—— os atta ti Ati Terms :—Five Dottans a YEAR. NEW SERIES. ————— —— —— —- —— Tue Dairy EXAMINER IS ISSURD EVERY EVENING, By rae Examiner Poustisnine Company, yROM THEIR Orrick, Conner OF WATER anp GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, RaTES oF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, ; “ ‘ $2 60 Three Months, - . . 1 25 One Month, - é 0 50 g@ Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quarterly, half yearly or yearly advertise- ments, on application. oe —— —— ee... =~ = ————— ALMANAC FOR NOVEMBER 1881. Di... ..... {Sun {Sun |Moon|High | Days “i OF WEEK izes |sets | riser | water | len’h. } ‘h m |h m | aft’n| mern| h. m. | \iTuesday [6 47\4 40} 2 9, 6 14) 9 52 2 Wednesday 48' 39) 2 35; 7 24' 51 3 Thursday 50) 37) 3 2) 823, 47 4\ Friday 51) 36) 3 6 9 11) 45 5/Saturday 53) 34,4 7! 954) 41 6\Sunday 54) 33/ 4 49/10 35] 39 7|Monday 85) 32) 5 3711 14! 37, 8) Tuesday B7| 31/6 30/11 54) 34 9 Wednesday 59, 29| 7 29jaft 32) 30, 10, Thursday 7 0; 28) 8 29) i 12) 28 | 11' Friday 2| 27| 9 31) 152) 25 12, Saturday 3! 26110 33) 2 35) 23 13\$unday | 5| 24/11 34/3 24| 19 14 Monday 6; 23] morn! 4 22 17} 15; Tuesday 7, 22) 0 35) 5 28 | 16)Wednesday | 9 21) 1 34 6 32 12) 17 Thursday , 10) 20; 2 40) 7 31 10) 18 Friday 12 19) 3 ‘s 8 23) 7 | 19 Saturday 13} 18) 4531 9 8$| 5 20 Sunday 14) 17; 6 1/952! = 3) 21|Monday 16 16| 7 910 34) 0! 22/Tuesday 17; 16; 8 L3)L1 et § 59) @3' Wednesday 19} 15) 9 10)morn! 56 f4)Thursday 20) 14, 952'0 1) 54) 25) Friday 21) 13/10 41/044; 52) 2é|Saturday 23' 13)11 15) 1 30) = 50) #7 Sunday 24) 12)11 45; 2 19 48 | 28| Monday 25; 12'aft 13| 3 13} 7| 20 Tuesday = 1l| 0 39, 4 20) 45) $0|Wednesday |7 28/4 10| 1 51) 5 38| 42! YT Ie ARTHUR & CO., GENERAL Commission Mershants, 108 SOUTH MARKET STREET, BOSTON, MASS, May 16, 1881. [wkly FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE. test Companies and Lowest Possible Rates. E. PALMER, Jr. Ch’town, Oct. 7, ’81—1m eod EDWARD T. RUSSELL, & CO. GENERAL Commission Merchants, No. 213 State Street, BOSTON, May 14, 1581. Credit Foncier PRANCO-CANADIEN, $5,000,000 Capital, - - - President—Hon. E. Vuclere,Senator, Paris. Vice-Pres.—Hon. J. A. Chapleau, Montreal. The Company will make long term loans with sinking fund, and short term loans wi h- out sinking fund. For particulars,apply at tie offine of Messrs. Sullivan & Morsen, Solicitors, Charlottetown. W. W. SULLIVAN. Aug. 24, 1881. THE FLRE Insurance Association | (LIMITED), OF LONDON, ENGLAND. Head Office, - - Corner Leadenball Strect, Londor. Capital .- - - - - $5,000,000 Reserve Fund - - mit * 250,000 Deposited with Dominion Govt. 100,000 Policies issued and losses settled promptly without reference to Head Office. J. R. BRECKEN, Bank of P. E. I., Agent for P. E. I. FRED. W, HYNDMAN, Sub-Agent. Sept. 13, ’81—3m 2aw, pat Sm Queen Insurance Co'y OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL - TWO MILLIONS STERLING. Insurance effected on all kinds of Buildings, Merchandise and Produce, Also, on Vessels ©n the stocks, Special rates for isolated residences. All Losses settled promptly, GEORGE MACLEOD (Usion Bank), Jw77] Agent for Priuce Edward Island P. E. Island. ‘ This is trae Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.’’