- = ———aer own ee re CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1880. - > 2 HAT DEPARTMENT. | © 2 9 =, g — Silk Hats, < ee ‘s Drab Shell Hats, | 2: = oS — cD Felt Hats. “ae Straw Hits, ra oa y | + 2ESs Linen Hats, = S eA) he ef 3 5c Indian Pith Hats. 5 2 St = aS : FOR HOT WEATHER. m 4 5. 0 - The General Stock comprises the Newest and Best Styles in and retail. Cheap for Cash. Charlottetown, slay 31, 1889. ——— Great Summer Resort West india Warehouse, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, LORN EH HOTEL.) 59 bbs. connmeat, ‘ TT 20 bags Nos. ] and 2 NAVY BREAD, FHN\HIS New and Commodious House, situate 30 chests } at North Shore, offers great attraction| 5 half chests | for Tourists who are wanting recreation, sea} 10 puns, Barbados } MOLASSI bathing, fishing, etc. 1} puns. Trinidad | ~ os It is within easy access of the City, being 5 hhds, } Bright Porto Rico SUGAR. only thirteen (13) miles by rail or carriage. 20 bbls. | Charges moderate. For further particulars Boxes and Caddies TOBACCO, apply to the Manager, or address 5 bbls. Split PEAS, +LORNE HOTEL COMPANY, {| ,}) casks Wasting SODA, ; a oz. BROOMS, Charlettetown, 7. = + 2) doz. WASH BUARDS, 20 tins CREAM TARTAR, +) e< . o. oda Illuminating Rock OIL, 3 casks MILK DISHES, 10 dez. Assorted FLOWER POTS, | 460 bbis. Superior Extra FLOUR, Choice Congou TEAS, 7c 4S, June 12, 188i ° ————— LORNE RESTAURANT! —AND— CO ETE aon and cattle, FRUIT DEPOT. | 200 boxes TIN PLATES, | $0 blocks Grain TIN, , 0 pigs LEAD, TPXGIS First-class Establishment (situated | . _. 1} COPPER, on Graftom Street, one door east of | op (2 lush.) GRAIN SACKS. Beales’ corner) is now open for the accommo. | ce ig dation of the public. Everything to be found | Allof which can be sold at lowest current in a first-class Oyster and Refreshment Saivon | *tes. alwayson han. Being conducted by an ¢x- HORACE HASZARD, \ perienced person, satisfaction is guaranteed. | 61 Water Street. Uur up-stairs Lunch Rooms are neatly and; Ch'town, June 3, 1880—2w eod tastefully arranged, and far excel anything of | — the kind in the city, Call and see tor your: (HF WOATH BRITICH & MERCANTILE selves. ‘ | A. McDONALD, reper. = EERE AND LIFE erence — PACIFIC INSURANGE C0., Mutual Insurance U0,, Of Edinburgh and London, June 3, ’80--Im mths Oe — aethine ESTABLISHED IN i809 V7 as is INE ae ome A Ome | Subserib = —— OW aaiere oe aid up Capital, - , 216,666, MARINE. a | Se Transacts every description of Fire, Life ; ? 2 =} > thea « sf ¥ * , Assets 3ist Vec., 1879, - $744,149.00 | and Anuity Business on the most favorable | ter nes. Fire DepARTMENT—Insurances may be ef- cted at the Lowest current rates. Insurance effected on CARGOES -_ ‘“ LEIGHTS, covering $15,000 and upwards— é Lae art no aie Insurances upon Public and Private Build- on first-class risks. : ry . cr . ; ; : Jon | ™85 effected on expecially favorable terms, Certificates issued pay oe e a OL “‘Lossks settled with promptitude and liber- at the oflice of Morton Rost & Oo., ‘ality. Bankers, or in New York. | Lire Department—New and Reduced pre- Risks taken avd rates fixed without being | miums for Dominion of Canada, referred to Bead Office. & W DEBI Os . » . are , , Fe . id Se FENTON T. NEWBERY, | General Agent for P. E. Island. Agent for P. E. Island. | O43..e, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. May 11, 1550. | April 14, ’80—pat her ne sj kca ti eod ame OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TW MILLIONS STERLING, NSURAN OF effected on all kinds of Build. | ings, Merchandise and Produce. Alse, on Vessels on t).e stocks. Special rat +s for isolated resicences, Losses setiled promptly. | GEOLGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island | J. MILLNER., June, 1877-- _ | Ch’town, May 31, 1850—Im eod (‘Valuable Property for Sale, | FO BE SOLD, all that part of Town Lot No. | HAT Freehold Property, with a front of 74, in the first hundred of Town Lots in eighty feet on Pownal Street and eighty- Charlottetown; having a front of 67 feet, Dor- four feet on Sydney Street,the House contain- —QON THE— Northwest Corner of Prince and Kent Streets, nBigen TERMS MODERATE. en ce -- For Sale or to Let. : chester Street, and running back 80 feet, to | ing 16 large rooms and two Kitchens. Can | : gether with the buildings thereon erected.. be turned into one Dwelling by unlocking a : Fer further particular apply to Messrs.