os * ¢ z i § e * : “ i z # 2 ; ; § Pag 2 & ee te : o- . ey 2. eee - . & ¥ } a - . ‘ é ‘ f ¢ ' ‘ # ‘ ® . ; z # ¥ z : i ' 4 2 * % i * 4 ¢ . - * & 5 > : me oo % : : . 2.3 4°89 % i 7 ’ 7 * ¢ £ 4s ¢ * : é = . . & . $ : 4 : ‘ 4. gs4 * ; i % 2 ‘ s : * 4 . : a 2 2 a 1 & if : » he , 4 ¢ # i : = * . ye 2 ft 8.9 4 f .-s iNKING , Fig 2.8.88 2 Boe : ; 4 eS Bg : . § ‘ . 4 .& 3 ‘ : . KB BRIG \ : * * of 2 é ¥ : « g x . a ¢ & $ : : " ¥ ¢ + s THE: Poe eh 20 ee Bose t ‘ © 4 . # ‘* 2 . > ‘ ‘ , eo 3 . a eae : 2 ¢ : 4 SOPHIA e * Z é 3 ; 4 . i ’ e i 4 Pe 2 Res ee Be. ee : 3.22 8% % & Fe oe Pe a ae ee ee ee Herald” . &.%. @ oe Se a ae j be = ee’ fe . ees El ee 4 Ff 7 # ; . 3 we kin, the * : 4 : a ; é oo Rta . «4 3 oe 4 x 7 oe. eg ; 3 . % : Me Bates hagas 4 Pea PTUs Pee se € reported , ¢ ; | : ? ; ‘ : + é 2. 9 4 58 7a from him . g s q % > 2 5 a z 1 ; 3 . [2 4 ; . 8. @ 2 isaster which : 4 & * % » # Z r * ¥ 4 : j 3 i ; : ; i , ees : : | ; ; 2 % 5 : STORY. Pog i t be FF & Pnmanided,” said the ; es . | ? : ‘ ught, a staunch ship. o . ; ‘ : ‘ ; ; » * “ortsmouth, Sagland, jast +t 34 e: Is}]¢ of Wight, and was a . £3 ee Fiedium Sized vessel. I do not ; os : * trade she was originally intend. | 2 & But she'was laid up about fifteen 4 > — 82.88 and offered for sale, and it is pos- et a sible Yet k do not kuow, that the oakum ; ” - ‘ e > a a. “| uw i i ge ee 3 + colonial had rotted out of the seams daring Luis idk ee ad : itime aud thusefs the sea a chance to get 5 verer"yesterday—neither Of }the better of us There is vo doubt that ca aners haying crossed to the Island. iris time the “ Northern Light” got un- der Way. _rMMb tt ——-_—-—- fag Apyssinta War.—A Paris despatch reporting the battle recently fought be~ tween the King ot Abyssinia ard Meuelk, states that the latter lost 23,000 men ip kitled and wounded, Bxcunsion TO Summersape — The mem- bers of the Temperance Reform Club of this city, aecompanied by the Band, in tend having an Excursion to Summerside on Thursday next, in order to take part in 4 Grand Torchlight Demonstration on that evening. ‘Trein will leave Charlottetown Station at 3.25 p. m., and return same night. — Return tickets, $1.00. . i> - Honor To WHom Honor 18 Dus. — As ap illustration of the progress which the pupils- of Prince Street School are making under the new regime, We submit the fol lowing piece of poetry, which is very popu~ lar among them : — As the devil one day was flying South, He picked John Harper up in his mouth; But when he found he had a fool; He dropped him in the Normal School. SOMMERSIDE NOTES. (from our own Correspondent.) Sommersips, Nov. 6th, ‘77... x Ship, like a Man,is the worse for not being actively employed. Well, we started in ballast for Ch@riettetown, Prince Edward island, and atter being out a few days we evcountered terrific gales. I have been a seagoing man for mavy years,but the way it blew off the coast of Ireland, and even when we gotrid of the shore, was some. thing appaling.’ We contd not send a mar aloft, and the decks were washed with such a furious sweep that it was as much as a man’s life was worth tO ven- ture out of hatchwats. | have been off the coast of Labrador, where the cold nor’ westers sweep across | the waters, and also in the Mediterranean when the ga es blow from the sou’east and wrinkled the face of the sea, making it what we sailors call ‘ch p,’ but [ have never seen such nasty weather as the Maggie experienced during our voyage. When we were about eight days out, in the middle of the dog watch, when from sheer fatigue | had fal- len asleep, [ was startled by one of the sailors, whom [| knew as ‘ Charley,’ calling : —‘Captiin! Captain! we've sprung a leak.’ [ sprang on deck, sustaining myself ly ropes, and found that the alarm was not false. The sea was sweeping Over every~ thing; the scuppers were choked and the water was filling the cabins and galleys; one of the skylights was broken and there was a perfect deluge of water pouring in the opening. [ give my orders and soon the crew, six men were working gallantly atthe pumps. But the water seemed to gainon us, All that night, the next day and the next, those faithful fellows toiled —J think as much to save the ship as to save their lives. Sometimes one of them would give way from sheer fatigue, «nd then a companion would go and get him a biscuit steeped in brandy» and by. this There are several cases of typhoid fever/). 44, revive him so that he could go to reported in town. ed fata), ;, Mr. Leonard Morris, formerly of Char lottetown, intends opening a singing class ia Montgomery's Hall next Thursday even ing. There was an unexpected change in the service held in the Presbyterlan Church last Sunday evening, over which the pas- tor—Rey. Neil McKay—had no control. Near the close of the service a man wus seen to get on the floor and commenced to “tip the light fantastic toe,’’ in a manner which would do credit toa dancing master. it has tarned out that the man’s name is Lloyd, and that he is orazy. The Orange young Britons gave an enter- tainment in their Lodge Room on the 5th, ia commemoration of Guy Fawke’s day. The programme consisted of songs, speeches, recitations and dialogues, which were well rendered. A Bye-Law passed by the Town Wardens, instituting a Small Debt Court for the town of Summerside, is published. The Court will siton the first Monday in each month. The first sitting takes place on the first Monday in December. Quite a storm raged on Friday night. Saturday and Sunday. The waves swept over the wharves on Sunday, making it dangerous for persons to pass up or down. The ** Princess of Wales’ did not make her return trip from Shediac until Sunday. The ** Alhambra, from Montreal, due Sa turday morning, also arrived on Sunday. She brought 1,200 bbls. flour for James Sharp, Exq. The temperance tidal wave has reached usatlast. D, Banks McKenzie arrived here on Monday night, accompanied by « few members of the Charlottetown Club. A meeting had been called on short notice. Yet when Mr. McKenzie arrived Ludlow Hull was filled with people. John F. Baker, E-q, introduced Mr. McKenzie to ths audience, who requested that they would sing “Hold the Fort.” After the Sibging was over Mr. McKenzie came for- Witdand gave an acount of the Reform Movementin Halifax, Charlottetown and tis, not forgetting an account of how he himself was saved from a drunkard’s . He gave tne audience some plain facta. and pictured the drunkard in good colors. He promised to make a clean sweep of the liquor traffic in our towm) He read the Reform Club pledge ( for persons willing to sign the pledge to’ in s short —_ forward and do at i ® over one hundred mames “had been enrolled and blue ribbon worn by some of our worst drinking Darin the signing of the pledge ; suitable to the cellos. wee i adies present. A meeting will be held to- night in the same hall, for which a choir oo be selected to sing some choice tem- perance songs. On Thursday night it is ‘ntended to have a monster ecnamia = which a large number of the City Re. ormers is expected to be present. Altos gether, Mr. McKenzie has made a good tL uencement, and it is to be hoped ; &t he will stilk continue to do good work | or the neble cause, During Mr. McKen- “e's address, he was loudly applauded, As yet none have prov- 4 | the *‘ Maggie.’ work again. Remember, while these brave feliows were working at the pumps, the storm was raging, the sea was pouring in at every open piace, and there was no abatement of .the wind. I never realized before what a little raft a ship was until J found myself out in the raging sea on the brigantine Maggie. But it was no use; the water was giining 6n us, and as each day dawned and each night closed in upon us we found we were filling and it was only a question of time how long we could float. We hoisted signals of distress about the time, according to our dead reckoning, we were off the banks of Newfoundland, but we saw nothing but the dead waste of sea ~the cloudy, misty expanse of water on whice we were rolling like a log. A BHIP IN SIGHT. “But when we were in latitude 43 deg. north and longitude 53 deg. west, on the 22d of October, we sawa brig in the dis tance, and atonce (as far as we were able) bore down upon her, renewing our signals of distress. The vessel proved to be the * Sophia Cook,” of Halifax, commanded by Captain John Cook, ani as soon as we approached each other Captain Cook sent a boat on board to inquire into our condition. {t was deplorable enough. We were rap- idly filling, and there was danger of our going dovn every minute. The men were hungry and exhausted and almost fainting from their over-exertion. I do not think that two of them, Charley and Robt. Wills, could have endured the fatigue twenty- four hours longer. Our own boats were filled with water, and one of them was stove, so the boats of the * Sophia Cook” | (ook the crew off to the latter ship. This took about two hours. { remained with the ‘‘ Maggie’. until the !ast—indeed, un. til she was in danger-of going down—and then [ consented, at Captain Cook’s re- quest, to go on board of his brig. IL don’t know anything about the insurance on the ‘‘ Maggie,’”’ but I am under the impression that she Is..not insured. Of course we sailed away trom the sinking ship, and | have no doubt that now she is at the bot- tom of the sea,” STORY OF CAPTAIN COOK. © ‘On the 22nd day of Uctober, in the be ; ofcourse knew she was in distress. was bearing down on us, was running very high aboat. I could | that the vessel Was | waterlogged and re wery ba mate boarded the ship and rey that it was oe ‘aggie,’ i Prince Edward Island, a1 conference, he dic to take _ ship was e. | d° myself, how-~ tite $ m0 chance Of saving the vessel, and the crew were then taken’ ‘off. This occupied about two hours and | was attended with considerable danger. | Captain Larkin was the Jast man to leave The water at the time we) left the brigt. was over the ballast, and as” _to me allast. for at she was ‘I then had a’ course, Wish me | pe of saving the, latitude mentioned by Captain Larkin, I{such License the applicant shall pay to sighted a brigantine with ensign down, and | City of Charlottetown the sum of Fifty Dollars, She | t© be paid to the City Treasurer, to become part we waited for | her as well as we ,were able, but the sea resident in this Province, bringing produ at the time, and it | provisions, fue! or supplies, nor to any c was with much difficulty that we launched | whomsoever bringing fuel or agricultural pro- ne tho night ensuing wis very stormy, it ds not at all likely the vessel kept afloat many hours aftershe wie abandoned,” A HEKO OF THE S#a, Nhe exploits of Captain John Cook in suvlag sHipWrecked marmers are matters Of nautical history, and for a commander as young as he—his aze is about furty—quite remerkable, in the State Departiugent there is gre@sore tint on thes first day of Maggle “Sprit, vga. Vook rescued the crew of the b » ©. Vanhorn”’ in the Bay of Fundy nded them safely at St. John, N. B* These poor men tad been twenty-four days in an open boat, and had (suffered all imaginable horrors from “lack of food and water and exposure to the ‘storms that were then