ne , : o. é « = . " + ra a ae VOL. 7, CH BIRL TT 3 EL ar WAREHOUSE QUEEN SQUARE. Spring an nd Suumer Goods, COMPLE E IN EVERY BEPARTMENT, VALUE U REASSED. Fw Subscribers have, by the 8. S. ** Edward,” ‘* Eth e sae * and later arrival t} comple the LARGEST AND ‘BEST STOCK OF British and Foreign Dry Goods AND GROCERIES Ever imported by them, which pose ¢ at the lowest ¢ Prince : othe they will dis ash prices, Please give us a eall before elsewhere. purchasing WwW. & A. BROWN & CO, {j 14 _ Mutual fusurance Co,, IN i w CORK MARINE. 1879, » $744,149.66 Assets *i»t Dec., CARGOES and 000 and upwards Insurance effected or FREIGHT™, covering $15 on first-class risks. Certificates issued payable in London at the office of Morton Rosz & Co., Bankers, or in New York. Risks taken and rates fixed without being referred to Head Office. FENTON T. NEWRERY, Agent for P. 4. Island. Great Summer Resort PRICE EDWARD ISLAND, SR Hieron a Ore... May 1 11, 1589. fEXHIS New and Commodious House, situate at North Shore, offers great attraction for Tourists who are wanting recreation, sea bathing, fishing, ete. It is within easy access of the City, being only thirteen (13) miles by rail or carriage. Charges moderate. For further particulars apply to the Manager, or address LORNE HOTEL COMPANY, Charlottetown, P. E. TRY [T. TRY TP Ze i j YIVE ALBION MINE NUT COAL KW a fairtrial and you will not be disap peinted in the result; i is Oras not fire clay and siate, For orders apply to G. W. DrBLOIs, Sole Agent for P. KE, Island. Oflice— No. 35 Water Street. Charlottetown, Jaly$, 1£80—pat tf WORTH’S YT June 12. 1880. tan ) MQ | a ere Isso. We AD : Between Kent and Grafton Streets Kk. Island. —3m eod pa Charlottetown, P. 1880 INSURANCE OF ENGLAND. QUEEN CAPITAL. NSURA ings, eee and Produce, Vessels on the stocks, Special rates for isolated residences, Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Unien Bank), Agent for Princo Edward Isiand ] or COY. . TWO ) MILLIGNS STERLING. CE effected on all kinds of Build- Also, on se | o McLennan, GOMMISSION MEROHAN!, GENERAL AGEN, AND AUCTIONEERS, 46 QUEEN STREET, Chariottetown. - - P. E. island. Consig: ments solicited. Prompt returns §¥arante: d. Auction Sales conducted in any part of the ity or Country on reasonable terms. ARLOTTETOW IN, P RINCE lta lle ns gg Ona ee cts nn UR. . EDWARD ROYAL NSURANGE GO'Y ins a3 c Of Liverpool and Louden, nwards of S27 460.009. Fund, | i LONDON AND: LANCASHIRE Fire insurance Company Oi Liverpool, England. AES ..* ai “a yj Capital and Reserve ted on every description of property m the above most re ‘hial le Com- panies, at the LOWEST CURRENT RATES, JOIN MACEACHERN, Agent for P. BK. Island. luty I4, 1I8SO—Im eed bnsurance ete L‘aiian Wank Ht ae ¥ 4 . 7 enouse, Til or THey f iH a t @ outa ._ = i oS Uf a aud gens ESTABLISHED IN 1809 Subscribed Capital, %2,733,332.00 Paid up Capital, - 216,666.06 Fire, Life most favorabl: Transacts and Annuity té ryis, EIR Dar ™ TMENT— Insurances ected at the Lorest current rates, “ eenneen upon Public and Private Build- ings effected on ¢ hie te TNs, Losses settled with promptitude and liber- ality. Lire DEPARTMENT-~New anc miums for Dominion of Canada, i. W. DPEBLOLS, General Agent for P. E. Island. Office, No. 35 W ater Street, Charlottetown, Aprii 14, ’80—pat her ne s} kcea ti eod ROMAN PUNCH, ice Cream, Fruit ices, Water lees, S L intend paying special attention to my A ce Cream department this season, | invite the public to call where they can be iurnished with the best assortment of Ice Creams and every description of Business on the may be ef- spr cia Hy javora Re 1 21Ce¢ d pre- lees to be had in the City. Ali _— from the best material. ‘To parties rdering Creams or [ces we guarantee satis- action or no charge. A. McKENZIE; Confectioner, Queen Street. , 1880. Charlottetown, June } LUMBER. “LUMBER, A VERY: LARGE STOCK OF Seasoned Pine & Spruce Lumber oa Hand, for Sale Delivered at Poiat Du Chene, te Schooners, Consisting of Pine Boards, Plank & Sheathing; also Spruce Boards, Scantling, Clap- boards, Laths, Shingles, etc. All for sale purchasers. Cheap, in quantities to suit CUSHING & CLARKE. Salsbury, N. B., June 18, 1880— Sm eod Emigrants, Attention. —-- FHVHE BEST ROUTE FOR Na / Ns APUG v5 , the West, LS View Tee Intercolonial and Grand Trunk Railway, QUICKER TIME, SHORTER DISTANCE and FARES always LOWER from Prince Edward Island than by any other route. For Tickets and all information Luggage, Freights, a apply to . W. HALES Agent ce d Trunk Railway eo harlottetown, April 17, 1850—3m wk ly Bones. Bones. oe oo undersigned will pay fifty cents Cash about per cwt. for all bones delivered at the Bone Mill; in the Royalty. No quantity less than one cwt. (112 lbs) taken. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Agent. Chitown. f fiec. 1, 1879 Hides, Calfskins & Sheepskins THVHE Subscriber will pay the highest Cash price for the above. ROBERT BRIDGES, May 11, 1880—3m eod April 29, ’80-—oaw wkly, ar pat eR TR I Ne ARR Fc LT 1 NSURANCGE AGRICGLTURAL IRE 2 I iF Wi me GRGANIZED (883. ee wenn ape Net Asseis for Pretertion of Pettey $1137,549.73 * Demaaen security of helders, Holders, es with Gove ot ne ene ee LOSSES PAID TO DATE, OVER $3,000.000, on Private Resi Farm property, had Priv Parties desiring Insurance ’ e dences and contents, or better tind out rates, ete., of this Time and Fire Tested Insurance Company. N. B. —~Canvassers wanted, Ros. ANGus, Special Agent for the Maritime Provinces. JAS, BESBRISAY, ‘ General Agent for P. Ch town, July 31, 1880 FOR SALE. 1060: BUSHELS Superior Mediterranean SALT, for re-packing Mackerel. R. F. QUIRK, Water Street. Last Vessel | of the Se ‘ASOR, FOR LONDOE DIREUT, a new Brigt. “MINNIE LOUISE,” classed ? years at Lloyds, Hector Murchi- son, Master, will be due here 0th August, and will 1 the berth immediately to load Lobs ters for London, sailing about the 20th August. Leodian berth, Peake’s No. 1 Wharf, where Lobsters will be received and stored free of charge. Alsoat Railway Wharf, if coming by rail. Freight One Shilling per Case. Apply to LONGWORTH & CO., Water Street. Mat Coal, K. S. — 3m Ch’town, July 28, ’80—101 go oO} ——— “Tut Goal, REE from Slate and Fire Clay. Also Round and Slack, at Albion . Mines, Pictou, Nova Scotia. For orders apply to G. W. DeBLOIS, \gent for P. E. Island, | Qi d Sydney Nines, Cape Breton, Lingan Mines, Cape Breton, RDERS for Rou on application to Terms as usual, G. W. Sale 3 , 2 d Coal can be obtained DOr BLOIs, tor Sale or to Let. FYNEAT Freehold Vroperty, with a front of eighty feet on Peo aaa Street and eighty- four feet on Sydney Sstreet,the House contain- ing 16 large rooms and two Kitchens. Can be turned into one Dwelling by unlockirg a door. Apply on thé premises to MKS. BOSWALL. oon 26, 1880—ti MAGLEAN & MARTIN ATTERNEYS-AT-LAW, Newson’s Suilding, Opp. Post Office, Charlottetoun, P. E. 1. A, A. McLEAN. B.C. MARTIN, Ptomak 18, 1879.—ex2aw Valuable Property for ‘Sale, ee ee YO BE SOLD, all that part of Town Lot No, 74, in the first hundred of Tewn Lots in Charl ttetown; having a front of 67 feet, Dor- chester Street, and running back $0 feet, tos gether with the buildings thereon erected. For further particulars apply to Messrs, Hoveson & McLeop Charlottetown. Sept. 18, 1879. jernuptions So faras we es [ a ; hothing aur factivity in the ISLAND, SAI 'URDA Y, AUGUST 7, L880, Flames from a Volcano TEREIVEI: BERUPTIO> Ol THE FUEGO IN GUATEMALA. EM{TTING A UMN FIVE HUNDRED FEET HIGH.- THE SURROU LLUMINATED FOR CLOUDS OF DUST AND SMOKE. LONG SILENT NDING COUNTRY 50 MILES. » Fuego, near the city of An- tigua, Sreabeenatae S. A., has, after many years of silence and apparent rest, in which there was jittle to determine its character except occasional eninissigns and odd rambling neises from burst out in \ The 1 : 7 a8% a VOICana of smoke ats “Within— k now, there which pre and tc indicate aly exce vets nal oleanie avencies whieh are perpetually at ae in that region, and | therefore the ontburet, at 3 a.m. on June wis } , . | ’ 7 l. iy tne ew days ed the ns gee ‘ omer ee an angry and territieithe NO. 66 Victory in Turkestan. ait. Skoboloft’s General Skobeloff telegraphs to St. Pet- ersburg, that he started on the 19th alt., on & reconnaisance from Bami against the Tekke-Lurcomans with a light column, consisting of three companies, three sotinas three light and two mountain mitrailienses, anc ene rocket lle says they succeeded in des- much grain and provisions in store between Bami and Geok Tepe. After se¥- cral bayonet encounters, Skobeloff, on the 17th, occupied Isgan and Batyrkala. There Russians establish themselves, and Skobeloll! marched on the L&th with the reater portion of his column te reconnoitre ‘the Dezuil Tepe and Geok Tepe. Large ihasses of the enemys horsemen were en- The Russians advanced, fight- thousand paces of