AB Tau “oy ae =e cat. a NEW GOODS. | OO enn et anc VOL. 2. “ROBERT YOUNG HAS JUST RECEIVED, Per 8. S. Prince Edward, 4 MAGNIFICENT ASSORTMENT Which he is offering at October 1, 1877. A. McNEILL. | tuctioneer and Commission Merchant NO... L QUEEN STRET. (HABLOTTETOWA, PB ISLAND ATICTION SALES, of all descrip- tlons, attended to in city and country at moderate rates. May 21, 1877. ROYAL HOTEL, | Aing Square, Saint John. | HAVE much pleasure in informiog my ne merous friends aad the public geaerally, that | have leased the Hotel formerly known as the CUNTINENTAL, and thoroughly renovated the same,making it, ag the ROYAL always had he reputation of beiug, one of the best Hotels in he Provinces. al Excellent Bill of Ferre, First-class Wines Liquors and Cigars, and superior accommoda Biackhall’s Livery Stable attached. THUS, F. RAYMOND. July 3, 1877—6m — QUEEN INSURANCE C0.) OF ENGLAND. —————_— Capital - - [wo Milllons Sterling, NSURANCK effected. on all kinds o Buildings, Merchandise, and Produce iso, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union*Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Islanu June — American & Foreign Patents. ae eee Gilmore, Smith & Co., Successors te Chipman, Hosmer & Co, ATENTS procured in al! countries. Novfecs P in advance. No charge for services until the patent is granted. Prefiminary examinations ree. Our valuable pamphlet sent free upon re eipt of stamp. Address, GILMORE, SMITH & CU., Washington, D. C. ARREARS OF PAY, BOUNTY, EFC. © EDERAL Officers, Soldiers and Sailors ot F the late war, or their heirs, are in maay exes entitled te money trom the Guvers ment, which has been found to be due since final pay- ment. Write full history of service and state amount of pay and bouaty received. Certificates ot Adjutant Geaeral U. S. A. showing service and honorable discharge there- trom, in place of discharge lost, procured for a small fee. Euclose stamp to Gilmore & Co., ard full re- ply, with blanks, will be sent free. PENSIONS. | PENSIONS. Soe Federal Officers, Soldiers and Sailors, wounded, ruptured, or injured, in the line oifduty in the late war, and disabled thereby, ao Obtain a pension. Widows, and minor children of Officers, Sol- ders and Sailors, who have died since discharge of disease contracted or wounds and injuries te eived in the service and in the line of duty, can procure pensions by addressing Gilmore & Co, luereased rates tor pensioners obtained: Bouoty Land Warrants procured for service in Wars prior to March 3,1855. There are no war- rants vues for service in the late rebellion. Sen — to Gilmore & Co., Washington i D.C., —_ full instructions. HAY ! Jaly24 1877. For SALE AT Water St., Ch’town, Dec. 1—eod tf Notice to the Public ! UPPLIES for the ‘“‘Soup Kitchen” will reach the Committee if left at the Store ie of Mr. Alex. Horne, Corner of Queen and | ' Fitzroy Streets, , Donations of money will be received by them HE i a : € . Annee, tacit E —- — + Secernenneenenneanee nice aia ears Meal eee eeeenmncnemtiterteciainneeeesien acer caniattita tiene i Prince Edward tstand STEAMERS. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. ee Nova Scotia. MonbDay, WEbNESDaY, TuurRspay, & uecling there at 10a. m., with train for Haiifax. Fare to Halifax. $4.10. Picnic Parties of Twenty and upwards can obtain Return Tlckets at Charlotte- town Office to Pictou and back same day $1.00 each. Returning to Charlottet own. Leave Pictou every Turspay, WEDNESDAY Fripay and SATURDAY, about 2.30 p.m. on arrival of evening train from Hali- fax. ' CAPE BRETON. ave Pictou for Hawkesbury every Mon- pay and THURSDAY, on arrival of morning train from Halifax, connecting both ways with stage and Steamer ** Neptune,” to and from Sydney and Bras d’Or Lake. Returning to Pictou same nights, connect- i.z with 10 a.m. Train Tugspay and Fri- DAY tor Halifax. New Brenswick, Canada and United Siates, Leaves SUMMERSIDE every day (Sunday -2xcepted) on arrival of morning train from Charlottetown, connecting at Saepimac with trains for each of above named places, and at St. John with Steamers of INreRNa- TIONAL Co. for PORTLAND and Boston, Also, leave Charlottetown for Summerside every Monday ,,about 3 