hive DoL_tars A YRAR. ‘“ This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men having to advise the Public, may speak free,” —Evxtrrprs. . Sinc ie Corres Two CEnts. NEW SERIES. fue Daruy - EXAMINER Is ISSUED EVERY EVENING, EXAMINER _PUBLISHING P. E. Island. | ESCRIPTION : ‘ l +4 Cua riot town, Rates Six Months, or St $2 50 l 25 0 50 ao ie ‘ontns, One Month, ~2~ Advertising at most moderate rates, ‘untracts may be made for monthly, | iarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- | nts, on application. DR. CONROY i to Muich’s Building, CHARLOTTETOWN. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1882 | =) G9: Ge EF mgm EDS W.. & A. BROWN & CO. HAVE JUST OPENED THE FIRST INSTALMENT OF THEIR Fy eee Ss alten” ae Sei mt FALL AND WHEINTER G0008 | Lower Great Geerge Street, OPPOSITE EXAMINER OFFICE. i ' Oct. 12, '82.—1m. wkly 6m | W. WHEATLEY, PAODUCE & COMMISSION M. ACHANT, 269 Barrington Street, HALIFAX, N.S. Consignments solicited. Highest and prompt returns guaranteed. Sept, 19, |882—2aw 2m in ARTHUR & CO., General Commission Merchants Particular attention given to the sale of Island produce. 121 Atlantic Avenue & 20 Essex Avenue, BOSTON, MASS. May 27, 1882—wkly Cat INSURANCE OFFICE. Queen. Insurawee Company, “OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. price 3 | a Insurance effected on all kinds of property at and equitably. . we a ee DESBRISAY & ANGUS, Genera! Agents. Office —South Side (Queen Square, Ch’town, Sept. 15, 1882, Nc JAMES S. SUOTT, Shipping and Commission MERCHANT. Dealer in Fish and Fishing Supplies, POWER’S WHARF, HALIFAX N. S. Special attention paid to the receiving and prompt disposa) of Island produce. Having | extensive wharf accommodation and com- modious stores, Consigumeuts are slicited and prompt returis guaranteed | 64e Weekly market reports forwarded | upon application, and vessels chartered for shippers. P O. address—Lock Drawer 51, Halifax. $e 25 Bank of Nova Scotia. ESTABLISHED 1832, $1,000,000 325,000 Paid Up Capital . . Reserve Fand .. . An Agency of this Bank will be opened on fonday next, 19th inst., in_ the building signed, Deposits will be received on interest, and; on current account. Drafts granted on the varieus Agencies and eorrespondents of the Bank. Sterling and other Exchange bought and sold, and yeweral banking business transacted. D. C. CHALMERS, | Ch’town, June 17, 18S2—tf Agent. | W. C. BISHOP, SHIPPrPIN @ | —AND-— | FORWARDING AGENT, Marine Insurance Broker, --AND— General Commission Agent, } BEDFORD KOW, P. 0. BOX 1 HALIFAX, N. 8. ARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the, Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks thereon. Hulls, Cargoes, and Freights insured in first-class offices at most favorable rates, Consignments of Produce solicited, and} prompt returns guaranteed, Correspondence solicited and promptly. Nav, 14, 1881—1yr ans wered 42 CASES, 28 BALES. A lot of Manchester Goods to follow shortly. Charlottetown, Sept. 22, 1882. ——- as 5 : = wm nen ED. Pre BRW ck, MERCHANT TAILOR, | Archibald HeXeii & Forbes, SHIPPING AND SSS WHOLESALE & RETAIL TRADES" asus. Advances made on consignments of produce. 44 SOUTH STREET, NEW YOrkK,. C.H MeNam, Agent, Charlottetown, } Oct. 25, ’82.—~iw _. HENRY TERRELL, SHIPPER’S AGENT, Ail Kinds of Produce bought and shipped ob Commission, Sole Agent forthe New Sheep Dip. Tracadie Cross & Bedford Station)P.E, |. | > Oct. 12, '82.—wkly 2m — PA CARD. DR. W. TOBIN, ‘Fellow of the Royal Coll ge of Sur- geons, Ireland, Member of the Hing and Queen's College of Physicians, Lreland, Late Surgeon Army Medical Dep't, | AS made a special sindy of diseases of the Eye, karand Throat, in Paris and London, and proposes to devote his practice . lo them, Is: now’ offering Cash Buyers the BEST VALUE that can be had in the market, in Broadcloth, Worsted, Scotch and Canadian Tweed Suits. : A magnificent range of GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, —In— ‘ } AMERICAN WHITE & COLORED SHIRTS, Collars, Ties, Underclothing, English and American Hats, . fashionably cut, well sewed, and having good trimmings, Wili be sold as Cheap as Imported. We invite you to inspect our Goods. mena . * Aw BRUCE, Charlottetown, Ma, 22. 