ety eens See — ; —_— ee ne a 9 en a eed P MISSIONARY MELTING we regret is that a number of young peoxy | Shlonines intellizenes 7 . ani { | 1 ? } senate ple disturbed the speaking by retiring ee ne ee ere. Latest Styles and Cheanesl Rates ' Daily Ay ils Tus Missionary Meeting held in the during the delivery of the speeches. It,” rp r OF CH \RLOTTE roWwN yet egcitanti vf e Prince Street Methodist Church last night | WAS exceedingly annoying to the spedRérs Ti: re 7 : ie ke —AT THE— was one Of tho mos interesting meetings and y ry unbecoming in a plice of worship, : ; CLEARED TH i I \ A VINER of the kind which we have attended, Ybe | particula, 'y so when no one who has the ‘i a aoe er lisa : 7 . aa ae io on eee: LONDON HOUSE f faitdr was 006 .d by William McKechnie. | least intelligence couid fail to be inters 1.002 do oats: \ ' sas . Scott. Mint, v. BOOK & JOB | * Exq;, who brief idressed the audience |Soted, a ; wae Catt, ie del ) falifex, 1,430 | uh fag | agate tame se “yin How, Bay rad abel SHE ADDIPIONAT Forace Pouce, |W Seussicd nualteotgownt tee! Printing ‘Depart nt sith. William Heard, Esq., read a brief, | 1 ABOITONAL FOLICK FORCE, (Snow, Crapaad, mi {se,; Us A. Hell, Bell, | | li) Ne Cpa me mut succinct, and interesting report, show- | 3 C ‘pe Lraverse, bal; S. G. Lewin.. Grifiia, ! 100 PAI RS um of 8146030 had beea | WE notice that some of our contempos | ifilifax, 2500 bus, ‘3, 590 do vur- a ing tha! th , collected during the past year by the Methodist issionary Society of theDs- mipion of Canada, about $2000 of which had been subscribed in Charlottetown: The Rev. E. Ryerson Young, one of the deputation from the headquarters of the Methodist Missionsry Society to tae Lower assel bly North Young voice is vidressed the larg» labors in the Grest West fmong the Indians. Mr. is a pleasing speaker, his good, he speaks deliberateiy, distinctly, and has the power of making «a jengthy speech without wearying his hear- ers. His speech, last night, occupied one pouraniahalf in the delivery, and full of anecdotes and incidents connected with his life in the far west and on the prarie for the last ten We have not space to give any more than an incom plete summary of the addres. Mr. Young says that Manitoba is one of the finest Provinces in the Dominion, con- taining some of the best lands for agricu- tural purposes, to be found on the contix nent. Tse soil is rich, and ih many places going to the depth of four and five feet. No fertilizers are needed, and a man has not tospend a lifetime in clearing the land of trees and stumps. To his knowledge, farmets have reaped over seventy busht!s Potatoes grow toan The only drawback . to Provinces, upon luis Wis yeurs, of oats to the acre. enormorls size. the farmers 1s the hoppers § which descend upon like hail, and devour every geen herb and plan’, not being to fastidious to tackle tie Cana la thistle and other weeds in their on- ward march of destruction. The speaker nex&gave a graphic account of his travels from-Manitoba to Norway Honse, where nowis one of the largest missions in the world, Onhis way there, he was com: pelled to take his place in the stern sheeis ofaskiff, with an ox boxed up amidsbip, The head of the ox bung over one side of the boat and hi; tail over the other. In the forward part of the boat were the Indiaas who guided it through the perilous rapids The graphic account of his trave's from Norway flouse to the far North, where no white man had ever preached the gospel to the red man till his arrival, was interesting in the extreme. The hardships which pio- neers have to endure, are exceedingly try- ing while travelling over stretches of snow, for three, four, and even five hundred miles, The mercury in the thermometer being thirty anc forty degcees below zero wito no trees at times to shelter them from the cold blasts that sweep witb iu- tensa keeness over the prairie. She means of travelare by dog trains, four dog3 being harnessed in tandem in a sled mide of oak boards, about eighteen inches in width, and ten feet long. The speaker vividly describe! the councils which are bild by the Indians. The principa, Chief occupying the centre of the gather- ing.those nextin rank are seated near him, wiile the hunters arrange themselves at the back of them, the women and girls being couched. at the outskirts of the circle. Here the speaker alluded to the difterence between the treatment of women among christians andtheir treatment among pagins Much as men owe to Christianity women are uader greater obligations to it for their