a aS Se ae. es Anniversary Items. Oct. 22.—The edict of ), in favor of Protestants, WEDNESDAY, Nantes, (\W. Fran cegned h y Henry TV. anno 1598, was re- wyked by Louis NTV., the 22nd of October, 1635. Awful eruelties were committed here by the republican, Carrier, anno 1793. The wholes. frowning of royalists in the Loire command of at Nantes, was by Carrier. Ninety-four Priests were drowned at one t he himself was condemned to death an} guillotined Dee. 16, 179% Drowning was a very ancient punishment. The Britons | infleted death by drowning in a quagmire | vbe.ore B, 150 iLecal and Other Items. Mone beautiful weather. _ -~-<- - — Srorm Drum ordered up to-day. — ~ Wuen a coachman marries be is a groom. > Lavy MacbONALD has returned to Ottawoe, ideo AsrTrRacAN and Seal Cloths at Perkins & Sterns. [21 ect22 + — Aine lot of Family Bibles opened at the Diamond Bookstore. ‘sie Asides SrLenpip value in Blankets and Comforts at Perkins & Sterns’. {2i oct22 - > —= rejoices in the possession of Mr, rke’s priz squash. - > — Suawts and Mantles in great variety at Perkias & Sterna’, [21 oct22 —_-+~~»-_— Have you seen those 5 cent historical works at the Diamond Bookstore ? _ > —- Wat we should like to see—the plankway at the north side of Rochford Square renewed. - >-~- THE invitation to Rev. D. D, Currie, to take the pastorate of the Moncton circuit next year, has been declined by him. - --— fue Woodside Sugar Refinery, at Dart- mouth, N. S., is now at work and is turn- ing out 80 tons of refined sugar per day. ——— Caprais Micuart Hickey, of the firm of Hickey & Stewart, left this morning for Louisville, Ky., to select their winter supply of tobacco leaf. Me NCTON R. Bou sseidilaiipslliita Tue bark George Peake, D. A. McDonald master, to Peake Bros. & Co., with a cargo of general merchandise, from Liverpool, ar- rived here the 22nd inst. -_—- o- — A TROTTING match between Young Ham, and Black Pilot, for a purse of 350, is billed to come off at Upton Park, on the 29th inst, Ex- citing sport is promised. — > — Lievur. Morson, Adj. of the P. E. Island Brigade of Garrison Artillery, left yesterday morning to join the Royal School oi Artillery, Quebec, for a spec'al course of instruction. chibi Ma. W. A. Brennan, editor and proprietor of the Summerside ./ournal, has gone to Bos- ton end New York to purchase a new outfit for iss printing establishment recently des- troyed by fire. « o-— Tue 7'imes esues, as a supplement, The /n- dustrialand Commercial Inder, with a view of Moncton, and descriptions of the various en- terprises in which the town is engaged, All very creditable to Mr. Stevens. > G. Suita, of the Lambton woollen mills, has forwarded by the Grand Trunk a large consigament of Canadian made tweeds and woollens cn route to England. Should the shipment result successfully others will be made regnlarly. slits Exuterrs for the Woerld’s Industrial Exhi- bition, to be held at New Orleans on the first Moaday in December, seut throught Mr. Worden, the United States Counsel, will be trausported without expense to the sender. Mr. Worden will be happy to give further information needed by intending exhibitors. oo A Larner number of persons in this Province have seen the great bears caught and shown by Mr. Sellick, and have pronounced them the largest and finest they have ever seen. They are to be taken, to-morrow, to Nova Scotia where they will be exhibited in the principal towns, and will then pass on to New Brunswick. _ - > - --- Tue steamer Worcester, Captain Allan, ar- rived from Boston this morning with freight, and Miss Agaes McCole, Miss Maggie L. Arthar, Mr. James Robinson, Mrs. Morrison, Master Albert Morrison, Miss Ellen Moren, May Moren, Antana Mulligan, Mrs. Mary Purcell, Mra, Dewar, and E, G, Worden and luly friend as passengers. - i -—- Aw ‘interesting event” took