the out- , ; of Cossacks, yuns, our battery. troy Linge countered. ing within a 2%, was equally surprising and terrible for! works, beneath the shelter of which they the dwellers in the villages and conntry }recomnoitered. The Russians retired at about. As seen from the deck of the Pa jone o'clock in the morning, and despite cific Mail steamer Wilmington, by the /frequent determined onslarghts regained officer on wateh, at a distance, as the drow sean and VBatyrkala the same evening, ties, of nearly fifty miles, the spectaélepalaost Without loss. They re-entered Ba- was magnificent. From the highest péak}mi on the 22nd. The Russian casualties ot the Py veo great columns of flame darted for the nine days were three privates killed into the air to a height, as neatly.as couljand eight wounded. The Tekkes at Geok be determined, of 400 to 500 feet, ThefRepe numbered 10,000, surrounding country te the east iid south etn aia was illuminated by the treme se Personals. of the flames, while te. the Bs sicatindenil westward the cloud® of dust and sitil Sir J. Lister Bave, Bart., and the Hon. which accompanied” the. ‘ hflagration “ob 17. Burk Ketoche, are in New York. areuyres Ww } idle — _ as - ‘ ty I the . cont o frat 1 The Right Hor. Sir John Macdonald Ae {Hess Bf * rs ra™ . : . + 0 Oye wis Se a oh es Stern tase x lecided to retain in England another column ef fire rosé at east SOD foot mn enti. he ile t, solid and smooth, and then the} da ; : . eectiat dite . “1 Francis Cowley Bernard. ne of the staff top, expanding, opened out lke an uni | ane * aa ‘J}a 4 a ie i od ae iv ; i ee for i unch, succeeds the late ees a, tile Spi arans coruscating ike those jr j +; if } t 2 ’ ° « r r « . from a brilliant rocket. The pulsations pf{ °°” aylor, an editor of that paper flames durine the first two hours of the Th e Emp 8TOoTs ot irermany and Austria eruption was about fifty seconds apart, | W ill meet at | Ischel, on Aug. 10. The Prince strong and regular.” Less than half an hour after the eruption began, two streams of lava were seén making their way slowly down the moun- tain, one southward, toward the city of An- tigua, and the other westward toward the sea. As the molten masses moved slong, consuming everything combustible in their track, destreyivg the forests and licking up the small streams which they encountered, great volumes of smoke and steam rose from their deselating track. Until the morning dawned fully the lava streams g conld be elearly seen moving towards the valleva below, while above, the red-tjames,, with their attendant smoke and dust shot upward into the air. A river. the Guaeu- late, which has its origin en the western slope of the mountain, had a sudden and remarkable accession of water of a eonsid- erably increased temperature,probably from the breaking out of hot springs from the mountain side, or possibly a tlew of water from some of the openings in the crater itself. The eruption continued up te the time of the sailing of the Granada on the 2nd, the day before being distinguished by increased activity and display. No damage is reported as a result, although . ars were felt at the beginning of quick and terrible disaster. The last eruption of Fuegos was marked by exceedingly heavy eruptions of. lava, stones, and the course of the molten mass liberated at that peried may still be distinctly seen. Some good is like ly to come out of the evil, however, and some recompense to the dwellers in the surrounding country for the tremendeus — | fright a have a we The volcanic smoke and ashes will. said. kill the Suishippste, which inst. now are an intol- erable nuisance and threaten all growing ereps with complete destruction. Expsiling an Infidel Mason. DISCUSSION OF THE EXPULSION BY Hilts LODGE OF AN INDIANA PASTOR. THE Masonic circles in Indiana are much ex- ercised over a matter growing out of the Chainey heresy. Chainey was pastor of the First Unitarian church of Evansville, secoming infected with rationalistic of Servia will probably arrive at Ischel at about the same date. The uke of Cambridge’s favorite equerry, the Honorable ‘ Jimmy” Mae- donald, bas received the Colonelcy vacated by the death of Lord George Paget. Mr. John Dickson, believed to be the last representative of the famous regiment of the ‘‘ Seott’s Greys’ who charged se gallantly with the heavy cavalry at the battle of Waterloo, died at Nunhead Lake, Surrey, England, on ee