= a VOL. 7. caren saat ~ ne HAT DEPARTMENT. Silk Hats, Drab Shell Hats, Felt Hats, Straw Hats, Linen Hats, indian Pith Hats, FOR HOT WEATHER. The General Stock comprises and retail. Cheap for Cash. Charlottetown, May 31, 1880. ooo PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MORN MB BOT He in. r IS New avi’ Commodious House, situate at North Shore, offers great attraction for Tourists who are wanting recreation, sea bathing, fishing, etc. It is within casy accegs of the City, being only thirteen (13) miles by rail or carriage. Charges moderate. For further particulars apply to the Manager, or address LORNE HOTEL COMPANY, Charlettetown, P. E. 1. June 12, 1880. PACIFIC Mutual Insurance 6o., —or— NEW YoRK ied MARINE. Assets 3st De., 1879, - $744,149.00 Insurance eflected eel CARGOES and FREIGHTS, covering $15,000 and upwards on first-class risks. Certificates i-sued payable in London at the office of Morven Ross & Co., Bankers, or in New York. Risks taken and rates fixed without being referred to Head Office. FENTON T. NEWBERY, Agent for P. E, Island. May 11, 1580. QUEEN INSURANCE COT, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLINC, NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- ings, Merchandise and Produce, Alse, on Veasels Gu che stoeks. Special rates for isolated resicences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agont for Prince Edward Island June, 1877— THE NORTH SQITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE SO., Of Edinburgh and London, ESTABLISHED iN 1809 ribed Capital, 89,733,332.00 — up Capital, - 1,216,666.00 Transacts every description of Fire, Life and Anuity Business on the most favorable terms. Fire Depart? went—Insurances may be ef- fected at the Lowest current rates. ; Insurances upon Public and Private Build- ings effected on especially favorable terms. gs settled with promptitude and liber- ality. Live Deparrent—New and Reduced pre- miums for Dominion of Canada. G. W. DEBLOISs, (oneral Agent for P. E. Island, Office, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. April 14, ’80- pat her ne sj kea ti eod _TH Great Summer Resort EK CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE AAA yedIH JOVWACV Ga [UNIHLON za oa" ci rm at Ce S$ BFEeS ¢. #39 A) SF Sey ow 7 8. . SS oule the Newest and Best Styles in i. Isso. BRITISH WAREHOUSE, QUEEN SQUARE. Spring and Summer Goods, COMPLETE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT, VALUE UNSURPASSED. Bhp Subscribers have, by the S. 5. ‘‘ Prince Edward,” ‘* Ethel Blanche,” and other later arrivals, completed the LARGEST AND BEST STOCK OF British and Foresiga Dry Goods AND GROCERIES Ever imported by them, which they will dis- pose of at the lowest Cash prices. Please give us a call before purchasing elsewhere. z w. & A. BROWN & CO. June 1, 1880. {jl A Fact Worth Knowing: “OW OFTEN do we hear men say, ‘I _ never can get clothes to fit.” The reason is obvious. Few Tailors understand how to Cut the Garment to afford the evolutions of the body. Come te the right place and get suited. Mothers, bring your boys; wives, sen your husbands. Cutting premptly executed. guaranteed. Equalled by few, excelled by none. Charges Moderate. Terms Cash. THOMAS SMITH, Upper Gt. George Street. Ch’town, June 1, 1880. Good fits pK; cary uA Tw 3 y See | Paks aL SOLE PROPRIETORS | {pre PERFECTION | eee LEES | of WHISKY <Gu|~ UNRIVALED For &=:BROTHERS 2995 TODDY. |. ee Les HIGHLAND WHISKY. ANALYTICAL SANITARY INSTITUTION, 54, Hfolborn-viaduct, E.C., London, Aug. 18,1879 Report on the Lorne HigHLanp WHISKY : ‘“We have visited the bottling stores of t | | . icetamimnamnsinty ities ! GROCERIES. Qur Usual Good Stock CHOICE TEAS In CHESTS, HALF-CHLESTS, and BOXES. FLOUR! The Best Brands in the Market, every department. Wholesale DA V TES. & CO. West India Warehouse, a Subscriber has now in Store the fel- lowing well assorted Stock, consisting of 400 bbls. Superior Extra FLOUR, 100 bbls. Extra FLOUR, 50 bbls. CORN MEAL, 20 bags Nos. 1 and 2 NAVY BREAD, 50 halt mnie ' Choice Congou TEAS, 10 puns, Barbados 10 puns. Trinidad Peery Bright Porto Rico SUGAR, Boxes and Caddies TOBACCO, 5 bbls. Split PEAS, 10 casks Washing SODA, 100 doz. BROOMS, 20 doz. WASHBUOARDsS, 