aft, i eee 5 o2:k aero ee eee ee ead ¢ oe ae Wa Re P “ i i?) pene eG aT ms eer re ry: eee . » Che Daily Exaniiner SEPTEMBER 2% 1854. Editorial Notes. —The Toronto Globe is ull prophesy- ing evil concerning the Canadian Pacific Railway—millions are going to be sunk every year in operating it! One would have thought the Globe would be tired by this time of making false predictions ——_—— ——— ee Ba PLEASE IO ED 7H DAILS Fearful sccident. \ LITILE CHILD MA*GLED BY A REAVING MACHINE, \ fearful Reaper accident occurred at South Rustico on Saterdsy. A little child, three years old, the oniy danghter of Leon Gallant, while playing ina field of wheat which her father was reaping, became canght im the reaping machive which ised ovir her boly, severing completely ithe arm near the shoulder joint and mang- _ ling the leg in such a dreadiul manner taat \it had to be ampulated below the knees, | besides making several very severe gashes 1 al : aa : g —The Patriot urges that the control on the body. The father, having his atten- of the Police be relegated to the City Counci!. The police are—to put it mildly—no better than they should be | (he management of an independent | | yards | child. , under licial.but until the electors of Charlotte town awake toa sense of their duties ind responsibilities,{it would be arrant| folly to expect an improvement in the foree as a result of the proposed change. for, —The Ottawa Sun says: “It is stated | tion directed to another part of the tield : ‘ ; |where he had ‘seen his children playing a little while before,did notfhecome aware of the accident until he had gone several and heard the cries of the mangled Dr. Gallant was called in, and found the child so weak that be did expect it would rally, Last evening, however, it recovered somewhat from the shock; and Dr. Conroy of this this city was sent The doctors, after amputating the leg, and dressing the weunds, did every- at, as a result of their visit to Wash-| thing in their power to allay the sufferings ston, the printing commissioners will | at once report to the government, r commeading that some steps be taken with a view of ultimately establishing a | parliamentary printing bureau here. Tn | all likelihood the government will supply | the plant and all other material and afterwards let the contract for doing the work.” ~~ The British trade returns supply the following figures, showing the exports | tu Canada for the eight months ending August, 1884, compared with the corres- pounding eight months of last year : } EXPORTS T) CANADA. Animals—Horses. £54,988 £58,564 Articles of Food and Drink— Salt, rock ani white . 50,951 42,416 ES: 36,084 = - 24,695 Sugar... . 7 28,513 49,029 Raw Materials—Wool. .. 17,540 9,083 Articles wholly and partly manufactured— Cotton Piece Goods. . . 449,333 409,290 Linen Piece Goods. . . 128,003 123,593 Silk, Broadstuffs......... 91,902 16,596 Silk, Ribbons. . a 9,170 Silk, Articles partly of.... 141,053 74,242 Woolen Fabrics. ..-.- 641,448 569,971 | Worsted Fabrics........ 259,883 379,804 Carpets.... teocesenes SEGRE SGeee Hardware and Cutlery... 132,915 90,569 Iron— Pig 131,252 70,471 BN Re i udualcan 161,472 90,303 OE iuiwicks case fh 459,833 211,891 Hoops, Sheets, &c.. 85,840 87,750 Tin Pilates, . 169,633 178,305 Cast, Wrought, &..... Machinery — Steam Kngines....... Other Descriptions Apparel, &¢.— Apparel and Slops. Haberdashery. 132,818 103,725 | 37,146 18,278 103,872 155,248 157,! 659,408 534,085 Earthen and China Ware 73,022 61,716 Oily MOMs odin ne 65,852 38,245 a 27,663 27,242 ee £4,720,389 £3,644, 266 —The Rev. Allan Simpson's sermon on “the color line in schools,” is going the grounds of the press. Mr. Simpson laid down and elaborated at length four reasons why no color line should exist in Halifax schools. 1. The existence of the color line con- travenes the very spirit and genius of our common school law. 2: The color line contravenes spirit of our institutions generally. 