VOL. XX{L.1 t i} \ A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF POL ‘““Phis is true Liberty, whev Freeborn Men, havin CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD I ( A; I ( AND, MONDAY, JULY 31, 1871, 5) LITERATURE “AND NEW advise the Public, may speak free.’---Enripides. ee carne - ~ The Examiner iS PRINTED EVERY MONDAY BY PrP. KR. BOWLERS, AT HIS OFFICE, BORCHESTER STR T, A few doors West of the Catholic Cathedral. TERMS OF ST BSORIPTION: Tea Shillings per annum, ia advance} or Twelve shillings when not paid in advance, POSTERS AND HANDBILLS PRINTED AT THIS OFFICE. CLUBBING RATEs. V tea's at the annered raves, payable in ad waotce: E will send the “© Examiner’’ for 1371, and aay on» of the following period- 0 | niall DRIAL 0 | Hillsboro’ Square. Ch’town, American Agricufta: ist, £9 18 Atlaatico Muuthly, 3 @ Harper's Magaz:ne, Las talexy ; = 8 Slack wood"’s Maga? ve, 7 2 ey Dublin Unowersity Magazine, 2s 0 0 London Reasdew, ‘ Dublin. de $ 2° =dinburgh de, 1 3 Westminster de, ks North British da, zs North American do 1.10 o| Every Saturday, Uluatrated, i 8 og} Appieton'’s Journal, do, i 8.0 Harpers Weekly, 2% Karpet's Bagger, ; e.g Frank Laslie’s (liustrated Newspaper, 1 8 Voaten Pilot, «8 New York Ledger, ee do Weeklr, i:-¢..¢ do herald 13 0 do Tribune, 1s By ado World, 3 3.0 We can supply am af the Englieh, American er Culewial Putticativws, at the ileweest cash ratea, P. R BOWERS. ——— SS Business Cards, BENJAMIN WILLIAMS, Surveyor of Lumber, Tittisborough Square, | | der Cultivation. |} a good supply of Seft and Hard Wound. if { Business Cards. ay NNN IRN INR RL LIRR IL Goto W. A. Weens & Co, for Cheap Goods, |The Travellers’ Insurance Comp’y, WILLIAM DODD, Cemmission Merchant and AUCTIONEER QUEEN SQUARE, FOR SALE AT THE CLLY LUMBER DEPOT. ALL KINDS OF LUMBER. Pine and Spruce Boards. and Plank, Scwn and Split Shingtee (Cedar Pine & Fir), Cedar Posts and Fence Rails, Scantling, Studding and Lathes. Enquire at Mr. James Barrett's, Block- maker, Dorchester Street, near the R. C. Chapel, or of the Subscriber, ALSO: FOR SALE AT THE LUMBER DEPOT. BENJAMIN WIEiLLLAMS. FARM FOR SALE, At St. Peter's. YEE Subseriber offers for Sale a Valuable | FARM of 84 Acres, 45 of which are wn ‘Lhe remainder is-covered with | } dane 19, L871. pi tf a Cunfortable Bares and Lheve cere can the Farw Dweliing-house, and comuodious Oat- houses. . . . > | The'Lead d+ w goad condition, and is well wa | ‘tered. Tt isBituateden the Main Read leading te- Goto W. A. Weeks & Co, foe Cheap ‘Goods. | itral and ie wear Grist and Saw Mills, wards Me. Peter S anett’s The position is een- Schou! Houses and Chureh. Vins desirable ‘Property will be Sold at a rea- sonable _Priee G@rehall the money te be paid down, and the remainder ina termof years. Por further particulars, enquire at the ‘Sx- | ;ayenne OFFICE or of the Stbseriber AND SONS Insurance, Xe. OO OAM AR AES 4 TS ere OF HARTFORD, CON, Cash Assets - - - - - $1,600,000. Granis everything desirable in LIFE & ACCIDENT INSURANCE ON THE MOST FAVORABLE TERMS, | Accident Departmont. ; so , ' : g ) EN HE Travellers’ Insurance Company, fh its Accident Department, is a General Accident ‘ } against Death or wholly Disabling Injury by Ac cident to men of all trades, professions, and occu- ; Patlots, at rates within the reach of all. It in- }sues against accidents by machinery, accidents | from the ase of tocls and implements, accidents that occur in the usual and lawful avocations of life, as well as accidents by travel. General Accident Policies are written for aterm Of One to twelve months each, and insure a sum of F500 to.$10.000 against Death by Accident, and $3 to $28 weekly indenimity fer wholly disubliny iu- jury by accident, not to exceed twenty-six weeks for any one accident, at un annual cost of $5 to $'0 per thousand for occupations not specially hazardous. Hazardous risks taken at higher rates Life Department. In its Life Department, the Tr il! Life and Endowment. Policies te best cou ath the uncertainties or the note It sells Insarance er thun future ** dividends.”’ Its contract is « plain one, its Secn- rity is ainple and unquestioned, and ite wates cf premivm are ex di gly low. It prefers to do bust 1 basis, and thus gives ie yolicy rd vunlages uot attuinable under ithe credit tveilers grants , embracing the but withoni ¢ it vi t} syste! tie utieres o wpli partes, tions or j @ ¢ rai 5 { Hess on weirs! holders ¢ system. Premi plan. All policies non-ferfeitabie. Its ten, fifteen and tLWelly Year poicies:can be converted tuto Kndow- ments, atthe optton-of the lwsuraut Whis reacere is Original with this Company. mane The Travellers’ fernish everything desirable in either Lite -or Aecident Insurance, It has issued 215 000 yeneral accident ;policies and Pail [Pour- tecu Thousand Claims for @éath or injary by ac- cident; the amount thus returved to policy holders im gystem, the favorite low rete cash averaging. about Seven Hundred Dollarsa Day for | }@Vel working day during the past-seven wears. In its Life depxrtmentiit has written F300 po licies; and its Low Rate Cash "Plan is stenatily rowing in favor with thecinsusing pablic. er « te, >, ‘ Example of Life Rate: Thetholder ef a policy for $4000 will pay an an bual premium of $70 20, which will cost in most othercompanias vety uwearly $98 Heneertie ay in he Travellers a Life Policy aunual preminw ; ore sured can # > ; : . tur over $9000 :for whe sane lcharged by ether -compantes tor ouly 3000, and Justrance Company, grauting policies of Insarunce | ver ip other parts; while as to fuod and) Miscellany. ms ONAN ON INARI L RIAL IN LINLIN LAL CD ILIA PILI tr, THE BATTLE OF DORKING. j dailies ae [Our réaders will thank us for digesting and ubridgipgtthis tremendous setine, which | 8 the li:evary sensation of the dayén Kng- land, ‘The plen of the author - ig simple ‘enough, .Professing toyspeak as af grand. ‘father, about the year MP2}, he relates the invasion of Wagland Sy «che two great. | Powers,” as an " happ ning close upon ithe ac*ual present inte followed by Brie taiu’s sudden and uitr vollapse.) | TH GRANDFATHER BEGINS. You ask me to tell yoo, my grandchild. ren, something about my own share in the great events that happeoed fifty years ago. "Tis sad werk turving back to that bitter | page io our history, but -you may perhaps take profit 11 your néw homes frow the Jes- >Ou it teaches, Fools that we were! We thought that all this wealth and prosperity were sent us by Piovidince, and cou!d not stop coming, [n our blindvess we@id not see that we were merely a@ big workshop, making up the things which came from al! parts ot the world ; and that if other nations stopped | s nding us raw goods to work up, we eould tot preduce them ouarse-ves. ‘frue, we had in those days ay advantage in our cheap. coal and iron ; and Lad we taken eare nut to waste the flel, it apight bave lasted us longer, But aver thon there were no signs tbat coal aud irou would sscn become cheap- other ‘hings Wing!and savas not better off than . , . . . ' itis now We were so-richsimp'y decause | thought that this would last for ever. J weed hardhy te!l you hoav the eresh exme | about, Which did wot go far to strengthen the reel defen-es uf that country, bat formed -an tr-| re-istibie tem tation to‘the Americas to) try and toke them prisoners, especially as ‘stid quickly, bis eye flashing the while | ‘Well, now, look here. , leave us to figh m sice of the gap ov our left. . stene at a theartre—a eurtsin.of smoke all /e2ty wewere ordered down to vecupy the Tallway station on our right rear. it up. was erowded with the dark-biue figuics of | , : ‘the enems, whom [ now saw for the first Should not be abie to vet ft om again tet time — an irreguler ouline in front, but ¥#8 While we were-eating our biead tha: other netions tram all parts of thevvorld | gery selid rear: ‘the whole body was mov-| the rumor first reached us of another disas were in the habitof sending their goods to) ing forward by fitsand atarts, the men Ering | ts eVeu greater than that we had witness us tobe sold or manufactured ; a:d weland advancing, the officers waving their ©4 ourse vez. Whence it came | know not; * ” ibut awhisper went duwa the :anks that Woulewich had been cap'ured. We alldenew Pirst, the risiag in ludia drew |eoncealed by the bashes at the top, whence | ‘at our ouly wreenal, aod understood the sway a part of -oursmail-army; tben-came the smoke and their fire could be seen pre- significance ef the blow. the défieulty wich America, which had been | ceeding: ibreater ing for years, wad We son off ten Lerest came out ated line, and dashed down |Courtty. Dhinking over this, #ve went to tnousend men to-defend CanaJa—ahendft! | yyo prow of the hill, aflime of fire beiching | the station. 'swords, the co umns closing up and gradu- ally making way. cut from the front enemy hesitated, gave way, an back Then | -s- _ _ = - -_—— ——— = -— - -— —_—— tends from beyond Aldershot east to the | their way past with grim-set faces, as if on the open door-way Medway ; but there is a gap ia the ridge ‘just here where the | past Dorking turns suddenly to the north to ‘fiad its way tothe Thamas. ‘ward towards this gap, and heid bivoaac in what appeared to be a gentleman’s park. Ss~-- { NO. 31, 3 | 'a desperate task ; and the battalion, when it irtle srream that runs! got clear, appeared to deploy and advance must have beer instantaneous. 