| &. : oe > & . feviesersiciear ea awit <ecssshm ecicetamaMaRONn Maa IRE HRB BC 8 AI a ORE I _ THE WXAMINER. ten ea EO old man bad not suficiear siremyth’ to! andergo an o, eration, and in two hours te had sauk, to rest, lewving bebindshim a membty, which will ever be held dear by every officer Age | man oc) the army. PRINCE MENSeRUKOFE’S ACCOUNT. | This orhing, Noveniber 12, his Majesty the ee | received from thé hands of the Captain of Cavalry, Jount Levuswhoff, the following revort from General Prince Mens-| chikoff, under date of Nov. O:— . j Yesterday, the Othy a sortie was mage from Sebastopol, on the side of the bastion No. 1; the following troops took: part | in it; —Of the 10th diviston of infantry ; the regiments of | Ciatherinedourg, Tomsk and Kolyvan. | Of the I Ath division | of infantty’? the* regiments of Selinghinsk, Yadbutsh’ and | Okhotsk. OF the 16: division of’ infantry: the reyiments of Viadimir, Souzdal and Ouglitch ; and of the 17th division ef infantry : the gegiments of Boutirsk ,Borodino and Tarou- tino. AS many guus were employed as the difficulty of the gates permitted the men to take with them. The command of the ttoops was confided to Gen. Dannenberg, the commander- in-ehjef of the 4th infantry corps. Our first attack on the hélghts was very fortunate; the English fortifications were carried and eleven of their guns spiked. Unfortunately, in this first movement, the cominanders of the troops, who were attacking the entrenchments,and redoubts, were wounded. While these-events were passing, the French forces arrived ia aid of the English. The siege artillery of thesedast was held in position on the field of’ battle, and it was no longer possiblé for our field-pieces 'to contend with it to advantage. Tue namevical superiority of the enemy’s infantry armed with rifles, oveasioned great losses in horses, artillerymwen and in- fautry officers. This circumstance made;it impossible for us to complete, except by a great sacrifice of troops, the reloubts which, during the fighting, we had begun to throw up on e* i } Numbers of French and British sailors.were taken by the Cos-acks on the. west cast... ‘The Britannia, 120, and the Marengo nearly fouled each, | is slightly injured, The rudders of the Queen, 110, and the London, 90, are badly wrung; but they may be kept at sea, at least fora time, Five French line of hattle ships have lost their rudders and received other injuiies; they will be brought down to Constantinople in tow. Captain Inglish, of the Engineers, was lost in the Prince. it is suid that several officers are lost in the vessels off Bala- klava. The following is an extract of a letter, written by the captain of the Andes, belonging to the British and North 'Amerigan Royal Mail Steamship Company, dated Constan- and received in Liverpool on | tinople, 20tk November, | Monday Evening : “There was a fearful loss, of life and property at Bala- klava on the 14th instant. The Jura, very fortunately, got into’ harbour before the yale came on. THE TREATY WITH AUSTRIA. The Daily News’ Paris correspondent learns, from a perfectly authentic source, that the treaty with Austria will become eventually a treaty of alliance offensive and defen- sive. Peace wiil be proposed to Russia by Austria on the basis of four points, interpreted as mentioned in the treaty. I! by January Ist or 2nd, Russia shall not have accepted the four points, so interpreted, Austria will recall her am- bassador from St. Petersburg ; | four points, or at least some conditions satisfactory to the | Western powers based upon the four points, shall not have oe he accepted by Russia, then Austria will declare war. ludes the throwing open Russia is not to be allowed to have a 9 Bucharest. Banisk Bey replaces Mussa Pacha as command-| A CERTIFIQATE FROM ONE OF OUR WILLIAMS BUL iF NDS: ant of the town. Mussa Pacha superintends the embarkation. . AGS | LS Cee Bbek, Angad 30, 1852. Omar Pacha will leave in a few days. I hope every one, whether adultyor . vo reason to and if by March 2nd the “ Vermifuge. I firmly believe it is one of the greatest worm destroyers of the age—eertainly the most extraordinary I knowof. - | A child of mine, abgut five years old, has been tr about six mouths back ; we could get nothing to relieve it across Dr M’Lane’s Vermifuge, of which we gave but a sn The result, however, was extraordinary. The child passed hundred worms, | bod Muarta Vouonrernina.