Edited Text
â
ERO prmrese 4
~~ AMisceltancons.
at a tN
ENGLAND AND GERMANY.
. Seeman
4. The Daily Tetegraph. thus comments
âon eh a the German press towards
âWhat is the meaning of the anger
with which the German people, or rather
the man newspapers, are, at present,
speaking of Bngland? Why do they
Bingle out Great Britain from among all
other countries, for their invectives and
their sneers? If the sympathy of one
nation bas the slightest value in the eyes
of another, it might have been expected
that this country would have received
some thanks, or at least no abuse, from
the Fatherland, When the French Gov-
erament seemed bent on picking a quar-
rel with that of Prassia, and when it is-
sued a declaration of war, the English
â and press condemned the policy
otf
which it would be difficult to match in
the history of English political discus-
âin, 4 Oe 6 8 ee es
What, we ask again, is the meaning |
of all this animosity? The answer ot
the Germans is, that we have been sys-
tematically supplying France with arms,
and that, by giving her the very kind ol
aid which she most pressingly needs, we
have virtually become her ally. The
journals of the Fatherland ostentations)ly
pees the record of every chest of
»reechloaders or cartridges which has
been landed, or said to be landed, at
Oalais or Havre. They complain that
we will not listen to the complaints of
their Ambassador, and that our Govern-
meut has virtually permitted England to
be employed as the gun-manufactory of
France, The answers to that accusation
are at once manifold and complete. This
journal has not defended a law which
permits belligereuts to use a neutral ter-
vitory for the manufacture of its arms
and ammunition,
liberty is given to belligerents by the
Jaws of every country, excepting Bel-
rium, but including Prussia herself,
ven if England were now sending rifles
to France by thousands, she would only
be following the example set by Prussia
during the Crimean war. And whether
the law is good or not, it is, at least, the
Jaw of England, and the Government of
Berlin knew that such was the case
when it accepted the French challenge
to war. That was one of the perils
which it had to face. Moreover, ut the
vutsct of the war, we so changed our
municipal law as to confer a direct boon
on Prussia, by forbidding the subjects of
the Queen to send coalin vessels which
might act as store-ships for the French
range with an unanimity and vigour)
PROSPECTS OF PEACE AND ITS!
CONDITIONS.
The London 7„mes lately put forward
a basis for peace, which is quoted and
commented on by the Figaro, thus:â
âLet the strong places of Alsace and |
Lorraine be dismantled, we will enter
into joint and several guarantees with |
each belligerent to join either against)
the other in case one should make an at: |
tack upon the other without first sub-|
mitting to our arbitration, as neutrals, |
the grounds on which such an attack is
sought to be justilied.ââ In a word, let|
us realize the dream of the Peace So-|
ciety, and. make war impossible, Why
did we not do so two months ago?!
Why did we not interfere after the)
battle of Sedan? When Pranve deelar- |
ed her willingness to negotiate a peace |
on any terms, save the cession of terri-|
tory, why did we not protest against the |
intention of Prussia to aunex French |
provinces? Are the friends of Prussia}
| disappointed at the slow progress of the |
war? Elave they discovered that a na-|
tion of forty millions cannot be conquer: |
Nevertheless, such a)
ed in a single campaign? Are they al-|
farmed at the growiug unpopularity of |
Prussia? Whatever the motive, any |
promising peace proposals are welcome |
}â-heartily welcome, Conceive the âre- |
ply ef Count Bismarck, if Lord Granville
acted upon the suggestion of the Zines :
âYou have entered into an agreement
about Belgium,
if you would.
guaranteed the neutrality of Luxem-
bourg. You
sia, and you do not even protest,
a month after your Foreign Secretary
had signed the Luxembourg treaty, he
repudiated the responsibility of it in
Parhament. You were bound to protect
the integrity of Denmark. Did you do
so? You were bound to protect the in-
dependence of Hanover, Did you do
so? Prussia knows too well the value-
If we had been faithful to our treaty ob-
ligations, the present difliculty would
have been impossible. As we have
been faithless to our treaty obligations,
our guarantee is worthless. We can
only regard the proposal of the Zunes
as a jest which will greatly amuse the
man of iron and blood
Whatever may be the basis of peace,
the cession of Alsace and Lorraine is
not to form it, if the Press of England is
to have anything to say in the maiter. |
It is admitted on all hands, says tie
Standard, that to take Alsace and Lor-}
lraine from Irance would be a deed of}
unjustifiable violenceâthat it is a retro- |
grade step into the barbarism of the last)
ni genom ie
You could not fulfil it,
Only three years ago you
lessness of your guarantee to accept it.â |
lceuturyâthat it is the establishment of
Uifficult to. draw the live between articles | 4 Precedent most dangerous to the peaceâ
which..a neutral may and those which | °! Europe, ~that the addition of any por
he may not supply, without giving ation of French territory to Germany |
flect in the Baltic, Again, it is very
ground fur protest, {would be a source of weakness to her
instead of strengthâthat, even if the)
people of Alsace aud Lorraine were to
be reunited to their conquerors, lrance |
would never cease to agitate for their re- |
It might be plan-!
sibly urged, that if a belligerent should |
not obtain âsniders, cartridges, gunpow-
der, Gk any other of the instruments
with which soldiers kill their foes, it is
equally important that he should not 1Âą-
veivo army -great-coats, army blankets,
vr any other article of clothing which
may protect the soldier against the cold.
Strould the siege of Paris last for a few
weeks longer, warm clothing may be as
important to the German troops as
needle guis or ogre Oy cannon. Yet
Prussia is, we are told, drawing large
stores of great coats and blankets from
England, and about those âinstruments
of warââ she dues not say a word. The
ene burden of her complaint is, that Eng-
lish manufacturers bave sold rifles to the
French Government, and she speaks as
if they had been exported in vast quanti-
ties. But such is not the fact. At the
utmost only 10,000 or 12,000 breech-
foaders have been obtained in this coun- |
try; thesuflicient explanation being that
England is not able to supply a large
store of rifles to any foreign belligerent.
The crowd of minor manufacturers, who
work by hand, take a long time to cxe-
cute any order; the only large Birming-
liam manufactory is, we understand, ful-
ly occupied by the commissions of our
own Government, and even the German
journals do not insinuate that Enfield is
at the service of France.
Yet France, we frankly admit, is ob-
taining a large s1pply of breechloaders
and ammunition from abroad, and, were
it not for such resources as the arsenals
and manufactories of other nations, she
could not arm her Franes-tireurs or her
Gardes Mobiles. From what country,
ihen, docs she draw by far the largest
proportion of her new rifles and car-
tridges? Not from England, but from
the United States. As President Grant
took eare to point out in his proclama-
tion, the neprsome laws of thatcountry do
not place the slightest restriction on the
export of arms to belligerents, and the
gun-makers have taken advautage of the
liberty with a vengeance. One of the
chief American makers, Mr. Remington,
has been at Tours for a considerable
time; has been constantly communicat-
ing with the committee which was ap-
pointed to negotiate the purchase of
arms; and it is no secret that he has en-
gaged to supply the Government with a
large quantity of his own weapons,
Down to this date, as local records show,
four steamers have left Now Yorâ, for
French ports, conveying no less ihan
158,500 breech-loading rifles and car-
lines, with cightcen millions of cartridg-
es, America, indeed, is notoriously the
country to which France looks for arms,
and itis equally notorious that she hopes
to vbtain, or may have already obtained,
a great proportion of those which were
employed during the Civil War, and
have since passed into private hands.
