Five DoLuarRs 4 Y BAR. af ‘* This 1s true Liberty, when Free-born Men, B =. = = — SINGLE Copiks Two CENTS. ~\EW SERIES CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1884. VOL. 15.---NO. 113. THe Laity EXAMINER is issued every evening, by * Se — 1: ‘ The Examiner Publishing Oo. Fr eir office, corner of Water and tireat Greorwe Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Is!and., Rares oF SUBSCRIPTION ; Six Moatha, . - . $2 50 Thcee Months, - - - 1 26 Month, . : . v0 50 ~~ \.vertising at most moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, iarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise ; | application. ALMANAS FOR OCTOBER, 1384. MOONS CHANGES, ‘all Moon, 4th day, Sh. 47.5m., p. m. wet Quarter llth day, 10h. 16.7m., a. m. m 18th day, Sh, 18 9m., p. m. irst Quarter, 27th day, Oa. 41.9m., a. m. Sun ‘San !Moon|High | Days “> WE) rises sets | rises pwater|len’h : bhmihm aft’n, morn] hm Wednesday 6 35 36 3 55, 7 52)11 23 2’ Thursday 5) 3t) 4 26) 8 43 29 3 Friday | 6 3314867 OD: 2% \Ssturday | 7] 29152910 6 22 § Sunday 9 23, 6 3)'0 & 19 6| Monday | 310i £6 6411127) 16 7' Tuesday 12' 24 7 24 aft 8) 12 3! Wetnesday gi 22! § 14! 0 5'! 9 9' Thursday 45 20 910.1 6 1) Friday — 16) 19}10 18! 2 39) 2 Lt Saturday 17; 16'11 16; 3 38 10 59 12 Sanday ; 18; 14 morn}! 4 5% 56 13 Monday | 39) 12' 023 6 71 53 14 Tuesday 1 <al 11} 2°, 7 3i| 50 156 Wednesday | 23 9.2 G8:8 23,.. 46 16 Thursday oe 71,340,;9 9 43 17. Friday 25) 5| 4 451 9 48 40 13, Saturday 37 445471024 37 19|Suaday |} 23! 2 64910 58} 34 20 Moaday | 0 7 5011 32, 3! 21, Tuesday 31'4 58 8 48'morn| 27 22) Wednesday 32. 56' 9 44 0 6! 24 23, Thureday 33, 6410 35 0 40 21 4 Friday 35). 53 MW 22; 1 16 is 25 Saturday '. 36)... 5) aft 6' 1 55 15 25 Sunday 38: 48) 0 40 2 42 12 27, Moaday 41} 47' 1 20. 3 37 9 25/Tuesday ! ia 56 1 §2 4 43 6 29 Weduesday | 43, 45; 2 23| & 58) 3 30) Thuraday 44, 44 268'7 9 0 31) Priday 45\4 42; 324 5 9 9 59 CHR RAILWAY PIM FABLE. (Charlottetown Time.) APPLES, APPLES, APPL'S 79 Queen St. London, E. C, ers, Merchants and Shipyers, witha view to Autuma and Spring business customers requiring advances, ang] St. John’s, kewfoundiaud. Consiguments solicited, nade. July 25, 1884.—2aw 4m N. J. GAMPBSELL, | (Successor to Campbell & Rayden) Anctioneer and Commission Merchant, SHIP BROKER, ANB ENSURANCH AGENT, COR. CF QUEEN AND WATER STS., Chariotictowsa, P. E. island. importer and Jebber of Cheice Groceries and Spices. General Agent for P. KL. Island of the British Empire Mutual Life Assurance Com- pany, of London, England Special attention given to Auction Sales of Lumber, Coal, Fisb, Apples and other Fruit, Real Estate, Household Furniture, Bankrupt and other Stocks, and all kinds of Merchan- dige. Correspondence and Consignmants elicited Returrs promptiv r+ Scio a eure icLeod, Morscn & MeQuarvis, BARRISTERS -~-AX bD-— ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Office in Old Bank, (@P STATRS). GOING WEST. 4.M. AM. P. XK. Charlottetown .......--.«. 647 912 427 ES ie A 747 1055 547 Pp. M. Kensington ...... esesecees 8 42 12 22 7 05 Summerside, } S**°V®-----: ° o7 = 9874 depart.,.... 927 232 WG EE, cn ac anno eseees 1030 415 Albertes.....-. ns eenes 1205 6 57 BM. 5. ceeeccdovecees 1242 747 FROM WEST. aim om BEEN « voctoedanssne<onal 202 647 RU nc ceceadabeceras 240 757 Ue SE ccd ee + chcsewenne 415 105 ' asvive... sv 517 1207 Summerside, { gepart,.....542 122 657 SEED oc kc dseud ceedys 607 209 730 Hant r BUIVEE cccceceovvses 7 02 3 25 8 47 Caariottetown .........-+ 802 507 1007 GCING EAST. aM. a M. GCeariottotowe. ... cc ccccess items... iv 2% 3 Mount Stowart, {| SC@--""""""357 902 Be PUNO Osc wed oc wee ocsvesueen 617 1002 P. M. A ctin neat ibdeeneeneneen 722 1202 A. M. Mount Stewart.......c0.00-+++--5 32 9O7 PR gj nasa oh i Dhe doth odes 08 629 1022 NED coccccccscssepeeneees 647 1047 FROM EAST. A. Be Pv NS 0 a0 a ese 647 217 PUNO... codscdcueccesase as 752 400 es os b arvhV c0ae cece 842 517 Mount Stewart, { depart......