Sd Ot ee VOL. 7, JUST ARRIVED! Be AR Ba WS SE WAREHUUSE, Ex S&S. Ss. “ Hibernian,” A LAGE ASSORTMENT OF Black Silk ringe, Cersets, Cashmercs, Coiored and Black Satins, Pompadoar Prints, TOILET COVERS & QUILTS, (in Plain and Fancy); White, Scarlet, Grey & Fancy Flannels, Cloths, Tweeds, &e¢., All of which are now opened, and will be sell at our ust al low pric es Ww. & A. BROWN & CO, Cb’town, Aug. 24, 1580. St. Dunstan's College, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. 1 (EVHIS College will be re opened under the charge o° the Fathers of the Society of Jesus, Wednesday, September- 15th, tudeats should make immediate Intending application. For prospectus and farther particulars ad- dress REV. GEORGE B. KENNY, 8. J., Ch’town, sug. 6, °80—till sep President. QUGEN INSURANCE COTY, OF ENGLAND, CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING, NSURANCE effected on ali kinds of Build- ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, ov Vessels on tlie stocks. ia] rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island June, 187 /— -— — ——__ —- Great Summer Resort PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MOR Bora tT. a ED FRXHIS New and Commodions House, situate at North Shore, offers great attraction for Tourists who are wanting recreation, sea bathing, fishing, etc. It is within easy access of the City, being enly thirteen (13) miles by rail or carriage. Charges moderate. for further particulars apply so the Manager, or address LORNE HOTEL COMPANY, Charlottetown, P. E. 1. June 12. 18380. : PACIFIC | Mutual Insurance 6o., —- OF -— NEW YORK MARINE. $744,149.00 Ist Dec., 1879, - Assets Insurance €@ffected on CARGOES and FREIGHTS, covering $15,000 and upwards en first-class risks. Certificates issued payable in London at the office of Morron Rose & Co., Bankers, or in New York. Risks taken and rates fixed without being peferred to Head Office. FENTON T. NEWBERY, Agent for P. E. Island. May 1!, 1580. Nut Goal, Nut Goal. BQVREE from Slate and Fire Clay. Also Rovad and Slack, at Albion Mines, Pictou, Nova Scotia, For orders apply to G. W. DeBLOIs, Sole Agent for P. E. Island, Old Sydney Mines,Cane Breton. Lingan Mines, Cape Breton. RDERS for Round Coal can be obtained on «pplication to Terms as usual. G. W. DeBLOIs, Sole Agent for P. F. Island, Office, vo. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. June 17, 1880—pat her sj kea tf i | } Charlottetown, July 21, 1880 Church Parties, Picnics, &c. June i4, 1880. Se EE om Ee rene ee - a Mi CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD {SLAND, TUESDAY, AUGUST THE GUARDIAN FIRE AND LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY. aa ESTABLIS HED i82 a *()° a HEAD OFFICE: 11 Lombard Street, OS Fee re ae Total Asseis, * o 7 - + - © - Annual Inecowe, . “ . é ‘ i ——- :0:—_~—- Risks at lowest eurrent rates bv - London, HK. C. $14,500.000.00 2.575.000.0060 Carvell Brothers, Zaw 2m, pat Jaw 2m Agents. CANTON FLANNELS, Fine Bleached Cottons, BLACK MOURNING GOODS, RID GLOVES, BUTTONS, New Tweeds & Worsted Coatings, SCOTCH FINGERING YARNS, All Colors, JUST RECEIVED. W.A. WEE KS & CO., Sign of the “Lion,” Queem Street. Charlottetown, Aug. 26, 1880—tu th aat. ————— EURO eee a = _ ——— ~— A oe a a ee es Maaclares OF For all kinds of Crackers, Biscuits, APO TO- _— ~—— _ ; } ‘ | ao oO ae = Zz = —_ ~ = _-_ . cc ae TRS roo ~ ee a, SQ => 2 ; a pon aed orm ne pao = ae os Vw et Ps oe ¢ ot ; ‘an’ = ra co ~~ © rs and * ron > 2 on = t ae n ~*~ C3 { ) — © ~~ a i a —_ ~ 200 Barrels No. 1 Pilot, 180 Barrels Navy Bread, ( th shall be sold cheape. than / © REMEMBER ! All Crackers, &¢., manuf 10, 15, 20 and 30-lb, Boxes of Fresh, as the MIXED CR table for Housekeepers delivered in any pa [| HAVE NOW IN STOCK 'sul | aust be which is a great advantage over the im- ported article, which is often otherwise. charge made for boxes or cartage. ‘the following kinds of Ship’s Bread: | | | | A Iberal Discount to Wholesale Buyers. Special Catalogue and Price List JOHN QUIRK, Navy Bread, &., “THE CITY STEAM BAKERY,” PRINCE STREET. ont — LY : % - ad > w) iptain’s Pilot, , and Cheap for ¢ 1 ‘ At 0 Barrels ~ eo GOOD FAMILY FLOUR Constantly on hand it wh | | srices otfered to Committees of mailed free to any address. PROPRIETOR be June 21, 1880. —— SEASIDE HOTEL! RUSTICO BEACH, PRINCE ZDWARD ISLAND. (UNDER VICE-REGAL PATRONAGE.) a 8 HIS Beautiful Watering Place will be open for the rec June till the 15th September. The above Hotel is situated in one of the most let for Picnic Parties, etc., at moderate charges. Good Tables. eption of Guests from the 24th charming spots on the Island, having beautiful scenery, a bracing atmosphere, a beautiful beach, splendid surf- bathing, sea and river fishing, etc., etc. arrangements made for Picnic and Dinner Parties, ete. Moderate charges. Special Also the spacious Pavilion will Coach will leave Charlottetown every Wednesday and Saturday evening, calling for Guests ; returning every Thursday and Monday morning, at 9 o'clock, a. m. Also, arrangements have been made with Mr. Bagnall to meet trains from all points at Hunter River, for passage to Seaside—7 imiles. ADDRESS, JOUN NEWSON & CQ., Proprietors, Charlottetown, P. E. Island SI, ) Carrespondence, aa WW. da not hold OUTS ives responsible for ’ the