rrr ore ee Sem Re A I IT i, PEG. cimamamy sad A A Re OE te rte ~y qa VOL, 7. ~ CHARLOTTETOWN. ACAMINER. ee eee oe ~ AO A eS A es NT Rt PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, NOVEMB iin 1-3 meme ee: 1230. ee ee ee BES LSE. WAREHOUSE, QUEEN SQUARE. HE Subscribers have received by S. 8. Prince Ldwoavd, Casrian, Ethe! Blanche, and other vie sels, The Largest Stock of DRY GOODS AND GROCERIES Ever Offered hy them to the Public. IN- trimmed and untrimmed, MILLis RY, with the newest materials for trimming. Ladies’ Sacques, Bolimans and Uls- ters. Dress tioods of every deseription, with Pompaiour and other trimming to match. Black and Colored Silks, silk Velveis and Velveteens, in every shade. Ribbons, Feathers, Flowers, Gloves, Laces and Frillings, Fur Mufs, Woolea Squares and Clouds, Ladies Inderelothing, &c., &e. CENTS’ FURNISHING CQODS, TVW EEDS AND CLOTHS. A choice lotof TEA, im chests and half-chests. All of which will be dispose 2 of at the very lowest cas) prices. Ww. & A. BROWN & CO. Nev. 6, )SS0. NEW GOODS 275 packages choice TEA, 90 boxes Valencia RAISINS, Barrels CURRANTS, 150 bbs. choice Baldwin Apples 25 puncheons MOLASSES, 200 boxes SOAP. 14 boxes Colman’s STARCH, 50 casks Kerosene (American), 60 5-gallon tins do. do., AND A REGULAR ASSORTMENT OF CHOICE CRCOCERIES! WHICH WILL BE SOLD CHEAP. BEER & GOFF. SLEICH ROBES TW ioe U) Lo.. ee ee ee CHARLES |. MORRISON Has just received a iew splendid Japanese Goat and Hadson Bay WOmPr ROB AS. Also, a fine selection of Ladies’ Seal, Persian Lamb, Beaver and Astrican Sacques ; Squirrel, titiniical and Siberian Squirrel Circulars. All the above are, without exception, tbe finest display of Furs ever shown in this city, Next (oor to P. G. Fraser’s Drug Store. Ch’town, Oct. 20, 1880—2w Ties, Boas, a merc BARRELS BALE AND SALT, QUEEN’S WHARF. 50 BAGS SALT, 200 Barrels Herring and Maekerel BAIT, | | 300 MACK EREL BARRELS. ' 100 barrels ‘ . = ei! FAT HERRING. 100 Quintals CODFISH and HAKE. Just Landed—a choice lot New Labrador Herring aug!7 D. SMALI.. HE WEEKLY EXAMINER. — Per sous having relatives or friends abroad, and ing to keep them informed concernirg P. BE. Isiend, cannot do soin a better or cheap. er way than by subscribing to Tus Weaxur Examiner. Sent, pau to any address ni } | OE Re Ae <a eR Ee NT mp ee WINTER | wercscemmmemenenee ©). ne eee: een Gentlemen, OVERCOATS AND RB. YOU SHOULD VISIT J. B. MAGDGNALD’S, QUEEN STREET. A magnificent stock to choose fram—and very cheap, ee ree * : ema ee = 4 — Ladies Manizles! Ladies will find the largest variety and lowest price Mantles in the City at J. B. MACDONALD'S, HOUSEKEEPERS’ ©GQU0DS | Sheetinges, Table Linens, Towels, Tickings, Oilcloths, Carpets, Flannels, Blankets, &c. SS cee WOOLEN GOODS! Overeoats, Storm Coats, Jackets, Ladies’ Ulsters, Mantles, Shawls, &e, N ov. 9, 1880, = _— Goods Cheap. : ” z : 70 Cash Buyers will find our see them. W. A. WHEKS & CO., Sicn of the Lion. ee — —_ _—< Gall and Nov. 5, 1880—tu th sat 72 QUEEN STREET. ee eS err Fall and Winter Opening READYMADE CLOTHING ———me (| —) GRAND DISPLAY. Stock We are now selling out our immense at prices that must suit all. MEN’S WOOL PANTS.....cccqeecceteceeeerseserscrsceresseteccasecesensnene anes $1 85 up. MEN’S WOOL PANTS AND VESTS.....+c00csecscecesetesevecserescrereee 3S OO Up. MEN’S D. B. REEFERS......-----ceceeeeeeeeererseee ceppesenghia daboegvanhentan 4 25 up. MEN’S D. B. OVERCOATS. ..+0. ndouiboonces chprotacanqecucmmepesnness soecsee & 10 UD. A SPLENDID VARIETY OF ULSTERS Also, a varied assortment of Gents’ Underclothing, Cardigan Jackets, Mufilers, and all kinds of Wool Goods kept in a Gents’ first-class } urnishing Establishment. Our stock of Weol and Fur Felt Hats, White and Fancy Shirts are taking the lead. A fine show of Linen and Paper Collars, Cafis, Silk Searfs, Ties, Braces, Kid and Cloth Gloves, Buckskin, and alt other kinds to suit. GUR CUSTOM TAILORING DEPARTMENT IS CIVING ENTIRE SATISFACTION. the place, and give us a call. BRUCH & McKENZIE, 72 Queen Street. ge” Please remembei Nov. 2, ’80—tu th sat * Next door te Geo. E. Fuil’s, - STH RIN ‘OMPANY! ENCORPQRATES 185]. ASSURANC. FIRE AND MARINE. 