OF po Sn sata SA A AE et eee —— mee ~ Uwe us A. oF a ‘a ao 48 Sor oe CHAR LOTTETOYV y ¥ VN ne | SE ER oe nee nee er 3 = eens ©) 9 cere cs ern ere é ke oo CN “oe os me mek ¢ ? IK wy NOW OPEN! Al “fsa LONI a3. JON Hx “ Utopia” from London, IWENTY CASES Bix ‘‘Caspian” from Liverpool, TWO CASHS. Hx “Anglia” from London, PACKAGHS THA. 30 Charlottetown, Sept. 6, 1880, ewe JUST ARRIVE! AT ett WARENOU DE Ex Ss. S, “Hibernian, A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF Black Silk Fringe. Corsets. Cashmeres, Velored and Black Satins, Pompadoar Prints, TOILET COVERS & QUILTS, in Plain and Fancy); White, Scarlet, Grey & Fancy Flan Cloths, Tweeds, &c., nels, All of which are now opened, and will be | geld at our usual low prices. WwW. & A. BROWN & CO. Ch'town, Aug. 24, 1880. St, Dunstan's College, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. 1 ee ee NHIS Coliege will be re-opened under the | eharge of the Fathers of the Society of Jesus, Wednesday, September Loth, Intending students should make immediate application. For prospectus and further particulars ad- dress RE\. GEORGE B. KENNY, 5. J., Ch’town, Aug. 6, ’80--till sep President. PACIFIC Mutual Insuranee 60., -~——O ¥ — 1879, ” #744,149.00 — ——- —- Assets 2\st Dec., Insurance effected on CARGOES and PREIGH''S, covering $15,000 and upwards on first-class risks, Certificates issued payable in Londoa at the office of Morton Roskz & Co., Bankers, or in New York. Risks taken and rates fixed without being referred to» Head Office. FENTON T. NEWBERRY, Agent for P. K. Island. May 1} 1880. TRY IT. TRY IT. “MIVE ALBION MINE NUT COAL a fair trial and you will not be disap- pointed in the result; i¢ is COAL, not fire clay and slate. For orders apply to G. W. DeBLOIs, Sele Agent for P. E. Island, Office~-No. 35 Water Street. Charlottetown, Jnly8, 1880—pat tf (s+.. DAV ETS | ADVISE RY BOARD pene 18 & Local I industry, ae 8 eee ee WV TITH thes of securing a fair repre- sentation a our Industries at the Gen i eral Dominion Exhibition, to be held a | Mentreal on the }4th day of September next, : (Norway) 3 00) (train each sample in the straw. FISH. ‘ Best Half barrel Mackerel $12 00! | ‘* Kit Mackerel 6 00 ‘ Barrel Herring 8 00 i * Half-barrel do 5 00 ‘ Quintal large Dry Codfish 8 00 Box 3G1b. Boneless = 5 00 Half-Box 15ib. * 3 60 ‘* Quintal Hake 5 60 Box 30lb. Boneless Hake 400 i ‘+ Half-box I5lb. ne 2 00 | The Fish alsoto be the | Board. Exhibits of listers, Mackerel, etc., bes be forwarded free of i hab tors, | TSaieie appointed by | the Prizes. All entries (before the 4th September, and all Exhibits | i(Live Stock excepted) senat be delivered at | | th: : Secretary's Office, on or before September | Lith, and no later. All entries of are Stock tmade at the Secrets Otftice | the 4th September, \ ad such lonly as the Judges will recommend {forwarded at the expense of the oe | A. eNEILL, Secretary Advi lee Board. | Ch town, Augpat 19, 1889 | - HAND, at the A Stand,” Water Street, Canned Goods, such as Lob. | and other Industries, charge to the Ex. the Board will ; reed i must be made on or must also be on or before | LW AYS GON Round and Nut Coal,/— From the ditferent Mines, is sold as Cheap as by Which the traee. ! TERMS CASH! CAPT. JOHN HUGHES, Water Street. Ch'town, Aug. 18, “80—Im tu th sa PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, LORIN a PWAWIS New and Commodious House, situate at North Shore, offers great attraction | for Tourists who are wanting recreation, sea bathing, fishing, ete. Ii is within easy access of ‘the City, being only thirteen (13) miles by rail or carriage. Charges moderate. apply to the Manager, or address LORNE HOTEL COMPANY, June 12, 1880. Charlottetown, P. E. 1. PRINCE oP : samples to be the property of “the | iB joard, and to be accompanied by 124 eads of | le | property of the | animals | will be | “Old others in, Great Summer Resort HOTEL. For further eer | A el Aa ct eee ee ete ee OF et ee KDWARD NG HOUSE, & CO. C7 ti A ING Dominion Exhibition, WELD ON THE 7 . Provincial Exhibition Grounds, MOUNT ROYAL AVEMUE, MONTREAL, Gpens Tuesday, Sept, 14th, (loses Friday, Sept. 24th, at 2 p. m. ’ ———— $20,000 OFFERED [ii PREMIUMS. Oo BE intries must be made with ‘in Montreal, on or before the jtioned dates, viz: Horses, Cattle, Sheep, 3 00 | Swine, Poultry, Agricultural Impleme nis and iand at the New Brunswick Exhibition to be | ‘held at St. John City, on the Sth day of ' Oct tober neXt, the Board will pay Prizes as ' follows GRAIN. Beat Washel Spring Wheat (white) S5 €0 . +s . si {r "¢ ad) 35 oO oe sé se (bear led) 5 00 | " = 4 ** (any other kind) 3 v0) Barley (2 rowed) 4 00 ‘** Oats (white} 3 «Oats (black) Dairy Products, te Saturday, September 4ih. fine Arts, Manufactures, Implements, Ma- chinery, Stoves, &c., Saturday, August 28th. Prize Lists and Blank Forms of Entry can be obtained of the Secretaries. lor further particulars apply to Ss. C. STEVENSON, See’'y Counci GEO. LECLERE, ee y Council of Agriculture. August }4, 1880—wkly . Tint Goal. Kut Coal, Also {REE from Slate and Fire Clay. Round and Slack, at Albion Mines, Pictou, Nova Scotia, For orders apply to G. W. DEBLOIS, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. ‘(tid Sydney Mines,Cape Breton. Lingan Mines, Yape breton, “yRDERS for Round Coal can be obtained ( on application to Terms as usual, G. W. DeBLOIs, Sole Avent for P. E. Island, _{ Office, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. June e 17, 1850—pat hee 8) kes ti lu BEN INSURANCE CO'Y, OF ENGLAND. . Two MILLIONS STERLING, SURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- ak Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Svecial rates for isolated resicences, Losses settled promptly. GPORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island LUMBER. LUMBER, VERY LARGE STOCK OF CAPITAL, des Seasoned Pine & Sprace Lumber en and, for Sale Belivered at Point Bu Chene. io schooners, Consisting of Pine Boards, Plank & Sheathing; also Spruce Beards, Scantling, Clap- boards, Laths, Shingles, etc. All for sale Cheap, in quantities to suit purchasers. CUSHING & CLARKE. Salehary, N. B., June 18, 1880—3m eod / Ci UBSCRIBE for the DAILY EXAMINER, WO the Chea published in t e Provinces, [SLAND, TUESD AY, ODS! the Setretaries undermen- 1 of Arts and Manuf’s, or to t and most Newsy Paper SEPTEMBER 7, 1880, € Orrespondence, e ones ddan gs We do not holed ourselves r he statements sponsible for } or OA RIONS of GULP COT T: aponede nts, on the Recent Rail-} Accident. : ! Dente sas The ‘ Patriot way _ ‘ LUGO 0} this L44 Phe editor of the To the Rare wn bie, feesbi ies, : Patriot ia more rails and isinent a guilty } Supermtendsat, >] negligent trackmasters and murderous sec | tiopmen, all along the tine. Like the} roval Dane, we can hear hin exclaiming : ' ‘Phe world is out. of joint -—— hi, spite, That I was ever I wish the editor of the derstand that no can eurrence of- the late accident more than 1} 7 4ut | have yet to learn that the ae ident was cansed by lack of duc care and resis ht on the part of those haying the manavement and safe keeping of the rauil- way. Accidents that cannc stor- ily accounted for, occasionally occur on the very best-regulated an cared-for the world, Why, even under the benign _ of the grand army of othicials with ‘Mr. . McKechnie as Commander-in-Chief, it 80 ‘happened that casualties, or as the Put- riot has it, ‘* Railway disasters,’ occurred. Take un Mr. McKeehnie’s report, dated Aug. 23, 1878, and what do we find? Un der the head of ‘* Casualties’ we find that Brakeman Thos. A. Cartmill was killed, Eoyin ie-driver Hendry and Fireman Trainor were very severely scalded, Brake- mean James MeDonald bad his arm crushed porn ta set Teer it right Patrwt to wn- one deplore the oc- t be satisias . ; roads ib while coupling cars at St. Peters, and Baggageman McDonald had his wrist broken. Immediately following these statements Mr. MeciWKechnie adis—‘‘ We have again the pleasure of reporting that no passen- ger has been either killed injured upon this Railway.” This statement of the late Superintendent is not true. On the 5th of Marck. 1877, a passenger coach upset at, or near, Harmony ‘Station. Taere hap pened to be but two passengers on board at the time—Miss Stewart and Mrs. McDon- aid. The former escaped unhurt, but the latter besides receiving other iftjuries, had her collar bone broken. 