“A ea RP TES saa ati fier ota suit 3s tea - —_ a a ts —_——— f= ee VOL. 1. Wide A. McNEILL, ! tyctioneet and Commission Merchant NO. 11 QUEEN STRET. CHARLOTTETOWN, PR. SEAN D eel \UCTION SALES, of all descrip- | tions attended to in city and country al, qoderate} rates. May 21, 1877. SYRUPS | RASPBERRY, STRAWBERRY, GINGERWINEFE- LEMON, Calton Kegs, and 20 da .d SUITABLE FOR TEA PARTIEE. CHEA PR. CARVELL BROS. ~ ROYAL HOTEL, Saini Sehr. “= VER King Square, HAVE much pleasure in informing my su merous frieads and the public generally, that “shave leased the Hotel formerly known as the CONTINENTAL, aud thoroughly renovated the same,making it, asthe ROYAL always had he reputation of being, one of the best Hotels in he Provinces. : Excellent Bill of Faure, First-class Wines Liquors and Cigars, aud superior accommoda tion. ‘khall’s Livery Stable attached. — * "THOS, F. RAYMOND. July 3, 1877—6m REMEMBER. Electors of Ch’town, REMEMBER THAT THE DAILY HXAMINER daily on Sale at the Stores of — H, A. HARVIE, South Side Queen St. T, O'CONNELL, Lower Queen St, rHEO. L. CHAPPELL, North Side Queen St. QUEEN TNSURANCE CO. OF ENGLAND. Capital -- {we Millions Sterling, NSURANCE effected on all kinds o Buildings, Merchandise, and Produce Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union*Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island June — CORNED BFEF. COOKED — [N— 2 and 4-pound TINS and by the Pound. All who have used it .know of ite ex cellence. FOR SALE AT BEER & GOFF'S, Shop and Warehouse to Let. Paar Shop and Warehouse corner of Water and Pownal Street formerly occupied by the late N. KaNKIN. Terms tale known on a ication to C. Dp. RANKIN, Druggist. . |, Leave §Charlottetown for Prince ‘Edward Island | STEAMERS., SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. eee . Nova Scotia. Pictou every MonDay, WEDNESDAY, Tuturnspay, & SATURDAY mornings, at 5 o’clock, con- necting there at 10 a. m., with train for Haiifax. Fare to Halifax. $4.10. Picnic Parties of Twenty and upwards can obtain Return Tlckets at Charlotte- town Office to Pictou and back same day $1.00 each. Returning to Charlottet own. Leave Pictou every TuEsSDAY, WEDNESDAY Famay and SaTurbDay, about 2.30 p.m. on arrival of evening train; from Hali- fax. CAPE BRETON. ave Pictou for Hawkesbury every Mon- pAY and THURsDAY, on arrival of morning train from Halifax, connecting both ways with stage and Steamer ‘*Neptune,” to and from Sydney and Bras d’Or Lake. Returning to Pictou same nights, connect- inx with 10 a.m. Train TuesDay and Fri DAY for Halifax. New Brenswick, Canada and United Siates, Leaves SUMMERSIDE every day (Sunday axcepted) on arrival of morning train from Charlottetown, connecting at Sueprac with trains for each of above named places, ind at St. John with Steamers of INTERNa- TIONAL Co. for PORTLAND and Boston. Also, leave Charlottetown for Summerside every Monday morning, about 3 o'clock. Returning, leaves Siueprac every day (Sundays excepted) on arrival of day train trom St. Jonny, for Summerside; connect there, without delay, with train for Char- lottetown. Also, leaves Summerside for Charlottetown every Saturday evening, about 6 o'clock. Agents: ALMon & Macrinrosn, Halifax; Noonan & Davies, Pictou; A Grant & Co Hawkesbury ~* HaNrrp/}Bros., St. John. F. W. HALEs. ONLY DIRECT LANE TO BOSTON. seamers Carroll and Worcester OTH Steamers are fitted with new Boi! ers, and their Passenger accomodation arranged for every convenience and com- fort, and fitted up in elegant style. FREIGHT carried at moderate rates and as low as by any other route. EGGS in boxes and barrels handled with the greatest care. SAVING TIME, only one business day used in reaching Boston, by leaving here Saturday Morning and catching steamer at Hal.fax, and arriving at Boston .Monday morning. LEAVE CHARLOTTETOWN Every Thursday, punctually at 5 p.m. LEAVE BOSTON Every Saturday, unctually at noon. CARVELL “ROS. ,Agent. Ch’town, June 7,i1877 Parks? Cotton Yarns, WARDED the only Medal, given tor COTTON YARNS of Canadian Manu factura at the CEN. ENNIAL EXHIBITION. Nos. 5’s to 10's, White Blue, Red, Orange, an Green, Warranted full length and weight. Stronger and better than any other Yara n the market. Cotton Carpet Warp. No. 12's 4 PLY IN AL. Coors. Warranted fast. WM. PARKS’ & SON, New Brunswick C: tson Mills M St. John N B. ? SATURDAY MORNING Pe eg Excursion Tickets. TO BOSTON AND ReTORN. erER STEAMERS CARROLL & WORCEST ER, Mor 815,00. Ciz faut BROS net esesceenethee neste ee SINGHR’S SEWING MACHINES | The Perfection of Mechanism. So Light and Simple that a Child can Work them, So Durable that they last A Lifetime, Kight Thousand Machines now Manufactured every Week. To be had only from the Authorized Agent, Robert Young, ‘South Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Sept. 13, 1877. SCHOOL BOOKS. Ge to MARVIE S BOOKSTORE, Queen Square, for Cheapest School Books! Clrtown, Sept. 24— STADACONA tire and ~ Life Insurance Company, OTICE is hereby given that the Board of Directors of this Company have made a further call of Four instalments, ot Five per Cent. each, on the Subscribed Capital of the Company, payable at its Office, No. 93 St. Peter Street, (Juebec, as follows :~ Five per Cent. on or before the Tenth doy of August, 1877; Five per Cent. on or before the Tenth day of November, 1877 ; ive per Cent. on or before the Eleventh day of February, 1878 ; five per Cent. on or before the Kleventh day of May, 1878. By order of the Board? CRAWFORD LIN DSAY, Secretary {jlr 1 A? the AGRICULTURAL STORE-.