20 tins CREAM TARTAR, 20 cases } 10 casks ( 3 casks MILK DISHES, 10 doz. Assorted FLOWER POTS, 3 casks Nutritious CON DIMENT for horses and cattle, 200 boxes TIN PLATES, 50 blocks Grain TIN, 50 pigs LEAD, 3 bars 14 COPPER, 2000 (2 bush.) GRAIN SACKS. Allof which can be sold at lowest current rates, HORACE HASZARD, 61 Water Street. Ci’town, June 3, 1S80—-2w eod NEW OPENINGS MOLASSES, Iumisating Rock OIL, Spring & Summer Goods GLASGOW HCUSE, Mens’. Youths’ and Boys’ Clothing, Shirts, Paper Collars, Ties, Braces, Umbrellas, Hats and Caps, Gleths & Trimmings, Grey and White Cottons, Prints, Sheetings, Shirtings, &c., Paper Hangings and Paper Blinds, And a large stock of Superior Tea and other (Groceries ; a few cases Concentrated Lye in tin cans, for soap-making. All at lowest possible prices for Cash. FRED. LePAGE & CO. Mune i, 1880—2aw Greenlees Brothers, and have selected | ——-—-—-———-____- from the vats, samples of their Lorne) Highland Whisky, and have subject. ed them to. careful examination an analysis. The samples were very frag- rant, mellow, and of pleasant flavor, and possessed all the characteristics of pure and well-matured Scotch Whisky of the first quality. ‘‘ArTHUR Hitt, Hassautt, M. D. ‘‘Orro Heuner, F. C, S., F. 1. C.” Wholesale of the Sole Proprietors, GREENLEE Brorners, 31 Commercial Street, Londen ; Distilleries, Argyleshire. Agents : - - MESSRS. OWEN CONNOLLY & CO., Charlottetewn, P.E.I. Feb. 24, 1880 UY the DAILY EXAMINER fer the latest news—lecal and telegraphie. ; For Sale or to Let. fAXAAT Freehold Property, with a front of eighty feet on Pewnal Street and eighty- four feet on Sydney Street,the House contain- ing 16 large rooms and two Kitchens. Can be turned into one Dwelling by unlocking a door. Apply on the premises to MRS. BOSWALL. April 26, 1880—tf Turnip Seed. Turnip Seed. UST RECEIVED, a quantity of the Celebrated Skirving, Laing, Champion and Shamreck. All warranted fresh and good. ‘ ROBERTSON & CAMERON, May 31, 1880. —30i a +>) pre! toe!'y et « Industrial Notes. Pictou,— At Logan’s tannery, a large extension is being built. Business is rush- ing at this tannery, the largest of our Pictou County factories. — Standard. New Grascow.—Messrs. Mackintosh and Dewer are getting along finely with their fire brick works. We are informed that last month’s pay by the Halifax Coal Company was $18,000. The new machine shop which is now in course of erection by the Acadia Foundry Company is 165x40 feet. height of post 16 feet. It is to havea truss-girder roof cov- ered with sheet iron. Mr. Donald Grant has the contract of the building, Mr. Tewnsend of the masonry. The work is being pushed forward rapidly, and itis ex- pected that in abeut a month the machine shop, blacksmith shop and moulding shep, will be all running full time. —Chionicle. Tue Hariray Sucar Reriveny.—We are glad to learn that work on the structure is net by any means lagging, but is proceed- ing briskly. There may be a little delay caused by the nen-arrival, in the expected time, of the piteh-pine, (which has been more than usually in demand this year, and caused a straining of the supply), but mean- while about 90 men are working away as hard as they can. Masons are getting $2 a day; and laborers from 80c. to $1.20, according to the capability.--Hv. Recorder. OxForpD.-——Says the Amherst Gazelle: A sample order received by the Oxford woollen mills from large Ontario dealers a few months ago, jias resulted in a recent order for 100 pieces of tweeds. Amuerst.—-Mr. Rupert Lusby is building quite an addition to his taunery.—Gazetle. Our farmers frequently complain that traders give them too simall a price for their produce, less than the foreign markets would warrant, and they are thus led to look upon merchants asin a certain sense their enemies. On this account many farmers imagine that if they could do their own trading they would speediiy become rich. Experieuce, however, has shown this idea to be fallacious—the man who sticks to one business succeeds the best. The attempt ef certain farmers and otbers to run a co-operative grecery store, in this city, convinced those who embarked in the undertaking that there was very little profit in the grocery business