tage ee rays ACT anata. AM le Bean ee: a eal ra a A asa santas nen (paneer ~- <vemrmeeneemne _ ee cmsteinsansnaatnattedpatithanittamstemmttennn een are ‘‘ This is true Liberty, wheu Free-born Mer, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” ~-KURIPIDES. SINGL# Corres ‘lwo Cenrs. RLOTI LL WN. Pil NUE BL Ws VD ISLAND, WEDNI BSDAY, OCTo BER 5 5, LSS. ee Nt a VOL. 9.-—-N, 115, eon Tue Daity IXAMINE} IS ISSUED EVERY EVENING, By tHe EXAMINED. Punsiisuine Company, eROM THEIR OFFICE, CoRNER OF WATER anyp Great GEORGE STREETS, Charlotte P. E. Island Rates oF SUBSCRIPTION : own, Six Months $2 50 Three Mouths, - . - 1 26 One Month, . - “ O 5 gw Advertising at most moderate rates Gentracts may be made fer 1 xenthly, euarterly, half yearly or yoarly advertise wents, on application, PLE a LIPS LE INS EE EL RT Do IE SET ALMANAG FOR SCTOBER igi. MOON S CHANGES Full Moen 7th day, 9h. {below herizon. ) Last Quarter 14th day, 10h. (below horizen. ) Mew Moon 2ist day, 10h, W. (below horizon.) ‘ju. a. a, RW l4m., p. m,, N E. 19m, p. m., N. } } ‘General Commission Merchant A Large Supply of Printing Types and Material First Quarter, 29th day, 12h 35m. midnight, W. (below herizon ) ey) sun ‘San |Moon!| High | Days = bat CF WEES rises sets | rises |w ater len Li oa h m jh m jaft'n mor 3 1 Saturday 6 45 35) 2 3; 3 52) I] 21 | 2) Sunday | 5} 33) 2 39) 5 18} 25 3 Monday | 7] SUS 2iié@43i 24 4) Tuesday | & ees 21 6 Wednesday | 9, 27) 4 7} 8 45) 18 6'Thursday _ 10) 25) 4 35; 9 34 14 7|Priday } 12] 245 5:10 15) 2 sisaturday | 13' 29) 5 36/10 54! 9' Sunday | 15! 20) 6 14:11 33] 5 10 Monday | I6é; 18) 6 58iaft 12} 12! 11 Tuesday 17' 16) 7 48; 0 52) 10 59! 12’ Wednesday | 19; 14) 8 43, 139; 55) 13 Thursday 20; 12) 9 41} 221} 952} 14 Friday } il 10/10 43) 3 isi {9 Saterday | 23 Sill 4s a4 46 16 Sunday | 24 7jmorn] 5 24} 43} 17 Monday | 26 |, 0 £3 | 6 30 39} 18\ Tuesday 271 3| 1 471 7 30) 36 19} Wednesday | 28] 11250! 818) 33} 20 Thursday | 30; 0) 3 52) 959) 30 31 | Friday | 31/4 58} 4 56110 37! 97 22) ‘Saturday 33: 5€| 6 3{10 1 - 23 23| Sunday 34) 55; 7 19110 5 aI 21 24 Menday 35; 53) 8 19/11 3 18 @5) Tuesday | 37, 52] @ 23imorn | 15 26| Wednesday | 38 50!1u 23! 0 10) 12 27\Thursday | 40) 44/11 17] 0 52| 8 85 Friday 41; 46 aft 2) 1 40 2 €9 Saturday 43) 0 49; 2 32) 5 $8) Sunday 44) 44] 1 13) 5 36); 9 59 31] Menday 6 46/4 26! 1 41) 4 50) 9 56 Credit Foncier PRANCO-CANABIES, Capital, - ey $5,600,000 President—Hon. E. Vuclere,Senator, Paris. Vice-Pres.—Hon. J. A. Chapleau, Montreal. The Company will make long term loans with sinking fund, aod short term loans wi h- out sinking fund. For particulars, apply at the office of Messrs, Sullivan & Morson, ‘solicitors, Charlottetown. W. W. SULLIVAN, Aug. 24, 1881. L. ARTHUR & CO, GENERAL Commission Merchants, 108 SOUTH MARKET STREET, BOSTON, MASS, May 16, 1881. Queen Insurance Co'y OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL - [wkly THO MILLIONS STERLING. |nsurance effected or on ‘all kinds of Buildings, Merchandise and Produce, Aiso, on Vessels on the atocks, Special rates for isolated residences. All Losses settled promptly, GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Juw7T] Agent fur Priuce Edwara island, EDWARD 1. AUSSELL, & CO. GEN RAL Commission erchants, No. 2i3 State Street, BUSTOR., May 14, 1881. W. C. BISHOP, SEIrPrrINns FORWARDING AGENT, MARINE INSURANCE BROKER, —aAND— Gere'al Commission Agent ~ $0 BEDFORD ROW, P.O. BOX 1 ; HALIFAX, N 7 aa AR ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and cther Canned Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks thereon. Halls, Clase offi Consignments of Produce prompt returns guaranteed, Correspondence solicited and answered promptly. [ap 7 6x0 Cargoes and Freights insured in first- e3 at most favorable rates, solicited, and