DoLLaks A YEAR, ——————— VEW SERLES. iuX AMINER gy, by (ne UAILY eveul fhe Examiner Publishing Co. rner of Water and ets, Charlottetown, ra Islan "TION I $2 50 ’ ‘ 4 . ; ‘ 0 50 e- A rtis t rate raies tracts ma) nade for monthly, yearly advertie ne ee 8. ee, alwANAG FOR SEPTEMBER, i824. ES. t).0im., & M. Last Qa lith day, 4h. $.0m., a. ma Ne 9th day, On, 24 Om., a. m. j l « Val ~~ i se a D Dba uw?’ vater|len’h i. i i mo h m ] fidi 7 Se.l3 |: 2] £ 52] 8 Zi 3 2 iu =o 68 iG 2 4 } 25 9 05) 9 oF 12 59 5 ‘oO 28/10 3! ~ 24: © be aay | o2 . ‘ i ' 0 > odal 45 i I § 43! | » j lo i 9 29° 1 49 £0 il pia. 2 42! 37 iZ I } i oo ot i3.s i 5 1d 3U ws u i 6 4 24 weM { .- 2a) 7 Bi 97 | 15 Lt oi 2 dl} 8 49) Zi 7 i 3! 3 39! 9 34 17 13) t7 il 4 4610 13 14} 19) F: 435 59 5521048! 11 90'Sa ov 57 > 7 Ll 22 7 #1 Sa yi >: 7 &9'1l 56 4 92 Mi 2 &3' 9 ik morn a} 22i\1u : 53 5110 O O 30)11 57 | a4 Wednesday §t| 4910 57) 1 5 55 | 2} Tharsd ay 55} 47,11 52' 1 44 52 20 Friday 56; 45 aft41| 2 27 49 27 Saturday 58} 43! 1 27: 3 11 45 25'San ia 6 O a. =: 8 & = 42) 29’ Moaday Ll} 39) 2 48) 5 37 39. 30, Tuesisy } 2} 38) 3 22) 6 5! 36 | cae oe THe RAILWAY TIME TABLE fu) pAL O46 1 A J ‘har! f Time ) Gol it Ae ee Lh Al i vo 47 9 12 + 27 Hauwter ltiver 747 1055 6 47 y. M.? NN ia ae eee cus sa rm 76 @ ' } arrive 907 1257 737 ee } depart...... 9 27 3 32 7" Port Hill 1030 415 Anas 1205 657 Ne a 1248 «7 47 FR \ a ae A. M Tiguis! > 02 6 47 Alberton 240 757 Port Hill A AE 415 1025 Sa } arrive 517 12 07 . ' \ depart 64648 193 687 K ona 49 20 72 Hu r 40 325) «68 47 Una eCk S07 IOG 6c) \ PrP, M An Mi Char! \ eth» soe ee ° 4 17 7 2 OOS oa iu ak 622 8$77 mount * 5 Gam eee . 000 cng: 527 902 sd cea 617 1002 Pr. M. Ss yur 7 ¥4 12 02 A. M. cas doce cues 532 907 a 629 1022 Veorgetown peoceeeeeoewes 6 47 10 47 PROM EAs’, ink. 2m Souris ‘ be scebceners 6 47 2 i7 St. Peter i 7 52 4 00 Mount Stewart, | S°TV@---+ +++: 5 42 0 17 | Oemert. cos cies 847 542 Charlottetown. o8f 7237 Pe ee ages 121 383 SN. ces es cvaewens enue nue 745 357 Moi + Stewart § 42 § 12 Did, Suecessful, Trustwerthy, PURELY MUTUAL, No Stockholders, Dividends Annually. ORG AVIZED 1845. NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE G0. roe lash Assets over 355,000,000. McLEAN & MARTIN, Agents for P. E. Island. 2m 2aw wkly HARBLE WOKS Ch town, Aug 27 CARRS” Me CHARLES CAIRNS, in returning 4 thanks to the public for the liberal patrona ‘tended to him, begs leave to 1- form nis old t rs and th public general- “Ys th at ss) taken into p tyerstip Mr. Mal m MeLean, and that hereatter the OUsiNess y on under the title of C in i R N ‘5 XN CO.. Marble & Stone Cutters.' Chey have on hand a fiue stock of Monu- Ments, ‘Tablets and Headstones, in Italian aad American Marble. They are of the latest de- Signs, and at prices to suit all. ©. CAIRNS. > i. ARTHUR | Will b ‘hy? M. McLEAN. Ch'towa, June 30, 1384—prea ne pat 3) WP “ This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, atta to datiitee the Public, may nati free,’’—Evxirrpgs. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, S! PTEMBER 23, 1884. CONSIGNMENTS SOL'SITED. R. ODWYER, ’ Cummission aud General Merchant © POR SALY OF P. B. 1. PRODUCE, 289 WATER STREET, Si. Johns’ Sevfoundland, ln connection with the above is Captain a ; mogush, who is well known in P. E. who will take special . : ments, and wil! also Island, charge of all consign- attend to the chartering ot vessels for the carrying trade of P. E. I The firm is one of the oldest and most reli- able in Newfoundland to be prompt and satisfa tory. ing to pr Parties wish- ure Labradore lierring should send their orders in time Ne pc 6, Iss. till 3l t dee, 84, GHN HRATL AF vommission Merchants, [2] ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON, MASS. Eyes and Produce a Specialty. May 15.1884 