Several American agents have gone to
France to conduct the negotiations, and
those gentlemen command the services
vf powerful politicians, so that it the
war lasts for a couple of months longer,
the United States may be the means of
arming all the Gardes Mobiles enrolled
âThese are notorious facts. They aro as
« well known, too, in Berlin as in London,
They tly familiar to the Iârus-
: at Washington. Yet,
the ' eae is denouncing
England for committing a breach of
neutrality, and sneering alike at her
Âź and her not a word of
or is flung at tho
United States, and not
et of this one-sidedness ?
the cause of hostility? Why is
it
that the German over, in
ibwolute silence, the flagrant sin of the
lcovery, and that thus there would be
established for ever an endless source of
war and future trouble in the heart of|
Europe. Even the Zimes, which, to
the eternal disgrace of the British Press,
was the first to suggest the appropria-|
tion of Alsace and Lorraine to the Ger-|
mans, is now found to be counselling
moderation and magnanimity to the con- |
querors, and deprecating the conse-|
quences of their insistance upon their}
original demandsâdemands which it-
self had proposed and justitied. |
But, by whatever means the change |
of opinion has been effected, and to
whatever cause it is due, it is not a
little gratifying to those who have sea: |
|dily resisted the German claims to Al-
fsace and Lorraine, to find the entire}
i voice of the English Press echoing our
views. Our readers need not be remiud-
ed of the arguments which we have |
used to prove that the present war had
baric conquest of one country by another |
when the cession of Alsace and Lorraine |
was set forth as the ultimatum of the
German demand. âTo insist upon these |
terms is, we maintain, to make peace |
impossible. France willnot and cannot |
surrender her eastern provinces, She
may be beaten utterly, and laid pros-
trate to the ground, but she will not
yield to the Prussian claia, This is not)
the time to discuss the question of which
was the original aggressor, or who was
the more wrong in the quarrel, Europe
has to consider only how the war is to
end. We may presume, by the marked
change of tone in the journals, thateven
those who have condemned France are
not desirous of secing her altogether
crushed, and that they are anxious that
the quarrel shall end with the present
war. Is there then no arrangement pos-
sible which shall give to Germany all
the legitimate spoils of her victoryâat
least, all for which she touk up armsâ
without depriving lârance of territory ?
Is the universal public opinion of Eu-
rope to be of no effect in the presence of
German ambition? Even in Germany |
there is a large and, as we believe, a
growing party, which deprecates a con-
tinuance of the war for the sake of get-
ting Alsace and Lorraine. If the Ger-
man people were to be polled to-morrow,
it would probably be found that a large
majority were anxious for peace upon
any honorable terms, The prospects of
such a peace are fading every day into
the dim distance ; âat something may
occur at any moment to render them ut-
terly hopeless. Any further defeats in-
flicted on France will certainly not be
calculated to hasten such a consum-
mation as Count Bismarck desires, One
effect of every such defeat is to aggri-
vate the disorganization and disorder
which prevail in the French provinces,
and another is to impoverish the people.
But it is indispensable to se peace that
there should be a settled and recognized
authority in Prance, and the Germans
will probably consider it 1.0 less cssen-
tial hat the French shall not be so tuin-
ed as to be unable to pay a large peca-
tiary indemnity. 4
The special correspondent of the Daily
Telegraph says that, notwithstanding
the enormous losses France has sustain-
ed, the towns and villages appoar as fall
of nes men as before, armed men
are pouring in pal, iy | town, and
filling every o a journey
railw .
iy aks ox Laeeta ie wide of te
route, he says, was bristling with bay-
nots, Arms did not appear scarce,
although the men had no Chassepots,
Remingtona, or Saciders.
reached the stage of pure, violeut, bar-| .
ae BLACKLEAD, 8 caves MATCHES,
To which he invites the attention of intend.
ing pu
Mercantile Advertisement
1870, SPRING, 1870,
PPE Subseriter has the pleasure to announce
the completion of bis Spring Importations,
comprising his usual general assortment of
Dry Goods, Hardware,
Groceries, Dye Stuffs, Spices, &e.,.
Bolt, Bar and Sheet Tren,
Carriage Spriugs, Blister & Cast Steel;
Cast Stee! Axes and Edge Tools;
Wrought and Cut Spikes, *
Nails and Tacks, Bellows,
Anvils, Vices, Sledges, Hammers,
Ecales & weights, Saddlery, Brushes,
Window Glass, Putty, Paints Varnish,
Linseed, Olive, Kerosene, Seal
and Codlish Oils, âPemperance
Cordials, Alcohol, Old Jamaica and
Domerara Spirits, Irish, Seotch, Bour-
bon, Old Rye and Old Malt Whiskies,
Brandy, Gin, Old Tom,
Gingerette, Port, Sherry and
Champagne Wines, Dublin, London
and Edinburg Bottled Ale & Porter,
Cordage, Canvas aud Coils Chap,
Tea, Sugur, Colfee, Molasses,
Contectionary, âTobacco, Sou,
Ral-ins, Currants, Sporting Powder,
Patent Shot, Caps, &c., &e.
Lest Cannda Flour
and Cornmeal.
A consigninent of Dark and Pale Brandy,
in hhds., quarter casks aud bottles, from the
celebrated Vineyard of George Sayer & Co.,
Cognac, France, per Ship dayphion,
All of which is offered for Sale, by Whole-
sale and Retail, at the lowest market rates,
DANIEL BRENAN.
June 2, 1870.
are aware that Luxem-
bourg is negotiating a union with on
ly,
IN BOTTLES OF FULL SIZE ONLY.
| SAYERâS
|
CELEBRATED
BRANDIES
AWARDED THE MEDAL, LONDOH, 1862
BOTTLED AT COGNAS
AND LABELLED, ACCORDING TO AGE,
FINE OLD
CHOICE OLD
VERY OLD
Marked: % ; BR 5 Reg
7] BE HAD OF THE BEST MERCHANTS,
Preferred by good judges.
N5,-AVOID INFERIOR BRANDIES
AND SMALL GOTTLES.
D. BRENAN, Sole Agent for P. KF, Island,
Fall and Winter
GSoonvms?
1870.
MACKINNON & MACDONALD
Have just received, per Steamers âDorian,â
* City of Baltimore,â Brig © Argos,â
Barque ** Theresaâ and others
Their Fall Stock of
DRY GOObDs,
IN
Broad Cloths. Doeskins,
Tweeds, Fancy Coatings,
Moscows, Vilots, Whitneys, &e.
Dress Materials. Ladiesâ
Cloth and Velvetwwen Jackets,
Velvetegus, Shiits and Shleing.
Fancy Goods, Scarfs,
Shawls, Sontags, Cottons,
Cotton Warp and Clothing,
Boots and Shoes,
Ifais, Caps, and Furs.
Hardware,
Iron, Steel, Plough Metals, Shear Plates,
Shovels, Hoes, Traces, Back Bands,
Hames, Nails, Window Glass,
Vaints, Paint Oil,
Olive OU, &e.
Trea,
A superior article, Sugar, Groceries, &c., &c.
All of which will be sold at lowest Market
Prices.
McKINNON & McDONALD.
Dodd & Roger's Brick Building, 2
Queen Square, Nov, 9, 1870.
18- NEW STORE, -70,
NEW GOODS!
The Subseriber has opened a New Store on
Queen Street, in Daun's Block, nearly op-
posite Mr. Watson's Drag Store,
where he offers for Sale, a care-
fully selected Stock of
Dry Goods, Groceries, Clothing,
Paper Collars, &.
He, also, calls particular attention to his
TreEA.