1 am not prepared to say what caused this accident. It may or may not have been caused by loose rails and rotten seepers. Of this much we are positive, Mrs. McDonald was handsomely remunerated for the lmjuries she sustained. Whether she was instructed, at the time of payment to keep quiet about the acci- dent, we are not prepared to state. I refer to this accident not for the pur- pose of making political capital out of it and cowardly abusing the late Superin- tendent as the the Patriot has done, and is doing, to the present head of onr Railway (Mr. McNab), but merely to show that a parallel case to the recent accident has oc- curred under the management of the late Government. It is true more passengers were injured in the recent accident than on the former oceasion ; but this was dune to the fact that there were not more passen- gers to injure. If instead of only two, there had been twenty passengers on board at the time of the accident at Harmony, when the cars upset, quite as many persona might have been injured as at York the other evening. Memo. Loses of an Gomy Stiaeake: VERA CRUZ HURRICANE, THE °° CITY OF SWAMPS IN A ; qc? *> rept. Ko SAVANNAH, : Morning | News ” oe from St. Augustine says: | ‘¢ The beach north and sonth of St. Augus- tine light and as far south as Matanzas | Inlet is strewn with wrecked stuff, dry goods, provisions and every description of inerchandise. First evidence of a wreck was discovered near lighthouse on Tavsday | and on the following day the coast north and southward revealed the story of a terri- ble disaster. ‘Ten miles below Matanzas trunks and a mail bag were found: A letter which was marked with a tag ‘‘Re- turn to New York,” was opened and found to contain a letter dated *‘ New! York, August 25, 1880, per City of Vera) Cruz,” ‘also bills of lading for goods per | steamship Vera Cruz. Near the place where mail bag and trunks were found, bodies of thre a woman and a child were discovered and interred in the neigh. borhood. Ali valuables and jewelry were | taken from the hodies so that remains could not be identified. All wreckers show that steamer Vera Cruz, which sailed from New York on the 25th for Havana either | went ashore on’ or foundered off Florida! coast on Monday night or Tuesday morn- | ing, during a heavy storm, and that all on board perished.” P . —<e _ ee Remedy for Hard Times. Stop spending so much on fine clothes, rich | focd and style. Buy good, healthy food, cheaper and better clothing; get more real and substantial things of life every way, and | especially stop the foolish habit of running | aiter expensive e and quack doctors or using so | much of the vile humbug medicine that does you only harm, and makes the proprietors’ rich, but put your trust in the greatest of all| simple pure remedies, Hop Bitters that cures | always at a trifling cost, and you will see bet- | ter times and y health. ry it once. Read | of it in another column, e men, | SUMMARY } Hon. Ji C. : ?0De, with the ¢ | had ittle not much by the Se neglect in go through the world, isures of the ‘that he owes a dollar in the cently concludes that many of his sunbseri- The Banquet at Summerside. REPOR? OF POPE'S SPEECH, Hom. J. & THe ‘Sammersid e Progesee publishes she following summary report of the Speech of Minister of Marine, on the oceasion of the bamquet recently given iat Summerside in his honor : than usu all, insolent and tnreas onable of i ‘© Mfr Pope on rising to respond. was re- In ‘ se ( LOMLATTES Ve! ‘ £2 eres ral “ Kt h thy ex? with - PED RPS and enthusiastic ic »} \ ScT" 4>* fens , . Gilent witha s s ; ienats t del . icheers, He -at some length, referring , « . ‘ bye? . 7 : . Ss . "’ * can see nothing but rotten : leepers, y m8el to the delegat ion to Enziand iv connection Canada Pacific Railroad. Ue said that so far as he felt at liberty to.speak, he doubt hut the BSIOn would be Morther, that before the Minis ters had left Ottawa, preposilions had been made by iwo separate companies or eyndi- cates offering to build the read. There was difference in the terms proposed companies, They wanted large land in alternate sections sauceessfal, quan tities of falony the line of road, subsidised by money made for the work already were not the only propositions that had been made, and -n better terms might probably he obtatned hy the delegates now in*England For his cwn part he entertainod no fears for the pitimate financial success of the road whether built by a company or by the Goy- ernment. The