aah 2 A Ge BLO . The Tables of Rates are moderate. 8 4 . \ 5 e ~ 2 ' y . Soy sath aaa : Riss aA ap EARL AO RR I AIRE A SRR ABEA mec LA an, ae EAS Ne NSS aR 8: A ee NTA one 8 PD. : . 7 ~ alles afaimnty bbe atte, 2% — ' om, $ aR * 7 5 oan cniee. te _ = em oe ~ THE are ™ Oe rth 2 Om XAMINER. _ VOL. 5. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD [SLAND, et a aa TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1879. NO. 46 LOOK HERE! BRITISH WAREHOUSE. As we intend to makea change in our business at the end of the year, we are now closing out our Large and Weil-issorted Stock of me A rim gl At Unusually Low Prices, ‘Meet the Dress Goods from Mard FOODS Which, we are Sure, Will Times, -!Ot— G cents upwards. Grey Cottons from 4 cents uswards. Prints from 6 cents upwards. Hemp Carpeting from [2 cents upwards. Tapesiry from 59 cents upwards. Brussejs from $1.00 upwards. Ali other lines we are closing out at Prices that Defy Competition. W. Charlottetown, June 30, 1879. & A. BROWN. MORE NEW CLOTHS !'MAGLEAN & MARTIN, — AT BEER & SONS’ Custom Tailoring Department, June 19, }S79— eee <I ean SO TURNIP SEED. LOT of that special kind which gave such excellent satisfaction last’ Also, Laing’s, Skirving’s, and Green ip. ; BEER & SONS. No. 85 Water St., Charlottetown. Prince Rdward Island Branch —oFr THK— NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE. INSURANCE CO. Subscribed Capital, $9,733,332.00 Paid up Capital, - 1,216,666.00 CHIEF OF FICES—Edimburgh, 64 Princess Street ; London, 61 Threadneedle Street. Nine-Tenths of the Profits of the Life Assur- ance Business are divided every Five Years. Fire Insurances effected on nearly every description of Property, at the LowEsT RaTES of Premium, corresponding to the nature of the risk. Losszs settled with promptitude and liber- ality. ; ¢. W. DEBLOISs, General Agent. OY. Dec. 14. OUBEN . INSURANCE OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS: STERLING, NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vv on the stocks. ; Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. . GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island June, 1877— BEG to inform the TRADE of Charlotte- town, and Prince Edward Island gen- erally, that Messrs. Roprrtson, Linon & Uo., Montreal, have appointed me their Agent for the Island forthe sale of Canadian Cot- tons, Tweeds and Woollens, and imported Dry Goods, Samples of these manufactures will be on hand in good time for Fall orders, and will be in charge of Mr. Ben. Davies, jr., who will, after 16th June, be associated with me in business, Any orders entrusted to Mr. Davies will receive the most careful attention. I hope to; be on the Island early in July With full lines of samples from the various houses whom I represent. JOHN H. CATHRAE. — -AGENT FOR— Messrs. Reinach's, Nephew & Co., London. ** Robertson, Linton & Co:, Montreal. “*_ 1. Gnaedinger. Son & Co., “‘ The North American Rubber Co., Quebec. ; | ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Newson’s Building, Opp, Post Office, Charlottetown, P. E. 1. A, A. McLEAN, BD. C. MARTIN. June 18, 1879.—ex 2aw THA, THA. Packages Now in Stock. THA. Something very superior, and at 190 BEER & SONS. very Low Figures. May 22, 1879. OR. W.6, GANWING, Licentiate Royal Colleges Physicians and Surgeons of Edinburgh. LICENTIATE MIDWIFERY. RESIDENCE : Upper Hillsborough St., corner Hillsborough and Euston Streets, Charlottetown. OFFICE HOURS : 8:30 toll a.m.; 7 to 9 p.m. Charlottetown, June 24, 1879.—eod Glass. Glass. Glass. 200 BOXES, all sizes, VERY CHEAP. BEER & SONS. May-22, 1879. BES 'T TO. 1 London White Lead, Turpentine, | Oils, Colours, Gold Leaf, cheap. BEER & SONS. June 10, 1879— — — eee tH et — — . SUGAR, MOLASSES, FLOUR. 10 Hhds. Porto Rico Sagar, 10 Bbis. v4 7 10 Pans. Cienfengos Molasses, 2006 Bhis, flour. On Consignment——Fer Sale CIJEAP. WRIGHT & MACGOWAN, Queen’s Wharf. June 21—1lm 2aw ne pat —_—_—— ED ouse to Let. \NE HALF that desirable Two-and-a-half Story Dwelling House situate on the eastern side of Upper Pgince street, adjoining the grounds of the Hon. Jadge Hensley. Possession given immediately. Apply to E R. BROW, at Messrs. Hodgson & McLeod's, Water st. May 7—eod re E, @. HUNTER, Italian and American Marble, Monuments, Tablets, Headstones, ManrLes, CENTRE TABLE Tops, BUREAU anp GCommope Tors, Wasu Bow. » Stass, &c., &. Prices to suit, and satisfaction guaranteed. aw Designs furnished on application. Corner Hillsborough and Kent Streets, Char; lottetown. Jane 16, 1879 —3taw November 6, 1878. | 33 Queen Street. -_-—— 5 5 > eee IN’ Ea W GOO Fx ‘* Prince Bdward’’ and other Steamers, All earefully selected in the. Best and Curarest Markets. do ; do Grey Cotton at 4c. and upwards. Print Cotton at 6c. White Cotton at Ge. Towels at 4c. and upwards. BLACK DRESS SILKS Best Value ever offered in the City. SEIRTS, {RS. DRAWE SUSPENDERS, &c., Cheap | LADIES’ COTTON HOSH, FROM 6C. PER PAIR. ne 7, b] 0 oo EMBROIDERY, From 4c. per yard, a great selection. ad nA DiEeS* DRESS IMIATERIALS! all at