—— - ache aie Ae *- <i sad — inertia: a “Se % Ls att te So ee ee ee pies pcre were atl Ne ey nee The pre * Sie al Baad ——— a fo ee I ye Tad! ae Ie oe oe tat serrtng, > Qe pee Se Ries — & ” Mi erst. tot tars = " ase ade Loe ae A is Tie Dairy EXAMINER. } SEPTEMBER 20, 1882. | } On Wool. Yesterpay we urged the farmers o! this Island to pay more attention to the subject of sheep-husbandry. Of no Tess importance is the subject of wool. The Monetary Times, ever ready to uote the fluctuations iu value of the different markets, has some valuable remarks op this subject. It says :— When urging the cultivation in Canada of finer and shorter stapled wools than the Cotswold and Leicester grades, so common amongst us, we are occasionally met with the remark: ‘‘ These long woola pay the best, and you will not get the farmers w go to the expense of changing their shee; when they can raise more wool off Lricesters and Cotswolds” There would be some reason in this position if it were true that the sheep named pay the best. But when our home-grown fleece accumulates till there are a million pounds of it in a certain district of Ontario, and a quarter millwn in this very city, unsold, of what avail is i! to the owners? What does it matter how cheaply Cotswold fleece can be grown if it will not sell ! Then follows a valuable table, showivg the profit from each grade of sheep, and placing the various grades in the follow- ing order. Ist, Shropshire, 2nd South- down ; 3rd, Oxford Down; 4th, Leices- ter; Sth, Merino; showing that the Leicester—the ordinary sheep—is next to lowest on the list. The table is the result of actual observation taken at the Ontario Experimental Farm. The clip of wool obtaiaed was :— Weight, Price lbs, cents Cotewold Grade... ...... 9 22 Leicester grade. .......... 8 22 Uxford Down grade...... 9 28 Shropshire Down grade.... 8 35 Southdown grade......... 7 35 NO... os. cetaes: 6 35 And the profits from each kiud of sheep —without valuing the manure and the pelts—are tabulated in the following :— 2 2 s «= 5 a a = nd Ss 3 ~ = ae ~~ Leicester grade... ..$11.00 $1.76 $3.10 34.66 Shropshiredowngrade 12.60 2.80 7.00 8.40 Oxford Down grade.. 12.60 2,52 740 7.72 Southdown grade.... 11.70 2.45 6.00 8.15 Merino grade........ 7.50 2.10 5.50 4.10 Let our farmers direct their attention not. ouly to the subject ef sheep- husbandry for the sake of the mutton and the manure, but also to the subject of improved breeds which will more than repay the extra outlay bestowed upon them. The closing remarks of the Monetary Times are so valuable that we quote them in full :— What Canadian farmers require to do is to raise such wool as our manufacturers can use. The consegnences are that Eng- lish, Scotch and cross-bred Australian wools are being imported by the million pounds for our mills, and yet there is a million and a half pounds of Canada fleece held in Ontario, some of it two years old, eating itself up in storage and interest, and unsalable at 20 cents per pound, while im ported wool of short fibre sells rapidly at 35 cents. One importer, we are told, has half a million pounds of wool on the way across the Atlantic for our factories. ~_>- - A Week of Victory. Tue British crow during the past week has been pardonably loud. The ‘* Bird of Fredum Soarin” above the targets at Creedmoor hides its head iv its wing while the British rooster’s throat is sore from excessive crowing before the targets. Rebellious Arabi gained his little experience of England’s gener- alship, and the} victorious conntry is proud of and jnbilant over both Victory and General. The crocodiles’ tears from the Nile, the sullen stolidity of the pyra- mids,the wayward wink of the sphinx, and the impressive ‘*I am Arabi’ of the rebel, all these have no effect in modifying the boldest notes of England’s chanticleer, And now she sounds the song of joy over the defeated *‘ Michiganders.”’ But here the tone must be mellowed, for it turns out that the Hillsdales were leading in the race, for the first two miles, and were apparently showiog superior strength and skill, when the sliding-seat of the bow-man broke aud the Hillsdales came in four lengths astern. Thus the brilli« ant achievement of our kinsmen on the river is not comparable to the glories of the batt and the campaign. The New York Herald, after exerting its utmost to keep Wolseley in order during the campaign; and prophesying that at Creedmoor, thongh the chase was a stern one, Americans were the boys who possessed an enormous amount of stimulus which justified hopes of a victory, now accepts the situation, restores Old England to her position as a first-class power, and patronizingly pats her on the back. But there is an air of subdued irritation in its remarks when it says -—Creedmoor caps the column. A machine poem from the poet laureate at a guinea a line, a vote of confidence in the administration of the ‘ grand ol mat,” and a dividend on Egyptian bonds are all that are necessary to complete the happiness of the average British citizen, who iu spite of all temptation is still an Englishman, Tue figures showing the amount of imports at Montreal for the month of August show an increase of nearly half a million of dollars in value of goods imported. over the same month of last year, the amounts being :--for Aucust 1882 $4,505.431, August 1881 $4, 044.794. = = —- iMcrease is represented by goods, the importation of ‘gw from other countries than the U, S, being increased sore $337,000 a ” | the village of Bell THE DAILY HXAM WAR NOTES. — ARA FLIGHT. correspondent of the ‘i was seen riding by is, from the disaster at Tel-el-Kebir, attenled by only twenty horsemen. The fugitive rebel leader, as he dashed past, waved his sword red with blocd, appealing to the natives with the cry, ‘‘ Egypt isruined!" They, however, paid no heed to him. His cause was every- where considered as hopeless. Regarding the Eyyptian loss in Wednesday's engage- ment, ne computation approaching accuracy has yet been made, but, including what has been accounted for by the cavalry, it can- not be short of 2,500 to 3,000. In several vlaces the bodies of the Egyptian were lying in heaps of from thirty to fifty, and they lay in dense rows where the Forty- second, getting in flank, enfiladed Arabi's lines while they were holding the position iwainst the attack in front. A GHASTLY SPECTACLE. The dead extended for over a mile be- hind the position, as our pursuing troops tired after the mass of fugitives. Altogevher the field of Tel-el-Kebir presents a terrible, ghastly sight. Suflicient tinned provisions tor 20,000 men for one month were cap- tured. Fifty guns have fallen into the hands of the British Chief of Commissariat. A prisoner states that rations were issued on the day before the battle for 15,000 regular troops and 7,000 irregulars. While the troops at Tel-el-Kebir were reposing after the fatigue of the night, the Bedouins, thousands strong, came down in the after- noon npon the Kassassin camp expecting to find it empty. The Fiftieth regiment turned out and fired several volleys into them, whereupon they retreated in all haste. Aceording to t Dai u Chronicle, A INCIDENTS. Between Ismailia and Zagazig the maize and cotton crops are in splendid condition. The fellahs have been working quietly and their occupation was well timed, as the cotton harvest begins to-day. Telegrams from the Governor of Benha-el-Assal to the Governer of Zagazig, ordering him to cut the canal and flood the country, have been intercepted by the British. Notwithstanding the collapse of the Egyptian rebellion preparations in the Eng- lish arsenals up to the 15th, were unrelaxed. Fresh orders were given yesterday for addi- ‘ional supplies to Egypt. Roobi Pacha was commandant of the troops at Tel-el Kebir and is deeply impli- eated in the rebellion. Roobi Pacha says that Arabi Pacha wasin bed when the attack of Tel-el-Kebir commenced and was panic stricken at its suddenness. — +> - <a A Dangerous Voyage. Last Sunday, at 11 o'clock, p m, the English mail steamer ‘‘ Circassian” ar- rived at Rimouski with 700 English im- migrants and 150 