hos. Me Sie Re. A. ~ a* Pw igi et tr a de PAS eer Pea Seat pte oe tr NT arn,» a t re ee ee te I NR i “he Daily Exanrinet JULY 9, Y885. Hditorial Notes. (Jueen Victoria has minde Sir Peter Lumsden a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath, —T'wenty-nine bye elections, includ: ing South Granville, have taken place in the Dominion sinee the general election of 1882, and yet the Government's position in the House of Commons to- day is stronger by one supporter than it was when the new Parliament assembled in February, 1534 ~The number of failures in Canada for the first six months of 1885, was 690 against 752 for the corresponding period of 1884; and the amount of liabilities, £5,166,000 against $10.741,000. This will prove unwelcome news to the Grits, who declare that the state of business is daily growing worse. —A five hours speech from Mr, Blake, is noted among the latest news items from Ottawa, Just think of it. The House has been in session bordering on six mouth, and the Opposition leader is still talking away, five hours at a_ stretch. Htisunhappy followers must have their say too, ou the subject of the five hours speech, and by the time they get through with their rehash, days and nights will have come and gone. And such is Grit obstruction. But the worst feature ot the present state of affairs is, that mem- bers are likely to ask for $5 additional sessional allowance each. This amount to over 200 members means a large amount of mouey, larger we venture to say, than the taxpayers of the Dominion will be willing to pay. We again hope the Government will refase to grant the members, both Grit and Conservative, any additional pay. If they give it, it will be ouly encouraging the Grits to carry on their obstruction tactics in the future, as it would pay them wellto ob- struct. The people however, protest, both against Grit obstruction and the proposed extra pay. --The Grand Jury forthe last week has been engaged in hearing evi- dence in reference to the murder of the old mau Callaghan. The doings before the Grand Jury are always private, and no person other than the witness testifying before them, is mitted to be present to hear the evidence taken. Consequently, what has taken place before the Jury has not been positively known, To-day, however, it is gn open secret thatssufficient evidence has been taken, to undoubtedly justify the Graad Jury in finding a true bill for murder against the man Gillis. The incictment, we understand, has accord- ingly been prepared, and will be imme- diately laid before the Grand Jury. The man Gillis, guilty or not guilty, has the right toa fair and impartial trial, and therefore we refraiu from publishing any of the many rumors that are on the streets in relation to the quantity of evidence that has been brought against him. It will be quite time enough to publish the evidence wheu it is openly given before the Court and a Jury, when Gillis is placed on his trial, and until then our readers must rest satisfied. ~—The Loudon Times appreciates the mufnner in which the rebellion in the Northwest was crushed. Referring to a speech recently made by Lord Derby be- fore the Colonial Agents General, it says: ‘When he cameto speak of indi- vidual colonies, Lord Derby referred first of all, in language of well-deserved praise, to the suppression of Riel’s re- bellion by the Canadian forces. That, indeed, is an achievement of which it is scarcely possible to speak too highly. ‘The danger to the colony was grave ; the question whether the central authority was strong enough to assert itself all over that vast, thinly-peopled territory had never been so vigorously raised be- fore. If the war miuister aad Genera! Middleton had failed, there would have heen no guar- autee whatever that the outlying regions would not have fallen away one by one;. and the Dominion might have gradually broken up. The general and his men have saved the colony from that fate; andthey have shown, moreover, that the Canadian has not degenerated from the best English type. Other campaigns have been more shown, and will fill a larger place in history; but few have given a more striking example of endurance, determination and prompti- tude. ~The debate on Blake’s motion about the Northwest Administration was con- tinued on the 7th inst. Mr. Laurier the eloquent French Canadian member of the Opposition, in his speech declared that the Liberal Party had not en- couraged rebellion in the Northwest. He accused the Goverament of not adjusting the