Old Tariff prices. Millinery, Hats, Heathers & Flowers. Lace Gurtains at prices to suit all customers. Best Talue Yet (}fered, JAS. DesBRISAY May 31, 1879. ee * , ind “1 i “cae 5 NEWS BY COMPOUNDING FELONY, CaMPELLTON, July 12. | » An express package, belonging to the ELEGRAPK ‘Montreal Telegraph Company’s office, con- (taining $210, was stolen by a messenger, named Frank Belmont,’ on Thursday imerning, but was recovered threugh the vigilance of the manager, R. McLeed, dur- ing the same night. The culprit was dis- covered and arrested in a barn in the | woods, by Mr. McLeod, assisted by Con- istable Adams. He was secreted among some hay. On the next morning he. was ibefore the authorities, who set him at large on condition of restoring the money, | | paying expenses and leaving the country. NOVA SCOTIA. Hairax, July 13. Mr. John M. Ordway, Professor of Me- taliurgy and Industrial Chemistry ; Robt. D. Richards, Professor of Mining Engi- neering, and a party of eight students, ladies and gentlemen, from the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, of Bosten, are visiting Pictou coal mines. The mackerel fishing along the south- east coast of Cape Breton is, like last year, afailare. The. catch of codfish. is pretty fair, and is mvre plentiful this scason in Lardoise Bay than for some years. Herring have not struck in yet in any great quan- tity. The Cape Breton Advocate says the barque ‘‘ Chevalier” is to load coal at Little Glace Bay for Toronte. She. was char- tered to carry flour down from Toronto to P. E. Island and Cape Breton, and to re- turn with coal from Cape Breton. THE TWELFTH AT MONTREAL. Monrreat, July 13. The 12th passed of quietly, the only dis- turbance reported being the assault of Mr. Power, of the (azette office, by a carter named Powers—the offence being the wear- ing of an Orange lily. The assault was mild, consisting in the carter’s placing his hand on Power’s shoulder and ordering him to remove the lily. Power threatens legal proceedings. The Young Breton’s row last night was more serious than at first reported. They beat a.Catholic named Warren, and broke the windows of the store in which he had run for safety. ‘They turned out on the street about fifty strong. | Newrort, R. L., July 13. The Duke of Argyll attended the church at All Saints Chapel te-day, with Mr. Field’s family. He. has passed the day quietly, several persons of prominence call- ing upon him. te will drive about town to-morrow, to yisit the various points of interest, and will take the steamer *‘Bris- tol’ for New Yerk to-morrow night. New York, July 15. A despatch from Bellfontaine, Ohio, says that the storm Friday night covered a track of seven miles wide by ten miles long, in which all crops were prostrated. ‘The damage will probably reach £200,000, One man was killed by lightning. The loss at Port Huron, Michigan, was $100,000. New York, July 15. This afternoon Michael Travis, a ‘long- shoreman was fatally stabbed in the breast by Paul Shirley, aged 25, night clerk in the Western Union Telegraph office at New York. Shirley claims self defence. EUROPE AND THE EAST. Bererape, July 13. The Peruvian Government has advanced francs, on account of raids by Albanians into Servian territory. If the Porte re- pudiates this claim, as is probable, it is thought Servia will refuse to bear the pro- portion of the Turkish debt alloted to her by the treaty of Berlin, in consideration of the increase of territory. Vienna, July 15. The elections for the Reichsrath, just ended, resulted in the return of 173 mem- bers of various Liberal groups and 175 Con- seryatives and Nationalists. Three of those elected have declined to sit ; two have been elected each for two places, thus rendering five supplementary elections necessary. Paris, July 13. A mass was celebrated, to-day, in mem- ory of the late Prince Imperial, at the Church of Madeline, which was crowded. Marshal McMahon was present. Sr. Psrerssure, July, 15. Advices from Orenburg, of June 28, con- firm the report of preparations making by the Chinese to march on Kuldja. The ill treatment to Russian merchants on the frontier still continues. Lonpon, July 153. The Stendard’s Berlin correspondent an- nounces that the Cowstitutionalists will resume the anti-tariff ag tation in August, and call a national meeting in September to prepare a vigorous cam paign against the new tariff at Prussian elections in October. Berutn, July 13. Herr Von Gessler has been appointed to succeed Dr. Falk as minister of ecclesiasti- cal affairs. Tae Hacve, July 12. Operations against the Atchinese have been resumed, and the Dutch troops, after several assaults, have captured four At-, chinese strongholds. The enemty’s loss was heavy. a claim against the Porte for 3,000,000. TEMPERANCE. An Interesting Address on Tem- perance by Mr. Justice Young of P. E. Island. The announcement in the Times of Sat- urday that the Hon. Judge Young of P. E. Island, would address the Temperance meeting in the Hall on Steadman street yesterday afternoon, drew out