other passengers. The Transcript’s reporter interviewed some vf the passengers. They said the passage was a very stormy one. On Thursday the storm lulled somewhat, but towards Friday night and Saturday morning it began to rage, and increased in violence during Saturday night, when the tempest was the worst the captain ever experienced. The steamer was toseed about with every gigantic wave, and it was finally deemed advisable to stop the engines. This was done, but it was socn discovered that they had drifted back about five miles from a point they had passed. When the ma- chinery was again put in motion the waves were making a clean breach over the ves- sel, and no one except the crew would ven- ture on the hurricane deck. Some verily believed their last hours were approach- ing. When the steamer was in mid-ocean two corpses were put overboard and buried at sea. One of the victims was a man named Moville, who, it is said, boarded the vessel at Dublin. He was then in- toxicated, and his appearance bore traces of heavy potations. He became very troublesome, and it was finally whispered around among the passengers that the un- fortunate fellow was suffering from de/irtum tremens, and would soon die. The patient gradually grew weaker, and about the sixth or seventh day his death was an- nounced. Next day the body was cast overboard with the usual ceremony. ll! Oo oo Murder or Accident? A short time ago a little girl in a great hurry reached the Quebec police station at the corner of Joseph and Bridge streets, saying that a murder had just been com- mitted at their residence at St. Sauveur. The police telephoned to Colonel J. Vohl, who with a detachment of the force pro- ceeded to the spot. They found a man named Maxime Fortin a corpse in his own house and a revolver close by him. The report of the affair rans that Maxime For- tin, aged fifty-five years, residing in St. Monique streets, St. Sauveur, whilst work- ing in a shed behind his resiaence, was shot in the right side by a bullet from the barrel ofa gun. fired, it is supposed, by three young lads named Jacques, Lepine, and Jourvin. . The deceased died immediately. The boys were practising in St. Theresa street, behind the deceased's shed, with the barrel of a gun which they found at the recent St. Rech fire. It seems the same lads had been using this gun in a similar manuer a few days ago in the yard of Mr. Dupois, near St. Sauveur church, when they had been forbidden to do it. They are aged about fourteen and fifteen years. The deceased is married and leaves a family. —--—___—_-~o-4>->—— - Threatening to Blow Upa Steamer A short time before the steamship ‘“Comus” sailed for Victoria with the Marquis of Lorne and the Princess Louise and suite, the captain of the vessel received an anonymous note containing the state- ment that the steamer would be blown up by torpedoes as svon as the Vice-Regal party stepped on board. The captain was much frightened, and applied to Capt. Hooper of the revenue cutter Richard Rush. The latter, accompanied by a squad of marines, made a thorough inspection of the Comus, but found nothing whatever of a suspicious nature. The Richard Rush accompanied the Comus some distance to sea, and saw the Vice-Regal party safely off, -—-- ste — James Siaunwuirx, North-West, says he was almost fatally injured by the fail of a tree, After doctors gave him up, Minard s Linijment, used exteruay aud internally, cured bj. j2 eod whly m a Sad Drowning Accident. ENGINEER MITCHELL, OF THE ‘‘ ELFIN”’ AC CIDENTALLY DROWNED AT MOUNT STEWART Owina to the illness of Mr. Doyle, Engineer of the ‘‘Southport,” Mr, Mitchell of the “Elfin” was transferred to the first- named steamer, until Mr. Doyle’s recovery. The steamer made her regular trip t) Mount Stewart last evening, and laid there all night for the purpose of returning with freight and passengers this morning. Shortly after mooring the steamer, Captain White and Eygineer Mitcheil left to visit some friends at Mount Stewart. They re turned at ten o'clock. The tide was then low, and it was