Papsr Bag Factory! a THE Bhi i¢ ED £ . nonpan F aann ory, 7 ISUPARCE =ASSOCIANOL (LIMITED), | CP LONDON, ENGLAND. Head (fice, RY Goops treet, Londox, anos esaen? enna nea aed | CYEOI ES Capital - $5,000,000 a Reserve Fund - . ° « 250,000 Deposited with Dominion Govt, 100,000 Coreer Leadenhall § TIN G - ~ —aT— J.B. Macdonald’s, Queen Strest. —0' 0—— ~~ FALL G OODS NOW OPEN. oo Inguranee Company F or Variety, Styles, Quality and Low Prices CANNOT BE EXCELLED IN THE PROYVERS. | Policies issued and losses settled promptly without reference to Head Office, J. R. BRECKEN, Sank of P. E.I,, Agent for P. E. I, FRED. W, HYNDMAN, Sub-Apent, Sk pt. 3, “i r% —3m nm, Ps at 3m ons | Prince Edward Island. | 0: PRA My NEW TEA is EXCELLENT. Rost. Lcnaworrn, Esq., President. J. &. MACDONALD. | 68 Queen Street, Charlottetown, Sept. 23, ’81—wkly, pat pres eee OLS: Just Try! Directors : } D. R. M. Hooper, Kaq., | B. Rogers, Ksq., Samus. Morea, Esq. ane Risks taken daily on Vessels, Cargoes and | Freights, at their Office, Corner of Great’ | George and Lower Water Streets, FRED. W. HALES, | Ch’town, n _? 1881. oe | Hos L. C. Owen, FLANDRAUAN, Esq., G. R. Beer, Esq., a THE EXAMINER JOB PRINTING OFFICE HAS LATELY BEEN REPLENISHED WITH ALFRED A. BOWN, AUCTIONEER —AND— ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND. = Solicits consignments of all kinds cf Produce | Butter, Eggs, Vegetables, etc., etc. Prompt returns guaranteed, ences on Ss agpratine. Www GF THE LATEST INVENTION AND BEST DESCRIPTION, ARE NOW PREPARED, Good refer- | AND WE Dytt Sm cow | : a i : Under the Careful and Skilful Supervision of Mt. J. W. litchell, TO PRI Ne LETTER HEADS, RECEIPTS, POSTERS, BODGERS, &c., &e., BILL HEADS, BLANK CHEQUES, NOTES OF HAND. EENT STREADT, Between Queen and Pownal, Charlettetewa, - P. EI. eee { VERY nee y and size of Paper Bags for’ Grocers, Dry Goods men, { eres Hatters, Ditgsists, and Pastry Bakers’ use HAND BILLS, On Short Notice, in Good Style, at Cheap Prices, stock or mate to order at short notice, am om at Montreal prices, with usual trade ae FO CASE CUSTOMERS. Parties having quantities of paper in stock Charlottetown, Sept. 1, 1881. can bave it male into bags without loss of time and at much Ivss cost than they can | import them. { Orders respectiully solicited k. U. BABBITT, | nay: 27—3m | == — a < eee MARINE! LIFE A BROWN & 00. HAVE JUST ———_——:0: ewe HORACE HASZARD, General Insurance Agent, AUTUMN GOODS, AMONG WHICH ARE? New Black and Cream Silk Laces, Black Silk Fiinges (ip variety), Black Satins, Man Commercial Union Fire Assurance Company, of London, kng., ——— a | CAPITAL, £2,500,000 STG. mt nig Wore Sco Twesde "| Western Fire Assurance Company, of ‘Toronto, Out. Worsted Coatings, &c, CAPITAL, $800, 000. 00. fg ecg Rey British Amerisa Fire Assurance Company, of Toronto, Out., | CAPITAL. $500,000.00. markets buying for the firm. ‘Sun Mutual Life & Accident Insurance Company, of Kontreal, CAPITAL, $500,000.00. | SS — ——REPRESENTING— We have also received a lot of | canadian Grey Flannels, Grey Cottens, Tweeds, &e., All of which will be disposed of at our, usual low prices. W. & A. BROWN & CO., <0: ae eon British Warchonse/ MARINE INSURANCE ALSO EFFECTED _ INET W :0: ¢ f h i F) E 2 WT ; Risks taken on all descriptions of Property at LOWEST RATES. “a: —— Beer’s Wharf (Late Duncan's. ) | Office--Corner of Queen and Lower Water Sireets. to hig Charlottetown, April 4, 1881—+tf RS ee eM se ES et ‘HE subscriber wishes to intimate friends, and the public generally, that he has opened a Coal Depot at the above named place, where he is prepared to receive orders for all the leading kinds of Coal, and fill them at lowest possible rates. R. McMILLAN, SEE LE SO I EERE LTE TATE. Pt JUST OPEN ED NO. 61 QUEEN STREET. Ch’town, Aug. 18—eod, wkly 1m pd