SS RP OM gs ra , . 2 ae ae oy . og ; = , ( se : ti i RE ore Pea ee oo wo , sae tS Se aie Me 2 or “* This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men having to advise the Public, may speak free.”’—Evxirprs. a SO Ee unseat NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTELOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1882. — a VOL. 12.-~NO. 18, ; THE DAILY EXAMINER. er Two False Prophets. demands of the system. To keep cattle IS ISSUED EVERY EVENING, By ras Examtnek Pousutsuive Company, | FROM THEIR Orrict, Conner or Waree | AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. Rares of Suescrtrrion : FIRE INSURANCE. ——nnenemenlBOY2 Six Months, 25 QUEEN INSURANCE COMPAN iree Months, - - : 25 One Month, poy } 0 50 Head Oflice—Liverpeol, England. po e@ Advertising at most moderate rater. Contracts may te made for monthly, juarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- | . Y mbdiel tb application. : LANCASHIRE —— INSURANCE “ of England, :0: atte E , % #2, Prince Edward Island i <= aa RI a at A i LL W A Y . ~. uabid bint steragalbdee tale NRE Bhi. | | aeemneemnet’) remem: waren” ee ee ee TIME TABLE NO. i9. _ The undersigned having been appointed General Agents for the above first-class | British and American Fire Insurance Companies, are prepared to insure all classes of WINTER ARRAAGEMENT,, | insurable property on as good terms and at as low rates as they can be taken by any |Company now solvent and intending to remain so. ae Oflice—South Side of S ‘+, Opposit ‘ ’ : t take effect on the 99:h Nov., 1889 _ ic outh Side of Queen Square, opposite the Post Office, Charlottetown, P. sland. = DESBRISAY & ANGUS, Oct. 5, 1882 GeneraL AGENTS. _ __N. B.—No persoa is authorized to collect monies for any of the above Companies |in this Province without producing a receipt signed by us, and any one paying money ‘TRAINS OUTWARD. (READ DOWN ) MIXED, sTaTioNs, | MIXED. MIxep, to any one without getting such receipt, will do so at their own risk. D. & A. Ci’towu ..|Dp 8. 15am/Dp 3.30pm! Dp 3 00pm ape eee ee _ Royaliy Jo ** 838 **; ** 3.53 N Wilteh’e' ** 929 * “445 *. Hunter R’rj “* 9 45 ** * 5.0 ** Bradalba’e | ‘‘10 23 ‘| ‘« 5 38 ** | Co’ty Line.| “10.32 «| ** 5.48 “ Freetown ‘10.47 **} * 6.03 * 3 Keusingt’n “11.10 * > mae ** I : »o:9_jArll 45 * be a db : Summ’ side topm|At 7-00." QUEEN SQUARE. Miscouche | ** 1.37 * | ; ‘O: Wellingt’n} ** %.05 “! = : 9 : Port Hill. .' «« 244 | \W & A. BROWN & CO., have now completed their FALL IMPOR- O'Leary...) ** 405 “| e TATION. —— eld | ‘* = | | Buyers wiil find it to their advantage to inspect their Steck, as they have a rteo. ’ ge 5. e 7 » oy as so . 2 ‘ Tignith.. |Ar 6.05 “ very large an] new assortment of 5 Royalty Je [Dp 3.23pm B s ti h d F = D G d BOR coaee ! “2@,** Bedford... | “400 « fl ls an Os cle nh ry 00 8, Mt. Stew’t “amr Ww : Cardigan .. | “603 * OF EXTRA VALUE. A a » © ra] ar eran eines | ae very latest novelties shown in every Department. Mt. stew’t Dp 4 45pm ; ie i aaa “5.97 « A great variety of Mantles, Ulsters, Wool Shaw's, Clouds, Scarfs and Fur, St. Peter's. “5.57 ‘* |Goods. Also Mantle and Ulster Cloths, Brown, Blue and Black Pilots and Bear River : | ** 645 “* | Beavers, Scotch Tweeds and Coatings and Seal Cloths. Souris .... | Ar7.30 ” ‘ ab - A iarge lot Blankets, Quilte, Horse Rugs, ete. ee 300 Lanibs’ Wool Shirts, assorted sizes. 300 pairs,Lambs’ Wool Drawers, A lot of Grain Bags, ete. STATIONS. | MIXED. All of which will be disposed of at their asual low prices. Jh’town ..|Ar 4.15 pm)Arl1. 15am Arl1], 30am Royalty Jc| Dp 3.53 * \Pp 10. 52** N Wiltsh’e| ** 3.0! ‘‘ ; *‘10.01 ** Hanter R’r| ** 2.45 ** | ‘* 9.45 “*: Bradalba’e | ** 2.09 “*| ‘* 9.08 * Co’ty Line. ** 1.59 “|! ** 8 58 * Freetown..| ‘ 1.43 ** | ** 8.43 a css) '3°/5°5° | YNTON MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Summ’ side Arll.20am “74 * PORTLAND, MAINE. Miscouche Dp 10 58** Wellingt’n; ** 10.31 ** | es : JOHN E. DeWIPT, President. 9 ' MIXED, | MIXED, i W.& A. BROWN & CO. Ch’town, Oct. 31, 1882. ra ‘ ‘ Port Hill..| ‘* 9.45 “ O'Leary...