wkly tf W. WHEATLEY, & Soyxs, CHARLOTTETOWN, i’. E. IsLanp) (Or WHEATLEY Commission Merchant, 269 BARRINGTON STREET, BALIPVAS,. W. 8. &® Special attention given to the sale of P, FE. Island produce. April 24, 1884. APPLES, APPLES, APPLES, ~_—— 79 Gueen St, Lenden, E. C., > glad to correspond with Apple Crow- ers, Merchants ard Shippers, with a vy to Autumn and Spring business. They willalso give the usual facilities to customers requiring advances, aug] N. J. CAMPBELL, (Successor to Campbell & Rayden) Auctioneer and Commission Merchant, SHIP BROKER, AND ENSTRARCE AGENT, COR. OF QUEEN AND WATER STS., Chariloticiown, P. EH. isiand. —— ane [supporter and Jobber of Cheice Groceries and Spices. General Agent for P. E. Island of the British Empire Mutual Life Assurance Com- pany, of London, England Special attention given to Auctiom Sales of Lumber, Coal, Fish, Apples and other Fruit, Real Estate, Houechold Furniture, Bankrupt and other Stocks, and al! kinds of Merchan- 1139€. . . . Correspondence and Consianr enta velisited ; Roturrs prompt'r ak oe te Neen EEE SULLIVAN & MAGHEILL, ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW Solicitors tu Chancery, NO. PUBLEC, &e. OFFICLS— O’Halleran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown, =S 8 ¢) oc oe at! «Ss 2 as 23° Nioney to Loan W. W. Sucuvan, Q. C. | Causran B. MAcNRILL Jan. 16,78 iicLeod, Morson & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Giice in Uld Bauk, (UP STAIRS). Ch’town, Feb. 21, 1884. BARGAINS. - AM selling the balance of my Furniture saved from the fire of the 20th ull., at J. D McLeod’a corner, Queen Street, at reduction of from twenty-five to fifty per . below usual prices, - ’ JOUN NEWAOW Ob'tows, Mert @ Returns guaranteed & COn. DORSEY, GOFF & CO’S. —— 0 | Island, ——-—_——_ 90 ——_——_— People say our Boots are Viater-tight, Good Fit, Very Cheap, and wear as | well as Custom Boots. —_—_—_— — ()- CO - BBE = SUic AND GET OUR FAKE. DORSEY, GOFF & CO Sept. 18, 1884,—eoad whkly "AUGUST! iO | CH town, Hw. PROW SE IS SELLING THE FOLLOWING LINES OF GOODS, VERY CHEAP: ) Table Linen, Towelling, Poweis, *heetings, frrey and White Cottons, Pichings, Bress Goods, Biack Cashmeres, Hais, Readymade Clothing, Teas, etc. All those who waut the best value for their money should call. : L. E. PROWSE Sign of the Big Hat, 74 Queen Street Ch’ town Aug 6. 1RSA.—eod whly oO Extra, Prime, Cheap, Strong, Nice, Al, Splendid Beer & Coff’s for Extra ‘T'ea, WHOLESALE. BELR & GOFPS FOR PRIME TEA, RETAILL, BEER & GOFF’S FOR CHEAP THEA, WARRANTED. BEER & GOFFS FOR ©» POUND TiNS. BEER & GOFPS FOR Al TEA, WALE-CHESTS. BEER & GOFF’S FOR SPLENDID TEA, ANY QUANTITY. WRHOLBSA A) & Rear At Io. Ch’town, July 9, 1884—2aw Attention Ye Who Are In Doubt. 0 Let i xverience be Judge —Comparison and Purse the Jury. WARK WRIGHT & CO., Because of the excellent facilities they possess, have been able to reduce the price of all goods manufactured by them, and by buying their raw material in the best markets, for cash, are prepared to give the purchasing public THE BEST VALUE IN THE PROVINCE. They are selling from thirty to fifty per cent. below prices NICE TEA, asked some time ago in the same establishment. Factory, Office and Showroom —King Square, Kent Street. IGE GREAM. p #. Island Pottery, CHIMNEY TOPs, iO KDE'S for Ice Cream, by the quart er | DRAIN PIPES, ) gallon, should be ° at “The Little STRAWBERRY VINE PROTECTORS ‘Shop around the Corn.., or at the Star Con-| And other articles made to order at the P fectionery,” 24 heur eod of the time it is| gm ISLAND POTTERY. wanted, so a3 to i: ure a supply of Fresh | Cream. Made frm pure cream, with superi- BEER & GOFF or freezers, «4d porcelain-lined cans for con- : AGRNTS ‘taining it. The purity, sweetness and whole- | ag “ ; OLtbawes, Mag