222, 72 Qneen Street, tf r}MHE proprietor of this Establishment, owing to the increased | demand for his Goods, has added new facilities to his Bakery, consisting’ of the latest and most improved machinery, etc., and is now prepared to supply the trade with Hard Bread, Plain and Fancy Biscuits, &c., AT THE SHORTEST NOTICE, 70; To arrive per Steamship ‘‘ Miramichi,’ from Montreai. Ye Orders by mail promptly executed. J, QUIRK, Prince Street, Charlottetown, P. E. Islaud May 4, 1882, For Scotch and English Tweeds or Worsted... Suits For Canadian Tweed Suits, For Overcoats of all Descriptions, -GO ToO- f : { a 7 f t 1€ ty A y j ° s z = e — ny oe ? 5 yg _ + . 2 ’ | ' ; 7 = | i; i = { } ‘ ' , i too 3°. 8. 4 } i ft ' SSS : id gle Sates es UPPER QUEEN STREET, ‘TWO DOORS ABOVE APOTHECARIES HALL CORNER) 295 oe. | ‘There you will find the largest and best assortment of Cloths in” the, Island. Prices very moderate, wuaranteed, —ALSO-— A complete Jine of Gents’ Furnishings and Felt Uats, echeap,&c. c. Remember the address, two doors above Ay iaecaries Hall Corner Obsrloktetcwn, Oct 11, 1881, bom Sa i r | Our Reatymate Clothity” is Maufactured on the Premises,’ Consultations at his residence, No. 9 South St., Haliiax, N. 8. Hours, 10 to '2a,m, 2 to4 p.m. Oct 11, 82, im New Tobacco Factory, RiICHHOAD STRERT. F¥YHE Subscribers wish to inform the public that they have opened a TOBACCO ‘MANUFACTORY on Richmond Street, in the estatlishment formerly occupied by Mr, Philip Coyle, and are prepared to sujply the trade with St, Tobacco of all kinds, as good as can be purchased in the city, and at toweet prices. | §@F Patronage solicited and orders prompt- ly filled, - COYLE & McQUAID. Ch'town , July 31, 1882—3m 2aw wky 8 jo anathema ‘ - . . , ee tee ee ~ DENTISTS, oN lately occupied by the Baak of Prnnce Edward | * ! Island, ‘ae the annenanent of the under- 1000 lbs. CHOILCH CON RECTION E RY "| Tae best workmansiip ani a perfect fit! gace dys ‘O.0S BULLDING, Opp. Post OFricn, Cucrcoitetown, P, EI. NEW. June 5. 1852—law i —~p oe ons alland wedinm investments *4p grain, provisi ns and stock {; speculatio «. cun do so by oper ating oo @ur pian. From May ist, Isl, to the present cate, on in- ¥estinents of 610 00 to $1,000, cash WHEAT: profits ave Ueen realhzed and pei to investers amounting to severai Times tie original invest- nent, still leawibg the original in- vegtment muking, money or pay- abvie on denrand. Explansatory cir- culars and. statements of fund W sent free. We want espynsible agents, who will report on crops and introduce the plan. Liberal evrmmiss ons. paid. Address, F EMMING A MERRIAM, Com- pmiasion eee, Majer Block, STOCKS Caleago, li $100 $< —_———— WICH. HE btsiness heretofore carried on by the undersigtted and the late A. B. Stewert, | under the ty}! and firm’ of Hick: y & Srew- arr, Tohaceé “Manufacturers, will be con- jtinued by the subscriber under the same i style, , MICHAELHICK# Y, MV "town, ke 4.1229 nat +f PARIS, 1878. GOLe MEDAL, |‘ “th ine _JOSEPH GILLOTT'S STEEL PENS. BY ALL DEALERS THROUGHOUT THE -:_, WORLD. POSITIVeE CURE “Without Medicines. ALLAN SOLUBLE MEDICATED oh LO BOUGIES. Patente@October1é6th, 1876. One box No. 1 : less the most obstinate case, no g Standing doves or cabebs, copaiba, or matter of B No na oil of sa by destroying the coatings of (the stomach Price $1° Sold by all druggists, or | mailed on ipt of price. For further par re sen@or circular P.O. Bex 1,533. J,G@ ALLAN CO, 88 Joho street \go 1 —iyt ” New \ des VOL 1L-—-NO, 137 i me The Capture of Tol-el-Kebir. SCENES AND INCIDENTS OF THE BATTLE — NARRATIVE OF AN OFFICER WITH THE BRITISH FORCE. breathing spell the men