| ‘' 8.30 ** Bloomfield} ** 8.05 ‘ Alberton ..i ‘* 7.27 “ NEIL McLEOD, | SOLUTE, NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC, | ‘The twelfth day of November last was, |for the Mohammedan world, the first day -.. OFFICES: Reform CT Cotminittee Rooms, Opposite Post Prophet had looked forward to with alter- Offiee, Charlottetown, rs =. {sland, Lote hope and fear. erchants’ Bank of Halifax Building, Sum-|4!lah chose for the spiritual manifestation M 7 Reever Pi Belen, . jand advent of the Messiah. Unfortunately tai ge il _ jin Africa alone there were then two Mes- MONEY To AN on good security, at | siahs in the field who both answered to the ; New. st res her ~ Pp ophecy _ ; —eo e | Messiah No. 1—El Medhi ben Moham- med Es-Senoussi—is well known by the | writings of the travellers Rohefs, Vachti- . 4 Da. WASBURTON, ‘ 'goll, and Duveyrior. It was the s i | of the Senousia who effectually barred the ‘passages of those travellers, as well as of ® late Captain Gillin an attempt made last }#(E DINBURGH.) ‘winter to penetrate Africa, by way of Tripoli and Benghazi. The Messiah, or El Office ip Old City Hotel, corner of Grear| Medhi No, 1, is the son of the famous George aid Dorchester Streets, opposite the Mohammed Es Senoussi, who died in 1860; Catholi¢ thapel. Entrauce on Great George his mother was named Fatima, and persons Street—nijghrt bell. jwho have seen him remember that his Ch’town, Nov. 14, ’82.—3m right hand reached as far as hisknee. Five —.- - | years ago E] Medhi No. 1 withdrew himself HENRY TERRELL from his followers, and becoming a hermit, | 5 jose to involve his existence in mystery. TTD ' ie twelfth of November was the day ap- S Lt: PER S AGENT, ‘pointed for his re-appearance in a cloud of ¥ ame. Mohammed Ahmed Ebu Mohammed El Dongolawee, or Medhi No. 2, is by this time pretty well known. It is he who has ' been amusing himself by slaughtering the aU Cross & Bedford Station, P, EAL, | Egyptians, and capturing with bows and ihn a a arrows, spears and old flint locks, the Rem- om #2, cee he ington rifles of the tatterdemalion Egyptian army. It is he who has killed and wounded in ARTHUR & cCO., jover twelve thousand Egyptians and cap- ee ; fat all the ree south of Chartoum, with th tion of th General Commission Merchants ‘Sicium wirsieoels, escuntion of the Partigular attention given to the gale |K°rdofan. And it is he who has been mak- z € Island due. | ing converts by taking a leaf from the book * ot AR goes hago ,of King John of Abyssinia, and pouring ' AG | boiling tallow into their eyes of all who are 12] Ilantc Avenue & dl ESsex Avenue, | not convinced by his ponebeae. This Messiah is in the habit of suddenly BOSTON, MASS, stopping while in the midst of an earnest May 27, 1882—wkly eacey fixing his eyes in a dazed stare at eds of Produce bought and shipped, mission, fgent forthe New Sheep Dip. vacancy, holding his breath and not winking or moving a nerve, limb or feature. He raxis, | | has attained such perfection in this species 1578. of gymnastic exercise as to appear to be ‘quite dead for a space of three or four been 3] minutes. He would, then show signs of an ‘emerging from his assumed trance and wonld look about him as if greatly amazed _at finding himself in his present company. | With a seriousness and earnestness that |does not admit of the slightest shadow of ‘doubt he would exclaim :—‘*] have just thts: moment arrived from Paradise, where I sat in company with Gods His Prophets and His Apvstles. I should be glad to . relate to you that we talked abont ; but Bank ot No a S t unfortunately you would be ineapable of y CO id. understanding me, for we discussed matters that are beyond the comprehension of all minds merely human and pertaining to the immediate affairs of the world.” One fine day Raonf Pacha, the Governor $1,000,000 General of the Soudan, sent a Khartoum dias ‘merchant, named Abou-el-Sonond-el-Ackad $23,060 with a body of soldlers, to order the Mehdi to renounce the life of an impostor. The Mehdi—who by this time had surrounded n Age of this - noutlage I. san meet a ao ena himself with aGrand Vizier, Chamberlains, lately occupied by the Bank of Prince Edward Councillors and all the appurtenances of the Island, under the management of the under-, Khalif’s Court—refused to receive the signed. | messenger from the Governor General and Deposits will be received on interest, and killed the troops sent by him. Since then Gv MEDAL, * fs ~ ie ae Bek i peal AE | JOSEPH GILLOTT’S . STEEL PENS. ivitice DRALERS THROUGHOUT THB WORLD. ESTABLISHED !832, Paid Up Capital . . Reserve Fund .. . — Total Assets Jannary ist, 1882. ° > Z Tignish...; ** 6.30 * 0 York..... | “10.50 «| Payments to Policy Holders, - - 19 000.000 0 Bedford “103.0 “| “ Dividends = o - - 4£.032,915.54 Mt. Stew’t! | “955 wii i é kant STANDING, COMPARED WITH LARGEST CANADIAN COMPANY: Georget'n Sab cal _| ‘ 8.00 * STANDING, © 3 ES } : Mt. Stew’t {Dp 9. 