Q “A ré td) ot Lt dis RP ue Vol. 4 WW Moseley Tignish, Ile du Prince Edouard, Jeudi le 11 Fevrier 1897 Per ———— TD ABONNEMENT , $1.00. PAYABLE D'AVANCE. … No 27 a EE ne CARTES D'AFFAIRES Dr. Murphy | PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON First Prize Graduate New! York University. OFFICE ; LATE RESIDENCE DR DEsnoyes. TIGNISH, P. E. I. A. W. MCcKINLAY, DENTISTE. Dents extraites et emplies de la manière la plus habile et à des conditions raisonnables, sans faire éffrouver aucuue douleurs aux patients. Bureau au dessus du naga- sin de J. Rattray. POS MAIRE. ALBERTON DR. WICKHAM, PHYSICIAN AND SUR- GEON. TIGNISH June 18— 3m PERRY HOUSE 1 have opened a new hotel on Queen Street, next door. to the old Bank of Nova Scotia building, where 1 will be pleas- ed to meet all my old patrons and many new ones. The honse has been thoroughiy fiited up, and furnished in first-class style, and it is one ofthe most comfatable and convenient hotels in town for either permanent or transient boarders. The terms are very reasou- atle and the accommodation all that can be desired, Give me a call. FRANK PERRY LONDON. PEN & PENCIL STAMP. This stamp, your own name, ink and brush mailed free, 25e. ; club of five, $1.00. For Printing Cards, Marking Clothes, &c. L P co. 225 loili- Street, = = = ifax N. 8. Manufacturers of Notary Seals, Btencila Rubber Stamps. &o. N RUBBER STAM ONDON RU Hal rt nmnenni nes on Bellevue Hotel [Formerly Gallant's Hotel] Tignish, P. E. I. —00000X00000— l'he Bellevue is situated a short dis tance from the Railway Depot and is now fitted up in first class style with every accomodation for the entertain ment of Guests. For years the Gallant Hotel has been known to be a pleasant house for Tou- rists. ‘Tl'he Bellevue will even surpass the former attractions. Guests and baggage conveyed to and from depot free of charge. M, W.McELROY PROP. Tignish Aug 27th 1896. Good Stabling in connection. TOBACCO —m(JOX 00 — T. B. RILEY —MANUFACTURER OF— Plug, Twist, Fancy Smoking & Chewing Tobaccos 00X 00 —— 1f you will have a good smoke or chew call on the trade for Riley's Tobaccos. They are reliable, uniform, and guaran- teed to give satisfaction. gæGret our prices before pla- cing your orders elsewhere. Charlottetown, P, E, 1, CARTES D'AFFAIRES Henry E. Wright AVOCAT ET PROCU- REUR | Bureau : Bâtisse McKenzie, en' face du nouveau magasin de R. T. Holman. Argent à prêter. SUMMERSIDE I. P.E. J.J. JOHNSON AvocaT, NOTAIRE PUBLIC, TCE BUREAU : Stamper Block... Ch'Town Gordon Building... Alberton Argent à prêter et à placer. MoDONALD & MARTIN AVOCATS NOTAIRES, ETC ETC — 000X000— ARGENT À PRETER ——000X000-— Es Browns’ Block Ch'town ersei l Gafiney’s B'd'g S'Side H C. Mcdoald, B. A, K J. Martin, LB. A J1. ? 16 J. & WYATT, SUCCESSEUR DE HopGsox & WyaTr AVOCAT, NOTAIRE, rc Solliciteur pour les Nova Scotia et Summerside Bank. M LA — ARGENT A PRETER — Bureau : Au dessous du Cliif- ton House. SUMMERSIDE A, E. DOUGLAS, M, D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON O,LEARY STATION, P. E. ISLAND. HOTEL PERRY J'ai l'honneur d'informer le! public que je viens d’ourir un! nouvel hotel tout près des bà- tisses de l’ancienne banque “Nova Scotia”, où j'invite mes anciens patrons et autres de venir me voir. La maison est de premier ordre. Prix MODERES FRANK PERRY. S immerside 15 aout 1595 tf Eureka House Formerly White’s Hotel. MAIN ST, ALBERTON The Patrons of this House may reiy on Good Table, Care- fal Attendance and Moderate 'harges. Guests and Baggage conveyed to and from Trains free. SAMPLE ROOMS AND STABLING IN CONNECTION. Mrs KRobcert McLeau, Prop MAISON EUREKA Ci-devant Hotel White. CR Rien Alberton Bonne Table et Bons logemenis Prix modérés. Les passagers de chemin de fer sont transpor- tés gratuitement. Salle d'Echantillon et Bonne écurie. Mme R. McLean, Prop TWO young men will find steady employment at L'IMPAR TIiAL office. ON DEMANDE deux jeunes hommes àgé de 15 à 17 ans. pour aider au Bureau de L’[m PARTIAL. Ripans Tabules: one gives relief. Ripans Tabules cure dyspepsia. Ripans Tabules. Sipans Tabules: gentle cathartie, Jan 16 95 fipans Tabules relieve nausea. J.H. Myrick & Co. importers and Dealers