place at the residence of Robert McLeod, Esq., West River, on the 22nd inst. The bride was the eld-st daughter of Mr. McLeod, one of the most popular young ladies of the locality, an’ the groom, Mr. Alex. D. McDonald, who has for the past eight years taught the New Glas- gow Grammar School. We congratulate our young friends avd wish them success. — Mr. W. D. McKay, Manager of the Char- lottetown Woolen Factory, has presented Mr. John A Nicho!son with the first prize suit of tweed clothing, as a recognition of services realerelia arranging and putting up their exhibits im the Drill Shed, at the Provincial Exhibition, We are pleased to see Mr. Nicholson receiving this recognition frem the Company. ‘the exhibits this year have, under lis direction, been better arranged than in any previous year. onitiingne Turre are several loose planks in the side- walk on Water St., near the Railway Station, which require a little attention from the City Surveyor. A gentleman passing that locality last evening stepped upon the end of one of them, and the ot her end was instantly elevated heavenward, coming down almost immediately with a noise resembling thunder, in close proximity to the feet of a lady coming from the opposite direction, This is not the only crievance of this nature citizens are obliged to innumerable = exist tolerate. Man-traps our principal th-roughfares, under the very noses of the City Councillors, yet they never, or hardly ever, make & move in the direction of improvement People, unthinkingly, blame the Sarveyor for the present disgraceful condition of our side- but, from what we know of that official, we cannot believe that it is owing to either neglect or incapacity on his part. Chere is altogether too mach red tape in our civic government. Let the Council appoint tT Walks; a Surveyor in whose ability they have confi- dence, pay him a salary sufficient to make him take an interest in his work, give him the privilege of selecting men and materials for the work he has to perform, and we venture the prediction that fhe present disgracefyl will speedily hive am end—and er.of thin = till t ‘o a TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. [SproraL Despatcues ro Tue EXAMINER, } Great Fire. CarruacppN. Y , Oct. 21. One hundred and sixty buildings were burned by yesterday's fire, which was the largest that has ever occurred in Northern New York. Among the buildings burned were all the schoolhouses, the Presbyterian, Baptist, and Episcopalian Churches, the Chureh of the Disciples, Parsonages, and Town Hall seedless ihe Chinese Situation. Paris, Met. 22. di _ Chinese troops continue to pour into Porguin. Great uneasiness is felt in Paris on this account. The Cabinet are divided as to what measures should be adopted to provide reinforcements. General Cam- penon, Minister of War, declines to mobilize an army corps without the authority of the Chambers. Cremated Alive. Tunne.tton, W. Va., Oct. 21. _ While three men and a boy were examin- ing a crack in the top of one of Thomas’ coke ovens, a mile east of this place, last night, the oven caved in, carrying with it the men. The poor unfortunate fellows were cremated. Egyptian News, Carro, Oct. 21. Ralli Brothers, bankers, have suspended. There is a great panic in the city. Three hundred and seventy eight Oana- dian boatmen have arrived at Asonia. Exchanging Shots. Parts, Oot. 21. Chinese advices state that a French cor- vette has been exchanging shots with Fai Wan port, on the west coast of Formosa. The corvette subjects all approaching steamers to search. Results of the Fire. CartnaceE, N. Y., Oct. 21. The fire of yesterday wrought wide- spread desolation ; hundreds are homeless. The loss is over half a million. Scores of persons were badly burnt. The Late A. M. Sullivan. Dvusuiy, Oct. 21. The Lord Mayor of Dublin, and others, have subscribed £1,500 pounds for the benefit of the late A. M. Sullivan’s family. fhe Marquis of Salisbury Stoned. Lonpon, Oct. 22. The Marquis of Salisbury was attacked by a mob in Dumfries, at which place he was speaking. They stoned him in his carriage. Weather Bulletin Probabilities for the next 24 hours for the Maritime Proviinces. Toronto, Oct. 22--10 a. m. South to west winds, fair to cloudy weather, with local showers; higher temperature, METROLOGICAL OFFICE. Charlottetown October 22, 1884. Highest Temperature Saturday.......... 