ee meee \ er VOL. 5. THA. Packages Now in 190 Something very superior, very Low Figures. BEER & SONS. TRA. —— Stock. May 22, 1879. Glass. Glass- Glass. 300 BOXES, all sizes, VERY CHEAP. BEER & SONS. May 22, 1879. GUANO! © =\ BAGS, powerful fertilizer jor Gardens e or general purposes. CARVELL BROS. May 19, 1879—pat 2aw Im. ALBION MINES, PICTOU, N. S. and ati! Queen Sireet. + OE ee ee ome —_ : CHARLOTPEN! amewen me ae and ROUND COAL can now be: b obtained at the above mentioned Mines. For orders apply to : G. W. DeBLOIS, Sole Agent for P. E, Island. Office, No. 35 Water St., Ch’town. Ch’town, May 6, 1879. pat tf - QUEEN INSURANGR GO'Y. OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING, NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build. ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vessels on the stocks. ' Special rates for isolated. residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island iune,. 1877 — Mouldings F every modern pattern, in Walnut and Q) Gilt, for Picture. Frames, cheap, and made up promptly to order. MARK BUTCHER. May Ist, ’79—pres pat Im TO SELL OR TO LET. ‘ee Two-Story Dwelling House, Garden, Coach House, Stable, etc., on Grafton Street (West) opposite the residence of the undersigned, and codes a jine view of the harbor. Possession ist June. Apply to JOHN W., MORRISON, May 17, 1879. CHILDREN’S GOODS. UGGIES, Chairs, Cradles, Swinging Cots, Go carts, Cots and Bedsteads, of every } heap for cash. ee eee eS” MARK) BUTCHER. May 1, 1879-- FURNITURE REPAIRED ND RE-PAINTED- Chairs Re-Caned— Looking-Glass Frames Retitted, and all kinds of Machine \Vork done with satisfaction and promptness, at April 1, 1879—3m IRON BEDSTEADS. (vane & DOUBLE—Best kinds—-Cheap. JOHN NEWSON. JOHN NEWSON’S. April 1, 1879—3m UPHOLSTERY WORK. ODERN STYLES—Best Finish—Cheap- est —Promptly delivered. JOHN NEWSON. April, ):1879=-3m Looking Glasses and Mirrors. W STYLES—Cheap. N e JOHN NEWSON, April ], 1879—3m PARLOR & DRAWING-ROOM 100 SUITES, in raw Silk Poil, Silk Cota- line, Silk Repp and Hair Cloth—Styles un rivalled—-Stock large —Prices at cost, BEDROOM or CHAMBER SUITES 150 —Every Variety of design and price— Never before so cheap. : bs JOHN NEWSON, April 1, 1879—3m FURNITURE. -ARGEST STOCK-—Greatest Variety — Best Quality—Cheapest in every grade. Call and examine. . JOHN NEWSON. ——s April 1, 1879—3m Bedding, Matrasses & Pillows Bes MATERIAL— Hair, Flock, Excel- sior, Straw. JOHN NEWSON. April 1, 1879—3m BEST 0. 1 London White Lead, Turpentine, Oils, Colours, Gold. Leaf, cheap. BEER & SONS. June 10, 1879-— “SPRING y avs 2 PM ae 2 _— 0 1 IN Et GOODS, Ex ‘* Prince Edward” and other Steamers. All carefully selected in the Best and CuEarest Markets. do do Grey Cotton at 4c. and upwards. White Cotton at 6c. Towels at 4c. and upwards. Print Cotton at 6c. BLACK DRESS SILKS ! Best Value ever offered in the City. SHIRTS, LINDERS & DRAWERS, LADIES’ COTTON HOSE, FROM 6C. PER PAIR. SUSPENDERS, &c., Cheap GCGHEIN TS’ EMBROIDERY, From 4c. per yard, a great selection. LADIES’ DRESS MATERIALS! all at Old Tariff prices. Millinery, Hats, Feathers & Flowers. Lace Curtains at prices to suit all customers. Bost Value Yet Offered. 20 JAS. DesBRISAY May 31, 1879. wy UX AMINER. E EDWARD ISLAND, THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 1879. ~ TELEGRAPH, AQUATICS. Toronto, June 17. Of Hanlan’s future mevements litile is known. After attending the regatta at Manchester, and witnessing the Nicholson- Plaisted race on Monday next, he will take ship for home. Arriving here, he, of course, will be subject toa series of ova- tions, which being over, he will probably settle down for a month or so of well- earned rest. In August he may take part in a regatta at Barrie, and later he will row ina grand professional sculling race cn Toronto Bay, to