NO A NN ae, AIR. ech 8, ita gn St i eg WS Wis Sas GP a eS a Ce a — Tue DAaILy KX AMINER. OCTOBER 19. 1981. de Fest Churnirg. Tx time has been when it was thought a mieritto eat fast. The rebuke that Abernethy gave to The Honorable Alden Gobble, Secretary of the American Le- gation at the Court of St. James, is, per- haps, veeded by many who believe it economy to save time in eating. Gobble} was a dyspeptic. Abernethy told him he would soon get rid of his dyspepsia, | for in the company he was now thrown) he would have to like eat a Christian. | Upon being contradicted,the old eccentric aroused, gave his opivion, and, with characteristic roughness: ‘“‘I never saw a Yankee that didn’t boli his food whole like a boa-constrictor. How can you expect to digest food that that you never take the trouble to dissect nor time to masticate? It’s no wonder you lese| your teeth, for you never use them; nor your digestion, for you overload it; nor yo ir saliva, for you expend it upon the; carpets. You Yankees load your stom- | achs as a Devonshire man does his cart | —as fast as be car pitch it with a fork, and as full as it can hold, and drive off. Then you complair that | jthat the churn which the more freely upon wrong principles. Where it has been time of charning long, 18 has “usually been because the churn used has not been perfected to the highest degree possible, although the principles upon which it was worked were right ones in the main. For instance two churns may be constructed generally upon correct principles, and alike so far as the motion of the cream is affected, and differ in the one respect of air circulation. Other things being equal, it cannot be doubted admits the fresh air, and allows the gas geverated by motion the mere readily to escape, will give the same quality of butter in a shorter time. A good rule then is this: Do not churn too quickly, but aim to bring the butter as soen as it will come consistent with well-known principles of butter- making. The Attack on the Land ‘Office. We are informed, and we believe, that Mr. Malcolm McLeod, Q. C., did not make use of the language with reference to the affairs of the Land Office which the Summerside Journal reports that he made, and which the Patriot reproduced. It is to be noted that the case in which Mr. McLeod was employed against the Land Office, grew out of an act which was done before the present Commission- THE DAILY considered necessary to have the} —- “ont ns REE co cca did a : a such a load is ‘too heavy for you!” | oe of Crown Lands took office; so it is And so it is with churning. It was once} ».¢ Jikely that Mr, McLeod would haye thought an object to churp fast ° but that i eoue out of his way to denounee the by. 7 ; time too Prue, there are} vtairs of the Land Office as they now is gone farmers yet who ve da little advice from | some adi icultural Doctor Abernethy. On | looking at a charn their first enquiry will | be: ** tow long does faKe TO bring the Be ey al few ihe day ‘ sree m churning, by thrashiag t n, bas gone the way of five mili<| er o> i the ft od. The ) rm will have nothing to with a churn that is constructed 3 i i vi to ¢ f work. Ti ey de not appreciate the ingenuity of giving ' | pp jances Litil il! nof churning at the pense of a product. What ti better appreciate now is something simp'’e as ssible in constrnction, and cousiructed I i ly wi h a view to do good work. On the other hand they re- quire that a churn do its work in a rea- sonable time, as now understood, and tha: what it loses in the once supposed merit of speedy churnicg, be made up by | the always undoubted merit of easy work-| ing. Mr. Flint quotes the practice of a suc- | cessful New York dairyman who churns | rom ene hour to one and a half. This| n a book published twenty years | “ince. Even at that time, he remarks, | the time of churning is by no means an}! unimportant matter.. Various contriv- | ances have been made to shortea this| operation ; but the opinions of the best | aud most successful dairymen coucar that | it cannot be too much hastened without in- jury to the fine quality and consistency of the butter. Italics ours. Says Prof. Miller, (1872) “ One often hears of churns in which it is claimed that butter will come in ‘three minutes.’ I have yet to be convinced that good but- ter may be got from the cream in that time. That cream can be churned into good butter in three minutes I am aware. aud although the butter may be tolerable for present use, I have uever been able to get a good keepable article when the churning was dove in such a short space of time. The butter globules are in- closed or surrounded by thin pellicles of caseine. In churning, these are broken and separated from the oily particles. If the churning is done rap‘dly the separ- ation is imperfect, and hence we get an article of butter in which there is too large a proportien of the shells of caseine. It is the caseine and nitrogenized constit- ect of milk that is liable to decomposition aud which injures the flavor of butter.” Voelcker is here quoted as saying that pure fat or oil is easily kept sweet, and if all the shells of caseine could be separated from the butter it could be preserved readiiy without salt. Prof. Johuson, of Yale College, (1868) said: When butter has to come in a few minutes by vielent agitation, as in the exist, ee ee ixperiments in Pig Feeding. Some experiments were recently made Local and Other Items. Onx case of drunkenness at the Stipendiary Magistrate's Court this forenoon. Tus weather will be welcomed by the millers snd perhaps by the doctors. pivcisidiiaiome Tux Dominion alliance will meet in this city on the 20th (Thanksgiving Day), at 7.30 p. m. _— >. --—— Tusnre is no doubt about it. Young is now showing some extraordinary chesp lines in Ladies’ Dress Materials. -<----— Wueret Grafton Street is crossed by Hills- borough street there are no cressings, and foot passengers complain. Will the Street Commissioner kindly see to them, aa Remember Rev. Mr. Duncan’s lecture to- night, at eight e’clock. in Prince Street Pres- byterian Church. Subject--‘* Religious Life aud Opinien in Scotland.” hibcscaaie On Monday three residents of the town were up before the Stipendiary Magistrate for violation of the Scott Act, the Magistrate has not at present writing given any decision,— Progress. > Mr. James Hupson has resigned his posi- tion as Manager of the Albion Mines, and will be succerded by Mr. IL. Rutherford, for- merly manager of the General Mining Associ- ation. —_—---~<~>--- — Tur New York, New Haven and Hartford Road is putting up near every bridge a warn- ing signal, consisting ef small repes hanging from an arm above the track. The ropes strike the brakeman, and warn them to duck, ccnesibattigiinseiin Tue Halifax Chronicle says: ‘‘ Many people in this Province will regret to find that Rev. UC. B. Pitblado’s departure is now a fixed fact. He has accepted a church in Winnipeg. and will shortly leave for that place with his family.” enmeenies — » Kansas State Board of Agricul- re respecting the best method of OV 1 livg pigs, with the following results: experiments were undertaken to as . ee ther the certaia Wi in epen fields, in cold weather, is more profit able than feeding in sheltered yards er pens.; Mr. len piga, all Berkshires, were fed each in a} ferent warner, and the result noted. Dur- ing :mmer preceding, andup to the time the experiment began, all the pigs were kept ins e pasture fieid—mostly prairie grasses, but containing a small proportion of orchard grass alfalfa—receiving an ear of corn per pig | vach day. The pigs were a remarkably uniform , and of very excellent quality, Haif the| ‘© Orren lin sa @ were a2rranbeeu ik a YS ers in Open yard on the souta sice of a d the o close board fex other pretection, except straw ‘‘ nests,” which were furnished both sets as needed. A single pig cecupied each pen, an arrangement neces- sary te the proper appertionment of food, and distribation of the resuits of the experiment. In pens 1, 2, 5, 6,7, and 10, shelled corn ex- clusively Was ied; in pens 3, 4, 8 and 9. ration of bran in addition to the corn, was fed, the amount varying but little from two pounds per day, Inalli the