social position. The Indian pagan treats his squaw like a dog. and he had seen a strong, stalwart brave brutally abuse his mother for a simple murmur in one ef their counsels. The Indian women are very fond of imitating their white sisters. The audience was amused with the ac. count given of this propensity to imitate indress. On one occasion a lady, the wife of an officer of the Hudson Bay Com paby, bad returned from Ontario to her home, end wore the fashionable that came just to the point of the adie. Christianized Indian girls who wore liair nets, drew them over their heads, down part of the face and hooked them on the points of their noses in imita. tion of the fashionable veil. The only in. stance which he knew ot ‘stealing among them was when they robbed his ash barrel of its hoops to have ecrinoline like the white lady. The audience listened with atten- tion during the whole of the address, and| doubtless many will, of their abundance | visits of grass- the land ve i | The ‘upon the area of raries are finding fault with the late ad- dition to the Police force, on the ground that the number is two large in proportion to the population, Now, this is a most fallacious way of reasoning. ‘the Pclice Vorce required for a city depends chiefly, upon the population, but, to some extent. the city. To patrol a city, covetiag the ground that Charlotte. towa ‘oes, a certain force is required wkether the population in that area is larger or smaller. The present force will be sullicient, even when our town is much more thickly peopled then it nowis. But that does not imply that it is too large a present. People often talk very unfairly about the Police force. When there were only eight men, if anything happened in any part. of the town, the cry was -at- once made }. ‘‘ Where was the Po'ice/”” Not more then half the force could be on duty at once; two of these had to be in the Station. That would feave two to patrol the whole town, and they were blamed if they.did not -als Ways happen to be just where the distur- bance vecurred. This was most unfair, lf, with the increased fyice, loafers are kept off the corners, cows. off the squares, trot‘ing matches and diunken men off the streets, if the town is well patrolled, «nd if, upon the outbreak of a row, an efficient force is soon upon the, spot, the citizens ought not—and will not—gradge the ‘tn- creased expense. The force before not sufficient for a city” of this area, even if it bad only ha!f the population, Local and Oiner Leis. Rememper D. Banks McKenzie’s lecture in the Marxet Hall this evening. ; _=—- Was res City Councit.—A meeting of the City Council will be held this evening at 7} o'clock, Taw Sheriff of King’s County is after Keenan, who esciped trom Georgetown juil last week. 9D + —— : A rew Uyacinths & Crocuses, at cleariug out prices, at Haszard’s Seed and Book Store. -_——- -——- GSeo— Masonic. — Regular communication of S John’s Lodge of A. F. and A. M. will be heid in their Lodge Room, Queen street, this evening at 8 o'clock, +e ; On Saturday last Francis Gallant and Ronald Gillis took passage in the steamer, on their way to Rome, to complete their studies; Both of these young gentlemen were students of St. Dunstan’s College. We wish them every success. a <> oe Sripanpiany Magistrate's Courr. ~— Nov. 10,- Donald MeDonald, drunk and ineas pable, $2 or eight days. Ellen McKenna, drunk and incapable, $2 or eight days. {homas Logan, drunk and incapable, $2 or eight days. Desmond Murphy, drunk. $l or fourdays. Michael Rush, drunk iid! disorderly, $1 or four days John Mc- Leod, drunk and incapable, $2 or eight days. Thomas Ladner, stealing clothes from Henry Green, one 1 month. Nov. 12.—John Wiggins, drunk and disorderly, $4 or 20 days. Arthur O'Neill, jr., drunk in. capable,¢1 or four days. James Welsh, drunk and incapable, £1 or four days. Michael Rush, drunk and incapable, $2 or eight days, Robert Welch, drunk and disorderly, $3 or 14 days. Daniel Me- Donald, drunk and incapable, $2 or eight days. John Kavagnah, drunk and inca. | pable, $2 or eight days, Z' . 