—Kvxirres. - OHARLOTTETOWN. = a orm Se 7. For Scotch and Fnolish Tweeds or Worsted Suits, For Canadian Tweed Suits, lor Overcoats of all Descriptions, -GOo TQ JOHN TAGLEOD & £O’S, UPPER QUEEN STREET, TWO DOORS ABOVE APOTHECARIES HALL CORNER. There you will find the largest and best assortment of Cloths in the Island. Prices very moderate. The best workmanshlp and 4 perfect fit ywuaranteed, rs et — aLso— ‘ ce a A complete line of Gents’ Furnishings and Felt Hats, cheap, &c. &e. Remember the address, two doors abeve Apotheearies Hall Corner. Charlottetown, Oct, 11, 1881, LL. THAN 0:0 CHEAPER EVER ! J.B MACDONALD Is Selling Off his Immense Stock of Dry Goods aud Clothing this Fall at very low prices. Everyone in want of good articles at a small price should visit this Store, [whly, pres Re cS FALL STOCK. = FALL STOCK. — ——0:e——_— BOOTS AND SHOES —AT— DORSHYW’S OLD STAN YD, “ajon Big Red Boot,” Men's, Women’s, | Large Assortment, | Latest Styles, and Children's. | Splendid Value. | Cheap for Cash. Wes you want good value please give me a call. J. C. SPRAGUE, Oct. 1, ’81—4w eod, wkly 4w Queen Street Boot and Shoe Store. Sr - - ee FIRE MARINE! LIFE HORACE HASZARD, General Insurance Agent, ~— REPRESENTING— Commercial Union Fire Assurance Company, of London, king,, CAPITAL, £2,500,000 STG. Western Fire Assurance Company, of Toronto, Ont,, OAPITAL, $800,000.00. British America Fire Assurance Company, of Toronto, Qut., CAPITAL, $500,000.00. Sun Mutual Life & Accident Insurance Company, of Montreal, CAPITAL, $500,000.00. :0: MARINE INSURANCE ALSO EFFECTED. 70: Risks taken on all descriptions of Property at LOWEST RATES. 70: Oftice—Corner of Queen and Lower Water Streets. Charlottetown, April 4, 1881—tf METHODIST HYMNS: BILLS OF LADING — E NEW HYMN BOOK, in great variety | —FOR SALE TT’ styles and binding, just received at Te place to get your Printing done is at) the EXAMI ee PRINTING ROOM’. Aug. 17—tf HARVIE’S BOOKSTORE, con, 4? THE EXAMIVER OFFICE hn PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, {88L ni alc a a Sugar, Molasses, Tea, Raisins, &c. 200 puns. Bright Cienfuegos Molasses, 100 puns. Barbadoes Molasses, 100 hhds, Choice Porto Rico Sugars, ‘ 200 barrels Refined Sugars, diferent grades, 100 barrels Granulated “ugars, 200 bags Rice, 100 barrels Dried Apples, 100 boxes Tobacco, different qualities, 300 chests } 1(00 half. chests ; Choice Congou Teas, 1000 hoxes carefully selected to meet the re- quirements of the trade. Aliso, to arrive by S. 8S. ‘‘Avlona,” from Denia and Malaga, in October :— 4000 boxes Valencia Raisins, 3000 boxes Layer Raisins, 1000 half-boxes Layer Raisins, 1000 qaarter-boxes Layer ‘* 2500 boxes London Layer * 1000 half-boxes ‘‘ r 1000 qr. boxes " " 1800 boxes Loose Muscatels. For sale by SEETON & MITCHELL, Oct. 24, ’81—1m Hauirax, N. 8. THE SUBSCRIBERS HAVE NOW RECEIVED A LARGE PORTION OF THEIR AUTUMN STOCK, and shall be pleased to inake quota- tions for all kinds of General Hardware, Oils, —AND— ' . Mill Supplies, which consist in part as follows : 1000 dozen Axes, 12 tons Close Link Chain, 25 tons Sled Shoe Steel, 12 cases Carriage Bolts, 4 tons Cordage, 450 packages Powder, 750 boxes Horse Nails, 400 kegs Horse Shoes, 180 barrels Oil, 2 cases Halters, 150 dozen Lanterns, 120 bdls. Iron Wire, 76 cases Scales, 2600 boxes Window Glass, 1 ease Silk Bolting Cloth, 850 pieces Hollow Ware, 4 cases Nixey’s Lead, 7 tons Brandram’s Paints, 4 tons Firth’s Cast Steel, 8 Portable Forges, 25 barrels Pitch, 40 barrels Tar, 12 barrels Rosin, 5 barrels Borax, 300 Cotton Nets, 4 bales Net Twines, 400 bags Shot, 3 cases Guns, 175 packages, containing — Breech-Loading Implements, Cartridge Maga- ines, Ely’s Cartridge Cases and Caps, Slates and Pencils, Chalk and Chalk Crayons, Chest and Padlocks, Tinware, Whips and Whip Lashes, Shop Twine, Shoe Thread, Cutlery, Iron Table and Tea Spoons, Granite Ware, Plated Ware. W. H. THORNE & 68, SpectAL AGEN’S FOR Haszard Powder Co, : é Powder D. F. Jones & Co., : Shovels and Forks The Howe Scale Co. - : : Scales Walter Carson & Sons, Anticorosive Paint J. T. Lawton, - : - m - Saws The Dunn Edge Tool Co, - Scythes St. John, N. B., Oct. 19, ’81—1m CHANGE OF TIME. PICTOU AND HALIPAY. N