aoe ae --— a on. ~ Local and Other Items. { ; | No paper to-morrow—Thanksgiving Day’ lf Tue steamship ‘Prince Edward” is ex- peared in the Manitoba Free Press :— pected this evening. Tur Fancy Goods and Toys at the ‘‘Dia- | mond Bookstore” are very cheap. A. C. MeDownatn, Esq., M.P., is in town, en route for Halifax, to be present at the reception. To-morrow is Thanksgiving Day in P. E. Island, New Brunswick and the United States. A tarek number of potato buyers left for their homes in the United States this morning. Tnxy say Gass’ is the best place in the city to buy Boots, Shoes and Rubbers, Try him. Dr. Clarke Johnston’s Indian Blood Syrup for sale, wholesale aud retail, at Apothecaries Hall, Queen Square. Tu steamer “‘ Secret” left this morning for Summerside, where she will load with potatoes for the American market. STEAMER St. Lawrence did not arrive from Pictou until noon to-day, and left again at one o'clock. She will return dur- ing the night. Srr. Princess of Wales left for Shediac at the usual hour yesterday morning, but did not return owing to the storm. She crossed to-day. Mr. J. W. McLeop, late of the Mechanic- al Department en our Railway, has received an appointment in the Union Bank. Mr. McLeod will now be able to hand his box of grease to another. Nerraer of the steamers arrived last night. There was no telegram to let per- sons interested in the mail know about it. What is the reason ? Dr. McDonatp will speak at the Prince Street Methodist Church this evening upon **The Religions and Religious Customs of Japan, with facts and incidents of Mission Life.” Horse Drownep.-—~A valuable horse be- longing to Mr. Michael Power backed over Peake’s No. 1 wharf to-day,and was drown- ed before he could be extricated from his harness. Hon. J. ©. Pors, Minister of Marine and Fisheries, leaves to-morrow morning for Halifax, to take part in the festivities attending upon the arrival of the vice- regal party Buxyw Tos arrived by boat from Pictou to-day, and will perform in the Market Hall this and to-morrow evenings. He is, without exception, the most wonderful musical phenomenun living. Tus New Dominion is urging the dismis- sal of the St. John Postmaster on account of violent partizanship during the recent campaign. We have also a few of those very zealous Grits in our midst, PresentaTion.—On the 16th inst. the Methodist congregation at Marie agreeably surprised their pastor (the Rey. A. Hagarty) by presenting him a first-class coon coat and muffler, as a token of their esteem. Tue Halifax Herald is wrong as to the election of Mr. Strong for the Second Dis- trict of Prince County. Mr. Strong’s op- ponent, Mr. Burns, is elected by a hand- some majority. Mr. Strong is not a Grit, either. Strpenprany Macoisrrate’s Court, this morning, Henry Von Boswell (a German sailor) drunk and disorderly, $4 or 20 days. James Smith, profane language, $4 or 20 days. William Smith, drunk and incapa- ble, $1 or 4 days. Sir Joun A. McDonaxp, Premier, with Hon. Messrs. Tupper, McDonald, Masson, O’Connor, Baby, Aikins and Wilmot will arrive in Halifax to-morrow at half-past one. Sir John and Dr. Tupper will be the guests of His Honor the Lieutenant Gov- ernor. The Minister of Marine will arrive in Halifax at 3 o'clock. H. M. S. Black Prince arrived yester- day afternoon. After leaving Malta for Marseilles, and when about 200 miles or so on her passage, her engines broke down for the second time on the same trip, and find- ing it impossible to proceed under sail, she put back to Malta, where she repaired, and left, reaching Marseilles Oct. 19. H.R. H. the Duke of Edinburgh embarked at that port, and the ship sailed for Halifax va Gibralter, where she coaled, and left Nov. 1. Had light winds since then. Lay too off the harbor 10 hours, packing her en- gines. Shortly after anchoring, a boat, in being Jaunched, was stove in. Captain H. R. i. the Duke of Edinburgh landed im- mediately after the ship anchored, and is the guest of His Excellency the Admiral,— Hex. Herald. tt See? Sensible Advice. eYou are asked every day through the columns of newspapers and by your Drug- gists to use something for your Dyspepsia and Liver complaint that you know nothing