tea A em NRT Tn SE a — dank e ry * ~ ee a a a TM Ree me Fw ee ° . hme = ~~ +. Dy <AMINE VOL. 5. | ~ LOOK HERE! ———__ — :0: —_ -_——_— CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINC —, p——— — WAREHOUSE. eee 3 BRITISH As we intend to: make a change in our business at the end of the year, we are now closing out our Large and Well-Assorted Stock of DRT GOoOowDS At Unusually Low Prices, Which, we are Sure, Will Meet the Hard Times. ——_— ----:0O°.-—--— Dress Goods from 6 cents upwards. Grey Cottons from 4 cents upwards. Prints from 6 cents ‘upwards. Hemp Carpeting from 12 cents upwards. Tapestry from 59 cents upwards. Brussels from $1.00 upwards. All other lines we are closing out at Prices that Defy Compeéiition. W. & A. BROWN. ea == a Charlottetown, June 30, 1879. ————— TT TT a ret ASIDE HOTE RUSTICO BEACH, P. E. ISLAND. VHK ABOVE BEAUTIFUL WATERING PLACE HAS BEEN MUCH IMPROVED thig Season and is now open for the accommodation of Guests. “Ror UM ARMING SCENERY, INVIGORATING and BRACING ATMOSPHERE, and sphendick SorfBathing, this Hotelhas ho equatin the Dominion. Terms, $2.00 and $2.50 per day, $10-50,per week. Special arrangements made for Families, Pic-nic Parties, Xc. To gett » the Seaside Hotel ; get tickets from all points for Hunter River. BY TRAIN. :—Trains, leave Chitowa for Hunter River at 6.20 a. m. ; 10.05 a. m. ; and 5.25 p.m. ‘Crains leave Sammerside’for Hunter River at 9.05 a. m, ; 12.40 p. m.; and 5.30 .m, Coaches meet trains from all points and convey passengers to the “‘Seaside.” Charges Siedeintiealinbeken between. 7 and 8 miles, through a beautiful country. BY. COAGH,. DIRECT :—Coaches leave Ch’ town Wednesday and Saturday evenings calling fer Guestg at all points in City limits at 6 o'clock. Returning arrive at Ch’town about 9 o'eluek, on Thursday and Monday morning. Fare, $1.25, distance 18 miles, Address: JOHN NEWSON & Co, Ch’town. ae ; J © July Sth, 1$79.—2m. pat. & arg. _ ———————— HAS JUST RECEIVED NEW FANCY DRESS GOODS, NEW, BLACK LUSTRES, EW BLACK & COLORED CORDS, \VETEENS & SILK VELVETS, NEW: Fb IWERS: AND FEATHERS, New Straw Hats, (Fall Styles, | FRILLINGS, FRINGES, AND RIBBONS, AT THE LOWEST PRICES. J. B. MACDONALD. Queen Street, Charlottetown, Aug. 22, 1879—her PICKLES. 50 Dozen. Chow-Chow. CARVELL BROS. TN A | BRITISH AMERICA Assurance Company. FIRE AND MARINE. Cash Capital & Assets, $1,176 A945 Ch’town, Aug. 25, 1879—3in eod Cash! Cash! INCORPORATED 1833. LL PERSONS indebted to me are re] quested te fake: iaiiasiaee payment. Head Office, - Toronto, Ont. All accounts remaining unpaid'on the 10th of September next will be handed over to the Court for eollvetion. HENRY A. HARVIE. Aug 23, 1879—eod 5in Risks taken on all descriptions of Property at lowest rates. 3 PROMPT SETTLEMENT OF LOSSES. ret HORACE HASZARD, Agent, QUEEN INSURANCE 0 Y, Office, South Side Queen Square, July 10, 1879. OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING, MAGLEAN & MARTIN, ee ee an | ee, the | Newson’s Building, Opp. Post’ Office, Vessels.on the stocks, Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled era “ Charlottetown, P. E. I. ee W (pion Bent) D. ©. MARTIN. Agent for Prince Edward Island /A. A. McLEAN. June, 1877-- June 18‘ 1879,—ex2aw ede atm ees naccenttet E EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9. 1879, ~-¢ 5 dP Dee. 14, a ee : WT UNION HOUSE, @ucen Street. Charlottetown. | P. P. CILLIS, . . . PROPRIETOR.’ CHOICEST WINES & LIQUORS. NEW YORK LAGER BEER. FENABLES set at all hours,-with every luxury of the season. FRESH, OysTeRs received daily, Rooms large and comfortably furnished. Coacnes from this House meet all Trains and Steam boats. First Class BARBER SHOP. July 4, 1879—3m FURTHER REDUCTION IN PRICE OF Albion Mines (Picton, N. 3.) SLACK COAL. LACK and ROUND COAL ean now be obtained at the above mentioned Mines, Slack Coal, only $1.30 per tons Round Coal, *2.00, For orders, apply to G. W. DeBLOIS, Sole Agent for P. E, Island. Orrice: No. 35 Water street. Ch’town, June 23, 1879—patsj kea h sp2m No. 35 Water St., Charlottetown. Prine Rdward Island Branch —OF THK— NORTH BANISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE. INSURANGE 60. Fut up Cons. teceae bis Street ; London!'6} Threadneedle Street. | Nine-Tenths cf the Profits of the Life Assnur- ance Business are divided every Five Years. The Tables of Rates are moderate. Fire Insurances ‘effected on nearly every deséription of Property, at the LowksT RATES of Premium® corresponiling to the nature of the risk. , | Lossgs ‘settled with promptitude and liber- ality. G. W. DEBLOISs, General Agent. Dress & Mantle Making, MISSES CRANDALL AVING taken a shop from Mrs, Burris, Great George Street, would respectfully announce to the public that, having hada large experience in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, they are prepared to do DRESS & MANTLE MAKING in all the new and lead- ing styles, at moderate prices. August 7, 1879 —2awlim . TEA PARTY | PIC-NIC SUPPLIES | BEER & GOFF’S Lemon, Rasberry, and. Pine Apple Syrup Sold in bottles and by the gallon. Plain and Fancy Biscuits Sold in Boxes & Bbls. and by the poun d. Iceing Sugar, Raisins, Currants, Pastry Flour, Essence of Coffee, Confectionery, Nuts, Oranges, Potted Ham, Drivelled Ham, Potted Tongue, &c. BEER & GOFF MAIL NOTICE. AILS for Great Britain will be closed at 10 o'clock, p. m., on THURSDAY in each week, to be forwarded via Rimouski, and also) on MONDAY, the 4th and 18th inst., at 4 o’cloek, a. m., to be forwarded via Halifax. Mails to be forwarded via Summerside and Shediac and also for all places en the route to Summerside and in Prince County, will be closed daily at 5.3) o'clock, a.m. also for Summerside direct, at 5 p. m. Mails to be forwarded via Steamers to Pictou will be closed every MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY and SATUR. DAY, at 5 o'clock, a. m. all places on those routes, will be closed daily at é o'clock, a, m. Post Office open from 8, a.m., till 9, p, m, A, A. MACDONALD, : Postmaster. Post Office Charlottetown, } Aug, 2nd, 1879, j j Mails for {Georgetown and Souris East, and} eee ee ee ee CANADIAN. Lonpox, Ont., Sept. 7. Legal advice is being taken as to the right of the city to spend public funds in entertaining the Governor General. Some citizens have expressed a determination to prevent it if possible. The Ontario Car Works are very busy tilling orders for Vanderbilt, the. Western Counties Railroad, N..S., the Halifax and Cape Breton’ Railway and Canada Pacific (Pembina Branch.) Orrawa, Sept. 7. Mr. A. T. M. Blasdell, of Ottawa, leaves to-morrow for St. John, N. B., having been appointed Inspector of Iron for the new post office. Judge Strong, of the Supreme Court, has returned to the eity. The papers anent the killing ef a China- man in British Columbia by an Indian have been examined by the Government, and the sentence of death ordered to be carried out. Orrawa, Sept. 7. Richard Sands, a brickmaker, was ar- rested at one o'clock this morning on a warrant, charging him with an indecent assault on a little girl named R. Eliza Finch, six years of age. The affair took place at Finch’s house on Friday night. Sands and Finch were both lying on a bed drunk and the latter was asleep at the time. The girl is very seriously injured. Penogsquis, N. B., Sept. 6. Mrs. Polly Dunfield, aged one hundred and three, died at her grand-son’s residence to-night. Krvneston, Ont., Sept. 7. Mr. Tolly, of the Montreal Canadian Illustrated News, was drowned this morning. His yacht was being towed to Kingston by the propeller ‘‘Persia.”’ He capsized a few miles above Brockville, and was drowned before assistance could be rendered. OsHAWwA, Ont., Sept. 7. A fire broke out this morning, about two o'clock, in the dwelling and bakery of Henry Carswell and occupied by Mr. Bloomfield. The fire had made such headway that Mrs. and Miss Bloomfield barely escaped in their night clothes. They had to jump a dis- | CHIEP“OFFICES-—_Edinburgh; 64 Princess {tance of ten or twelve fect. Miss Bloom- field sprained her ankle and Mrs. Bloomfield had eight teeth knocked out by the fall. The building was almost totally destroyed. The furniture was insured for $600 in the Northern ; the building for $800 in the Commercial Union Company. Fire sup- posed to be incendiary. UNITED STATES. Mempuis, Sept. 7. | Eleven cases of fever, four white, are re- port to-day. Eight deaths occurred. EUROPEAN. | Lonpon, Sept. 7. The statement that the French Govern- ment intends to abandon clause 7 of M. Jules Ferry’s Education Bill is formally de- nied. The clause re‘erred to prohibits members of unauthorized societies from teaching in schools. CoNnSTANTINOPLE, Sept. 7. The Greek members of the Turco-Greek Frontier Commission have drawn up a note to the Ambassadors insisting on the fulfil- ment of the thirteenth protocol of the Ber- lin treaty as obligatory upon the. Porte. The Turkish Commissioners intend, to maintain that the protecol merely recom- mends the Porte to agree to the delinea- tion therein suggested. They are ex- pected to make this declaration at the next sitting en Wednesday. It is reported that if negotiations fail, a European: Con- gress will assemble for the purpose of settl- ing the Greek and other questions. Sr. Pererspurc, Sept. 7. Eighty-four young persons, sentenced to hard labor and deportation to Siberiafer: political offenses, left Moscow: to-day under an armed escort. CONDENSED DESPATCHES. At the request of the United States Gov- ernment two cadet engineers from the An- napolis Naval Acadamy will be admitted to the Royal Naval College at Greenwich as students next months, Sir Alex. T. Galt has left London for Paris. The boiler of the steamer “‘ France,” plying between Bordeaux and Royan, ex- ploded on Friday. One person was killed, three were mortally and twenty-five serious- ly injured. It is stated in the best informed quarters that the rumors of serious opposition to the King ef Spain’s marriage are considered of no importance. The Liberal Conservatives | under Costillo are in entire accord with the Government. The loss caused by the sinking of the stone quay at Galatz is 750,000 francs. The St. Petersburg Gazette, in an article on Gen. Lazaraffs death, says the expedition to Mery for this year is a failure. At Sturk’s Ferry, Indiana, on Thursday, a fractious mule backed a wagon with a party overboard, and two persons were On Friday night in Cheyenne a two story brick building occupied as a boarding house fell. The building was completely wrecked. A number of persons were buried in the ruins. It is believed that all except two children were taken out. Col Vandesande, NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. NO, 94. ellen whose parents reside in Boston, was taken out dead. Others received more or less myury. ' A fire occurred on Friday night in a var- iety Theatre at Cheyenne, Wyoming, and as that building adjeins the telegraph ottice the latter was rendered untenable by the falling walls. Commupication with San Francisco is therefore interrupted. It is reported that. two men lost their lives in the theatre, but nothing definite is known. - 2 <—Deo se ——-——__—___._._. -- Terrible Afghanistan. MUTINY AMONG THE NATIVE TROOPS.—THE BRITISH EMBASSY ATTACKED BY THE MUTINEERS AND POPULACE.—THE ENTIRE PARTY, 79 IN ALL, MURDERED, — Simia, Sept. 6.—The fourth messenger has reached Ali Theyl with news that the British Embassy at Cabul has been attacked by several Afghan regiments, and that the escort of the Embassy are defending them- selves. The troops of Ali Theyl have been ordered to move instantly on the Shutarg- ardon pass, and instructions have been de- spatched to Generals Roberts and Stewart to advance on Cabul. Letters from the Ameer confirm the re- port of the revolt. He was completely sur- prised. The populace jeined the mutinous regiments, and the Embassy was attacked by overwhelming numbers, AT LATEST ACCOUNTS the Viceroy of India was ignorant of the fate of the members