3. [thas no basis at all in our physical or mental construction. ’ 1. The existence of a color live in our public schools directly contravenes the spirit of our. most holy religion. the In Mr. Simpson’s opivion, the common school law is designed to place the benefits of education within the reach of every child in the land, what- ever the social conditions of its parents or the peculiarities of its race or color. We are, he says, pleased with our school law, proud of it, sometimes boast of it. Only one clause is wanting to make it perfect—compulsory attendance. In the sight of the Lord all children are If we are going to draw a hard aud fast color line, we must cease boast- nz of our free schools. White and icolored alike pay taxes. equal, Eventne Rest. By J. L. Pratt. Young Folks’ Library. Hoston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price 25 cents. A simple, quiet story, whose character is adequately ex- pressed by the title. Evening Rest is the name given toa little hamlet in the Blue Ridge region of Pennsylvania, remarkable for the beauty of its surroundings and the lovely character of its people. Thitber goes a young man from the East to visit an uncle whom he has never before seen, and his experiences during the stay make up the contents of the book. One incident of the story is strongly dramatic in charac- ter. A family party, one of the members being the young man referred to, visit a coal mine, While passing through one of the nar- row passages the guide fires a pistol to show the effects of the echo. The concussion of the air starts a loose part of the roof over- head and a portion falls in. The little company is shut up in the earth with little chance of ever seeing the light again. They have lights, however, and stumble across some tools, and by dint of many hours’ hard labor they are at length able to com- municate with their friends outside, who are at able to rescue them. The author, throughout the story, dwells much upon the sweet and tender influences of home. In Evening Rest he creates an ideal household and commuuity, and strives to show how much they have to do with the formation of character. last _-_-. The Emperor William received a great popelar ovation on his return from the autumn manceuvres and was tendered elaborate banquets at Muenster and other cities on his way to Berlin. — ¢ Count Herbert Von Bismarck has been decorated with the order of the Red Eagle, an unusual distinction for so young a dip- Jomat. ea el ae ee of the unfortunate child; and to day, a neighbcr informs us, that it is doing very well. —~— _—ee -- Fishing Notes from Souris. Matthew, McLean & Co’s new fishing schooner, General Gordon, made a big haul of mackerel the very tirst day out, She came into port here to fix her seine which was slightly torn. The crew were jubilant over their unusual good luck, and com- mend their ‘‘seine master” in the strongest terms. ‘This deserving individual is Mr. McCormack, of lobster can fame, who hes large experience in the business. He was for several years seine-master out of Cape Ann, and this summer out of Bull Creek. Although somewhat old and weather- beaten, still his eye is as quick and keen as any tar that plows over the salty billows, and he can scrutinize a school of mackerel at | amile’s distance. “If ther wind don't chop ‘round to the nor’ard,” he said the day the vessel sailed, ‘‘and east’ard, we'll get three or four hundred barrels this tide, I reckon. I've been ranging the barrings in my head for the last ten minutes, and | guess I’ve got them all right now; there's a leetle spot of ground that all the green ‘orns as come’s here don’t know about, and I’m goin’ to chuck my killock plump down onter it, and if we don’t strike ‘em, they hain’t on the ledges that’s all, mind I'm telling yer. So keeper head on, an’ Tl do der takin’ in.” Captain Hardy came in here, having a full trip. He filled up off East Point. The schooner Isobel, of this port, got her seine badly torn, and had to putin here to get it repaired. The crew say they lost a big haul when it was torn. It appears they had the seine pursed up, when the schooner Torrain sailed so close them, aud, having some kind of hook towing after, caught the seine, tearing it, and losing the fine haul of tish. None