1 tried to 'down the slope. I have also a dim reco!- . We stood on | lection of seeing the Life Guards trot past but even thie load was too wuch for me, and the slope of the hill as it trends down exs*- the front, and push on toward the town—a_ while stooping dowa I fainted away. our last d-sperate attempt to save the day—be- | fore we leit the field, Our adjutant, who ; it had carried awa the # back of his head, The poor child’s -. ‘ 4 lft wp the lithe corpse with my one arm, When | came to my senses again, it was quite dark, and for some time L could not had got seperated from our flank of the regi- make out where | was; I lay, indeed, for? AN OFFICER OF THE GUARDS EXPRESSES His|™2Nt in the confusion. now came up, and some time like one half asleep, feeling noy) ESTIMATE OF THE VOLUNTESRS. While we were talking a third officer came uo; he was a dark man, with a smooth face aud a curious, ex-ited manner, | Yor are volunteers, | suppose #? he Mind | dou’t| want to burt your feelings, or to say any-| thing arpleasant; bat 171i tell you what, if| ail you gentiemen were just to go back, aud it Out alone, it would be a dev.li-h good thing ; we could do it a pre- cous deal bet'er without you I assure you. We don’: want your help, I ean teil you, We would much rather be left alone, 1 as- sure you, Mond, I don’t want to say any thing rude, but that’s a fagt:’’ Hav ng blurted cut this passionately, he strode away before one could -reply, or the other cfli-ers cou'd stop bim. | | A TEMPORARY ADVANTAGE ON BX HILAL, @oce the mist lifted, and L gaw for a inute xn -atrack on Box Hill,on the cther round and a vlear gap in the ceutre, with a/ sudden gicam of eveniig sunshine lighting | . , d The steep smoo bh s!ope of the hill | which were hecomiog very offensive, but I : dared not take off my cost, tiecling sure | Qur people were almost | presently from these bushes.on the | asit advauced, Whe! in a confused crowd down the mist covered the -seene d finally ran jutant looked in to say that we were as sa‘e the -bri|, | #8486 thurch, that Weamast be sure and Ba: /pepper the enemy weil, aud that more car: | litiaand wagoneyall hurrying reerward from the direciion of the big house, and we were by. At ijast i sat a bore on the stream for a mile at least be-' fore it was possible to s:op For myself, | had found out for the rst | time that, besides the bayove’-wound in my leg, a bu'let had gone through my left arm, | just below the shoulder aud vutside tke bone, | it, at opee saw where | was, for _{ remembered felling something like a blow | bad trought baek my senses. just when we lost the laue, bat the wousd to the wound. This half-hour seemed an age, and while | we s:ood on this knoll the endless tramp of | men and rumbling carts along the downs be- | ‘ide us told their own tale. The whole! army Was falling back, At last we coul} | discern the adjutant riding up to us out of | the dark, The army was to retreat and take up a It was like the Posioa.on Eytom Downs, he said Pres-| still engeged at supper, occasionally grun:- | [ should huve liked tewash my wounds, No hope if tais were true of saving the Justias:the fi ing began, our gal'ant ad- dirty legs on the'table and one of poor Trae ' vers’s gars in his mouth; ‘Sie so gut lau. ‘aber sind meht -eben se schoell wie die Vravz-siehen Mobloten.’ the fluor, leaning ea ‘his elbow and out a cloud of smoke from his ugiy jaws; | ‘urd da sind hier etwa gute Sehurzen,’ managed to lead us, up to the crest of the ‘inelination to move, By degrees I became “ ‘hill in the rear, to re-form,as he said; but eware that L was or the carpeted floor of a there we meta vast crowd of vo'utteers, mi- room. All noise of ‘battle bed ceased, but s there was a sound as of macy people close, — : ast p and gradually got, § y leet, “The movement gave me intense ; » pain, for my wounds were now highly is- se flamed, aud my clothes sticking totbem made » & them dreadfu'ly sore. Atlast I got up and groped my way to the door, and, opening» — the plas y F . 1 bad been lying in Travers’s little writ a passed unnoticed til now, when the bieed- ing-room, at the end of the passage, into 5} ing bad stopped #2 the shirt was sticking which | made my way. There wasno gas, @ a aaj the drawing-room dow was closed; but vo & from the open diuing-room the glimmer of ». F a cande feebly lighting up the hail, ia } whick ba.f-a-d.zen sleeping figures could be discerned, while the roow itsei! was crowded { with men. ve table was covered with 1 plates, glasses and bertle; but most of the ; renwere a-leep in the chairs on the floor; |) and one or two, with their.helmets on, were ing cut au observaiion beiween the munth- fuls. ‘Sind wackere, dies Hughiséhen Freiwil- ligen,’ «42 a brosd-shouldered brute, stuf fing a great bunch of beef into bis mouth with a siver fork, ou implement, | shoal think, be had beea using for the first time io bis life. ‘Ja, ja” replied a comrade, who was lol- ling back 'o bis chair wih e@ pair of very =, anne . e wie. td ieon kounen.’ ‘Ja wobl,’ responded the first speaker; 04 %* te * Gewiss,’ gruoted a bulking lout frota *” ; ‘ Hast recht, lang Peter,’ answer:d num- " R . TO y N P E Isl I ND : JAMES PHELAN. the insurance tuke effectifrom date of poticy with- tk e contingent inc u ted three bettalions o! | bar lly ame eould have passed in thas nid ges wou d-so0n arrive, There Were -B9WC | ber one ‘whew dae Scbhurken so gut exer- ; (CHARLODT LETO Ww? - & ates ° St. 'Peterss, Let 39 thy 35 17h. ont Waiting tor bonus additions, which wae uneer-;+be Guards, Thus ‘he reguiar army at MYtedk ing aver the field, when our bricade.- ‘Bigps and benches in the lugyaye-shed, and ciren wie scu'zen konnten, eo "waren wir he- " jtcin, and at best uot aes P TY , {yy siharanutee of life for a uumber of years in order to | UNION HOUSE! o ' jinne 9 1871 pat 3 m08s reguire ‘the useured to Pave a © AR >. JAMES BEAIRSTO, i. D., home was even smaller then usudi and | oacrly hshfof it-was in Ireland to check the jtalkec-of Jenisn invasion fitting Out io the | / West. Worse stdi—ibedsh L do not kacw | jit weuld realy have mattered as th nzs/! u'e uicht hier *Resht! re-hi!? said the sesond , * das exerc rey macht den.ga'en Soldaten.’ W hat morecritcisms on the shortcomings of cur un'¢riweate wolnnteers I did not stop (1/0 ‘hea a part of our men were standing | to tire tarouzgh the upper loop-ho'es, witle the line soidiee and others stood on the ground, guarding the sevond rew. I sit oe rfl: Major came moving up the lane oa foot suppose his horse bad been sho), ering “Stand to your arms, Volunteers! they’re comirg on aga n;”? and we found ourselves 5 a second time engaged in a hot maskeiry| tveHourtor 1 eould not-now ase my Halifax Board of References: Hou. W. A. Leury, Mayor, A. Uniacke, Fe x3 Hurrah for the Railroad ! * : y = ihe e en | turned out—the fleet wos seattered abrood;! ¢ PoC igs .| aud besides, there were more meo than loo ing i sound ¢ Dip sician & S urgeon | (QXHE Subseriber -thankfnl to his friends N Clark, ma! ck teak | some sh:ps to gusrd the West Lndies, othess | a . septs hing oe: een wt, {boles. ‘The artillery fire waich bad saotek oo eee an pooe a a f o ’ aud customers generally, for their putron- | a. Tole. Ee. Yup. NeX. R. : “k Att M j ty ae J i rememoer, but we could distinguish clearly . 54 Sa f, > Lom sinh “— rs, 7 og » OFFICE AND RESIDENCE: jage since ‘lite commencement fn buriness in! Jaiwes Scott, Mequ, Merete {teehee aay aicering sbi. he a AOnGOsi ‘the thick Hne of skirmishers. abcut ci y-| AAM.20 oat bes Ww = ny 3 on the landing-piace; Liimped up the s:airs e MRS. DEWAR’S, KING STREET, | UNION HOUSE Charlottetown, “end in “ E- Be Pipe. as ike a = hal — _ aaron paces off, and mounted officers among thew 5 | ie er : ved “ net ree to meet her, é CHARLOTTETOWN, P. EB. ISLAND. ane Ge fi Penge ngseer es aeons ante et eee ahon ae eed bie Frais, we Sane aero manele on lehed alee becsbad inne a Ses on! d Among the Gane Sana a ov aay = Bay 15, 187. ina. pehetf op the Union Monee dt a LARGH COST ix-| Canada Benrd af Refesenacs: |. SoM Msicn, wecccmld pox |TUret: for thoy wore quite. eipeeed: qo: gmrl td eee aiees nanied Sore ee FE nae or oc oe ae “ i nian oe tamngnal , TT da. peed te C. J. Brydges, Eeg., Managing Divecter Graud | Clalu possessions Which We.covid Noi | ¢., ; while we were protected nearly up to | He wcad, 2 Was Biwost stunned fur B UME | ber none M re clearly than the mournful * | side and oat, end is vew ,prepared to accom- modeate the TRAVELLING PUBLIC, Krank Kuilway, Montreal | pessibly deterd. America was wot the W.-K. Muir, General supe rintendent Great West- | vreat power forty years ago that it is now; eru Railroad, Hantiten How I. Holteu, late Minister of Finuuce, Moutre- | but for. us to wy aud told territory ou be: our sboulders, when—I kaow not how—I | and could not uate out avhat bad happeued. acpeet of umy poor ‘friend, widowed and beeame sensible that s meth ng had gone A shot or sbeil had hit the sed aritboul | chijidless withm a dew moments, as she © We are takin in flank !? called, quite peaetrating the wal'; bat the blow! ..o4 there in her white drese, coming SVILLAW JAMES HENEY, AUCTIONEER, el le a Moe bie Euion House, Ch'town, May 1, 1871 Orrice (N North American Hotel, KeENE STREET. Charlottetown, Aug 3, 1870. . 