7 : ‘ COrrespoadenee. bes- Wedo not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions or statements of Corres pondents, To thé Editor of the Daily Examiner : Dear Str,— The present Government has done enough for the Island—and for themselves. The handwriting is on the wall. Any amount of ‘Tekel’’ in it. The r Government must be shewn_ this. lhe pent-up feelings of an angry people must now burst forth. Now for the meet- ing. . Votir. hie tts ioe MOR ui by To the Editor of the Daily Examiner : Sin,—Dr. Jenkin’s has struck the right note. Let a meeting be called at once. Patent Government combinations are a ‘|maraliel tothe Souris Road, for the distance }.of sixty-eight (68) fet, or to the southern potato Dips, 1,000 do oats: Maria Addie. LeBlanc, | Cascvumpec, “bal.; Louisa, Gallant. Pictou, bai. } } ENTERED. Nov. 12--Seh. Bounty, Doveette, Rustic co, oats ; Confecderate, McKay, Pictou, coal, City Point, Bell, New London, oats; Lizzie Tupper, lye Shedise, lumber; Catharine, Mclsea¢. Glace Bay, coal; C. wt Bell, Bell, Cape Tr iverse, oats, } és neil SUMMERSIDE, Nov. 10—cld, barque Katie “Vans, Mumbles, 30,000 bush.; oats, 700 pieces deal, by John LeFurgy. ©OURIS, Nov. ]0—eld. Pathfinder, Ken- nedy, Harbor Grace, 1,800 bush, potatoes, (00 do outs, 350 do turnips, by George H. Campion. eT NOolice to Procrastinators ! * ae ee Ald Accounts furnished before and at Nnas this thet unpaid after this month, will be placed in the hands of las¢ , and’ Midsummer of year, remain aw Attorney for collection, without dis- tinction of persons. MARK BUTCHER. —OF-— FOUR PLOTS OF LAND 4N KING'S COUNTY. ist. A FREK‘TIOLD FARM dred acres, in Lot 47. of one hun- Yid. FREE IOLD LAND (Woodlaad), 11 a:res.in Lot 47. 3rd, A BUILDING LOT, with Tlouse and Premises, in Souris East. 4th. A LEASEHOLD FARM (woodland— no improvements), of about two huudred and four acres, in Lot 46. ee Werice is hereby givea that the Sub- 4°. scriber—Administrator cum leslamento annexo de bonis non of the Estate of the late Emanuel McHachern, of Lat Nutnber Forty-seven, deceased—will Sell, by PUB LIC AUCTION, on THURSDAY, the TWENTIETH Day of DECEMBER next. 1877, at the hour of TWELVE o'clock, noon, at Souris, by virtue of a Vigense therefor, granted by the {lonorable Charles Young, LL.D, Surrogate and Judge of PProbate of this Isiand, dated the twenty- frourth day of October, in the vear of Our Lord one thousand eight hundred and seventy Sseyen: ALE that Tract, Piece and Parcel oft Land, described 4s follows, that is to say: Commencing on the north side of a line of road surveyed by Joseph Ball in the west- ern boundary of land marked Farm No. 9, in the possession of Donald MeDonald, and rugning from thence by the magnetic meridian of 1764, for the distance of ninety- nine (99) chains; thence north 76 degrees; West lill it gives the distance of ten (10) chains on an east aad west line; thence south to ijine of road aforesaid; thence efist to place of commencement, containing gne tundred acres of land, more or less, and being*part of said Lot Forty-seven. ALSO, all that Tract of Land situate on said Lot Namber Forty-seven, bousded as ful'ows: Oa the south by the rear boun- dary liue of the honiestead of deceased, on ‘he west by the farins known as the Port- are Farms; on the north by lands owned by the McDonalds of Prospect Hill; and on the east by the east line of the said home- stead, containing eleven acres, more or ess. AND, ALSO, all that Building Lot in Souris Kast, in said Island, with the House and Buildings (hereon, described as fuillows: Commencing at the eastern boun- dary of Building Lot No. One, and running Lheuce south 54 degrees, along said boun dary for the distance otf one hundred and Six (103) feet; thence north eastwardly anzl: of Building Lot No. 3, thence nore 45 degrees ; west along the south west boundary of said Lot to Souris Road: {hence along sait road for the distance of tighty feet, to the place of commencemen , with all and singular the premises and ap- purtepanees thereunto belonging, snd of which the said deceased doth appear to have b€en seized and possessed. AND I, hereby also give notice that I will put up aud Sell, by PUBLIC AUCTION, at th lime and place aforesaid, ONE CERTAIN LEAS @DLD FARM of the said late kin- unucl MCKachen, deceased, being all that day. J. W. MITCHELL, .(Formerly of the Firm of Laird & Mitchall,) HAVING ENTERED THE Examiner Printing and Publishing Company, ani added to the Plant, before possessed by the Company, his Complete New Stock of Job Printing Material, We are now in a position to execute orders for | all kinds of Printing, such as LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS, CIRCULARS, CARDS. PAMPHLETS, DODGERS, HANDBILLS, POSTERS, AND ALL KINDS OF Bank and Legal Printing ! &. ke ke. _ 2a ~While announcing this important addi- tion to our business, we deem it but right that we should tender to the public our sincere: thanks for the encouragement and practical! support our enterprise has hitherto received. fu view of the