CO - ben dag pty, gg, Pahl, lito 1 : —E——EE a SE SES FS lr Cl — —— ah oe —— hewn tl cy — i ll Alc = "cE - eV == * alibi we Notes of a Naturalist. Tig Parry EXAMINER. : | JULY ‘I - GEOLOCY OF (HAREOTTETOWN HARBOR, ! ' iss? There is Wo fairer scene among all the Feenures anticlinate. By careful observation we can trace the same inclination of strata right up the valley of the North River to the Bridge. A mile above that point there occur some beds of conglomerate filled with quartzose pebbles, These probably consti | broad landscapes of the Dominion than the A Short Answer - ~ af Cae es - ae unded by its| tute the uppermost beds of the system. arb } ior tet« , wt ‘ e ” vk > i . " , * : rereen, Let us mount the | Between them and Blockhouse Point 1840 | : ’ i lis of summer green, sc ’ ‘ reartical de strats cur, Very hard up for a complaint agai evaied | on Warren Farm, crowned by | 'eet verticat depth of strata occ the Government. the Patriot carps at! ny. uid French fert, and have a view of its in the harbor these beds are mostly | EXAMINER f atures. The swift tide of the Narrows wssured | rushes in blue streaks just beneath our will | feet, Before us the broad, gleaming, ithe hing, day pling, azure and silvered sur- the harbor sports in the sunlight; Dut resis perfectly au expression ol Tue FXaMiner tlag the Post OM: be built in due time; ‘ec at Summerside for we have neve yet seen the pres of Government ge er hand stretches the low swell of repudiate ad ligation, however gress, | hills, wrapped in the fresh verdure ot cul- impored upon it by Parhament, No | vated fielde and groves; beyond rise the have we } ublished a sit gle word which e evations of the interler, swell upon sweil, eould sirty f mustrued us inconsisteut| cheir dark groves pury led by the growibg with this assurance. The fulfilment ot | listance: and, in front ef them, the town, mtracts entered iuato by Parliament i | with its thick grouped masts, and spires, a + : + » ime ‘ of the J' eer | sid crowded houses, nestles right dewn by yells: de aaa ar . : ue |che border of the wave. quite apother and te thing, lu} 1. “eile on the grassy rampart of the the po ragraph to ch the at | a hai | id tore and enjoy the freshness of the sea | | ' we alluded to the la ter. liow any OUC | opeege comit g throngh the harbor entrance, who strove to put Blake and Mackenzie} «e view the scene in all its loveliness. in power can have the “cheek” tot pbraid (‘Le summer sky bows over the shiuing the Goverument for not instantly expend- ‘ave, and rests its amber verge on the eae i on ' . : } |} purple hills beyond; the pearl-tinte d cloud ing large sums of money in this Island—— |e") ; s t ca ts a soft shadow as it passes over the Mackenzie ved Blak and alre udy rec whch both sayji * : ‘ e ming surface. The attenuated misti- has more than Ns ful jness of the sea air throws a delicate s ft- share is a Mystery. But in these dog i ie 8S OF panel lig on all the colors otf field deys, it is noturatly expected that the] and grove. and up the broad valiey of the Patriot will snap and snarl, and vatuly dilisborough, where the low hills recede te strive to bite. « horizon, it clothes them in tints of the ial blue—that great valley of the Hilsborough where the waters recede til t mingle with the verge of the ky! Itis a long trough scoop.d out ol | } te ne! _—e-— + est at t of Chariottetown. The Public Spir ey { Ir is with. the greatest pieasure the! er Permian rocks, and its southern we now chronicle the « fler of a gen le- <tremity forms the Charlottetown harbor. mon of this tewn to subscribe the sum | rhe history of this valley 18 peculiar. of $100 towards a public library It i- | Before the red rocks of our Isiand Were to be hoped that mavy more of our;!ad down in the Gulf, when the Carbom- citizens will forthwith come forward in|'e'eus strata