55am Say : 3 cs = eee eens eine === == ——— Morell....! ** 9.04 ** nee Total Receipts | Deposited with St. Peter’s | ne . past year, Domi’on Gov't, | Bear River 7.45 |Uaion Mutual sccsscccccsssssssnsoone | $6,264,215.47 | $1,088,779 00] @13%,000 Souris ees oe ABP seen FCMDAER Life ......... ceceee cesserees soeeee svebes 5,064,206.65 1,00%,164.31 | 54,000 | On and after Wednesday, 29th November, instant, and until close of navigation,a Special Passenger Train will leave Charlottetown daily (Sundays excepted), at 6.20 a. m., for Summerside, connecting with the Steamer there at 8.45 a.m, and returning to Char- Why you should Insure in the Union Hutual BECAUSE EVERY POLICY IS AN ENDOWMENT. BECAUSE EVERY POLICY IS NON-FORFEITABLE. BECAUSE EVERY POLICY IS INCONTESTABLE. lottetown on arrival of Boat each evening. BECAUSE ALL PROFITS ARE DIVIDED ANNUALLY. L. B. ARCHIBALD, BECAUSE DEATH LOSSES ARE PAID PROMPTLY. Superintendent.) Branch Office Queen’s Building, Halifax: Railway Office, Charlottetown, Nov. 25, 1582. 7 2 W. R. ANDERSON, | JAMES DESBRISAY, dy ex dy pat pres ber sum jr Gi NOTICH. Special Agent. | Agent, Charlottetown. ryoHE Charlottetown Gas Light Company have importeda fresh supply of Bray’s Patent Burner’s, especially made to consume only three feet of Gas per hour with the tap b the ta CHEAPEST, SAFEST. SIMPLEST turned tullon. These Burners are intended for use in Halls, Bedrooms, Kitchens, and other places where a light from a small con- ' sumption of Gas only is required. By regulating the tap, the Gas consumed can be reduced to any desired quantity less a ree teet per hour, These. ‘ IN THE WoRLD. These Burners are so scientifically made that they will! give a light eqval to about ten candles at a cost of three quarters of one cen Price ofthese Burners co consumers ot The Dominion Satety Fund Life Association Gas will he ten centa each. fin 10 end pat $500 Reward! OF ST. JOHN, N. B. WE mille the above reward for any cas [$20,000 Deposit with the Dominion Government. of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia. Sick under Government License. Headache, ndigestion, Constipation or Cos- " tiveness we cannot cure with West's Vegetable ; Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly) Ay Assessment Company with a Safety Fund. Life Insurange complied with. They are purely Vegetable, t it saat “ and never fail to give satisfaction. Sugar at 108 actual Cost, exes €} cprentin Nov. 8, ’82. — ———— () —— Working Coated. Large boxes, contaiming 30 Pills, 25 cents. For sale by all fruggists. Beware of on current account. : |the Mehdi has won a series of decisive Drafts granted on the varieus Agencies and victories, but when, attheend of Septem- correspondents of the Bank. ‘ber last, he was upon the point of capturing Sterliug and other Exchange bought and Khartoum one of his followers recalled to soid, and yeueral bauking busiuess transacted. ‘him the words of the prophecy declaring D. C. CHALMERS, | that the ‘‘Mehdi will be hidden for a time Ch’town, June 17, 18SS2—tf Agent, | prior to his manifestation.” The would-be ——- —~ — Messiah then, fortunately for Abd-el-Kader, ; Y ~ the Egyptian Governor, retreated from W CS Bl Ss HOP Khartoum in order to *‘hide himsolf’ for a e * A. 4 time previous to the attack on Khartoum, which he seems to regard as the real manifestation to all Moslems. Such are the two false prophets. Should the Egyptian Government be able to make Mehdi No. 1 attack Mehdi No. 2, a Kil- FORWAR i [ i Gi AGENT kenny cat campaign would probably ensue, § | wuch to the relief of all interested in the Marine {usurance Broker, apparently hopeless task of civilizing the Dark Continent. —AND— General Commission Agent, ~ to be confined air in the stable; but as cold Indoor Care of High-bred Cattle. BEDFORD ROW, weather sets in especial provision should be P. O. BOX 1 HALIFAX, N. 8. made against re-breathing the stable at- mosphere. Animals have a wonderful in- herent power to resist damaging