strolled about look- ing into every tent and overhauling the contents. The niost absurd scenes were enacted on all sides. , Hera a gigantic Juardsmen was putting on the white tunic of an Egyptian ; there a sturdy artillery- men was strutting about in the flowing Cane Teu-yt-Kesre, Sept. ass mn robes-of a Bedouin ; camels and loose horses Our * ouly general” has made his effort) were eareering about and # Jatge’ body of and delivered his blow, and the Egyptian) prisoners, under strung éscort, were being army is a thing of the past! Of course you! marched to the place ‘allotted te taem. in England know all about it, and proba! ly) Among, them was a wounded. Egyptian more than we on the spot do, but some few officer carried on a litter 6v his own men. details from an eye witness may interest) Hy was evidently of high rank and had a Ue . re‘inue of servants with him. After the ection of the 9th, troops came| Very soon we were all settled in the tents pouring into ‘the camp at Kassassin. The| which had been so lately occupied by our ghland brigade arrived the day after, | enemies. Some of tha tents were ivery with Sir E. Hamley and Sir A. Allison. | p.rgeous affairs, Arabi’s was magnificent The 11th passed over quietly, but on the} _pnilt with crimson and gold brocade and 12th came the longed for order, ‘‘ Pack divided into three compartments, in. one of everything ; strike tents after dark ; troops! which were two beds with spring mattresses. to bivouac; no bugles to be sounded.” His state chair was in the centre of the The leash against which the troops had jargest compartmer:ts, and several unepened been straining was to be slipped at last and J|uteers addressed tu him were on the table. we could go in at theenemy. All the offi- The tent was immiédiately occupied ‘by cers’ light baggaye and the men’s valises General Willis commanding the, First were stacked by the line of railway long division, and hin ataff. ay before the appointed hour, and the moment [yn the evening the news came into camp the silent signal was given down came every of the total collapse of the Egyptian army tent, the troops marched out with quick gi@ of theend of the campaign as far as light step to the bivousc, and then came @ mere fighting is cuneerned: The whole great and most impressive hnsbh—not & camp rang with the cheers of the victorious sound but the occasional stamp of a horse ; troops, whe had in se short:a tinve! enti with! wAIE cure any case in four days or bottle and on the fourth something else, ood, that are certain te pree! notalight, All was as stil,.as the grave, and it wes almost impossible\to realize the fact that the enemy had not a single out-, post, not a single sentry beyond the line of is works. Daybreak found most of the regiments close on to the intrenchments, some of them lying on the very brink«of: the diteh.)! As the first rays of morning lit up the sand wastes the enemy seemed to wake suddenly and instantly the parapets burst into life and flame. The fire was something awful, atid had the Arabs shot as straight as the shot fast no mortal troops could have dean up against iti Most of the bullets flew over the heads of owr men as they rushed on ; but many ‘a one found its billet. | On went. the assaulting regiments, the soldiers jumping down or rolling into the ditch and then ‘scrambling on to the para-, pet, some to fall back again to the bottom and lie there dead or wounded ; others slipped down the sandy slope,‘but imme- diately tried again until at last they gained the top. Then eame the cold steel and it i was all over with the lgyptians. They could not stand it, and in ten minutes from the first shot they were in fuli flight across the open. Here they suffered terribly from the quick, incessant fire of the: Martini- Henri, and the gronnd was strewn thick with their dead. Without aw attempt to rallp--indeed, without any)possibility of r they _were.