alone formed its bed, there fexisted here a syneimmal vailey in that the cavse of the common weal. | ewaterm. Throvgh it the boreai currents At Woburn, mne generaay oF} passed on their way to the south, through one towpsman placed a handsome stone} (pe Bay of Fundy; and, during the Geposr builling, the pride of the town, for eve: jiion of the Perunam strata, they still kept at the disposal of the citizens. This] \he valley open in the same line. Thus, it magoificent edifice is stocked with tie| happens that the valley of the Hillsborouga best and the dovor has left a|®®% @ north-easterly and south-westerly ce eal ., | oireetion, while all other important valieys mouumenut more lasting than tombstones : ON oe cil ames ald f the Perwian, run nearly east and west. OF, UF128. yur Ye - = } Low different must heve been the scenery kind be ground hs} acound, when that valley was first formed new been broken. and we hopefully wait} it the close of the Permian. Then, as ta: for the ripeniug o the * Pablic Spirit of | 4s the eye could reach, there was nothing Charlottetowv.’ Names of gentlemen } ut one vast spread of sandy shoal, pacily desirous of assis'ing in the ectab ish-| eft bare in smooth rippled surface, partly ment of a Free Citizens Library will be|@%*red by, shallow, turbid waters, and tetvet at Tan Es we Office partly cousisting of far extending reefs, received at lar Examiner a where the white breakers, rollmg in from the deep sea, thundered the eternal swell of ovean’s anthem. Bat right through the widdie of shoal and breaker, there runs a deep blue strait where the boreal current poured its tide on its mission southward to cool the heated tropics. The red banks round the harbor are mostly composed of the boulder clay forma ‘ion. This formation spreads everywhere ever our Island. It consists of red clay, saud, gravel, and stones: and has a depth of from three to-thirty feet. In every part vf these banks which we may examiue, we will find nambers of worn, smoothed, and scratched or glaciated stones, bearing ample evidence to the agency of ice in its form stion. Floes of marine ice, doubtless, had much to do with the formation ‘ of the boulder clay; but the evidence of the opera im of glaciers, or creeping land ice, in pro- du-ing some of its features is abuncantly apparent. At Rocky Point, a little tothe west of Mass.. literature ; dwe here? The _—_—<“eS ¢ De Freycinet. M, Dr Freycinet, whose resigvation is chrouicled in our telegrams of to-day. was born at Foix, on November 14, 1828 Heis aman of much capacity, a skilled engineer, and well noted in France tor his services on various seien- tific aud industrial missions. After the revelution of September 4, De Frey- cifet was appoivted Prefect of Tarn-ei- Garonne. Onthe 10h of October fol- lowing, Gambetta entrusted him with supreme control of the department in counection With the Minister of War. He was elected a Senator by the depart- ment. of the Seive, January 30. 1876 being placed first on the list of snecessful candidates. In 1877, when the Dufanse mivistry was formed, De Freycinet ac-| iy. wharf,where the boulder clay is removed cepted the portiolio of Publie Works. ! trom the surface of the rock, we find that It is but « short time since he succeeded | :t is worn, smoothed and scratched by the Gambetta; and now, iv turn, he meets:* tion of a glacier which moved down the the fare of modern ministries in unstable | *4j:cent slope. At Mr. Robimson’s, North France ' River, we find another rock surface simi Bi larly marked. The scratches in both these cases have their direction down the slope of the land, though, in one case, this is northerly, and in the other easterly. At the month of Mill Creek, on Mr. Howard’s farm, an ancient glaciel moraine forms the river bank, and the masses of rounded avd -laciated stones which it contains are well exposed to view. At Brighton shore a sm lor instance is seen. Crops in the Northwest. A REPORT of the crop prospects in Manitoba -has just been issued by the Cavadian Pacific Railway Cempany. There bas been a very large increase in the average under cultivation, and a most promisiog and abundant crop is expected. In Manitoba there are 300.