A share of public patronage is respectfully
solicited,
A. G. McDOUGALL,
Ch'town, Nov. 9, 1870.
Groceries, &e.
âItalian Warehouse.â
UST RECEIVED, from London and else-
whereâ
100 chests and half chests TEA,
5000 Ibs. Jamaica COFFEE,
60 hhds. SUGAR,
60 pun, MOLASSES,
100 doz. PICKLES and SAUCES,
400 boxes RAISINS,
10 kegs Green GRAVES,
10 bbls. CURRANTS,
10 * JVondon Crashed SUGAR,
20 casks & 200 cases Brandy and Gin,
Casks & qr. casks Superior Wines,
éc., G&e., &e.
WHOLESALÂź AND Reeratt,
MACEACHERN & Co.
Ch'town, Nov, 9, 1870. lin
Tobacco! Tobacco!
HE Subscriber having removed next door
to the old Stand, begs leave to intimate
to hie patrons and the public in general, that
he has fitted up a new Tobacco Factory, on
an extensive ecale, from which he will supply
his customers on the most liberal terme,
Also, on hand, a large assortment of Fancy
PIPES. 20,000 CIGARS, 400 boxes LOZEN-
GES, 800 dozen SHOE BLACKING, 12
a large assortment of
GROCERIES, |
CHARLES QUIRK,
âHATS, CA
THE HERALD, CHARLOTTETOWN, eee < ee + eee ee WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER
PS & FURS!
BoowTs & SHOES.
ECEIVED from England, United States, and Canada, a full and
complete assortment of the above GOODS, embracing all the
leading and most fashionable Styles for Fall and Winter,
mADIESâ FURS,
No old nor moth-eaten Furs which
All Furs warranted free from
A. B, SMITH,
South Side Queen Square.
Latest Styles, all New Goods.
have been kept over from last year.
moths.
Châtown, Oct. 12, 1870.
ee (ee
N. B.âIlighest Price in Cash paid for MINK, MUSKRAT,|
OTTER, FOX, and other Fur Skins.
+m «+
GEN TLEMENâS -
OUTFITTING WAREHOUSE
TO
REMOVED
Reddainâs Corner,
QUEEN STREET.
en Qh nee
WING to the increase in the Subseriberâs business, he is necessitated to remove to larg-
er Premises, and having received, per Etna,â ca Halifax, over
Two Hundred Pieces of Choice Tweeds, Beavers,
Pilots, Napps, Meltons, Fancy
Coatings, &c., &c.,
TOGETHER WIth
E'urnishing Goods,
IN GQREAT VARIETY,
Ile is now prepared to accommodate his Customers in first-class style. Cutters and
Workmen unsurpassed in P. E. Ishand, Nothing will be left: undone
to ensure satisfaction,
J. W. FALCONER.
Châtown, Oct. 5, 1870.
Remember that
MASON & HENDERSON,
QUBBN SSVARB WOSA,
Queen Street,
AVING nearly completed their Importations for the Season, call
- _ the attention of the inhabitants of Prince Edward Island to an
early inspection of their Stock, which will compare with
any on the Island, for
QUALITY, STYLE § PRICES.
Having purchased in the best markets, by one of the firm, for Cash,
âenables them to offer the whole of their Stock at very low rates.
{ We invite special notice to our various assortment of Carpet-
ing, tearth Rugs, Matts, Room Papering, and Furnishing Goods,
MASON & HENDERSON.
Charlottetown, Nov. 0, 1870,
A PROCLAMATION.
J D. Il. MACKINNON, do, by virtue of Authority vested in
9 me, as Proprietor of the â*New York Clothing Emporium,ââ
issue thisg my Proclamation, the 29th day of October, One Thousand
Kight Ilundred and Seventy, which, like the laws of the Medes and
Persians, is binding to all intent and purposes, that, whereas, this
Fashionable Strect has been neglectfully miscalled Great George
Street, which is not in keeping with the intelligence of the residents
thercon, nor appropriate to the business thoroughfare of so magnificent
a location for business purposes. Considering that all the Great
Georges have pissed from the scene of action, Little Georges being
exempt from such honors, on account of inability, shall henceforth pass
into obscurity, like all their ancestors, and substitute in its place a
name which will give new life and vigor to the artistic skill and
mechanism displayed on so successful a Street, each day; therefore, I
proclaim its name shall henceforth and forever be called
âBROADWAY,â
Where I sell the most handsome and most stylish fitting Garments
ever manufactured in Charlottetown or any other place. You can call,
gentlemen, and cxamine my Stock of Cloths, my Fashionable made up
Garments to order, my ready-made Garments, which alone excel any
custom work in Charlottetown, Come and we will suit you to any-
thing you want in our line, to suit your own notions.of comfort and
style, as well as our stylish and comfortable ideas, cut and mechanism,
You can have all these Cheap, at
âThe New York Emporium,â
Charlottetown,
âBYâ ,
D H MACKINNON.
Broadway,
Upper Queen Street.
Ch'town, Sep. 7, 1570. 3m
November 16, 1870.
30, 1870.
.
âââ
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HE âAmerican Variety Storeâ is the only
place to get all kinds of FRUITS, in sea-
TIMOTHY O'CONNELL,
Ch'town, Queen St,, Oct, 12, 1870. 8m
son.
A rare chance for Shipbuilders
and others.
TEXIUIE Subseriber offers for Sale, in lots to
sult purchasers, that desirable Property
situated at Bridgetown, Dundas, formerly oÂą-
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âBridgetownShipyard,â* together with grounds
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This is one of the best situations in King's
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3d, cy. cach rate; for the Unit. d tates, 4d, cy. ;
for Great Britain, 44d, cy.
op ae tng for Newfoundland and West In-
dies, 1d. stg., each; for Australia, New Zea-
land, &c., 2d, stg.. each; Newspapers for Great
Britain, United tates and the Dominion of
Canada, forwarded free,
JOHN A, MACDONALD.
Postmaster Geveral
| General Post Office, Charlottetown,
Ist Oct., 1870,
ALL CURES MADE EASY
nY
Hollowayâs Ointment.
Bad Legs, Ulcerous Sores, Bad Breasts.
No deseription of wound, sore or wleer can re-
sist the healing properties of this exeellent Oint-
ment, âThe worst case readily assumes a heal-
thy appearance whenever this medical agent is
applied; sound flesh springs up from the bottom
of the wound, inflammation of the surrounding
skin 1s arrested and a complete and permanent
cure quickly follows the use of the Oimtment,
Piles, Fistulas, and Internal
Inflammation,
There distressing and weakening diseases may
with certainty be cured by the sufferers them-
selves, if they will we Hollowayâs Ointment,
and closely attend to the printed instructions.
It should be well rubbed upon the neighboring
parts, when all obnoxious matter will be remov-
ed, A poultice of bread and water may some-
ticles from the best CathoHe Enghsh
writers at home and abroad, as well as trans-
lations from the Reviews and Magazines of
France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, and Spain.
Its readers are thus put in possession of the
choicest productions of European periodical
literature, in a cheap and convenient forin,
Extract from letter of Pope Pius 1X.
Rome, Dee. 20, 1868,
Rey. I. T. Weeken:
We heartily congratulate you upon the es-
teem which your periodical, âThe Catholic
spicuity, acquired cyen among teose who dif-
er from us, ete.
Letter from the Most Rev, Archbishop
of New York,
New York, Feb. 7, 1865.