pens all the cern that the animals would eat was fed, great care being taken that none were left over in troughs and wasted, er on the osher hand, that the ani- mals were insufficiently supplied. Che pigs were fed twice daily, at eight a. m. and four p. m., the feed being weighed out accurately atevery feeding. If at the time of feeding the previous food had not been cen- sumed, the surplus was removed, and a pro- portionate reduction made in the amount of the next feeding. All the pigs received what- eyer water they required. ‘The bran was fed dry or mixed with water, to suit the tastes of the different pigs. At first this was eaten with apparent relish, but as the pigs increased in ripeness they seemed to care less fer the bran, finally refusing it altegether, when about the eighth or ninth week the bran ration was discontinued. Records of the daily tem- perature were also kept. The five pigs kept im Warm pens gained 63.9 per cent of original weight frem Nevember lst to January i7th following; those in open yard gained 52.4 per cent. In the first case the average numbe of pouncs ef corn per pound of increase was 5.05 to 5.3); or 4.78 to 484, with two-third to se .| three-fourths pound ef bran, W th the pigs in the yard it took 5.2] to 6.02 pounds of corn, or 5.39 to 6.17 peunds of corn, with three- fourths to seven-eighths of a pound ef brap to maker pound ef gaia. For the pigs fed exelusively on cern it took an average of 5 15 peunds of corn to make a pound of increase, when kept in warm pens; tor those in the yard it teok 5.45 pounds. The total loss from feeding in the open yards was quite marked throughout, and the variations in individual cases was eonsider- able. lt was noticeable that the quietest ani- mals, the best feeders of those fed ‘‘ out- side,” endured the severe weather the best, an gave the | rgest returns for the food con- sumed, These, during the severe weather which prevailed during the sixth, ninth, and tenth weeks, passed much of the time ina condition closely resembling hybernation ; they came to their feed during severe wea- her with great apparent reluctance, and rarely oftener than once eack day, during the trial for the repute of quick work ip cases of trials of new churns, there is remainder of the time lying very still, the | vital functions apparently moving at the |slowest pace. The very uniform increase in obtained justead ot good butter in dense rmount of feed required to produce one aod large clamps, a doughy mass, con-| yp und of increase, durimg each subsequent sisting of little balls of fat mixed with | week of the experiment, after the first and butter-milk and cream, aud full of air} second weeks had been passed (a fact fuily ‘ which no skill in working cap | 22st out by the experiments of Mr. Miles ' ; +e, 2. . | and others}, was plainly shown. The dimin- to g od butter. While it is| j.ied amount ef food consumed for each 100 true tbat viol ‘hurning will produce a} ibs. live weight durimg each subsequent week eater weight of so-called butter, it is| of the experiment, afrer the animal's had be- strat » milk or cream thus treated does not | 7 yA a siower and gentler agitation. ‘The great- | | this question that bran was u‘ed with corn in | est weight of product is due to the ad- ed by chemical analysis that } » much of its fat as is obtained by | ome measurably ‘‘ ripe,” was also noticeable. Che importance of a rstion of bran erfother : food in connection with corn, for fat | tewing pigs, is frequently urged by writers on | grounds. It was chiefly to test the eretical coarse twoeof the peus of eareh of the two series, feed- ' — ace, Western plan of fseding | warm stone barn, and | i ice, five feet high, but without | ’ a's Sr. Loviais suffering from a big freight Some 5,000 cars filled with mer- mncize fillthe tracks of Eastern reads for forty miles ont of the city, and goods shipped from Eastern points forty daysage have not arrived yet. | | MicuarL Hickey, of the firm of | Hickey & Stewart, leaves for the United | States to-morrow, t» select the winter’s stock | of tubaecce leaf. ‘The firm bas done a goed