o’clock. Returning, e§ SHEDIAC every day (Sundays excepted) on arrival of day train from St. Jonny, for’ Summerside; connect there, without delay, with train for Char- lottetown. Also, leaves Summerside for Charlottetowm, every Saturday evening, about 6 o'clotks | Agents: Atmon & Macinrosn, Halifax; Noonan & Davits, Pictou; A Grant & Vo Hawkesbury * Hanrrpo gBros., St. John. PF, W. HALES STEAM COOKING. MAYO'S STEAM CULINARY BOILER ! ———eeee LL the condensed steam is carried back into the boiler--preventing unpleasant odors in the kitchen. Puddings, &c., may all be cooked at the same time, without mingling the flavors, while each article retains all its strength and aroma, and is more palatable and nu- tritious than when cooked by any other mode. On exhibition and for sale at BEER & GOFF S. CA Ev). M®: D. McRAE, a teacher of upwards of 25 years experience in the Province of Ontario, ex-Superintendent of Schools for the Township of Kingston, intends (if sufficient encouragement offers) to open, during the winter months, Evening Classes, in Writing, Arithmetic, Algebra and Elocu- tion. Mr. McRae would give his earnest atten- tion to Posting Books, Making out Ac- connts, Collecting, &c.. Apply at 124 Kent Street. Two permanent boarders can be accom- modated. , Ch'town, Nov. 15, 1877— MORTGAGE SALE. be Sold, by PUBLIC AUCTION, on T TUESDAY, the 12th day of FEBRUARY, 1878 atthe Court House in Charlottetown, at thehour of 12 o’clock, noon, of the same day, under and by virtue of a Power of Sale con- tained in a certain Indenture of Mortgage, dated the 3rd day of January, 1860, and made betweer Pater McInnis and Mary his wife, of the one part, and Joun Kwyicar, now deceased, of the other part —All that Piece and Parcel ofLand being partof Township No. ah pad situtuated wear the bead of Souris River, nded on the west and north by land then n occupation ot Donald McCormack, and on the east by land then in the possession of Angus McDenald, and on the dquth by Souris River—containing fifty- oue acres ofland, being the farm then and uatil lately in occupation of the said Peter McInnis, together with ali the Buildings and Appurten- ances connected therewith. For terms and conditions of sale, apply to Messrs. Hodgson & McLeod. Dated 9th day of November 1877, JAMES McFARLANE EDWARD J..RODGSON, t h Dr. Dodd-and. Mr. J. Quirk, . N. B.—Food for the sick carefully prepared: by the Committee. 7 Nov. 30, 1877. VERNON H. KNIGAT Trustees and Devisees under the will of the] John Knight. { Nov, 10—t sa ; Sxrervpay mornings, at 5 o’clock, con-' EYTRAORDINARY-LOW - PRICED" Meat, Vegetables, | tet tig eta aeenee —ewsain ~~ Fee a DR. WILLIAM GRAYS RPEOLFIC MEDICINE, os The Great English Rem- Be 8 a Cdy is an unfailine eure tor Seminal Weakness, Sper- “® sequence of Self-A buse; x as Loss of Memory, Univer- | BOXER 604 Lassitude, Pain in thee wa tes Back, Dimness of Vision= BeforeTaking. Premature Old Age, and Atte many other diseases that lead. to Jnsaniépe: sumption anda Premature Crave. Aer per package, or six packages for £5, by maf postage, Full particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to send free by mailto every ones Address WM. GRAY & CO., Windsor, Oatario, Vanada 03a Sold in Charlottetown by W. R Watson, P. . Fraser, C.D. Rankin, Der Leave Charlottetown for Pictou’ every )Dodd, and a Apoth@édrids’ AMY and by EVERYBODY'S BAPER, The BEST and CHEAPEST in the World ; for City, Village, and Coun- try, for Men, Women and Children in all Stations ; The American Agricuiturist, so-called because started 36 years ago asa Rural Journal—hence its name—but greatly enlarged in size and scope, without change of name, until it is now a large splendid, //lus- trated Family Journal, adapted to the Wants, Wishes, Pleasure, and Improvement of eve member or of every family in City, Vilage and Country—full of PLAIN, PRACTI- CAL, USEFUL, INTERESTING, RELI- ABLE, and HIGHLY INSTRUCTINE IN- FORMATION. Jt has departments helpful to Housekeepers, and for Youth and Children, beth /nteresting and Jnstructive. Every volume contalus 550 to 650 Ori- ginal Engravings, finely executed and well printed on fine paper, which are PLEAS- ING and IN SPRUCTIVE. s@ No one can read a volume without get- ting numerous hints that will pay back many times the cost of the paper, TERMS, $1.60 a Year, (sent post-paid). Four ies $5.20 ($1.30 each). Ten copies $12.00 ($1.20 each). it, in connection with the WEEKLY EXamIneR, for one year. ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, Publishers, 245 Broadway, New York St. John Fire Waltzes.” TUST OUT, COMPOSED BY , shacrcentnclfgiindtivete MAX. STERNE, PROFESSOR OF Music, SacKVILLE ACADEMY. The above Waltzes are really good. Get acopy. For sale at FLETCHER’S MUSIC STORE, Queen Street. Nov. 22, 1877. Clocks & Timepieces A VARIED ASSORTMENT, FROM™ $1.25 UPWARDS, WARRANTED, AT }. F. McKAY’S, North Side Queen Square, Nov. 24-- VIOLIN CLASS. M?: VINNICOMBE has opened a Violin “* Class over Mr. Fletcher’s Music Store Ages of pupils preferred—from Eleven to Fifteen years. Trerus—$10a quarter, half in advance. Twenty-four Lessons a quarter; each Les- son one hour’s duration. Orders for TUN{NG may be ieft at the above Store. October 13, °77. UNION BANK of P. B. ISLAND. OTICE is hereby om that a Divi- dend, at the rate of Pen per Cent. per Annum, has this day been declared on the Capital Stock of this-Baak for the past half year, payable forthwith at its Office here. GEORGE MACLEOD, Cashier. Charlottetown, Dee. Ist, 1877—6i ‘TENDERS. Mayor’s Orrice, 29th Nov., 1877. EALED TENDERS will be received S at this Office until noon of the 20th day of December next, from persons willing to Contract to supply, for one year, the City Stables with Hay, Oats and Potatoes. The Council will not be bound to accept the lowest or any Tender. ao WM. B. MORRISON, City Clerk. Nov. 30—pat t 20th dec GROCERIES. 31 Hhds. SUGAR, 25 Bbis. do,, 255 Packages TEA, 135 Boxes RAISINS, 10 Bbis. CURRANTS, All of Finest quality and at lowest figures BEER & SONS. Ch'town, Nov. 30, 1877. a te a _CHARLOTTETOWN,- PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, DEC Credit Becoming More Difficult to Get. To refuse a man credit, especially, when he had about a thousand dollars in his pocket ready to invest in groceries and dry most unheard of in Canada.” But now, we are glad to say, a more healthy business sen- timent exists, and a better regard for the welfare of the mercantile community has grown to be entertained among the whole- sale houses in our cities. We have endeay- oured to do our duty in urging the impor- tance of curtailing credits, and in warning would-be merchants against the folly of _ at- tempting business with small capital, and of competing for custom, in the present de- pressed condition of trade, against men of large experience and a well established busi- ness. If we have contributed in any de- gree in bringing about a better condition of affairs, we have had our reward. Occasion- ally we hear that persons’ about to begin business find it extrewtely difficult to obtain goods on credit from respectable houses and it will be well if the trade generally persist in declining to advance stocks of goods to new beginners in localities where stores are already too numerous. An instance occurred last week where a young man of good address and consider- albe experience as clerk in a country village not a hundred miles west of this city, came *Y | here with $800 in cash for the purpose of buying a stock of goods amounting to say $2,500. He did not attain his ob’ect, and, after consulting some friends, he returned home with the intention of resuming his former occupation, and investing his money in something less precarious than dry goods. This, considering all the circumstances, was the wisest course to adopt. Had he got the goods, it would have been difficult in his lo- cality, and with his means, to adopt the cash system. And to sell on the customary terms of credit in the village in question, would to him have been simply ruin. This was clearly foreseen by those who refused to accept his hard-earned savings and sup- ply the goods necessary ; hence the very proper refusal to give credit. Under simi- lar circumstances, the seller is certainly safe in keeping his goods, and the intended buy- er is much better off without them if he in- tended to conduct his business honestly. Undoubtedly, the