raging. In 1872, \on the 18th ot Degeraber, Captain Cook bad the good fortune to rescue the crew of the American schooner “ Ravenswing,” of ‘Stonington, This company consisted of |seven men and they were takéh to Dem- \erara by Captain Cook, whither he was ;}bound. For this act he was presented by President Grant with an elegant gold watch, the inside of the case being in- sertbed with an acknowleigment of the service for which the gift was made, ‘The the list of vessels that this brave officer has been fortunate enough to relieve in their hour of dire peril.—N. ¥, Hefald. a ee re Shipping Intelligence. PORT OF CHARLOTTELPOWN. ENTERED. Noy. 6.—Sclirs, Kate, Pentz. Picten, coal; /Cameleon, Weatherbie, Tatmagouche, | boards and staves to O. Connolly. CLEARED. Nov. 6.—Schra. Spring Rird, Smith, Hali- fax, 1,500 bush? potatoes, 330 do oats, 80 do. ‘urdips; Gulf Ranger, Walker, Pictou, 70 bush. potatoes,;"Fish Hawk, Sa¥im, Cascum. pec, Kclecta, Beattie, Pinaggte, sundries; Golden West, Smith, Halifax 540 bush potatues, 114 do. turnips, 746840 oats, 10 bbls. oysters, “ ! > inst., 60 hours from MecFayden. Niieg to Prirastinaors | All Accounts furnished before and at last Xmas, and Midsummer of this Halifax, to Davies & year, that remain unpaid after this month, will be placed in the hands of an Attorney for collection, without dis- tinction of persons. : MARK BUTCHER, Oct. 81-- ; EDUCATIONALL CUNNINGHAM DUNLOP begs to in- ey, timate that he will deliver 4 Course of Lectures wie (IN ne FRENCH LITERATURE. throughout the winter, in the large Hall of the Y.M.C. A, The first Lecture will be beld on TUES- | DAY, 13th November, at 8 o'clock p. m. Admission, 10 Cents, Ch'town, Nor. 6, 1877. NEWFOUNDLAND PURT WINE. rescue of the captain and crew of the brig! ‘‘ Maggie.” therefore, makes the third in| Quick Passage.—Brigt. Brttern, Irving, | Master, arrived at Murray Harbor of the 2d° GREAT THIS DAY, —AT THE— ‘Seer 100 PAIRS 10-4 WHITE WOOL BLANKETS, $3.00. 100 PAIRS S-4 White Woo! BLANKETS, S150. These Goods were bought mach wider inarket value and are « GREAT BARGAIN, 300 BED QUILTS | 85 cts. and upwards. ne 4000 YDS. -/Print Remnants, 6 cts 1600 Yards FLEECY COTTOX ! 9 & 10 CENTS. 3000 YAR Ds Fancy Dress Goods, DIFFERENT TTYL&s, 123, 18 & 25 ors, 100) LADIES FELT SKIRTS, AT 60 CENTS. ee 15,000 YARDS BLACK DRESS GOODS JUST RECEIVED, From £t. Johns, per Brig * lleetwood,"’ a | supply of this Fine Old Wine, which will be sold at our usual MODERATE PRICES. MACEACHERN & (CO: Oct. 24— A. LAW. (a ee A Bye-Law Reiating to Com- mercial Travellers. Ze tk Enacted by the Cily Council of the City of Charlottetown, as follows 3 ae” toe the passing of this Bye-Law, no Commercial Traveller or Agent, who ia, nota rate-payer to the said City, shall offer for | sale or sell, within the said City, aay kind or! description of goods, wares or merchandize, | either by samples or otherwise, without first ob- se a License from the City of Charlotte- | town for the purpose , such License to be under he Seal of the said City, and sigaed by the ‘Mayor and City Clerk ; and for the pay tbe ot the revenues of the City. This Bye-Law shall not apply to any pers@r uce to the City Any person violating this Bye-Law shall be subject to, and liable to pay a fise of, not less than Twenty-five Dollars nor more than Fifty | Dollars, in addition to the License fee, for each offence,—to be prosecuted by any party who may inform, in the name of the City of Char- lottetown; and, on conviction and non-pay- meut of the fine imposed, imprisonment for not more thao thirty days in the Charlottetown rison ; and the trial of any such offeader shall take place before the Stipendiary Magistrate of | the City of Charlottetowa, in