Secier, ee rms aan Hint ae ali Si A SMM ai Terms :—Five Do_iuars a YEAR. & aminet. a le a -- —--——- —-— - “ This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men having to advise the Public, may speak free,’’—KEvuxiprprs, Stneaie Copres Two CENTS. ~NEW SERIES. oom BRITISH WAI CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 21, i881. LEHOUSH, QUEEN SQUARE. -—-- —_—————— O— _ — W. & A. BROWN & CO. In their FANCY GOODS DEPARTMENT Have just opened a large assortment of Novelties and fF'ancy Ware suitable for, the Xmas season. Dec. 9, 1881. Se A'T Clothing, Readymade W. & A. COsT! Tweeds and Heavy Cloths, SROWN & CO, AS I WANT TO CLOSE OUT MY STOCK IN THIS LINE. Some Expensive |. adies’ Cloth Mantles and Dolmans, and Fur Lined Cloaks, Sealettes and Colored Dress Goods. & TA LARGE RBip;lo COVetrlton. JUST A Select Assortment of Flowers, Feathers, Velveteens, Ladies’ Sacques, &e., &e.' Nov. 1, 1881. GPENED AND MARKED LOW, RR. W. TREMAINE, 83 QUEEN STREET SS EE —— GRAND HOLIDAY | ——— en ee ee ee ee ee a ee —_ eee ee GIFT ENTERPRISE, “2° 2 “ALLL, FIRST PRIZE—A comfortable DOUBLE DWELLING HOUSE, only eight years old, and Freehold Lot, situated on Euston Street, Charlottetown, SECOND PRIZE.—A new and handsomely | finished COTTAGE, with Coach House and | Stable attached, on Freehold Lot, situated en the Malpeque Road, about half a mile from | Charlottetown. 3500 Tickets will be issued at ONE! DOLLAR EACH. Clubs of 1] tickets for) $10 7 276 prizes will be distributed as follows :—, f ) U R lst Prize. Double Dwelling House, Rg Gescribed above ...... 22... eeosceses $!,200 00} 2nd Prize, New Cottage, do, do....... 1,060 00 DR ince wedtendebsneescgns coasstaecces 250 00) SPOR 17 ” oltaisbinhdcaecummiaeiess 100 00} § 2M D6 , &> sacbdecadtitibdsvbbeds dbiadens 50 00 | i. MS , eodeoe sogneqeas seoongege genes 25 00) ES ES 20 00} , * “ “ sss backer tees 41) 00 | 10 « “ “ eR ae 250% “ u Hcaped deade coqhdcoce 250 00 The Owners of the properties guarantee to the holders of the lucky tickets a full and un- disputed title, free from all encumberance, and I will pay the cash prizes immediately after the drawing isclosed. The drawing will take place in Charlottetown, on Saturday, the dist Dec, Next, A meeting of ticket holders will be held on FRIVAY, December 30th, to appoint a Com- mittee of five persons to conduct the drawing on the following day. Parties ordering tickets by mail ere requested to register their letters Agents wanted in Towns and Vil- lages. Any further information in reference to above properties or their owners will be cheer- fully supplied. _—— E. H. BABBITT, Kent St., Ch’town, Dec. 3, wkly Manager. W.C. BISHOP, SELIPRLIIN G& —AND— FORWARDING AGENT, Maring Insurance Broker, —AND— General Commission Agent, 80 BEDFORD ROW, P. 0. BOX 1 HALIFAX, N. 8. ARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks thereon. Hulls, Cargoes, and Freights insured in first-class offices at most favorable rates. Consiguments of Produce solicited, and prompt returns guaranteed, Correspondence solicited and answered promptly. Nov. 14, 1881—1yr Vennor’s Predictions ! Big Storms Anticipated ! Stovepipe. Stovepipe L* you want your STOVES attended to, leave your orders with C, F. HARRIS. I guara atee Promptnesss and a Boss Job, C. F. HARRIS, Upper Queen Street, oct 28, 61] ppe bo ° S i) The Great Getting BEER & GOFF’S. EXTENSIVE STOCK is MOVING OFF RAPIDLY, isest Quality at +--+ 0 CHRISTMAS SUPPLIES! Table Raisins (Extra Choice), HAISING Low Prices. Valexcias (Off Stalk. tine and large) Boxes and Half-Boxes, Cheap. Figs ui 2 300 Boxes of Very Choice Layer Figs. COFFEE : ° : premises, warranted Choice. Woodburn’s (St. John) Celebrated Pure CONFEGTIONERY Candies, a very large assortment. eh ! Chocolates, Creams, Toys, Scotch Mix- 25 Cents anp Upwarps. l tures, Gum Drops, ke., &e. 20 lb. boxes. Our new Tea is giving excellent satisfaction. Very Choice Brands (warranted), Hia- FLOUR - wea watha, Primrose; National Policy, Crown Patent, &e. Nuts, Dates, Spices, Candied Peel, Biscuits, Chocolate, Cocoa (Epps), Schiveitzer's Cecoatina, Cranberries, Green Fruit, &e., &e. yn BEER & GOFF. Fresh, Roasted and Ground on our Hlalf-chests, Caddies, 5, 7, 10, 15 and oo ee SS - _ Charlottetown, Dec. 13, 1881. For Scoteh and English Tweeds or Worsted Suits, For Canadian Tweed Suits, for Overcoats of all Descriptions, -GO TO- JOHN MACLEOD & £0’s UUElae Clee We dow AU Bw, UPPER QUEEN STREET, TWO DOORS ABOVE APOTHECARIES HALL CORNER. There you will find the largest and best assortment of Cloths in the Island. Prices very moderate. The best workmanshlp and a perfect fit suaranteed, —ALso— A complete line of Gents’ Furnishings and Felt Hats, cheap, &c. Kc. Remember the address, two doors aloye Apothecaries Hall Corner. |: Charlottetown, Oct, 11, 1838), ‘tush is to oe * pe mo _ 4 Wa « > : ise : & a wa* | mee a5 i HE GREAT ‘GenMaiRFuEAY ‘REEUMATISN, | Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, | Backache, Soreness of tha Chost, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swe/!