een ae - el aw i ag ea ap nsdga eR. isa 7 a tee « a Pe tie Spel PE eer ae a Tuk Dairy EXAMINER. 19, 1882 SEPTEMBER 2 Sheep Husbandry. Many rARMERS—especially those who | live at a large distance from mussel beds | —find it difficult to make ends meet They sow and plant, harvest, dig, thresh, and market their oats and potatoes —anud work hard. But the quality of their land has been reduced by previous | cropping, mavure to restore it they | cannot obtain; somehow the turnout Is) not good; markets are distant; hilly roads pecessitate small loads; prices are variable ; the chances of the market are often lost-—and afier all their labor and sweat of brow, these unfortunate farmers find themselves at the eud of the no richer than when the year began It strikes us that they—or at least| those of them who have high dry hilly | land—should turn their attention more particularly to that small, meek, modest, uniotrusive but very useful acimal, the sheep. Sheep thrive well in this country. It doesn’t take a great lot of money to buy a few good ewes and a sound, pure-bred ram. With less care and feed than any other animal requires they will thrive ; and, when kept in a thriving way, they will double their number year by year, After the flock is once established, the lambs may be sold at the door, and the wool may be sold for cash, at paying prices, in any of our towas. All the while, the worn-out farm will be improving ; for there is no better way of restoring a soil which is run ont than by pasturing a flock of sheep upon it. Let farmers who are in difficulty for want of manure, stop growing avy more graia than may be uecessary for the re- quirements of their own homes, and try Sheep husbanding. , The change will involve the erection of a few sheds to keep trom their flocks the heavy fall and spring raius, and the heavy winter storms. The growth of more hay will be necessary. The flock will require a good deal of care and attention, especially at the outset, and in the early spring. But the hard labor of planting and harvesting, and threshing aud marketing a lot of grain which yields no profit will be saved, the fertility of the farms will be restored, and the money will be sure to flow in, for lamb and mutton are always in demand both at home and abroad. _—- > we@m ---- -————- — - Editorial Echoes. eee —After an advertisement of three or, four days standing, calling a meeting of the Historical Society to ‘consider ‘the question of its continuance or dissolu- tion, three members assembled yesterday in the Legislative Library. With this f of the interest taken by its mem- bers in their Society, we think the meet- ing was quite justified in unanimously adopting the report recommendiog the dissolution. It is almost exactiy a year since a large and influcntial meeting of prominent delegates gathered in the same place and enthusiastically resolved that we mast have a Historical Society. And the faree is now played oat. yeur . --Foar telegrams in one day to Tue EXAMINER. are proving to be a terrible dose to the Patriot. One from ihe Asso- ciated Preds of the Maritime Provinces, two from@independent sources, and one from Souris containing the new of the loss of the ‘‘ Pheevix,” gave the Patriot such av attack of dyspepsia that the au- noying effects are still troubling our con- temporary. A great writer has said that “ opposing fe ‘4 ir infivences pon eat fe glad to see trie: to get au: daily for the ey a work, like ery good work,, is not wholly local, but tends beyond ‘the sphere of personal labor. Young men leaving here for other every diocese of Of late years, head of | Church. ‘to his gloss of some knotty point, or the Anglican Church. ace had bowed the hoary ran theologian, and yet it is biota fe years since we saw the short and fra ile form of the Doctor tiking the air >: the ** quads” of Christ Here, on the tine afternoons, could be seen the cluster of young men surrounding the Professer and listening the vy. chatting cheerily on the questions of the day. He retained his aptitude and abi- lity for his special work to the end. nl: it e The Temperance Meeting. THE meeting called by the ‘Sons of Temperance ” was held last evening, in the Y. M.C. A. Hall. The Hall was packed to its fullest capacity, which showed no small degree of interest in the subject under