about, you get discouraged spending money with but little success. Now to give you satisfactory proof that Green’s August Flower will cure you of Dyspepsia and Liver complaint with all its effects, such as sour Stomach, Sick Headache, Habitual Costive- ness, palpitation of the Heart, Heart-burn, Water-brash, Fullness at the pit of the Stomach, Yellow Skin, Coated Tongue, In- digestion, swimming of the head, low spirits, &c., we ask you to go to your Drug eo and ae a sample bottle of Green’s ugust Flower, for 10 centa, and try it, or a regular size for 75 cents. Two does will relieve you. ~~~ of some sixty miles extending westward from Calf Mountain past Rock ke. We No. 35 Water ot., are nearly all bachelors, although most of Wives for the West. serious revolutions, but this is the time for — heroic action and bravest correction of evil ; A short time ago the following paragraph , | and none of the many evils and mistakes of ron & correspondent at Swan Lake, ap-} America’s last century needs correction more sorely than does the treatment the | and see that your feet are protected,'and thus Indians have received at our hands. ‘* Out near Swan Lake means an area of us have pined since spring for connubial bliss. Hereis a chance for a fond parent with a family of marriageable girls. the husband stock running out for some tame to come. The soil cannot be surpass- ed, and there is any amount of it vacant, the reserve and speculator curse not having arrived yet. Wood, hay, and good spring Water are in abundance, the former consist- ing of poplar and oak, and being in clumps of from ten to twenty acres and fairly dis- tributed. Game of all description is plen- tiful, both four-footed and winged, although hesitation in saying that sport will be good here for some years to come. I hope next year at this time to give a good account of the crops for which the land is at present being broken. Being read by a family of young ladies in Montreal they sent the following communi- cations to the Free Press ;— 404 Sr. LawreNcsE Street, MONTREAL, Oct. 24, 1878, To the Editor of the Free Presa: Sir,—Will you please oblige by oe the enclosed to the fifty gentlemen mentione by a correspondent in your valuable paper. Yours respectfully, Emma Bruce. MoxTreEa, Oct. 24, 1878. To the fifty unmarried Gentlemen : Having read in the Manitoba Free Press your ap for wives, we offer ourselves a sac- rifice. ing all that is desirable, we trust to tirid three worthy husbands. As we are three in number, namely, a blonde, demi-blonde and brunette, we each hope to receive a favorable reply from a few or all of the fifty lonely gen- tlemen. Please accept our regards. Remaining yours, THREE WILLING SIsrErs. S. Bruce, blonde; J. Bruce, demi-blonde; E. Bruce, brunette. The ‘‘ Free Press” adds :—‘* Now here’s a chance for the fifty anchorites ‘out near Swan Lake,” and we trust they will not fly in the face of Providence by allowing the opportunity to pass. The assortment of maidens offers every shade of complexion and the sweet self-abnegation which induces them to sacrifice themselves for — country’s ought to be a guarantee o the es other desirable qualities. ness send in their application at once. Should the lucky ones behave themselves as they ought to, we dare say other willing maidens can be found ready to launch their little barque on the matrimonial sea, as it is said the supply is practically unlimited. Who will be the first to speculate ? —- ~ape—--— Our Washington Letter. Wasuiseton, D. C., Nov. 15, 1878. Notwithstanding the embarassments and anxieties and harassing disturbance to which the Patter Committee has been sub- jected, and which is the common lot, more or less, {of all Congressional Committees, there is much to be gained and enjoyed (not to say accumulated) by being appointed on such Committee, or in being a favorite rela- tive or particular friend of some member of such Committee. It is a good time,with no expense, especially if one is not a Chairmar. Take, for instance, the visit of the ‘‘Con- gressional Committee on Indian Affairs” to California this summer. A party of 17 (by no means Committee members, all of them. Ladies, correspondents, clerks, guests,” swell