- jags and Sprains, Burns and Scales, General Bodily Pains, | Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. Ho Preparation on earth equals St. Jacons Orn as a sufe, sure, simple and cheap External Remedy A trial entaila but the compuratively trifiing outlay of 50 Cents, and every one suffering with pain can bave cheap and positive proof of its @lizima. Directions in Eleven Languages, 80LD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE, A. VOGELER & CO., Fire! NORTHERN ASSURANCE C0. 1 Moorgate Street, London, Capital, £3,000,000 stg. Every description of property insured at current rates, in tow and-country: FRED. W, HYNDMAN, Corner Queen and Water Streets. Ch’town, Dec, 6,’8'—tf CITIZENS’ INSURANCE C0., OF CANADA. SIR HUGH ALLAN.........PRESIDENT. 4 ROROEIIE a snicevdeiatenss os BU elmmlcscesenes $1,188,000 Deposited with Dominion Gov’t..., 142,000 Fire, Life, Accident and Guarantee. | Risks taken in the above Company at moGerate rates, (Farm Property and Isolated | Dwellings a speciality.) Policies issued in joffice at Charlottetown, Losses ‘settled promptly and liberally, A. 8. URQUHART, General Agent for P. E, I Ch’town, Dec. 9, 188\—1l.a Queen Insurance Co'y OF ENGLAND. en et ee CAPITAL - TWO MILLIONS STERLING. Insurance effected on all kinds of Buildings, Merchandise and Produce, Also, on Vessels on the stocks, Special rates for isolated residences. All Losses settled promptly, GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Ageut for Priuce Edward Island. Credit Foncier PRANCO-CANADIEN, $5,000,600 Ju’77} Capital, - - - President—Hon. E. Duclere,Senator, Paris. Vice-Pres.—Hon. J. A. Chapleau, Montreal. The Company will make long term loans with sinking fund, and short term loans with- out sinking fund. For particulars,apply at the offi-e of Messrs, Sullivan & Morson, Solicitors, Charlottetown. : W. W. SULLIVAN. Aug. 24, 1881. STEEL PENS. BY ALL DEALERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD. ani NMETHOOIST HYMNS fq HE NEW HYMN BOOK, in great variety of styics and binding, just received at HARVI%’s BOOKSTORE, Queen treet Ang, 1T-—tf itt — wr _ ~paka5-dooe Saonue ip-ctd lst cnashanndalltasandiemtaaie - We do not hold ourselves responsible for the opmons or siatements of our correspondents, : CORRESPOA DENCE, The McDonald-O’Farrel Case. To the Editor of the Patriot. between you and myself. aitercation with him.” Well, this is simply |It strongly reminds me of how the ‘caze stood between the darkey and his master | one day :-— ** Sambo,” said the master, ‘‘ Where is ithe hoe ?” ‘It’s with the barrow,” replied Sambo. “‘And where is the Larrow?” engnired his master. ‘* it’s with the hoe,” said Sambo. _ “Well,” said the master, getting a little impatient‘ ‘* Where are they both ?” *“* Why the D——1” said Sambo “ they are both together, I think massa wants to pick a row with poor nigger this morning.” There are only two acts of this depart- ment which have any real bearing on the McDonald-O’Farrell case. First, the sale to McDonald. Yon have already by the Hon. Joseph Pope, when he was is binding om all the departments. Yet you fill columns of your paper with attacks on me in connection with these acts, and when I point out the facts and you cannot confute them, you exclaim, with an uir of injury, ‘Oh, you want to pick a quarrel with us!” You say that Mr. Pope was right in selling the land. You say that the Attorney General was right in ordering the Deed to be given to McDonald. McDonald was right in refusing the refund of his money, forcing the Government, to give him his Deed, and in going to law. I have not noticed that you have condemned O’Farre! for the course he has pursued, nor demand- ed that Judge Hensley should be impeached fur charging in O’Farrels favor. One thing, however, you are determined to insist on, viz: that whoever is in the right I must be in the wrong. And for what? For improperly selling. land to McDonald or O’Farrel? It cannot be for that, be- cause you say Mr. Pepe soldthe land. For granting the Deedto McDonald? It cannot be for that, because