AND AFTER MONDAY, the 17th inst., the STEAM NAVIGATION COM- PANY’S STEAMERS Will Leave Charlottetown for Pictou Landing at Six o’clock in the Morning, instead of at half-past seven as during the summer months. By order, S FRED. W. HALES, Secretary Steam Navigation Company. Oct. 13, 1881—10i Millner’s Tin Shop. ae subscriber , thankful for past patron- age, respectfully solicits a continuance of same, Steve Pipes, Pans, Elbows, &c., &¢., At Greatly Reduced Prices for Casb. WHOLESALE AND Retalt, An apprentice wanted immediately to learn the Tin Trade. GEO, W. MILLNER, Oct. 11, '81—im Removed. RS. W. W. IRVING begs to notify her friends and the public generally that Mshe has opened her Fall and Winter Classes for Painting and Drawing in all their different branches. For terms, etc., apply at her Studio — resi- dence of Mr. Peebles, South Side of King [au 29 tf Square. a a a ee The Panama Canal. WHAT Is THE REAL TRUTH ALL TO ITS PRO- GRESS AND DIFFICULTIES—MENDACITY OF THE AMERICAN PRESS. Mr. H. A. Woods, Superintendent of the Panama Railroad, has been inter- viewed in Detroit on the subject of the Panama Canal scheme. He falls foul exceedingly of the New York dailies for misrepresentation and lying. The amount of disease is neither phenomenal nor abnormal. ‘There is, of course, the usual malarial fever, and this these papers style “ Panama fever,’ very little differing from the ague or intermittant fever of Detroit, of Michigan, and the West generally. In the dry or wiuter season (being from December to April) there is very little of this, but is more prevalent in the rainy months, May to December. It rarely assumes a malignant type, and generally yields readily to treatment, and, by the way, the climatic effects are such that twelve to fifteen grains of quin- ine there are only equivalent to six or seveo grains in Detroit. Yellow fever is neither epidemic nor has it been epidemic. There have, of course, been sporadic cases of that dis- ease, but of cholera not one. In fact, in mortuary statistics the Isthmus contrasts favorably with New Orleans. For some distance back from the Atlantic the laud is low and marshy, but arcund Panama it is generally high. The French em- ployees died off because they were too enamoured of Parisian ideas and food to conform to the sanitary requisites of the climate. THE INTER-OCEANIC CANAL. Mr. Woods, in speaking of the pro- gress of the work ou the Canal, said that De Lesseps first visited the Isthmus in January, 1880, and last January his corps of engineers put in an appearance. Since then they have thorough surveys of the entire route, and also of the Bays of Aspinwall aud Panama. . They have bored all along the line to ascertain the earth strata, and will soon be; ready to commence the excavations, probably by the middle of December. The company is now receiving large quantities of machiaery and implements from P iris and building material from New York. THE ROUTE. ’ The Atlantic end of the canal will be at Aspinwall, by the valley of the Cha- gres River, through the lowest part of the mountains, but it is not decided whether to follow down the bed of the Rio Grande River to Panama Bay to the left of the City of Panama, or go down the Pacific slope a short distance to the right of the city. The general agent of the Company is now in Paris, however, and all these minor details have been arranged ere this. It may be added that very many people thiak that in crossing the Isthmus they go from east to west, whereas the Isthmus crooks away to the eastward at this point, and Panama is nearly due south from Aspin- wall. The villages along the line are inhabited by natives. The Canal Com- pany is establishing a village at Gatun, seven