aD ERY LOW BLG MEN ! At Work Again: © MARAED TEE 2 Who Want Good Winter Wealleas | ALBION MINES! Velveteens, Dress Gsods, ICTOU, N.S. Piai : il F we ' Plain and Fancy Wincey, Ordera for ROUND COAL can now be ob-, 3 ; tained on application to SSCs SC. dC G. W. DeBLO'S, Sole Agent for P. E. Island, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. al Terms as usual, the Cheapest anc ‘Sept. 3, ’sl. wkly im, sj pat eod lm) 83 Queen Street, Aug. 26, 1881, ip’ Cplighed in the Province, ~—AND— HAD BETTER CALL AT Cc. i. Morrison’s, AND SEE HIS sfTOCcK OF Extra @ut-size Scotch Lamb Wool Shirts and Drawers! To thirsting souls, to hearts that pine, | Winnipeg to Fort Ellis im the interior, and . the soil, and its soon fill up with settlers, more especially ‘now that ; Ways in al! directions. ‘of deterring farmers ‘going to the North-West they should be | encouraged to go there. ‘inces, all his travels Sir Alexander never met a all over. either with their present condition or, if gives it as his candid opinion that it will overtake, if it does not up some business he has here. ‘the last words he uttered as he passed into -the Canadian Pacific railway office on St. | thousands of natives of the United States.” | —Torente Globe. Just Received per Prince Edward. fse 16 H. KW. TRENIAINE pj QUBSC RIBE for the DAILY EXAMINES |! HYMN. | In our uureason and aia liow little know we what is best; oa Ww tittle can explore the deep, Yhence emauate our weal and woe; But th s we feel, and this we know, “God giveth His beloved—sleep !” He, while by rambie far ab rut In realms of darkness and of deubt, Doth His ne rua! councils keep; Watches our ways, supplies our needs, Strengthens the weak, the wanderer leads, And “giveth His beloved—s! eep!” } But g i{ts there are which, though pursued W ‘ith passion by the multitude, W * o idly sow and blindly reap; Rank, fortune, fame—not these, not these Are "God's supreme beniguities: He giveth His beloved—sleep |” His own beloved they are not OF princely pomp, or lofty lot; The cay, the vain, the proud, who sweep The noisy paths of life along: To some se) rener joys belong, * He giveth His beloved—sleep !” Sleep ! Sweetest dowry ! gift divine To world o’er-weared eyes that weap; For these he brings a blest release, Lb repares a bed of endless peace, And “giveth His beloved—sleep !° j — > oe +e The Great North West. SIR ALEXANDER GALT’S VIEWS. (Correspondence of the Torento Mail ) In general terms the Canadian High Commissicner to England said that what he had seen ef the North-West gave hima far higher opiaion of its adaptability inevciry respect for settlement than he had even been led to form from the glowing accounts he had previously read or heard about it. He had travelled 250 miles north-west of returned on the line by the Pacific Rail- way, and he was charmed with the general features of the country, and the fertility of WONDERFUL PRODUCTIVENESS, In all parts where the land was culti- vated the wheat and other grain, as well as the root crops, he descriked as simply magnificent. The crops of all kinds sur- passed anything he had ever seen before. Such a splendid country he thinks must it will be intersected with rail He thinks ivstead in Ontario and the Milk and Maal. (London Live Stock Journal.) Monosyliabic aud alliterative, terse and practical, plain and simp le, are the words of our heading to-day. The things they denote are of no small i;a- portance in the economy of life, and they have a homely smack of cag life as it was in days goue by. Our fore- fathers understood their value better than we-—the value, tuat is, of the thirgs, not the mere words ~and used them oftener. They had what we are aiming to get, ‘“* a free breaktast-table!” for milk and meal, anda sliee of fat bacon on a_ piece of