Dean Farner Heexen:
T have read the Prospectus which you have
kindly submitted of anew Catholic Magazine,
to be entitled: âThe Catholic World,â which
it is proposed publishing in this city, under
your supervision; and I am happy to state
there is nothing in its whole scope and spirit
which has not my hearty approval. âThe want
of some such periodical is widely and deeply
felt, and Tcannot doubt that the Catholic com-
munity at large will rejoice at the prospect of
having this want, if vot fully, at least In a
great measure, supplied,
With the privilege which you have of draw-
ing on the intellectual wealth of Catholic
Kuropé, and the Mberat means pieced av your
disposal, there ought to be no such word as
failure, in your vocabulary,
Hoping that this landable enterprise will
meet with well-merited success, and under
God's blessing, become fruitful in all the good
which it proposes,
I remain, Rev. Dear Sir, very truly, your
friend and servant in Christ,
JOUN,
Archbishop of New York.
âTHE CATHOLIC WORLD"
144 pages each number, making two large yol-
umes, Or 1728 pages, each year, and is furnish-
ed to subscribers for $5 4 year, invariably in
advance. Single copies, 50 cents,
Postage, thirty-six cents a year, payable
quarterly in advance, at the office where the
magazine is received,
All remittances and communications on
business, should be addressed to
LAWRENCE KEHOE,
General Agent.
The Catholic Publication Society,
No, 126 Nassau Street, N.Y.
P. 0. Box 5,596,
Nov. 1, 1870,
Mink, Fox, Muskrat.
The Highest Price in Cash paid for
MINK, MUSKRAT, OTTER, FOX
and other FUR SKINS, at the
HAT, CAP and FUR STORE.
South Side Queen Square.
A. B. SMITH.
FPVUE Catholic World contains original ar- |
World,â has, through its erudition and per. |
Forms a double-column octayo magazine of | Âąws and muscles lax and wncontracted,
times be applied at bed-time with advantage ;
the most scrupulous cleanliness must be ob-
j served, If those who read this paragraph will
| bring 1t under the notice of such of their ac-
| quaintances whom it may concern,they will ren-
âder a service that will never be forgotten, as a
cure is certain,
Eruptions, Scald Heads, Ringworm and
other Skin Diseases.
After fomentation with warm water, the ut-
most relief and speediest eure can be readily ob-
tainec in all complaints affecting the skin and
| joints, by the simultancous use of the Ointment
jand Pills, Butit must be remembered that
nearly all skin diseases indicate the depravity of
the blood and derangement of the liver and sto-
; mach: consequently, in many cases, time is re-
| quired to purify the blood, which will be effect.
ed by a judicious use of the Pills, âThe general
| health will readily be improved, although the
; eruption may be driven out more freely than be
fore, and which should be promoted; perseve-
rance is necessary, On the appearance of any
ot these maladies the Vintment should be well
rubbed at least three times a day upon the neck
and upper part of the chest, so as to penetrate
to the glands, as salt is forced into meat; this
course will at once remove inflammation and
ulceration, âThe worst cases will yield to this
treatment by following the printed directions.
Scrofula or Kingâs Evil and Swelling
of the Glands,
This class of cases may be cured by Hollo-
way's purifying Pills and Ointment, as their
double action of purifying the blood and
strengthening the system renders them more
affable than any other remedy for all complaints
of a scroftlous neture: AS the is impure,
the liver, stomach and bowels, being much de.
ranged, require purifying medicine to bring
ubout a cure,
Rheumatism, Gout and Neuralgia.
Nothing has the power of reducing inflamma.
tion and subduing pain in these complaints in
the same degree as Holloway's cooling Oint-
ment and purifying Pills, When used sim.
ultaneously they drive all inflammation and de-
pravities from the system, subdue and remove
all enlargement of the joints, and leave the sin«
A cure
may always be effected, even under the worst
vircumstance, if the use of these medicines be
persevered in,
Both the Ointment and Pills should be used in
âthe following cases :â
Tad Legs âCorns (Softs) |Rheumatiam
Had Breasts Cancers âSealds
Burne jContractedand Yaws
Hunions Stiff Joints |Skin-diseases
Nites of Mos- |Flephantiasis
Sore-nipples
chetoes and Fistulas
Sore-throats
Sand-tlies (Gout Seurvy
Coco-bay âGlandular Sore-heads
Chilblains | Swellings mors
Chiego-foot Lumbage Ulcers
Chap'd Hands Piles Wounds
Sold at the Establishment of Prorrsson How-
Loway, 244 Strand, (near Temple Bar,) Londor,
and by all reepectable Druggiste and Dealers
in Medicine throughout the civilised world, at
the following prices :â1s, 14d,, 28. 0d., 48, 6d.,
Lis. Gd,, 22s., and 34s. each Pot.
*,* There is a considerable saving by taking
the larger sizes,
N. B,âDireetrons for the guidance of patients
Nov. 16, 1870,
in every disorder affixed to each Pot,
re
a
cS,
ERO prmrese 4
~~ AMisceltancons.
at a tN
ENGLAND AND GERMANY.
. Seeman
4. The Daily Tetegraph. thus comments
âon eh a the German press towards
âWhat is the meaning of the anger
with which the German people, or rather
the man newspapers, are, at present,
speaking of Bngland? Why do they
Bingle out Great Britain from among all
other countries, for their invectives and
their sneers? If the sympathy of one
nation bas the slightest value in the eyes
of another, it might have been expected
that this country would have received
some thanks, or at least no abuse, from
the Fatherland, When the French Gov-
erament seemed bent on picking a quar-
rel with that of Prassia, and when it is-
sued a declaration of war, the English
â and press condemned the policy
otf
which it would be difficult to match in
the history of English political discus-
âin, 4 Oe 6 8 ee es
What, we ask again, is the meaning |
of all this animosity? The answer ot
the Germans is, that we have been sys-
tematically supplying France with arms,
and that, by giving her the very kind ol
aid which she most pressingly needs, we
have virtually become her ally. The
journals of the Fatherland ostentations)ly
pees the record of every chest of
»reechloaders or cartridges which has
been landed, or said to be landed, at
Oalais or Havre. They complain that
we will not listen to the complaints of
their Ambassador, and that our Govern-
meut has virtually permitted England to
be employed as the gun-manufactory of
France, The answers to that accusation
are at once manifold and complete. This
journal has not defended a law which
permits belligereuts to use a neutral ter-
vitory for the manufacture of its arms
and ammunition,
liberty is given to belligerents by the
Jaws of every country, excepting Bel-
rium, but including Prussia herself,
ven if England were now sending rifles
to France by thousands, she would only
be following the example set by Prussia
during the Crimean war. And whether
the law is good or not, it is, at least, the
Jaw of England, and the Government of
Berlin knew that such was the case
when it accepted the French challenge
to war. That was one of the perils
which it had to face. Moreover, ut the
vutsct of the war, we so changed our
municipal law as to confer a direct boon
on Prussia, by forbidding the subjects of
the Queen to send coalin vessels which
might act as store-ships for the French
range with an unanimity and vigour)
PROSPECTS OF PEACE AND ITS!
CONDITIONS.
The London 7„mes lately put forward
a basis for peace, which is quoted and
commented on by the Figaro, thus:â
âLet the strong places of Alsace and |
Lorraine be dismantled, we will enter
into joint and several guarantees with |
each belligerent to join either against)
the other in case one should make an at: |
tack upon the other without first sub-|
mitting to our arbitration, as neutrals, |
the grounds on which such an attack is
sought to be justilied.ââ In a word, let|
us realize the dream of the Peace So-|
ciety, and. make war impossible, Why
did we not do so two months ago?!