GI 1004 somene's ol the Ice Cream furnished 1s ia antes i, J “ y oy 1884. DVERTISE in the DAILY EXAMINER Rates nod erate, | Cribbing and Windsucking Horses. Crippinc, and windsucking, is called a | vice, or a habit, by some writers, but it is |ueither the one nor the other, but a dis- elebrated Wake of Boots are taking the iead all over the ccs ox rather a symptom oF disease. Crib- people contend, neither does the animal learn the habit from its neighbors, but is caused by pain in the teeth, known as veterinary dentist, who has the necessary instruments and is paid sufficiently for using them. Windsucking is different from cribbing, as the teeth are not worn away,and is caus- ed by indigestion in some of its forms, as the windsucker is, without doubt, a dyspeptic, in the fullest sense of the term. Now the idea prevails that the horse swal- lows wind; Lut that is an impossibility, as an animal can no more swallow air than it can breathe water, and it is time that men knew this physiological fact. When inves- tigating the act of windsucking, as it is called, there is something to be noticed be- sides the fact that the horse draws in his neck, and emits a sound, swells, and voids wind per rectum without being able to tcl! whether the animal takes wind in his stomach, or lets wind out of that organ. All animals that are dyspeptic, are troubled with flatulance, and colicky pains, and become weak and faint, if they are not fed regularly, and where, I ask, is the windsucker that can stand a long journey well? The windsucker, or rather the windbelcher, is unsound, and requires a thorough course of medicine, and wise and careful dieting as well, as it is not necessarily incurable if taken in time. Of all the cures for this disorder, that of buck- ling a strap tight around the neck, is the most ridiculous, and only shows the ignorance of those who first recom- mended it. t Joun M. Wurman, V. 8. Charlottetown. :_——- Victoria Notes. On Monday evening, the 15th inst., the people of our village and vicinity were pleasantly entertained by a lecture on ‘* A Voyage round the World,” by D. W. Campbell, Esq., accompanied by many in- teresting as well as amusing views, many of which were illustrative of places or things referred toin the lecture. Mr. Campbell is a very pleasant speaker, and his lecture was listened to with the deepest interest. The order was highly creditable to the young men and boys of the vicinity, but it would be something very unusual to have bad order with a chairman such as the Rev, Mr. Johnston, who is esteemed and belov- ed by both the young and old wherever he is known. Some writer in the last issue of THE EXAMINER, made a very mean and cowardly attack upon some of our young villagers, who attended a picnic some miles from the village, and on returning, thought it no harm to give vent to their best laughs and loudest hurrahs. Beyond this, either mocking of religion nor approaching rowdy- ism,was ever thought of,and the pious party who was so exceedingly shocked by the cheering and singing of some half dozen boys and girls, had better move himself some where into the back woods where he may have a chance of living the rest of his life in peace, for we can assure this zealous divine that if he resides any where near the highway, and is so easily disturbed, his righteous soil will many times be vexed and his spirit grieved by such like demonstra- tions of hilarity. 