—From all parts of the country reports arrive of the volunteering of militia men into regl- ments of the Guards or the line. The Northamptonshire militia has* just offered 300 men to the Guards. The South Middlesex Militia has given 260 volunteers to the Rifles, Marines, and line; the Lancashire has also given upwards of 150 to the line and Guards; the Essex Rifles. have fur- nished over 200, and the Wiltshire 158 volunteers. to the ling, and more daily join. The South Lancashire Militia, which has for some months been quartered at Chichester ied 10 Os, all quanGiy, 97 Bare, . : MR. LENT, Willian di ¢ Len i e 208 P.S. The above valuable remedy, alzo Dr. M’L.ne’s Celebrated Liver eqeece. e wet HB First Lecture:for:the sedsion wilt bb delivedtll inthe’ ; T ‘Temperance Hall, on Thursday, the 4th January next, at 8 o'clock, p,m, by the Hon. Cuar.es Youne,on Mechanics* oe points which the enemys position commanded, even as far as jof the Black Sea. ‘Institutes generally, their object aud uses. ‘The Lecture will the town of Sebastopol itself. The retreat was effected in good order on Sebistopot aud over the brigde of Inkertnn, 2 . . . and the dismounted guns were carri d off the field of battle : ' : ty bos “Nicholae’ Ni back imto the place. The Micand, Dukes Nicholas Nicho- laievitch and Michael, Nieholaievitch were in the midstof.this | terrible fire, setting an example of cali courage in the fight. Simultaneously wih this sortie the iwfanury regiment of Miusk, with a light battery of Artery ander the command of Major Generali of Artillery Timoteieff. executed another sortie against the Preach battenies, ard spiked fifteen of their guns: Uar loss in dead is uot yet exactly known, but the number of the woanded amounts to 4,90U,men and 109 offi- cers. Major-General Prince Measciukoif, in the suite of your Imperial Majesty, was hurt in the neck ; Colonel Albedinsky, the aide-de-camp of your imperial Majesty, and the eavalry captain Grewh, my aide-de-camp, was struck on the head. General Danneaberg had two horses killed ander him, and - all the officers surrounding him were wounded. The loss of the enemy cannot have been Jess considerable either, and the sortie of General Timoteieff cost the French dear, for, whilst pursuing hun with cease masses, they fell under a heavy fire of grape from. the bastion No. 6. While these movements were going on, the troops placed under the command of Prince (jortsehukolf executed a strong demonstration aginst Kady- kor, and thus kept the enemy’s detachment at Balaclava ina state of inaction. THE CRIMEA. Banactava, November 21.— On the 14th, the hurricane blew down the tents. and the men were exposed to rain and cold for the day. Several of our troops died from cold and exhaustion, and many horses perished. The camp was a sea of sand, and the Russiens were quiet and depressod. On the 16th, the fire was very slack on both sides. On the 17th, meu and officers were beginning tu hut them- sélves fur the winter. On the 18th, the weather was finer. valley are suid to have deca reinforced. On the 20th, it rained all day. There waga guod deal of firing on the French aud Britich lines, which was replied to very briskly. Preach avd English reimforcemeuts continue to arrive. . About tén days, later, and after the result of the battle of Inkernann was known to the Czar, the Austrian minister at | St. Petersburg was iuformed that the Russian goverament was disposed to accept the four points without