difficult to get on board owing to the gangway being narrow and steep. Captain White, on going aboard, told Mr. Mitchell to be carefal, as the gangwey was narrow, and he would be liable to fall overboard. He also aivised him to get in over the rail, and not go on the dangerous gangway, but Mr. Mitchell replied that he could walk over it safely, and immediately tried to do so, In an instant he fell, and was struggling in the strong current. Mr. S.C. Clark and che others who were on the bridge heard him fall. They hastened to launch the steamers boat, but experienced great difficulty in getting her clear of the davits, and when they lowered her, stern foremost, she half filled with water, and then no oars could be found. Mr. Mitchell,wesin the meantime, strugel ng +gainst the current, and cilling lustily for the boat, but owing to the difti- culty of releasing it from the davits and want of oars, they conld not render him assistance. Within four or five minutes from the time of falling he was carried off in the current and drowned. His body was recovered at noon to-day, The deceasel was we'l and favorably known in this city. He was many years in the service of the Steam Navigation Co., previous to being employed in the ferry service. He was an excellent engineer, a general companion, and was deservedly respected by all. He leaves a wife and large family in the city to mourn their loss. —— +> + Latest Telegraphic Concerning the Campaign. Lonpon, Sept. 18. The Times’ Cairo corresponden: says : The British troops are everywhere well re- ceived, even in the native quarter, Num- bers of Egyptian levies are still leaving for their homes, in many cases taking with them their Remington rifles. The Times’ Alexandria correspondent gays: Italian naval Lieut. Paolucci, who was placed under arrest on Saturday by Gen, Wood, states that he joined Arabi in a moment of folly, but that he bad been in the hospital all the time since, entering Arabi’s service, The Times’ Alexandria correspondent says: One of the Egyptian officers who surrendered explains that Arabi left his best soldiers at Kafr-el-Dwar, because he thought the move on Ismailia was a ruse, and that the real attack would be un Kafr- el-Dwar. The Times says the punishment for the crime of rebellion is death, and without vindictiveness it may be said that never was that punishment more richly earned than by Arabi and his chiefs. Carro, Sept. 18. Arabi informed General Lowe that he trusted himseif to English honor as a sol- dier whose army had been defeated. Gen eral Lowe replied that he could not diseadss the questiors of war. Arabi considers that DeLesseps shamefully betrayed the national Egyptian party, who depended upon his assurance that he would prevent any land- ing of troops or war material by way of the canal. Throughout the campaign the Egyptians had a complete system of spies in Alexan- dria and Ismailia. The rebels expected that the British would attack Tel-el-Kebir at midnight of the 12th, and they remained in their trenches all night. ALEXANDRIA, Sept. 18. The following decree, proposed at the Council of Ministers, on Sunday, has been signed by the Khedive :— Article 1. The Egyptian army is solved. Article 2. Officers guilty of rebellion will be prosecuted and punished according to military law. Riaz Pasha, Minister of the Interior, states that as the restoration of order will be impossible unless capital punishment is awarded to the leaders of the revolt. he shall abandon the country if any milder sentence is passed against them. The total surrender here consists of 6,000 men, 70 horses, 15,000 Remington rifles and 50 field guns. The surrendered rebel officers are intern- ed in the Khedive’s palace. Two quadrons dis- of cavalry from Mariout, after having been- disarmed, were marched into Alexancria yesterday. Sule Iman Bey, who is sup- posed to have instigated the burning of Alexandria, has been captured. Weather Bulletin. —-——— Probabilities for the next 24 hours tor the Maritime Provinces. Toronto, Sept. 20—10 a. m. Moderate wines, cloudy to fair weather, with local showers, =i di inlined Mall ba oe a Special Notices. GRAIN and Potato Saeks at the “London House.” septl6 EnxoiisH MILLINERY, Trimmed Hats and Bonnets, now open at the ‘“‘London House.”’ septl6 Onk case Boot Uppers and Blocked Fronts, ch ap at the London House, se9 2i wly DoMINION Boct ard Shoe Store is now open. Great bargains in all kinds ; good quality and low prices is the motto. Inspection solicited. —Next door to Fraser’s Drug Store. 814 Gin eod wkly Focs —Highest cash price paid for Eggs at Beer & Goff s. {ju 22 Har Parrets No, | Herring for sale at F. 8. MacNutt’s. se 11] Gi eod Kerosene O1t.—100 Tins (5 gals. each), American Water White, for sale at George Carter’s Grocery Store. Call at once and secure one. 85 l a w tues wkly tf NEw Tra, extra quality, direct from Lon- don, at Begyr & Gorf’s. [sep 12 CRANBERRJE8 and Digby Herring just re. ceived at the Family Grocery. R. K. Brace. [sept. 14 Surets, over 1000 coloured avd white shirts, at 12) per Gent. discount off former ve low prices, D. A, Bruce, (Aug. 19, tf) TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. THE COUNTRY QUIET. Damietta to be surrendered. APABI'S FRIENDS. A GURIOSITY FOR BARNUM. Special to the Examiner. ALEXANDRIA, Sept. 19. A despatch from Ismailia gives encour aging news concerning the order in the surrounding country. Men are busily engaged in preparing for and in harvesting tne cotton crop, and the ordinary routine of Egyptian life is once more the order, The whole country is quiet and evidently ylad at the rapid termination of the campaign. Abdeilah Pasha who is commanding the garrison at Dimietta has bien brought to his senses, and now expresses his readiness to surrender to the recognized chiefs of the British forces in Egypt. Much sympathy is now being shown towards Arabi by the high officials in the Egyptian service, and also by the influen- tial citizens of Alexsndria. There is a movement on foet here, the chief promoters of which are endeavoring to exact a promise from the Sultan that Arabi’s life will be spared. The favor shown by the Sultan, in sending Arabi the special decoration just before the war, and the idea that Arabi was backed up by both Sultan and Khedive er2 used in his favor. The geveral belief here is that Arabi will be put upon his trial and convicted of treasun against both Khe- dive and Sultan. He will then be sentenced to death, with all the imposing formalities of such a trial; than the Sultan will intervene, and press urgently that the life of the rebel may be spared as a personal act of favor to the sovereign of Turkey, even if he has net authority to demand the same. In the event of this occurring, it is ramored that Arabi will be BANISHED TO THE Unirep Strats. | What achance for Barnum! Has the wily showman had a hand in the negotia- tions /] THUNDER ! Cable Special Dispatch to the Exraminer. Connection! — Monrrea, Sept. 19. The heaviest thunder storm known in this district for many years visited us to-day. News has been received here of the sign- ing of the contract of the Company making cable connection between Lisbon and the Uited States, with the cable touching at the Azores. \ SROOKD TELEGRAM ! Additional from Koypt. The Czar’s Coronation. | Received just befere going to press | ALEXANDRIA, Sept. 19. A troop of Indian cavalry will leave Cairo to-day, tu escort the Khedive from Alex- andria to Cairo on Thursday. The Ministry «f° the Interior is t) be transferred to Cairo to-morrow. Ab- dellah Pasha telegraphed to-day, stating he never intended to disobey the orders of the Khedive, and intimating his readiness to surrender. The ironclads Minotaur, Sultan, Incon- stant and Achilles, and gunboats Falcon and Condor sailed eastward this'morning, and are now anchored off Aboukir forts. Altogether, 2,300 men from varions parts have made submission at Kafre-el-Dwar. Abdellah Pasha has surrendered. ALEXANDRIA, Sept. 19. From 10 o'clock on Monday morning until the present, infantry, cavalry and artillery poured in from Aboukir and sur- rendered their