i a me ST sae “mM Gi THE IN ER. VOL. 6 CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22 a ee ey - , 1879, NO. 2, Hewson, McDougall & Seaman EG leave to acknowledge thanks to the public generally for the very liberal pat ronage extenled to them since commencing business, and intimate that they have on hand alarge and select stock of material for the manufacture of Sleighs, ete. They have re- cently received photos of all the latest prize aleighs of the Ottawa Exhibition. Parties re- ulring new sleighs would do well to call at their factory and examine before ordering elsewhere. They keep on hand and make to order Top Buggies, Phaetons, the famous Dexter Spring Wagons, and carriages of every description. Repairing of all hind done with neatness and despatch, and warranted to give satisfaction to those who favor them with a call, at prices to suit the times, N. B.—Parties haying their Sleighs repaired and painted would do well to leave them at once in order to have them in time for the first snow. a@ Wagons stored at moderate charges. Parties having their wagons repaired and painted in the spring will have them stored free of charze for the winter. Ch’tewn, Oct 27th, 1879. . BRITISH AMERICA Assurance Company. FIRE AND MARINE, Cash Capital & Assets . $1,176, 491,45, INCORPORATED 1833. Head Office, - Toronto, Ont. Risks taken on all descriptionsof Property at lowest rates. PROMPT SETTLEMENT OF LOSSES. HORACE HASZALD, Agent, Office, South Side Queen Square. July 10, 1879. DR. P. W. G, CANNING, Licentiate Royal Colleges Physicians and Surgeons of Edinburgh. LICENTIATE MIDWIFERY. RESIDENCE : Upper Hillsborough St., corner Hillsborough and Euston Streets, Charlottetown. OFFICE HOURS : 8:30 toll a.m.; 7 to9p.m. Charlottetown, June 24, 1879.—-eod QUEEN INSURANCE CO’Y. OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING. ee CE effected on all kinds of Build- in. Vv Merchandise and Produce. Also, on on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences, Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island June, 18S77— No. 35 Water St., Charlottetown. Prince Edward Island Branch —OF THK— NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE. INSURANCE 60. Subscribed Capital, $9,733,332.00 CHIEF OFFICES—Edinburgh, 64 Princess Street ; London, 61 Threadneedle Street. Nine-Tenths of the Profits of the Life Assur- ance Busiuess are divided every Vive Years. The Tables of Rates are moderate, Fire Insurances efiected on nearly every description of Property, at the LowEsS’ RATES of Premium. corresponding to the nature of the risk. Lossus settled with promptitude and liber- ality. G. W. DEBLOES, General Agent. Dee, 14. “MAIL NOTICE. : AILS for Great Britain will be closed at 10 o'clock, p. m., on THURSDAY in each werk, to be forwarded via Pictou, for Canadian mail, steamers leaving Halifax every Saturday. A mail will be closed on Friday, the 2ist inst., at 10 vp. m., for mail steamers leaving Halifax on Tuesday, the 25th, and supplemen- tary matter will also be forwarded by MON- DAY evening's boat for Pictou. Mails t be forwarded vtz steamers to Pietou will be closed after the 22nd inst., on every MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY, and SATURDAY. at 5 o'clock a.m, until close of navigation. Mails t» be forwarded via Summerside and Shediac will be closed at 5.30 4.m.; also for Su-nmerside direct at 5 p.M., and for George- town, Souris and places on those routes at 6 o’clock 4. m., daily. Post Otiice open from 8, a.m., till 9, p. m. A. A. MACDONALD, Postmaster. Post Office Charlottetown, Nov, 20th, 1879. ee A SWEEPINC REDUCTION Those who are in want of CARPETS can now supply themselves at rates unusually low at the LONDON IOUSE We shall, on FRIDAY, the 7th November, begin to sell out our entire stock, con- sisting of about 6,750 YARDS, WITH Hearth Rugs & Mats, at an