consideration. With commendable punctuality, the evening’s proceeding began with singing by a seleet choir, and the different speeches were heralded by sacred songs. On the platform were seated the different speakers, the. choir, and an influ- ential gatheriog of the friends of temper anca. G, W. Bentley, Esq., took the chair, and.in his introductory address drew the attention ef the audience to the strong reasons, existing on the ground of political economy, why the temperance movement should ‘be triumphant. His figures and facts were sufficiently startling. The Chair- man was followed by G. Millner, Esq, who too modestly compared himself to one of Arabi’s Bedouins, sent out to do the skirmishing, while the great guns were kept in reserve. He suggested the plan of campaign in this temperance .warfare, and thought that. though the foe wag more formidable than Arabi, the»Welseleys of the movement would come off laurelied aud victorioas. After some choice poetic quota- tion from the ‘* Immortal Bard of Avon,” the speaker retired amid the rousing cheers of his comrades. He wasfollowed bythe Rev. G. W. Hodgson, who made a lengthy and brilliant address, pointing out the danger of over-confidence. and urging persistent effort on the part of temperance. friends to ensure the due fulfilment of the, law. In speaking of the influence exercised by the ditferent classes, the rev. gentleman was severely denunciatory in his atiack on the so-called upper classes, who, by their indis- criminate displays of liquors, hindered the wers of temperance. His peroration was a brilliant and touching one, and appealed to the influence of each individual to. work in earnest for the cause. Professor Burwash was the next speaker, and pressed with much earnestness tae view thata man who dil not oppose the sale intoxicating liquors shouid be» ready. to: furnigh his quota to the share of its victims. He said where the liquor issold, there will necessar- ily be the victims; will anyone come for- ward, and offer himself or a son, to the same? Then why continue the danger ! The speech was an effective one, ani tem- perance mea must feel proud of their new ampion. The last speaker was R. M, arrett, Esq. , who asked if every law was ot broken, ‘‘then’why be surprised at the ott Act being broken? But as every member of the community was interested in the due observance of the law, then every true lover of law and order should do his or her best to see the law enfotced. After a flying review of the teiaperance work on the Island for,the past 35 years, the evening’s work. was concluded by the singing of ‘‘God Save the Queen.” + I A A Team Without a Peer. 2.165 IN DOUBLE HARNESS: A remarkable trial against time was made at Charter Ouk Park, Hartford, on the 15h by Mr. W. H. Vanderbilt's: team’ Barly Rese aud Aldine. The Hatter was pur- chased at Hartford~on his account for $15,000 during the recent trotting meeting as a ma‘e for Early Rose, and matches her perfectly in color and action, besides having the requisite speed. Mr. © Vanderbilv’s purpose was to secure a pair which could equal or beat the time made by Mr. Frank Work’s team, Edward and Dick Swiveller, at Fleetwood, 2.163, and he has succeeded. The track was freshly brushed on the morn ing of the race, and was in first-class con- dition. William Bair drove, «and after some exercise and a slow mile for warming up he sent the pair for a fast mile and with- out a skip or a break they made it in 2.16}. and gave one of the finest exhibitions of team work ever witnessed. Mr. . Vander- bilt’s horses, including this pair, Maud S. and Tysander Boy, who have been at Charter Oak Park for nearly a month, are now in New York. ; [We might here remmrk thet Barly Ros and Aldine, are sisters of re iso} nando owned in this city. ] Mr, Rew. Swrru, of Oxford, N» S., wag ts are warmly welcomed by Christian iortesack helping’ hands, when such | is of pecoliar value to the | wauderet. “The Helping Hand of Port- | land, Maitié, gives che following incident | in its Work:— | “A young man, a recent arrival from | Charlottetown, P. E.i., who has taken up his residence in Portland, writes us an in- | “teresting letter, thanking us most cordially ‘for the:kind reception he met with at our roomson his arrival here, a perfect stranger | to everybody. troduction