busi luring the past summer, and has given idaily employment to from twenty-five to | thirty hands. We wish it success. saaliliisnja hei | Ar the Stipendiary Magistrate’s Court this | forenoon, Daniel Ryan aud Patrick Cavanagh ness aui were each sentenced to six menths’ imprison- iment with hard labor for vagraucy. They |were arrested for throwing stenes against | the door ef a gentloman’s resideece on Kent streeton Saturdsy last. They richly deserved their imprisonment. —_—___—~ j—-—- CLEVELAND has made money out of the burial of (\arfield. The visitors at the time of the funeral spent money freely in the hotels restaurants and stores; the theatres were crowded, even on the very n'ght of the ceremonies, and special trains are still run every day to carry those who wish to see the tomb. aitiaaieiadtidien Four schools for praetical military instruc- tion of officers of infantry, are authorized to be opened, viz: one in Toronto, ome at Mon- treal, and one in St. John, on Wednesday, 4th January next, and one at Ottawa, on Wednesday, the 8th of February. The Com- mandants and Adjutants will besupplied from t.e District Staff, aed two non-commissioned officers for each school will be detailed to act a3 Drill Sergeants and instructers. —_— —»>> -—— Ir seems that the Republican members of the United States Senate have ousted Bayard out of the Presidentia! ehair of the Senate. The work, it seams, was accomplished by the help of the vote of Davis, the independent, who was used asa lever to pry Bayard out. The whole proceeding loeks meanly. But, we suppose, party exigencies were held to necessitate the performance. Bayard will lose no respect by the transaction, and Davis will gain nena —>---—- CLYPESDALES appear to have been the feature of the Pennsylvania State Fair. There were abeut one hundred fand fifty-five horses and ponies on Exhib' ion. The Clydesdales were out in force, and astheir great rivals, the Normans, were unrepresented, they had their own particular field largely to themselves. Our eousins pride themselves on their stock, aud the Pittsburg Stockman affirms that ‘No better Clydesdales can be seen in this country, and possihly not im old Scotland itself.” --- oS - THe market to-day, notwithstanding the disagreesble weather, was well at tended. Prices as fellows: Beef (small) per Ib 5 to 12 cents; do, (quarter) 4 to 8 centa; Mutton per lb 4 to 8 cents; Lamb per lb 4 to 8 cents; Veal per ib 3 to 7 cants; Ducks each, 25 to 30 cents; Fowls each 15 to 25 cents; Chickens per pair 40 to 60 cents; Butter (fresh) 20 to ‘23 eonts; do (tab) 17 to 19 cents; Eggs 19 to 22 sents; Liay percwt 30 to 40 cents; Potatees oer bush 45 te 40 cents; Flour per cwt $3.25 to $3.50; Catmeal per cwt $3.60 to $3.25; Vat per bush, 36 to 40 cents; Gee-e each, 50 to 70 cents; Sheepskins, 50 te 73 cents; Pork, per carcyss, 6 to 74 cents; do, small 8 te 11 cents; Turkeys cach 80 to 90 cents, —_— > --—— Cow StTraLing. —Ona Friday last Mr. John Cennolly, of Spring Park Road, missed a fat | cow from his pasture at*North River. Search | vas made, but her whereabeuts, in the flesh, |could uot be discovered. Yesterday the | Police were engaged to seareh fer the animal. On Visiting the slanghter house of a butcher named Young, on Bayfield Street, they found | the carcass of a newly killed cow, and on fur- | ther investigation, discovered the hide of a /cow, which Mr, Connolly proved to be his, On the discovery being made, the butcher, by tke way, became horrified. He bolted mixture ¢ ter-milk which is retained | -- ’ roo ‘ ; ; wixti # butter-milk which is retained | 71. yatue of the bran fed in this experiment |frem the slaughter house, and was subse- in the spongy mass,” The Orauge County butter-makers say | that the time should be from 45 minutes to one hour. hour at least is not thought too much. Mr. Flint says that the time required | depends much on the temperature of the | than a mixed feed consisting of corn and bran. cream. We may add that it depends too | on the cream itself, and alsu upon the churn, Other things being equal, one} churn may do the work more quickly | son, disappeared mysteriously from pas- than another churn aud give as good tures in the vicinity of this city. Ouly quality. A good churn ought to take afew nights agoa very fine fat heifer geod cream at a right temperature aud, unless it is peculiarly hard to churn, | briug butter in less than one hour. There may be churniag too long, even as there is churning too tast. Where churning has been too quickly doue, it lias usually beeuw by working the cream & ee 6 | fed, 1094 Ibs. of increase cost 4,773.5 lbs. of Prof. Johnson says half an | at . : . is considered essential for | and bran were fed, 570 lbs. of increase cost churning, when the volume of cream is | 2,975 lbs. of corn, and 432 lbs. of bran. That cousiderable and an hour,jor even more, | is, 8.42 lbs. of corn had, In this experiment, | av , ; 7 . » j ; 2 |may be shown in a brief summary and com-| quently captured by the police. parison of the results obtained. In pens 1, 2, 5,36, 7and 10, in which corn exclusively was ay corn, and in pens 3, 4, 8 and 9, in which corn a feeding equal to that of 75.78 lbs. of bran— a fact which seems to show that corn alone ean be more profitably used for fattening hogs —_ —=?>>- >> << -__- Cow Stealing. SEVERAL cows have, during this sea- was taken from the pasture of Mr. John Connolly, on the North River. It is said thet the thief in this case has beeu found. We hope that, if found, he will be well cared for. Men who take to We learn he was allowed to settle the robbery amicably with Myr. Connolly and the carcass was seld at the market to-day for the tenefit of the man from whom it was stolen. Wedo net belive the authorities will allow the$ matter te rest here, more particularly when -they know a eow was stolen from Mr. Pickard not a week ago, and undoubtedly retailed at the market by Young or some other dishonest butcher. —> 2+ <a -o HOTEL ARRIVALS. REVERE HOUSE, Oct 17—W M Hayden, London Eng; Mrs Hayden, do; Wm Hayden, do; Miss G Hayden, do; Albert Stone, do.: RANKIN HOUSE. Oct 15—E Nickerson, Yarmouth; A E Morris, Montreal; Lancey Hubbard, do; J F Lestgow, Halifax; A L Garey and wife, Che'sa, Mass., H E Swabey, San Francisco, Cal; James Lucas, do; H Barnett, Glasgow; cow stealing should be provided for at the public expense. M McLeod, Belfast; R G Lawson and wife, Havana, ixAMINER, OCTOBER 18, 1881_ ee meee ntl A A —_—— eae - ne A ty. nh Gan a eesti Ot En ROBES, BLANKETS, CLOTHS, TEA, &e. AT AUCTION, fo ARRIVE, agd will be sold by Auction, T at the Queen Sirect Auction Reoms, —ON— Thursday, 27th inst., aft 11 oClocK, A. &, 1 bale Wolf Robes, 1 bale Grey Blankets, 2 cases Cloths, 1 case Heavy Clothing, 1 case Underclothing, 1 case Sheets, Cottons, Prints, Italian Cloths, Tailors’ Findings. —ALSQ— 100 half-chests superior Tea, 200 dozen assorted Brooms. Sale positive. - - - No reserve. Terms—All sums over $50, three months; from $100 to $:59, four months—approved paper. W. D. STEWART, Oct, 18, ’&1—eod Auctioneer, Public “Auction. re O be sold by Public Auction at the Shop | lately occupied by JAMES HOBBS, fronting on Prince Street, on Friday, tls Qist October, inst, AT ll o’cLecK, A. M., Carriages, “Hearse, 1 Horse, 2 sets Harness, Heurehold Farniture, Tools, together with all the Stock in Trade formerly be- longing to the said James Hobbs. Terms made known at sale. W. D. STEWART, Oct, 18, '81—4i Auctioneer. LBS EL LAND QUESTION. JSOUN MURDGCH, EsQ., EpiTor oF ‘THe HIGHLANDER,” Will, by request, deliver a Lecture on the above subject, in the MARKET HALL, Wednesday Evang, 19th inst, ADMISSION FREE. ~ Doers open at 7 mence at 3. By order ef Committee, RICHARD WALSH, Secretary. o’cleck. Lecture to com- Oct. 18, 1831. Very Valuable and Handsome HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE AT WOODLAWN. AM instructed by Hon. Jostrpn Pore to sell AT AUCTION, at his residence, ** Woodlawn,” Euston Street, on WEDNES DAY and THURSDAY, 26th and 27th at 11 o'clock, all his very valuable and handsome Household Furniture and Effects, Handsome Rosewood and Turkish Cloth Draw- ing Koom Suit, with tete-a teta Sefas; Rose- wood Sofa Table, handsome Rosewvod