1 wonder though that his senses are so dulled as not to perceive that the Sabbath School children made three times the amount of noise made by the temperance party. Nothing but a hit at temperance,under cloak of religion, shows where the spirit of the attack is. If not in- terested in the liquor traffic, it has an in- terest in him. ‘Temperance in this vicinity has been attended by such results as make ‘he rumsellers weep aud gnash their teeth for very anger, and the day is not far dis- tant when every vile traflicer in the poisonous drugs they call brandy, whiskey, etc., will only be remembered as an evil banished forever. Well, they know that temperance societies are their most deadly enemies, and no deubt the tongue and pen of the slanderer will ever be ready to bring, if possible, disgrace on the most worthy of all societies—temperance. We here chal- lenge the party who wrote this slanderous article in the EXAMINER concerning our young men, intimating what he dare not say in plain terms, to come out over his own signature and make the same charges. We here give him the stump and dare him him to take it up. But we have no hesita- tion in saying that no doubt his name would be sufticient proof of the untrathful- ness of his assertion. It is unnecessary to say anything further on this matter as the motive, no doubt, was nothing more or less than an attempt to bring our order into dis- repute. We have no cause to be ashamed of the actions of any of our party on that occasion, and we can assure our respectable members whose characters are as good, if 10 superior to his. Hanpy Anpy. e <2. A Grand Bnatertainment. A grand literary entertainment was given }at the Albion Cross Schoolhouse, Dundas, ‘on the evening of the 17th inst., under the ‘auspices of our Literary Club. | Too much praise cannot be given to the | principal organizer of the Club, Mr. ‘Cameron, for his indefatigable zeal in getting it up. The house was crowded to jexcess, aud the audience highly pleased with the performances consisting of comic readings, dialogues, recitations, music, ‘both vocal and instrumental, and speeches, toothbound, and can be cured by a skilful, countryman that we have in our institution | VOL. 15.--NO, 106. Plummey McDonald, were well done. The recitations by the Misses McDonald and Gay and Miss McLeod, was highly applauded. The little children deserve credit for the able manner in which they have acquitted themselves. It is to be hoped that more of these literary entertainments will be delivered to enliven up our long winter evenings now approaching. D. N., Secretary. | Albion Cross, Sept., 17th, 1884. -——- Dundas Notes. Harvesting is the order of the day here. Tae oat crop pr omises a fair yield. Our carriage factory, owned and con- trolled by L. McKay, has done a large busi- ness in wagons this season. We expect this gentleman to compete at the County Exhibition. D. Nicholson, Esq., has done a large business in blueberry canning, at Albion Cross, and promises to do a lucrative busi- ness next season. John McDougall, Esq. M. P. P., will soon launch his vessel, She is near com- pletion, and is pronounced by competent judges, to be the finest looking vessel built on the. Island this season, Her model came from Lunenburg, N. S. Her moulds were made by Mr. Donald Stewart, of Cardigan, who highly approves of the model, This vessel has a pitch-pine stem apron, juniper top, copper fastened, patent rudder, with Messrs W. F. & J. W. Myers patent steer- ing gear, of latest pattern; also Russel’s frictionless pump, patented fin Ontario, 1883. We have every reason tu believe that Mr. McDougall’s will be the fastest vessel belonging to the province. This vessel is built for the firm of L. Kickham, & Co., of Souris. Her captain, Thomas Kickham, who is very liberal, we believe, will spare no expense on her, and no doubt, will make her a model craft. The Grits up here are foaming with rage, at the great victory gained by the Liberal- Conservatives in Queen’s Co., as they are sure of this County lyst to them in the next general election. Quiz. Sept. 14th, 1884. --_-. Baltic Notes. _ The