from the President of the Y. | M. ©: A. of his own city, of which Associa-| tion he is an active member. We immedi- | ately secured him a good boarding place, | employment in a pringing officer, intro- | duced him to Christian associates, and | found him a chureh home. Such work as | this we are constantly doing. Business | men ! fathers ! will you not sustain us in this | good work ?” In the death of Dr. Pusey, England! loses one of her ripest Hebrew scholars. | He was born ia the year 1800, was edu- eated-at Christ Church, Oxford, gradu-' ating there ‘with bigh honours, and. final Y in 1828, being appointed as Re- gius Professor to Hebrew in the Uni-| versity of Oxfcrd. He was the clevercs: of | the coutributors of the ‘* Tracts for the | Times,” and was one of the most pro- lifie writers of the day. He is popularly known as ome of the leaders of that movement in the English Church which | has been at once the object of so much | sympathy and so much oppbsitiou, and. which vow nymbers its adherests jn seriously if not fatally shot, by Gecrge, King, on Thursday last, Mr. Smith happe.sed to be on the bank of the river near the foundry in the village, and King was on the opposite cide, looking for a seal which happened to have come up ‘the river. On the seal rising from the water, King fired, and the shots instead of strik- ing the seal found a resting place in the foundry, breaking the glass 15 feet from the ground, und one striking Mr. Smith in the Rose | Military Convention Abandoned, DAMIEITA Ri! RACTORY | BRITISH OCCUPATION. Special to the Examiner. Lonpon, Sept. 18. The Anglo-Turkish Military Conventicn will be abandoned. Damietta refuses to surrender, and it is thought that the Sultan has given secret orders to the Commander not to surrender Troops and gunboats/have been ordered to hold themselves im readiness to be sent to bring the refractory Commander to reason. | Damictta is about eight miles from the Nite’s mouth in the Mediterranean. I' is in general il] and irregularly built, but it has some handsome mosques and marble baths, and several bazaars. Its commerce was formerly important, but it has been much itjured by the prosperity of Alexan- dria. It carries on a large trade with the interior and in this respect is importan*, The existing town was ¢c eated about the year 1251. The fort is a strong oue. | The British forces will re-occupy Tantah. The train service between Cairo and Alexandria has been resumed. The line is in good working order, and for the present the British will cecupy all the stations along the route. DEATH OF A. DEAN. ICH BOUND! —- Wellesley, Dean of Windsor, and do mestie chaplain to Her Majesty Queen Victoria, is dead. The Danish Polar Expedition is_ ice- bound at Nova Zémbla. An Trish Woman Shot. At Glenties, County Donegal, a process server was engaged in the performance of his duties, and was seizing some cattle. A woman present became very excited over the effair and resisted the seizure. The process server shot her dead. The man has been arrested, Foundering of a Steamer | Sp cial te the Examiner. Monrreat, Sept. 919. The. Great. Northern Stoamship Com- pany’s steamer Asia foundered on e Huron last Thursday in a heavy gale. _ The steamer was on a voyage from Colling- wood to Frerch River, About one hun- dred “passengers were on board, and al! were lost except a man and a girl. ‘The Times Alexandria correspondent saysthat, after the engagement at Tr!-el- | Kebir, Arabi fled to Cairo and told the | Conneil that his troops had deserted him, upon which a mission was sent to the Khedive, with two letters frém Arabi, one expressing his devotion and the other warning him net to allow the English to enter Cairo, as the same results might follow as happened at Alexandria. The Khedive refused to receive the letters. Arabi was taken before the Khedive yester- day. He presented a loathsome picture of groveling servility.., Hejswore he had not been aware that he was fighting against the Khedive. . The Khedive remained stafiding while Arabi was in his presence. ~ When Arabi had coneluded the*Khedive ordered hs removal. } The Times says: If the tives of Arabi and his immediate followers are spared these men must be put once for all ont of the way of doing further harm. They cannot be permitted to retire to Constanti- nople to