3 | . ., | Wwroug, ; . . . eT at ae gy imma! snd hapeo sosnenh QSOS Suara x’ B* l { i, « ixsi ee ee omy pe reashed by sail-| out some one; and louking aloeg the left, | had up-set the s-eps resting against it, and | forth like @ ghost from the chamber of the : : aie ; f : Atexander Campbell, ‘ommissioner of i : . 3 i oad 4 OF ie : i a ¢ mber ; 2 At you want te in tne ION HOUSE. |-, Crown Lauda, Kingetor. ing round the Horn. was 98 absurd-es.if 9€ | core enough -there-were dark figures jump-| ‘be mea ee bringing. rae dead, the candie eve held lighting up ber |i COM Mi ISSION AGENT. | Caarlottetown, stay at the UNIO) GLdsis | tou. W. M. McMaster, M. L. C., Firm McMaster had att inpted to iake the Isic ot Man be} ing over the bank intorthe lane and firing 'a cloud of p-asier an brickbits one ot Ww ich face, aaa contra:t’ ng ats pallor ‘with the ‘ + a ’ Je AWS are s T¢ ito. | » be . ' . pate . a: ; a saad . ; 3 } , . CENTILAL STREET | Usams McperaTe. wae ee oe Cir Renk.| lore ihe independence of Ireiand. We gee up aong our lice. Tne vo unteers in re had s ruck me, Ltelt a _ . | dark bar that feli d sordered round it, ite ~ Summer ide, Me P E. Island ly. | A FIRST-CLASS BARBERS SHOP “Montreal. ectial ; (his: plainly euouga gow, but we Were ull) cove who had come down to take the place | use—I¢ . aaa my . os a ee radiant, even through ‘features wore : - . - . . | | ae > irn al - J drew / len : thea | : , ; : . si i be ‘ 4 fe , F . a ae jin connection with the Hotel, where you wili | uxt Aten Ruldknem aon" agen Some, en ‘of the Guards, must have given way at this)! oe ee _ are . ry ‘he Su » Conon etuene e a . 7 a ypehera Mere fat rue veuts oO au : oer ; 7 ae : ‘ COLFORD BROS., ways find the Barber at his post, In con- Ocean Steamship Company, Montreal | ENGLAND FEELS HUFERP, AND DECLARES WAR | point; the enemy’s skirmishers bad got! epi om yt ais owe age hy 3 Ya ‘abd even tearless, though the trewbling fip ‘ ¢ . . ¢ i } : ; a 1e chane ¥v 8020 : i : : , ; ; d Deal : nection with the above Hotel is an iJ. 1. Beandry, Esq , Mayor ot Mouire il, : lt-was while we ware eee sae ith through our line, and turved our left flauk. the chance 0 . imy s0u.c One sil ' o'd of the effort to restrain the emotioa she . Sumportere ae oe licdwin Atwater, Esq., Firm KE. Atwater & Co.. | z . > it got up, therefore, aud siagyered bome | fait ! “ erchants 3 Vreside itizens’ Insurance | our ships all over thafwortd, and our liv le| How the next move came about [ cannot re-| "© = | 1 : ng 1 OYSTER SALOOS, | Merchants and Mresideut Citizen f oe “ , ur il : eal | “D ' . 4 ” * ‘ast ‘“ boda a i QO B A C C {) fitted up im good style, second to none in the | Cie, ENE mnie tne’ tis bit of an army. cut @p into dea chmen's -collcet, or whether it ws without orders | ear friend,” s _m akiog y hand, él > ee r enry Sturnes “Sih. Maunger iftario Dau i. we | is , 5 i “a ‘ a ; > P.ovinces, where youcan get Oysters done up in : "tlebarcat. ‘ 7 |that the Secret Treaty was pub ished, aad | bat in a short time-we foand ourse ves out of | AW ENGLISH HOME DESILATED, «1 was coming to se you; ‘iorgwe my Gi gan First Class Styl [James Jchuson, Fey, Ex-Pvesident Provincial | {Jo!laad and Donmarg were annexed, Pec-, theleneand drawn in a straggling line abow: | [, was about a mile to our house, and | | selfishness in uy you so long, but you : ? i i tio . 7% m,, Sundays | \ come oy aves Accident Insnrance are } p/® saf row that wet git have escaped the | Hiirty yerds in rear of it—at cur eod, that) was thinking how | eould po-sibly drag my.) oo wnderstand’ aan at the door ° - £ , r . Cs - eg HSUNGAVS | PHcalions r ale Aaecden snragic 2 ae . : ; ee : as ° . and Smolrers Articles, coer ne PREP eae ' respentially solicited. | troubles which came ous if we had at #ay | 'S. the o her flank had fallen back a g0d | seif co far, wheu L suddemiy reeoilec-ed thar | # = 7 Se ave been 1 Hautrax N.S ne OICE LIQUO/S scperal Agent for Metitege Pee, {tate kept quiet tier otbér difficult-es| deal more—and the coemy were’ lining the | | was’ passing my friend Travcrs’s house) | ea r re ok wali in ? Mav i. 187! re ly ak Sil cn @ " | om 5 tes oars sltbiene eee | were settled: tut t 2 wiish were always| hedge, and numbers of them paseiny O¥er! oye of the first. ef avow of villas then leading My 5 she answered, ao pat g my ‘ ‘ ++ 2 én - hy - i ce } set 8 HiGings, + | : : ) : 2 ; 7 . : : : , . j : — jof all kirds, the very best = ae rsa = No. 114 Hollis Steet, Halifax. 