oat-cake—this was about all it cousisted of. The modern free breakfast table is an excellent thing iv iis way, avd worth getting when we can reach it; but we are not clear that it is much better than the old one, all things considered. Tea and coffee are among the esthetics which adorn the -modera mahogany just as milk and meal was a standing dish on the ancient oak, and they are always delightful when nicely mashed and gracefully dispensed by the hand we took pains and pleasure in winning, But they do not compare, ia simplicity or in worth, with milk and meal! Nobody ever grew fat on them except the dealers, and they in pocket, not in person. They are not conducive to rosy cheeks, or to limpid eyes, and ‘the maids of merrie England’ are not indebted to them for the beauty we so much admire. They are less a food than a relish—are purely adventitious adorn- ments, as it were ; and neither of them is nice without cream, The men who won at Waterloo were ‘raised’ on milk and meal; the lads who lost atMajuba were not—at least we be- lieve they were rot. Milk and meal are not beaten, save by death. As articles of food they are not equalled for health ef body and peacs of mind. We are coming ‘to see this at last; for oats are being more extensively grown, and the demand for milk is rapidly i increasing. The porridge of our forefathers, or ‘lumpytums,’ as it was sometimes called, was a grand institution. Itis not too much to say that we should not have subdued India, or peopled the Colonies, Eastern Townships of this Province from}°" destroyed Armada, or won Gibraltar, They are just the tight class of pioneers for that new coun- try, from ihe valuable experiences they have gained in making their present homes. Tenant farmers from Great Britain and Ireland, he thinks, would at first do as well to buy farms in these settled prov- where the transition from their former experience would not -be so great at first as in going into the North-West. In grumbler either in city or country. It was literally, he said, A BOOM OF PROSPERITY Everyone seemed in good spirits, they were new comers, with their future prospects. Winnipeg he thinks a wonder- fully progressive city for its age, and he SURPASS TORONTO in the race for population and wealth. Sir Alexander intends returning to England at as early a moment as he can possibly setlle The opinion he has formed from actual observation and experience caunot fail to be otherwise than of infinite advantage, not only to the North- West, but to the whole of Canada, for the interests of the Dominion are now indis- solubly bound up in the peopling and gen- eral development of our new empire in the North-West. Before parting with the igh Commissioner your correspondent asked him if it were true he was anxious to return permanently to Canada, as was gen- erally represented. ‘‘ Well, you may say it is true, I love Canada and greatly prefer iving in it to stopping in England,” were James street. ——_——__~<4_>< -—_—_-- Migrations. ‘The Dominion already contains tens of This is what the Toronto Opposition organ says, and, unlike a great deal of the utterances of that paper, it is true. But the Globe does not make the statement as a charge against the United States, or as proof of the unsoundness of its fiscal policy, or as showing that its Government is not or conquered Napoleon, or charged at Balaclava, or stormed the gates of Delhi, but for porridge! Of late yearsyhow- ever, we have gone on coffee and tea, and uot on milk and meal. The change was disastrous, but we see the error of our ways. +-<—- Rumours that the noble library of rare books which has long found a home in the palace which the British nation gave to the great Duke of Marlborough was to be sold publicly, have at last shaped themselves into an undisputed