the number) a special palace car, special cusine on the rail, special and exclu- sive accommodations on the route, grand reception in the Golden City, delightful ex- cursion to Seal Rocks, grand trip to the Yo- semite, the Geysers, hot springs, public re- ception and grand dinner in San Francisco, a visit to the Chinese Theatre— all travel- Government, and allin the interest of the ‘* poor, untutored savage.” This is but one of a dozen or two of similar excursions that have been taken for the country’s good in the past few months. No moral is neces- sary. Apropos of Indians and their affairs comes the work Gen. Le Duc has taken in hand. Gen. Le Duc is the Commissioner of Agriculture, and among his benevelent efforts of the last two years are the raising of tea, olives, and bamboo in this country, and the introduction of rooks from England for the destruction of the western grasshop- pers. But his more human and humane idea promises better success than any other. He has induced 70 Indian youths, of both sexes, to enter a Government School at Fortress Munroe, where they are to re- ceive common school education, and be taught agricultural employment and housekeeping, respectively. It is hoped and will marry among themselves, families, and go back to their people civil- ized, industrious and ambitious, and, by their lives and occupations, do more real missionary work than can ever be done seventy have arrived, and are already placed at school. Recent estimates place the number of full-blooded, self-supporting Indians, who voted at the last Presidential election, at no less than 10,000. The red men of Indian Territory had a unique but respectable exhibit at the Paris Exposition civilization. In the words of another: to be treated exactly like citizens—not like enemies, foreigners, children or Congress ought to compel them to abandon their tribal habits—their tepees, blankets, leggings, mocassins, long hair and laziness —and to live by legitimate work, to enjoy We would suggest that those meaning busi- { Charlottetown. number about fifty, there is no dear “of Prince Kdward Island Branch —OF THE— NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE. INSURANGE CO. we don’t boast a gun-club, we have no!| Syubseribed Capital, $9,733,332.00 Paid up Capital, - 1,216,666.00 CHIEF OFFICES—Edinburgh, 64 Princess Street ; London, 61 Threadneedle Street. Nine-Tenths of the Profits of the Life Assur- ance Business are divided every Five Years. The Tables of Rates are moderate. Fire Insurances effected on nearly every description of Property, at the LOWEST RATES of Premium. corresponding to the nature of the risk, Losses settled with promptitude and bber- ality. G. W. DeBLOIS, General Agent. 0: AGENCIES —OF THE— General Mining Association, Limited, —AND THE— Halifax Company, Limited. ORDERS FOR COAL, —ON THE— Old Sydney Mines, Cape Breton, Lingan - ” Albion Mines, Pictou, N. 8., can be obtained on ore to the Subscriber. ‘Terms as «We DEBLOIS, Sole Agent for Prince Edward Island. May 18—2aw | SEE THE LIST ov FARMS FOR SALE } IN THE ‘WEEKLY MAIL. Parties Wis to Sell Advertise there. WANT “Bus. read’ there.” DO YOU VENNOR PREDICTS | An early winter and a long one. save many doctor’s bills. W.R. BOREHAM SouTH SIDE QuEEN Square, has the best sclected stock of Boots, Shoes, Slippers, Overshoes, Mocasins, &c., to be found in the City, which he will sell at bottom prices, to suit the hard times. CUSTOM WORK. { am now also prepared to take orders for every description of Custom Work, having opened a Custom Boot and Shoe De- rtment, under the superintendence of . W. Krronrn (late foreman at Dorsey & Jost’s). Mr. Kitchin has had long experience as a cutter and practical shoemaker, and will guarantee good tits and the best of workman- ship. None but first-class material will be Prices as low as possible consistent with good work. Mr. K., having had considerable ex- perience in making boots and shoes for persons with DEFORMED FEET and those who are troubled with CORNS AND BUNIONS, will make a specialty of this branch. A Good Fit and Perfect Kas in every case, or no money taken. S® REPAIRING NEATLY DONE. Ch’town, Nov. 7, 1878—3m wed & sat JAMES