-.847 542 Gmariottetown. ......cscecceesecs 952 727 A . .cnos apne san sis aebie 727 332 Nn «kc ccntpemeeneninienns 745 357 M Dee: MPEG... cc cccte cn dwmene 8 42 512 CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED R. O’DWYER, Commission and General Merchant FOR SALS OF PB. 1, PRODUGE. 289 WATER STREET, Si. Johns’ Newfoundland, In counection with the above is Captain English, who is well known in P. E. Island, who will take special charge of al! consigu- ments, and will also attend to the chartering of vessels for the carrying trade of P. E. 1. The firm is one of the oldest and most reli- able in Newfoundland Returns guaranteed to be prompt and satisfactory. Parties wish- ing to procure Labradore Herring should send their orders in time. Sept. 6, 18S4,—till 3let dec, '84. i. ARTHUR & CO., GHN HRAL Commission Merchants, 12] ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOoOsToOoWw, MASS. Bggs and Produce a Specialty. Muy 15, 1884 —wkly tf , Ch’town, Feb. 21, 1884. W. WHEATLEY, WHEATLEY & CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. IsLanb) Commission Merchant, 269 BARRINGTON STREET, Te Aw A ae. th a Special attention given to the sale of P. E. Island produce. April 24, 1854. Piano Tuning & Repairing N R. VINNICOMBE begs to inform the musical public that he is now prepared to take in Pianos for repair. Pianos recapped With neatness, defective sound boards re- newed, keys tightened, actions regulated;—in fact the whole construction renovated. Cabi- net Organs repaired. Church Organs voiced and tuned. Having received a large stock of Piano Fitting, Wire, etc., from the celebrated Emerson Piano Manufacturers, with nearly twenty years experieace in that business, and under the patronage of Government House, the Convents, and the leading musical families on the Island, feels sure of giving universal satisfaction. ‘Terms——Cash when work is done. Offico—C. P. Fletcher’s New Musie Store. Ch’town, May 91---we aa | (Or Soxs, SS a. a a. ee ae Prince kdward island Hospital, MEDICAL BOARD: Dr. Hobkirk, Consulting Physician, Dr, Johnson, Dr, Taylor, Dr. Beer, Dr, Dawson Dr. Warburton, Dr. MacKay. —_— Matron —Mrs, Hannah Robinson Applications for admission may be made to the Visiting Physician or Matron, at the Hogpita!, daily (Sundays excepted), between ten and eleven, a, m., or by correspondence with any member of the medical Board, or the Matron. The friends of patients will be admitted from two to four, p. m,. every day (except Sunday). The general visiling day for persons wish- ing to see the institution is Thursday of each week, from two to four o'clock, p.m, D. RB. MACLENNAN, Secretary of Trustees. April 24 ood witly Spruce. Fisutag aad Shiaing, & AVING been appointed by Messrs. Prim- H ruse Brothers, o' Pictou, Agent for the sale of their well known Grooved and Tongued SPRUUE FLOORING and SHEATHING, 1 will always have on hand a stock of the same WELL DRIED and SEASONED, which I have no hesitation in recommending as the best in the market. Messrs. Primrose Brothers are also prepared to execute promptly orders left with me for any deseription of Spruce Scantling, Boa: cig, Laths, &c. i For further particulars apply at my resi dence, Prince Street. THOMAS ALLEY, ‘Swugl—2aw 3 m. Will be glad to correspond with Apple Grow- They willalso give the usual facilities to | WEST & RENDELL, Commission Merchants, . Liberal advances J Qld, Successful, Trustworthy, ELECTRIC GLOSS, CHARLES BOMALD & (0, PURELY MUTUAL, Pf in No sluckiolders, Dividends Annually. ORGARIZED 1845. eee | NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE GO. | WcLEAN & MARTIN, Agents for P. E. Island. Ch town, Aug 27—2m 2aw wily CONTINUED SALE WATCHES, CLOCKS, Jewelry and Plated Ware, gE. W. TAYLOR, Queen Street. Chitown, Ang. 4—-«ed whkls MONCEON — Sash ald Door Factory, R. P. LEA, in returning thanks to the; 4VE public for the liberal pat~-oageextended | to him while in busiaess in Charlottetown, begs leave to inform his old customers and the public generally, that he, in company with