become the centre of intrigues. To restore the authority of the Khedive the army must be disbanded and rep! by a gendarmigetifticient to maiataiu civil If troops are needed to defend frontiers it is sufficient to maintain the frontier end not keep them at C ALEXANDRIA, e forward. this morning and rare ae in person, mediately inquired for the aval lie stendat, Paolucci,’ Was siipposed i, Sate Arabi Pécha’s cause. After some delay, Paolucci was brought forward wearing the uniform of an Egyptian «fficer, and was immediately placed under arresf. f A despatch from Cairo says some natives accused of murder, as. sted ly wine attempted to escape froin the police station, but the native guard fired upon the erowd and queiled the disturbance. Lonpon, Sept.il7. The Times says: The self-esteem of bacy. Mr. Smith walked home, and Dr. Howard having been sent for, examined the | He brought a letter of in-| weund and probed for the ball, but was | feats. unable to find it. Smith is quite feeble at, last accounts, > THe steamer *‘ Prineess of Wales,” belong- ing to the P; KJ. Steam Navigation Vo, has undergone extensive repairs on the marine slip at this port, and was lannched therefrom on Seturday last. On her being opencd out for Lloyd’s inspection her timbers and other portions of the hull were found perfectly good and sound. She bas been throughly refast- ened with strakes of thick pitch pine planks on both sires, and new metalled. She is pro- nounced by competent judges to be in first- | class order and condition, and under the able | management of her commander Capt. Camer -n | will give to the travelling public both comfort | and safety. We wise her and her worthy eap tain every success.—Pictou Standard, 12th | inst. a Ficvres, facts, and fancies get considerably | mixed in Ontario. According to a Mr. A. §, | Hardy, the more liquor that is sold there th less liquor the people drink. That is a rather | contradictory statement; but the Grit organ | beats it, forit alleges that by increasing the | number of licenses issued annually from 3,988 to 4,049, or by 111, the Local Government bas | dintivished the number of places in which ! liquor is sold, % English sportsmen and athletes has been rudely shaken lately by->a_ series of de- Yesterday was a bright. day, and brought signs that the national credit in sporting matters was not irrevocably Jost. Tne English gained three distinct suc- cesscs in international contes's yesterday, viz ,@ boat race with the Hillsdale, the Creedmoor rifle match and the ericket match with the Australians at Manchester. We will be jabilant ever them while we can. We wil wor modestly, but crow we will and wust. Dr. Edward Bouverie Pasey; D.'D., Regius Professor of Hebrew in Ohrist Church C lege, Oxford, and well known as one of the leading Oxford 'fractarians, is dead. hi Crrepmoor, LL, Sept.17. | In the rifle shooting ‘yesterday “the British team made 487 points at 900 vz: ‘The American téam did not contest this match. At 1000 yards the British team made 436 points; Americans 226. At the 200 and 600 yards ranges the British team was a'so victerions. The total score is for the British team at the four ranges 2,029, Americans at three ranges 3.088. Toronto. Sept. 19-10 a. m, Moder te to fresh, southwestirly to : outh- «ry wines, fair weather, with shower , GENERAL CABLE NEWS. . “me _ Phe commandant and twelve officers of THE DAILY EXAMINER, SEPTEMBER 19. TELEGRAPHIG NEWS. WAR NOTES. ae GRAPHIC DE: CRIPZION OF THE BATTLE. The Times in its leader last Thursday, warmly praises Gencral Sir Garnet Wolseley | and gives him all the credit fur the success | of the campaign in Eyypt. It saye:—‘ It) is impossible to conceive of an operation | more successful and executed in a more wasterly manner, The whole plan of the canipaign, it says, was settled by General Wolseley, with the concurrence of his superiors and the hearty acquiescence of his chief advirers, before he left England. There nevér was any question about the canal being the basis of operations. Before he left England he put his finger upon Tel-el Kebir, saying there Arabi would stand and we should attack him on the 15th of September. We mention the circum- stances to show that a great deal, which to the outside observer seems chance, is really foreseen, plavned or allowed for. General