70: Goiiial abd hie .- + ee oi a i. G37, 553.10 Ineome for year ending Sist Becember, 1879 - - $1,601,052.20 — :0: — HEAD OFFICE, - . - FORONTO, ONT. 0:0 ——-—— Risks taken on ail descriptions of property at lowest rates. HORACH HASZARD, General Agent for P. E. Island. October 18, 1880. N. B.—Applications from persons willing to act as Agents throughout the Proevinee will be received. LL TO LET. HE BRICK HOUSE situate in Water | —FOR SALE— a Great Britain, the ted States, or the Demin ow, ov receipt of One Dollar, Apply to adjoining the erg A i HE EXAMINER OFFICE. ‘town, Nov. 2, '30.. j ; i — KR 13. 1880. NO, 147 ‘ ’ i apilray ‘ rola ‘ } ”~* . 7oO7 ry) 4 bh ont. (Marker Clouds Gathering over Changes in the Cabinet. t i a . —— (Krom the Canada Gawite krtra, Nors j vr? ‘ ? : ‘ (From the New York Herald . Uth.) His Excellency the Governor Gereral has i 4 4 Phe aaies bey avuTr,. idt, 5 : . : been pleased to muke the following appoint- freland is gloomier and seems to be no point of ;compromi eor 8y mpathy bet een the POV- ments, viz: i Vhe, news from There gloomier. Joseph Phillip; e Rene Adviphe Caron, of jar oeess and the agitation. Mr. Parnell, the City of Quebec, Nsquire to be # ; who only the other lay was the isolated | Member of the (Jueen’s Privy Council for leader of a faction’ whieh was the mockery | Canada. of Parliament and the derision of the| Joseph Alfred Mouasean, of the City of people, now advaices tv the position held | Montreal, Esquire; to be a Member of the by O'Connell as the leader, the tribune of | Queen’s Privy Council for Canada, the Irish people. Conservative men like; The Honorable Joseph Alfred Mousseau, the distinguished Justin MeCarthy rally to|to be President of the Queen’s Privy his banner. The Church swings to his Council for Canada, vice the Honorable side. The radical movement in England Louis Rodrigue Masson, resigned. considers the wisdem of making common} The Honorable James Cox Aikins, late cause with him. The Liberal Government | Secretary of State for Canada ; to be Minis- with whom Irishmen have sympathized is|fer of Inland Revenue vice the Honorable the theme of Mr. Parnell’s invective. No| Louis Francois Georges Baby, now a Judge statesman has done so much for IrJandas{0i the Superior Court of the Province of Mr. Giedstove. Nostatesinan is willing to; Quebec. do more. The Cabinet contains Mr. Bright, | The Honorable Johu O'Connor, late who went into office to do what he could? Postmaster General for the Dominion of for Ireland. Mr. Forster is Irish Secre-| Canada; to be Seeretary of State of Can- tary. He resigned his claims to high office ada, vice the Honourable James Cox Aikins in the Liberal Government, hoping that in jappointed Minister of inland Revenue, a small place he might solve this penetrat- The Honorable Sir Alexander Campbell, ing, enervating problem. Tie agitators} K. C. M. G., late Minister of Militia and have turned against the Cabinet, and Defence for the Dominion of Canada; to especially against Mr. Gladstone and Mr. | be Postmaster General for the Dominion Forster, as the enemies of Ireland. The of Canada, rice the Honorable John OCon- alliance which Liberals in England and|vor, appointed Secretary of State of Ireland hoped would be a new bond of | Canada. union between Ireland and England has been broken. When Mr. Gladstone meets | -“- Washington Letter. Parliainent he will find the Irish members! are among his most antiring opponents. GOStIP