be given by tne Hanlan Club in honor of the Vice-Regal visit. There is little likelihood of his going to Australia te meet Trickett, but it is prob- able he will offer the champion of the world extraordinary liberal expenses to row here. Failing Trickett, there are no ether champions for him to conquer ; and unless Courtney sheuld court anether defeat, he will perforce be compelled to rest on his laurels until he shall have staled a bit and some younger oarsman shall come to the fore with pluck enough to offer battle. At Ottawa it is proposed to invite the cham- pion to enter into a match against time, but that is a species of contest for which he will probably have ro stomach, It has too much of the trotting-horse character about it. Of course he will be able to give exhi- bition races, and that he will prebably do, providing the prizes are made weighty enough. Lonpon, June 17. A match has been arranged between Elliott and Robert Beyd, on the Tyne, for £200 a side, four months hence. New York, June 18. A despatch from Courtney the oarsman, denies the rumor that he had arranged a race with Hanlan, and he further says he don’t intend to try to bring abeut a match. THE WALKING FEVER. Lonvon, June 17. The score in the walking match, is as fol- lows: Brown, 155, Weston 150, Harding, 89, Ennis, 73. Noon—score : Brown, 163, Harding 89, Ennis 86. UNITED STATES, . New York, June 17. The ]Vorld announces that Cleopatra’s Needle Obelisk, now standing at Alexandra, Egypt, has been secured by an American, and will be sent to this city. Gatveston, Tex , June J7. Ike Rector, a negro, ex-city detective, in a gambling house fight, shot Nathan Harris through the heart. The murderer was captured, New York, June 17. In the garret of a tenement house on Elizabeth street, in this city, kept by an Italian, was found this afternoon the de- composing, body of an Italian named Phil- lippe Alexander Minntilla; a _ horrible stench came from the room. The deceased was a man of edueation, a proof-reader on a French paper. The cause of death is a mystery. The flerald’s London despatch says Tal- mage preached yesterday at Islington Pres- byterian Church, Colebrook Road, to an enormous congregation. A dense crowd blocked the streets. “Half a mile before the church was reached ‘his carriage was lifted from the ground and carried bodily to the church. FRANCE. Lonpon, June 17. A correspondent in Paris describing the scenes in the Chamber of Deputies yester- day, says :—‘* Many members of the Rizlit rushed towards the Ministerial benches, Dariste called Minister Tirard a coward. There was a personal collision between them. Blows were also exchanged between Raulins and Jean David. DeCassagnac, after the censure of the House was pro- nounced upon him, declared the Gevern- ment was the scum of cowards and wretches. The Soir announces that explanations pass- ed between Gambetta and DeCassagnac and that the latter will not be prosecuted. The Hungarian General Turr, initiator of the canal scheme, will probsbly accom- pany De Lesseps to Panama. | ALGIERS. Axcrers, June 17. | Te French commander telegraphs an /nouncing his arrival at Maderia. He re- ports that ten chiefs cf the rebel tribes en- deavored to obtain a suspension of hostili- ties by falsely representing that the rebel leader has fled. The rebels have been warned to surrender to him or they will be attacked to-night. | VERSAILLES, June 17. | Minister Lepere assured the Chamber of Deputies to-day ‘that the disturbance in | Algiers affordecl no present canse for anx- | lety. j | THE TROUBLE AT FALL RIVER. Fauu River, June 18. | Secretary Howard, of the Spinners’ | Union, has issued a circular urging the “spinners to stand firm and not retract: the the notices given of intention to strike. He says things look as if spinners would