the Deed was ordered by the Attorney General. The ‘‘ chaos” of which you speak, is to be accounted for by your unfathomable insincerity or your utter mability to understand the simplest busi- ness transaction. When you say that there was no condi- tion annexed to McDonald's purchase, you say what is not correct. I informed you of that condition, and it is recorded in the books of the Department. When you said that there was no record in the Land Office ‘of the Gillis’ survey, you said what was incorrect. Gillis’ plan is in the office, and I told you in the presence of Mr. Mc- Kiley that it was here. These are only specimens of the inaccuracies which are to be found in almost every sentence of your articles on this subject. Your reference to Mr. Strong’s letter is very disingenuous. You say that Mc- Donald never received that letter. That it was stolen from the Post Office. I believe that this is correct. But when you say that I have accused McDonald of disregard- ing advice contained in a letter which he did not receive, you are endeavoring to convey & false impression by suppressing a part of the truth. You knew when you wrote this that McDonald had the same ad vice given him verbally, and more than ouce by me, in the presence of witnesses You say that Mr. Strong’s letter was stolen or intercepted out of the Pest Office, that it “‘ was produced in Court by O’Farrel’s Attorney,’ and you demand ‘‘ why I do not prosecute the man in whose possession it was found, and had the audacity to use it in a Court of Justice.” Is it because Mr. Malcolm McLeod had the ‘‘ audacity’ to tell you that he did not use the language you attributed to him in reference to the Land Office that you want him to be pro- secuted for receiving and using a stolen letter! You ask meif I am prepared to condone this offence. I believe that the public would feel more interested in a deliverance of your own on that subject. Not many years ago a Government of this Dominion owed its existence to the whole sale stealing of letters and papers. Did yu condone it then! Or did you demand that the men who ‘had the audacity” to steal and use these letters should be pro secuted? If my memory serves me right you applauded the act, and it is only some three or four months since, in this City of Charlottetown, you joined in banqueting the principal offender. The charges which you have made against me, since I entered public life have been very numerous, and they have been urged with an ingenuity and a determination worthy of a better cause. But they have all burst like this latest one, in bubbles at your feet, each failure weakening your hands foe the next attack. Your impotence is now equal to the giant which the immor- tal Dreamer saw sitting in the mouth of his cave, only able to grin at passing pil- grims. I have no feeling for you, but com. misseration; yet, bad as yourcase is, it might be worse. A stern Roman law provided that when a man made a public accusation against another and failed to prove it, he should be cast into prison. When you politely insinuated that I should change places with McDonald, 1 could not help thinking of the old law of Rome, and how well it was for you that it is not in force iv these days. In that event your case would be worse than your friend McDonald’s for - Sin,—In closing your article of yesterday ; you say that I am endeavoring to make the’ | McDonald O'Farrell case, a personal matter | But, you add, | ‘he cannot tempt us to get into a personal | ,adelicious declaration coming from you. | to beth parties ; second the fulfilment of | that sale or bargain by giving a deed! admitted that the sale or bargain : : gain was made} = trish National Land Lesgue, Commissioner, and that the’ Deed was! given under instructions from the Attorney | General, whose advice in questions of law. VOL. 10.—-Nv, 25 his incarceration will come te an end, but _ yours would be perpetual. I have no doubt that you are familiar with Goldsmish’s elegy on amad dog. I would remind you of the following vefse, leaving the application to yourself. | * But soon a wonder came to light, Which showed the rogues they lied, The man recovered from the bite, The dog it was that died.” Iam, Yours, ete., Donatp Ferevson. China Point Ferry. To the Editor of the Examiner. Simn,—In the last issue of the Werx iy EXaMINER AND ARGUs, a writer signing himself ‘‘ Fairbank’s,” states that the ferry man at China Point, ‘ has retired to his winter quarters.” At the time this letter was writen navigation at this Point, was closed by ice, and