these modifi- cations. In both cases it is evident that the real object ol The Rassians in the | ‘concentrated at [brail. | interpretation of the four points inc | larger number of vessels therein than France and Kngland. Sx ships from each nation is the stipulated number. An | European port is to be formed as a counterpoise to Scbasto- | pol, either at Batoun or at Sinope. The liberty of the Danube is to be declared; and, as a guarantee for ‘such i liberty, the tow. and fortress of Ismuzel, and all the Russian forts. near tue n.outh of the Danube, are to be destroyed. |The protectorate of the Chvistian subjects of the sultan in Turkey, is to be exercised collectively by the five powers. Should Austria be compelled, on March 2nd, to declare war, she will enter with all ber forces into Bessarabia, and will send 20.000 men to the Crimea. The Times’ correspondent also mentions, as conditions, the liberty of the Black Sea, of the Danube, the annulling of the treaties between Russia and the Vorte, and the joimt protectorate by the five powers of the non-Mussu!man subjects of he Porte. Tie Anoto-l’rencu-Avusrrian Treaty.—Vienna, Wed- nesday.— Austria, so it is asserted in all quarters, has not signed the ofleusive and deteusive treaty, till she was sure of the Emperor Nicholas’s willingness to aecept the four guarantees as origiwally proposed by M. Drouin d2)’Huys. iiussia, it is further stated, will not prolong the war beyoud } the winter, LATEST INTELLIGENCE. Intelligence has been received from Sebastopol to the 25th. The Russians made a sortie, and were repulsed by the Hug- lish. While pursuing the enemy, the English got possession of a battery of nine guns, which they maintain. The transport of Turkish reinforcements from Baltschik to the Crimea continues, One hundred and forty-six guns have been landed by the Allies, aud wil. be employed ina the siege. The Vieuna Presse states, on the authority of a despatch of the 26th from Baia Clava, that the Knglish took tzvo batteries | of seven guns each, which the Iussians had not had time to spike, Ou the 20th 9 part of the garrison attacked the French lines, bu! was routed with a loss of 230 men. Tue French lost seventy-five men, three of whom were officers. seek Buenarsst, Duc. 2.—45,900 Turkish troops are being Omar Pasha will leave our city to- morrow. 20,000 more are ordered to Varna. The news from the Crimea still comes principally from Pa U unfriendly sources, aud yet it is favourable to the’ Allies. the Russian cabinet in making these negotiations was ta tain from Germany a neutraliftysapported with firmness and petseveranes, but in both cases the maneuvre failed; for evel Prussia was not restrained from concluding the addi- tional article to her treaty with Austria, aud Austria pro- ceeded without any further delay to complete her treaty with the Western powers, ~ THE GALE IN THE BLACK SEA. ConstanrinorLe. Nov. 19—We have just had the* most distressing ews down from the Crimea—the total loss of a great many of our transports in a heavy gale of wind. I gend you a list of the Vessels lust :— é The Prince, screW"steamer, weat down, aud only five were saved out of 150. The Melbourne, dismasted. ; Iler Majesiy’s steamship Retribution lost all her guns. lor Majesty's steamer Sampson, dismasted. ‘The Resolute gone down, and all hands lost ; cargo, gun- powder. The Rip Van Winkle lost. "The Wild Wave lost ; one boy saved “The Kenilworth, all Tost. The Progress lost ; a few saved. ‘The Wanderer, all lost. A Freuch ship, all lest. The Mary Ava foundered at her anchors; ail hands lost. The Pride of the Ovean, the Me lora, the Sir Robert Sale, progres had been made in strengthening the defensive lines from Iukermann to Balaclava. A despatch from General Canrobert, dated the 24th ult., states that the weather had become more favourable, and that the work of the trenches had been renewed with increased activity. Ihe Russians in the field had, up to that