reaws:—Five DoLttars A YRAR, ‘ NEW SERIES. __—_ Tus Daity EXAMINER is issued every evening, by The Examiner Publishing Qo. corner of Water and Streets, Charlottetown, e Edward Island. From their olhice, Great Georg Prin RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, . - $2 50 fhree Months, 1 25 une Month, : ° 0 50 @ Advertising at most moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, piartecly, halt yearly or yearly advertiser. Application. ments, on ALMANAS FOR OCTOBER, 1884. VOCON S CHANGES, Full Moon, 4th lay, Sh. 47.5m., p- m. Last Quarter llth day, 10h. 16.7m., a. m. New Moon 18th day, 5h, 18.9m., p. m. First Quarter, 27th day, Oa. 41.9m., a, m, 1D Sun Suan |Moon| High | Days ¢ “‘ This is true Liberty, when aily #£xXaminet. Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.’’—KvRIPIDEs. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY. OCTOBER 6, 1884. BARRISTERS —AND—- Oilice in Old Bank, (UP STAIRS). Ch’town, Feb. 21, 1884. W. WHEATLEY, Wueatiey & Sons, CHARLOTTETOWN, P, EK. Istanp) Yommission Merchant, | 269 BARRINGTON STREET, IELALIFAxX, WN. 8s. a8 Special attention given to the sale of | P. E. Island produce. April 24, 1884. i (OF | SULLIVAN & MAUNEILL, | ATTORNEYS - AT- LAW Seliciters in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &e. OF FICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. Ga Money to Loan, W. W. Suutivan, Q. C. | Cusstsa B. Maongri, Jan. 16, °82. APPL&S, APPLES, APPLES. CHARLES DONALD & CO., 79 Queen St, London, E. C., McLeod, Moron & MeQuarris, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. a | : } | { Will be glad to correspond with Apple Grow | — WEES rises sets | rises | water |len’h hm hm_ aft’n moro} hm {Wednesday (6 3.5 36 3 55] 7 52\11 23 2) Thursday 5; St] 4 26| 8 43' 29 ? Friday 6} 321 457 926: 2 4/Saturday | 29] 5 29.10 6 22 5 Sunday 9 23 6 31046 19 6! Monday | 10; £6 6 42111 27 16 7|Tuesday | 12) 24) 7 2¢aft 8} 12] giWednesday | 13) 22! 8 14) 0 5! 9 9, Thursday 14, 20 9 10) 1 39 6 19) Friday 16, 1310 14" 2 oe [1 Saturday 17, 16'11 16 3 35 10 59 12'Saaday 18; 14 morn | 4 58} 56 13, Monday | 19) 12) 0 23) 6 91) 53 14 Tuesday ant Shi Bom 2 31] 50 15) Wednes lay | 23 9 236 823; 46 16 Thursday ' 24 7/3409 9 43 17 Fri lay 25) 5} 445) 9 48° 40 18 Saturday i= 4| 5 4710 24, 37 19 Suaday | 28; 2 6 4910 58] 34 90'Monday | 291 0, 7 SOlLL 32, 3t 21, Tuesiay ' 31/4 58) 8 48!morn 27 22|Weduesday 32 561944 0 6} 24 23| Thursday 33| 5410351040, 21 24) Frid, 35} 53.11 22)116 18 25 Saturday 36} Sijaft 6! 153 15 26 Senday 38; 48) 0 40 2 42 12 27|Moaday 41} 47/120; 337) 9 25|Tues lay 42° &6 1 5&2 443 6 29'Wednes lay | 43) 45, 2 23) 5 5S 3 30, Thurs iay | $4 44) 253) 7 9 0 31! Friday | 4514 42} 3 2418 9 9 59) Vi aH. THE RAILWAY TIME TABLE, ‘rarlottetown Time.) GOING West. i. Mi Be Be oe MPEORGRGGWR ..cccccceses $a, Vr ésF7 OE a 747 1055 647 P. M.? Bensington .......---+---- 8 42 Le 7 05 , ‘ 2 57 Summerside, et 3 : ce - 39 7 37 ee FEE, ib pbs ie Deeeei 1030 415 OO ceed cede iuaees 12 05 6 57 Bamnlah.. .. cicscsdccecves 1242 747 FROM WEST. e-em ae MEE co cnceetucceseseas 202 647 OG. oc cucsceeees seus 240 7 57 Se GROIN. coe cewnceawes 415 10%5 arrive...... 517 1207 Summerside, | depart,.....542 122 657 pibetey Vicdsidecesets 607 209 730 ne” REVOK. os ese caat 702 325 847 Gmariottetowa .... ces cece $02 507 1007 G@CIN-’ EASY. P.M. 4. M Paetbobows. « «soca sees aneeeses 417 702 : DP ONNEUO cccecess 622 837 Mount Stewart, { denart........ 527 902 ee. ie seen eenes 617 1002 P. M. TE ccd veh eniton si ike ee eel 722 1202 A. M. See ieee... ct ccccncscccase ae | OME SER, oc ccncctedecysceueeytes 629 1022 Osc. cdccsescecedoesets 647 1047 PROM EAST. . Me. . Be oe BE ccd co ecce cack eee 647 217 ib BEORE ©... so<seneqenes ch eeeee 7 52 2 > Mount Stewart, {Sri "\"""1s47 642 RmmnGethatowR. .......ccccccsce 952 F727 Petia gn ... «oes «ceed dhieb each 727 332 SN 5 vc cncdacendnennaaneues 745 357 Mount Stewart...... oo a ae CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED. R. O’DWYER, Commission and General Merchant FOR SALE OF P, EB. 1, PRODUCE. 