3- |anm impulsive lot > whole country was|*nd iorming up on our side, — Beyoud our! from the station to Kiogston = L woud go| Question t oe is father. HENRY J. GAFFNEY, M. D. Or ee ead | ne ile e | boing over wish dn@tymation, acdtheGuy-| lett a-contused mags mero ealreDtiNte firing |im aud reat awhile, avd see il could. be Phra laca wounds must 5 cured for; how , ane! , . : vo ) ot vu las they wen’, followce y the advanging | ys a ee fd faint you look : , MCI - QIT SON He Oe > od 4 |erumedt, egged cn by the press, aud going | as (hey wen’, y E use " ; oa rae AB 6 SUES! ata | Bal toh v dL 4 | with tLe stream, declared line of the enemy, We stood in this way) ‘Te little garden before the house wa- While tending me she exp!ained in brok- en scatences how matters stood. Lvery for a short epee, firing at random as fast 2s | as trim as ever (L used to pass it every day ry * roow but ber own, and thelvttie parlor in- *. |we could, Our colonel and mejor must! on my way tothe train, und kuew every | bu se have been shot, for there was a» one (0) shrub init) and a bleze of flowers, but the |'0 Whick ehe, atish Weo-’s help, bad car- i g.ve an order, when somebody on horseba k | jaltdocr stood ajar. L stepped in, and saw ried me, 4va8 dull of soldiers, Wood had | called out frota behind—*:Nowsthcu, Yo'- jittie Arthur standing in the ball, He had} been taken satay to work at repairing the 7 unteers! give a British -cheer, and go at laéon dread ae neatiy as ever that day, railroad, and Lucey bud sua aff from fright; * them—charge!’ and, with a shout, ae | and up he stood there ia bis pretiy blue but the cook bad stopped at ‘ber post, and 4 rushed at the enemy. ‘irock and white trowsers and socks, show | had served up supper aud opened the cel. * ing his chubby little legs, with bis golden) '@ for the roldiers’ use. she did not under- f | ocks, fair face. and large dark eyes, the) stand what they said, avd they were rough Boine of them ran. s me stopped to Mee | ire of childish beau y ia the quiet ha'l, | 0d boorish, but not uncivil. I should now § aud for-a momeot it was a real handeto. | just us it used to lock—the vases of flowers | 20, she said, when my wounds were drese- t Sa . | Wan. There was a Ballot Bill passe} for ad‘ \ing £50.0 men to the wilttia; why «| jroucd number was uot fixed ont don’t iknow, but the Prime Minster said that this 'was the exac’ quota wanted to pat the de- | feuses of the country on a gaund footing. 'Then the sbipburiding that began! Lrou 'clads. despa ch-boats, yur-oats. monitors— ‘every building-yard in the coun-ry got its |job, and they were offering ten sbilings a | 8S Goto W. A, Weeks & Co, for Cheap Goods, MR. A. SMYTHE, PROFESSOR OF MUSIC, Ilas Removed his Academy to Water St,. (Opposite the late Telegraph Ollice.) HAND-TC-HAND, AXYD Apothecaries’ Hall, idisiadainin, debe A Splendid Assortment By Steamer City of Cork from ENGLAND | AT THE rr and other recent arrivals, the undersigned as completed bis imp orttions for the winter, CUTLERY, rhe Old Stand, West Corner of Qreen | eetemmmnae Brigantine James from MONTREAL | LOH HAUSE i { i | ' j 1 | } consisting of x i } a “2, caiek fae body who could drive a)hand fight, I felt a shavp siagin my leg arte dcoat banging up, the familiar /¢4, to look after my own home, here d Pi d Metodeon Tuning pune- ‘AT }coy wagee lor anybody vi in fe AN : _ the hat and coat bangiog up, ; a . eee eanlly attended _ GENDINE DRUGS & CHEMIC 5, Tops assorted Cut and Wrought irvet, This didi’t improve the recruiting, |as id drove my ee rae ee oo pictures.on the wails—chis vison of peace | might De wanted; nate ( only to be allowed to remain watebing there —pointing to the room whese lay tae bod- * ies of ber busband and child—where she!) woaid not be molested. li c : j mea0 tn front a: ste, | lim the midst of war made me wonder for o | . ° THE PLWiRS PREPARE TO INVADE moa nt, ‘aut and giddy ae L was, if the ‘ . Ab a ° eves, fur | just got a glimpse of the poor) | wreteh as he . back, his he sturting out pande nooiu 1 outside bad any veal exis An, wmbgrge bed. pean laid on ail tht! of his head and, savage though we were, ‘tenee, and was not reaily a hideous dream ! Buly 25, 1870. ly | you May £uppose. CARVELL BROTHERS, Dye Stuffs, Va nishes, Paints, NAILS. Vils, Colos, &e. ‘Tons assorted BAR ERON., i | { — AUCTIONEERS, Commission Merchants, AND GENERAL AGENTS, #ANK BUILDING, QUEEN STREET, Charlottetown, P. E. Island } A. McNBELL, Beading Koom Popiecto, 2H LIZ31IO M2AtAANe AND AUCTIONEER. CHARLOTTETOWN. Commission Merchant, GENERAL AGUN®, AND AUCTIONEER Uppe. Queen Street, Charlottetowa, - - - PET. PINWARE, KITCHEN UTENSILS: ee N. B.