-driven.. in beadlon eahebr aera the cone “Phen the eae suit was taken tp by the cavalry, who followed them all day and slaughtered them by the handred. Zagazig, Belbeis and Benha fell successively into the hands of Geteral Drury Lowe, dnd then Cairo, itsvif.. The, Bengal, Lancers . must ‘have | been in their element, as they are the very troops for that kind of work. I fancy they disposed of many of their coréligionists ! In taking these formidable hes, garrt- soned by 18,000 regulars, and 7,000 velun- teers and Bedouims, the regulars being }arn.ed with Rewington rifles, and defended ' by fifty-eight Krupp breech-losding cannon, we lost 60 killed and 480 wounded, and did the job in as’ little time as it takes one to shave comfortably! It is ‘reported that | Arabi himself said that if the English could ‘turn hin: out of his lines at Tel-«)-Kebir diate surrender seems to prove the report . Tt is certain he had placed his best ‘troops here.” true. CITY STEAM BAKERY.” - iisscase See YOUR’ CAPITAL. ' Thos destring to make money ‘One group of dead interestéd me greatly, | anv I shoald have lik d to have’ seen the incident. A Highlander, quite a boy, was lyi.g with his legs entwined with those of a big Arab, whose brains were protruding from a bullet wound in the head; four other | Arabs layaround them, All six were stone { dead, and you could haye covored the lot | with asheet. I fancy in the eagerness of | pursuit the lad had rushed on too far, be- came separated from his comrades, and was overpowered by numbers. He had appar-, ‘ently killed five men before he himselt fell. | I told some of his comrades near by of the spot where his body lay, and so insured him’ decent and immediate burial. Shortl» after I met a young officer of the Seven y- oorth Highlanders riding back on -acawel. He was shot in the wrist and lez, but was quite cheery, His scldier-servant {was leading the camel and had a bundie of rifles and sword-bayonets under his arm, to be sent home, I suppose, as +trophies. The officer was in high feather at having ‘*thown them a touch of the Highland spirit,” as he put it, and told me how he had cut two men down with his claymore ‘and shot a mounted officer through the) heart with his revolyer. He was just rais- .iag his hand to catch the dead man’s horse when a bullet went through his wrist, and then another hit him on the leg. The loss of the horsé seemed to grieve the young blood much more than his wounds, which, _as he said, were nothing to those of some of , its men, Yet another incident. A subaltern rush- {ed wack to his colonel, crying out, ‘I've got them, sir!. I’ve got them!’ On the colonel ingniring what it was he had got it turned out that; followed by a handful of his men, he had charged Straight at a battery, shot down or bayoneted all the gucners and taken four guns. On one of the cannon he had slung his revolver, on »nother his have sack, on a third his water | thus inarking them as regimental p izes. ' He.was Ladly wountéed, but will, 1 trust, live to’ fight aucther day.as well as he has ju this his first battle. The Hyhland brigade, the Eighteenth, |Eighty-fourh, Eight)-seventh, marines, with the Guards in reserve, were the troops wiuch acrually took the works, but th: , Guards bid not get up until the rush hac ‘+ wpt over the first line of intrenchuents, the sword: the Gordian, .kniot whieh had puzzled diplomatists for.months.., 9° 1 Now, hey for Old Engaad ! ——-— 1-79 <p Oars Tiger Killing in Java. The following is a translation .of an ex- traordinary ‘report, published iu the Java, Bode, the ‘chief paper of ‘Batavia :—** Yes-. terday (July 2), so says the Mataram, a newspaper at Djcodjakatra, there took place here the announced clearaves among the. tigers belongitig to His Highness the Sulan in order to make room for, fresh supply when the: uger pens wil] be built. At about ten a.m. the Sultan, the Resi- dent Military Commander, Assistant Resi- dent and other spectators