- 000 acres uuder cultivation. About one- half of this is under Glowing accounts are given of the future pros Here ani there along the shores we may find & block of grey granite or diorite, or, more rarely, a fragment of dark Laurentian rock. These were dropped from bergs and Hoes of ice, which eareered over the Isiand pects, and it is expected that the crops} “hen it was sunk deep beneath the waters of next year will be doubled. of the boulder sea. The granite stones : hae a ome from Nova Scotia, but the Lauren- Tne Muil says that of the 206 members| t##° tocks were borne from the far coast of of the House of Commons who met iu Labrad "> 7 meyer ‘ . Ottawa in 1879, atthe first session of the oe ae ee thesa oad of boulder or, last'Pactiame widit died four | reveal! They tell of the upward march of accepted judicial appoint with destractive tre ad over the Lieutenant-Governors, elevated | hele surface of our land, They tell of to the Seuate, three resigned to make wavy | ™° '®'S. of an Arc ic winter, when snow. | for other members, three were unseat d.|™mouetam and ice-field, berg and glacier and twenty-five who presented themselves ni 7 the scene with their deathly glare, to the electors at the recent elections were | Beth the hottest summer suns. defeated. [t is stated that only fifty-five of the 206 members of 1879 are row entitied to be addressed as M. P’s. The House of Commons is truly kaleidoscopic in its personnel, but it is not very change- wheat. in harness, : thy ce ents, two be¢ame a two were The cold of the boulder period is now referred to astronomical causes; and is snip- posed to have been produced by the occur- vence of the northern winters at the time when the earth was in that part of its »rbit able so far as its principles are concerned. | most distant from the sun. If this theory sievnepsiotaiiiimaeiataas, Macias iee se is correct, then that red band of clay Tue Prussian Cross Gaz ite, in an article and 7 s will represent a period of the on the policy of Germany, says: —‘The | °atth’s history ten thousand years in dara- maintenonce of the former state of things a ; : : impossible since Exzyot has practically Round the harbor in various places, im- fallen under the dominion of England. It | ™edlately underlying the boulder clay, we is impossible to pregnosticate the work of | have small out-croppings of rock, They the future, as no Power has disclosed its | © msist of rather dark-c lored red sand- plans. England has not yet reckoned up| stone beds, of the Permian formation. the conseq iences of her cuurse. There i3 j Though we tind these he ls in immediate no necessity, therefore, for Germany to} conjunction with the boulder clay, yet an prematurely take sides. Prince Bismarck, |immense gap in time separates the two, in deci ling upon the attitude to be taken, The whole of the secondary perk d. with its will not prove false to tradition.” | monster reptilian forms, and the Tertiaries, ——- with their mighty mammals, had passed American beef exports continue to rapid. | @¥4¥ between the deposition of those red ly decline. 