—Orders from abroad, ang the country wil! -eceive romptittention. April 26, 1869 “AGENCY OFFICE! T Jeasin HE SUBSCRIBER will attend to all or ders for the Selling, letting, purchasing, | &e., of Dwelling Houses, Business Establishwents, aud lands both in City aad Parics wishin -4o dispose of or purchase Property of any deseription, to let. or lease Houses, Stares Ac fer stating particulars. sar SECREVY, observed. A, MeNEILL. xchange Buildivgs, Ch’town, May 15, 187}, } uf » will please apply by let- NESS willbe attended te with Despatch when reguired, strictly PATENT MEDICINES, PERFUMERY, Tons Blister, Cast, and Spring TULL “T AKTEICLES, &e, &e, STEEL | Phe whole of which will be sold at a snail ad : po oe ant, ‘ : at a Boxes 1 it P] Speeral attention, by an experienced hand, to | 5 eral : | the migabation by day and mght of Physicians | Bundles Sheet [ron. | preseriptiuns and private recipes. ets Plouch Metals. T, DESBRISAY. be © . Charlottetown, Jan. 2, 1871. } Dozens Prime Nash Ss Scyt es. y |Dozeus assorted Shovels, Spades, and: Lloes. | ates, assorted sizes. x a } - A. HERMANS, ‘Dozens Knives and Forks. Bell-Ranger, Gun aud Tin-Siuilh, &., &, &. CHEAP FOR CASH! | | i Dorchesier S<eet, (Next to ** Examiner’? Office.) | j EGS toreturn histhanks to the general | public forthe liberal patronage extended | ito him since hiscommencement in business, | and asks for a coutinuauce of the same. He} keepscoustanty on hand A geat Asortment of ___ 2st June, F672. WOOFINA GBAVS Tor Sale! uantity of the best kind of Reofin rravel. : WM. KOUGHAN Queen's Wharf, | May &, 187}. 4 | | A‘ &e., &e., KC. | ALL ORDERS in the above BUSINESS: will be punctually attended to. | Having lately made large purchaaes in the | | Cheapest Markcts,intended for House Builders, | guch ae Gas Fitting, Water Closets, Bell Fittings, &.. &e., Jam prepared to SELL, FHEM at RATES AS LOW AS CAN BE HAD IN THE CITY, and will fit them up ina good workmanlike style To a generous public, | would say, that all. POKES, Orders in THIS BRANCH OF MY BUSI Leather, re Carriage Builders WILL FIND AT THE “City Hardware Store,” Rims, ' other artiele.in.their line. A Lotpf#irst Class WATi.R COOLERS on | hand. SAYER’S CRYSTAL BLUE, Sold Cheaper tian evers July 12, 1809 | than they can he pucchuged elsewhere. BOURKE, GILLAN & Co; t | Ang. 22, 1870 Dozens Cress Cut & Hand Saws. SIMON DAVIES & CO, 5 ing Enuamelled Duek and Drili, Malable | | Castings, Boltsand Nuts, #atent Axels, and.avery | -——— | £9? Ae we have the Agency of the above) articles, we wih! guarantee to sell ata lower rate | tremity of the ri shipping in every port from the Baltic to | Ustend ; the fleeis of the two rea’. Powers! But the strugg'e was ove bad moved out, aud was supposed were as- ae ‘on tbe great northern barbor, and jens detained in these places, mo-t of which were British ves-els, Lt was clear that it- ' vasion was intended DEFEAT OF THE BRITISH NAVY. The fatal anrouncement of the loss of the ‘fleet was telegraphed from Portsmouth, The panic and excitemevt of that day — how the iuvds weat down 1039; the run ‘upon the bank and ite stoppage; the fall lof half the hou esin the cuy; how the | Government issucd a notification suspending ispiecie payment and the tendering of bilis |— this last precaution too late for firms, Carter & Co, among the butaber, which stopped payment as soon as my ‘father got.to the office ; the call to ame, ‘and the uuanimcus response of the couotry |—uali this is bis:ory woich 1 need not re- = 9 peat. {18 VOLUNTEER GIE3 TO BLTTLE. A train full ot Guardsmen was just start- for Guildtord. J was told it wou'd ‘stop at Sarbiten, aod with severe! other volunteers, hurrying like myself to join our geyiment, got a place in it~ Ll wanted very much to run bome and et my great-coat and kaapsack, which I had bought a few days ayo, but teared to be ileft behind. A goodeaatured recruit vol- | upteered to fetch them for me; but be had po: returned before we stated, aad [ began yr e Cartiage Bands, Dasher the campaign with a kit consisting of a macintosh and a small pouch of tobaceo. THE STATION AT DORKING. Our regiment was drawn up ov the ex- dge whiea runs from Guild- ford to Dorking. Tais is indeed merely a ‘part of the great chalk-range which ex- ; i } the sight was almost to horrib'e to look at | rin @ secoud, and | | we had cleared the ground again right wp | to the rear hedge of the lane, ‘lage, tov; bet we were now all out of or- | id-r; there was no ove to say what to do; the enemy began to line the hedge and op- left; and how it came about [ know not, but we found ourselves falling back towexd ou: ‘right rear, scarce any sembiaace of lime re- ‘maining and the volunteers who bad given way on our tight had mised up with us, and adding to the c:cfesion, DEFRED TION It was nca:ly daik. On the slopes which most | we were re'reating to was a large muss of) ‘reserves drawa up in coumos. Some of ‘the leadirg files of these, mi-taking us for | the enemy, bezan fring at us; our fellows -erying ou ‘ranks, an of the hill became a