AT THE CAPTTOL. ‘ % + ¥- ¥ Wasnrxcton, D. C., Nov. 8, 1880, The proceedings of the two Honses will be exactly the same as if Garfield had re- ceived all the vetes in ail the States. He will be declared elected and will be inau- gurated without a murmur of dissent. It ia not unlikely that resolutions of inquiry, as te events connected with the votes of several States, will be submitted in the House or Senate, but not with any idea that the regular proceedings incident to Garfield’s assumptien of the Presidential aftice shall be affected, Of suggesting Cabinet ofticers for Presi- dent Gartield, there is no end; but I find. no one who says he has talked with that gentleman on the subject, and very few whe believe any pledges have been made. As to the *‘ policy ” of the administration, there is equal fluency of suggestion, and equal absenee of alleged declarations of the future President. It is generally believed that the inaugural will be written with a. view of attracting men’s minds to other subjects than the ‘‘ Southern question,” and that General Garfield will endeavor te impress ipon us all the fact that that par- ticular subject is net a desirable one for parties te divide upon. Of the four Supreme Court Judges who, it is thought, will soon retire, one is In the meantime Mr. Gladstone is as- serting the authority of England. Pressed by the raling classes--by all who own pro- perty, by people who feel that if an agita- tion can flourish in ove part of the Empire it must flourish in another ; that the right tosequestrate the lands of the Duke of Devonshire in Ireland means ultimately the exercise of the same rightin England— the Premier is dealing with Mr. Parneli as with an avowed eneiny of the crown. Mr. Gladstone holds that Mr. Parnell’s posi- tion is inconsistent with the allegiance due by a subject tothe Queen. Mr. Bradlaugh may organize land leagues. Mr. Labour- chere may propose to abolish the Lords. Mr. ©’Connor may wish to control the pre- rogatives of the crown. All this means nothing. Itisa part of Enghsh freedom. There is no reaponse from Englishmen. A radical club has about as much influence in vast, teeming London as «a woman’s rights convention in New York. It does not dis turb the peace. No one cares abont it. Crowds come to the getherings as they came to hear the Tichborne trial or brood over the Balham mystery. If there is one thing about which London cares less than another it is [reland. Public opinion has not advanced beyond Shakespeare’s time, when an Irishman was not worthy of the importance given to Fluellen or Jack Cade. “gt _— paren ee Clifford. if Trishmen condenined themselves to sen- : eREGR >) MEOT« should quit the fench hefore March 4th next, there timental grievances—even to questions of faith like Catholic emancipation — there would be the saine indifference. But when the essence, the life, the soul of an agita- tion mean that there are no rights of pro- perty in land except to till it,the blow is aimed at the tenure of all land in England. if Cromwell's grants are to be attacked and destroyed by Mr. Parnell when may not the grants of Henry VIII. be attacked by Mr. Labouchere and Mr. Bradlaugh? The power which drives Mr. Gladstone to make war upon Mr. Parnell is a power which sees that if Mr. Parnell can drive Mr. Her- bert ont of the rains of Muckross Ab- hey a successor of Mr. Parnell may dispute the right of the Duke of Bedford to Wo- burn and of the Duke of Westminster te the beticr part of London. d + “fh, is no denbt the President would ap- point Attorney General Devans to the position, but if Judge Hunt, of New York, or either of the other two infirm Judges should create a vacancy, it is thought the influence brought to bear on the President would be sufficient to secure a suecessor. from the same State as the retiring official. The Attorney General is known to desire the appointment. There will be the usual batch of con- tested seats before the new House. Te A P. E. 1 Prospscror.