HOBBS, CABINET-MAKER, UPHOLSTERER, ETC, H* REMOVED from McPhail’s Corner to the premises just vacated by Mr. JOHN StuMBLES, Prince Street, where, witk increased facilities, he is prepared to attend to the wants of his customers with punctuality and despatch, and on reasonable terms. CaRPeETs cut and laid. Parntine and Repairing neatly done. Picture Frames and Mouldings constantly ou hand, or made up to order. All kinds of Household Furniture made to order, cheap and good. New Pattern School Desks made at short mntoae A oe <> p s@ Don’t forget the place: (near the on ee Chace aE Sth erection). Charlottetown, Oct. 26, 1878— Recerven 10-DaY fc hig 0 _ AUCTION SALES, ose’ Consignments I will Sell for Cash or Good Paper, at Lowest Market; Rates, ()( BBLS, of that favorite brand FLOUR —‘* Hiawatha,” 100 bbls. Choice Superior Extra . 200‘ ‘* American “ 100 ‘* Kailn-dried Cornmeal, 100 ‘* Am. Kerosene Oil, 120° iest,} 200 sides No. 1 Sole Leather, 75 chests good Congou Tea, 75 half-chests Choice Souchong do., 50 hoxes Tea, 5 and 8 pounds each, 5 qr. casks Sherry Wine, 10 cases pure Jamaica Lime Juice, 20 boxes Soap, 6 handsome Wolf Robes, 20 Buffalo Robes. WILLIAM DODD, Auctioneer, used, aud ali orders will be promptly filled. | Nov. 11—3w mon thu AUCTION. MORTGAGE SALE! To be sold by Public Auction, at tho Court House, in Charlottetown, on ys the First day of April, 1879, at the hour of Twelve o'clock, noon, under and by virtae of a Power of Sale contained in an Indenture of Mortgage bearing date the 16th day of December, A. D. 1876, and made .between Pierce Lacey, of Charlottetown, Prince Edward fsland, blacksmith, and Margaret, his wife, of the one part, and Daniel Hodgson, of eo place, Esquire, of the other part— LL that Tract, Piece or Parcel of Land, being part of Lot Number Seven ia the first handred of lots in said Town, bounded as follows, that is to say: By a line commencing on Water Street, at the southeast coraer of Town Lot Number Six, in the same hundred, and from thence ex- tending, om the eastern line of Lot Six, eighty feet; thence running northeast- wardly parallel! with Water Street forty-one feet ; thence eighty feet to Water Street by 4 line parallel with the aforesaid line of Lot Six ; thence along Water Street west- wardiy, to the place of commencement, together with all rights, members and ap- pu eotea thereto belonging. or further eet apply to Mesars — & McLEOD, Solicitors, Charlotte wn. Dated the Fifteenth Day of November, A. D, 1878. (Sg’a) DANTEL HODGSON, Mortgagee. Nov. 15—4m law PRINCE EDWARD§ISLAND. In Chancery. SAMUEL NELSON ROBINSON § a Gina ee ling ‘‘dead head” and expenses paid by the |- expected that they| not paid for, are req tablish | them. 7 in two weeks from date of this notice. among the Indians in any other way. The} Nov. 4—Im eod ne Im her 2m this summer, wnich is in itself a mark of | no one else is authori ‘‘ What the Indians of this country need is! and 6 a. m.,—at 75 cents pe hogshead. y exars- promptly attended to. Advertisements of Farms for sale are inserted in the TO BUY Weekly Mail, 20 words for 50c. each insertion; each additiona) word 2c. Advertisements of Farms A FARM for sale are inserted in the Daily Mail, 20 words for 25c. each insertion; each additional word lic. Advertisements of Live Stock, Auction Sales of Stock, Implements, ete. | Seeds for sale, Exhibitions, /ete., inserted at the same | rates. | Address Mail, Toronto. October 31, 1878. WAR! Kent Street Tailoring Depot. ———1 0! -—-- To the Public. TAKE NOTICE, I WILL IN FUTURE (on account of hard times) make up Clothing as under, viz. : Men’s Suits of Black Cloth........ $5 50 se “ Good Tweed........ 5 00 + “ Common Tweed.... 4 25 ° ” Homespun.......... 3 95 Boys’ ‘Suits. Suits of Black Cloth.............. o Good Tweed.............; “ Common Tweed.......... ” POmNeeN,... 