scene of confusion that order, Most of us, L believe, turned to- ward the enemy and fired away our few re- maining cartricges ; but st was too late to the glosed eyes, the prostrate arms, the, ‘take aim, fortunately fur ws, or the guos which the enemy bad brought up through the gap, and were firing point-blank would have done wore damage, we con'd see little more than the bright flashes of their fire, In our confusion we had jammed up a live regiment inwediste- ly bebind us, and its colonel and some staff officers were in vain trying to meke @ par- \pege for it, and their shouts to us to march io the rear andclear a road could be beard above the raarofthe guns and the ccu- Atlest a mounted hair dabbled in blood, officer pushed his way through, fallowed by the crash amoug the otuer noises, but a ¢ ‘a company in sections, the meu brushing ‘splinter of a shell must bave come through ing army, fused babel.of soned. i Hi.d wegone | troops were burrying on board al! the sieam-| on, L believe we might have recovered the | | the ta But the roar of the guns made tse bouse| shake, and the rushing of the shet, gave a) realy answer, The tittle fellow appeared almost ubeoncicus of rhe scene around bn, | along, and wagoners, from Sussex aod Sur wt A LIVING STREET-LAMP, Outside the house there was @ gcod deal , of movement sod bustle: many caris going | a and was walking up the stairs bolding DY | rey, evidently wmpressed and guarded by 5 iling, ene step at a time, as | bad secu him do a bundred mes before, but turned veund as 1 came in, en fire, and they Were s'reaming past cur} My appearance faizh'ened him, and | stag : | and clothes covered with b ood and dirt. 1 ‘chile, for he gave « cry and turned to rea toward the basement-stairs, Bust he s'op- _ped on hearing my voice calling him back | to bis god-papa, and afier a waile came ‘timidly up to me. - : P.pa had been to the battle, he said, and was very il; mama was with papa; W was out; Lucy was in the cellar, snd ha ‘taken him there, but he wanted to go to t for them tostop, rao toward their mamma, Telling bim to stay in the “hall | mused by tbe absurd figure J in a few moments the whole slope | for a minate till f called him, Lelimbed up| man re presented, whith bis solemn face sod. stairs asd opened the bedroom-door, My '{ cannot attempt to describe—reyiments| poor friend lay there, his body resting on ' fious of his own door, to light and deiachments mixed up in hop!ess dis- the bed, his head supported on his wife's of shculder as she sat vy the bedside. He breathed heavily, but the pallor of bis face, clammy foam she was wiping from bis ‘mouth, all spoke of approaching death | Tae good old servant bad done bis duty, at Asit was’ lessi—he bad brought his master home to die in his wife’s arms! The poor woman was too intent on her charge to notise the opening of the door, and as the child would be better away, 1 closed it gently and went dowa to ihe hall to take little Arthur to the shel.er beio foo late! " where the maid was hiding. gering as 1 did into the hail, my face | must have looked an awful object to the: e lay at the foot of the stairs ou his face, bis little arms stretched out, hia Ll bad not noticed euldier-; and although 50 gas was tarning, ,') the road toward Kingston avas avell tighted ;! “by torebes held by persons standing at short _ intervals in line, who had been seged for | the duty, some of them the tenants of neigh. ' boring villaa, Almost the ut these 5. toreb-bearers | came to was an tle |) mau whose face [ was well acquainted with, a trom having traveled up and down im the | same train with bim, He was s senior cierk ia.» Goweroment effice, I believe, aud ;° |wesa miid-looking old man, "With s prime. | ‘face and long neck, which he used to wrap | & in a wide double neckoiozh, a thing even in - | those days seldom seen. Kven in that mo- meat of bitterness, 1 could aot Deing ,, | ee old "4 s* ' . 1 long cravet, doing penance with @ toreh in- : up the path i j " i our congusrors. “** , CF D ¥ Why speak of this insult, in pertiou far Py Had not every man who lived then bie tale |. to tell of humiliation und degradation? For | & it was the seme story everwhere, Afier - | | the first stand in line, and when opce they | 7 got us On the march, the enemy lgughed - | at us. Our handful of regular sroope } was sacrificed almost tos mao in & Vain conflict with wumbers; our volunteers | aud wilitia with officers who did not‘ know their work; without te or equip- ' ment or staffto euperio starving in | the widst of pleuty, we bad soon become, ' a bolpless mob, fighting desperately here , cnd thers, but with whom, as & man@ave- the disciplined invaders did juet: — Are