the 17th ult., at the age of ninety-one. Ayoob K han is thirty yearsoid, He is Mhe’son of the late Ameer, Sheer = and is a ful! brother ef Yakoob Khan, with whom he served ip ihe campaign of 1867-68, which resulted in the restoration of Shere Alito the throne. When Yakoob Khan was recalled from Herat and imprisoned in i874, Ayoob Khan fled to Persia, and re- mained there nntil the British invasion drove Shere Ali from Cabul, when he re- turned to Herat and overthrew Shere Ali’s representative. It is stated that he was angry at Yakoob Khan for concluding the treaty of peace at Guucamuk, and he has since held aloof from Cabul. His saccess is likely to make him leader of Yakoob Khan’s party against Abdurrahman, and thus render the proposed settlement difti- cult. it has been a favorite ides among this party, since the deportation of the ex- Ameer, Yakoob Khan, to proclaiun Musa Khan, his son, Ameer, under Ayoob Khan's protectorate. . oteeiaaiiaiihias: aaiiilieill sine = ‘* How slim is Sara Bernhardt, pa, ‘That shadow of a shade?” " My hoy, she’s just about as thin As pic-nic lemonade.” Mr. Gladstone being one day in the Lon- don offices cf Mr. Lindsay, the ship owner, making a note of some shipping returns for his budget, a brusque and wealthy Sunderland ship owner who was watching him and was struck by the industrious and intelligent way in which he went to work, without dreaming of who he was, said, ‘Thou writes a bonny hand, theu dost.’ ‘fam glad you think so, was the reply. ‘Thou dost ; thou makst thy figures well ; thous't just the chap I want.’ ‘ Indeed?’ Ind. — Ba stay » hic - oronat ¥ nO mockery: that the hymn-boocks of the ehurch weuld serve a better purpose if sold tor waste paper, and that, if he con- tinued his ministry, it must be on that basis of belief. Mr. Chainey was a mem- ber of Reed Masonic lodge, and fer some years was its chaplain. Soon after the delivery by him of a sermon of rational- istic tendencies, efforts were made to have him arranged before the lodge for infidelity. No formal steps were taken, however, until about a month ago, when he was served with a summons to appear and auswer to charges and *pe .cifications, several in number, the most important of which charged him with denying the existence of God; saying that prayer was a pideons mockery, and uttering words in contempt of Masonry. |‘ The last was not sustained, but tle cthers were, and he was expelled for *‘ un-Masonic conduct’ in uttering false thoughts, doubts and opinions. Mr. Chainey was absent, but was represented by counsel, who filed what may be termed a demurrer, claiming that the charges did not constitute a Ma- sonic offense. The demurrer waz over- rnied, and a plea of not guilty was enter- tained. Upon that plea issue was joined. His sermon was offered and accepted in evidence. Oral testimony was heard and expulsion followed. Two other Masons, who in expressons of like belief, are ex- pecting to be expelled, and one has already ‘Yes, indeed,’ said the Sunderland man. for the offer,’ was the answer, ‘ and when Mr. Lindsay comes in Vl. consult him.’ Mr. Lindsay, when he came in, kept up the joke, saying he would not stand in the young man’s way, and the sooner they knew each other the better. ‘Allow me, therefore, to introduce to you the Right Hon. W. KE, Gladstone of the Exchequer.’ There was much latighing. Succes-ruL Sreck Ratsina. —Edward Vickerson, Esq., of Grand River, has purchas- ed a heifer calf, eight days old, from M. Hession, Kxq,, of this town, for the sum of ten dollars,—first calf from his heifer two and ahr‘ -ears eld, and Mr. Bovyer’s Aryshire RP The same owner sold John McDougall, Esy., Dundas, a heifer calf ten days old, from a cow pure hased for him by M. Blake, Esq., at Hon. J. C. Pope's sale last year, for which he received tw enty dollars,-—also bred by Mr, Bovyers Ayrshire Ball. This will give an idea of bow eager the farmers of King’s County are to procure the most improved kreeds of cattle.—A. C. Adre =>. A BAGGAGEMAN on the Grand Trank Rail- way, named Johnson, with a wife and two children, has eloped with the wife of a con- ductor named Fiswell, taking with them the two children of the latter. ‘The fugitives were pursued as far as Buffalo, whére they escaped, -- +. - iv is estimated that from twenty to twenty- tive tons of “cherries have been shipped from rtixe?. been summoned for trial. , ) Bear River, N. S., this season,