aegemag, RS wea? < + athe a ee THE ee = —— XAMI HR. oe eee et TOL. 8 CHARLOTTETOWN, PI INCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, NOVEMBER » cadillac + ele manera! ae SIGN OF TECH STOVE. ISLAND CROWN, ALDERMAN RANGE; FARMERS’ COOK, MAGICIAN COOK, a TOR GOA. 3 ee o ; " lees} - ‘ eer ; a a * ss "es 5 Oe eee) Bile eet & ate, ah oad api) vr mA.) 4 ad 7 N a . dens 4 "IvVOO How STANDARD FRANKLIN, WOUDBSINE PARLOR, ADVANCE PARLOR, WAVERLY PARLOR, WESTMINSTER BASE BURNER, (Call and Examine.) Steve Pipe (Riveted) SIX Cents per Ib. Stoves, for Woeod. Charlottetown, Oct. 21, 1SSO—12 in eod Shop Steves, for Coal. STOVES FITTED UP BY COMPETENT WORKMEN. CHARGES MODERATE. Russia Tren Pipe. TWENTY Cents per ih. Co Extra Boilers, Pots, Kettles and Spiders. Cook and Parlor SIMON W. CRABBE, Sign of the Stove, Walker’s Corner Sess gs re re PERKINS & STERNS ARE NOW SHOWING A SUPERLOR STOCK OF New Miliinery and Millinery Materials ! DIRECT FROM BEST LONDON HOUSES. PLUSH, FREIZE, WELVE/, FUR AND w~ STRAW HATS, IN ALL THE NEWEST SHAPES. Silks and Satins, in . Pompadour, Brocade and Plain Colors. Velvets and Velveteens, in Plain Colors, Pompadour and Embossed, New Laces, Ribbons, &c., Flowers and F'eathers, Hat and Bonnet Ornaments. 4 FULL SPOCK OF STAPLE AND UNSURPASSES ‘Charlottetown, October 4, 1580. EYE, EAR AND THROAT. DR. J. Re MoLEAN, Gradaaie of the University of Pennsylvania, fermerly Assistant Surgeon to the 8th and Locust Street Kye and Ear In- firmary, Philadelphia, eonfines his practice exclusively to diseases of the Eye, Ear and Throat. OfGee 2: St. Lawrence Hotel, Picton, N. §. Oct. 14, 1988. MRS. W. W. IRVING I now forming her AUTUMN and WIN- TER CLASSES in DRAWING and AINTING, in all their different branches, from Nodel, Life, &c. Intending pupils will kindly send in their Rames as SOOD as convenient. Terms, &c., made known on application at her Studio, City Hotel, opposite R. C. Cathedral. Ch’town, Sept. 11, '80—2aw tf ~~ — @ev atte MEDAL, ; JOSEPH STEEL PENS. BY ALL BEALERS THROUGHOUT THRE WORLD. 7 Se ee QURAN INSURANCE G0'Y.. OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING | FANCY GOODS, IN VALUE AND VARIETY. PERKINS & STERNS. K THE VERY BEST ARTICLE FOR patients to abstain from using either. which has been universally acquired, it stitute. Various substitutes have been principle whatever which can even by comstitutions, K See THE NEW CANADIAN BEVERACE! &.. A: OC FA The Only Satisfactory Substitute for Tea and Coffee. -Highly Recommended for Regular tse at Ordinary Meals, rk DIETARY USE EVER DISCOVERED. :0;-——--——- "HE injurious effects which the continuos use of tea and coffee have on he human system are well known. ‘The most eminent physicians advise tthe Owing to the taste for these beverage has been found necessary to find a sub tried, but Kaoxa is the only one ever discovered which has been fouad to perfectiy answer the purpose. Unlike Tea Oo and Coffee, it contains neither Theine nor Cafleine, nor any other poisonous long use, prove hurtful to the weakest lt is especially recommended for sick persons and children. Families using white bread habitually should adopt Kaoka as their regular drink at meals. ‘They will then have made. meals nothing but Kaoxka. supplied to them the elements which, when taken inte the system, go to form bones, nails, teeth, sinews and brains, and which have been separated from the fine flour of which the white bread is Thousands of persons who have been afflicted with Dyspepsia, Ner- vousness, Indigestion, Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, &c., have been restored to perfect heaith by eschewing tea and coffee altogether, and drinking with their It contains no ‘‘ chemicals.” which it is made are wheat and sugar, nothing more. The elements from For sale in pound and half-pound packets at the ‘‘Crown Grcoery,”’ South ROBERTSON & CAMERON, Charlottetown, Oetober I, 1880—30 ins eod Side Queen “qu are. © K Flour & Herring. UST RECEIVED per Schooners, a cheice ey) lot of large fat Herring, in barrels ant half-barrels; and daily expected, a choice lod of Labrador Herring. —ALSO— A large supply of Superior Extra Flour, All of » Merchandise and Produce. Also, on wyjch will be sold cheap for cash. | Yip Merch effected on all kinds of Build- direct from the mills— Galt, \Ont. on the stocks. Speeial rates for isolated residences, | _ GEORGE MAGLEOD (Union Bank), Jeane, 1877— HORNE, PIERCE & CO. No. 155, Upper Queen St. Nov. 13, ’80—2w 2aw Agent for Prince Edward Island FY HE place to get your Privting done is a ‘IT the EX AMIN NG BR PRINTI kOOMS Dissolution ; ' ——————$—_—————— of Co-Partnership. NHE Partnership heretofore existing be- tween Francis %. Loncwortn and |Ropert SuHaw, doing business in Charlotte- town under the style and firm of LONCWORTH & SHAW, as Rarristers and Attorneys-at-Law, has this day been dissolved by mutual consent. Dated this 30th day of October, A.D. 1880. F. 8S. LONGWORTH, ROBERT SHAW. Ch’tewn, Nov. 1, ’80—tf : Bu the DAILY EXAMINER for the latest news—loeal and telegraphic. iene ies nina hccinicntinctanlaitaileliinnmee: smeaid The Canada Pacific Railway. MR. BRYDGES ENDORSES IMPORTANT OF THE GOVERNMENTS POLICY. POINTS Ata bangnet in honor of Sir