appeared behind the Kraton and seated’ themselves in * rand stand constructed for the purpose. heusands of Jayangse flucked to the spot to see the combats. Soon a fight between a Poyal tiger ands ouffalo together in a Swas commenced. The tiger was several imes tossed into the air and then gored| to eath by the buffalo. whieh had been made as furious as possible by peppered water, burning nettles and -red-hot, iron bars. , The combat lasted fully two hours. _ After- ward began the rampvken or tiger flight. Qn the plain alongiide the Kraton stood: Javanese armed with stent spears fifteen to eighteen feet long, drawn. up in rews ene betumd. the other, forming an extraordinary large square. The two fore- most rows lay kneeling, the two hindmest stuod erect. In the centre of this open space were thirteen straw-roofed wooden. pens, in‘ gach of whieh was «tiger. “Ata given signal. a musical instrument calied the gamelan begins playing @ martial air to slow measure, Toree tiger keepers then step out of the ranks and approach the cage. Two.of them bear obok a burning torch, with which they. set fire to the straw. Thé° tiger, frigntened by the shower of sparks; is then forced out into the open space, but knows! not)whither toturn It theves around arid seeks whether itcan find | an outlet, until it: endeavors either by,a desperate . spring to. ges away over the human wall which keeps jt enclosed or tries to creep through underieath. But it falls pierced by the mauy ‘spears which have struck it: Tt ntters a savaye cry, which’ is drowned by the arplause and ‘shouts of the maltitnde, in silent agony it strikes, around fuclously with,-bis might paws. The shafts of the spears often br like glags. In such cases a single blow might cost the life of any unfortunate with- in reach of ite claws. [t is afterward killed in due form. This scene took place in the same way thirteen times successively with as many tigers, the festivity clhusing at two p.m. Only a few accidents occurred One soldier, by ill Jack, received a spear thrust when combating with a tiger, and was severely sounded in the tee . A’native received a bite when one the tigers broke throngh the square and was killed outside of it, after causing great commotion among the spectators. —-— — —_—_——— — Personai—Gossip. Walt Whitman the poet is lying seriously ill at his residence, Camden, N. J The man Souter, who was convicted of stealing the body of the Earl or Crawford and Balcarres, has been sentenced to tive years’ penal servitude. A correspondent writes to the London Daily News :—‘* As Sir Garnet Wolseley is 10 be. created « peer, several provincial papers have been giving statements as to his tamily and descent which are very er- roneous, for Sir Garnet, elthiugh an -Irish- man, isin veality, ne of the Staflordshire W. lecleys, who are undoubtediy one of the oldest famiiies in the kingdom. Mrs. Langtry is unquestionally a very beautiful woman. Her beauty is of the kind that baffles photography, and ‘those who have seen her pictures only, have no eenception of the charm of berface, Her Complexion is pure and white and almost transparent, There is on cither cheek a dull, rich, ard scarcely distinguishable colur that softens the cuntour of the face, but otherwise her skin is »s white as snow. The ears are as purely white es the fore- head, and the eyebrows are beautifully out- lined, The mouth in repese has a pathetic or serieus ¢tpression end the hps are as lewiy cut as statue’s. When she smiles perfect teeth are revealed, and the cheeks wrinkle up into two deep litle dimples. The eyes, however, are the Wost wivuing feature of all, They are wonderfu'ly ex- preasive, and certainly very effective, fur tiey do remarkable work. Mre Largery raises them slowly, and glences around an! the rest of the work, as J have suid, was Jeft to the cavatry. After a short ; rato the feces of the wen eb—ub ber leuk. Bog at ea one fal UT eee oe My an