date, made no further offensive movement against the lines of the Allies, but remained under cover of their nuimerous entrenchments. Prince ‘Lenschikoff reports that the siege operations were continued up to the 27th, but that the fire of the Allies was feeble, and produced little effect wpou the works at Sebastopol. He admits, how- ever, that our troops were strengthening their position and establishing new batteries. A despatch received via. Vienna states that ou the 25th the Russians made a sortie and were repulsed; ; The Kngtish pursued the enemy to their entrench- ments and ¢apthred a battery of nine gans, which they still hold. Another account cf the same affair is that the English took possession of two batteries of seven guns each. On the next day, the 26th, a part of the garrison of Sebastgpol attaekcd the lines of the French, but were repulsed witha loss of 230 men. The French lost,72 men and 3 officers. Reinforcements were daily arriving in the Crimea, but it is believed that the assault would not be undertaken until an addition of 20,000 men had been made ti the forees of the Allies. It is reported in a despatch. from. Bueharest that 40,000 Turks and 400 guas were'immediately to be embarked fa +: er . Notwithstanding ti? unprepitieus state of the weather, great the Lady Valient, and the Caduceus; all dismasted. The unfortunate ships were lost’ just’ outside Balaklava. It is a most fearful coast, and a ship orce oa shore would. not have the slightest chance, there being not a foot of beach | any-where—nothing but perpendicular recks. The Himaiaya dragged also, and very nearly got on shore | in the Turkish arsenal. This was tast Tuesday. - The Sanday before we had very heavy weather in the Horn—torrents of rain, and so cold. ‘There was the most fearful smashing going on among the | shipping. A large transport with Stores on Gollrd™ (the | Wynastay) went on shore outside Ovunstantinople, off St: Stefano ‘Point, and has become a perfeet wreck. ; The Geuveral Screw Steam Shipping Com is on@hore at Eupatoria with a tole hope to seve her, The uews.came down by the Valoreas. Nov 20.—On the night of the 18th a voilent storm burst over Constantinople, aud caused much damage to the lo*tier buildings; the mosque of the Sutton Ahmed alone losing thiee minarets. The tempest commeneed st Balaklava about seven in'the morving, and in two hours eleye | had been wrecked and six dismasted atd féndered unfit for’ service. , © A later account sdys the disasters of the 14th are even than we" anticipated. The following names: added to the list of those totally lost at Balaklava :-—Gor. trude, Pyrenees, Pride 9f the Ocean, and Ganges, The total Joss at Balaklava is cd . Pe ; | } pany’s ship Jason | in her bottom, but they greater t } Lost. Dismasted. British 18 ie French 12° ~ Sor5 Eighteen more British é are said to be lost or dismasted at Kupatoria or the Katéha | n transports | tha for the Crimea from the ports of Varna and Bultschik. The Morning Chronicle siates toat there is not the smailest ground for supposing that the. shipwrecks of the 14th ult. have:in any degree ¢rippied the operations of the English army, or exposed cur troops to intolerable privations, Lord Raglan had in stove, at that time, upwards of three millions and-a nalf of cartridges ; and, independently of the articles of winter clothing that were unhappily lost on board the’ Prince, there were, on board other ships which must have arrived shortly after the storm, 34,000 pairs of woollen socks, 30,000 wool- len frocks, 54,000 tlanuel drawers, 3500 watch coats, 50,000 blankets, 23,000 rugs, and nearly 7000 pairs of warated gloves. Little, therefore, is to be apprehended: from the resulis of the confessedly severe loss which our army ‘has sustained,’ ~*~ ys t , The Emperor of Russia still continucs his military move- ments aud preparations, A despateh from Warsaw, dated the 4tly of December, states that General Sievers is