stutements or opinions of our correspondents ' i The Scott Act. To the iditar of the Laaminer. Sin, Kindly insert the follewing extract from 41 Vie., Chap. 16, Sec. 99, Statutes of Canada, 1878: ‘The sale of intoxicating liquor for exclu sively medicinal purposes, or for Fona fide use in some art, trade or manufaeture, shall be lawful only by such druggists and other ven- dors as may be thereto specially licensed by the Lieutenant Governor in each Province, the nnmber not to exceed one in each township or parish, nortwoin each town; and in cities not exceeding one for every fonr thousand inhabitants; such sale, when for medicinal purposes, to be quantities of not less than one pint, to be removed from the premises, and to be made only on the certificate of a medical map having no intercet in the sale by the druggist or vendor, affirming that such hqnor has been prescribed for the person nained therein; and when such sale is for its use in some art, trade or manufacture, the same to be inadeonly on a certificate signed by two Justices of the Peace of the Lonu fides of the application accompanied by the aftirmation; and it shall be the duty of the druggist or other vendor to file the certiticates and keep a register of all such sales, indicating the name of the purchaser and the quantity sold, and to make an annual return of all such sales on the 3ist day of December m every year to the Collecter of Inland Revenue within whose revenue division the county or city is situated. ’ Have reliable vendors been appointed for King’s and Prince Counties. If net, why not? Ang. 30th, 1580, J. Mel. 7). a Among the many inevitable anomalies of an old social system (says the Pal/l Mall Gazette), none surely is stranger than the punishment daily inflicted upon a man fer being poor. He is made to feel, whenever he buys a pound of meat or an ontice of tea, how mueh bis poverty costs him. The dis- advantages arrising from purely economic causes are aggravated by the penaities im- pesed by the law. Litigation, though no longer impossible to the poor man, is yet in a hundred cases so expensive that he wisely prefers to pocket his injuries. The legal expenses in buying a bit of land, ridiculous and unjust in every case ; are absolutely prohibitive tv the moderately poor. A striking illustration of this trait of our system was lately given by Mr. Faweett, in the debate on the Money Orders Bill. Most people know that the lowest cost of sending a post office order, however small the amount, is twe-pence. But few would have believed that last year the number of orders for one shilling would have amount- ed to 94,560. Yet such was the case. Nearly one hundred thousand people, and these necessarily of the poorest class, were taxed 25 per cent. (the penny for postage must not be fergotton)*in discharging small debts or sending assistance to poor relatives. During the same period there were half a a million oréers fer five shillings, and con- siderably more than a milhon for one pound. - ~— oP A Detroit physician asserts that for a hot weather drink nothing equals buttermilk, It is, he says, both drink and food, and for the laborer is the best known. It supports the system, and even for fever will cure the stom- ach admirably. Itis also a vast valuable do mestic remedy. It will cure dysentery as well and more quickly than any other remedy known. Dysentery is really a constipation, and is the opposite of diarrhea. It is inflam- ation of the bowels with congestion of the ‘yortal circulation’—the- circulation of blood through the bowels and liver. It is ’a disease always prevalent in the summer and autumn. From considerable observation I feel warrant- ed in saying that buttermilk, drunk moderate- ly, will cure every case of it—-certainly when taken in the early stages.’ tine President Hayes is credited by a newspaper reporter of Reading, Pa.. with having recent- ly told the following anecdote: ‘‘] am not the great temperance man that peopleethink we Forinstance, during the war | carried good brandy with mealithetime. [invented all by myself a very ingenious method of car- rying it. Attached to my saddle was a pair of holsters. In one of them I carried one of my revolvers, and the other I carried at my hip. T invented a can, or canteen, to fit the other holster, and it wasa very clever thing. Weil, every morning I filled that canteen; not a drop of it was Jeft at night, but not a drop passed my lips—not adrop. [ gave it to the poor, famishing soldier.” > Herbert Reeves, son of Sims Reeves, the great English tenor, is thus spoken of by a correspondent: ‘‘He is a perfect copy of his father. He has his father’s features, long, black, curly hair, which he also parts in the ‘middle, and an effected gait. He bows, ' smiles, holds his music exactly like his father, and has all his self possession. He has been carefully trained and se successfully coached by bis father, that if you shut your eyes dur- | ing the singing of such a composition as Sebu bert’s ‘Ave Maria’ by either of them, you would be puzzled to say which had been sing- inc. atm 77> teports have been received from Manda- lay of an attempt to assassinate King Thebaw. A ponghee went tothe King’s apartment, where he was stopped and ques. tioned. His replies were very unsatisfac- ‘tory, and he was seized, when a dagger dropped from his garmenis. He had twelve associates. The pongee and one of his asso- ciates were put to death. 