the City Court, | apd the fine sha}! be paid to the City Treasurer. | Passed 220d October, 1877. § « J. 8. CARVELL, Mayor. — Wa. B. Morgison, City Clerk. Caarlottetown, Oct, 24—3w law pres ne 3w FRENCH MERINOS. CASHMERES, PARAMATTAS, BALMORAL CRAPES, PERSIAN CORDS, COBURGS, LUSTRES, BRILLIANTINES, &e, These Goods are marked at the very Lowest Cash Ht rice, and do not need any special commendation from us. eee 1000 MEN’S SHIRTS, 50 cts. to 82,75. } i | Extraordinary Bargains Men’s Clothing Men's Reefers $2 to $10. Top Coats $4.50 to $16. Boys & Gents Ulsters $3 to S16. The above Goods conprise a portion of our intmense Stock, which our special Cash System enables us to sell at prices) so exceedingly low, | GEORGE DAVIES & CO. Nov. 5, 1877, YRACTIONS | LONDON HOUSE ! Latet Stes | ad Cheapest Rates THE EXAMINER BOOK & JOB Printing Department. J. W. MITCHELL, (Formerly of the Firm of Laird & Mitchell, HAVING ENTERED THE Examiner Printing and Publishing os Company, and added’ the Plant, before possessed by the Company, his Complete New Stock of Jop ~ Printing Material, s a Oe ‘ We are now in & position to execute sa While announcing this im an tion to our business, olen it bus right thes we should tender to the public our sincere thanks for the encouragement and practical support our enterprise has hitherto received {n view of _the long experience of Mr. J. W- Mitchell, his well-known attention to business. an the large and varied Stock of Material at our command, we confidently solicit the patronage of Auctioneers, Merchants Ship ae plot." ee Companies, Asso- ciations, and indivi ‘ : i steanity riduals and corporations = Orders oe for a few weeks only, (until oul arrangements are completed), be lett i Company's Office, Water Strees ; and x at _ ee of J. W. Mitchell, 23 Great George Street. Tae Examiner Pusiisurye Co. | Musical Instruments. Concertinas, Violins. Cuitars, Accordeons, Etc.. Etc., Etc.. ALL PRICES, a? FLETCHERS’ MUSIC STORE. Ch’town, Oct, 30- 3m eod | Wants, ete, ete. sa" Advertisements under this heading,in space not ex- ceeding half an ineh, wlll be inserted for TEN CEN Ps per day. enn ee ee _ ee ANTED—Apn acre or two of Land, near Town, to set out fifteen or twenty thousand grafted fruit trees, to raise for sale. Would like to have owner of lant take one-third or half interest in the busi- ness. Very little capital required. Address S. McKAY, Truro, N. S. Ch’towv, Nov. 7—5i*, OUSE TO LET.—A House to jet, con- taining five rooms. Apply at this of, tice, or to JAMES MoLEOD, Spring Park Roed, Ch'town, Nov. 5, '77.—3i eod ANTED TO CHARTER.—A VESSEL for Newfoundland. W. BOYLE, Spring Park Tannery. Nov, 3.— in* a a a oe ANTED—Good Board wanted by a Gen- tleman, with Bedroom and Privat Parlor. Late cinner preferred. Apply at this office. > Nov. 8 PV ANTED—A first-class Horse Suorn and a first-class CanriaGe BuILpex (wood). Apply to J.C Square. Ch’town, Nov. 2—tf KEIFFR, Queen a a \ ANTED—A Smart Boy, 15 or 16 years of age, to learn the Printing Business Apply immediately. paw. A, 'T7. ree — —_——_— eee pry WANTED.—A few perman. ent Boarders can now be accommodated at the Revere House. OARDERS WANTED —Four er five Boarders wanted, Gentiemen preferce «1 Rooms are large an! Suitable for married couples. Apply at this office, Ch'town, Oct. 12, 1877, u) LET.—Two or more Rooms te }+t convenient part of this city. App'y at this olflice. Ch'town, 1377. all kinds of Printing, suchen see a LETTER HEADS; BILL HEADS, CIRCULARS, CARDS. PAMPHLETS, DODGERS, HANDBILLS, ; POSTERS, AND ALL KINDS OF Bank and Legal Printing ! ke &e. ke. * Rot = gaia eR aE ie 7 ‘ on eo oS eae Pe ee Be eg eed ay ly scan ve MPa aaa as - 9 mane mie, ade EES OE MN | ERLE I 2 ON ee oe cl A i «ae gaa iN 38