Mr. William Rogers, has appointed Hessrs. B&B. Williams & Co, Lumber aud Coal Dealers, Pownal Whari, Charlottetown, our agents, who will k constantly on hand a full supply of Mould- ings, Window Sashes, Doors, etc., at LOWEST CASH PRICES, All orders entrusted to them will receive prompt attention. LEA & ROGERS, Monetan, N. R. Gept F RP ner wly WeMILLAN'S DEEOT COAL, In all the leading varities, including AGADIA, - - - Nut and Rovnd, INTSRCOLGNIAL, - do do VALE, -- - - - do do SYDN&Y, (old mine) Round, SYDNEY, (reserve) lo CHIMNGY CORNER. do ALBIOw & RESERVE SLACK, Allof which will be sold on most reasonable terms, ALSO TO ARRIVE: A cargo of (Red Ash) Anthracite Coal from Wales, due here ist October, and same quality as gave such good satisfaction three years ago. Will be sold low from ship, BR. McMALLAN. STANDARD Lid ASSURANCE GO, i ' the 57th Annual General Meeting of (CA the Staudard Lite Assurance Company, heid at Kdimburgh on tuesday, the 24th of | April, 1833, the following results for the lyear ended 15th November, 1553, were re- | ported i— 4 | % -- (3,038 new proposals for lile as- surance were received the year for $ 9,754,085 38 | 2,561 proposals were accepted, | assuring 7,239,048 13 The total existiig assurances in | force at 15th Novem ber, 1382, amounted to th th . may Pe O21 15 , | (OF which $7, 753,081. lo was reassured with other offices) The claims by death which arose during the year amouut- $6,936,302 91 Copper and Plate Glass Permanent ! Being Quick ! entirely OR cleaning Solid Silver, Nickel, Brass, Sure ! No dirt, no trouble, no labor. free from grit and acids, it cannot iniure the most finely burnished sur. face, I: is the ouly preparation ever pro. tavern for every 18 voters, duced that will polish brass or copper with- ° Drunken Switzerland. n 1874 certain judicious restrictions re- gulating public houses in Switzerland were abandoned, and there is now a tavern for every 130 of the population, or deducting women, children and the sick, there is one for 30 persons. In one canton there is a ‘out the use «f acid, Nothing approaches it of ¢runkenness and crime, the great ma- for removing grease and finger marks from jority of the offences having been com- Brass, Copper, Glass, etc; while for cleaning mitted in taverns or by persons who had | useful, got drunk in those places, called to the injury done to working men, | Nickel o1 Stoves it is especially ‘Retail price, 25 cents per bottle, | MICA WASH.—This wash is the only and the suffering inflicted on their families, thing of the kind ever invented. A stove’ py the wasting of earnings in taverns. | may be as hindsome asa jewel and shine like Pajlures, bankruptcy and forced sales are ' on . . Cash Asseis over 390,000,000. ebony; but smoke mica lights will spoil it Day by day mica becomes scarcer end higher in price, and an article that will clean ‘and preserve it is valuable to all concerned, Try this wash once, and you will always use) all, it. Retail*price, 275 cents per bottle, } U.S.A, and sold by every respectable Drug gist, Stove Dealer, Hariware Merchant and) The Canadian} General Dealer in Canada. trade supplied by JOUN T. REED, 105 Water Street, St. John, N. B Specially low prices during this Hlouth on our Stock of | Aug 6—6 » eod THE EXAMINER JOB PRINTING ORMRIC Be has lately bean replenished with a supply of Printing Types and Material -OF THE— Latest Invention and Best Description, and we are now prepared to print, under the Careful and Skilful Suvervision of Mr. J, W. Mitchell, BILL HEADS, BLANK CHEQUES, NOTES OF HAND, HAND BiLLs, LETTER HEADS, RECEIPTS, POSTERS, DODGERS, de, On Short Notice, in Good Style, AND AT CHEAP PRICES. LADIES, ATTENTION! “UST Read This, and be convinced of the excellence of the Model Washer and Bleacher. It makes the washing light and easy, gi es the clothes that pure whiteness that no other mode of washing can produce. No rubbing required, no friction to injure the fabric. It is a Scientific and Suecesstul Ma- chine, which does its work supericr to any other Washer that ever have been in use, You can do a heavy wash in a quarter of the time, without any labour at all. They are 9 durabl-, time and money saving machine, and sold cheap. Price, $3,00; when sent to the country, $3.25. WM. WORTH, Spring Park Road, Agent for Queen’s County. Ch’town, July 31, '84.