| door. Apply on the premises to Hescson & McLxop Charlottetown, ° Sept. 18, 1879. April 26, 1880—t# Ne en. te PENILE Subscriber has now in Store the fol-: lowing well assorted Stock, consisting of | 3 casks Nutritious CONDIMENT for horses ; WY MEW LIVERY STABLE, P, McPhail’s Oid Stand. MRS, BOSWALL | ee eee we OE NE OO a OF nA ate ances “x a amet anes A Ne et NF een THe EXAMINER. a oer mete ae om to CROGERIES. Our Usual Good Stock | GHGICE TEAS In CHESTS, HALEF-CHESTS, and BOXES. FLOUR | The Best Brands in the Market. every department. Wholesale t+ DALVIRS @& CoO. — 1880. Bertha LS EL WAREHOUSE, _ QUEEN SQUARE. ‘Spring and Simmer Goods, | COMPLETE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT, VALUE UNSURPASSED. Ys i} Subscribers have, by the S. 5. ‘* Prince Edward,” ‘Ethel Blanche,” and other ‘later arrivals, completed the LARGEST AND BEST STOCK OF British and Forsign Dry Goods AND GROCERIES | Ever imported by them, which they will dis- i : : ’ pose of at the lowest Cash prices. | Please give us a call before purchasing elsewhere. Ww. & A. BROWN & CO, i June J, 1880. © {j 14 i j - CHOICE SYRUPS. “THE CON- MET your SYRUPS at | SA PECTIONERY,” opposite the Market ae Ll use only the best Sugar and the purest and freshest flavorings in manufactur- ling Syrups. Ne glucose to make it thick. Parties erdering, will please de so early, so | that they may get the Syrups made fresh, and } consequently nicer than when old and state. WM. KENNEDY, June 21, 1880-——pat ne | { REOPENED. ~ have reopened my ICE CREAM SALOON, where | will be glad to meet all my old customers, and as many uew ones as will favor me with a call. Ki CREAM supplied to Parties and Balls. The quality of the Cream will be, as before, the best that can be bought. June 9 4w W. F. CARTER. JUST LANDED i. STR. Miramishi, another Hot of , 10 BARRELS 66 i ; +s ‘ 99 “Montserrat Limetia Champagne, In lots of 1, 2 and 4 dozen, te suit buyers. i W. E. DAWSON & CO. May 31, 1880—tf At the Fish Market. PQYRESH HALIBUT, Codfish and Mackerel; also, Smoked Alewives and Finnan Haddies. Charlottetown, June 3, 1830. a ee ee —— - DORIES. /QOR SALE, Two American DORIES, in thorough repair. Apply at the FISH MARKET. May 20, 1830. UY the DAILY EXAMINER fer the latest news—local aad telegraphic. = Woriesponsente, ae We do net hold- ourselves responsible for the statements or opinions of our correspondents To the Hditor of the Examiner. SIR,--- Quem Deus eult perdere, prius dementat.”’ To see children sporting on the brink of a precipice, or caressing a Cobra di Capello; to think of the degenerate Nobility ot France, about an hundred years age, danc- ing and singing on the very edge of the Crater of a revolutionary Voleano,—their Queen, the unhappy Marie Antoinette, playing on her Harpschicord that splendid Carillon which afterwards was prostituted to the fearful words of ‘* Ca ira!” and was the last Music which she heard on Karth, fer it accompanied her on her ‘ via dolo- rosa”’ to the Guillotine ;—all this is enough to set one thinking very seriously, especial- ly when something analogous to it exists at this moment. <A few dzysagea, | received a letter froyy a dear and early friend of mine, in England. a Gentleman of high standing and counexiens, rich, both im land and money, amiable and intelligent ; but, un- fortunately, a Whig. The following is an extract from his letter :— ‘* We have indeed had a complete change in our Ministry here. 1 own 1 had no idea of such a thorough defeat as the Consery- atives have met with.. [am not given to betting, but I took two to one that the Conservatives had any majority at all. I was sure they wenld lese a good mauy seats. People got tired of a Government after six yea's, and wish for a change. Some ace disappointed and grow lukewarm On the other nand, those who are eut of office are very keen te get in again. The present Government have a very streng majority, avd J dare say we shall jog on somehow ; but the change of feeling was brought abeut by the eleqnence of Glad- stone working on the constituencies, who had all been suflering from hard times, and were dissatisfied. There was no one else to blame, so they turned against the Govern- ment. Gladstone’s chief motive, in my opinion (though probably unknown to him- self) was hatred of Lord Beaconstield, and a belief that no one but himself could properly govern the country. ” My version ef my friend’s words, would be that by talking stoutly while out of office, (and apologizing for the same on entering upon office,) and on the ground of personal hatred, together with & very ex- alted opinion of his own abilities, Mr. Gladstone has succeeded in tossing the destinies of Great Britain and her deépend- encies from hand to hand, like a shuttle- cock. If the crew and passengers of a ship were to elect a captain, to change him for another at their pleasure ; to steer first towards one port, and then towards another and another—what sort of a voyage would the said ship accomplish? What would be the probable fate of her owners, and the by no means improbable fate of the ship, crew and passengers, if in the varieus courses steered, the reckoning should be lost. and the ship strike on some unexpect- ed rock? Or, if a leak were to be discey- ered ouly when the ship was going down, and *‘ universal suffrage’ end in universal suifering / There is frequently great ‘ruth and true Prophecy in Poetry. In Gray’s Ode to Eton College are Jines that may well be applied to the wealth and aristocracy of England and Scotland at this moment :-- ‘* Alas! Regardless of their doom The little victims play ! No sense have they of ills to come Nor cares beyond to-day : Yet see. bow all around them wait, The Ministers of human fate, And black Misfortune’s baleful train ! Ah! show them where, in ambush stand, To seize their prey,the murderous band ! 5 Akh! Tell them they are men ! and again ; ‘¢ Ambition this shall tempt to rise, Then whirl the wretch from high, To bitter scorn a sacrifice, And grinning Infamy.” But, after all, Gray concludes with:-, “Yet, Ah! Why should they know their fate, Since sorrow never comes toe late. , And happiness too swiftly flies ! Thought would destroy their paradise. No more !—Where ignorance 1s bliss, Tis folly to be wise.” [ am, sir, your obeadt. servant, View Diromnvit Nan Ord, June 18th, 1880. ee Personal. tev. Canon Cochran, D. D., one of Nova Scotia’s most eminent sons, died recently. Dr. Cochran was 82 years of age, and had been an active minister of the Establshed Church for 56 years, 28 years of which he was recter of the church at Lunenburg, and 28 in charge of Salem and Trinity Churches in this city. It is said the purpose of Mon. John O’Connoer’s visit to Manitoba isto make certain arrangements in connectien with ‘!the postal service of Manitoba and the Northwest Territories. George Cowan, one of the tenant far- mers’ delegates from Scotland who visited this Country last year, has purchased ‘© Prairie Dell Farm,’ Manitoba, which comprises 800 acres. Mr. Cowan is ex- pected there by the end of July to take possession. — NO, 29 Jottings from the O!d Country. An Awkwarp Position.—Very ugly rumors, as the new magazine, the Statesman, announces, are abroad in India concerning the jewels and plate, valued at about $400, 000 which are property of the Marharajah of Mysore. During the Prince's minority these articles have been. or have been sup- posed to bp, in the custody of our Indian officials The Prince will come of agea few months hence, and will then have a clain to his hereditary treasures ; but no one knows where they are. An Iuurrenatirve Paracrarn.—Two teetotallers took the trouble to teach three tailors to talk Tamil.