2s the ‘shippers can no longer | sandstone beds and that of the clay banks compete with Canada and Australia, The) which repose upon them. quantity sent abroad last month was only | At the entrance of the harbor we have 2,623,920 Ibs., against 6 042,146 Ibs. in the | 89me very good sections of rock exposed. in same month last year; and the amount in| the high banks on either side. Here we the eight months ended June, 1882, was | see that the system is composed of alterna- only 33,878,414 ibs, against 77 050,178 | ting beds of sandstone and red clay shale. lbs. in the equivalent period ended June, | We can observe (listinctly, too, how the 1881. Ans‘ralian meat is being received in | firma beds of sandstone have formed»the England in increasing quantities, it being headlands and the hills, and how the bidre brought over in ships s), scially built for the | trade, having larze moat ch wobers, with a ito form thee ives and the hollows in the Capacity equal to a thousand tons. | land. +<.- | We have here also an opportunity of | _. Tue Hession Fly has appeare’ in the vicin- | Observing the dip, or inclination, of the | ity of London, Ous., and Mr Will am San- ders. presitent of the Ey tonolocialS wiety, estimates the damage to the Wheat crop in consequence, at over 20 per cent, beds, which is toward the north, at angles, | mereasing, #8 we proceed out the entrance from three to ten degrees. These beds are on the north side of the Hillsborough co) teria and other genii, traces of calamities, graceful branclets. past. obscured by the covering of boulder clay, but the same are to be seen in good sec- tion on the sea coast at Canoe Cove, and t the westward; and there we may study them to great advantage. Traces of fossil plants are to be found in the rocks about the harber We have found fragments of ferns, of Pe knorria, and many limbs of pines. Nea: North Poimt isa bed filled with casts vl siemws and branches of what appears to be Auracavities gacilis. In some instances the jong siender needles still adorn tie The thick, fan-shaped leaves of neogra- hia are also to be found, and these are interesting, a8 they probably are tiie leave of the great pine tree, Dadoxylun. Trunks ut these trees are rare, but small twigs and eaves are not infrequent. As the great mon- | archs, towering their dark forms aiong tie | river bank, in dense groves which the axe uever depleted, swayed before the weih if the sweeping tempest, whole shuwers 01 their large massive leaves would be dashed into the surging tide, to be borne away and entombed with the gathered wrecks of te ea The rveks are everywhere tilled with cuuntless fragments of sea-weeds, and emong them these few stray leaves of the arclent forest trees ace a treasure to the ecologist, Let us go down for a stroli round Biock- youse Pot. How the rushing tide chafe> ‘od whiris and fcams among the broken masses Of rock at the entrance point! Tie beds bere are indurated with carbonate ot ume which has enabled them to resist the action of the wayes, while everything else has given way. A splendid growth of seaweed covers the rocks with heavy dra pery. The fucus, with tts short branching 20,000 Tioops Despatched. A THE DAILY BXAMINER, JULY 3: TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. a a re ee Latest Telegraphic News, indisposition of British Soldiers, "Scots Wha’ Bruce.” re SEYMOUR RECONNOITERING ABOURIR. | j | Special to the Examiner. Lonpon, July 3l. Extensive preparations sre being made for the lamediate despatch of 20,0U0 troups to Lgypt. ‘bey will be shipped eff in successive | actachments to the scene of war. Sir Garnet | ‘volseley has been appointed to the chief, command, rs News bas just been received here giving dreadiul accounts of the serious indispositi p of British forces in Egypt. : ihe Scots guards, seven hundred and fifty strong, have eaibarked for Egypt. ALEXANDRIA, July 31. The report of Arabi having given in his submission to the Porte is now emphatically cenied, Admiral Seymour reconnoitered Aboukir nd fourd the torts there weli armed. Fre. parations for the bourbardment are rapidly icing caried op. So tar, the settled p'aus are not made known. DEP EAT OF DE FREYCINET, . wees. BIRTH, Lo this city, on