a large and inteiligent andience. There was some little difticuly in securing seats for the crowd, but some extra benches were brought in and the majority were seated. The Rev. Mr. Browd presided over the meeting which was opened with singing, reading of the scriptures and prayer by Rev. Mr. Colpitts. “Mr. Young, in opening, spoke of the pleasure it gave him tu see the Temperance feeling in Moncton so great as to bring eut such an audience as was present. He said some of the brethren had taken it upon themselves to announce in the press that he would be the speaker of the afternoon, without first consutting him, and in this connection related an anecdote of how he had been taken by surprise at-one time in St. John, where he had suddenly been called onto preach, the person doing su remarking that a Methodist local preacher should be always ready to ‘‘shake a sermon out of his coat sleeve.” He said he would have to shake his remarks out of his coat- sleeve on the present occasion. The speak- er went on to tell the audience of the way in which he had been’ converted to total abstinence. In the year 1845 he was seated in his chambers in Charlottetown, it so happened busily engaged in mak- ing out a marriage license, when he was waited on by a Committee from a total abstinence society with a request te lecture on the subject of temperance. He at first refused to lecture on temperance, from principle, not being a total abstainer himself, but offered to give a lecture on moderation. His offer was accepted, after consultation, and he asked the committee which waited on him for some work bear- ‘ing on the subject. The committee gave ‘him a book containing evidence given by physicians before the English House of Commons. He read the book, became con- vinced of the correctness of the principles of total abstinence, and, instead of lecturing on ‘‘ moderation,” he lectured on * total abstinence.” He then took the total ab- stinence pledge, and subscribed his name, “‘Charles Young,—ror wre.” He had kept this pledge for thirty-four years, and, with God’s help, he intended to keep it for life. He might also add that at the meet- ing at which he spoke and signed the pledge, nearly two-thirds of the audience also signed. Some might question the fact that the Temperance cause was making progress, but of this there could be no doubt. in 1843, he said, when travelling, the first object that: would meet’ your eye on entering a hotel would be the words,“ bar-room,” and liquor was’ regularly on the tables. During the past tive weeks he had travelled 5000 miles in the United States and Can- ada, and he had not seen a drop of liquor at one of the hotel tables. The hotels were ashamed of their bars and stuck them away down cellar. If a traveller wanted to find the bar in a first-class hotel now, he would have to go the rounds of clerks and waiters - before he could do so. The Temperence cause had been the means of turning upside down the customs and fashions of the day, and while it had not produced total abstin- ence with all, there could be no doubt that it had done much within a few years. He passed in review the historyof the Temperance cause from before Christ tothe present day, and then said that to say the Temperance cause had made ne progress, was a libei. He urged all to work for the further suc- cess of the cause—work first for ourselves, he said and then for our brother. If there were any present who had not taken the pledge, he urged such to do so, and then go abroad and do good for his neigh- bor. Judge Young referred to recent temper- ance legislation in the Dominion, and said the Permissive Biilhad been passed in all the constituencies on the tight little Island— the garden of America. He considered this measure but the entering wedge, and he felt sure prohibition would follew. What he had said was red hot from the fountain, and, in conclusion, he would ask if there were any present who were not total abstainers, and if there were any such let them stand up. At this stage, one eld gentleman in the centre of the room stood up, and, at an invitation to go forward and sign the pledge, did so. The scene was quite affecting. After the signing of the pledge had been gotten through with, D. B. Lindsay, Esy., moved a vote of thanks, which was sec- onded by an unknown gentleman in the audience, and unanimously passed by the audience rising to their feet. The vote was then tendered by the chairman, and was replied to. Afterwards the Rev. Mr. Col- pitts made a few remarks, which were well received, and the meeting closed. — > aa The report of the sinking of a steamer and the loss of fifty-three lives ip a hurrivane on the river Doubs, France, published in the Journol de Jura without date or details, is not substantiated. and its authenticity is deubtful. The new German Consul-General to Samoa has received orders to abstain irom all inter- ference with internal affairs. The suggestion of certain interested parties that Germany shall anex Samoa, finds no favor in high quar ters,