* The tailers,through taciturn, turned towards their teachers to tell them that talking Tamil tried their temper terribly. The teetotallers told the tailors that talking to their teachers tempt- ed them to teach them trigonometry. Those terrificd tailors then tremblingly tried to talk the Tamil tongue. Thinking that this tortured them, the teetotallers took the tailors to tewn to take tea. The tailors, thankiny them, treated them to tickets to the Tottenham ‘Theatre. The tailors tell the tale that those two temperate teetotal- lers then teok toddy together. “ **Famil,” a dialect spoken by the natives of Southern India. Servants and Masrers iN Hica Lire. —Last week I gave a “ scene from London low life,” this week I give you the follow- ing, clipped from the ‘‘ Gentleman’s Mag- azine :” There has been much correspondence of late of thegrievance sort concerning menser- vants and maidservants. It is trite, indeed, to remark that there are faults on both sides, i. e , on that of the masterssnd mis- tresses, as well as on that of their depend- ants ;-+but how great and glaring they some- times are is scarcely creditable. Never- theless, the following examples can be vouched for, A lady ef fashion, Lady A , was show- ing a friend of here, Mrs. B——-, the other day, a necklace of gold and turquoises, con- cerning which she requested her opinion. ‘*! think it is very pretty,” said Mrs. B-——-; ‘‘is it fer a marriage present ?’ ‘* A marriage present!” replied the other with some contempt ; ‘‘ it is not quite good enough for that; why, it only cost me fifteen pounds. I boeught it fer my maid, Julia, who is going to an upper-servants’ party at the Duke of C——’s to-night. I have got her a claret velvet dress which becomes her admirably, and with the necklace I think she will be—-what it is my wish she always should be--the best dressed maid in the reom.” Mrs. B—— was too wise a woman to suggest that velvet dresses and tur- quoise necklaces were net perhaps the most judicious gifts that could be bestowed upon a lady’s maid; but, upon a subsequent oc- casion, happening to meet Julia, she ex- pressed a hope that she had enjoyed her evening at the Duke’s. ‘‘Yes ma'am, it was beautiful, and every- body was so polite. Indeed, Ive always found as the ‘igh-born servants is allus the best mannered,” That use of the term ‘‘ high-born ” ina transferable sense is surely very pretty ! Again, an old bachelor baronet, Sir W. D~--, whse name has been long associated with London society, went up to Scotland in August last te shoet with the Earl of C——. On the second morning after his arrival, however, he announced his inten- tion of returning to town. ‘‘Goed heavens!” said his host ; ‘* why, you promised me to stay a month! Have you had bad news !” ‘“‘ No,” stammered the old buck, * it’s not exactly that; it’s semething that has happened here, only I’d rather not tell you, : ‘*Pray tell me,” said the Earl ; “it will not distress me, whatever it is, one-half so much as your leaving in this way without my knowing why you re going.” ** Well, the fact is it's my Charles. You know my Charles /~the mest invalable of servants, and absolutely indispensable to me everywhere. | conld not live a day without him.” ‘* Well, what of your Charles? What on earth can he have te do with your leay- ing us /” ‘* Why, this : you see, he cemplains—I’m very sorry, and | know it’s very wrong of me to have spoilt him se ; but the thing is done—he complains that in your steward’s room there is no champagne, and he can- not live without his champagne.” “Then let him die!” cried the Earl ir- ascibly, *‘ let him die and be —-—~ !” ‘* Just so,” interrupted Sir William just in time, ‘‘ that is how it ovght to be, of course ; | knew you wouldn’t give way in the matter, upon principle ; no more wall Charles ; so I’ve got to go.” Musicat.~ A. concert was given by Messrs. Saint-Saens and Ovide Musin at the Seeinway Hall, on Tuesday afternoon, was rendered interesting by the perform- ance of a sonata for piano and violin by M. G. Faure, a young French composer of promise. The work is not only musicianly, but the ideas are pleasing, and the harmen- ies distinguished by a certain wild and pathetic feeling quite individual in its way. The French element prevailed largely among the audience, and it was curious to note the difference in the general demean- our to that which prevails when the Ger- mans are in the ascendant. Then nota sound is heard until the close of the move- ment. Here applause and braves breke forth at odd times, apparently without any ‘| +) } q = ‘ is a AON ta is hs =