289 WATER STREET, Sit. Johns’ Newfoundland, Ja connection with the above is Captain English, who is well known in P. E. Island, who will take special charge of all consign- ments, and will also attend to the chartering of vessels for the carrying trade of P. E. 1. The firm is one of the oldest and most reli- sblein Newfoundland Returns guaranteed to be prompt and satisfactory. Parties wish- ing to procure Labradore Herring should send their orders in time. Sept. 6, 1834.—till 31st dec, ’84. —— — L. ARTHUR & CO. GENERAL Commission Merchants, 12) ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON, MASS. Bygs and Produce a Specialty, / patronage extended to him, begs leave to in-, HATS & CAPS IN GREAT VARIETY AT LOW PRICES. ers, Merchants and Shippers, with a view to Autumn and Spring business. They will also give the usual facilities to! customers requiring advances. augl CAIRNS’ MARBLE WO:KS, \ R. CHARLES CAIRNS, in a a thanks t¢ the public for the liberal; form his old customers and the public general- ly, that he has taken into partuersiap Mr, Malcolm McLean, avd that hereafter the business will be carried on under the title of CAIRNS & CO.,, ‘Marble & Stone Uutters, _—_—— — —— They have on hand a fine stock of Monu- ments, Tablets and Headstones, in Italian and American Marble. They are of the latest de- signs, and at prices to suit all, C. CAIRNS. M. McLEAN. Ch’town, June 30, 1884—pres n e pat s j] wp N. J. CAMPBELL, (Successor to Campbell & Rayden) Auctioneer aud Commission Merchant, SHIP BROKER, AND INSURANCE AGENT, COR. OF QUEEN AND WATER STS., Charlottetown, P. E. sland. Importer and Jobber of Cheice Greceries and Spices. General Agent for P. E. Island of the British Empire Mutual Life Assurance Com- pany, of London, England Lumber, Coal, Fish, Apples and other Fruit, Real Estate, Household Furniture, Bankrupt and other Stocks, and all kinds of Merchan- dise. ; : i. Correspondence and Consignments solicited. Returvs promptly ™*7* Uae-k SQ 1204 Prince Edware Island Hospital. MEDICAL BOARD: Dr. Hobkirk, Consulting Physician. Dr. Johnson, Dr, Taylor, Dr. Beer, Dr, Dawson Dr, Warburton, Dr, MacKay. — Matron—Mrs. Hannah Robinson. Applications for sdmission may be made to the Visiting Physician or Matron, at the Hospital, daily (Sundays excepted), between ten and eleven, a, m.,or by correspondence with any member of the medical Board, or the at . : athe friends of patients will be admitted from two to four, p. m, every day (except Sunday). ; The general visiting day for persons wish- ing to see the institution 18 Thursday of each week, from two to four o'clock, p. 2, D. B. MACLENNAN, Secretary of Truatees. April 24-004 whkly NEW SEASIDES, ete BREMNER BROS. Muy 15, 1494 —wkly tf | July 28, 1884. Spegial attention given to Auction Sales of IN O'TLIC-4i. MORE ROOM. aes meee? ()? eee meme LOWER PRICES ! ccacieniansiiniinansticalt tiie 4 S my Store has been greatly enlarged, my importations have been greatly increased, thus enabling me to show a very much better assortment of Goods than usual. MORE GOODS. LETTERS T THE EDITOR, - > — Prince of Wales College and Normal School. Six,--It is somewhat strange that from time to time the readers of the newspapers in this Province—at least of some of them —have brought to their notice certain so- called imperfections in the methods of in- struction at the Prince of Wales College and Normal Schoo!—notably those of Principal ._ Anderzon. So far as the ability of Principal Ander- son to conduct or manage this institution is concerned I think that there can be but A ee meas Ty ns Rae aaE VOL. 15--NO. 118, Going equally as well? Are they earning , the large amounts of salary they draw from the public Treasury as faithfully and well ? | ‘The taxpayers of the Island have in- telligence eneugh to perceive that the fault if there be one, in connection with Prince of Wales College cannot lie so entirely and completely with Principal Anderson. They have seen in THe Examiner the course of studies atthe Prince of Wales College, and the statement of the expenditure of that Institution which, on the whole, is a fairly moderate amount of money to support the only public high school we can boast of in the Province. | Since we are an agricultural people the farmers who form almost the whole bulk of our tax payers will be pleased to learn that Every Department is well filled with Choice NEW GOODS, imported one opinion. He hes been long and favour- ft is the intention of our present popular direct from the English Markets. reputation for selling Cheap Goods, those who patronize me will find my Prices Low. Quality Good. CALL Assortment Large. AND SEE US; L. E. PROWBSE, | Sign of the Big Hat, 74 Queen Street. Ch’ town, Sept. 26. V884.