arms, There are many more to come. Lonpon, Sept. 19. The Khedive has ordered all persons to return to their usual avocations, and that all respect be paid the British. Cairo, Sept. 19. A large body of Egyptian infantry ap- peared at Tantah, and surrendered to a Battalion of Highlanders. Mahmoud Pacha Somi has been arrested, disguised as a priest. The Grenadiers are guarding Arabi and Toulba Pacha. Sr. Pererssvre, Sept. 19. The, Czar will, start for Moscow to-night most probably for coronation. Thirty apne troops will be stationed along the ine. GENERAL CABLE NEWS, New York, Sept. 19. The Hon. Alexander M. Sullivan, M. P., lectured t -vight in Cooper Institute be fore a large audience. He was introduced by Mayor Grace, and the subject of his discou'se was the present condition of Ireland, ALEXAnpRIA Bay, N. Y., Sept. 18. The race for $1,000, three miles with turn, was rowed to-day by Courtney, Ten Eyck and Dempsey. Courtney led .to the turn when Ten Eyck overtook him and turned ahead of him. On’the return, how- ever, Courtney pulled away from the others, and pa-sed heme, being an easy winner by two lengtls. Dempsey was a full half mile behind. Courtney’s time, 20m. 59}sec. Boston, Sept. 18. At a meeting at the Tremont House this evening, Hanlan dep: sited $1,000 with the Boston Herald to cover the amount pla ed by Jokn A. Kennedy, of Portland, in his challenge. Hanlan and Kennedy will si articles at Point of Pines to-morrow. The ry | race will probably take p!ace On Silver Lake within three weeks. INNER, SEPITHMBER 20, 1882. DIED, Ia Oakland, Cal., 26th August, Gertrude, only chiki of Thomas ©. and Maggie A. Butier, aped six years and eleven monthe. [Georgetown Advertiser please copy.| At the Charlo! tetown Hospital, on Thursday Aug. 3lst, Pius J Campbell, youngest son of Dougald Campbell, Esq , North Lake, Lot 47. ‘| he deceased was in his24thycar. His illness, which extend+d over a riod of sixteen months, was brought on ty a severe cold setting on hie lune. Though he received every care and treatment that friends and medical skill could bestow, he gradually sank, that most ipsiduous of ail diseases—con- sumption— having laid its withering hand upon him. He was removed from his home t» the Hospital in July in the hope that by the care- ful nursing of the Good Sisters in chal and by extra medical skill, he would mast:-r bis disease. But neither his own earnest hopes of recovery, nor the assiduous care and att ution of his devoted nurses, nor the services of the most skilful physicians could arrest the pro- gress of the enemy that had attacked him. Fortified by the last rites of the Church, surrunded by the holy and peaceful atiaos- ph-re of the Hospitsl and strengthened by the prayers of his faithful narses, he calmly amd cheerfully yave up his soul tu the Great Maker from’ whom he received it. His r m ins were conveyed by rail to Sourisand thence t» No: th Lake fo lowed by a long line of car:iages The funera!, which took place on »aturday morn- ing, was largely attended by people of al) deuominat jous who thus testified their «steem aud respect for a young man who, in life, possessed a generous heart, aman y independ- avt spirit and a cheerful disposition, and who, in death, let us hope, has received the reward promised for a well spent life —Com. APPLES. ’ ryxo be sold by AUCTION, TO-MORROW THURSDAY, at 1! o'clock, at Sales Room, Queen Square,— 30 BARRELS APPLES, Just receivea by Steamer irom Boston. WILLIAM DODD, Auctioncer. REFORMATORY. N ADJOURNED MEETING of the Com- mittee appointed to consider the best means to establish a Reformatory or Indus- trial Schoo] in this Province, will be held in the oflice of the Stipendiary Magistrate, on Saturday, the 23rd instant, at 10) a, m,, sharp. Sept 20, 1s82—3i W. WHEATLEY, PRODUCE & COMMISSION M: ACHANT, » 269 Barrington Stree’, HALIFAX, N.S. Vonsignments solicited. Highest prices and prompt returns guaranteed. Sept. 19, 1882—2aw 2m Sept. 20, 1882. SEPTEMBER. MORE NEW GOODS —AT THE— LONDON HOUSE, Serene Selected by our Mr. Stewart, + NOW OPENING, Ex