get what they demand. i. BRITAIN’S MINISTER’S ABROAD. ° New Yous, June 17. Lord Loftus arrived here tc-day en route to New South Wales via San Francisco. The steamer conveying Sir Thomas Fran cis Wade, British Minister to China, to Peking, was wrecked in the Yellow Sea. The passengers and crew were saved. DAMAGE BY FLOUDS. Vienna, June 17. There are fresh inundations in Galicia, Silesia and Hungary. Half of the town of Troppan, in Austrian Silesia, is submerged, and the hay harvest is destroyed. Seven iron bridges have been demolished, and the Danube is still rising. ‘ Warsaw, June 17. Seven bridges on the Warsaw & Vienna Railway have been flooded off. Correspondence. anon nal a We do not hold ourselves responsible for he staeiments or opinions of our correspondents. ——— et ee rere * eens een Mr. Annear’s Unfortunate Vote. To the Editor of the Examiner. Sin,— During the last session of our Pro- vincial Parliament, some of the new mem- bers have made themselves prominent by the utter recklessness with which they broke their pledges to the electors. But the mest conspicuous of these is a man by the name of Themas Annear, who, during the election campaign, was leud in his denunciations against the Legislative Couacil as being useless, expensive and of no good whatever. ‘The moment this mighty giant of People’s Rights is elected, he turns his coat, supports a motion to re- tain the Council, and even goes so far as to say that ‘‘ the views of the electcrs must be had on so important a question.” Consist- ent Annear ! who has bewitched you, that you should deceive the electors ! No later than the 25th March last, Mr. Annear, at a meeting held at Valleyfield, gave out the famous words, ‘‘ ll stick to my election card.” But his sticking pro- pensity is miserably deficient—particularly when the pocket isin the way. I am told that Annear is having mighty bright boots in the city. These ave are things we are not used to see him wear. Might not scme one in Opposition supply him with shoe- blacking, and the consequence be a broken pledge ! Any M. P. who has pledged himself to support ‘‘any constitutional — measure introduce to abolish the Legislative Council” and fails to do so is a traitor, and a traitors doom should be pronounced upon him, and is pronounced upon our political Judas Iscariot ; Thomas Annear, M. L. C. I fear, like the Judas of old, “he carries the purse,’ and takes whatever is offered him, from a box of the blacking upwards. The. electors were aware that in Thomas Annear they had a man who loved his pocket better than his country; but they wished the country to understand, that, they, as the electors of the second Electoral District of King’s County for the Legislative Council, wished the Council abolished. O, the wailings of this political Judas for the poor farmer M. L. C. for being brought at such an unseasonable time from their hones, to legislate for the good (/) of their country; so wild were his lamentations, that the electors thought that, if he had the power, he would crash the Council out of existence that very moment for the sake of his dear farm. After he had occupied the cushioned chair for a short time, he found it so com- fortable, that nethiag short of a large bribe, I believe, would make him ‘‘ get up and git.” The fact is, he lacks in almost all the qualities that a statesman should possess. A statesman should have no broken pledges te answer for ; he should serve his country before his pocket or self-glorifica- tion. The affix, no doubt, had a good deal te do with Annear’s conduct on the Council question, as you see he was to lose all his fitles, ete. But what are titles, if character is not there, if the finger of scorn is printed th: man saying ‘‘ there goet the man known only for broken pledges, the country has no faith in