exceedingly large discount FOR CASH. ee As these prices will be offered for a limited period only, those who wish to take advantage of them should make . an early call. The Stock consists of BRUSSELS, TAPESTRY, ! SCOTCH WOGL, FELT and STAIR CARPETS. TERMS CASH. anes & Ut Nov. 5, 1879. ENTLEMEN: \ J. HAVE ABOUT COMPLETED THE lost Ghoies Collection SbOTCH TWEEDS, Canadian Tweeds, West of England HS, eer i Om St rs CG F in tom ‘i iL 2 Overcoatings, &., &., &e., Pe q - — ae ne . F Be We have yet efered tothe Public. ar . >| 3 3 3 TT? e Monn Taninyan an Tha Pram MWGitidiiiiGi UL Bile is Hs 5 ALWILULWUUMLUU Ul Uli LLUe IN THE 5 i, capa ,2 CAs. wy me ee ¢ Me % 8 Nos eu yo i ws o Whee na aD ‘ . And With Despatch BD a. an aD TD | , 2, * 4 OT OY piviiie & SBOPRS. Oct. 11, 1879.—t£ BISCUITS A NICE LOT OF PECK celebrated English Biscuits at BEER & GOFF'S, TREAN § Nov. 1, 1879. BASKETS ! EW STOCK of over §QQ—cheapest lot yet, at BEER & GOFF’S. Nov. 1, 1879. SALT! SALT! And Mackerel Barrels, FOR SALE. DAVID SMALL, ueen Street 879—tf 1,000 Ibs. MOIR & KEILER’S CELEBRATED Jams and Harmalade | ee ae 22 cents per lb., in bulk ; 1VE a7 Ib. tin for $1.35; 1&2 Ib. tins at 25 cents per Ib.; 1 lb. crocks, 23 eents. JAM 25 cents per Ib. in bulk ; 1 lb. crocks 28 cents. Stawbery, Raspbery, Black & Red Charlottetown, Oct. 13, Currant, Gooseberry, Green. gace, Damson and Plum sams, at BEER & COFP'S. Noy. 1, 1875. Valuable Property for Sale, rg xO BE SOLD, all that part of Town Lot No. 74, in the first. hundred of Town Lots in Charlottctown; having a front of 67 feet, Dor- ehester Street, and running back SO feet, to- gether with the buildings thereon erected. For further particulars apply to Messrs. Hopason & MecLxrop Charlottetown. Sept. 18, 1879. SOLE PROPRIETORS | = . ve t+ GREENLEES&| e2-BROTHERS | GRESHAM BUILDINGS, EC! DISTILLERIES,ARGYLESHIRE, UNRIVALLED For CYPSTODDY. ‘“LoRNs Hicuianp Wuisky.—Sole pro prietors, Greenlces Brothers, London and Argyleshire. This Whisky is a pure unadul- terated spirit, very mellow, in quality excel- lent, and in our opinion perfectly wholesome. Where a stimulant is required, it is to be pre- ‘ferred to brandy.”—London Medical Review. Agents : MESSRS. OWEN CONNOLLY & CO., Charlottetown, P.E.L 4 June 24, 1879.—6m [FOR THE EXAMINER. ] The Brooch of Lorne. Relic of the mighty dead, Of ages that are gone, When Scotland shook, beneath the tread, Of marshalled hosts by Kdward led, To grasp the Scottish throne ! Old Scotia in her darkest hour, Did foes and traitors spurn, Her sons still battled for the right, Led by the Chieftan Wallace wight, And Bruce, of Bannockburn, Heirloom of a nation’s hope, And of a nation’s fears, Witness of its greatest joy, And of its bitterest tears, ‘Say : did you shield her hero’s breast On that eventful morn, Dunolly’s vengeful clansman grasped Thee, Brooch of Lorne, Down the silent stream of time The centuries have pgssed, And each succeeding cycle seems Brighter than the last. No more on Seotia’s purple hills, Or in the silent glen, Is heard the murderous battle shout Or tramp of armed men ; Peace and plenty o’er her plains On every breeze is borne; Onee more by Royal fingers pressed, Gleams on Victoria’s Queenly breast, The Brooch of Lorne. ScorsMAN. Braga RY TEI CANAD Me ee OES Ag See oS Novo bi bELZGNAL CANADIAN, Monrrear, Nov. 20. Hon. Mr. Robertsun has been elected by six hundred and fifty, Hon. Mr. Lynch by three hundred and thirty-two, and Hon. Mr. Paquet by seven hundred and four, majority. Orrawa, Nov. 20. Cablegrams recieved here indicate the British feeling to be intense against Russia. It is deemed probable that the result of the present difficulties will be the formation of alliances between Britain, Germany and Austria, vs. Russia, France and Italy. The Citizen this morning states authcri- tatively the visit of the Princess is not in the interest