—2aw wly. Credit Foncier Franco-Cauadien. and from 10 to 50 years with Siuking Fund. loan, in whole or in part, at aay sime. obtained on application at the office of Mesers W. W. SULLIVAN, Agent for the Company, jv 30—pat dy & wky pres sum jour 4. | The above nouceholdnecessitics are manufac... tured by The Klectric Gloss Co., Philadelphia, | 1! © OANS on Mortgage for periods not excee4- ing 10 years, withont Sinking Fund, The borrower is privileged to pay off his Circulars giving detailed information can be Sullivan & Macneill, Solicitors, Charlottetown, alarmingly on the increase. Tae evils, | ' tion. cing the prevalent intemperance. <i iets Mi iil) Feeding Grain to Horses. The capacity of the horse’s stomach is about sixteen quarts. This fact should be orne in mind by those who have charge of horses. In feeding grain to horses, it is im- portant that it should be fed at such a time, that it may remain in the stomach as long as need be to secure its complete digestion. The nitrogenous elements in which grain is in the stomach than in the intestines. The grain should be fed after the hay has been eaten, and no other food or drink should be given for some time after, so that the grain may remain in the stomach until it is fully digested. If the grain is fed first, and then a-ration, as for instance, of seven pounds of hay, the grain will speedily be forced from the stomach by the hay. In eating the hay, it will be mixed with four times its weight of saliva, and an hour and a half will be required for masticating it. In order to have the stomach digest well, it should not contain more than ten quarts at a time, and in eating seven pounds of hay, the animal swallows at least two stomach- fula of hay and saliva, one of those having passed on into the intestines. If the grain had been fed first, before the hay, the grain would have speedily passed out of the stomach into the intestines where it will digest less completely than if allowed to remain in the stomach. It is the office of the stomach to digest the nitro- genous parts of the food, and as oats or corn contain four or five times as much of these as the same amount of hay, it is obviously more important to have the grain subjected to the full action of the gastric jucies than to have the hay retained there. Hence in feeding grain, 1t should be fed after the hay ration has been eaten. This is a matter worth remembering in feeding horses. — The Model Farmer. He should not buy more land than he can pay for easily, and till to advantage. The hardest thing to raise on a farm is a mortgage. Thirty or forty acres carefully cultivated will prove more profitable than two hundred on which the same care and labor are expended. He should not have more stock than he can shelter well, and keep in good order all the season. 1tis poor ecenomy to stint cattle throngh the winter and expect them to do as wellin the coming spring as they would under generous treat- ment. A man should be merciful to his stock because it pays best in the end. Cattie that are stoned by the boys, kicked by the men and worried by the dogs, are not likely te thrive in flesh or milk. Such treatment is silly, brutal and every way unprofitable, The occasions are very rare where beasts of burdeu—horses or oxen—are benefited by the application of the rod. People who wreak their insane fury on helpléss dumb animals are at these moments something lower than beasts them- selves. He should keep a careful account of his income and outgoes. No business can prosper that is basea on uncertainties. ‘The habit of keeping a c!ose account begets prudence, economy and wisdom in man- agement. If a man can figure out a fair