Centre Cable, with carved pedestal; Rosewood Card Tables, Rosewood Chess Table (inlaid with marble), Rosewood prie Dieu Chair, Rosewood Fender and Foot Stools, Five o'clock Tea Tables, handsome Statuary, in Parian Marble and Alabaster, very handsome Mantel and Wall Mirrors, 1 Giltand Marble Top Console, with Mirror, Crayous and Pencillings, hand- some Oil Paintings and Engravings, Velvet Pile, Brussels aud Tapestry Carpets, French Damask anda Lace Curtains and Hangings, Chandeliers, Register Grates, Fenders, Fire irons, &¢., very handsome Dining Room Fur- niture in Mahogany Extension Dining Table, Mahogany Sic» Board, Mahogany and Leather Seat Dining Chairs, Mahogany Dumb Waiter (3 shelves), Butler’s Trays and Stands, Mar- ble §-Day Cicck, Bronze Ornaments, very naudsome, 0:1 Paintings and Oil Chromos, Crimsen, Damask and Lace Curtains, Poles and Rings. very handsome and expen- sive sets Dinner, Dessert and Fish Knives and Forks, in Mahogany cases, Plated ware, Glassware, China and Creckery, Lamps, ete. Very Mandsome Hall Furniture, in wlahogany and Marble Top Tables, Hat and Umbrella Stand, Chairs, Steel Engraviugs and Oil Paintings Bannister. Oil Cloth, Base Burner Stove, bagateile Boards, etc. Hand- some Mahogany avd Pulished Birch Bedroom Suits, with Canopy Tops and Damask Hang- ings. Very handsome double fringed Mahog- any Wardrobe, with mirror front (cedar drawers and shelves), Mahogany Dressing Cases and Glasses, Toilet Sets, Feather Beds, Matrasses, Pailioses, Blankets, Sheets, Coun- terpanes, Chests of Drawers, Wash Stands, Commodesa, Bedette-, ete. Rese- wood, Rotary Library Tsble, Library Book Case, Lounges, Easy Chairs, Wal. Pianoforte, (French) 6? oct., Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine, wal. boxed, lined with satin wood, etc., Kitchen and Pantry Furniture, *‘ American Kitchen Range,” Tin- ware, Crockery, Cooking Utensils, ete. Iron Axle Cart, Driving S’e'gh, Box Sleigh, Wheel- barrew, Lawn Mower, Harness, Garden and Stable Tools, etc. Full particulars by catalogue, to be had after Wednesday next, at the office of WILLIAM DODD, Auctieneer- Oce 15, 1881.—eod Wreool ! Wool! FE°HE Hignest Cash Price paid for Wool Wool Skin, Hides and Calf Skins, at R. BRIDGES, July 12—-2aw wklyim Hillsborough Strees | London WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. OU R Fall and Winter STOCK OF Dry Goops JUST RECEIVED BY 8. 8S. PRINCE EDWARD FROM LIVERPOOL, and Anchor and Allan Line Steamers, NOW OPEN! —COMPRISING-— A Large Asseriment of PLAIN and FANCY DRESS GOODS, Black Cashmeres, Lustres, Meltons, Serges, best value. WINCEYS—Plain and Twilled, all Colors and Qualities. COTTONS—White, Grey and Printed, in English, Canadian and American makes. MANTLE CLOTHS, Beavers, Pilots, Worsted Coatings, Scotch, English and Canadian Tweeds, a fine assortment. MILLINERY — Ladies’ Plush, Beaver and Straw Hats, Feathers, Flowers and Orna- ments. SKIRTS, SHAWLS, GLOVES, Hosiery, Thompson’s Glove- fitting Corsets. MEN’S and BOYS’ HATS and CAPS, Fur and Cloth. FLANNELS, Sheetings, Towels, Napkins, Table Linens. CANVAS, Silesias, Casbains, Linings. CANADIAN AND SCOTCH Wool Shirts and Drawers, Wool Scarfs, Blankets and Quilts, Small Wares, Braces, Braids, Buttons, Threads, Needles. CASH BUYERS will find this Stock complete, and very best value. GEO. DAVIES & U0. September 30, 1881, | LECTURE. LECTURE will be delivered ; 7 Patrick’s Halil, on !HURSDAY EVER: ING NEXT, ly the Rev. M, J. McMillan under the auspice of St. Vincent de Paul Society. SUBJECT—SCIENCE, Proceeds will Le devoted to the relief ofthe poor, Doors open at 7.30. Lecture to ence at 8 p.m, a. Admission 10 cents, Reserved seat cents, s'20 J. A. McKENNA, Sec’y, HARD COAL. ASSED the “Gut,” and expected to arrive A daily, 300 tons of Best Welch Anthracite Coal, superior to and cheaper than American per Brig “ David Rees.” Send orders at once to Oct. 17, °81. JAME BROWN & CQ, Oct, 1T7—tt at Office, or Box 238, NO. 1 LABRADOR HERRING, YXPECTED DAILY, per Schr. Emma, from 1 Henley Harbor, Labrador — ee 300 barrels No. 1 HERRING. For sale in lots by JOHN H. CATHRAE, Ch’town, P. E, I., Oct. 