-—-eod whiy e NEW FALL GOODS. 0:0 100 Cases and Bales now open and more to follow. 2:0: B. “secdonald has Opened a Great Portion of his Fall & Winter Stock. — oO ——— AN IMMENSE VARIETY OF CLOTHS IN LADIES & GENTLEMEN'S WEAR, LADIES DRESS MATERIAL in all the newest fabrics, VELVETEENS & SILK VELVE?S, CASHMERES & FRENCH MERINOES, LADIES MANTLES & SHAWLS, FRINGES, GIMPS & MANTLE ORNAMENTS. J. CLOLHING DEPARTMENT. —— 0:0—— 5600 OVERCOATS, 200 REEFING JACKETS, 200 MEN'S SUITS in Worsted and Tweed, 200 doz, SUITS MEN’S UNDER CLOTHING, from 75 cents a suit upwards, 20 bales of COTTON WARP, 150 chests FINE CONGOU TEA. Juspection Solicited, and the Lowest Possible Prices for Goods at J. B. MACDONALD 'S. Ch’town, Sept. 18, 1884.—2aw wkly, DORSEY, GOFF &CO’S. Celebrated Make of Boots are taking the lead all over the Island. enpenteenisonenetet> () People say our Boots are Water-tight, Good Fit, Very Cheap, and wear as well as Custom Boots. —_—_—_—_—_ Q-------—- - BE SURE AND GET OUR MAKE. DORSEY, GOFF & CO Ch’town, Sept. 18, 1884.—eod wkly 0 Extra, Prime, Cheap, Strong, Nice, Al, Splendid Beer & Coff’s for Extra Tea, WHOLESALE. BEER & GOFFS FOR PRIME TEA. RETAIL. BEER & GOFE’S FOR CHEAP TEA, WARRANTED. BEER & GOFFS FOR NICE TEA, 5 POUND TiNs. BEER & GOFF’S FOR Al TEA HALE-CHESTs. ANY QUANTIIY. BEER & SOrF’S FOR SPLENDID TEA, WHOTBSALEH & RETAIL. Ch’tuwn, July 9, 1884—2aw thorongh and eflicient instructor of youth, and if we are to judge by results, then Principal Anderson is second to none in Canada, sinuations of inefticiency »gainst so old and | well-tried a public servant as Principal Anderson. Have those anonymous scrib-, blers forgotten the numbers of young men_ who have received their early training in the Prince of Wales College, and distin-| guished themselves at Dalhousie and Mc-' Gill Colleges, since Principal Anderson has | been in charge. It is but a few years ago, | that the Patriot newspaper, at almost every issue, regaled its readers with stertling paragraphs, under such significant headings | as ‘‘Another Islsnder Abroad,” &c. What} has happened of late that the Prince of Wales College is almost condemned as an institution of the past, by those snonymous | Writers ? But the chief aim appears to be | ‘at Mr. Anderson, and attempis are made to show that he is utterly unfit, in so far as scholarship is concerned, to be Principal of our highest educational institution. The term scholarship, as applied to Principal Anderson, must necessarily mean his knowledge of the branches, included in the curriculum the Prince of Wales College. Out of the compara- tively wide range of subjects included in this course, the principal objection—if objection it can be called—seems to be on ‘account of his lack of knowledge of the {principles of English compcsition. But |who is the judge? I am perfectly aware | that the anonymous writers, whose prodic- |tions appear in the newspapers anent the | Prince of Wales College and its manage- ‘ment, follow in the wake of Prof. (/) J. H. | Fletcher. I fancy that almost any reason- able’ person will admit that if Principal | Anderson’s scholarship is to be put to the | test, that it is rather Jate—to put it mild— _to begig now ; and further, that he- has every right to be either acquitted or con- demned by a jury of his peers. But in this case I imagine that the dictum of Mr. J. H. Fletcher is not sufficient to condemn Principal Anderson as lacking in his know- ledge of English compusition for obvious reasons, It certainly says very little for those un- fortunate persons who have received their ' knowledge of English Grammar and Com- position under the tuition of Mr, Alexander Anderson, to affirm that he is so utterly and profoundly ignorant of those subjects. What a blissful state of ignorance those teachers must be enjoying who have been under his tuition! But what of those whom they teach? Can it be possible that our whole boasted free school system has been such a ‘‘ delusion and a snare?’ Are we only now wakening up to the stern reality? Verily, if we had had ‘* payment for results,” it would have been better. These and such like questions as these may very well be asked by every taxpayer in the Province, if the statements of these anonymous scribes be correct. But what are the facts? One or two reasons appear to my mind to contradict the assertion that his knowledge of English Grammar and Composition is so shamefully defective. It is a fact that in the Matriculation Examina- tion of Dalhousie College, and also of McGill University, Grammar and Composition form a very prominent feature, yet the young men who have been trained under the tuition of Principal Anderson, have always taken an exceedingly high place, and in most instances have, I believe, headed the list. This is inexplicable, if we assume the statements of Mr. J. H. Fletcher to be correct. Any one, at all acquainted with the matter, who takes up a calendar of either of the above-mentioned Colleges, and looks at the requirements for matricu- lation, can hardly help seeing that these statements are utterly unworthy of the consideration of the well-thinking portion of the community. It is not then on the plea of his inability to impart instruction, nor yet of bis scholarship being defective, that Principal Anderson—who so wisely treats those effusions with silent contempt—has re- ceived so much unmerited censure. We must look for some other cause since it is not fo be found in his capacity as a public official. It is rumored in private circles that a certain supposed change of views has caused the sudden flood of light to dawn on these worthies that we have had at the head of our highest Educational In- stitution so utterly incapable an individual as Mr. Alexander Andersor. It is a truly deplorable state of affairs that class legis- lation should be sought to be dragged even within the sacred precincts of the Prince of Wales College. It is all very well for some one who is anxious to distinguish himself, or who has some private malice or grudge against a public official, to publish a squibin the newspapers which he fancies will accom- plish the malicious end in view. But what the public—I meen the taxpayers of the Province—are concerned to know is: Is of And, as | am bound to sustain my past ably knownin this Province as a most Local Government to have a practical in- structor in Agricultural Chemistry as soon as practicable at the Prince Wales ,College, which, by the way, is a much It is too late now to make in- needed improvement. If our present. so much lauded free school system is to keep pace with the times, any one who gives the subject thought must admit that our highest educational institution must be maintained in its present state of efficiency. JUSTITIA, Queen’s County, Sept. 30, 1884. Not a Flattering Picture. MISS CHARLOTTE O'BRIEN S DESCRIPTION OF TENEMENT HOUSE LIFE IN NEW YORK. Miss Charlette O’Brien writes in the Nineteenth Century for October on ‘*The Emigrant in America.” Her account of her experiences in New York, after having crossed the ocean in the guise of an ordin- ary emigrant in the steerage of a mail steamship, is vivid and interesting. She says the streets which the average emigrant finds in the lower part of New York, and by which alone he has an opportunity of judging of that city, are indescriably filthy. They are filled in the summer time with children whose scanty attire has no pre- terce of decency, and with careworn, drunken and siatternly wemen, the wothers of constantly increasnig broods, whose only heritage is misery. She de- nounces especially the overflowing refuse boxes which occupy balf of the narrow sidewalks and are rarely