gricvauces, and said shame- ful negligence on the part of the Govern- ment had been shown, Mr. Girouard answered him in an able speech full of important facts. The evils of the North- west, he said, had chiefly originated in the determination of the Mackenzie government to change the Macdonald policy. He showed that surveys neces- sarily preceded the settlement of the halt breed claims; that up to 1874 there bad been nearly 10,000 acrea of land surveyed, aud since 1878 there had = =been §=5,000,000, while in the Mackenzie regime there were only 1,750,000 acres during al! the years of that administration, surveyed. He pointed out that the St. Laurent dis- A ee mee oe tee ' answered in the negative. alton nine mt OP bm ete - - + ane TELE trict was surveyed in 1878, and that, though surveyed, the late government had neglected to give land patents to half-breeds; that snce 1880 Manitoba half-breeds had come to that region, and all had had their claims settled. Nota man had been evicted from his holding ; not a man threatened. Under the Mace kenzie regime there had only been 6,500 patents for laud issued. Under the pre sent government, since 1879, there had been nearly 17,000. — The eyes of the Amorizan people | are daily turned to the summer retreat at Mount McGregor, where General Grant, one of the bravest Geuerals of the United States, is spending his last days. The bulletins are dgily issued, but, sad to say, there is not a ray of hope for **The Dying Soldier.” This is how they read :—** Although the day (the 8th inst.) opened with sunlight and brighter anticipations in the Grant family, the evening closed with clouded skies and increased apprehension in the general’s cottage. Apparently the day was passing bravely with the — sick man, and visitors to the mountain, when they saw him riding in his chair, were inclined to scout the press reports that have indicated the increasing weak- uess of Gen. Grant. The vieitors were, however, deceived. The general was not feeling so strong as the appearances led strangers to conclude. After his ride and while sitting on the piazza a season of coughing began which nearly if not quite, amounted to spasm. This besides taxing the goneral’s strength, caused him uneasiness. He was relieved by the physician, but though drowsy, the general forbore sleep, and while his family was at dinner, he walked slow- ly through the cottage and for a few moments on the piazza. At7 o'clock he halted in his stroll and stood with bowed head, looking pensively into the woods near the cottage, then he resumed his pacing through the parlor, occasion- ally halting and standing with head inclined as though in deep thougit. The Fisheries Question, (From the Monetary Times.) A temporary arrangement has been made between the two Governments, by which American Fishermen will continue to fish during the present season within the three- mile limit of our coasts, and a similar right is guaranteed to Canadian fishermen along the American ceast. This mutual conces- sion of advantages is not made by way of equivalents—on our side it would not be so regarded—but asa means of avoiding the irritation which would be occasicned by in- sisting on our rights, and which might siand in the way of a new arrangement, to which the President of the United Siates evidently looks forward. This extension of time as to the fishing privileges is based on the undertaking that the President shall! recommend the appointment of an interna- tional commission, whose function will be to attempt to bring about a settlement of the whole question on an equitable basis. Though this arrangement may not be en- tirely satisfactory to every interest, the best course open to us has, on the whole, been taken. Our fishermen will suffer from the revival of duties on their fish in the A:erican market, but thiais a mattor under the control of Congress, and over which the executive has no authority. To what extent the Canadian fishermen may be incommoded by having to share the in- shore fisheries with the American fisher- mep, we are not able to judge; but this is the only special detriment to which tho ar- rangement subject them, as the compensa- tion received, under express s*ipulaticn, from foreigners for the privilege of fishing in our waters, goes into the general treas- ury, the loss meanwhile ia borne by the whole community, If the temp rary ar- rangement is somewhat one-sided, it must be remembered that it is made in view of a future attempt to make a permanent asctile- ment of a somewhat