of any company. UNITED STATES. New York, Noy. 19. A cablegram announces the burning, at Singapore, of the Britis steamer Bremer Castle, while completing loading a cargo for New York. Seven hundred tons of teas, silks, spices and tin, taken aboard at Japan and Chinese ports, were destroyed, and seven hundred tons were saved. The whole cargo was valued at three-quarters of a million of dollars and falls on the New York undewriters. —_—_ —— IRELAND. Lonpon, Nov. 19. Miehael Davitt and James Bryce Killon have been arrested in Dnblin, charged with having used language in public speeches calculated to incite a breach of the peace, and James Daly, editor of the Connaught Telegraph, has been arrested in Castlebar for a similar cause. Dustin, Noy. 19. The Irish Times states that the arrests of Davitt, Killen and Daly were affected very quickly. Davitt and Killen arrived at Sligo this afternoon. At several stations along the railway extra policemen were on duty. The prisovers will be brought be- fore a resident magistrate and formally remanded to Sligo jail pending a special magisterial sitting in a few days, when one of the Crown law officers will conduct the prosecution. Killen asserts that he can- not understand his arrest, as he considered his speech entirely within the bounds of the law. Lonpon, Nov. 19. The Home Rule Executive Committee at a meeting in Londen to-day, O’Connor Power presiding, passed a resolution pro- testing against the arrest of Davitt, Daly and Killen, while defending the rights of the Irish tenantry. The meeting also re- solved to call upon -Irishmen in Great Britain to establish local defence com- mittees ‘to collect funds to secure a fair trial for the prisoners, LATER. Dusurm, Nay. 19. The prisoners have been remanded until Monday to await the production of im- portant witnesses.~ Bail was refused. Re- presentatives of the press were excluded from the preliminary magisterial inquiry. Tt is anticipated that the Solicitor General or Law Adviser to the Crown will conduct the prosecution on Monday. LONDON, Nov. 19. A public meeting to denounce the ar- rests of the Irish priscners will be held in Dublin on Friday. Edmund Dwyer Gray, Liberal Home Rule member of Parliament for Tipperary, will preside. Mr. Charles Stewart of Parliament will attend. news agency says that seventeen warrants have been issued for the arrest of other persons charged with seditious conduct, in- cludiug several clergymen. CONDENSED DESPATCHES. The Hanlan-Courtney race has fizzled again. The Queen likes the cold weather of Scotland. The Czar returns to St. Petersburg on the Parnell and several other menibers | The central | The union of the variousIrish Societies of Montreal is being discussed. Since General Grant landed at San Fran- cisco he has made eighteen speeehes. The report that yellow fever had reap- peared at Meinphis is officially denied. All Russian officers on leave have been ordered to join their regiments immediate- ly. The mother of Ex-Empress Eugene of France is seriously ill, and the ex-Empress has started for Madrid. The Pope and Papal Secretary censure the attacks of the Belgian Bishops on the constitution of Beigium. Some swindlers in Montreal have altered one dollar Dominion notes into fours, and = passing them off on unsuspecting peo- @. Mr. Theodore Martin has postponed the publication of his last volume of the “ Life of the Prince Consort,” until next year. All Lendon morning journals approve of the arrests in Ireland, except the News, which makes them the occasion of violent attacks. Messrs. Moody and Sankey will begin revival work at St. Louis in two weeks, and will continue it there through the winter. Professor Baird, the federal fish com- missioner, intends to establish a station for the scientific investigation of fishes at Bel- fast, Me. Miss Josephine Meeker, daughter of the late