—A_ eorrespon- dent writes from Guysboro, Oct. 26th, te the Halifax Hereld:—Mr. U. MeVarish, of Souris, P. E. 1., an old practical and experionced Australian gold miner, has been off and on here prospecting through * 2P y ly ag r The best that can be hoped from the wee rene oe oe pan esent gloomy condition of affairs is that ma tase a ee omnes Arete re ete a ae 4" | coincides with that of geologists, who have the British government will take up the! poon alao prospecting through the Hastern Irish question. The eifort to imprison Mr. Townships—as to the vast richness of allu- Parnell and his followers commits Mr. | vial depwaits, particularly in the County of Gladstone to a large measure of reform. He} Gaysborough. Mr. MeVarish, with his is too wise to aS the prison Hever! brother, and son, returned here a few solves political probiems. It is acimit'ec! months ago, and are vigorously prosecuting that Ireland is suffering and that Paria: jtheir claims at the head of Guysborough = * po rade Be a ; ne ae \ flat; where they have three shafts sinking De rsa 0 cal vik foleet athh dee ee ne — we Se chotin. ” Ebed Weabeebliala edecated nnn at oan ce ee ao en = 7 pases Meet wanes’ | they are prepared to bring hand or steam pe ee cee a pbedoae avinked © tt | DMeEe | to their assistance next summer, 'when they can be used permanently on the ibed reck. The Messrs. MeVarish sunk would pot surprise us if the end of the Parnell agitation was to make the Tory | several shafts in shallow sinkings, and the party the champions of the best interests of | knowing ones here believe they were amply {reland. irepaid, as the precious metal was seen In ‘their possession in Halifax. However, the Arnustep Yor Forceny.—A man named | Messrs. MeVarish while here were very Georse Murchie has been arrested on a! reticent as to their success. We all admit charge of forgery and fraud. It is alleged they are plucky, and deserve encourage- that he was in Tangier, and from there | ment and success, and it is a pity that more telegraphed to Mr. J. K. Munnis an order of our able, energetic and industrious to give him (Murchie) a quantity of cloth-' Nova Scotians would not turn their atten- ing, forging the name of his brother-in-law, tion in developing the hidden treasures Capt. John Hawes, to the despatch. He beneath their feet, rather than risking then carae to town, got the clothing from their lives amidst the wild regions of the Mr. Munnis on the order, and drew $25| far west, where they encounter daily con- from Messrs. Pickford & Black on another | tests with the scalping knife and temahawk TE + TIP order bearing Capt. Hawe’s signature. ‘of the red man, He next chartered three schooners to go to — Oe OO A Good Account. P. K. island and load produce for Boston. One vessel is now on the voyage tothe ‘*To sum it up, six long years of bed-rid- [sland. Capt. Hawes was communicated den sickness and suffering, costing $200 per ‘with in regard tothe orders, and pronounced year, total $1,200—all which was stopped BILLS OF LADING . the inoue forgeries. Yesterday after- | by three bottles of Hop Bitters taken by noon Detective Hutt and Sergeant Adams my wife, who has done her own honse- arrested Murchie.-—Hx. Chronicle. work for a year since, without the loss of a dein day, andI want everybody to know it for Siz Cuarces Turrer,has been received with their benefit.” enthusiasm in Manitoba. } “Joun Weexs, Butler, N. Y.’; * SF esr ne et ee ee ee eee eee ee ee ee aes —- a ae 4 2 ARSE vee 2A SR NN re RRR RMS Nperere oan aeons, a wee ae RO OR Ae Pr TRS pew ore? sang ey ony, @ dneahaaane aapener <ahen ~ ao ee DO led MRO es ee