profit as the result of his years labor, it is a source of satisfaction and contentmens ;if the balance is on the other side he will ascertain the cause of his failures and follow new courses. ‘‘Book Farming’ is no longer despised by intelligent men. He should make his home and its imme- diate surroundings as pleasant as his means will permit. He should at least take as much pride in beautifying his home and supplying it with the comforts and con- veniences, if not luxuries of life, as he does in having fine or blooded stock and neat and large outbuildings. A proper regard for the happiness of these whose duties lie chiefly within doors would dictate this. The ‘‘matters of the house” are of primary importance, for what after all is the chief end of labor but to make the home life happier and better. Half the dullness and monotony of life on the farm, driving the boys and girls to the towns and cities, would be banished if the same pains were taken to make the home beautiiul and at- tractive that are taken by most residents of towns and cities. The successful farmer will do his work in season ‘here is no business where re- eularity is more essential than in farming. ed, including bonus addi- tions, 6 : The annaal revenue amounted at 15th November, 1852, to The invested funds date amounted + Being aM incre: 2,462,226 59 ; 00 same 29,503,416 00 ivring the wear of 1,062,648 35 JOHN LONGWORTH, Agent four Charlottetown. THO .AS KERR, iuspector of Agencies. UW' town, August 2, 1882, Pf. Island STOVE-PIPE STONES, CHIMN¥Y TOPs, DRAIN PIPES, And other articles made to order at the P E,. ISLAND POTTERY. BEER & GOFF Oh'tewn, Mep 27, 1886. Feblery, STRAWBERRY VINE PR OTECTORS AQMNTSiJce take?” be merchant and the manufacturer caa cover ground loxt by neglect or inetten ion easier than the farmer. The farmer who is chasing his work ali the year around tryiag to catch up with it, is doomed to ultimate failure. > <>< Jounxy came home from school the other day very much excited. ‘What do you thick, pa; Joe Stewart. one of the big boys, had an argument with the teacher about a ‘question in grammar!” “What position did “His last position was avross 3 chair with lis fade down.’ The increase , f taverns has been followed by an increase | Attention is) however, cannot be restrained, much less | suppressed, until the cantons receive back | the power to regulate the traflic, which can) only be done by a revision of the constitu- | Ist. The situation is alarming, and the| flicials, the icgislature and the church | |synods are vigorously engaged in denoun-| prime factor in the practical politics of the richer than other foods, are better digested | | CURRENT NOTES. Lod | Grain rates from Chicago to the East are said to be demoral'zed. Green promises to be the fashionable color in Paris this autumn, The prefect of police at Paris has pro- hibited the contemplated baby show, Striking miners in Ohio kill farmers’ cattle in the fields to support themselves. New York Indians have been holding a convention and want to be given the rights of citizenship. Russia is about to build two ironclads at Sebastopol to serve as a nucleus for the Black Sea fleet. The Mexican Congress has formally announced that Porfiraro Diaz was elected President for four ycars from December The Pope’s encyclical on liberalism de- nounces ali systems where religion is not a state. The English bondholders have ratified the agreement with the Mexican govern- ment for the settlement of the Mexican debt. The use of bitter willow im flavoring and coloring tobacco, is vehemently denounced by Prof. Deschamps, of Paris, as causing softening of the brain. One peculiar feature of life on the Bos- phorus, near Constantinople, is the great shoals of tish which darken the surface of the water, and run their noses into the sand on the beach. A London physician has ascertained that there are six deaths among 1,000 married men, ten among the same number of bachelors, and twenty-two in the same number of widowers. Experiments