5. s wiow —ALSO— Pante of Black Cloth.............. $ “ Geol’ Tweed: 2345234 oS. _— IN Er W (aN qnetes PATTERNS) --AT— KING SQUARE HOUSE Tailoring Department BEER & SONS. Ch’town, Jane 18, 1878. JOSEPH ROBINSON and GEORGE FREDERICK ROBINSON — Complainants AND MARGARET McCRAITH JAMES REDDIN, PIERCE GAUL, MARGARET McCRAITH, Guardian ef James Barry McCraith, Arthur Edgworta McCraith, Mary Louisa McCraith, Augaos- tine McCraith, Margaret McCraith, Eller McCraith and Beatrice Marion McCraith, Defendants In pursuance of a decree made in this suit by His Howor the Vice Chanceller, bearing date the twenty-ninth day of August, instant, A. D. 1878, there will be sold by Public Auction, oa ete SUBSCRIBERS —aNp— ADVERTISERS WILL THEREFORE PLEASE WITHOUT DELAY. Nov. 1, 1878, THE PRINTER PAY UP distance of forty feet; WEDNESDAY, the eleventh day of December next, ensuing, at twelve o'clock, noon, in the Supreme Court House, In Charlottetown, in Queen's County, LL that Tract or Piece of Land situat BE PAID. A lying and being in Charlottetown, aforesaid, being part or parcel of Town Lots Number Four and Five, in the secoad hune dred of Town Lots in the said Town, bound. ed and described as follows, that is to say < Commencing at the southeastern corner of the dwelling- house and store now occupied »y Henry J. Calbeck, in tne northern edge or side of Sydney Street, and running thence along the edge or side of Sidney Street, parallel with the line of said Street for the thence at right angles to said Street, northwardly, for the distance of seventy-nine feet; thence et right angles westwardly, along the boum- Gary line of the late John McGull’s land, forty (40) feet, or until it meets the bous- dary line of land occupied by the said Henry J. Calbeck; thence at right angles south- BY THE DML == INER, | wardly along the said last mentioned line for the latest news—] c seventy-nine (79) feet, to the place of com. “ Common Tweed.......... ~ eee Vests, SESS SSSR Wants, Lost, Found, & mencement, together with the buildings and improvements thereon, and the appur- tenances thereunto belonging. Of Good Tweed or Black Cloth, 90 cents each ‘* HomespunorCommon Tweed,80 “ « All work guaranteed, or no pay for making. Advertisements under this heading, in not corny half an inch, will be insert. ed for Ten Cents per day. Dated this 31st day of August, A. D. 1878. space J. LONGWORTH, Master in Chancery. E. J. HODGSON, N. B,—Parties having Clothing done and uested to call and pay for If not, I will sell them for my expenses g® Patterns cut to order. WM. J. McINTIRE, Kent Street. NICHT SOIL. E Subscriber, having obtained the Con. | Building. Hume. against cashing the same. rewarded by leaving it at Norman McLeod’s, Orwell Head, or at the Examiner office. ee Ee Sent ane Solicitor for Complainants. Au3 OST To-day, between Fleasant Valley, /@ffice of the Singer Manufac Lot 62, and Southport Ferry, a NOTE OF HAND for $66, in favor of Wellington The public are hereby cautioned The finder will be , Nov. 19, 1878—2i turing Company, No, 281 Notre Dame Sreexr,§§ Montreal, P, Q., Nov. 9, 1878. To ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN :— This is to certify that Mr. Robert Young, ap- TO LET-—-A" House con-|°f Charlottetown, P. E. I., has been d {nov. 18~— 61 tract to remove night soil from the City, to do so. Night Soil only removed between 8 p. m. Payment to be made only to me. s@ Orders left at the Police Station will be DANIEL GORDON. Charlottetown Royalty, } 3m wed & th Nov. 13, 1878. )ne pat m & tues And To Let—THRE Dayy’s Lane. Apply te JOHN MORRIS. stables, and a lar, Street, near Crab or Sale—A New IRON PUMP, thirty- order, at half price. ROOMS in a house in two feet long, in Nov. 18th, 1878— fate taining six rooms, near Spring Pointed by us as our Agent for the sale of our is Apply toG. H. COOKE pratt Singer” Sewing Machines, and that Photographer, DesBrisay’s|¢ 3s the only nt we have for this on Prince Eward Island. _ THE SINGER MANUFACTURING Co’y. Hexry E Attorney-in-fact. Nov, 14, 1878—-lm — I sons having relatives or friends abroad, and LET—A two-story House, pentetnlei a keep them informed 9 rooms, frost-proof Cellar, yard teen en, fronting on Euston |} er way than bscri Eccensc. Mont aodeoth iesiinan “Geek, the benefits of thrift, and to receive the E Printing done is * | For information to W. W. LORD. | protection of law.” All this would involve I the EXAMINER Printing Room | Ch’town, New Lhe 1873 P cannot do soin a better or id, to any address tm Great Britain, the United States, or the Dominion, on receipt of One Dollar,