concen- trating the First Infantry Corps of the Russian army, with a portion of the Lmperial Guard, on the left bank of the, Vistula, at is, on the extreme western frontier of the ewpire, while General Paniutin is advanemg with the Second infantry Corps en Podolia and Volhyma.. Movements of this magni- tude arid importanee; undertaken by whole armies, (“or each infantry corps consists, when complete, of about 52,000 men), at this season of the year, when the troops would otherwise be taking up their winter quarters, indicate a conviction of thy néar approach of hostilities, ion By Magnetic Telegraph. Derartore or Oman Pacua ‘ann 40,000 Tunes For THe CRiMea.—Boucharest, Dee 6.—Forty thousand Turks and one hundred guns will be embarked at Baltschik and at Varna next week for the Crimea, One’ regiment remains at * Loven ee 0 , Su UNGENES: er Gih, Mary J nacre tthe shal Bavtimore, ( November If from P. bh. Isiand; for Lavetpool, arri barracks, under. the command of Colonel Sibtborp, Mb P..| To te it pheno be earafal to ook for, ead tale ote bab Dr exhibit a great desire to join the line, and no less than 150 Lane's Valdinana Rina of “dip SAREE OR° * UC of them have volunteered curing the past week. = s C8 es others, in comparison, are wort so ; oo a sh W.R. WATSON, Agent for P. E. Istand. The treaty signed between Austria, England and _— : Be a WS is offensive as well as defensive. ‘The three main condftions A GOOD MEDICINE, o> Coe, are as follows : | The Oxygenafed Biuers ath received the hiBhest’ tesa” “ If, in copsequence of her attitude in the Principaliiies, or )monials ever offered in fayor of sny medicine in the for any other canse, Austria should find herself at war-with | may be seen by all who will take the trouble’to rea ~ Russia, the alliance offensive and defensive between her,;tificates of citizens whose character and standing a ra France and England, shall be established bythe fact of the Sate ant whose na:nes could not be bought to pull a _ war. : : ‘ J a “Tf, before the end of the present year 1854, Russia should A ee remedy, fee gabe, Asthma and General Deb wh , ; qual, Give it a trial, and prove its wonderful effica not have made prepositions which are considered acceptable} Reey), BATES & AUSTIN, Wholesale ists, No, and which ensure good and durable peace, the three Powers} Merchants’ Row, Boston, General Agents, Price, $1 . will advise as to the means of obtaining that peace. = « bottle. Six bottles for $5. | 1 oat DAGTS. 52 ED), soma “The three high contracting Powers bind themselves not| For Sale at Charlouetown by W. R. Watson, " Desbrisary to accept any proposition for the re-esiablishment of peace | & M. W. Skinner aden’) aii heats te ae without having deliberated upon it in common. 1 pe Se eee Py “Such are the terms of this important treaty.” Tux Arwy.—KReinforcements for the Crimea consist of :—1 The 9th Infantry from Malta; 14th do.; 68th do.; 34th from Coriu; 71st (Ist Bat.) do.; 17th fromGibraltar ; 90th9 do. ; 77th do. ; G2nd do. ; 39th do. ; 89th d of 11 Regiments. 10th Hussars proceed to the Crimea from India. readiness to convey the regimeut from Bombay to Suez. DESPATCH FROM GENERAL CANROBERT. of November :— improve. Our works will now exhibit fresh activity. Our reinforcements continue to arrive, and [ have just received the Sixth Reygiment.of Dragoons, the sixth battalion of Chas- seurs, besides various detachments of different regiments. The enemy still shows no signs of activity, but continues to protect the town by repeated entrenchments.” Farther advices from before Sebastopol state that the de- fensive works of the English, between the right of attack and Bala Clava, were nearly completed, An Koglish regiment, from the Pirgeas, arrived on the 20th, and the next day de- tachment from the Guards, Ist, 7th, 23rd, and 95th Regi- ‘ments, to the aumber of 1,200 meu, landed at Bala Clava. French reinforcements were also continually arriving. The fring from the batteries of the allies was kept up. WINTER WORK—THE LOST OPPORTUNITY. « Before Sebastopol, Nov. 12. “ The weather has been very cold. It has now changed to wet, with tremendous gales of wind, The plateau we are on being at a considerabie elavation, and unblessed by a single tree or shrub, one’s tent gets very noisy and troublesome ; so L have begun to hut myself, having discovered an old cow- house, Or pigsty, without a roof, on which | am busy engincer- ing, in hopes of making four planks do the work of ten in the way of covering. 