have been made in England with vaccine virus put in hermetically sealed tubes as long ago as 1854. The most interesting feature of the experimen's is the fact that iu every case the lymph failed to ‘‘take.” Having lost the whole of both legs in the war, and subsequently living in poverty for twenty-one years on his pension, a Nash- ville man hit upon the idea of making a sideshow curiosity of himself by attaching deceptive wax feet to his stumps, and figur- ing as a freak of nature. He is now pros- perous, The Montreal Gazette draws attention to the fact that the wheat crop of the experi- mental farms on the Canadian Pacific Rail- way has been sold at 87 centsa bushel The averaye price of wheat in the Northwest is somewhat lower, bei: g about 70 cents per bushel. This is in charming contrast to the situation in Kansas, the Utopia of Mr. Blake. There the price for highest grade of wheat is 58 cents, and in Minnesota and Dakota so sma'l a figure is offered that farmers are neglecting to market their crops.—7orento Mail. Hixpvursm Breakine vup.—A deep and wide sproad conviction seems to prevail not only in cities, but also in the country places, among the villagers, and indeed throughout all classes, that a day of over- throwing of the old religions and effete faiths, of the breaking up of old forms, is at hand. The common people speak of the coming day of overturning, and seem not dismayed at its approach, but announce themselves as ready to join in the van; in- deed, are only awaiting its coming to break away from their present thraldom and bonds of caste-—Dr. Waugh, on Lucknow The Winnipeg Sun, summing up the re- suli of the harvest in the Northwest, says ‘* Altogether, it can be said with trath that in spite of the untoward weather, the whole country has been blessed with a crop of surpassing quality, and unparalleled so ‘ar as quantity is concerned by the best harvests ever known in this wheat-belt since settlement began in earnest. The price now current well repays those who, taking time by the forelock, sowed early in the spring and are thus able to market now; and even if it should drop to 70 cents or a fraction below, the return, taking the high average yield into account, will put the farmer on. his feet again and give a gaeat impetus to business. ” Within a few months past markings have been seen on the surface of the planet Venus which even so cautions an astronomer as Prof. Young has declared give promise that we may be able to learn something concerning the poles, the moun- tains, the continents, and the seas of that distant world. Mr. Trouvelot has dis- covered: what he regards as probably the snow-clad summits of mountains thrust up through the cloudy atmosphere in - the neighborhood of its poles. The mountains, if they exist, must be of amazing height, and it is duubted whether Trouvelot has correctly interpreted what he saw. Yet that he did see some peculiar feature of the planet—that he did get a glimpse, though an obscure one, into this far-away world—the astronomers do not question. Imitativeness is man’s strongest link with the ancestral monkey. Women run after each other in the enormities of their cos- tume, no matter how remote these may be from what they recognize as beauty. Men will copy the preposterous in building or anything else with avidity. An unusual murder or a crime is “sure to have its imitators. A great embezzlement or suicide is followed by others and now we have an epidemic of elopments. Rich girls like Miss Morosini flee from monotcnous ennui to probable disaster. As one has said, ‘‘She thought she was in love when she was only idle.” Poorer girls flee from the monotony of drudgery into more grievous sorrows and The lack of au object in life is the cares. ' cause of most of these mistakes. Miss Morvsini said, ‘At home it was nothing but rise in the morning, breakfast, dine and sup and go to bed, for twenty five years, and she was sick of it.” She bad fine talents and was not allowed to use them.