Charles Tupper at Portage La Prairie, Mr. Bryd- ges, lately Manager of the Government Railways, said:— ‘In regard to the question ef the route of the Canada Pecitic Railway, having given the matter considerable attention he had no doubt whatever that the change of the line to the south of Lake Manitoba was undoubtedly the correct policy to adept, and the Government had acted correctly in coming to that decision. He had never doubted that the true principle in locating the railway was to run if through that por- tion of the country which was the most fit for settlement, and where the largest popu- lation could be profitably maintained. He believed that the change tothe south of Lake Manitoba had fulfilled this principle. He considered on the same general princi- ple that the change of the line so as to pass through Portage la Prairie was correct, and that the Government and the Minister of Railways had acted wisely and in the pub- lic interests in making this change. He was of opinion that it was most important that the threngh trans-continental line should at the same‘time bealine which would draw toitthe largest amount of loeal traffic, which would prove the founda- tion of its altimate success. Looking to the nature of the soil of this country, and the impossibility of making wagon reads, snch as existed inthe older provinces, he he- lieved that the main line should be con- sidered as an arterial line, acting as the backbone of the railway system, and that from it should radiate a species of gridiron lines, cheaply constricted, to draw the traffic of as large areas of country as possible te the main artery. No aitempt should be made to make these lines costly — they should be constructed as cheaply as possible, on the same principle as the Amoricans had built their railways to open up their western ter- ritories, and they could be afterwards strengthened and improved as the necessi- ties ot the traffic might demand. He be- lieved, as had been very properiy said by the Minister of Railways, that the main raiiway should be brought into connexion wherever possible with the navigable rivers of the country, so that the latter might be brought into use to aid in the settlement of and: development of the North Weat, and he would take this opportunity of pointing out to the Minister the importance of im- proving the navigation of some of the great rivers such as the Assiniboine and two branches of the great Saskatchewan. He believed that very great improvements could be made in the carrying capacity of those rivers, and that the expense of doing so would not be very large. He did not think after the important statements which had been made by the Minister of Railways that any long speech by anyone else should be inflicted on this assembly, but he should like to make one further observation which he thought was of the gravest possible im- portance, He referred to the question of the rates of freight to be charged for the carriage of the productions of the country. It must not be forgotten that the wheat fields of our North-West were further from the sea board and the markets of the world than the other producing portions of this tontinent, and that it would be impossible to carryeuc- cessfully on the competition which existed between us and ourneighbors to the south, if rates of transportation were not put at reason- able and moderate figures. He felt sure that this very important question had not been lost sight of by the Minister of the Govern- ment, but he could not too strongly press it upon their attention as one of the most vital importance. ” Terrible Disaster. THIRTY PERSONS DROWNED IN A SCHOONER. A despatch received in Baltimore on the 18th inst., states that the schooner ‘* Abra. ham Lincoln,” from Monrovia to Cape Palmas, Africa, capsized and only four out of 34 lives were saved. They floated sev- eral days in an open canoe and were then picked up by a steamer and landed at Cape Palmas. Among the passengers were : James B. McGill and Hon. Geo. 8. Wood, ex-Representative for the County of Mary- land, Liberia, and other prominent Liber- ians. The vessels was loaded with pro- visions and carried $5,000 in money be- longing to the Liberian Government. en nee ~~ 6 0 GENERAL SUERMAN, ip his annual report to the Secretary of War, recommends that the eifective strength of the standing army of the United States be increased to twenty-five thousand men. That is now the nominal strength, but deducting the number detailed as clerks, detached services, sick, &c., the actual working number does not exceed twen- tv thousand men. There are eleven general officers, five hundred and fifty-five officers and twelve hundred and eighty-six men of the staff, and the combatant force is composed of ten regiments of cavalry, five of artillery and twenty-five of infantry. General Sher- man says that ‘‘ under the proviso ‘limit’ 25,- 000 enlisted men, the companies are too small fer proper discipline or economical service, and Iam convinced that the proposed in- crease of enlisted men wil! double the effi- ciency of the army, and hardly be felt in the aunual expenditures.” Twenty-five thousand men is certainly not a large standing army for a conntry of