after paying the expenses of manage ment. ‘This spring, farmers who had clover and timothy seed to dispose of would net sell it to dealers in seeds, imagining that by attending market themselves they would get a higher price for it. The consequence was that seeds- men finding that they could not precure a sutticient stock from the country, at any- thing like a reasonable price, imported large quantities from Canada. The market was thus overstocked ; seedsmen made very little prefit, and many farmers are obliged to hold over their grass seeds till next year, while a large amount of money has been sent off the Island. Had farmers brought their seeds to market early in the season, traders would have given higher prices for them than they were afterwards sold for at retail, and the home-grown artiele would have suppliec the demand, to the exclusion of foreign seeds, the money kept on the Island, and the country made so much richer. It is a very short-sighted policy for farmers to waste their time in Spring retailing seeds in market when they could sell them to dealers in seeds at nearly as high a price, provided they were brought to market in March or the keginning of April.— Cem. to Patriot. a > -—— A most extraordinary case was brought before the Recerder’s Ceurt, Montreal, on Friday last. David Thomas was arraigned for vagrancy. ‘The prisoner is a young man of good features and respectable address, but was clad in the most abject tatters, and ‘appeared filthy in person beyond expression. It was shown in evidence that he had been educated in the Montreal College and was a good classical scholar, and formerly held the position ef book-keeper in a wholesale house. He is the owner at present of four good houses in the city and was never known to be drunk ; his only weakness was determined idleness, which of late had amounted to a disease with him. He would not exert himself so much as to wash and clothe himself. The prisoner had neo de- fence. His Honor commented on the strange nature of the case and sent the prisoner to jail for two months, express- ing the hepe that he would there find somebody who would make him wash himself. ae jd dis A strange animal was recently seen by two men on the pleins near Pugwash River, N. S. It stood erect about six feet in height, covered all over with black hair, shoulders as broad asa heavy man, slender about the leins, and small hips, long arms and legs, with feet about fifteen inches long, and arms reaching half way between the knee and feet, countenance between a monkey and a dog, with the head sloping back like a negro. They had ample time to observe it correctly, for it stood till they were within forty feet of it, when it started to run across an open plain of about two hundred yards into the woods.—Moncton Times. jneoinauniileis <-> «o- <-> +e > ——--—_-- Mtuk Pans, Butter Crocks, Hay Rakes, Machine Oil, the best you can get is at the Family Grocery. —R. K. Bracer,—jl4 CLARK’S DIAMOND DUST POLISH.— Unrivalled fer cleaning Gold, Silver and Nickel ware, Enquire for it. L880, NAMINER. E EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, JUNE NO, 27 i mem ! i | Injuries to the Brain. | SOME REMARKABLE INSTANCES OF RECOVERY. The Indianapolis Journal gives a report of a lecture upen the brain recently de- livered by Dr. W. B. Fletcher in that city, inwhich he mentioned the fellowing in- stances of recovery of persons after severe injury to the brain : Once, about ten years age, I was on Sonth Mississippi street, in this city, and was called upon to attend the injuries of an Irish bey, upon whose head a piece ef stone had fallen. A large rent was made in the skull, through which the brain matter was rapidly oozing. © I took out nearly a tablespoonful of it, and removed a piece of the stone and some fragments of bone. The lad recovered in a few weeks, has gone through. our public schools with credit, and is rather brighter than the average lad. At another time a little giri fell froma third stery window of a biock situated at the eorner of Maryland and Illinois streets. Her skull was completely tlattened, and the brain very much compressed. The skull was pressed back inte proper shape, and the girl recovered. One