17, 184l—1w TO BE LET. FFXHAT BRICK WAREHOUSE on Water Street, n.arly opposite the residence of Charles Leigh, Exq., new occupied by Mosarg, J. & T. Morris. Enquire at the office of Messrs. Hopcson & McLezop. Oct. 15, 1881—3aw tf AGENTS WANTED FOR “OUR RA p ” WESTERN ba IR E. Just issued, County Maps of every State and Terri. tory, showing every Railroad and important Town, Beautifully illustrated; 312 large pages, octavo, Retails $4.50 and $4.75. ‘ells all about Mining, larmirg, Prices, Climate, Products, Wages, &e.; Man- itoba, British Columbia, Alaska, Texas—every section beyond the Mississippi. Sells to every class, and secures the most unqualified endorsements, Address®, C. Miirey & Cory 123 St. Mary street, Hochelaga (near Montreal), P, Q, {oc 17 lin To Joun Murpocu, Esq., Editor of ‘ The Highlander,” ‘IR,—From the impression produced by the »_) lecture which yeu delivered here on Tues- day evening last, we, Irishmen and descend- ants of Lrishmen and sympathisers with those who now suffer frem and are stru,gling with Lavdiordism in the Uld Country, :espectiully request that yeu will favor us with a lecture on the Irisu Lanp QUESTION, in the MARKET HALL, in this City, on WEDNESDAY EVENING NEXT, the 19th ef October. Purr Coy, WILLIAM Murray, Joun HvucGues, Joun CARROLL, Tuomas Hanprawan,! Patrick Hogan, PaTrRIcK BLAKE, MIcHAEL DurFrry, Jown Qvurak, \JOHN MONAGHAN, M. P. HoGan, MicwakEL TRAINOR, Mavuxics Bake, Joux Lrauy, Wiii1AM Keecrnax, |P. McQvarn, James BYRNE, James HvucueEs, Wa. C. DesBrisay, |James T. MuLLIN, Owezx WINTERS, J. C. McManon, MIcKAEL Hicxsy, Purtie McQuaip, JAMES EDEN, \Joun L. TRAINOR, Dasxiret MULLIN, pe WALSH. JamrEs Doy ie, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. L, 13th October, 1881. GENTLEMEN,—Yhanking you very warmly for your sympathy with our poor people in Fatherland, and for your generous apprecia- tion of my own efforts, I cheerfully respond te your flattering request, and place my ser- vices at your disposal for the evening specified in your requisition. Iam, Gentlemen, Yours very truly, JOHN MURDOCH, foc 14] Editor of The Highlander. NOTICE! To the Editor of the Patriot. Sin,—In reference to the item whieh ap- peared in your issue of yesterday's date in re- gard to full fares baving being charged on the Steamer ‘‘ Heather Belle” on Exbibition Day, I beg to state that it was my fault, as I omitted informing Capt, McLean that arrange- inents had been made for half fares Passengers on the Boat during those two days can have the difference refunded by call- ing on Vapt, McLean any trip this season. JOHN HUGHES, Agent Steamer “ Heather Belle,” Charlottetown, P. E. 1., Oct, 15, ’81—6i (1 UBSCRIBE for the DAILY EXAMINER i) the Cheapest and mout Newsy Pap. r Tf cad im the Prevfeow Sess de. + WANTS, LOST, FOUND, YANTED—A BOY to attend Stable, &. W Apply at the Examuver office. [oc 17 \ y ANTED—Fifty tons of old BONES at ‘Y the Pottery. A good chance for the Boys to make money, foc 11 pat lw rANTED — At Servants’ Employment W Office, Girls to hire in respectable places, Good wages given. Situations ob- tained free of charge. Please apply to Mrs, H. M. Dixon, Temperanee Keform Club Builcing, 124 Germain Street, corner Princess street, St. John, N. B {oc 1! 6i rg°O RENT—A COTTAGE PIANO in geod i order, Enquire at Lewis’ Phvtograph Gallery, Grafton Street. joc 10 tf XOR SALE—Two nice DRIVING PONIES, { “Work well in either single or couble har. ness, and very well matehed. Will be sold low for cash or short credit.—R, B. Nontoy. Norton’s Exp,ess, [oc 7 lw *gxWO GIRLS wanted immediately for gen- i eral Housework, Apply at this office {oc 1 +O LET—A HOUSE pletsantly sitvated on Prince Strect, containing ten roome #nd 4 kitchen. A good Stable and Coach House. Rent moderate, Immediate povsession, Ap- ply ww J. Quirk, Lock Bex 123, Charlottetown. [se 8 2w gsO LET—That desirable Dwelling House ou the north side of King’s Square, con- taining nine rooms and a convenient fiost proof cellar and good stable. Rent very low. Possession given in about one month frm this date, Apply to Marx Burensa, [se 6 tf