the extent and population of the United States, especially with Indian troubles almost constantly cropping up, but it is abun- dantly strong for a nation devoted to the arts of peace, and whose relations with other powers cannot casily be disturbed. ey) tw ow — NO. 1 ae : : adlincus 1880, FHuropean News. Violent shocks of earthquake continue to visit Hungary. A despatch from Cendahar says all is peace and order at Cabul. ' Mr. Parnell is going to the south of Vrance for the benetit of his health. The French beet crop is said to be one of the worst known as regards quality. Gales and floods are reported in the Midland counties and on the west coust of England. t is rumored that Lord Derby is shortly to be offered a position in Mr. Gladstone’s Administration. Reports on the French beet crop class it among the worst as regards quality. Ad- vices from Gerinany and a partof Austria are better. The election of members of the new Great Council in Switzerland has resulted in atriumph for the anti-Catholics and extreme radicals. Two more violent shocks of earthquake occurred at Agram, in Anstria, at midnight on Monday, causing a panic, and the flight of the inhabitants is thus renewed. The Standard’s correspondent at Berlin says :—‘‘In the Prussian Parliament yes- terday Herr Richter violently attackedjthe Budget on account of the inerease of tax- ation it proposes. A despatch to the Standard from Tehe- ran says Sheik Abdullah is sorrounded near Urumiah. The Persians have captur- ed the town of So-0j-Bolak, the Kurds losing 200 killed and 180 prisoners. The Standard’s correspondent at Madrid reports that the police have seized the presses and arrested the printers of a revo- lutionary paper there. General Ripell, a revolutionary officer, has also been ar- rested. ° A despatch from Sutermann says that Dervisch Pacha has ordered the Albanian chiefs to surrender Dulcigno, threatening to use force if they fail to obey. The Al. banian Popular Assembly have asked Der- visch Pacha to grant them a month’s time in which to reply. A despatch from Berlin to the Times says :—** A meeting of citizens of Bremen rejected a motion for the formation by a committee of the conditions under which they would consent to the incorporation of Bremen in the Zollvevein and resolved that it was inopportune at present to surrender their free harbor privileges. The corres- pondent says this will not avert their in- evitable fate.” ™he Vienns correspondent of the Times says:—‘‘The meeting of the Austro-German constitutionalists here on Sunday last was an imposing demonstration. Nothing can shake the fact that the liberal German party in the, Reichsrath has quite nine- tenths of the well-to-do, educated Germans of Austria behind it in any struggle against federalis attempts.” A despatch from Agram, dated the 12th inst., says:—‘‘The earthquake continued last night, and there were fresh shocks this morning, afternoon and evening. There has been further devastation. Half the town has been destroyed, and half of the inhabitants are rendered homeless. Many people have left the town, while the poorer classes are encamped in sheds. Pantie pre- vails, but the authorities work uneceasingly to relieve the distress. The government has sent military engineers and workmen to assist in the measures of relief. Two mud volcanoes have formed near Agrain and are in full eruption. Several hot springs have risen.” A Madrid correspondent has telegraphed that the Co-operation Trade Association held a meeting yesterday in the Opera House in favor of reform in the tariff sys- tem, net only in Spain, but in her colonies, to promote the development of her trade with England and South America, and te preserve her West Indian colonies by the only policy that can develop the prosperity of Cuba and free her from the condition cf a monopoly market for Spanish imports to which she has heen reduced. Four thou- sand persons were present at the meeting, and several democratic and liberal deputies made speeches. Other meetings will be held this winter. Reform in the tariff will be advoeated in the Cortes next session by the Spanish opposition. Tur old project of a ship canal between the St. Lawrence Lakes and the Mississippi River is about to be revived and, if possible, pushed to completion at a probable cost of $15,000,- O80. A pespatcn to the St. John Telegraph says: —‘‘It is not probable that there will be any opposition to Mr. Caron or Mr. Mous- seau. In North Oxford it is likely that sev- eral Liberals will run as the majority of the electors are cverwhe!lmingly of that creed. Agitation is going on ia Spain for a re- form of the tariff system. oe From Harry Hitt, THE CHAMPION W eeEsr- LER, Ne. 26 East Hovsron Street, N. Y.— I know of no remedy that will so quickly re- move the discoloraticns of the skin resulting from injuries, soreness and pains of the joints, muscles and bones, the result of violent and continued exercise, as Giles’ Liniment Iodide Ammonia. I have used it myself and have seen it used by other, and recommend its use to all athletes. Giles’ Pills cure Biiliousness. Sold by W. R. Watson. Send for pamph- let. Dx. Gites, 120 West Broadway, N.Y. Trial size 26 eents. behind enh a A 4%