the 29th inst., the wife of Ir, J. Harris, of a son. - eet MARRIED, At Royal Hotel, st John, N. B., on the) 27th inst, by the Rev. J. M. McLeod, Mr. Donald Nichoison to Miss Martha Ff. McWhee, | both of this city. In tLis City, on the 19:h inst., by the Rev. Kenneth Mactennan, Mr. Murdoch DVDoyhervy, of Selkirk, Lot 60, to Miss Mary Anu Mac dowvald ot Pleasant Valiey, Lot 62. By the same, on the same day, Mr. John McLeod, of Dundee, Lot 59, to Mias Fira Ann Dogherty, vf Selkirk, Let 0 | i | pip. On Sunday mornirg, the 30th iast., John A. Henderon, aged 0 years. Funeral wiil | leave his muther’s residence, Kent Nereet | West, for the Railway Station at 2. 10 o'clock, to-morrow. At Argyle Shore, on the 19h Juiy, Dougald McLean, sou of Vonald McLean, iu the 30ch | year of is age, deeply lamented. HOTEL ARRIVALS. ques amen i REVERK HOUSE. | July 29- T W Higgins, =t Joho; J 8 Area: ivaid, Montreal; J MicAuiay, wile and daugh- ter and son, do; James S dchas, Toronto. 31 —J Murray, Brockvilie; J © Hoiden, Mon- | treal. RANKIN HOUSE, July 31—-W T Lawson, Halifax; David Flest, New York; W A Ciaveu, Monvreail; Damel MeVouald, toronto; bells Chishol +, New Glasgow; W P Horre, Portiand, Maine; C ii Moore and wife, Boston, Mass; & b Brewster, Montreal; A Pelleticr, Quebec; | William Stone, Souris. Si ASIDE HOTEL— RUSIICO BEACH, July 26—sidney McGregor, London, "ng. July 27—Miss Madaline Haviland, Ci’town; Miss E Blanche Haviland, do. July 28—J © tioden and wi:te, Montreal; WJ Wilson aad Kesignation of the French cabinet. stems and floating bladders, makes a thick brown carpet over the low rocks. Brigit green tape-weed covers the = sheltercd muddy bollows. Heavy masses of curda- tillum, many feet in length, stream in the ride, anchored to a sivugie sheil or pebble Mnny colored sprays of carageen grow on ‘he deep reeks. There are corallins,too, fairy forms of the deep, like minaiture fores’s, carved in ivory. Here is a sertulara, a span in length, with spirally arranged trapchlets, covered with polipe cups, that each bear a bright-hued coral flower. Tubun- laria, too, with clear, horny stems, and living, pinky b‘ossoms. See here is a curious fleshy mass, adher- ing to a deep recess of the rock. What a shapeless, uninviting thing it is. But take and put it in a pool, or wait till the tide rises round it, and, lo! a many-petaled flower of brilliant hue—the sea anemone. Some of these hard rocks are completely covered with the little snowy tents of bar vacles—Ba/anus. Little, black-nosed peri winkles craw! everywhere; and bright-tinted velutina defy the stormy surges. The thick spiral shells of purpuria crowd on the sides of the rocks; and the pure white Valves of the petracola may be found burrowed deep in its mass. These shells love the rocks and the wild stormy exposed situa- tions. There are tiny ones, too; lovely gems in their mivuteness. The slipper limpet, with its polished, variegated surface, pearly cytheria, and a glossy surfaced little buc- cinum, richly shaded, that, were it laiger, would be counted a treasure for the cabinet, As we pick up one of these among the wiid rocks, where the heavy surf is lashing, we remember Tennyson's lines: — Small, but a work divine, Frail, Sut of force to withstand, Year upon year, the shock Uf cataract seas, that snap The three-deckers oaken spine. We ass along the shore to the westward, over the rocky floor, piled with huge frag ments tumbled trom the cliffs. At a short «distance fiom the point there isa large, flat slab of rock-uptilted, like a sloping table. Across its upper end there is a i road band, of darker hue than the rest of the stone. On examining it carefuliy, we find that it is hned with a thin coating of carbcnate of lime, and that it is marked by a number of longtitudinal ribs, and that there is a joint or break in these where one