very remarkable incident occurred inmany years ago in this State. A man, while attending to a blast in a coal mine, ignited the spark from a crow-bar before he was ready, and the bar was thrown threugh his hands. One end of it struck under his chin, and, passing clear threngh the brain, protruded thregh the top of the skull. The bar was removed, and the man lived twelve years in perfect health, mentally and phy- sically. A similar case, which happened in the Eastern States is mentioned in many recentiy written physiologies. Last year an explosion occurred ‘in the Eagle machine works, in this city. A piece of splinter entered the head of a gen- tieman, entering the brain to the depth of 25 inches. The wood was eventually re- moved, and with it some _ brain-matter. The gentleman recovered, and is engaged in business in this city to-day. Numbers of other cases, equal in point of importance and interest to those [ have related have eceurred, and are on record. I could men- tion many more if time permitted. The fact that the brain may sustain such injuries witheut producing death must be explained on the fellowing theory : Ina healthy cendition the brain matter com- pletely fills the skull, and the introduction of a fereign cbject, however small, creates a pressure which is sufficient and sure to cause death unless a corresponding quan- tity of bene or brain-matter escapes by the aperture caused by the entrance of the fereign matter. A bullet enters the brain and an amount of brain-matter equal in size must be permitted to escape, or the pressure is greater than can be withstood. In each of the cases cited such was the case. Even when such an amount of matter escapes, death may ensue, but it dees net necessarily follow. In apoplexy a bleod- vessel in the brain is ruptured, and no aperture existing in the skull, there is no means of exit for the blood thus freed. The pulsation of the heart continues to force blood into the brain, and death results from presssure on the brain. > «=P - Hog Packing in the West. The Cincinnati Price Current, in referring to the movement of hogs and progress of pack- ing, says: Hogs are now moving freely to market, and generally of good qua‘ity. Dur- ing the past week packing operations in the West have been more effective than they were in the correspondin;; time last year, the gain being about 25,00) hogs. The total now reached in the West, sinc@ March 1, is 2,150,000 hogs, against 1.485,000 at same date last year, increase of 665,000. Dating frem November Ist the total packing 1s 9,100,000, against $,965,000 during the same peried in preceding year,an increase this season of 135,- 000 in number, while there is no impertant variation in the aggregate weight. Prices of hogs are being well maintained and are 50¢. to 60 per 100 Ibs. higher than a year ago. The product is meeting with a good domestic consumptive demand, but does not particularly engage the attention ef speculators. ‘The ex- port movement of product continues steadily in excess ef corresponding time last vea . - > « The Chinese Entrance of Kuldja. China has really made good her menace and has occupied by force the region which 2ussia would net, in accordance with her promise, surrender as a right. The mat- ter in dispute between the two countries has been a subject for discussion at all the capitals of Kurope, and opinion is divided ; but all those who regard it impartially are convinced that Russia has acted in bad faith in the first place, and in domineering reliance en her greater nulitary strength in the second. In the meantime word came that Chinese troops were being massed upon the Russian frentiers, while Russia, aware that her enemy had other difficulties on hand, continued centident of maintain- ing her ground or even of getting the bet- ter of China in some other way. If reli- ance is to be placed on the news just re- ceived. China intends to show the world that she will be neither cowed nor cheated by her over-bearing and unscrupulous an- tagonist. " Peo Rocxtin House Greys and Hack at all trains and steamers, te convey passengers to = _House or any other heuse in the city, —Jjii, ot OO CR ERT MR SE A EE ee eaten Ripe: tieerdrre tar Si ca Se 6S ci