fact. The Sunderland library has been catalogued, anc. in Decem- ber the first part of it will go to the auction desk in London, there to be scattered far and wide through England, Italy, France and the United States. Perhaps the most distinguished feature is its choice editions of the ancient elassics, many of which are early and from presses that are renowned. Of vellum books there are 58 in the first part ot the catalogue, and nine of them are from the presses of Faust and Schoffer. The Italian classics are said to be of great importance. Editions of Boceaccio, Anosto, Dante and Petrarch will become memorable features of the sale, there being five pages of the catalogue de- voted to Boccaccio, and one of the lots is none other than the Valdarfer edition —per- haps, all in all, the most celebrated book in all the annals of bibliomania For that volume, in 1812, the Marquis of Blandford paid, at auction, the sum of £2,260, and, in dining with his adversary immediately afterward, declared that it had been his in- tention, if necessary, to bid up to £5,000. -—- 2@ @@— ~— Preparations are being made in Palermo and elsewhere throughout Sicily for grand celebration of the six hundredth an- niversary of the ‘‘ Sicilian Vespers,” in March next. No more emphatic indication could be obtained than this announcement of the ill-feeling which continues to prevail towards the people of France among the inhabitants of the Italian Kingdom. The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies was given by the Pope in the thirteenth century to the brother of the King of France, Charles of Anjou, whose government was so cruel thet he became odious to his subjects. During aster week in the year 1282 a French soldier insulted a Sicilian maiden, and this deed preved the spark which lit up what it should be. It treats this whelesale migration from the United States to Can ada as a matter of course occurrence.— Moncton Times. > oo a terrible conflagration. The cry of ‘‘ Death to the French” wa» raised on all sides, and a massacre began which did notend till it |had spread from Palermo to Messina and |< nward through the whole island. The un- happy French, before they even knew what Ir is genuine good management and a tho-| had excited so much rage against them, exhibit of the Intercolonial which has r-used the aaver of the Grits. They praised, as the} acme of management, a state of things which | made the annual workir ng eXpenses nearly three thousand dollars per mile. They find nothiny to praise in the renovated system ad. opted by the present Minister of Railways, by which the annual working eXpenses were in one year reduced to about $1,900 per mile. They, of course, see nothing worthy of ‘praise in the makazement which has resulted in the surplus of receipts over expenditures without addition to the working expenses per mile, — To,-onio Mail. a oct 1 \norurr lot of Automatic Copying Pencils most Newsy Paper, or sale at G. H. Haszarn’s, 18 Queen Street. | rong system of economy which has enabled were ruthlesfly butchered, without distine- Sir Charles Tupper to show that magnificent} , ion of either age or sex. That such a catastrophe shouid now be brought to mind- | as something worthy of honorable remem- nance, is under the circhmstances, sadly | significant. —--———2w eo A Wot¥ Ficnt.—A farmer at Dayton, Wis con-in, discovered and attacked seven wolves while oat looking up a flock of sheep a short time since, After a desperate fight, in which ~s his clothing was torn off, his hands avd legs ere badly bitten, and the lower half of one ear snapped off, he killed them. He received $77, in bounties from the state, aud sold the ekins for a fair price. GRavensTetys and other Apples wholerale and retail, at R. K. Brace’s, 03 A Sil tet esteem