were on deck of the Torrain except the helmsman, who accidentally came in such close proximity to the Isobel’s seine-boat. LANCASTER JR. Sept. 26, 1884. __ _—_——o-+- The Canada Life Company. Assurance As specially interested in the success of purely home enterprises, we feel more than a passing gratification in directing attention to the 37th annual report of the Canada Life Assurance Company. The new business offered, as appears, was about $5,000,000, some of which not being up to the com- pany’s high standard, was declined, the amouut issued and completed considerably exceeded $4,000,000, yielding a new pre- mium income of $129,187, while the grand total in force has increased to $52,052,126 which about equals the combined amount credited the three companies reporting the next largest sums to government, and is about a fourth of the entire life business in force in the Dominion. The income of the year shows a handsome in- crease, being $1,209,932, while the expendi- ture for all purposes was only $379,377, thus adding $664,708 to the assets, which, at 30th April, aggregated $6,282,341, or, including capital, over $7,000,000. The low death-rate, always a notable feature in this company’s reports, is especially strik- ing, calling for only $233,864, or about 55 per cent. of the amount estimated and pro- vided for, \iz.; £437,805, a clear indication of the skill and disecvimination exercised in the selection of risks. It is pleasing to ob- serve in the liberal earnings of the company that the prudent forethought of its managers in selecting investments with special regard to permanent safety and revenue, is bearing ita legitimate fiuit, the rate of imterest ob- tained averaging from 6 per cent. Tho ad- mitted axiom, that a judicious selection of risks, safe and remunerative investments and moderate expenses, infallibly combine the highest security with the greatest economy to the insured, finds its highest illustration in the records of this tested old Cunadian compapy. Its $7,000,000 of assets are clearly so much saved capital to Canada, as compared with companies 1n- vesting abroad, and it is obviously the in- terest of our citizens to support an institu- tion whose success is identical with their own. —ee 2 -— -——___ -—-— Foreign Trade of Great Britain. The annual statement of the trade of the United Kingdom, taken from the Lon- don Keonomist, gives the total value of the foreign trade of that country for 1883 as £752,358,649, against £719,630,522 in 1882, and £694,105,264 in 1851. The total imports iv 1883 amounted to £426, 891,579, as compared with £413,019,608 in 1882 The total exports in 1883 amounted to £305,437,000, as against £306,660,714 in 1882. The imports into Great Britain of goods from India amounted to £24,698,008 in 1879, and in 1883 had increased to £38,882,000. The exports to Lndia increased from £22,7 15,000 in 1879 to £33,383,000. Next to India in expansion of trade come the colonies of Australasia, whose imports into Great Britain in 1883 amounted to £25,956,000. The British exports into those colonies amuonted in 1883 to £26,839,000. The imports from Canada in 1883 amounted to £10,445,000, and the seposts to this country amounted to £10,110,000. HX A. MIN Hk, SEHPTE A Procession of Icebergs. —_—-— PAST NEWFOUNDLAND OUT MOVES GRANDLY INTO THE DEEP 4 MAGNIFICENT PANO- RAMA, ——- Correspondence of Montreal Gazette. Sr. Joun’s, N’tld., Sept. 17.—During the last week we have witnessed a most un- usual phenomenon at this season of the year. A long procession of icebergs has been passing our shores, slowly pursuing their southern march on the bosom of Arctic enrrent; and we have not yet seen the last of these glittering wanderers of the deep. Frequently sixty or seventy were visible at the same time from the top of Sivnal Hill. They are of all shapes and sizes— some lofiy and turreted, ame dome-shaped or flat; some _hav« ing a veries of beautiful crags and pinnacles. A few were of immense size — low, flat islands of ice. I saw one at the entrance of Conception Bay, near Bacca- lien Island, which was not less than two miles ia