Why did we not interfere after the)
battle of Sedan? When Pranve deelar- |
ed her willingness to negotiate a peace |
on any terms, save the cession of terri-|
tory, why did we not protest against the |
intention of Prussia to aunex French |
provinces? Are the friends of Prussia}
| disappointed at the slow progress of the |
war? Elave they discovered that a na-|
tion of forty millions cannot be conquer: |
Nevertheless, such a)
ed in a single campaign? Are they al-|
farmed at the growiug unpopularity of |
Prussia? Whatever the motive, any |
promising peace proposals are welcome |
}â-heartily welcome, Conceive the âre- |
ply ef Count Bismarck, if Lord Granville
acted upon the suggestion of the Zines :
âYou have entered into an agreement
about Belgium,
if you would.
guaranteed the neutrality of Luxem-
bourg. You
sia, and you do not even protest,
a month after your Foreign Secretary
had signed the Luxembourg treaty, he
repudiated the responsibility of it in
Parhament. You were bound to protect
the integrity of Denmark. Did you do
so? You were bound to protect the in-
dependence of Hanover, Did you do
so? Prussia knows too well the value-
If we had been faithful to our treaty ob-
ligations, the present difliculty would
have been impossible. As we have
been faithless to our treaty obligations,
our guarantee is worthless. We can
only regard the proposal of the Zunes
as a jest which will greatly amuse the
man of iron and blood
Whatever may be the basis of peace,
the cession of Alsace and Lorraine is
not to form it, if the Press of England is
to have anything to say in the maiter. |
It is admitted on all hands, says tie
Standard, that to take Alsace and Lor-}
lraine from Irance would be a deed of}
unjustifiable violenceâthat it is a retro- |
grade step into the barbarism of the last)
ni genom ie
You could not fulfil it,
Only three years ago you
lessness of your guarantee to accept it.â |
lceuturyâthat it is the establishment of
Uifficult to. draw the live between articles | 4 Precedent most dangerous to the peaceâ
which..a neutral may and those which | °! Europe, ~that the addition of any por
he may not supply, without giving ation of French territory to Germany |
flect in the Baltic, Again, it is very
ground fur protest, {would be a source of weakness to her
instead of strengthâthat, even if the)
people of Alsace aud Lorraine were to
be reunited to their conquerors, lrance |
would never cease to agitate for their re- |
It might be plan-!
sibly urged, that if a belligerent should |
not obtain âsniders, cartridges, gunpow-
der, Gk any other of the instruments
with which soldiers kill their foes, it is
equally important that he should not 1Âą-
veivo army -great-coats, army blankets,
vr any other article of clothing which
may protect the soldier against the cold.
Strould the siege of Paris last for a few
weeks longer, warm clothing may be as
important to the German troops as
needle guis or ogre Oy cannon. Yet
Prussia is, we are told, drawing large
stores of great coats and blankets from
England, and about those âinstruments
of warââ she dues not say a word. The
ene burden of her complaint is, that Eng-
lish manufacturers bave sold rifles to the
French Government, and she speaks as
if they had been exported in vast quanti-
ties. But such is not the fact. At the
utmost only 10,000 or 12,000 breech-
foaders have been obtained in this coun- |
try; thesuflicient explanation being that
England is not able to supply a large
store of rifles to any foreign belligerent.
The crowd of minor manufacturers, who
work by hand, take a long time to cxe-
cute any order; the only large Birming-
liam manufactory is, we understand, ful-
ly occupied by the commissions of our
own Government, and even the German
journals do not insinuate that Enfield is
at the service of France.
Yet France, we frankly admit, is ob-
taining a large s1pply of breechloaders
and ammunition from abroad, and, were
it not for such resources as the arsenals
and manufactories of other nations, she
could not arm her Franes-tireurs or her
Gardes Mobiles. From what country,
ihen, docs she draw by far the largest
proportion of her new rifles and car-
tridges? Not from England, but from
the United States. As President Grant
took eare to point out in his proclama-
tion, the neprsome laws of thatcountry do
not place the slightest restriction on the
export of arms to belligerents, and the
gun-makers have taken advautage of the
liberty with a vengeance. One of the
chief American makers, Mr. Remington,
has been at Tours for a considerable
time; has been constantly communicat-
ing with the committee which was ap-
pointed to negotiate the purchase of
arms; and it is no secret that he has en-
gaged to supply the Government with a
large quantity of his own weapons,
Down to this date, as local records show,
four steamers have left Now Yorâ, for
French ports, conveying no less ihan
158,500 breech-loading rifles and car-
lines, with cightcen millions of cartridg-
es, America, indeed, is notoriously the
country to which France looks for arms,
and itis equally notorious that she hopes
to vbtain, or may have already obtained,
a great proportion of those which were
employed during the Civil War, and
have since passed into private hands.
Several American agents have gone to
France to conduct the negotiations, and
those gentlemen command the services
vf powerful politicians, so that it the
war lasts for a couple of months longer,
the United States may be the means of
arming all the Gardes Mobiles enrolled
âThese are notorious facts. They aro as
« well known, too, in Berlin as in London,
They tly familiar to the Iârus-
: at Washington. Yet,
the ' eae is denouncing
England for committing a breach of
neutrality, and sneering alike at her
Âź and her not a word of
or is flung at tho
United States, and not
et of this one-sidedness ?
the cause of hostility? Why is
it
that the German over, in
ibwolute silence, the flagrant sin of the
lcovery, and that thus there would be
established for ever an endless source of
war and future trouble in the heart of|
Europe. Even the Zimes, which, to
the eternal disgrace of the British Press,
was the first to suggest the appropria-|
tion of Alsace and Lorraine to the Ger-|
mans, is now found to be counselling
moderation and magnanimity to the con- |
querors, and deprecating the conse-|
quences of their insistance upon their}
original demandsâdemands which it-
self had proposed and justitied. |
But, by whatever means the change |
of opinion has been effected, and to
whatever cause it is due, it is not a
little gratifying to those who have sea: |
|dily resisted the German claims to Al-
fsace and Lorraine, to find the entire}
i voice of the English Press echoing our
views. Our readers need not be remiud-
ed of the arguments which we have |
used to prove that the present war had
baric conquest of one country by another |
when the cession of Alsace and Lorraine |
was set forth as the ultimatum of the
German demand. âTo insist upon these |
terms is, we maintain, to make peace |
impossible. France willnot and cannot |
surrender her eastern provinces, She
may be beaten utterly, and laid pros-
trate to the ground, but she will not
yield to the Prussian claia, This is not)
the time to discuss the question of which
was the original aggressor, or who was
the more wrong in the quarrel, Europe
has to consider only how the war is to
end. We may presume, by the marked
change of tone in the journals, thateven
those who have condemned France are
not desirous of secing her altogether
crushed, and that they are anxious that
the quarrel shall end with the present
war. Is there then no arrangement pos-
sible which shall give to Germany all
the legitimate spoils of her victoryâat
least, all for which she touk up armsâ
without depriving lârance of territory ?
Is the universal public opinion of Eu-
rope to be of no effect in the presence of
German ambition? Even in Germany |
there is a large and, as we believe, a
growing party, which deprecates a con-
tinuance of the war for the sake of get-
ting Alsace and Lorraine. If the Ger-
man people were to be polled to-morrow,
it would probably be found that a large
majority were anxious for peace upon
any honorable terms, The prospects of
such a peace are fading every day into
the dim distance ; âat something may
occur at any moment to render them ut-
terly hopeless. Any further defeats in-
flicted on France will certainly not be
calculated to hasten such a consum-
mation as Count Bismarck desires, One
effect of every such defeat is to aggri-
vate the disorganization and disorder
which prevail in the French provinces,
and another is to impoverish the people.