emptied. She in- stances especially the lower part of Wash- ington street, in which street alone, she says, hundreds of tons of animal and vegetable matter decay unremoved amid its teeming and seething population. How the peoiee escape typhus and typhoid fevers and cholera, if indeed they do escape them, is a mystery to her. The internal arrangements «f{ the house in which the emigrants are herded ate ces- cribed as being quite as horrible as the « ut- side filth. In summer the temperature in these compartments is such that sleep is impossible and life a constant bureen. The blazing heat in which the brick tenements are baked during the day ra‘iat«s at night, and compels the inmates to flee to the roofs or streets for air and relicf. In the winter the condition of the peor is even worse. They either suffer from in- tense cold or they bake as victims to the close coal demon which seems to be the Moloch of Americans from October to June. Miss O'Brien menticns the case of an Irish-American Physician, who had suc- cessfully practised for eightcen years in Brooklyn, but who told Mies O'Brien that he felt compelled to return to Ireland, because he found that he could not rear his children in the neighborhood of New York. In the opinien of Miss O'Brien this is the great evil—that the children of Irishmen and Englishmen going to America are bound to grow up diseased and depraved. It is, moreover, an evil that’s only partially remediable. The British Government, she says, is now trying to send emigrants to those vile tenements, these dens of disease, poverty, and immorality, and it is time to let the English people know that such action is equivaient to the social murders which con- tinue, in light or darkness, to darken modern civilization. It is a new applica- tion of the old proverb, ‘‘To hell or Con- naught,” which means that anything bad is good enough for an Irishman. Miss O’Brien warns the English people that there is another nation beyond the sea that is watching England, and whose peo- ple bear in their hearts sentiments more deeply implanted than those in Irish breasts of anger, bitterness, and hopes of coming revenge. She says she was igno- rant of what detestation of English rule meant until she went to America and mixed with the exiles there. Miss O’Brien next pays her respects to those Irishmen who, having grown rich in the New World, leave their newly arrived countrymen to suffer all the horrors she has described. If, she says, the wealthy Irish in America did by their fellow countrymen one tithe of what the poor are doing un- noticed every day in Ireland, there would be indeed a grand future for Irishmen beyond the sea. Miss O’Brien concludes by commending the authorities at Castle Garden, who do their utmost for the new- comers: but she says the work that should be done for them is beyond their power, and the problem that is to be solved must be dealt with by a far higher authority. ——_—_ ll <> i The Journal de St. Petersburg refutes the idea of a Franco-Russian alliance having in view the partition of China. Governor St. John’s letter of acceptance draws a deplorable picture of the state of affairs in the United States. Mr. Stanley thinks the British Govern- their money expended to the very best advantage? The common school teachers) of the Province are strictly dealt with, and, judging from the ‘‘Annual Reports on the Public Schools,” are doing their work faithfully and well. But I ~— there may be a feeling abroad which es the questions:—*‘‘ Are those who are enjoying the largest amount of salary in our highest educational offices ment should send two cruisers to the mouth of the Congo. The returns made by the assessors show a population of 104,276 in Toronto. The Pennsylvania miners are likely to succumb to the masters’ terms. Milwaukee has a ‘“‘lady” rag-picker who is worth $40,000. Le cae te, LN EEL OEE HO eI! = eee at ean Nae wei crete sila ily anaes bans ii apa latte crane: emanate wtb te earn rien a pe renee sae heres a ens osmscsniininenit steitateity at j y , a a _ ae Ay TRE ” a ee cera nena 1 ag petty Seay Der eee eee Venn set vn oe . . ’