farmers are jubilant over their houn- tiful crop, which is a long way ahead of the average. The hum of reapers may be heard from early morning till the setting of the sun, mingled with the merry laughter of young men and maidens who are busily en- gaged binding and gatherin the fruits of their springs work, There is an extraordinary crop of buck- wheat here this year, and the natives are elated over the stores they intend to lay by this winter,as they are very useful for cook- ing purposes; especially pies, and to flavor rabbit soup, etc., etc. A number of our young ladies tovk good fares of cramberries from Big Swamp a day or two ago; some of them made two or three trips and filled up each time. Our young men are busily engaged erect™ ing a factory for the purpose of canning rabbits and beach nuts; they being supplied by a firm in New York to which they intend to ship their canned goods. We wish them every success in their present enterprise. There are a great many fishing vessels off our shore for the last week; some of them took good hauls, but the greater part of them are not doing anything to speak of. The schooner ‘‘M. A. L.,” of Sandy Hook, encountered a heavy squall off the second chapel and had her baloon jib and gaft topsail carried away; alse part of her run- ning rigging. She went into Souris for re- pairs. ae qo The New York Tribune says : ‘‘No Gov- ernment can set aside this subject of drink. Despotic Russia and Republican America must both meet it. For the evil is too enormous and atrocious to be hid, too de- structive and cyclonic to be regulated; too insolent to be endured ; too cruel not to ex- cite indignation. It is true that the capital and influence invested in its defence are enormous and potent; but God and human- ity are engaged against it ; childhood and womanhood out of the depths lift up holy hands against it, and the ‘irrepressible con- flict’ must go on until our statesmen shall dare assail, in our halls at Washington, any evil or nostrous wrong that is destructive to national welfare. The cyclones which periodically sweep over ‘the Western States are mere wind- puffs compared with those of India. The official report of the cyclone which swept over Arakan, in India, last May states that 5,000 native huts were destroyed and 16,- 000 damaged, and that 2,500 tons of paddy |were lost. It is roughly estimated that, in- ‘eluding the indirect action on trade, the actual loss sustained amounted 15 lakhs of ;rupees, The number of persons killed was 49, of whom 15 were carried away by the tidal wave, 10 who were out in a boat were drowned, and the remainder were ‘killed in various parts of the province. ~@ipe | The Prefect of the Seine has just pub- jlished the returns of the last census, from ‘which it appears that Paris then had 2,239,918.inhabitants, of whom 1,115,326 were males and 1,126,602 females. When the previous census was taken in 1878 the ‘tote! was 1,988,806, so that there had been an increase of 251,122. There were 68,126 inhabited houses, and 2,075,800 of the in- habitants were French by birth, the foreigners numbering 91,872 males and 75,542 females, consisting of 45,281 Bel- gians, 31,190 Germans, 21,547 Italians, 20,810 Swiss, 10,789 English, 5,981 Ameri- F. H. White, Esq., of Souris, delivered a cans, and 65 Chinese. humorous speech which was highly ap- plauded, Messrs. John and Robert Acorn, and John A. Cameron, E:sq., also delivered ‘able speeches. - Dialogues delivered by Miss McPhee, Teacher, _— -—--30—@ o-——- - The Salvation Army claims that its colors are flying in nineteen countrics, and thet it prints eighteen journals in six different ouut Hope, and Miss languages, : AO WOE OES a p, Re AT A Se ee Cee ee eee nen eee ae ee en ee teehee Spoon yee Saas ae ld Snr A ER ES ORE ne.