1 am very sanguine, however, as to the resuit. Such is the seareityoof fuchin the camp, that we feel it severely, and the poor soldiers who come out of the trenches wet through suffer, most terribly: You have no notion how our poor wen are beiug overworked. They hardly ever come off daty without having to go-on again in twelve hours ; and you may imagine that out-pickets, covering parties, &c., are no joke in such weather. The*siege goes on slowly. The ground in our front is too rocky to make trenches. The French ate pushing on, but very slowly. If wwe are to winter here, as scems probable, there is no great reason for haste, if by slow approaches we can save men, Wemicsed the op- portunity of earrying it by coup demain, and must now be satisfied svith the slow but sure system of dig, dig, digging, ‘dewedig into the place. Our difficulties are even then uot the Grand Dukes are here, and a Polish deserter who came in to-day reports that the Kmperor himself has come down. ‘This is not unlikely, as he is remarkable for activity. The most formidable arm of the Russians is their artillery, which is very numerous and well served. What do you think of a London newspaper publishing where Lord Raglan was—where our powder magazine is situated—telling what shot reach our camp, end from what batteries—informing the we are hard up for shells; ‘gabions, fascines, &e.? Bad enough publishing our numbers! We have positive proof that the information is not lost.on the enemy.” Mutancnoty Accrgnr. — On “Thursday last, 21st. ult,, Wiiham, aged four years, eldest son of Mr. John Stewart, North River, was accidentally burnt to death. It appears Mr. left the deceased, and two younger children, in the house, and when the mother returned, she found William on the middle of the floor, having fallen into the fire almost burnt io death. It is supposed the poor child had been trying to reach something off the mautiepiece, and bad. fallen, He lived for about two hours, in the greatest agony, and then expired.—Haszard’s Gazette ete etal : . » ' . i Died. - : » At Charlottetown, on Priday, the 22nd ult., afters long and painful ilness, which he bore with much christian patience and resignation, Join McDounell, Carpenter, in the 72nd year of his age. As . Ship News. : _, Arrivals.in Europe from hence. ; Pirmouri, Novenber 2ist, Farry. 253tn, Warburton. Hakwicu, November 261m, Silmtria, 6 Liveapoot, November) bliin; locredible. 13th, Flore Graham. 16th, Paxion, Mary Wilson. [8in, Mar himpire. 220d, tiannah Jane. Wh, Olinda. — Alice, Sth, Cambria, 7th, Mary 81h, Bom InmLanp, (Baltimore,) November 19th, 20:h, Augela, ‘ Graveseyn, Nove % tal : arrived yard, aod short of ‘ovt Row afiiee: Haxwicu, November 3erhi— &. {siand, for tiull, Which pat inf and with cargo shifted, dragge a squa!! from N. W., and stru but was assisted off with dary ' LOO va st Brig Carleton, of P.E. |, 0. Making a total Ships belonging to the India Gompany’s navy are held in, Pants, Tuurspay Morsing.