Karr, Phoenician, and Assyrian. GEO. DAVIES & CO. Sept. 11, 1882—wkly To Lobster Packers, W* have 375 cases of one-ib tall Cans, emply, Cheap for cash, lt ee McKINNON & M : Sept. 6, 1889—2w ’ ‘meee ee Household Furni ousenold Furniture, fy O be soid by AUCTION, on WE DAY, the 27th inst., at 11 os lock, at aa House in Great George Str et, formerly OC. cupied by the late Mist Mury Margaret Mac. Sonald, all the furniture there in, CC prising in part; | very Superior Piano, Rosewood Cure, by Hardmaa, New York; 1 Superior Organ; Parlor Sets of Walnut and Hair Cloth Furniture, Broasels Carpets and Ruge, Heil Chairs and Hat Stands, in Walpaot Marbl, Top and Wainut Ce itre Tables a lot of ( > Paintings, Haadsom Vuses and Méutle ae naments, lron Bedsteads and Spring and Hair Mattrasses, very £000; 1 good Sewin Machine, Stair Carpet and Rods, Oil Cl 4 Cooking Stove and. Kitenen Furniture, all nearly new and in gooa order, WILLIAM bODD,. Auctioneer, Sail & Row Boats. VO be sold by AUCTION, on THURSDAY = 28th inst., atthe Steam Navigation Co's arf at 4 o'clock, the namely ;— gee a 1 Sloop Sail Boat, 1 Schooner Rigged Sail Boat, 3 Pleasure Boats, Sail and Row 1] Oyster Fishing Boat. ] 3 Four-oared Row Boats, 5 Double Sculls (one ofthem new ) 3 single Sculls, w 1 Four-Oard Gig, 1 Geore Brat, 1 Rob Roy Canoe, | All the above with Oars and Sails complete, } WILLIAM DODD Ch’town, Sept. 19, °89, Auctioneer. TO LOBSTER PACKERS. For London or Liverpool, Se; t. 19, ’82. et . Jit... oo BRICT. CARITA, BARKENTINE EREMA, now on their passage to Chor from England, due here about the — re a i. ; Ist of October, 1 will carry Lobsters to either of the aleve ports, providing a sufficient quantity~ of treight offers. Lobster Packers will please make early ap- pl cations in order to secure room. Warehouse receipts given, and advagper made against consignments. No charge made for sto: age. PEAKE BROS. &0,, Sept. 13, 1680, 3.w Houses for Sale. 1 Red Mare, a good worker. 1 “ Horse do, do- roi 1 Roan * heavy draft, cod. family, hd 2 Roan Mares, fairly matched, young and _ atylish, a good family team. )” _ Apply to H. COOMBS, Sept. 13, 2i eo! COWS. Pope's herd, 1 Grade, Short Horn, Hon. JC. young and very large. 1 Large Ayrshire. 1 Dry Fat Cow, , : Apply to H. COOMBS. Sept 13, 1881. 3i eod ; — ———— WANTS, LONT, FOUND, de. YANTED, @ servant man or boy, & whom good wayes will be given. One from the country preferred, Apply @bt uftice. ,. (er ANTED IMMEDIATELY, a girl for general housework, Apply at this 5? 182 Uy ANTED—Active News its, Must be well recommendea, App st of News Agency, P. EK, I. Railway se 18 sipd os SALE OR TO LET, tbat siluated residence fronting oB Side of Kent Strect and ihe West Side of Cumberland Street, at present in the ocenp® tion of Hop, A. A. McDonald, adjoining the residence of Rev. F. W. Moore and Macleod, Esquire. “ Popiar Vijla. given Ist October next, For particulars #p ply to Jous Bars, Charlottetown. #8 att W antep immediately, a Waitress for Hotel, cone whohad scme ex Good reference rm quired apply at this wee W J ANTED, ap expericnced pailor office, Wages, g@even collars, or to ove who thoroughly understands work. Enquire at the Examiner office, whly ee apiece ‘ANTED, in a respectable family # boarders, a few gentlemen, ora g man and bis lady. Apply by letter to P. 0. Lock Box 123, Charlottetown, ge 12 18 ‘ _—— *g O LET, a bouse containing six Toca. Apply to Jawes VcLrop, Spring Road, {se 1 eee” r O LET, a Cottage contaix ing pine rooms, with a good yard, garden snd pleasantly sit.ated on Upper Hillsbe street, near the late ‘residence of ME *, T° Hyndman. For terms apply to f- — Burray. fee? Si cai ee ee nn rg O LET—The Honee situated on cover of Great George and King Streets. further information apply at the OMK¢ | Examiyer or “New Era,” : een Oe wo _THREE GOOD CABINET JOURN EYMEN WANTED at the 7: E, Island Furniture Warer oms.— ne eer ae Terr PPXHE SUBSCRi”EKS beve about 8% oOo _ of the Bank of P. E. Island Notes hand for sale. HAMJLTO & SMITH. 9th ee ie. aul! Shediae, N. B, 1 aOR Bll eta ‘Whitney