diflicult question, and whatever there is objectionable in it must be borne in the hope that our forbearance will produce fruits which will be valuable to both the contracting partios. In any event, Canada will have given to the United States proof of friendshi and good neigh- borhood, which it will be for our neighbor to recognize when the time for action comes, A reciprocal arrangement for the ex change of the produce of the two countries is precisely what would best suit the Mari- time Provinces, which have, in one sense, a special interest in the fisheries. Whether such an arrangement can be arrived at, it will be the duty of the contemplated com- mission to enquire, and if poasible to ar- range the basis of such exchange. Some Canadian journalists take the ground that any Reciprocity Treaty with the United States must be confined wholly to raw pro- duce. Should the Government take this stand, it is not probable that any treaty can be agreed upon: We must, it is said, maintain the National Policy ; but there is no reason why we should convert it into a perpetual monument of uational folly. In 1862 Sir A. T. Galt, then Min- ister of Finance, proposed to give greater scope to the principle on which the Reciprocity Treaty was based, by abolishing the coasting restric: tions of the two countries and adding to the froo list wooded wares, agricultural im- plements, machinery, and bovks; and the treaty, which Mr. Brown tried to negotiate, was, with the consent of England, to in- clude certain articles of manufacture. The question is not, it must be confessed, so easy to deal with as would have been at either of these periods. The protectionism of our tariff imposes an obstacle which did not exist before. Nations which, like the United States, indulge in protection on their own account, are most impatient of it in others. The Unitéd States complained more than England did when we raised our duties to 20 per cent. ~ On tho other hand, we are in effect told, as we were sure to be, that we owe conservation to manu- factures which our protective tariff has cailed into being. Against Reciprocity the protected interest will fight. Will the Americans agree to a treaty which merely includes raw produce? If this question stood alone it would without hesitation be But it does not stand alone; the Americans desire access to tt: StS —— Sao Se YS HSA MTN HR, our inshore fisheries. At the same time, | married, and is now living happllyJwith her | A the men most interested in getting that ac- husband, and doing well over here on the cess, the fishermen, arenot even willing to west site, I kept another young girl four give as some equivalent, the freedom of! weeks.” thelr market for our fish, Gloucester) ‘Do you pay their expenses at your fishermen are the first to depreciate thé Hhonae out of your own pockei?’ idea of giving that equivalent. They think| ‘*Yes,” she said with reluctance,as though that somehow they will get access to our in- ‘unwilling to let her left hand know what shore fiaheries and they insist on having her right hand doeth in the way of disin- the American market exclusively to thern- | terested charity. solves. “What is that on the shelf ?”’ If the American nation were compose!) ‘ Did you think it a hose-pipe? Why, wholly of fishermen there would be no hi p> that’s a nursing bottle! You see we have in this direction, fortunately there are is it lots of foundlings brought here, an! we | some people whose interests lie in anu. her’ nurse ‘em on that till some childless laly direction, That the attitude of tie ealls to adopt them or they are sent to St. Gloucester fishermen is oppesod to the V neent’s Orphan Asylum. The sisters yeneral interest of the nation i: Ww q \stion-| from there are always ready to take waifs able. But it is always thus with sp.cul' when they are refused elsewhere. I have interests; they seck their own good, not| known ladies to come here and take babics that of the mation at large, and they ask | away that were only a day old. Whenever the public to believe that any profit which) a real pretty baby comes I fondle it myself goes to themselves is a peculiar national | fora day or two, and let no one have it, for benefit. The men who controlled the carry- | I dearly love children.” ing trade of the State of New Yi rk in 1862,| ‘* Tlow do you manage to name them ?” carried their antagonism to the genera! in- | ‘‘We name them in alphabetical order terest to the greatest ex'feme when they |a: they come. The last one wo had was a