length. Another, in the same neighborhood, was estimated to be over three-quarters of a mile. One peculiarity of them was that they appeared to follow each other as if arranged in a single line of march. but at irregular distances. This is accounted for by the supposition that the bulk of them are fragments <f an enor- mous ice mass which was seen on the Labrador coast some time ago. If the accounts of two captains who were close to it can be relied on, this was THE LARGEST ICEBERG EVER SEEN in northern latitudes. One of the captains estimated it to be fifteen miles in length and three or four in breadth ; the other made it twenty miles. Allowing a margin for the excited imagination of these worthy skippers, this must have been an astonish- ing island of ice. Asitdid not make its appearance off our shores in its full dimen- sions the great probability is that it grounded on some rocky ledge. By the action of the summer sun its joints had become loosened; and by the rising and falling tides and the force of the waves, as it hung on the ledge, great fragments were snapped off, and falling, one by one, with sullen plunge into the waves, floated off as icebergs, thus in part creating the long, ghostly procession which has been filing along our shores for the last ten days. The one I saw, two miles in length, may have been the ramnent that was left after the fragments had floated off. All of the im- mense group, however, could not jave had the same origin. ORIGIN OF ICE-ISLANDS. Most of the icebergs are the product of the glaciers which glide slowly down the gorges of the Greenland Mountains. The fringes of these ice rivers terminate in the ocean, and from them the icebergs are broken off and floated by the great Arctic current southward till they reach the waters of the Gulf Stream, in which they are dis- solved. The great ice-islands, however, are not generated by the glaciers, but by the accumulation of coast ice. In the Arctic regions the intense cold freezes the sea, and when this occurs along the base of a lofty cliff the sheet of ice is prevented from adhering to the land by the rise and fall of the tide. Meantime, as it continues on the shore at the foot of the precipice, snow from the land is blown upon it in heavy masses, causing the ice to sink slowly. This snow is gradually converted into ice by partial liquefaction and recongelation; and if the water be deep, a huge island of ice, many miles in length and of great thickness, is thus formed during the long arctic winter. When the ice loosens in summer an off-shore wind blows it out to sea and it sets out on its long voyage to the Gulf Stream. If strongly built, one of these may hold together, like the one referred to, till it reaches our shorea, or by collision with other floating masses it may be broken up into numerous fragments. These low, flat ice-masses are by far the MOST DANGEROUS TO NAVIGATION, asin thick weather they are not discern- ible at any great distance. Their immense bulk may be imagined when we remember that the visible portion is only one-ninth part of the whole; so that if one be seen, as is frequently the case, one hundred feet above the surface of the sea, its lowest por- tion may be eight hundred feet below the waves. But icebergs have been seen rising 300 feet above the sea, and these, in their submarine portion sank to the maximum depth, must have reached the enormous iotal height of 2,700 feet; that is, rather higher than the Cheviot Hills in Scotland. These, however, are the true icebergs, the off spring of the glaciers, ‘‘The oldest in- habitant” does not remember anything ap- proaching to the ice phenomena of this year. In ordinary years, a few icebergs are seen after the lstof August. But now we have a huge fleet of them sailing past in the middle of September and chilling our atmosphere. Since the beginning of February a stream of icebergs and floes has been passing at intervals. Some great ice movement must have occurred in the Arc- tic regions of an unusual character to cause such an abnormal disgergement, and call into existence the vast ice-argosies of the