series ends and another begins fn short, it is a section of the stem of a great calamite—Calamitas gigas—six inches in diameter. The lime which hardeus the structure of some of these beds, was supplied, in part, at least, by stony corels, for we find con. sideraile remains of them among the rocks, Here is a litile rocky recess where the waves have gathered their treasures—pear ly shells, bright sea-weeds, glittering pebi ks. Among them we find a brown fragment o1 silicified wood. It was pait of the sten, of an ancient pire tree—dadoxrylon materis- rium. We can see on it the annular rings, the nbumerous medullary rays, and perhaps, the great central pith. Under the micto scope every tissue, and fibre, and vessel, is seen as perfectly as in wood from a living tree And now we know that the pine trees of the Palozoie were as perfect in every adaptation for strength and protec- tion, and growth and reproduction, as the daik-foliaged monarchs ot our own forests. They bear the same evidence of wisdom and intelligence and design in their struc- ture, and tell of the hand of the eterna/ a chitect in the past eternity the same as in the prese t We proceed along the rocky shore. It is a tiresome scramlle ; but how delightfui ! The great bosom of the bay spreads its blue to the horizon, fresh, gleaming resplendent. The measured swell of the waves, burs’s its form at our feet. The wild wind wanders fresh from the sea. The kerlew wails along the shore, and the pewit skims the silver border of the tide. White sheils glisten on the sa: d, or pearly ones mingle their rays with the bursting f-am, while overhead, the towering red cliff rises its majestic front to meet the arch of the summer sky, a ead] single leaf from the might yielding beds of shale have been worn ont in ° Se dail oe which is recorded the history of the B. ——————> +e “TRAYED from the pasture of W. BE. Dew- | eon, Esq , Malpeque Koad Road, on Su iday ; : y| Morning, ared cow, with large horns. Auy|8educe a young girl, if he succeeds in >| One kn owing of her whereabouts wil! ob ize by leaving informatjon with Fletcher, Great George Street, ya: os Special to the Examiner. Paris, July 31, '* The French Chamber has refused to sane- iou the war eredit denianded by the Govern- mont When the vote was taken the measure was rejected by 450 to 47. ‘he Cabinet have resigned, Lord Coleridge to visit Amer.¢a, CHOLEA RACING IN JAPAN, Special to the Examiner. Loxpon, July 31. Lord Coleridge, the Chief Justice of E g- land, will visit America next year. « holera is spreading rapidly in Japan, and nm skang sad havoc among the population. High Death Rate in New York Special to the Examiner, New York, July 31. The death rate in New York has increased at a terrible rate during the past week. The number of deaths is twelve hundred and seventeen. This is the largest unmber of deaths for one week in New York for the last teu years, Latest Canadian N ews, Aquatic— Ministeria!---Natatorial, Special to the Examiner. The date of the Halifax Negatta has at lest been fixed. The matches wiil take place on tne 6th September. An influeutial committee has been appointed to solicit subscriptions and make the necessary preparations. (Great efforts are being made to induce Hanlan to visit the city during the regatta days. Chapleau wil. be sworn in as Cabinet Minis ter; and Mousseau will form his Provincial ministry to-morrow. Charles Nurse, of Toronto, has challenged the famous English swimmer, Captain Boyn- tex, to a swimming maten for £.00a side, Boynton courteously declines, on account of pressing engagements, GENERAL NEWS, Lonpon, July 28. A report was current in the Commons last evening, that the Sultan had made overtures to Great Britain looking to the latter's acquirement of Egypt on the same terms as those on which Cyprus changed hands, Prt Said is full of