in DRY GOODS HARDWARE BOOTS & SHOES FINE GROCERIES And Fishing Supplies At TIGNISH and ALBERTON\ AH UTAR 11 USV9 JSOUSIF © IP4 99 US 910794 wo} ALT, ‘SICO JIOF P —posonbor squnosoe jo quourvd pue j29W91339$ AI uiddi —SOUIT [UI949$ arog9 ut Âddns ny U JIM SXOW107SN9 ITOUF JO SIUCA OU] "UIBJUU) 01 © | | | the Home goverament would \complaint : jat Pigiguit alone ; sent by wa- |ter to other places. And what [there was no reason to hope | Popish Recusants. Therefore, :tory, ancient or modern, which From a memorial sent, in Of Nova Scotians praying that institute an inquiry into the a- buses committed by Governor Bawrence, we find the follow- ing pertinent paragraph of “lhat the cattle of the Aca- dians were converted to pri vate use, of which we know 3,600 hogs and ner 1,000 head | of cattie was killed an ! packed at other forts is yet a secret all unaccounted for to the amount of a very large sum; and he and his commissary are now under great perpiexity to cover this iniquitous fraud, &c.” Meantime the drama of the deportation hurries elong— more speedily does event fol- low event with Lawrerce as protagonist than the swift fata- liism which brings Macbeth face to face with Macduff in the woods of Dusinane. The A- cadians have been Geprived of ‘hair boats and guns ; their ar- chives carried off ; their priests imprisoned. Their delegates af ter having finally consenied to take the oath of allesziance with- out restriction are to'd that ‘as their proposed compliance pro- cecded fion an honest mind and could b> esteemed. ouly the effet af compulsion and force and is contrary to a clause in an act of Parliament, 1, George il, Chap. 15 whereby persous who have once refused to take oaths canuot be afterwards permitted to take them, but considered as they wonld not be induiged with sach permission. And they were thereupon ordered BY THOMAS O'HAGAN, M. A. PH. D 'uneivilized 1758, to England by a number |’ THE TRUESTORY OF THE ACA- |femds. Parkman, who glow- DIAN DEPORTATION- ee img pages are the delight of ‘thousands ! Parkman, who shared for a year the rude and | d life of; 1nd'ans, Busily plied the freighted [that he might the ‘more accu- boats ; and in the confusion! rately study their character for Wives Were torn ‘fé tes the pages of his history ! Park- husbands, and inothers, too Ru who loted th» heroic in late. saw their children either the spiritual or physical Left on the land, extending crder ! With the real facts of their arms, with wildest en- the Acadian expulsion and de- treaties ( So unto scparate. ships were) * the documents of the time Basil and Gabriel carried, | the New England historian, Evangeline stood with her |°badow of Harvard, the idea of father. writing his ten volumes dea- Haif the’dadé waë n6tdonà ee with the life and fortunes when the sun went down, |: New France in the New and the twilight World, blasts forever his repu- Deepened and darkened aroun d OURS 8 * and impartial and in haste the reflnent O-|"'St0rian, thaîthe may justify céan the condact of the most brutal Fled away from the shore, desp É ee Fe disgraced the and left the line of the sand- | "als of Colouial America ! 15 Lé£h it any wonder that Laval Uni- with kelp and the slippery the giit and grace of French CT genius and generosity, hesita’ Farther backin the midst of|° t° Place upon ‘ke brow of ‘ the household goods and the es New England story-teller a Wagons, doctor's Cap ? lt were, indeed, Like to a gypsy camp or a lea- an honor illbestowed. Hannay guer after a battle. is also a partisan, ; Murdoch, Al escape cut off by the sea, honest but weak ; Haliburton, and the sentineis near thein, ’ Lay encamped for th: night [>] ! . ., j » L : the houselées ‘Acadian far: (Smith, Casgrain and Rameau, mers. ‘careful and painstaking. It is, Back to its methermost cases P°Wever, to the MS. of the | + r retreated the beilowing o CRE re ET Ce | prolonged research and indus- cean, | D Dragging adown the beach the LETY of Edwar1,Bichard that we rattliug pebbles, and leaving td A “ue OT a Ihe fer , dläan expulsion anç! depoertation. MS UUE MS LE the shore Kingsford is but an echo of e stranded boats of the Sal-|Hannay, and Parkmañ, while