last seven months. Asa consequence, the supply of the next few years may be com- paratively small, and we may have but few of these mighty wnaderers of the deep, the Arctie warehouses being temporarily exe hausved. F. Baron Munchausen Again. HIS TIME HE VISITS MANITOBA. A writer in All the Year Rownd tells some extraordinary stories of winter life in Manitoba. Here are specimens: ‘When I have been ironing the top of a pocket-handkerchief, the lower part would freez> on the table, which was close by a roaring woor-iire.” “LT was surprised when I first found the mustard frecz: in my mustard-pot, which stood a foot from tho kitchen stove-pipe, aud two feet above the stove, where there was a blazing fire all day and every day through the winter.” ‘‘Occasionally, when one is frozen and far from help, the part frozen, if an extrem- ity, willsvap off Last week a man living about thirty miles from us was told that his ear was frozen ; he put up his hand to feel, and the ear dropped off in his hand.” ‘This is worth¥ of the traveller who de- scribed the Manitoba year as consisting of ten months of winter and two months’ bad sleighiag is July and August. --: ae +s 6 __A Brockton father bas been sent to gaol for six months for beating his child. " ene tO New Brush-Making Machine. W ATC Ld ES | | -— s The Halifax Chronicle says that ‘L_tters patent for the United States have been issued to Mr. Lawson Fenerty, the well | known manufacturer and inventor of this city, for a labor-saving machine that pro- mises eventually to revolationize — the important industry in which it is to be used—the manufacture of all that class of b-ushes, clothes, scrubbing, stove, shee, &e., made by inserting — tute of | bristle or fibre iu suitable bachs | and securing by wire or cement. It) has been left for a Haligonian to be abso- lutely the first to devise a brush-making machine that will make a brush outright, | At leasi,the records of the principal patent offices in the world contain 1o bing even approximating te this invention, either in capacity, elements, or details. The capacity of the mechine 1s such that, by the applicat 01 of power, and with one attendant, a girl, and in one operation, a brush is completed, with the exceptions of shaping the back and putting on the handle, superseding the present fifteen operations by hand and machinery, and doing the work of eight hands, there being no veneers to glue on, as the back is solid, All of the operations are accurate and uniform, as the movements are exactly adjustable and repeat automatically. The machine is being patented in all parts of the world.” A The American papers are treating, with great interest, the meeting which is to Me ER | _ es nae EL The Waltham and Flgin Watch manufac- turers having greatly reduced ths prices of the different grades of Watches made by them, the subscriber will sell his large stock of WALTHAM & BAGIN WATCHES | | \ | | | | at an immense reduction on former prices. Ali Watches sold are warranted to px: rform well. A handsome Gold Plated Guard arcom- panies each Vi atch. Ww. WwW. WELLNER, Watch Maker & Jeweller. Ch’town, Sept 26, ’3+—li wk PLUMS, PLUMS. 81 Crates Kova Seetia Plums, Just Received and for Sale by GEORGE R. STRONG, J. D. McLeod's Block. Sept. 25, ’S5— commence at Washington on Wednesday next to endeavor to establish a common meridian, A great many European nations are to be represented, and the prospect is good that the meridian of Greenwich will be adopted. ‘This is not, perhaps, the best meridian to select for the general use of the world, but as it is now in very extensive use by the majority of those who do the marine work of the world, there would be less inconvenience by ¢electing it than by selecting any cther. It is thought pro- bable that if France accepts the English meridian, Great Britain may compromise by adopting ihe French system of weighing and measuring. Indecd, there are some American papers sanguine enough to be- lieve that England will yet adopt the deci- mal coinage system. pf. (SLND BAILWAY King's County Exhibition S~ecia] Passenger train will leave Char- lottetown