—The Moniteur contains the | following despatch from General Canrobert, dated the, 28th |_ “The rain has ceased, and the weatlicr seems disposed to at an end, 2s 70" other side of the harbour they will bs — ALS0,:DAULY HEXPECTED — \ work us with long guns, and F-TRRGLGugsUon pbelber the large supply of Groceries, Leathet and Ironmongery place would be tenable for us unjess we warch round and lick |~ & bangs yi be wid m r , } =: ; nloas ¢ oon, | (CHARLES SAUNDERS. them there too. In any ease it will be a long job. Two of bi oe blic that Stewart was absent from home-tand Mrs. Stewart had in the morning gone to. the shouse-of her mother-in-law, and. -had are Lied i 4 tee ft ; 4s go gees ve open to the public. At the close of the Lecture Members will proceed to elect Office-bearers for the enaming year. si JOUN KENNY, President. December 25, 1854. ob goitizogax ch “The poor ye have always with yon. : The Bazaar, | 7 4,9 fi ohh - P SIG 1 yawaiisJ NDER the patrouagé of Mrs, Dany, in aid of benoyolent purposes, will take place at the Temperance Hall, Charlottetown, | on Thursday, the 18th January next, The following ladies composing | the committee, will gladly reevive contributions, viz: — ae L- Mrs. Lloyd Mi mer Mrs. W. Pope | / Mes. Jenkins Mrs. C. Stewert Mrs. C. Palmer: Mrs. W. Nelson, , 6 December 23, 1854. 4 CAlLpapers) ™ Christmas Cheer---Christmas Cheer. _. Jy ST call at SIMS’S STORE for your Christmas Cheer, Viz:—~ ; SY 4 Currants, of excellent quality. Bloom Raisins, Cask de. Spices, Ground and 8ti i round and whole Cloves, Grourd Alspice, Nutm Cinnamon, : , Se. Ieunessey’s best Brandy; Wines, Gin of excellent quality, Spirits, Rum. For merry Christmas and New Yeor. : Don’t forget the old corner Shop, alongside the Hon. D. Brenay’s Brick Hovss. ARTEMAS G. SIMe. wee © | Queen Strect, Dec. 18, 1854. Dry Goods. Dry Goods. CALEDONIA HOUSE, ON2 DOOR WEST OF APOTNECARIES’ MALb. T the above establishment is now offered a very choice and elegant assortment of DRY GOODS, comprising mostly every article in the line. hose Goods having been selected expressly for the market, in the principle houses of Great Britain and the Continent, will be found well worth the attention of the public, and they are with von- fidence recommended as the best and cheapest assortment of Dry Goods ever offered in the market. = ~ An excellent article of CONGO TEA. December 11, 1854. 4i Latest News from Sebastopol. rpuk accounts from the Seat of War have been so conflict. Public, and his customers, to something really to be relied on, viz:— ing of late that the Subscriber would call the attention of the HIS FALL AND -WINTER GOODS, just received, per schooner Elizabeth, from Halifax, corsiating of—- Broad Cloths, Cassimeres, Doeskins, Pilot and Whitney Red, white, yellow and green Flannels comes Ladies’ Dresses, of all descriptions Millinery, &«. 7 Fancy Goods, in great varioty Kossuth, silk, white, black and Fur and cloth Caps * Striped, gray, unbleached, printed i : glazed Hats e and white Cottons. - * ae of [L, a prime article for Laps. ai te a eva we * Tr. Aw Great George Street, Dec. 15,°R oe sa Hides, Hides, Bids ence per Ib., in Casu, -will be KF eee GREEN HIDES, delivered at Subscriber. NS te Ske ge , October 23, 1854. (Albithe papers?) _ Ladies’ Dress Materials, = [erent variety —newent stylea-—at thé Manchester House oe ViCUVIOw Decrdy Iely 5 fo, py Ss MoMURRAY. OOD TEA FOR FA Y USE—that can be ree G commendéd—is) Bow ur by datenniee aes the Manchester House, Sree Ph, one ka Y December 18. _ OG Hel Ss SAMUEL MoMURBAX. Fe B ae etcthe Hnleodieeall Senet) forty Boxes 3 Nr A i Olive and Pale Seat fs cone, Tepe ele Charlottetown, Doe, 18th, 1854, W ANTED, 4650 feet Dimension Soanrtine, of good sound Spruce or Fir, and of good on ‘A bill of the same gay be seen at the Eeaminer office. “Dee. 18. ~ txon vale ne PB. , ro es2200 2 SOMETHING Siw. uilcusete sTREDT 3 . w. SKINNER | ‘opened aud well ie Shap: Bo adjoining his dweting in Dorebester Street, oppc Mr. McKay's Coketia “ho e, with a choice sé 2¢ on of Groceries, Faney articles, Coofectramary, ruil ¢ al kinds Pickles and Sauces, preserved meate and fish, and ome go toys suitable for presents for Corietmas ime. All which will be sold for the fowest cash price Tecember 16, 1606 ns nit eee eft _. Stoves!. Stoves! 8 DV: mpue Subscriber has on hand e ; establishment eas ae Speke ‘Peeeeaeoe