Wolseley has achieved a success which renders all apology for his methods super- fluous.” The Sultan telegraphed to General Wol- seley on the same day offering congratula- tions on the splencid vietory achieved by him, and requesting him, now that the neck of the rebejlion is broken, to stop the march of his army inte the isterior. Gen- eral Wolseley sent a tel- gram in reply, in which he referred the Sulban to London for a response to his request. All the enenly'’s magazines liave been blown up and all the unavailable stores destroyed. The [Herald's correspondent gives a gra- phic deseription of the taking of Tel-el- Kebir, and among other things says: Not only has Tel-el-Kebir fallen into British hands, but the Eyyptian army has ceased to exist. The first move was a short one, being only to the sand hills above the camp. | There the arms were piled, and the men lay down on the sand cr sat and chatted over the coming -fight. At one o'clock word was passed round, and they again fell in. Never did 14,000 men get under arms more quietly. The very orders appeared to be giveu in lowered tones. Almost noise- less'y the dark column moved off, their footfall being deadened by the sand. It was an impressive march, which nove who shared it will ever forget. On our right was Graham's brigade, which had already done good service by twice repelling the assaults of the enemy. Nex came the Guards, the brigade which was, when the action began, to act. im)! support of General Graham. Between them and the canal were forty-two guns ef the Roya) Artillery. On the railway itself the Naval brigade advai ced with a forty ponder on atruck. South of the canal the Highland regiment led the advance, followed by the Indian troops in support of the cavalry The horse ait 'ery had started due north to make a long detour, and come down “upon the enemy’s line of retreat. As usual ina movement carried. out in darkness many detached parties altegether lost their way, I with some mounted police among ihe number; for while we completeiy bea’ the rest of the force, we went hither and thither all might until daybreak, and early stumbled into the enemy’s lines. Then suddenly a terrific fire flashed along the line of sand heaps. A storm of bul- lets whizzed over the heads of the adyanc- ing troops. A wild cheer broke from the Highlanders, and in) response thespi struck shrily up, bayonets were fixe at double quick time they dashed forward. The first line of intrenchments was carried, the enemy scarcely offering any resistance. But from another line of intrenchments, behind which in the still dim light one could searcely see, a burst of musketry broke out. Fora few minutes the High landers. poured a heavy tire, but it was probably as innocuous as that of the un- seen enemy whose ballets whistled harm- less'y over head. The delay ia the ad vance was bat short. ‘Then the order was wiven and the brigade again went rapidly forward. Soon, a portion of the force had passed between the enemy's redoubts and opened a flanking fire. This was too much for ‘e Egyptians, who took to their heels and fairly ran, *sufferiug, @s the crowd- ed © masses. rushe across the open, very heavily from our fire, being literally mowed down by _ hundreds. The Royal Irish were sent to turn the At the word they dashed at them at the enemy's left. the trenches and carried the defenders of the position. Next came the Eighty-eighith regiment, then the Eighty-fourth, the Guards beirg close up behind in support. These regiments ad- vanced by régular rushes. For a short time the enemy clung to their line of in- trenchments, but their fire ‘was singularly ineffective and the British troops got fairly into the trenches: Then, as the British poured in, the Eyyptians fled as rapidly as those upon the other side of the canal had dune before the Highlanders. The fight was now practically over, the only further danger arizing from the bullets of the British troops, who were firing in all di- rections upon the flying enemy as with loud cheers the whole line advanced iy pursuit. The Egyptians did not preserve the slightest semblance of order, but fled a confnsed rabble, at the top of their speed On the bridge over the canal General Wol- teléy dictated his orders to Generals Mc. Pheison and Lowe. The former was ordered to move with