for Georgetown at 8 35 a. m.,, on Wednesday, October Ist, returning same evening, carrying passengers to and from the Kiug’s County Exhibition at one first class tare tor the double journey. This train will stop at all Telegraph Stations going and re- turning. JAMES CUOLEWVAN, Supt. Railway Office, Ch'town, Sept, 23, 1884 - eed da pa’ eod _— a Horsford’s Acid Phosphate ADVANTAGEOUS IN DYSPEPSIA, De. G. V. Dorsty Piqua, Ohio, says : have used it in dyspepsia with very marked benefit. If th:re is d ficiercy of acid in the stomach, nothing affords more relief, while the action on the nervous system is decidedly beneficial.” Apples, Plums, &¢. Y Auction, ‘To-morrow, TUESDAY, Sept. 30th., at 10.30 o'clock, in front of my Auction Room APPLES, oG Hrlis. in Gravensteins and other Choice Varieties. —aA LSO— A Few Boxes Plums. A. McNEILI, Auctioneer. Ch’town, Sept. 29, 1884. CHALLENCE. | SEE in Tae Examiner Mr, Lane’s advert- isement, He has the n.ost perfect l’otato Digger ever offered to the public. Mr, Lane must have improved his ‘“’ommon Sense” a wonderful sight since the digger matches last fall, at Captain Aylward’s, Southport ; Josiah Lane’s, Vernon River, where 1 came off best. I will dig Mr. Lane's ‘‘Common Sense,” with all his improvements, say half-a-day for trial, at or near Vernon River, aud give an opportunity to any other digger. To THE Pusiic :—I citer for Sale Potato Diggers, with two sets of beaters—wooden and iron—-the only remedy for tops. Also, Driving Wheels witch will not slip, and other improvements which gives every satisfaction, These Potato Diggers cin be seen at J. R. Strong’s, Charlottetown ; McKinnon & Mce- Lean’s Starch Fac ory, Peake’s Station, and at the Subscriber's premises, Lot 4%, P. E. Island. J..H. McKENZIE. Sept. 29, 2i wky Ra —~ inne Queen's County kille Asscclation. HE Annual ined ‘Sadsie of this Avsoci- ation will open at Kensington Range on Wednesday next, October Ist,at 8a. m. The following is the order of competition :— Nursery Match--20) yds.—5 Rounds. Ist Match—200& 400 yds.—5 = do 2nd Match—5v0 & 600 yds.—7 do. The Dominion Rifle Association Medal will be awarded to the « mpetitor making the highest agzregate in the Ist and 9nd Matches Atiention is called to the order of Council by which members shal) be liable to be dis- qualified from participating in the Prize List if appearing on the Range or seen parading the streets of Charlottetown in part uniform, By order, J. A. LONGWORTH, Secretary. Ch’town, Sept. 27, ’x4 —3i For St. John’s, fewfoundland. STEAMSHIP sé . 5 BON VISTA,’ dne here on or about 30th ShPTOMBER, will carry freight ; also Cattle aad Sheep on deck for the above port. For Freight or passage app'y to PEAKE BRUS. & C0., AGENTS. } ss] PE ISUAD BAiLiAt, Prince County Exhibition Special Passenger Train will leave Char- lottetowy for Summers'de at 8.15 a. m, on Thursdsy, 2od October, returning same evening, catrying passengers to and from the Prince County Exhibition at one first-class fare for the double journey, This train will stop at all Telegraph Stations going and re- turning. JAMES COLEMAN, Superiutendent. tuilwa: Office, Ch’town, Sept. 23, 1834—eod da pat eod FOR SALE. 40,000 First-class Brick in Lots to Suit Purchasers McKENNON & McLEAN. Sept 20, ’$4.—2wk FOR SALE. — HAT Farm, 3 miles from Charlottetown, consisting of 34 acres, on the North River Road and lately in possession of the Subscriber. Apply to WM. PICKARD, East Royalty. Sept. 20, 64—eod 1 mo Damaged Flour. fcw barrels Flour, slightly damaged, for sa'e at a bargain. HORACE HASZARD. Ch’towna, Sept. 20. ’84—1w eod. NEW ALL GOODS, elected by Mr. Stewart, —IN THE— ENGLISH MARKETS, just arrivec per S. S, Australia and Phoenician, and NOW OPENING —AT THE— LONDON HOUSE. Sept. 11, 1884. FA? HERRING FOR SALE, J UsT received a quantity of Good Fat Newfoundland Herring. For sale cheap in barrels and haif barrels A. HORNE & COU, Upper Queen 8t, ChL’town, Sept 18, *R4. 29. 1824. 