lors. . | Professor, Goldwin Smith faint- Then, as the night descended, | ly reflects the thre:. The latter the herds returned from their STE has r the Nes | | whenever a Urench Canadian . : PAL à à … . or a Jesuit crosses his literarÿ POSTE moist still AT | path. Yet, even the ône time With the odor of milk from! rofessor of Oxford is not the their udders ; last t> traduce the character of Lowing they waited, and long: | tP® Acadiaus. at the wellknown bars of the | . Dongies SInieRe "4 Kapee tai Va ring m'astrel from ustralia, , ; and a some‘ime sojourner in Ja- Waited and looked in vain for pan, while taking aflying trip. | Sam Slick, judical and stroug ; into confinement. And now besins in earnest | the s1d drama of depcertation : Th:re is no other event in his-: has such a setting of tears. 1t is a new world tragedy whose meunory wiii go out but with the heart of man. The transports are Îving in ‘he waters, the Acadians are ordered to convere in their church, whose consecrated ais. les are desecrated by a brutal aud blasphemous soldier+. 1t is Suuday, when perce and prayer were wont to hover o- ver the village of Gr:nd Pre ! From the steps of the aïta- Winslow reads the forged or- der puryoting to come from His Majesty. the King of England, orderiug ihe people of Grand Pre into exile—‘“exile without an example in story.” 1 will letthe poet Longfel: low teli of the embarkation of the poor Acadians as they turn- ed their faces away from their happy and peaceful homes to go they knew not whither : “There disorder prevailed, and the tumuit andstir of em- Joou 07 poredoad o1t ,Spoys [njrnvoq ÂI9A JOU JT 048T,, 41043 ur dn pouodo mou barking momie ou a nn dE Re à 5 PrE 2 the voice and the hand ofthe through Canada, and dining milk maid. with some Maritime literati, Silence reigned in th» streets ; [éonosived the ide, of adding from the Chuch no An Le quete to [he Hieréare pt 8 ‘this sad chapt:r in (he history soanded, of our country. Here is a spe- Rose no smoke from the roofs, cimen of his contribution to -and gleared no lights from br question taken from a page the windows.” of his recent bulky work, en- For eight years —that is from | titled, “On and Off Cars.” 14 is 1755 to 1763—the deportation | Very evident that our poetie ofthe illfated Acadians conti-|Pilgrim is “off” here. He is nned at intervals Ofthe 18,000 Speaking ofthe Acadians who peopled the Peninsula; | “These poor souls were:as fond 1sthmus of Shediac, Prince E1- Of their holdings as an Irish ward Island and Cape Breton, peasant”—this, by the way, of 14,000 were deported, and of Course, was a grave Crime, see- this number no. less than | that Lawrence wished to settle 8,000 perished. They! his friends on their lands— were scattered upon the | ‘and had been rebellious, not shores nf Massachusetts, New | from inclination,. but. because York, Pennsylvania, Mary!and |they were body and soul in and the Carolinas,amoug stran-|the control of {ho Charch, gers whose docrs and hearts in! Which was a mere machine in many instances were closed to the hands of Abbe Le Loutre.” their misfortunes by order of! Mr Richard spent years in Lawrence to the Colonial goy- research, consulting the archi- e-nors. The goddess Juno, ves of London, Paris and Ha- slighted iu her beauty, pursued fax, ere he ventured to em- with vengeance the Trojan ex-| pray a RTE DENTS ( bis painstaking Jabors, bu seb _ . but sa Douglas Sladen needed no such ‘Tu Piril © Wrence 18 research: Trathi came to him much more relentless and vin- | by intuition and the grace of dicative, for it pursues his | being a B. A. Oxoniensis, Eng- meek and despoiled victims in- | land. si ; to the-very solitude of their ex- | Time, however, is fast vindi- , ges cating the character of the . this is the man whom | peaceful and pious Acadians ! arkman whitewashes and de-! ; The end | tanns. Médias hs ee | ii de portation before him, as found. While in despair on the shorel Wh0 first cônceived, under the ; Covered with waifs of thetids, |"°"Sity> Québes, founded by. the distinguished author of nn a om mat ne ne cm ie More AT CT ut ot VOLS Cl ITU GT A PT ANS MT MC D DU mn smilies aus dt inrmendag dis ï