51. Lowest Temperature (read at midnight), . .38.4 Lowest l'emperature this morning........40 9 ‘Temperature this morning, at 8 o'clock. .50.8 Temperature this afternoon at 1 o'clock. .59.0 A Lance and varied stock of Dress Goods at Perkins & Sterns’. [2i oct22 — Ar the fruit and vegetable show which opened at the Crystal Palace, London, on the 7th inst., some remarkably fine specimens of apples from Nova Scotia were exhibited. Six special prizes, says the Gazette, were awarded to Nova Scotia exhibits, the silver cup being won by Dr. H. O. McLatchy, of Wolfville. ee Ucsrer and Mantle Cloths, very good and cheap, at Perkins & Sterns’. f2i1 oct22 ean + « i t La NEWS. SHIP PORT OF CHARLOTTETOWN, ENTERED. Oct 2l—River Queen, Buffett, Burgeois, N fid; herring; Cora, Melsaac, Sydney, coal; Maggie Jaue, NcLean, New London; Sea Bird, Hyde, Murray Harbor, ballast; Zetland, McKenzie, Pugwash, lumber; K Boak, Curry, Pictou, coal; I Dare, Sprague, Northport. Oct 22—Lord Lyons, Proctor, Port Hawkes- bury, herring; Sunbeam, Eldridge, Halifax via Souris, molasses; Lina May, Cook, Port Hawkesbury, bal; Show Queen, Corkum, Crapaud; ss Worcester, Allen, Boston, 1,125 bris flour (Uanadian) and general cargo mdse; Prospect, McMilian, Wood Islands. CLEARED, Oct 21-- Maggie Jane, McLean, New London; Spirit of the Day, Mason, Pictou, bal; Sea Bird, Hyde, Murray Harbor, mdse; Viola, Geldert, Picton, bal; Cora, McIsaac, Pownal Bay. bal; Morning Light, Walker, Halifax, 1,800 bush oats, 700 potatoes; Confederate, Robertson, Pictou, bal; Elsie G., Naugle, Pictou, bal; 1 Dare, Sprague, Northport. Ovt 22--Mary Charles, Leger, Shediac, bal; Prospect, McMillan, Wood Islands. HOTEL ARRIVALS. REVERE HOUSE. Oct. 21.—C H Martin, Montreal; James F Black, do; L Lewis, do; Wm Richards, Bides ford; J Ht Myrick, ‘lignish. SARRIED. At the residence of the bride's parents’ West River, on the 2nd inst., by tiie Rev’ William Grant, Mr. Alex. D. McDonald, of New Glasgow, to Miss Maggie J., eldest daughter ot Robert McLeod, Esq. At Marshfield, on the 15th inst.,by Rev. A. W. Mahon,Wm Rogers, of Moncton, to Grice Scott Rogers, of Marshfield. At the Rocklin House, Charlottetown, on the 2!st inst., by men, a a Danie} Charles , 8 of Victoria, Vancouver Island, to weit Pinkhant, of Georgetown. THE DAILY for him, not improbable death. /oue proud Scottish chief suffered the ex- Flora Macdonald. _— An interesting illustration of how that which in one generation is arrant treason | . . . becomes in another an heroic myth, is pre- sented by the erection, on the Isle of Skye, in Scotland, of a monument te Flora Mac- donald. He who reads history bet to glean its romance, cannot fail to remember the significance of her name, and the dramatic incidents in which she became the heroine of the famous Scottish rebellion of ’45. In those days, to be a Jacubite, and even to sympathize with the Pretender Charles Ed- ward, was to risk personal liberty ; to act More than treme penalty after ‘‘ Butcher William,” Duke of Cumberland, throttled the rebellion on Culloden Moor. Gradually, however, the bitterness against the Jacobites who clung, almost hopelessly to the house of Stuart, softened and faded, until at last Sir Walter Scott, an historical partisan of the Pretender, though