Indian agent who was killed by the Utez, has been offered aclerkship in the Ir- terior Department by Secretary Schurz. Mr. Dwight Whiting, a citizen cf Boston, has gone to South Africa to purchase one hundred ostriches for his farm in the San Joaquin Valley in California. ‘The Governor-General has presented two modals, one gold and the other silver, to be competed for by the students of McGill College. On the farm of Isaac Emerson, in Win- throp, Me., has been found what may prove quite a valuable gold mine. Speci- inens analysed are rich in the metal. The total number of emigrants from the Ottawa city section of the Ottawa Valley to Manitoba and Western States, during the past season, was 1,834. Owing to the prevalence of highway rob- beries, the people of Edgewood, N. Y., have established picket guards on every road in the place for night and day service. As existing treaties between the United States and several nations guarantee trade mark protection, the iegislation on the sub- ject will be frea from constitutional objections. The frigate Egeria has been ashore near Pallhoi, where she was sent to protect British Interests. A considerable portion of the false keel was wrenched off, and she will have to be docked. Thomas Martin, news dealer, Market street, Brantford, Ont,, committed suicide by shooting himself through the head on Tuesday. Business cares are said to have been the cause. There are 500 cases of diarrhoea in the Kentucky penitentiary, and a large num- ber of hands have knocked off werk in the hemp department. The physicians are un- able to determine the immediate cause of the disease. The London “Sportsman” has received news from Canada that Hanlan has de- finitely decided to visit England during the winter if he can be assured of a match. He will be inEngland in January and would prefer to row in March. The English Colonfal Office, replying toa memorial against the exclusion of mission- aries from Zululand, has promised to inform Sir Garnet Wolseley, that it is desirable that any interference with missionary opera- tions must be avoided. A Philadelphia despatch states that she survivors of Farragut’s fleet have organized a Farragut Association. The object is to secure a settlement of the prize money due the fleet for the capture of New Orleans in April, 1862, and decreed to them by the U. S. Sapreme Court. U.S. Postmaster General Key estimates that his department will need an appro- peiation of $10,000,000 for the next fiscal year owing to the increase of business. He recommends the passage of a law providing a penalty for persons assaulting or mal- treating a postmaster while in the discharge of his duty. Mr. McTavish, the Hudson Bay Com- panys agents at Winnipeg, says it is ex- pected that 49,000 people will emigrate to the North West next year. The Hndson’s | Bay Company are making strong efforts to further the cause of settlement, and half a million acres of their land have bsen sur: veyed in the townships laid out by the Do- minion Governmentr The Spanish Cabinet Couneil, presided over hy King Alfonso, have determined that the marriage of the King with the Areh Duchess Marie Christine will be sol- emnized on the 29th of the present month. The court festivities will be on a splendid seale, including receptions, gala perform- ances at public places of amusements, ban- quets, buli-fights and national dances. The London correspondent of the Man- chester Guardian says that tha Govern- ment have been placed in possesion of much information by landlords in connee- tion with the rent agitation in Ireland which, for obvious reasons, the landlords cannot make public. These statements show that many tenants who are willing to pay are kept from doing so by fear of out- rage from others who cannot or will not 4th of December. pay. ene Ca eee rane catia see | —— aaa Seaneenentineea , ry