But it is indispensable to se peace that
there should be a settled and recognized
authority in Prance, and the Germans
will probably consider it 1.0 less cssen-
tial hat the French shall not be so tuin-
ed as to be unable to pay a large peca-
tiary indemnity. 4
The special correspondent of the Daily
Telegraph says that, notwithstanding
the enormous losses France has sustain-
ed, the towns and villages appoar as fall
of nes men as before, armed men
are pouring in pal, iy | town, and
filling every o a journey
railw .
iy aks ox Laeeta ie wide of te
route, he says, was bristling with bay-
nots, Arms did not appear scarce,
although the men had no Chassepots,
Remingtona, or Saciders.
reached the stage of pure, violeut, bar-| .
ae BLACKLEAD, 8 caves MATCHES,
To which he invites the attention of intend.
ing pu
Mercantile Advertisement
1870, SPRING, 1870,
PPE Subseriter has the pleasure to announce
the completion of bis Spring Importations,
comprising his usual general assortment of
Dry Goods, Hardware,
Groceries, Dye Stuffs, Spices, &e.,.
Bolt, Bar and Sheet Tren,
Carriage Spriugs, Blister & Cast Steel;
Cast Stee! Axes and Edge Tools;
Wrought and Cut Spikes, *
Nails and Tacks, Bellows,
Anvils, Vices, Sledges, Hammers,
Ecales & weights, Saddlery, Brushes,
Window Glass, Putty, Paints Varnish,
Linseed, Olive, Kerosene, Seal
and Codlish Oils, âPemperance
Cordials, Alcohol, Old Jamaica and
Domerara Spirits, Irish, Seotch, Bour-
bon, Old Rye and Old Malt Whiskies,
Brandy, Gin, Old Tom,
Gingerette, Port, Sherry and
Champagne Wines, Dublin, London
and Edinburg Bottled Ale & Porter,
Cordage, Canvas aud Coils Chap,
Tea, Sugur, Colfee, Molasses,
Contectionary, âTobacco, Sou,
Ral-ins, Currants, Sporting Powder,
Patent Shot, Caps, &c., &e.
Lest Cannda Flour
and Cornmeal.
A consigninent of Dark and Pale Brandy,
in hhds., quarter casks aud bottles, from the
celebrated Vineyard of George Sayer & Co.,
Cognac, France, per Ship dayphion,
All of which is offered for Sale, by Whole-
sale and Retail, at the lowest market rates,
DANIEL BRENAN.
June 2, 1870.
are aware that Luxem-
bourg is negotiating a union with on
ly,
IN BOTTLES OF FULL SIZE ONLY.
| SAYERâS
|
CELEBRATED
BRANDIES
AWARDED THE MEDAL, LONDOH, 1862
BOTTLED AT COGNAS
AND LABELLED, ACCORDING TO AGE,
FINE OLD
CHOICE OLD
VERY OLD
Marked: % ; BR 5 Reg
7] BE HAD OF THE BEST MERCHANTS,
Preferred by good judges.
N5,-AVOID INFERIOR BRANDIES
AND SMALL GOTTLES.
D. BRENAN, Sole Agent for P. KF, Island,
Fall and Winter
GSoonvms?
1870.
MACKINNON & MACDONALD
Have just received, per Steamers âDorian,â
* City of Baltimore,â Brig © Argos,â
Barque ** Theresaâ and others
Their Fall Stock of
DRY GOObDs,
IN
Broad Cloths. Doeskins,
Tweeds, Fancy Coatings,
Moscows, Vilots, Whitneys, &e.
Dress Materials. Ladiesâ
Cloth and Velvetwwen Jackets,
Velvetegus, Shiits and Shleing.
Fancy Goods, Scarfs,
Shawls, Sontags, Cottons,
Cotton Warp and Clothing,
Boots and Shoes,
Ifais, Caps, and Furs.
Hardware,
Iron, Steel, Plough Metals, Shear Plates,
Shovels, Hoes, Traces, Back Bands,
Hames, Nails, Window Glass,
Vaints, Paint Oil,
Olive OU, &e.
Trea,
A superior article, Sugar, Groceries, &c., &c.
All of which will be sold at lowest Market
Prices.
McKINNON & McDONALD.
Dodd & Roger's Brick Building, 2
Queen Square, Nov, 9, 1870.
18- NEW STORE, -70,
NEW GOODS!
The Subseriber has opened a New Store on
Queen Street, in Daun's Block, nearly op-
posite Mr. Watson's Drag Store,
where he offers for Sale, a care-
fully selected Stock of
Dry Goods, Groceries, Clothing,
Paper Collars, &.
He, also, calls particular attention to his
TreEA.
A share of public patronage is respectfully
solicited,
A. G. McDOUGALL,
Ch'town, Nov. 9, 1870.
Groceries, &e.
âItalian Warehouse.â
UST RECEIVED, from London and else-
whereâ
100 chests and half chests TEA,
5000 Ibs. Jamaica COFFEE,
60 hhds. SUGAR,
60 pun, MOLASSES,
100 doz. PICKLES and SAUCES,
400 boxes RAISINS,
10 kegs Green GRAVES,
10 bbls. CURRANTS,
10 * JVondon Crashed SUGAR,
20 casks & 200 cases Brandy and Gin,
Casks & qr. casks Superior Wines,
éc., G&e., &e.
WHOLESALÂź AND Reeratt,
MACEACHERN & Co.
Ch'town, Nov, 9, 1870. lin
Tobacco! Tobacco!
HE Subscriber having removed next door
to the old Stand, begs leave to intimate
to hie patrons and the public in general, that
he has fitted up a new Tobacco Factory, on
an extensive ecale, from which he will supply
his customers on the most liberal terme,
Also, on hand, a large assortment of Fancy
PIPES. 20,000 CIGARS, 400 boxes LOZEN-
GES, 800 dozen SHOE BLACKING, 12
a large assortment of
GROCERIES, |
CHARLES QUIRK,
âHATS, CA
THE HERALD, CHARLOTTETOWN, eee < ee + eee ee WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER
PS & FURS!
BoowTs & SHOES.
ECEIVED from England, United States, and Canada, a full and
complete assortment of the above GOODS, embracing all the
leading and most fashionable Styles for Fall and Winter,
mADIESâ FURS,
No old nor moth-eaten Furs which
All Furs warranted free from
A. B, SMITH,
South Side Queen Square.
Latest Styles, all New Goods.
have been kept over from last year.
moths.
Châtown, Oct. 12, 1870.
ee (ee
N. B.âIlighest Price in Cash paid for MINK, MUSKRAT,|
OTTER, FOX, and other Fur Skins.
+m «+
GEN TLEMENâS -
OUTFITTING WAREHOUSE
TO
REMOVED
Reddainâs Corner,
QUEEN STREET.
en Qh nee
WING to the increase in the Subseriberâs business, he is necessitated to remove to larg-
er Premises, and having received, per Etna,â ca Halifax, over
Two Hundred Pieces of Choice Tweeds, Beavers,
Pilots, Napps, Meltons, Fancy
Coatings, &c., &c.,
TOGETHER WIth
E'urnishing Goods,
IN GQREAT VARIETY,
Ile is now prepared to accommodate his Customers in first-class style. Cutters and
Workmen unsurpassed in P. E. Ishand, Nothing will be left: undone
to ensure satisfaction,
J. W. FALCONER.
Châtown, Oct. 5, 1870.