of the Embassy. The Viceroy of India immediately or- dered the troops at Ali Theyl to move in- stantly upon Shutargardon Pass. General | Roberts has been ordered to proceed to Pawar Pass, and advance on Cabul, while General Stewart has been ordered to hold Candahar. All British forces on the Can- Gahar line will concentrate at Candahar, the forces in Khyber Pass being strongly reinforced, and will operate on J allalabad. Major Connolly telegraphed on Friday night the substance of letters received from the Ameer of Afghanistan, who confirms the intelligence of the revolt, and adds that the regiments which mutinied were joined by the populace. The Ameer’s arsenal and stores were first plundered and destroyed, and the British Embassy then attacked by overwhelming numbers. The Ameer de- clares that he was.completely surprised by the outbreak. He endeavored to quell it, and sent General Daoudshak to Major Cavagnari’s assistance, but General Daoud- shak was unhorsed: and fatally wounded. The Ameer then sent his son with the Governor of Cabul and other influential personages, but the mob was wholly un- controllable, The attack on the British Embassy continued through Wednesday, when a fire broke out on the premises. The Ameer, writing on Thursday, says he is in great distress, and is himself besieged. The Viceroy of India is at present ignor- ant of the fate of Major Cavagnari and other members of the Embassy. | General Roberts has started for Peiwar Pass, and the advance on Cabul will be made very speedily, and will be strongly supported. The Viceroy’s military secretary accompanies Gen. Roberts. LATEST FROM THE FRONT. Simia, Sept. 7.—Troops of all arms have been recalled from Peshin andare re-occupy- ing Candahar. British aid. Badshath Khan, who helds the country beyond Shutgarden Pass has offer- ed his services to the British. Major Connolly reported all quiet to and beyond Shutgarden Pass. Smita, Sept. 7., 6 p. m.—Acecording to authentic information from Ali Theyl, some of the natives have come inand reported they have seen the dead bodies of British officers at Cabul. It is believed that nine troopers belonging to the escort escaped. Lonvon, Sept....7.—Intelligence. from the India Office is to. the: effect that. an attack. on the British, Em- “were joined later by nine others. The Viceroy of India, telegraphs, Sept. 6, that. General Roberts will reach Peiwar from Simla ‘in five daysfrom date, and will take command of a rapid advance on Cabul. General Stewart has been ordered to hold Candahar. The Ameer writes that the troops, at the first outbreak, after stoning the ofticers, rushed to the British Embassy and stoned it. Several volleys were fired from the Em- bassy in return. A SECOND LETTER FROM THE AMEER, dated Sept. 4th, says: ‘‘Thousands assem- bled to destroy the British Embassy. Much life was lost on both sides. 1, with five at- tendants, were besieged all day yesterday - to noon. Ihave no certain news of the nvoy whether he was killed in his qnar- ters or captured.” Lonvon, Sept. 7.—-The “‘Standard’s” cor- respondent at Bombay asserts that symp- toms of discontent were noticed at Cabul some time ago, and the bearing of the population toward the Embassy was de- tiant. numbered 79. They fought with the great- est bravery. Said, the Ameer’s son, was injured and a number of mutineers were killed, After the buildings of the Embassy were fired, the survivors held out, and defended themselves desperately, but all were killed, including Major Cavagnari. There is intense excitement throughout India. it is believed at Paris that the out- break was due to Russian intrigue. Yakoob Khan has asked for | ee begun by three Afghan regiments, hic’ The force defending the Embassy . ee -- ie ~- SS hE reser Gs , oe a ee m2 Pre ———s " epeaerd conerilacitecitab2 re anal ame ater eect ates a ea B am Cee ne cnemennnsetemedianaeinniellieeemaeacnaeeaice ne an Nene nea Naa ene ean en ea itil aa: eee eee ae RE LEN ET Te SE nese neath tin Ri is ores ve)