Was made it a subject of complaint that C.nada! bey, and as his turn came to F wo called had removed every obstruction in the way of American commerce seeking the St Law- rence route, This was the gratitude which they expressed for our sacrificing the canal tolls and abolishing the tonnage dues on Lake St. Peter. It is the duty of the statesman to guard the general interest while giving fair play to individual eftort ; and shonld higher views than Ben Butler would wish to impose on Congress be ac- cepted, the chance of a Reciprocity Treaty may couat for something. But we shall not get it if either party to the negotiations listens to the advice of its Ben Butlers A treaty confined to raw produce would not be what it was in 1854. During the existence of the treaty concluded in that year, the United States was practically the only foreign market Canada had for her surplus cattle. Now, both countries find in England a common market for eattle. Thie change would lessen but it would not de- stroy the benefit which reciprocity in the cattle trade would confer upon Cagada and the United States. If the coasting trade of the lakes were made common to both countries, great mutual advantages would be found to result from the removal of the existing restrictions,” Great objection would be made by our mannufactnrers to include in the free list, as Sir A. 1. Galt proposed in 1862, woodén machinery and especially agricultural im Wares, ihim Fred Flannigan, but sometimes we change off and call them after the oflicers who find them, or after the name of the man in front of whose door they be found, if there is a name there. One hundred and fifty foundlings have passed through my hands in two years.” At this juncture the conversation was in- terrupted by the warbling of a black native of Meridian street, who was waiting with her sister cyprians to be taken over to Jua- tice Woodman. *<'The women are harder to manage than the men when they get bad,” continued the matron ; ‘‘ they go deeper in degradation. Some, when locked up, will strip stark naked for spite. I have seen as many as eighty women in here at one time after a raid had been made by tie police. Many ladies may wonder how | can stand such an apparently disagreeable place, but my work is very interesting here. Of curse I do hear language not fitted for ears polite, but Tam deaf to that, and only think of doing the best I can for the orphans, the destitute, and those who have no friends. I prefer this to any other occupation. Mr. Damin, the turnkey, al- ways gives me the freedom of the jail when any of the female prisonors are sick and need aftendance. The lieutenants are very dct 4 Le3so5 a : SS eines re merican Mowers. Y Auction, TUESDAY, Jtly 14tb, at 2 o'clock, at Market Square, four of Wm Anson Woods Improved American Mowers These Machir 8s were awarded the GOLD MEDAL at the Paris Exhibition, 1879 TERMS :—Ope-t aif the purchase meney payable November Ist, 1885; balance Nev, Ist, T8X6, on approved joint notes, A. McNELILL, Auctioneer. Ch’town, July 9, 1985--4i wky li Groceries, dc, Y Auction, SATURDAY, July 11th, at 1) o'clock, at the store lately occupied by N. J. Campbell, Upper Queen Street, a lot of Groceries, Paper Bags, Wrapping Paper, Confectionery, Preserved Fruit, Condensed Milk, Riding Saddle and frirle, and @ lot of Sundries. ax MecNEILL, : Auctioneer. July 9, 1885.—2i CARRIAGES, & WY Auction, FRIDAY, July ih, at 2 o'clock, in front of Auction Roem :— 1 Double-Scated PH. TON (latest style). 1 do do CARRIAGE, 1 Single-Seated BUGGY, ALSO 1 Fire-proof Safe, 1 large Book Case (Mahogany), 1 Sideboard, 1 pew Sewing Machine (best make), Tables, Chairs, Pictures, Books, &e. A. McNEILL, Auctioneer. July 8—2i TENDERS. NEALED TENDERS will be received at the Mayor’s office up to noon of SATUR.- DAY, the llth inst., for the painting and whitewashing the lower market, according to specification to be seen at his office, A deposit of five per cent of the estimated cost must accompany each tender, The Council do not bind themselves to arcept the lowest or any tender. generous in allowing the girls who come in: here every ch: nce to reform, and the waifs plements. The number of manufaciures| and lst children are suffered to play around which it would be possible to admit to the} as they with Capt. Benfield, too, is very free list would necessarily be restricted, but | kind aud good to everybody. He allows no they could not be wholly excluded, and perhaps some might be admitted at a re-} duced rate of duty, provided’ there were n discriminations against Dritish goods. f: must be distinctly understood that any treaty which may be mado eaves each of the contracting parties at full liherty to sub- ject to whatever duties it may think proper all articles which it does not specially include. oe She is a Good Angel. THE EXCELLENT WORK PERFORMED BY Mks. DODGE, THE MATRON OF THE DESPLAINES STREET STATION—FRAIL YOUNG GIRES COUNSELED, CAKED FOR, REFORMED, AND FREQUENTLY PROVIDED WITH SITUATIONS. We publish below an interesting inter- view of a Chicago KHvening Mail reporter with Mrs. Dodge, wife of Mr. Henry J. Dodge, of the Chicago Inter-Ovean, who is now visiting the city, and daughter of Mr. Alexander Stewart, of Belle Creek. Mrs. Dodge, besides being matron of the worthy institution referred to in the interview, has three times been elected aes a delegate to the Humane Society Conference hell at Madison, St. Louis and Boston :— ‘The iron gate of the Desplaines Street police station was unlocked by a tall, grace- ful young woman, with a benign face, kindly blue eyes, and raven black hair. She was dressed in black, and wore a black hat with a black feathor in it. This is the good angel of the station—Mrs. Dodge, the matron, ‘* Excuse me one moment,” she said, ** till I give this girl my address.”’ ‘* Who is she ?” asked the reporter, after the girl had gone. ‘She has just got out of the Martha Washington home in Ravenswood, where she was sent to recover from her passion for drink, She knows me, and I will keep her at my house until she obtains a situation. fler name? Oh, I would not tell you that. Hor sister is very wealthy and lives in grand style on the west side, and her brother-in-law is teller in one of the big banks. [ am seldom without some such stray sheep at my house. I am like the man in the school book who dressed the broken leg of astray dog, and when it got well went and brought another sick dog to4 its benefactor.’ ‘*Do you look after all the frail young wirls and waifs ?’ queried the reporter, ‘Yes, young wayward girls for whom there is a chance to be saved are booked to me, and instead of having them locked up here, I take them home with me at night, and bring them back in the morning, until they are sent to the honse of the Good Shepherd, or some siwilar institution. They never betray the trust [ put in them. If I send them to the store; they always re- turn. Ihave looked after 250 girls of that class in the past two years. Some of them were only 11 years old when picked up off the streets, and their whereabouts are often unknown to their parents. Some of these prodiguals are highly connected. There was Miss Garrison, who belonged to a rich St. Louis family. When she came to Chicago she grew home sick and weary of wayward- ness, and gave herself up at this station. I kept her over night and gave her a pass home. And there was a Sydney Jehoshe- phat Hammond, who masqueraded in boy’s clothes. Why, she boarded here a week at the station and ne one ever knew it at the time, except the lieutenant, and I paid her board, too, out of my own purse. At last she put on some of my clothes and went home with me.’ “*Where is she now?’’ interrupted the re- porter. ‘‘Her sister, with whom she went to live, somewhere in the country, ill-treats her, and she is coming back to Chicago to work for a lady next door to Mrs, Franklin’s on Campbell Avenue, where she staid before.”’ “One girl,” continued Mrs. Dodge, as she smiled at one of her little charges, who stopped in her play to peep through the bars of her gate, ‘‘one of them, who had been arrested for petty larceny, lived with | | } | cross words to be spoken to prisoners. ‘The boy waifs? Well, when over five ' years old they are taken in charge Ly cflices Dudley, of tha Humane Society. The curt igin session now, and I musi take my virls up stairs to Justice White.’ And the good angel, whose presence is sunshine in the dark prison,arose aud open- ed the heavy iron prison doors and hurried to the court roam, Mrs, Dodge, will, we learn, arrive here on # visit to her parents an friends on Wednesday next, 0 _. Civilizing with Brandy. (From the Pall Mall Gazette.) The development of German colonial ambition in the direction of Zanzibar has caused Englishmen to remember that Zan- zibar is a place where British piety has established thieving mission stations, and where British zeal crusades against slavery. There is, however, another side to the shield, to which «a cynical correspondent calls attention in the following ecommunica- tion. Hewrites: ‘* The real achievement of civilization ia neither mission nor eman cipation, but the success that has crowned its efforts to ; INTRODUCE DRUNK&ENNESS among the native population, Foreigners must seem a funny set to Syud Burghash and his subjects. We persuade them by a plentiful display of force to suppress the slavery, which their law approves and allows, and at the same time we make them admit the liquor, which is the abomination of their faith, If there were no European traders in the place, His Highness the Sultan would not suffer a drop of svirits to find its way into his dominions, Unhappily for him the strargers have come; have claimed advantages in trade which are not allowed to his own subjects, and have se- cured their claims by commercial treaties. By the English treaty, no articles whatever shall be prohibited from being imported inte or exported from ihe territories of His Highness the Sultan of Zanzibar, but the trade be- tween the dominions of her Britannic majesty and those of his highness,the Sultan of Zanzibar shall be perfectly free, subject tothe ° duty upon goods, and to no other. The duty referred to is a duty on imports, and is limited to 5 per cent. The treaties with the United States, and with France and Germany and other European countries, contain clauses identi- cal with that quoted. In consequence of this clause there is an unlimited and in- creasing traflicin Iquor. The Sultan sees the mischief that is being wrought, but is helpless to check it. The surprising and shocking thing is that, heavily be-consuled as he is he can get no aid from the European powers, ‘As the treaties stand at present the trader is legally entitled to import sny quantity and any quality of liquor for which he is prepared to pay the stipulated ad valorem duty. He is SURROUNDED BY SAVAGES whom he quickly teaches to consume any qantity and any quality of stuff, and so it is only to be expected of him as a trader that he should exercise his legal right to the full. If good liquor only, genuine wine and genuine brandy, were brought into the place, little harm would be done. The price at which it must be sold would keep it out of the reach of the natives. The traders know this and provide accordingly. At Hamburg they find the stuff which they call brandy. They give $1 for a case of one dozsn bottles and have it shipped to Zanzibar for the more speedy poisoning of the negro. Two German firms are the chief offenders in the wholesale line ; they are the Brin- villierses of the trade. Another firm,which is really German, but is registered as Eng- lish and under British protection, deals largely in the same line. The representa- tive of this firm was dining at a table d’hote not long ago. He happened to take a friendly interest in a neighbor, for whom a bottle of ‘square face” was produced, In an excess of friendliness the German exclaimed: ‘‘ You must not think of me two months, and while here she got drinking that stuff. It is imported by us.” ly order, A. H. MACPHERSON, City Clerk. Mayor's Office, uly 8, 1885 —3i Dalhousie and Metapedia, the great Fishivg Resort of the Derainion. Tickets for the round trip per steamer “Clifton,” leaving here about Thursday, 9th imst., will be issued at the following rates, good to return in about ten days, on the re- tura trip of the steamer from Miramichi. FARES : To. Miramichi and return, $7.00 Ch'town, July 7, 1885. Strawberry Festival, AND PROMENADE CONCER} in aid of Queen Square Improvements, will be held in the DRILL SHED, and adjoining Grounds, on Friday Ev'g Next, l6th July. The grounds will be illuminated and the Brass Band will perform on the occa-ion. The following ladies have kindly consented to aid and receive contributions : — Mrs. A. A. Macdonald. Beer Mrs H, Mackinlay Miss, Beer Miss, Macleod Mrs Geo, Beales Mrs James, Newbery Miss, Brown Miss Ella, Jicnsley Mrs, Cameron Miss, Paimer Mrs H, Carey Miss, Palmer Mrs Minnia, Conroy Mrs, Palmer Miss Ethel, Crabbe Mies, Pethick Miss. Dawson Miss, Richie Miss, Gray Mrs Col, Strickland Mrs, Gray Misa, Weeks Mrs Robert T, Murray Miss F, Weeks Miss Alice, Mackinlay Mrs T, Woeks Miss Maggie.: The names of other ladies willing to assist are solicited. Doors open at half-past six. Admission 15 cents ; Children 10 cents, ARTHUR NEWBERY, Se July 7th, 1985, ery THE TELEPHONE COMPANY of Prince Edward Island, NPCS. is hereby given that a General Meeting of Subscribers to the Stock of the above Company, will be held at the Office of Messrs. Palmer & McLeod, in