Remember that
MASON & HENDERSON,
QUBBN SSVARB WOSA,
Queen Street,
AVING nearly completed their Importations for the Season, call
- _ the attention of the inhabitants of Prince Edward Island to an
early inspection of their Stock, which will compare with
any on the Island, for
QUALITY, STYLE § PRICES.
Having purchased in the best markets, by one of the firm, for Cash,
âenables them to offer the whole of their Stock at very low rates.
{ We invite special notice to our various assortment of Carpet-
ing, tearth Rugs, Matts, Room Papering, and Furnishing Goods,
MASON & HENDERSON.
Charlottetown, Nov. 0, 1870,
A PROCLAMATION.
J D. Il. MACKINNON, do, by virtue of Authority vested in
9 me, as Proprietor of the â*New York Clothing Emporium,ââ
issue thisg my Proclamation, the 29th day of October, One Thousand
Kight Ilundred and Seventy, which, like the laws of the Medes and
Persians, is binding to all intent and purposes, that, whereas, this
Fashionable Strect has been neglectfully miscalled Great George
Street, which is not in keeping with the intelligence of the residents
thercon, nor appropriate to the business thoroughfare of so magnificent
a location for business purposes. Considering that all the Great
Georges have pissed from the scene of action, Little Georges being
exempt from such honors, on account of inability, shall henceforth pass
into obscurity, like all their ancestors, and substitute in its place a
name which will give new life and vigor to the artistic skill and
mechanism displayed on so successful a Street, each day; therefore, I
proclaim its name shall henceforth and forever be called
âBROADWAY,â
Where I sell the most handsome and most stylish fitting Garments
ever manufactured in Charlottetown or any other place. You can call,
gentlemen, and cxamine my Stock of Cloths, my Fashionable made up
Garments to order, my ready-made Garments, which alone excel any
custom work in Charlottetown, Come and we will suit you to any-
thing you want in our line, to suit your own notions.of comfort and
style, as well as our stylish and comfortable ideas, cut and mechanism,
You can have all these Cheap, at
âThe New York Emporium,â
Charlottetown,
âBYâ ,
D H MACKINNON.
Broadway,
Upper Queen Street.
Ch'town, Sep. 7, 1570. 3m
November 16, 1870.
30, 1870.
.
âââ
STANDARD PERIODICALS FOR 187
By the Leonard Scott Publishing Co.,
New York.
Indispensable to all desirous of being well in-
formed on the great subjects ofthe day,
1. The Edinburgh Review.
This is the oldest of the series, In its main
features it still follows in the path marked out
by Brougham, Jeffrey, Sydney Smith, and Lord
Holland,its original founders and first contri-
butors,
2. The London Quarterly Review,
which commences its 128th volume with the
January number, was set on foot as a rivel to
the Ediburgh, It resolutely maintains its ap-
position in politics, and shows equal vigor in its
literary department,
3. The Westminster Review
has just closed its 92d volume, In point of lit-
erary ability this Review is fast rising to a level
with itscompetitors, Itis the adyoeate of politi-
eal and religious liberalism,
4. The North British Review,
now in its 4ist volume, occupies a very high
position in periodical literature, Passing beyond
the narrow formalism of schools and parties, it
appeals to a wider range of sympathies and a
higher integrity of conviction,
5, Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine,
was commenced 62 years ago. Equalling the
Quarterlics in its Hterary and scientitic depart.
ments, it has won a wide reputation for the nar-
ratives and sketches which enliven its pages.
Terms for 1870,
For ony one of the Reviews - -
For any two of the Reviews + -
âor any three of the Reviews -â -
For all four of the Reviews -â -
For Blackwood's Magazine - -
For Blackwood and one Review -
For Blackwood and any two of the
eviews - - + + = = =» 10,00
For Blackwood and three of the
Reviews «© + = © = =
For "lackwood and four of the
Reviews + + = - 15,00
$1.00 per an,
6.00
1Âą.00
12.00
4.00
7.00
=
13.00
Single Numbers of a Review, 81.
Numbers of Blackwood, 45 cents,
The Reviews are published quarterly ; Black-
woodâs Magayviae is monthly, Volumes com-
mence in January,
Clubs,
A discount of twenty per cent, will be allow-
ed to clubs of four or more persons, when the
periodicals are sent to our address,
Postage.
âThe postage on current subscriptions, to any
part of the United States, is two cents a number,
to be prepaid at the office of delivery, For back
numbers the postage is double,
Premiums to New Subscribers,
New Subscribers to any two ofthe above peri-
odicals for 1870, will be entitled to receive one
of the Four Reviews for 1860. New Subscri-
two of the Reyiews for 1869,
Back Numbers.
Subscribers may, by applying early, obtain
back sets of the Reviews from January, 1865,
to Decen. ber, 1869,and of Blackwoodâs Magazine
from January, 1866, to December, 1869, at halt |
the current subscription price,
âLhe Janweary nuweetere will We pilaced fom now
type, and arrangements have been made which,
itis hoped, will eecure regular and carly publi-
cation,
The Leonard Scott Publishing Co.
140 Funron St., New York.
The Leonard Scott Publishing Company also
mudlish the Farmersâ Guide to Scientific and
*ractical Agriculture, By Menry Stephens, Iâ.
R. 8, Edinburgh, and the late J. P. Norton,
Professor of Scientific Agriculture in Yale Col-
lege, New Haven, 2 vole. Royal octave, 1600
pages and numerous Engravings, rice, $7.
By muil, post-paid, $8,
THE CATHOLIC. WORLD,
MONTHLY MAGAZINE
OF
GENERAL LITERATURE & SCIECNE.
Single |
bers to all the five may receive Blackwood or)
NOTICE. NOTICE. :
HE âAmerican Variety Storeâ is the only
place to get all kinds of FRUITS, in sea-
TIMOTHY O'CONNELL,
Ch'town, Queen St,, Oct, 12, 1870. 8m
son.
A rare chance for Shipbuilders
and others.
TEXIUIE Subseriber offers for Sale, in lots to
sult purchasers, that desirable Property
situated at Bridgetown, Dundas, formerly oÂą-
enplied by James Jenkins, and known as the
âBridgetownShipyard,â* together with grounds
adjacent, embaacing all the land Lying between
Clay's Wharf and Grand River Bridge,
This is one of the best situations in King's
County, for any kind of business, being the na-
tural business centre of a vast tract of coun-
try. Produce belog shipped here from Rollo
Bay, St. Peters, and the North Side. Mechan-
ies of all kinds are wanted here, Bridgetown
is & faust growing and thriving villiage, and
this Is a chance to procure a really valuable
property that seldom occurs. Apply on the
preinises to
e DOCTOR CLAY.
Is7 0.
URING the months of October, November
and December, Mailsfor the United States,
Canada and New Hrunswick, to be forwarded
via Shediac, will be closed at the General Post
Office, Charlottetown, every MONDAY and
THURSDAY evening, at 7 o'clock,
Mails for Nova Scotia, v/a Pictou, until further
notice, will be closed every Monday, Wednesday
and Friday evening, at 7 o'clock,
Mails for Great Britain, Newfoundland, West
Indies, &c., every alternate Monday and Wed-
nesday evening, at 7 o'clock, as follows ;â
Monday, 34 October Wednesday, 2d Noy.
Wednesday, 5th Monday, Mth
Monday, 17th Weecnesday, 16th
Wednesday, 19th Monday, 28th
Monday, Sist Wednesday, 30th
Monday, 12th Dee, Wednesday, 14th Dee.