an obsequiously loyal subject of George IV., could, with popular applause, publish prose epics of fiction which embalmed the Jacobite chiefs as herces, and Flora Macdonald as a heroine to be worshipped for her courageous trea- son. It was she who, when Charles Ed- ward, defeated at all pints in his rash enterprise, was hiding on the western sea- board, saved his hfe by embarking with nim on a stormy night among the danger- ous Hebrides, and conducting him to a place of safety. Her resolute heroism fascinated the young prince, albeit he was worn out with the excesses of a dissipated life; and long afterward, when he had degenerated into a mere drunken sluggard, whenever Flora’s name was mentioned, he always raised his hat in veneration for the Scottish beauty who had preserved his life at the peril of her own. Gruff Dr. Johnson, that ** colossus of cockneys,”’ on his memorable tour to the ‘‘ canny land” which he was always sneering at, visited the Isle of Skye, where Flora Macdonald was still living, now in the ripe prime of womanhood. ‘‘ She is a woman,” says he, in his notes of the journey, ‘‘of middle stature, soft fea- tures,” gentle manners and elegant pre- sence.” Indeed, Flora was far from being one of those ideal heroines who boldly use physical as well as moral exertion in performing notable deeds, and who are strong of body and stout-minded; she was slight and frail, shy and shrinking, inexperienced, a high-bred Highland lassie ; and what she did she achieved by that spirit of self-abnegation, which, on occasion, sometimes shines out and star‘ les the sterner sex in the weak and timid woman. She believed Charles Edward to be her true liege-lord and king, and her proud Highland blood taught her that loyalty was a religion. The reward of thirty thousand pounds for Charles Edward's head, offered by the government, only nerved her the more for her attempt, and she gloried in encountering for him the dangers of a tempestuous island- studded sea, in courting martyrdom, and in risking life itself, that the true monarch might be saved from the hand of the usurper. Flora was taken prisoner after the success of her venture, and when Charles Edward was once more safe in France; and even then, her sincere heroism and loyalty to her belief so out- shone her treason, that the officers of the war-ship in which she was brought to London always stood bareheaded in jher presence, and the rough old British captain showered comforts, in his uncouth way, upon her. She was released, after a short imprisonment, by the Act of Indemnity; Was thereupon lionized to weariness by Jacobite lords and Scottish chiefs ; returned to her native Skye and quietly married her cousin, Macdonald of Kingsborough; lived a long and always a peaceful life, adored by her neighbors and all the peasants round for the many virtues, making, on one occasion a brief visit to our shores; and died in the green old age, leaving behind her five stalwart Highland sons, who fought for King George as loyally as their mother before them had served her crownless prince. >_> - ae Toleration for all religions has been pro- claimed in Cuba. Go to Perkins & Sterns’ for extra value in Velveteens. {2i oct22 Several Republican leagues have been formed in Belgium. A FINE line of Railway Rugs at Perkins & Sterns’. [21 oct22 The Democratic majority in West Vir- ginia, is about 4,000. There was a serious riot by students, at Moscow, a few days ago. Execution by electricity is proposed in Vermont. Tne Canada Gazette contains a despatch from the colonial office, in regard to the status of colonial barristers in English courts. There are complaints as to the misman- agement of the Erie canal. General trade in the United States con- tinues dull, and no immediate improvement is expected. J. R. Williams, of Lincoln, Neb., a