competition is already too great. And it has become a question with some of the older and wealthy merchants, whether it be better to continue to rish their capital and compete against illegitt- mate trade, or to retire with what they have accumulated,—Monetary Times.. —-> 2+ “ap +o British Heroes of Trafalgar. Looking back through the long vista of seventy-two years to the day when Nelson’s immortal signal inspired the victory of Tra- falgar, it seems hard to believe that we have still among us a group of officers who have helped to assert the naval supremacy of England. We regard even a Waterloo hero as arelic of the remote past, so far away appears that ‘‘ loud Sabbath” on which Wellington ‘‘ shook the spoiler down.” But Trafalgar was fought ten years before the great European convulsion ended on the plains of Belgium, and ten years, when man get past the Scriptural limit of human life is an age. Nevertheless, on Sunday last (October 11) seven venerable officers cele- brated, each in his quiet home, and doubt- less, with many a proud and many asad recollection, the seventy-second anniversary of Engladd’s greatest sea-fight. Their names are as follows :—Admiral of the fleet, Sir George Rose Sarterius, K. C. B., who is now in his eighty-eight year,and entered the navy in June, 1801, fought as midshipman on board the Tonnant; Admiral Robert Patton, now in his eighty-seventh year,who entered the navy February 1, 1804, asa midshipman in the Bellerophon ; Admiral William § Ward Percival Johnson, who entered the navy July 2, 1803, was midshipmen of the Victory: Vice Ad- miral Spencer Smythe, who entered the navy in March, 1803, was midshipman in the Defiance ; Commander Francis Harris was a first-class volunteer in the Termeraire ; Commander William Vicary (who is now in his eighty-fifty year, and who entered the navy February 6, 1805), was first-class vol- unteer in the Achille ; and Lieutenant-Col, James Fynmore, R. M., was midshipman of the Africa. The following is a list of the ships engaged : Victoria, Royal Sovereign, Britannia, ‘femeraire, Neptune, Leviathan, Conqueror, Agamemnon, Africa, Ajax, Orion, Minetaur, Spartiate, Belleisle, Mars, Bellerophon, Colossus, Achille, Dread- nought, Polyphemus, Revenge, Swiftsure, Defiance, Tonnant, Prince, Phoebe, Sirius, Euryalus, Naiad, Entreprenante and Pickle. —London Daily Telegraph. —_-———__ > +- am -e ed CS The last sensational suicide in Europe is that of Marie Prieur, a pretty French singer of twenty-five, who ran away from her home at Toulouse with Count Hugno Lamberg, an Austrian cavalry officer. She had ac- quired a competency and retired from the stage, young as she was; then she was smitten with a passion that the Count failed | to reciprocate fully, and when he left she | placed his portrait over her heart and with a revolver bullet pierced both. poerineeresneennee annem Tue Halifax ‘‘ Herald’s” dispatch from Montreal says: Another victim of Ameri- can competition, Ives & Co., immense manufacturers, have closed, owing to an accumulation of stock. The Montreal Bank being solely involved and having good se- ‘eurity, will probably tide the firm through. EMBER 3, 1877, NO; 172, wb si-ete-qnmagegeenngeini Washington Letter. Wasuineton, D. ©., Noy. 27, 1877. Two spacious dwellings that have been the scene of many a gay assemblage and goods, was, a few years ago, something ai- | have been the favorite resort of many a so- ciety devotee at the Capital, have recently | been overtaken by a most unenviable fate:/ _T refer to the residence so long oceupied by Mr. and Mrs. Fish and that wherein lived and shone the false but fair Mrs. Belknap and her weak and unfortunate husband, both of which have been turned into board- ing houses. The most pleasant reports coritinue to a: - rive regarding 'General.and Mrs. Grant and their doings abroad. Rev. Dr. Newman received a letter the other day from the General, which expressed himself as well pleased with his tour thus far, in good health and. spirits, and in which he says Paris is ‘‘ the most beautiful and quiet city in the world.” He intends wintering in Spain, on the Mediterranean coast, and purposes completing the circle and return