Nails for ummerside, St. Eleanorâs, North
Bedeque and Lower Freetown (to be forwarded
by Steamer), will be closed on the same even-
ing a8 Mails for the United States; for George-
town, via Steamer, every Fiiday evening at 7
o'clock,
Sept. 28, 1870,
â
Letters to be registered, and newspapers, must
be posted at least half an hour before the time
of closing Mails,
Mails from the United States, Canada and New
Brunswick ,will be due at the General Post Office,
Charlottetown, on the evening of Wednesday
and Saturday, at 10 o'clock,
Mails from Nova Scotia will be due on the
evening of Monday, Wednesday and Friday,
at 6 o'clock,
Postage on letters for the Dominion of Canada,
3d, cy. cach rate; for the Unit. d tates, 4d, cy. ;
for Great Britain, 44d, cy.
op ae tng for Newfoundland and West In-
dies, 1d. stg., each; for Australia, New Zea-
land, &c., 2d, stg.. each; Newspapers for Great
Britain, United tates and the Dominion of
Canada, forwarded free,
JOHN A, MACDONALD.
Postmaster Geveral
| General Post Office, Charlottetown,
Ist Oct., 1870,
ALL CURES MADE EASY
nY
Hollowayâs Ointment.
Bad Legs, Ulcerous Sores, Bad Breasts.
No deseription of wound, sore or wleer can re-
sist the healing properties of this exeellent Oint-
ment, âThe worst case readily assumes a heal-
thy appearance whenever this medical agent is
applied; sound flesh springs up from the bottom
of the wound, inflammation of the surrounding
skin 1s arrested and a complete and permanent
cure quickly follows the use of the Oimtment,
Piles, Fistulas, and Internal
Inflammation,
There distressing and weakening diseases may
with certainty be cured by the sufferers them-
selves, if they will we Hollowayâs Ointment,
and closely attend to the printed instructions.
It should be well rubbed upon the neighboring
parts, when all obnoxious matter will be remov-
ed, A poultice of bread and water may some-
ticles from the best CathoHe Enghsh
writers at home and abroad, as well as trans-
lations from the Reviews and Magazines of
France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, and Spain.
Its readers are thus put in possession of the
choicest productions of European periodical
literature, in a cheap and convenient forin,
Extract from letter of Pope Pius 1X.
Rome, Dee. 20, 1868,
Rey. I. T. Weeken:
We heartily congratulate you upon the es-
teem which your periodical, âThe Catholic
spicuity, acquired cyen among teose who dif-
er from us, ete.
Letter from the Most Rev, Archbishop
of New York,
New York, Feb. 7, 1865.
Dean Farner Heexen:
T have read the Prospectus which you have
kindly submitted of anew Catholic Magazine,
to be entitled: âThe Catholic World,â which
it is proposed publishing in this city, under
your supervision; and I am happy to state
there is nothing in its whole scope and spirit
which has not my hearty approval. âThe want
of some such periodical is widely and deeply
felt, and Tcannot doubt that the Catholic com-
munity at large will rejoice at the prospect of
having this want, if vot fully, at least In a
great measure, supplied,
With the privilege which you have of draw-
ing on the intellectual wealth of Catholic
Kuropé, and the Mberat means pieced av your
disposal, there ought to be no such word as
failure, in your vocabulary,
Hoping that this landable enterprise will
meet with well-merited success, and under
God's blessing, become fruitful in all the good
which it proposes,
I remain, Rev. Dear Sir, very truly, your
friend and servant in Christ,
JOUN,
Archbishop of New York.
âTHE CATHOLIC WORLD"
144 pages each number, making two large yol-
umes, Or 1728 pages, each year, and is furnish-
ed to subscribers for $5 4 year, invariably in
advance. Single copies, 50 cents,
Postage, thirty-six cents a year, payable
quarterly in advance, at the office where the
magazine is received,
All remittances and communications on
business, should be addressed to
LAWRENCE KEHOE,
General Agent.
The Catholic Publication Society,
No, 126 Nassau Street, N.Y.
P. 0. Box 5,596,
Nov. 1, 1870,
Mink, Fox, Muskrat.
The Highest Price in Cash paid for
MINK, MUSKRAT, OTTER, FOX
and other FUR SKINS, at the
HAT, CAP and FUR STORE.
South Side Queen Square.
A. B. SMITH.
FPVUE Catholic World contains original ar- |
World,â has, through its erudition and per. |
Forms a double-column octayo magazine of | Âąws and muscles lax and wncontracted,
times be applied at bed-time with advantage ;
the most scrupulous cleanliness must be ob-
j served, If those who read this paragraph will
| bring 1t under the notice of such of their ac-
| quaintances whom it may concern,they will ren-
âder a service that will never be forgotten, as a
cure is certain,
Eruptions, Scald Heads, Ringworm and
other Skin Diseases.
After fomentation with warm water, the ut-
most relief and speediest eure can be readily ob-
tainec in all complaints affecting the skin and
| joints, by the simultancous use of the Ointment
jand Pills, Butit must be remembered that
nearly all skin diseases indicate the depravity of
the blood and derangement of the liver and sto-
; mach: consequently, in many cases, time is re-
| quired to purify the blood, which will be effect.
ed by a judicious use of the Pills, âThe general
| health will readily be improved, although the
; eruption may be driven out more freely than be
fore, and which should be promoted; perseve-
rance is necessary, On the appearance of any
ot these maladies the Vintment should be well
rubbed at least three times a day upon the neck
and upper part of the chest, so as to penetrate
to the glands, as salt is forced into meat; this
course will at once remove inflammation and
ulceration, âThe worst cases will yield to this
treatment by following the printed directions.
Scrofula or Kingâs Evil and Swelling
of the Glands,
This class of cases may be cured by Hollo-
way's purifying Pills and Ointment, as their
double action of purifying the blood and
strengthening the system renders them more
affable than any other remedy for all complaints
of a scroftlous neture: AS the is impure,
the liver, stomach and bowels, being much de.
ranged, require purifying medicine to bring
ubout a cure,
Rheumatism, Gout and Neuralgia.
Nothing has the power of reducing inflamma.
tion and subduing pain in these complaints in
the same degree as Holloway's cooling Oint-
ment and purifying Pills, When used sim.
ultaneously they drive all inflammation and de-
pravities from the system, subdue and remove
all enlargement of the joints, and leave the sin«
A cure
may always be effected, even under the worst
vircumstance, if the use of these medicines be
persevered in,
Both the Ointment and Pills should be used in
âthe following cases :â
Tad Legs âCorns (Softs) |Rheumatiam
Had Breasts Cancers âSealds
Burne jContractedand Yaws
Hunions Stiff Joints |Skin-diseases
Nites of Mos- |Flephantiasis
Sore-nipples
chetoes and Fistulas
Sore-throats
Sand-tlies (Gout Seurvy
Coco-bay âGlandular Sore-heads
Chilblains | Swellings mors
Chiego-foot Lumbage Ulcers
Chap'd Hands Piles Wounds
Sold at the Establishment of Prorrsson How-
Loway, 244 Strand, (near Temple Bar,) Londor,
and by all reepectable Druggiste and Dealers
in Medicine throughout the civilised world, at
the following prices :â1s, 14d,, 28. 0d., 48, 6d.,
Lis. Gd,, 22s., and 34s. each Pot.
*,* There is a considerable saving by taking
the larger sizes,
N. B,âDireetrons for the guidance of patients
Nov. 16, 1870,
in every disorder affixed to each Pot,
re
a
cS,