men-of-war. There ig no interruption to traffic on the canal, but the public feeling is one of indignation a’ the conduct of DeLesseps in opposing measures for the safety of Port Said and the canal. He is believed to be in daily communication with Arabi Pasha. Enro- prans, including French subjects not under | DeLesseps’ thumb, contemplate sending to the foreign office at Paris complaining of his intrigues. The ‘‘Inflexible” has gone to summon the Aboukir forts to surrender, and to bombard them if they do not surrender. The marines who recently arrived here have been ordered to Ismalia. Orrawa, July 29, Sir Leonard Tilley will probably visit the North West next month with Hon. H. Langevin. Weather Bulletin. Probabilities for the next 24 hours tor the Maritime Provinces. Toronro, July 31—10a. m. Moderate winds ; fair warm weather. The Globe says:—‘‘Iu this Canada of ‘us. if aman ‘prescribes’ for a cut fineer he becumes in the eye of the law a crimi- nal, and way be sent to prison in default of payment of a fine. But if aman deli- berately coaspires with his own lust to wreeking a life and everwhelming a fan il with humilatiop, the law takes no cogni- zance of his offence. wife, Cleveland, O; Mrs ‘WB Hosford and ¥ {chiliren, Chieago, July 29-E G Milhdge, | Autigonish, N 8; Donald Downie, B CU L, Montreal; Miss Dewnie, du; Wm Murphy, Ch'town; Jobn A Murphy, Cuba; Charies ( Gardiner, (htown; James Iweedie, seot land; LH Davies, Ch'town., July 30-—W 1 Lawson, Halifax; CB Mitchell, Boston; Frank MeDouald, Ch’town; Sarah Jane McCarron, do; Knuna C Bigeins, do, New Tobacco Factory, RiCHHOSD STRERT. ie Subscribers wish to inform the public that they have opened a TOBACLO TAVERNIER-LEWIS DRAMATIC CO'NY, WHO WILL APPEAR aT ACADEMY OF iMusic, TWO NIGHTS ONLY, MONDAY & TUESDAY. JULY 3isr AND AUGUST Jy. — i ca RETURH OF THE PopuLag TWOoONEw PLAYs MONDAY wVENING, the ¢ reat Cowedy entitled Joshua Whitcomb, as performed over 2000 times in the U, g TUESDAY, the Eveut of the Seago, Dion Boucicault’s Celebrated Drama, ARRAH NA POGUE, with full cast, effects,and Ja Z50 bris A oa. 25 ‘. 250 CS i256 9 . WHITE BUNS choie DUART, NEW NATION, NE PLUS UL#RA, CHAMPION, / July 23—dly pat di, ej ne 2, 50 sacks { K- D, CORNMEAL Music, Songs, great scenie rge corps Of auxilliaries. Admis-sion £5 aud 35 cents; R 50 cenis; for sale at br. Dodd wn "ies Flour and Co i* STORE AND TO ARRIVE, — eserved Seats rnmeal. e Sup. F xtra, FENTON T. NEWBERY. wkly 2i sugar and Molasses, ' #0 ARRIVE per 1. J. BILL, ve here 100 pun 1) tier 8. -~ALSO IN 15 hhds. PORTO RICO SUGAR, 50 bris R« FINED SUGAR, STORE — 25 puos. TRINIDAD MOLASSES, MANUFACTORY on Richmond Street, in }the establishment formerly occnpied by Mr. | Philip Coyle, aud are prepared to supply the | trade with | Tebacco of ali kindy, | as good as cen be purchased in the city, and | } at lowest prices, } B&F Patronage solicited and orders prompt- | ly filled. COYLE & McQUAID. | Ch’tewn , July 31, 1882—3m 2aw wky s jo| PICNIC! pe. BIBLE CHRISTIAN 8. 8. PICNIC will be held on the pleasant and well. shaded Grounds of John McKinnon, E-q., Rocky Point,on THURSDAY, August 3rd, The “S uthport” will leave the Ferry Wharf at 10.30 a. m. Tickets i0 cents each. Refreshments wil! be Grounds, } supplied on the li—jy 31 PORK ‘ND HAMS, ON HAND AND FOR SALE LOW, 70 Barrels Prime Mess Fork, O00 Sugar Cured Hams, AT THE FISH MARKET. J. MW. MYRICK, Ch’town, Juiy <9, 1882. eod —WOTIGR 10 CREDITORS, T OTICE is hereby given that Jony Scort. of Chariottetown, Carriage Builder, hath, by two several indentures. each bearing date the third day of July, instant, AD, igo conveyed and assigned aj! bis real and pe tr sonal estate and elfects to the undersigned, im irust for the equal benefit of the creditors of the said John Scott. All such creditors are hereby notified to furnish their claims to us, or any ot us, with- ‘mone month from this dete, and assent to and execute the assiznment. Dated this Tweniy-ninth day of July, A D. 882, DONALD FERGUSON, WILLIAM 5: OTT, KDDISON W. DAWSON, Assignees, July 29, 1882.