Sunday-school superintendent, has ab- sconded with $27,000. It is probable that a provincial police will be formed for Quebec. A farmer's son wascut to pieces by a threshing machine near Orilla, a few Jays ago. The investigation into the explosion at Quebec is still proceeding, but nothing has yet been elicited. A public meeting will be called in Montreal, on November 4th, to devise means fer the establishment of a Protestan: insane asylum. The exports of cheese this year have been unprecedentedly large, aggregating 951,- 581 boxes, which is an increase of over 100 per cent. as compared with 1880. The national democratic committee have issued an address on the Ohio and Wesi Virginia elections and ‘ienouncing Blaine’s persOaal career. DIED. In Frovitence, Sunday, Oct. 12, Mra. Margaret Tienderson, widow of Donald Hen- ders: i, former! of P. E. Island. Nova Sota papers pldade copy.) EX A MIN Perkins HR, OCTOBER 22, 1884. FALL & of the very low. English Silks, Brocade Velvet. Ulsters, Shawls, Kc. Goods, newest and best value. Men’s Caps, Ladies’ Fur Caps. Splendid Value in Ch’ town, Oct. 17, L884. Ch’town, Sept. 27, 1884. CONSTRUCTED ON A New and Improved Principle, CONTAINING Every Facility for Cocking. Ch’town, Oct, 1. NEW & FASHIO attentiun, Oh'town, Sept. 24, 1884. Coats, Alexandra Jackets, Jerseys, Xe. New Millinery, Hats, Bonnets, &., very stylish. Berlin Wool~— Beehive, Victoria, Rutland, Albany, Saxony, Alloa, Universal, and other yarns. Flannel, White Flannel, French Twill Flannel, Tweed Shirtings, Tartan Plaids, Xe. FALL IMPORTATIONS! | The Bulk of our Fall Stock is now Oven, and we are Prepared FIRST CLASS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT. CASH CUSTOMERS AND WHOLESALE BUYERS HAVE A LOCE AT OVUB: STOCE. BEFORE BUYING ELSEWHERE (ima zn = = we in we = ' af C OMBI | A 1 aU | | Tt 1 8B. 7 \ om 1 Jems we |, Se ic _/A__ oh = ww s EVERY STOVE WARRANTED. | W.& A. Brown & Co. Ilave now Opened and Ready for Inspection a very Large Stock of WHROLEBMSATLEH AND RAETATI. Remsmber the Place: Tremaine & Metcalf’s old Stand, next Door to Messrs. Beer & Goff. <=> The New Brick Store will not be opened till Ist April next. = & Sterns’ WINTER GOODS Very Best Value. ( UR Stock of Velvetees is large, and includes all colors in Plain and Brocaded, and marked Satins, Velvets ond Plushes, all shades. New Feather Trim- ming, New Stripe Satin, New Astracan Trimming, New Spot Silks, New Cheinlle Ruching, New A Grand Display of Knit Wool Goods, in £quares, Scarfs, Jackets, Scarboro Fur-lined Cloaks, Rubber Circulars, Dolmans, Jackety, Grey Flannel, Scarlet, Dress Large Stock of Wincey, Prints, &c. Boys’ Cloth and Fur Caps, Biankets, Comforts and Counterpanes, ALL PERSONS WANTING WINTER GOODS SHOULD SEE OUR STOCK. PERKINS & STERNS. “~e — — ee ee - ne ES ee eee 10 Give Buyers VALUE —WILL DO WELL TO— W. A. WEERS & Co. QUICK AND PERFECT = IN If3 OPERATION, AND Easily Managed. Simon W. Crabbe, Sign of the Stove, Walker’s Corner. NABLE FALL & WINTER GOODS, JUST RECEIVED FROM THE BRITISH AND FOREICN MARKETS. Prices of all classes of Merchandise are very Moderate this season, therefore we are offering all lines of Dry Goods at prices that are bound to sell them, me The Following Special Lines are Marked Down Low — Millinery, Jackets, Dolmans,and Ulsters, Fancy Goods,Wool Goods, Velveteens, Silk Velvets and Plushes, Black and Brocaded Silks, Dress Goods, (Black and Colored) Black Merinoes and Cashmeres, Black Crapes, Fur Cloaks, Capes, and Trim- mings, Black Skirts, Scarlet and Grey Flannels, Gent’s Wool Underclothing. Asloa very large Stock of Heavy Staple Goods. ca 45,150 yds. Grey Cotton Marked cown to 6c. and4c. A large Stock St. John Cotton Warps at Mill Prices. If you want Genuine Bargains do not fail to call at BROWN’S, where you willfreceive every STOR Sar er