long experience of Mr. J. W. Mitchell, his well-known attention to business, aud the large and varied Stock of Material at our command, we confidently solicit the patronage of Auctioneers, Merchants, Ship Owners, Farmers, Banks, Companies, Ase~: ciations, and individuals and corporatia generally. sa Orders may, for a few weeks only, (until our arrangements are completed), be left at the Company's Ottice, Water Street; and also at the office of J. W. Mitchell, 28 Great George Street. Tue Examiner Pvsitsure Co. — — a ‘JHE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING of the * Diocesan Church Society” wil! be held in Sr. Paun's ScaooLroomM oa WEDNESDAY, the Lith instant, at 7.30 p- mm. , D. FITZGERALD, Secretary. Clvtown, Nov. 8—6i NEWFOUNDLAND PORT WINE} JUST RECEHEIVED, From St. Johns, per Brig “© Fleetwood.” a supply of this Fine Old Wine, which { will be sold at our usual MODERATE PRICES. MACHACHERY & CO CARD. "(‘HE Subscriber, having associated himself with Taz Examiner Pronting & PUBLISH ING COMPANY, would take this opportunity of returning thanks to his friends, and the public generally, for the patronage extended to him in the past, and would solicit a continuance of their Company. 4% All orders for Printing, as heretofore, will receive prompt and personal attention. J. W. MITCHELL. Jharlottetown, Oct. 20, 1877. COAL (VASES. Handsome and Cheap | aT SSEU ECR & SONS Ovt 25, 1877. Wants, ete., ete. ane han ene nen ee i ceenneente: - BS Advertisements under this heading, in space not ex- eceding half an ineh. will be inserted for CTisN CHiN Ds pus O LET—A_ Cottage on the Malpeque Tract, Piece and Parcel of Land, situate, lying and “being on Towuship Nuisber | Forty. six, in King’s County, bounded as | follows, that is to say: Ou the e€ast and ‘{Souta by land formerly the property of the | late Lloporable Samuel Cunard; on the! Donald; and on the north by land teased to | Anzus McPh-e, Neil Mcthee and Jobn| : mt ‘ ‘Kk ie, c ining an area of t give to support a work which seems to rew| failure ; it Is scarcely too much to say that, McKenzie, con taining an 8 epost tee quire the most heroic and sel{-sacrificing | men io undertake. The Indians are anx.| ious t> have Missionaries to civilize Nota’ and to teach the gospel. The Rey. Mr. | Lotherne briefly addressed the meeting in| bis fervid and eloquent style ¢ One thing! piewaTtion one. in the present case, the combination is a curse. Our little Island is being laughed at by outsiders. Even the * cute” Patriot man begins to feel that under the combi» nation regime we are drifting from “ the bounds of civilization.’ Let us have a meeting by all means—A Monster In- Vox. iundred*and four acres of land, a littie! more or less. on day of sale, or on application to the | undersigned, or at the ollice of Messrs | Brecken & Fitzgerald. CHARLES McEACHERN, Charlottetown, Oct. 30, ; } j 2 ’ west by land leased unto Roderick Mc- | APP!Y immediately. Terms and concitions of sa’e made known | Couples. Apply at this office, MYO LET.—To or more Roons 10 let in Ad” ijnistuator. this office. id77—kea 4i Rov6 Chtiown, 1877, Road, at present occupied by Mr, Job Bevan, Enquire at this Office, Ch town, Nov. 9 — T VW ASTED—A Smart Boy. 15 or 16 years of age, to leatu the Printing Business. ov. 5, 77. ' —_— OARDERS WANTED .—Four or tive Board-rs wanted. Gentlemen preferred tooms are large ani suitable for inarried Cltown, Oet. 12,1877, $$ $$ ign _— convenient part of this city. Apply ai 10-4 WHITE WOOL BLANKETS, $3.00. 100 PAIRS S-4 White Wool BLANKETS, $1-50. These Goods were ‘bought mach uncer market value and are a GREAT BARGAIN; 300 BED QUILTS !. 85 cts. and uowards. 4000 YDS. Print Remnants, 6 cts 1600 Yards FLEECY COTTON ! 9 & 10 CENTS. 3000 YARDS Fancy Dress Goods, DIFFBRENT TTYLBs, 124, 18 & 25 ors, 100 LADIES FELT SKIRTS AT 60 CENTS. 15,000 YARDS BLACK DRESS GOODS: IN FRENCH MERINOS, CASHMERES, PARAMATTAS, BALMORAL CRAPRS, avors in conne:tion with the above PERSIAN CORDS, COBURGS, LUSTRES, : BRILLIANTINES, &e, These Goods are marked at the very Lowest Cash | rice, and do not need fauy special commendation from us. 1000 MEN’S SHIRTS, SO ects. to 82,75. —— Extraordinary Bareains IN Men’s Clothing Men’s Reefers $2 to $10. op Coats $4.50 to $16. Boys & Gents Ulsters $3 to $16. ~~ The above Goods comprise a portion of our immense Stock, which our special Cash System enables us to sell at prices so exceedingly low. GEORGE DAVIES & CO. Noy, 5, 1877: 8 a eis wot a ey Se pinata = cere nea ere os oe tsie greeny om “RR elas stm - eye eles «ee en sail