line mnst beeome so very important, that the lands along its ronte will be taken up and will deubtless be sold for a price that will more taan recoup the Gevernment for any possible cost of its con- struction. This view of the situation must be held. by the great capitalists of the world who are willing to risk their fortunes to- build and work it. He severely criticised and condemned the late Governinent for gross mismanage- ment and extravagance on the work per- formed on the road during the time they were in power. Speaking of the civil ser- vice, he said the permanency of that depart- ment had been established and he believed it better that it should be so. He said that Mr. Mackenzie had secured the dismissal of our friends from ofiice in 1873, by mis- representations, that he had represented to the Governor General that the offices were not required, and had the appointments cancelled on the ground of econom Three days after this-was-done he had the impudence to lay before the Government a list of Grit names to fill up the very offices which he had declared a few days previous were not required. These facts being known, it was supposed that after the Con- servatives came inte power, those whe gvere dismissed in 1873 would have been returned to their positions. This, how- eper, appeared to be impossible, but as he believed that the present party will remain in power perhaps for ever, and certainly for the next ten years, our friends who at- tain office during that period will have the satisfaction of knowing that they will held their situations during life, or good be- havior. -&s regards the Fisheries, it had to be admitted that the Island had peculiar claims (into which he went at some length), and he was not without hopes of the Island yet getting something out of the Fishery Award. it was no ‘breach of confidence for him to say that he had done all that it was possible for him toe dein the interest q being ‘These grants, allor WAhce pertorme d, henee ev of his native Province in the mat- ter. But half dozen members were weak as against nearly 205— the whole House of Commous— for nearly the whole House were against them, ineluding Mackenzie and Biake with their followers. The question had been submitted, to the legal advisers as Well as to the Privy Coun- ci}, and all the decisions were against us; yet it was admitted that there were special circumstances in favor of this Province. These sentiments of the Minister were re- lceived with applause. He expressed his delight at meeting so many of his old | fri ind anda” concinded one of the best | speeches we have heard him make by thanking the genilemen present for their kindly fe IG gs expresce ui towards ‘im, and for the honor > had done him ” es nt apd The busiest life may bemade endurable by a judicious lightening of its cares. If we take time for recreation and relief, no time for acts looking to the future and a_ better life, the hour is certain to arrive. sooner or later, when a crisis will confront us,compel- ling ustodoall things which we so much the routine of business or profes- sional life, how much better is it then, to make rest. recreation, reflection, thoughts of a future, a better, purer and holier state of existence, a part of our daily experience, combining business with charity, industry with kindness, perseverance with fortitude, experience with religion, a commingling of qualities and hopes that lighten life as we and add to the plea- present with a view to the e hereafter. An editor having read in another paper that there isa tobacco, which, ifa man smoke or chew ii, ‘* will make him forget world,” inno- bers have been furnished -with this article, A Good Account. ‘To sum it up, six long years of bed-rid- | den sickness and suffering, costing $200 per | year, total $1,200--all which was stopped by three bottles of Hop Bitters taken by ‘my wife, who has done her own house- _work for a year since, without the loss of a day, andl want everybody to know it for their benefit.” “Joun Weexs, Butler, N, Y,’ NO, 92 = enanpereate - nl its a ees wm ve 1 oe | Ae iT Oe IE A eee eae nal Rt - FS 5 ERED EES VE IE ES “Ti A fa iis di tne i F ‘poles Pamledl a ee SS, ORRIN 8k REL SERN a ie aac BORG Sica Wi iin 1 8 BRT a , 4 7 , , ’ Pane J ~~ BM BE ee RE PE