influences; ARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the|and while breathing an atmosphere that Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned | has already been once or more in and out of Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks | the lungs of such cattle as may be in the thereon. istalls, will not necessarily induce disease; Hulis, Cargocs, and Freights insured in! still, it is depressing to all the powers; and, first-class offices at most favorable rates, |in proportion as animals are forced to de- Cousignments of Produce solicited, @nd/ pend upon previously used atmosphere, in SHIPPING -—AND— During warm weather there is not likely prompt returns guaranteed, _,|that prop rtion will the blood and tissues Correspondence solicited and answered |} ..ome poisoned. If the influence (says delicate, or have a latent constitutional de- | , yl i fect, or tendency to any special ailment, NSUBANGE Ov FICE. cinema ish as to advocate close confinement in | ( tight stables, arguing that the stupor and (ueen LSU alice OMpany, sleepiness observed to come upon cattle so one of the most baneful influences that can affect a person or a cattle beast, and cannvt, Air once breathed should be viewed as an CAPITAL, FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS | excrement, for from the lungs it is such ; eueey. The Chicago Live Stock Journal) referred to will, sooner or later, droop, and show bad OF ENGLAND confined was beneficial, and promoted the by any possibility be otherwise than harm- ‘and, to a degree, it would be as proper to Nov. 14, 1881.-—1y9r be long centinved such animals as are condition. Some feeders have been so fool- fattening process. This stupor comes from CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS, Lancashire Insurance Company «. Insarance effected on all kinds of property | Barrister & Attorney-at-Law, a ——— ener OF THE of the fourteenth centnry of El Yelam—a day that for fifty yesrs the followers of the ft was the day that in-doors, giving them all the adv. tages of excellent quarters, grooming, and select food, neg'ecting the reyuisite we have named, shows « want of understanding of how far cattle, like mew, are sustained by the air they breathe. When we consider that a ‘full-grown cattle beast consumes probably not less than four thousand gallons of air during each twenty-four hours, it will be seen that a stable containing a herd of twenty or thirty cows must have a provision for fresh air of no small limit The importanes of observ- iwg correct rules in this regard, has been recently quite clearly brought out in France, by observing the effects of increase of space allotted to each animal employed in the cavalry service. Previous to the change the space allowed to each horse was 700 to 900 feet of air each. Under this regulation the deaths from glanders were fif y-one in each one housgad head during ten years. The deaths from all diseases reached ninety-four in one thousand during the same period. The mortality from glanders during the ten following years, the space having been increased to eighteen feet, was brought down to ten in each one thousand head; and, from all diseases, to twenty-seven in each thoasand, against ninety-fouras above stated. Observations have proved that similar results follow in the case of cattle, and it is, of course, entirely natural that it should be so, There is, perhaps, no part of the winter management of housed-up cattle so difficult to exactly control as temperatare. Not difficult if the stable is properly constructed, so that the ventilation can be regulated to suit a large or small number of occupants, as the exigencies require, the heat generated by their bodies giving warmth sufficient for healthy stock, if the stable is properly constructed, Cold air should on no ace»unt be permitted to enter beneath a stable, especially if the floor be otherwise than close. Even though it be as tight as plank can well make it, no cemplete comfort can be secured. Openings above can be tolera- ted better than the merest cracks beneath, if they communicate with the outer air. Before an animalean lay on fat, the claim made by the body to be kept warm, must be met, In proportion to the degree of warmth afforded to the bady, in that proportion will there be a surplus of the food