miles from Aspinwall, and another at Empire, thirteen miles from Panama, near the summit of the mountains. These are to be the head quarters of the Com- pany. The general oifices of the Com- pany are at Panama, where they have purchased and converted to their use the only first-class hotel in the city. THE MOUNTAINS AND STREAMS EN ROUTE The height of the mountains, a eon- tinuation of the Cordilleras chain, travers- ing the Isthmus, is about 700 feet. On ihe Pacific side the rise is about five miles, and on the Atlantic side seven miles. For twelve miles they will have to make a cut of 100 to 325 feet in depth it being proposed to make the canal thirty feet below tide-water level. The tides will cause them considerable ex- pense, for while the flood-tide at Panama is fifteen feet it is but eighteen inches at — ee ts : _ ars), ’ SINGLE Copies Two CENTS, VOL 9-—Nv. 147 renee ae road ard cross it two or three times. The Canal Company has really purchased the railroad for only by so doing could they build a canal. They had purehased a franchise for uinety-nine years from the Colombian Government, by the terms of which no other railroid or a eadal could be constfucted without the Com- pany’s cousent. The capital stock of the road was $7,000,000, but the stock was worth about $290 per share, so that the smount of the purchase was between $18,000,000 and ¢20,000,000. The road is forty-seven miles in length, aud the fare is $25. Therun is made in four days, two trains each way daily. They are all freight trains, with passen- ger coaches attached. The Canal Com- pany will use it for transporting their men, material. aud supplies. In fact, it is doubtful if thaseanal would have been undertaken but for the railroad. THE COST OF LABOR. The estimate of $100,000,000 for the con- struetion of the canal will probably not cover the cost. When DeLesseps was making his estimates he put.in the wages of laborers at sixty to sixty-five cents per be hired for , day. A Jamaica negro that, but they ars a lazy, who will not work more ¢ one or two days in @ week, just enough to maintain an excistence; They will never work unless hungry, very hungry. West Indian labor of all kinds is miserable and cannot be re- lied upon. De Lesseps must get his men from Africa or China, at great cost for transportation, and their wages will be much more than sixty-five cents per day. -—-: oe +s Zadkiel’s Prophecies for 1882. mptible set, Of Zadkiel’s new Almanac a London correspondent writes :—It does not at all affect the Tao Sze that he missed out of his 1881 prophecies all the greatest events of the year, though he naively admits that the twelve months that have rolled away have been prolific in the manifestation of planetary influence.” But quite early in the year 1882 he gives us some startling forecasts. ‘In Africa,” he says, ‘‘violent deeds will be the order of the day,” and “the French wil! have a lively time of it in Algeria and Tunis,” There wilt be “‘tumults and seditions’ Ireland and Persia. These cOuotries will not be able to resist the fact of ‘“Sattrn’s stationary position in Taurus.” The Emperer of Germany. will aiso. feel the effect of “ Saturn’s stationery in his mid- heaven.” In the month of February Mars will be also stationery, “ and we may therefore look for numerous fires aud much excitement in the metropolis ;” and in the latter part of the month ** great excitement will be witnessed in New York.” March is to be a terrific month, not so much, it would seem, on account of the stars as owing to the fact that three Kings have their birthday anniversaries during the month. The Crown Prince of Germany will have domestic troubles; ‘‘ taxation will be heavy ;” there will be