the Indian brigade on Aagazig, the latter to continue the work of the total dispersion of the enemy. As I write the troops are cheering the Generals, Alison and Graham, who rode into the trenches at the head of the Highlanders; | the Guards are making themselves comfort- | able in the abandoned Egyptian tents and | preparing to snitch a few hours’ repose. The enemy’s position consisted of lines of sid eptrenchments, bound together by wait'es. It was four miles long from flank to flank. At intcrvals bastions, mounted by guns, protected the front. There were successive series of deep trenches at right angles to the extreme left of their position. A deep trench extends two miles to the rear, behind which is another entrenchment forming a defence of the front line from attack on the flank. Toward the canal, on the right right, were very strong works. The natural irreyularities of ground constituted a very formideble position which would have cost great expenditure of life had it been attacked in front. At one point ovly was the advance checkel for a moment, but the first line was reinforced from behind, and with a other cheer they swept on aga‘n and cleared the enemy from before them. At some of the bastions the resistance, al- | though unavailing, was désperate, the | Egyptians being canght as jn q trap by the bayonet’s point, so turning the flank of} rapidity of the advance, defending them- selves to the last, At these points the Egy>tians lie dead in hundreds, while o: ly here and there a Highlander lies stretched among them, as if shot in the act of charg- ing. Had the Egyptian fire been any way accurate the losses ust have been tremen- dous, As it is they are marvellously slight when the vature of the works carried and the number of their defenders is considered. et p. At sea, on the 25:h .of July, «f rheumatic fever, Captain Vaniel Carew, leaving a wife and two childien, and a large circle of rela- tives and fnends to movra their loss. The dec:ased was master of the ship ‘‘ Thomes Hilyera” which, at the time of the Captain’s death, was on her way from Diamond Island to Calcutta. (North Sydney and Newfoundland papers please copy ‘ Household Furniture. ft O be sold by AUCTION, on WEDNES- DAY. the 27th inst., at }1 0’. lock, at the House in Great George Street, formerly oc cupied by the Jate Miss Mery Margaret Mac- ‘onald, all the furniture the rein, comprising in part: } vers Superior Pmno, Rosewood Case, by Hardman, New York; 1 Superio: Organ; Parlor Sets of Welout and Hair Cloth Furniture, Brussels Carpets sud Ruge, Hall Chairs and Het Stands, in Walnut, Mart 1- Tep and Walout Centre Tables, a lot of il Paintings, Handsome Vases and Mantle Or- naments, Iron Bedsteads and Spring and Hair Mattrasses, very gooc; } good Sewing Machine, Stair Carpet and Rods, Oil Cloth, Cooking Stove and Kitchen Furniture, all nearly new and in gooa order. WILLIAM DODD, Auctioneer, Se} t. 19, ’82. Sail & Row Boats. ee NOTICE A ; gegen hom whee Stock sem lea of I quo are taken, fem time to x on for ibe purpose of having the test re Quirest by law performed, re Mguest'd to cal tor them within cen Cay: trem the date s°ch test bas been completed o' li rwise th.y will be destroyed. By order ot the Coll ctor, JAMES F, CURTIS Chief Landing Waiter and Surveyor Chict Landing Writer and Surv 01's Office. Charlovctows , S. pt, 13, 1882-6) Dominion of Canada, — Province of Prince Edward Island, IN THE SUPKIM COURT In the matter of an Act of the Pay iament of Canada, passed in the forty-fitth yrar of Her present Majesty's reign, Chapter 23 lutitukd © An Act respecting Insolvent Banks, Insurance Ccmpenier, Lown Mom. panics, Building Societies and Trading Cor. porations,” and of the President, Directors and Company of the Bank of Prince Ka. ward Islend, an Insolvent Bauking Ccm. pany,— i Y dir ction of His Honor, Mr. Justice Peters, one of the Jndges of the By. preme Court of this Province, notice is hereby kiven that ihe said Judge has appoinnd MONDAY, the 25th day of Seplem ber, instont, A. D, 1882, at the hour of eleven o’dock in the forenoun, at the Judges Chambers, in the Law Couity Building, in Charlottetown, in said Province, to make a call on ajl the con. tributories of the above-named Company, and that the liquidaters cf the seid Com; propose that such call shall be for