given, which can go to increase the fat deposit. An eminent authority, Dr. Play- fair, said: “The food is fuel, the ex- crements are the ashes, and the gasses expired from the mouth are of the same composition as those which fly up the chimney of a farnace.” Cattle kept in a hot climate require less food than these kept in a cold climate; hence, we find a provision for this state of facts. Tropical foods contain aboat 20 to 30 parts of heat-producing material—char- coal; while the blubber and fats used in the Arctic regions contain from 80 to 90. Ia those regions, food full of heat-making material is required, and the foods suited to a southern climate would not sustain life in the region of the Polar seas. When we reflect that a person can consame twenty pounds of blubber at one meal, when ex- posed to the open air in the regions named, it proves what we have said—that food takes the place, in such a case, of fuel, strictly so in its effects. Oorn is well cal- culated to make heat, when fed tw catile in cold weather, as it is also well caleulat d to make fat when the temperature and other conditions are favourable. Young growing cattle require more nitro- genous or flesh forming food than older cattle. Young cattle, even calves, in cold weather, require an abundance of heat- forming food; but this alone is not suited to their case, fully, in any weather. But few make such csreful provision for the growing calf or yearling, in the matter of food selection, as these young things re- quire. Even the unlearned gardener shows stricter regard for the requirements of the growing vegetable than the average cattle- grower does for the calves that are annually dropped upon his farm. Extra specimens of vegetables cannot be grown except the right kind and quantity of nutriment be placed within reach of the roots, to be taken up according to the requirements and capacity of the plant. The young growing animal occupies precisely the same position; and if the conditions we throw around it, while in the stable, are in every way con- ducive to health and vigorous digestion, it will occupy the same position as the plant in that it will be able, safely, to take all the food, entirely suitabl- fortae dem inds of its growth, that can be digested and as- similated. TS A Western ltems. (From the Journal.) Another of our oldest and most respected citizens has pa away, Robert Walker, Esq, of New Annan, brother of Jobn Walker, Exq., of same place, whose death we chronicled a few weeks ago, died after a short illness, on Monday last, in the 70th year of his age. A canoe was found the other day cn the shore of Malpeque harbor, supposed to be the one out of which the two Indians were lost a few weeks ago, as it had what appear- ed to be a hole made by a gun shot in the bottom of it. The theory that the shot was the cause of the fatal accident is gener- ally believed. John Gaudet, of Muddy Creek, shot and killed a bear which weighed 305 pounds, on Wednesday, 20th ult., within a short distance of his house. His bearship seemed quite tame and did not act as if he anti- cipated any danger until his skin was punc- tured in several places by an overdose of buckshot, Exports per steamer for week endin 5th December :—36 horses, $3,160; 1 cattle $260; 1368 sheep pelts, $1,287; 13 327 counterfeits and imitations. The genuine manufactured only by JOHN C. WEST & CO., “The Pill Maker,” ae aa Free trial package sent by mail prepaid on receipt of iS alk stamp. Sold by FRASER & REUDIN, and all Draggi augl4—dy & wky ly. xs Good Canvassers Wanted. LEONARD MORRIS, at current rates. and equitably. DESBRISAY & ANGUS, General Agent for P. E. Island. Summerside, Oct, 28, 1882 -—iy Uk’town, Bopt, 15, 1882, Losses settled promptly | General Agents, noxious. ) Ufice—South Side Queen Square expect cattle to take in other forms of ex-| bushels oats, $4,531; leather. $372; 475 lbs icrement and thrive, as to force them to| poultry, $24; 1 barrel oatmeal, $6; 1,000 take air into their langs which is equally|lbs. ham, $101; pork and beef, $1 136; So in-door care is far from being | potatoes, $113; 440 sheep, $1,100; 100 lbs, what it should be when fresh air is not fur-| feathers, $40; 250 yerds cloth, $200: sun- nished within the stable, equal to all the’ dries, $404 Total, $15,234, Ce lle —— P } rf) corny oe