Charlotte- town, on THURSDAY, the 16th day of July, instant, at 11] o’clock in the forenoon, for the purpose of electing the jirst Board of Directors and transacting general business, JOHN INGS, i CHARLES C GARDINER, MALCOLM McLEOD, Three of the persons named in the lst section of the Act of Incorporation. Ch’town, July 4th, 1885—dy tl mtg, SuUTMDit GATQERING. yg annual * athering of the a the auspices of the Caledonia Clab P. E. Island, will be held at Charlottetown of on Thursday, the 23rd July ingg. Special arrengements are mate, aad che rates seoured from all points b j aud Steamers om Railways For full particulars get Programme, JOHN M, CAMPBELL, Sec'y of Games Committee b fphece: is hereby given that I haye re ceived from the Dominion Goverutnent the amount required to pay the claims a refund of duties paid ia the year 187i Checks for the amount. allowed wil] be ie warded by mail to the several slidetiieas entitled. Dated 17 Juae, A. D., 1885. R, R. FITZGERALD, Covunissioner, June 18—pat her jour hi . LV Obie » Amumonica Baking Powder, AND USE ONLY Woodill’s Gelman Baking Powder, of which W. I’, Best, Dominion Analyst, § John, N. B., in his report, Aug, Tn says :— r ° , fresh and Pure ; same compo ao U2 F. L. Barrierr, State Chemist of Maine, eays of a Baking Powder (cold only in tins) now being pushed into this city :— It contains one ingredient ‘hat should not enter into the composition of any Baking Powder, nemely, Carbonate of Ammonia, This isa strong Alkali, wnjit for human con. sumption, aal lam surprised that this chemi- cal shoald be used when it is ea well known to be injurious to health, in anything ased for food. Ask your grocer for WOODILL’S GER- MAN BAKING PO.VDER, ip paper or in tins 8 cents ; quarter and half pounds, June 26th, 1685.—lyr dly wkiy “7p AR eee sition as usual, — BY —. % g 9 is the best Canadian Patent FLOUR ever oh e CLI ETON landed at Charl. ttetown. ='B : Satisfaction ynaranteed. sd Slo A. H. B. MACGOWAN = = J 2 —_ 4 Miramichi, ee Sete Ae TS Newcastle, WANES, LOST, PoOtints, ge, Campbeiton, SS HY “ETO LT — Pleasantly situated on Prince Stroet, cootiining eight rooms; Apply to Peake Bros, & Ca, jly9 tf rent moderate. we (TUATION WANTED - By a yoang man ‘ as clerk in a store or office; has had three years’ experience ; good reference, Apply at this ofjice. jaly 9 2i pd TS ~KIFLEMEN—the Subscriber offers & for sale hit Snider Rifla. made by Thomas Turner, Burmiugham, Ungland, to- gether with all the modera appliances neces- sary for successful target shvoting, Applyat To Newcastle and retura, $7.25 f including | once to E.JMacdougall. july9 To Dalhousie & Campbelton, $11.25 ( stateroom —— To Metapedia, $12.30 VY ArtEp=a Girl for general house- FENTON T. NEWBERY. vw, Work. Appiy to Mis. ‘Yaa, Rae Agoat, Hillsborough Street, jy9 2i pd OQ LET —A three-story dwelling on Water Street (West), containing eleven rooms and shop. Will bo ready fcr occupation on the 15th iast. Apply to M. MeQuaaid, Queen Strect, or at Ex .mryen office. jly8 SECOND-HAND PIANO for Sale; in = perfect order; can be seen by applying at this oflice, jly8 —1 wk I OUSE ‘TO LET. —{ ‘ontaining five reoms. Apply to Jas. A. McLeod, Spring Park Road. jlys OR SALE AT A BAKGALIN—Twelve volumes IUnstrated London News, 18 points Fish and Fow! ef America, 1 Cate maran, and 1 Desk. Apply at this office, j'y7 tue tha PEW LUT—Shop and Tenement on Upper . E Queen Street, lately occupied by K. J. Campbell. Apply to J. McGill, jly7 eod tf BS ARDERS.—Two or three gentlemen oF lady boarders may fiud comfortable ac- commodation, by app'yiag to Mrs, William Kennedy, Brick House, Hillsborough Park. july ts at __ a y ANTED—A Cook. Apply to Mm Charies Palmer. jy7—5i y JANTED—A Girl for general honse work. Apply at the EXAMINER office, jly7 eee VOR SALE—Two double-seated Carriage® Apply to A. McNeill, Auctionser. jly6 ANTED IMMEDIATELY—A smart Boy. Apply at the Revere Honee. iy4 cual FRYWO orthree Boarders can be accomm- dated st Miss Stewart's, corner of Groat George and Euston Streets. jun27 7.4 LET—The top flit of store at P. G. Fraser's corner. Apply to Dorsey jus 24 & Co, He i y ANTED—A Cock. Apply #0 on DeBlois, Devonport Cottages poque Road. {= ———-~ |} “OUSE TO LET—On Upper Queen Sts containing five rooms; & large garden also if required; possession immediately. Apply to James F, Curtis. janls ‘T= LET-—The Dry (Good Store on — , Street, lately eC ded by Mr, are. Apply te M. Stovensen ” des —__—_— ae rie DADLY EXA™® tMelng mate Shand DVERTIS" in NER, t= Set = dso!