trouble in Paris, discord in Russia and at Madrid “ tur- moil and perhaps revolution at Constan~ tinople ;” an ‘* epidemic of diphtheria or small-pox at Washington,”’ and ‘a most eritical period at hand;” but, says the sage, ‘let us hope that the destivies of 3reat Britain will be guided by a firm will and a sound judgment.” June is go- ing to have good in store for ** London, the West of England, and the United States, but let those persons beware who are born ov or about the 29th of that month, for they are in danger of “a period of loss and suffering, and should exercise caution in all thivgs.” In July let the women look out, (especially the mothers of costers, I presume for whom the Gilbertian East Euder jumps at all times of the year, and * loves to lie a-basking in the sun,” for ** Venus meets with the square of Saturn and the con- junction with Uranus this month, hence cases of cruelty to women will be vum- erous.” September will bring America “a bountiful harvest.” and embarrassing to England. Persons born on the 17th Aspinwall. This difference would send | a powerful current through the canal) from the Pacific to the Atlaniic. To) prevent this a tide-water lock is to be | built at Panama. ‘The borings as yet| made are either through solid rock or a! heavy red clay, that, when wet, is fright- fully tenacious. These borings were entirely satisfactory. THE GRBATEST DIFFICULTY to be surmounted is the Chagres River. | In the dry season it is a small, unnavig-| able stream, but when heavy rains pre-| vail it becomes a roaring torrent. It is| sometimes known to rise forty-six feet at | such times. has to be controlled, for the proposed | route crosses its bed several times. To dothis several plans are under consider-, the river and divert it from its present course. and stone from the cut through the mountains, aud build a vast dam across from one spur of the mountains to an- other, and thus hold in check the flood cf waters, running them off through a system of canals and locks iuto the main channel. THE PANAMA RAILROAD. The canal will follow the line of rail- This vast volume of water |° of May or 18th of November had better beware of next September—Taurus or Seorpio will be after them with unfrieudly intentions. Mem to these unhappy beings—‘ Avoid almost any travelling and danger of all kinds on the 8th September, 1882.” Next Decem- ber ‘* the transit of Venus across the sun’s disk on the 6th will be partly vis- ible in England.” For this fact it is not necessary to consult Zadkiel, but the King of Italy is warned that he will be in personal danger about the 16ih, ‘“‘when Mars and Uranus attack the sun’s place at his birth.” If there is one thing on which Zadkiel is intense, almost too too,” it is in his loyalty. The year 1881 ‘closes amid a strange ymixture of good and evil influences.” But ** God Save the Queen and royal family!” he ation. One is, to dig a new cliannel for pays, aud prints it in eapital letters. Few almanacs have a larger sale in The other is to take the earth England than this relic of barbarism sigued ** Tao Sze.” | A man came into an editor’s room’With a large roll of manuscript under his arm, ‘and said, very politely, “I have a trifle i here about the beautiful sunset yesterday, ‘which was dashed off by a friend of mine, |which I would like inserted, if you have ircom” ‘Plenty of room. Just insert it jourself,” replied the editor, gently push- nz the waste-paper basket toward him. er te SOP I aS ge Se a | Sica amelie Billie, Wiese seer me seiner Ti i ent Bip -ih Yas ~ sbhcanice osname Sinton sein en Sarena arene atmren eee ahesenm ae sf 3 Cer hes 4 doe ooran SA, <a e eea LN ERROR a Te ‘| ‘ te iff H } ‘| 5 lp SONNE: AUDRINA AN