him, he has deceived the country, for the sake of an empty title, and, per- haps, a paltry, but almighty dollar.” I would rather respect the most humble of men, than such a man as that; but men of that stamp we have got. We have a man who, with a smiling face, solicited our votes, and who, with tears in his eyes, told us of the sufferings of the poor farmer, alas! alas! Can this be the human being that voted for a continuance of our suffer- ings? A whole constituency answers ‘‘that’s the man, down with him, down with him. The man is Thomas Annear. The Presbyterian man tries hard to de- fend Messrs. Eurns and Annear; but he fails most signally. Can the Presbyterian man see the difference between Mr. An- near’s card and his vote en the Council Bill? I caninform the Presbyterian man that electors of this place de not want him to dictate to their representatives. The only excuse that Mr. Annear has for vio- lating his pledge to the electors, is that he was cae on by Mr. Lawsen, who desired him to voteas he did. Is it a fact, Mr. Lawson ? Knowing, Mr. Editor, that Mr. Annear will be-dealt with as he deserves, I remain, yours, &c., Fioe Hm. Lot 59, June 16, 1879, TURNIP NO, 24, SEED Fresh From Scotland, Laing’s Purple Top, Champion, . fireen Top, Skirving, and the Improved Swede. Wholesale ond fetal, ih BEER & GOFF’S Ch’town, June 2— MORE NEW CLOTHS! — AT— BEER & SONS’ Custom Tailoring Department. June 19, 1879—- PHOTOGRAPHS t MUGEHORD, Sole Licensee for Lambert's Patents for Permanent Photographs, for City and Queen's County. THEY NEVER FADE, as the old Photographs do. ALL THE OLD SORTS HALF PRICE! RICHMOND STREET, Opposite London House — David Wilson’s Old Stand. , P. 8S. ~To THE TRADE. — Photogra »hers wish- ing to supply their Customers with Permanent Pictures, can get their Printing and Enlarging ‘done at reasonable Prices from their own Negatives.—Sample, 25 cts, 35 cts, 60 cts. Ch’town, May 16, 1879—3m law dy & wkly -_—_—— TO LET, aa STORE AND OFFICE iately occu- pied by Mr. John Gillan, in Hyndman’s Brick Building, corner of Queen Sand Water streets. Immediate posse’sion given, Also, SEVERAL ROOMS, suitable for offices, ete., im upper stories same building. For terms, etc., ly to ae JOUN LNGS, <a ema mete ; House to Let. NE HALF that desixable Two-and-a-half Story Dwelling House situate on the eastern side of Upper Prince street, adjoining the grounds of the Hon. Jadge Hensley. Possession given immediately. ag kK. kh. BROW, at Messrs, Hodgson & McLeod’s, Water st. May 7—eod Ai mee. ne ee ne ee COMMERCIAL Union Assurance Company, OF LONDON, ENCLAND. CAPITAL - - $12,500,000. NSURANCE effected against Fire on all descriptions of Property throughout the b Island, ; a@ Sow rates and rromer settlement of losses HORACE HASZARD, ’ Agent for P. E. Island. - Ch’town, Dec, 20, 1878-— STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL —AND— FANCY SALB, Will be held in the Y. M.C. A, Hall, in aid of St. Prrer’s Cuvren, by the members of St. Peters Church Sewing Society, on WEDNESDAY, 2nd JULY. Doors open at 2 p.m. Avslmission 15 cents children 5 cents, Contributions for the Sale will be thankfully received by the Society at its meetings on Thursday afternoons, in the Church School room, or by MRS, E. J. HODGSON, Pres’dt. MRS, ALEXANDER, Treas. MISS JENKINS, Secretary, Ch'town, May 26, 1879.—2aw MOORE & M°DONALD, CABINET-MAKERS, UPHOLSTERERS. ETC. HAMBER-SETTS, in Black Walnut, Ash, &c. ; Parlor, Hall and Dining-Room Fur- niture, in the latest styles.—We are prepared to meet the wants of our customers with pune- REPAIRING neatly executed, - PicturE Frames and Mouldings constantly on hand or made to crder, All kinds of Household Furniture farnished. s@ Don't forget the place: Opposite Mrs. Robertsongs Hotel, Souris East, P. E. Island, April 12—2m eod ———ooo