1880, NO, 86 Latest News Notes. | Cardinal Nina is convalescent. General Brooke was among thore | killed at the recent sortie at Candahar. | shale at mre, | The Civil Commission are at | present going through the Militia depart- ; ment. Service A conference for the reforin of the laws of nations has.commenced at Berne, Swit- zerland, Fourteen hundred and fifty weavers, Of Bolton, England, have struck against a re- duction of five per cent. in their wages. Bismarck proposes the commencement of Government relief works in West Prussia, as a means of lessening the distress prevail- ing there. A disturbance is reported to have broken out at Lagos, and the natives all along the west coast of Africa, are said to be on the eve of open revolt. The Czar of Russia and the King of Greece will have a formal and final inter. view on Sunday, after which the King will return to Athens. The autumnal meeting of the iron and steel institute opened at Dusselderft. Dele- gates’ are in attendance from America and European states. The London frazette announces the ap- pointment of J, Pierrepont Edwards, Vice- Consul of Great Britain at New York, as Consul at that port. Prince Bismarck proposes, in order to relieve the distress in West’ Prussia, that the Government begin some necessary im- | provements, and furnish the suffering inha- bitants with work. The bill for the reconstruction of the Tay bridge has failed to receive approval of the select committee to whom it was re- ferred by the House of Commons. Doubts were ascertained of the safety of the pro- posed structure. At the annual dinner of merchants held in Glasgow lately, it was. stated that two- and-a-half millions of pownds sterling had been paid during the year for produce im- ported from different parts of Ireland, con- sisting of ham, eggs, butter, &e. From Fort Mojave, Arizona, 22nd, a report comes of a storm. The company quarters were blown down. Three men were killed and several others wounded. The officer's quarters were destroyed and hospital and storehouse much damaged. The Association for Promotion of the Fine Arts in Scotland held its annual meet- ing in Edinburgh on the 28th inst., when it was reported that the subscriptions for the past year amounted to $4,719, showing an increase of £70 as compared with those of the previous vear. The new railways now under contract in France will increase the French railway system from 15,790 to 24,855 miles. Most of the work will be done under superin- tendence of the Government agencies, and the lines will be managed under State supervision. but not at Gevernment ex- pense. The Montreal Witness (Grit) says rumors were widespread last evening that further news had been privately cabled announcing the complete success of Sir John Macdonald's mission. What truth there is in the story, it is difficult to tell, but stocks were again on the rise to-day ; the whale market selling up at 25 per cent, Generally over Scotland the crop of goose- berries is light, but of fine quality. Apples and pears are, in the words of growers, ‘‘really nothing.” Plums are a fairly aver- age crop, but all sorts of that frnit at pre- sent on sale are imported from France. On certain soils and where young plants have been set the strawberries is a good average. Mr. Blake may be a very able wnan, but he says some very inconsistent things. In his Thursday evening's speech in Toronte he pictured the country, after two years of N. P. rule, as no better than when the Government took effice. A few minutes later he said:-‘‘It was claimed by the Conservatives that things were better, and he rejoiced ty see it, but it did not at all fol- low that the improvement was ewing to the National Policy.” He might as well have said: ‘‘I have given yon a graphic picture of a ruined Canada, but you need not be- lieve it as it is not true.” —AS?t. Sole Swi. The potato crop throughent Scotland is this year likely to prove the great crop of the season. ‘There is, up till now, no ap- pearance of disease, and the yield has se far been prolific. On the other hand the turnip crop is, comparatively speaking, rather a failure, the seed,‘ in consequence of unfavorable weather, having in many cases, failed to germinate. Of the cereals, wheat presents at the present time by far the most favorable appearance. Oats, gen- erally speaking, are a light crop as regards the grain, and are much deficient in straw. Barley will be about an average crop. A delegation of Mexiean veterans, resi- dents of New York and Brooklyn, visited General Haneock. Major Alexander of the Third Infantry, suggested that in the case Hancock should be elected President his old comrades desire him to restore res- pect for the United States among foreign powers by protecting merchant sailing un- der our flag on the high seas. ‘‘ I feel very confident that in our course as to that. and other things,” said the general, ‘‘ the people of the United States want a change. If it is their pleasnre to elect me, I will give them such a change as will result in uphold- ing the honor and dignity of our country.’, ’ ee. 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