'didst)s for the Higher wed HOUSE TO LET. ’E° HL Subseriber offers to let a most desir- able two-story House, on Fitzroy Street, neatly opposite the residence of William Brown, Esq. It contains twelye roome, be- sides kitchen, and has been paper+d anew and painted inaide and outside this summer, | There is iso a Stable, Coach-house and | Garden atiached. DONALD FERGUSON. July 7, 1886 Ch’town, Sept. 26 —-3i Oliice and War-housa, Water Straat, ave Worey Vheef | way 3 Civil Service Entrance Examinatig;: °g°HE Prelimioary, or Lower Grate ex my. ation, will commence ov Tucrdey |. lith November next, aud the QW alifyn zg : ‘ir Higher Grade, on Weds soy ihe bbb, Car. Lut pass the Lowe: Grade examination, The «xamipations will be bh lid at the places at which they were he'd in May laet, Applications for admission mest be made tothe audersigned not later than the 16th O. tober, P. LaSU+.UR, Commissioner and Secretary to Board, Ottawa, 12th Sept, 1#84, Sept 22, '’s4. cc tena FLOUR. FLOUR, 125 bris. CHOICE PATENT, 375 bris. SUPERIOR EXTRA, prompt delivery at Charlottetown or Summerside 20 bris. No. 1 PILOT BREAD, 10 bris. THid ia...) FOR SALH BY (J. A. CHIPMAN & CO,, Corner Pownal and Water Streets, Ch’town, Sep 5. for FOR SALE. 2,000 bushels Fishery Salt. i. ©. OWEN, Ch'town, Aug. 18—mo we fr WANZER Sewing Machines. THESE CELEBRATED MACHINES RESEIVED nidticST AWARDS At all the leading Exhibitions of the - World, Only Gold Medal in Canada, I5s3. J. F. WILLIS & CO.,, Sole aud only authorized Agents for P. E, L jy3v MUNN & CO., of the SCTENTIFIC AMERICAN o tinze to act as Solicitors for Patents, Cav Marks, Copyrights, for the United States, Engiand, Germany, ete. Patents sent free. Thirty-seven years’ experience, Patents obtained through MUNN & CO. are noticed in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, the largest, best, and most widely circulated scientific paper. $3.20 a year, Weekly. Splendid encravings and _ interesting tn. ormation. Specimen copy of the Scleutific Amere ican sent free. Acdress MUNN & CO., SCIENTIFIO AMERICAN Office, 2i1 Broadway, New York, BA RGATS. AM selling the b«liuee of iny Furnitare saved trom tie te of tip youl, etd, D. McLeod’ corner, Queen direct, at e reduction of from tweuty-five to fills per ent. Dolow usu! prices ron ot Der ey 4 we Goma %, & (NURSCLIBE for tue WEEKLY FXAMNI- s Ni. che Chospeat ar | hewereper quite wt .. : Pa tngn * ' Wards, LOST, FOUND, de. f WO LET.—A oun en Derchesten street, with seven rooms and Stable, Apply to G. C Werthy. {sep29 3i py D--On Queen Street, on Fnday morning the 26:h inst. a Brown Silk Umbrella. The owner can have the same by payiag for this advertisement. Apply at the EXAMINER OFFICE, (se 27 6: ‘y O LET—A House ccntainirg four or tive reoms Apply toJames \cl Bc bv, Spring Park Road 'se 24 OST—On Sunday evening last between Prince Street and the Mount Edward Koad, a Socket of a Carriage Lantern. Any person finding, please leave at Win. Dodd's, (Queen St. (se 23 ene | igre rooms unfurnished near centre of city with board for two (man and wife.) Address, stating terms and loca- wen, 2. 2... 0. bon, BE. {iw v - - —_—_—_— A; ANTED-—A girl to do geveral house work in a family of two, Inquire at he Examiner Orrice, (se 22 ‘gO LET—The Double Dwelling House om Prince Street at present occupied by Mrs. John Dorsey and Mrs, LePage, each contain- ing eight rooms, Apply ou the premises. {se 22 NULL LINE of MeCormick’s celebrated BISCUITS AND CONFECTIONERY, at R. K, Brace’s fseplO 3a —i JOR SALE —A New Schooner ef about 15 tons. Apply at this «office. [sep 5, $4 CLERK with some experience in a Gro- cery Store will fiud employment by addressing P. U. Box Bi. {spl y ’ i will geve exciusive sale at aod pear Charlettetown, of our Evtire heat Fleur, to a dealer who will push it Covered by patent. Kasil sold. We guarantee 100 lbs, more bread to the burrel then any other flour. —PRANKLIN Mi Ls Co, 38 Clark Street, Chiceyo, 11. aug? V1 RL WANTED immediately, to do gen Wi eral housework in a small family. Good wages. Apply to Mrs John A. Moore, Hills- fang?l borovngh Square, g 0 Lut. —Shop and Teaement on Upper Qucen Strect, at present occupied by Mirs McLean, Apply to J, MoGtit, aug2—pat, 7 ENT MILLS and other choice brands Xv iamily Fiour for sale by Uenry Beer