home by way of California. His son Jesse, who is with his father and mother, wishes to enter one of our law schools upon his re- turn to this country, but has not yet de- cided what one. Wednesday is the reception day of Vinnie Ream, the famous little sculptress of whom all America is so justly proud. A visit to her studio last week resulted most. satisfac- torily to your correspondent. who, not hay- ing a personal acquaintance with the artist, took advantage ot her weekly reception day. Miss Vinnie was just parting with Mrs. Gen. Custer, for whom she is now execut- ing a bust of the lamented General. In one studio are busts of Senater Voorhees and General G. H. Thomas, and a model of the equestrian statue of General Robert E. Lee, for which Miss Ream hopes to get the con- tract. She also has the unfinished busts of Senator David Davies, Hon. L. E. C. La- mar, and Capt. J. B. Eades, upon which she works as a relaxation from the harder » labor which her colossal statue of Admiral Faragut requires. His is the first colossal statue ever executed by a lady, and is worthy the ‘‘clear grit” of this little woman. It stands in a room, of which she had the ceiling removed for its accommodation, and represents the Admiral standing, with tele- scope in hand, as having just finished an | observation. Miss Ream expects to have it ready for the foundry in a few months, when it will be placed in the position already prepared for it in Farragut Square. Working by Deputy. We were rather surprised, says the Lon- don ‘‘ Globe,” to hear the other day of the arrival of some fifty ‘‘ American” workmen in London. We had aiways been under the . impression that an American workman was much the same kind of rara avis as a Brite ish bustard, and our _belief has since been confirmed by the news that nineteen-twen- tieths of the tourists in question are. of Irish extraction. They are American im- migrants or the sons of American immi- grants. The American boasting of a native grandfather takes kindly to politics and to the dry goods trade, but his notion of man- ual labor is confined to ingporting it for his own and his country’s benefit. + He - — Some people are so bright and wide- awake that they are always iooking ahead, A married couple in Prussia of this pru- dent sort provided themselves with cottins beforehand, and kept them in a stable. Thinking it a pity not to make some use of them in the meantime, they utilized them as cupboards for the keeping of various kinds of food. At last the man died. The widow proceeded to put the contents of both cottins into one, and the emptied cof- fin was used for the reception of the corpse. By some mishap the cotlin containing the eatables were carried to the grave. Soon after, the widow, raising the lid of the other in quest of food, was horrified to find tle dead body of her husband. The funeral had then to be done over again. OsMAN PASHA, says a war correspondent, appears about fifty years of age. His face is very brown and not wrinkled, his. black but rather loose beard full-grown. His fea- tures are very remarkable, and would ree pay the attentive study of a physiognomist. His forehead presents a strong slope, his hazel brown eyes are uncommonly large, suggesting an Asiatic origin, and always be- tray his feelings. His lips are uncommon- ly thick, though their thickness is partially disguised by the imperative firmness with which they are pressed together. Ido not know if the high title of Ghazi, conferred upon him at the early stage of the war, will prove justified inthe end. He is a severe disciplinarian. Sovran Arrica.—The British in South Africa are afraid that the little war Sir Bartle Frere was so ready to undertake, the Galekas may be long, troublesome, expensive, as much of the country is. covy ered with dense woods, and the nativesshave several pretty safe retreats. A few days ago a customer in a wholesale house in this city remarked to the dealer that he noticed an. unpleasant odor upon the premises.. The latter did not perceive anything, and the customer added : ‘‘ Well, I guess it is the celler that smells.” The other replied : “*‘ Not at all. I smell noth- ing. It seems to be the buyer that smells.”