—1m eod w 3i Dental Notice. R, EATON, with a view to introduce his practice of Deutistry in this City, will be prepared to ive his services for the next few Months, at greatly reduced prices Satis- faction in every Branch of Dentistry guara:- teed. ? Office of Drs. Hyde & Eaton, Great George Street, Charlotretown. RECOMMENDATION. From a personal acquaintance with G. W. Eaton, Keq., for some years past, and with his practice of Dentistry, | take much pleasure im recomMen.ing him to any who are in ned of a competent De»tist, A, C, COGSWELL, D. D.8, Halifax, July 4, 1822. jy 25 iw, wkly 2w, law 2m The New Boarding House, N KING STREET, adjoining the Ferry Store, is prepared to accommodate & limited number of boarders and lodgers, Ap- ply to J. Renpat, proprietor, fiy 18 tf SXSM VER est and mos Newsy Paper ‘ UBSCRIBE for the VALU the Chea Published in - K Talend, from Barbadoes first week in August, 39 bhds. choice GROCERY SUGAR, Lo ces Bright BARBADSES MOLASSES ris, FENTON T. NEWSERY. July 25---diy pat 5i, ej ne 2i, wkly 2i Closing-out Sale. AM instrueted by the Assignee of Charles” a I. Morrison and Jchn H Un by AUCTION, at their Store, Queen Street, — on THURSD\Y NEXT, 3rd August, at i] ‘clock, all the etock-tn-trade, consisting of Hats and Caps, licadymade Clothing, Shirts, | Collars anu Tics, Ruboes Coats, a quantity of | ise otch Tweeds and other Purnitur:, tegether | proof Sates also 2 L ijy’s Seal Skin Sweqnes ieud some Gents’ Fur Caps, Shop No reser Ve, Goods; thrae, to seg 8; also the with one Fire. Sale positive WILLIAM DODD, Auctioneer, ‘3 Also, at the same time, by. order of the Merchavts Bank, the tn: ap.red lease of the shep and premises, free of Ke nt, for about 17 years, Terms at sale, Ci’cown, July 28, °82. out Engine, capable of grinding five tons of W.D. for Sale. HE undersigned offers for sale, the Pot tery Cumpany’s Bone Mill, with or with Bones per day, —ALSO— | Bulmer & Sheppard’s Brick Machine, capa- ble of turning out 10,600 Bricks per day. As the Company intend contining theit business to the maoufacture of Earthenware, the above will be sold at a bargain. FRED. W. HYNDMAN. July 14 1-82-10: «od JULY 26th. Finished & for Sale To-Day, lot Chairs, better apd cheaper than ever AT THE P. E. 1SLAND URMTIURE §=WAREROGOMS, KING SQUARE, A large assortment of ( ane Chairs, Rockers, Easy Chairs of al] kinds, anoth r new ot Cornices (very fine), ‘ common offeret for sale in the city, Picture Mouldings ond Frames. M. BUTCHER, July 26, 1°82—1w », de WANTS, LONT, FOUN OQ RENT—A nice comfortabie Cottage, convenient to the Market. Possession given immediately —J, J. Carpet, OST, on Saturdsy night, between J, B. McDousid’s Diy Goods Store and Ter- jizzick’s corner, a small sum of money. The finder wil be suitably rewardec by Iraving it at the Family Grocery,—R, K. Brace. jy \ .AN(‘ED IMMEDIATE. Y- At Bell's ‘Y= Tailoring Establishment, Kent Sereet West, a first-cluss Machinist None but those thoroughly compet: nt to fill the situa tion need apply.—Jonn Bet, (iy 22 \ ANTED—A Girl for general housework. Apply at THe Examiner Office. (july]3 IGGER FOR SALE, nearly new and im good order, suitavle for single horse oF for team. Enquire at this cflice. {ju 5 wd ITY HOTEL TO LET-— This Hotel it finely situated, standing opposite the BisLop's Palace, on the highest ground in the city, It contains 37 roume, and being Con- ti,uous to the 8S eam Navigation Com)anv’s Wharf, is admirably adapted fur the acccmo- dation of summer visitors to the Terins e & Co, Oni Apply to Messus, Gee, Hoke island, Davies fap 17 ee = nema Sage, Sew SO et br sac SRR Se ‘ ee "wa tpg sea A