eighty dollais per share, All persons interested are entitled to attend at such day, hour and place to off-r ol jvctions to such cail, aoe this fifteenth day of September, A, D, 82. D. HODGSON, Prothonotary. se 16 +; be sold by AUCTION, on THURSDAY, 28th insi., at the Steam Navigation Co’s Wharf. at 4 o’clock, the following Boats, name|y :— 1 Sloop Sail Boat, 1 Schooner Rigged Sail Poat, 3 Pleasure Boats, Sail and Row, 1 Oyster Fishing Boat, 3 Four-oared Row Boats, 5 Double Sculls (one ofthem new), 3 Single Scuils, 1 Four-Oared Gig, 1 Goose Boat, 1 Rob Roy Canoe. All the above with Ours and Sails complete, WILLIAM DODD, Ch’town, Sept. 19, °8?, Auctioneer. W. WHEATLEY, PRODUCE & COMMISSION MERCHANT, 269 Barrington Street, HALIFAX, N.S. “onsignments solicited. Highest pr'ces tid prempt returns guaranteed. Sept. 19, 1882—2aw 9m = SP PTEMBER. MO-R-Bi NEW GOODS —AT THE— LONDON HOUSE, Selected by our Mr, Stewart, rd NOW OPENING, Ex Karr, Pheenician, and Assyrian. GEO. DAVIES & CO, Sept. 11, 1882—wkly Wanted! Ax active young man having some busi- ness eXperieuce to serve as a Clerk in a _ writer, . Box No. 55, e: 142i, sj} merchants’ office. . Must be a Apply by letter to B. K., P. Charlottetewn. The City of Charlottetown, | Crry Creek's Orrice, Sept, 12, 1889, fun following resclution was paseed at the last regular monthly meeting of the City C uancil,-— Resolved, That no articles be purchased for the City unless a mysisition hae been first obtained from the City Clerk, and such re. quisition be countersigned and approved of by the Chairman of the Pemapce or other member of the Finance Committee, aud that this Council will be liable only for such articles a8 are pyrchased on the author. ity of and und r such regn tition, By order, rey WM. B, MORRISON, City Clerk, NOTIC Ale Nt Sg se 14 31 14 1619 Z ie JUDGE REDDIN” Wislies to Sell or Rent His Opposite the Raiiway. Dwelling House, Stebles, end large Ware. ase, The property fronts 170 feet on Weter and 100 feet on Weymouth Street, * A'so, Horses, Uarringes, &e. To Lobster Packers, E have 375 cases of one-lb tallCans, empty. Cheap for cash, . McKINNON & MeLEAN, Sept, 6, 1882—2w ; 7 PRINTING of every description, @F executed with Neatness and at the EXAMINER JOB ROOMS, cor, Water and Great SS WANTS, LOST, FOUND, &e. OST, lest evening, in the Post Office, & _4 bunch of Keys. The finder will be te warded by leaving the same at this cffjoe. — se 19 2 ——— Vy sete IMMEDIATELY, a git! for general housework. Apply at this se 18 i oflicey \ TANTED. a large quantity of Oats aot Potatoes, for which the bighest j tice will be paid, Kent Street. Apply to James Phi se 18 Vi ANTED—Active News Agents, Mast be weil recommended, Apply atoffice of News Agency, P. E. I. Railway Station, se 18 3ipd yer SALE OR TO LET, that ese | situated residence fronting on the Side of Kent Street and the West Side of Cumberland Street, at present in the occtp® tion ot Hon, A, A. McDonald, adjoining the residence of Rev, F, W. Moore and Macleod, Esquire,“ Popiar Villa, Possessio® given Ist October nsxt, For particulars §p- ply to Jonn Bars, Charlottetown, 8¢ lett Vi ease immediately, a Waitress for Hotel, «ne whobad sme experiente. Good reference required apply at this offices. nee J ANTED, an experienced palor maid. Wages, seven dollars, or higher, to obe who thoroughly understands her work. Enquire at the Examiver office. se 6 wkly ll tetas — seem et ANTED, in a respectable family 2 boarders, a few gentlemen, ora g man and his lady. Apply by letter to P. 0. Lock Box 123, Charlottetown. se 12 16 anaes O LET, @ house containing six rooms. Apply to Jawes \cLeop, § Park oad, {se 11 - nap enqeeneeeseurendes ———— ee ry>O LET, a Coctage contaizing vine rooms, with & good yard, garden sud pleasantly sit' ated on Upper Hill street, near the late residence of Mr. Pz ¥- Hyndman. For terms apply to P. cee 1 Bu reay. —— aon ee r§ O LET—The House situated on comer a Great George and King Streets. further information apply at the oftice. of Examiner or “ New Era,’ ve 6 ere r ¢ if Ae hl “GO C WO OR THREE GOOD C the P: BorcHER JOURNEYMEN WANTED at E. Island Furniture Werer »oms.—M. ood etal em (P\HE SUBSCRIBERS have about $350:00 T of the Bank of P. E. Island Notes band fir sale. " ‘ ee) HAMILTON & SMITH. Shedive, N. B, 9th Aug, }892, angi rey eaters Ro det Je