is still closed; and there- fore no blame can be attached to the ferryman for not being able to take passengers across. I am at ® loss to understand why such an attack should be made upon our ferryman, who is always at hand at the call of cuty ; and I think that if all the * Fairbanks” throughout the country were no truer than your correspondent who signs that name, there would be much false weight in the Province. Yours very truly, __—e— «+ The Charlottetown Branch of the abeve organization held its regular meeting last night, at 8 o'clock, in St. Patrick’s Hall M. P. Hogan, Esq., President, in the Chair. |The audience wasa large one. The ro] of membership was increased by several new Danes. Mr. Patrick Cosgrove, at the invitation of the President, gave an interesting ad- dress on the history of Ireland’s grievances. |The hardships the Irish people are forced to undergo, owing to the cruelty of Land- lordism, were described in strong terms. Their present deplorable condition, the speaker said, claimed the sympathy and | material aid of all Ireland’s exiled childrcn, and that the conduct of those who are holding aloof from the Land League should be stigmatized as it deserved. ‘Ihe various periods of exodus of Ireland’s people were referred to, showing them to be the result of the misrule that has been Ireland’s history. He held it to be the <uty of all lovers of freedom, especially chose of the Celtic race, to unite in one final effort to bring about that brighter day when Ireland shall become a glurions and unfettered nation. Mr. F, Curran brought to the notice of the meeting the uncharitable and illiberal manner in which the [rish question is dis. cussed by a certain class of journalists ; and that it is unfair to refuse to concede to the Irish the right claimed by other peo- ples, of asking for a redress of those griev- anees which few can deny to exist. A vote of thanks was passed to Messrs. Cosgrove and Curran. Philip Coyle, Esq., Treasurer, reported the ackuowledgwent, from Rev. Lawrence Walsh, of fifty dollars, remitted the Irish National Land League on the 12th inst. Aiter a few remarks had been offered on matters of interest, the meeting ac journed. Rieparp Wats, Ch’town, Dec. 20, 1881. Secretary. _—————————< ©: Gib -s Personal. THE Queen has contributed to the relief of distressed Irish ladies. Mrssks. Moopy and Sankey are to receive £700 w month during their tour in England, It is stated that Her Majesty will open the Imperial Parliament in persou in February. Ir is stated that an Indiantown, N. B., clerk is a defaulter to the extent of $5,000, Mr aND Mrs. GoLpWIn >MItH are at present on a visit to the Arcubishop ot Canterbury. THE Sultan has fiinally refused to sign an irade, sanctioning a scheme for settling the Turkish debt. \. Rs. GOosELEY, a widow lady residing at Liverpool, N. 5., died last week at the great aye of 99 years, 10 months. Tue London correspondent of the Globe cables that H. R. H. the Princess Lonise is to spend the winter in the south of France on the advice of Sir William Jenner. Tue other day Mr. Beecher urged the mem- bers of his church, for the sake of keeping up pleasant church associations, not to sit ia the aisle ends of pews and make everybody climb over thom to get a seat. —~ ¢ —mo@m o- — News Notes. The directors of the Canadian Pacific railway deny that they have any intention of building a road to Port Nelson, on Hudson Bay. The British Government has taken the Italian Foreign Minister to task for stating that she was indifferent as to French move- ments in Tunis. In England Canadian purchases for the spring trade have been unusually large this year, and the Intercolonial Railway route is growing in favor of shippers, The Montreal Herald contends that the wicked Sir John Macdonald means to ‘‘ go to the conntry ” in 1882, and that he forced on the Quebec elections as part of his nefar- ious plan. Well, the result of the Quebec elections ig not reassuring to our Grit friends; and if their fears of an election are great, they have obviously great reason to fear.—Toronto Maul. According to the quarterly report of the Western Union Telegraph Co. submitted to the meeting of the board of directors on the 14th, the net revenue for the quarter ending December 3ist is estimated at over $2 W00,- ot). After payment of all expenses and & dividend of $1,200,000, a surplus of $1.013,- 000 will be carried forward ‘The sur; lus on July Ist, 1881, was only $127,000; the im- provement in the condition of the Company, therefore, has been must marked. a ee a