- Plants in flower, at auction prices ; Plain and Ornamental Flower Pots; Tre!l- lesses for training plants on; Brackets. Boquet Holders, Vick’s Floral Guide for Autumn ; “Country Gentleman,” “ Har- pers Weekly,” and a miszellaneons lot of Papers, Books, Stationery, etc., cheap for cash at HASZARD’S SEED & BOOK STORE,—the Old Stand,—West side Queen Square.—Bulbs expected about 5th October. Ch’town, Sept. 28—f and ‘tues, CHEAP SACKS. - SECOND-HAND, slightly dam. 2,000 aged, SIX CENTS a PIECE. CARVELL BROS. Ch’town. Sept. 27—3w 3taw OAKOM ! OAKUM! OAKUM' UST landed from Steamship “ Prince Edward,” a superior quality of Machine Picked OAKUM. PEAKE BROS. & CO. Sept. 28th, 1877. eT hem et KER OSEN 200 CASKS, Landing x “Jane MveKay,” and 100 CASKS ‘lo arrtfve. CARVELL BROos. Sept. 27—1w Sugar & Molasses. 50 PUNS. BARBADOES MOLASSES. 125 BBLS. White Granulated, Vacuum : Pan, Coffee Crushed, and Brown SUGAR. CARVELL BROS. | Ch’town, Sept. 27—1w Che Examiner. COTTON, Editor & Manager. SHEEP AND TURNIP HUSBANDRY IN ENGLAND. Handsin-hand these husbandries have done more for agriculture than | aught else since the world was civilized. It is the immense quantity of turnips, mangel wurzel, and swedes eaten by sheep on the land, that chiefly keeps up the fertility ot the arable soil,and causes the yield of wheat, barley, oats, beans, and peas to in- crease todouble the number of vwushels which were furmerly grown. This has been done, too, while in the United States exactly tue opposite has been accomplish-~ ed, for here the yield of wheat, barley, and oats has become less than half what was grown in the days of yore. The hous. ing of sheep by night,in Summer, is a great detriment to the pasture they feed on, and the severity of the Winters in the North, making it necessary to take the turnips offthe land where grown, to be eaten in barns, is # drawback to the chief benefit of the crop for improving and ve- novating the soil. Ingenuity is a characteristic of the American nation, and the man who shall invent & movable sheep pen, aftording shelter so that sheep canbe kept daily moved allover the fields, as the crop i- eaten, will be a benefactor to his country. have his name handed down to posterity, and as astill sharper spur to ingenuity. gather in the shekels abundantly; for, al- though the manure is good when made under cover, yet there is loss of urine, loss of time in hauling the turnip crop, and again in carting the manure. When this is made practicable, the swedes can be put into heaps of a load or two, on the field, just as isdonein England, and covered with earth sufficiently thick to keep out the frost." Then, witha crowbar or like implement, it will be easy to break into the heaps, cut them up with a machine and feed exactly is always done in England. in the open field. The South will, doubtless, eventually, be the great sheep producing place, and there turnips can be grown and consumed by the sheep; but, by improving the grass land and contriving to have food pastures open: ed to them in Winter, and encouraging the best varieties of grass for a perman ency, very little roots of any kind would be necessary , as any quantity of mutton and woo! may be produced from stimulation by corn, peas, or grain. Nevertheless, «a heavy crop of swedes given toa flock otf sheep intended for the butcher, will bring them outin the Spring riper bya good deal, and not only will there be better and more mutton, but the wool will be corres. pondingly improved. Sheep and turnip husbandry must be generally adopted in the United States to save the country from becoming a barren wilderness, for to such a condition it is, in reality, coming slowly but surely.— George Gardner inthe Rural New Yorker, > 2: <a «oe @- A WARNING TO LOVERS. A Paris correspondent says :—A young woman being crossed in her affection re. solved to starve herself to death, and for three days refused food; when the quarrel was made up, it was found she could not eat, and now liesin a hopeless state. However, there are two young men in Paris, who take their daily bread directly into their stomachs by means of a silver tube, Butimagine Romeo thus nursing Juliet. A drunkard has abused the motto said to have been made for MacMahon; he declined to leave a dram shop, retorting. “Jy suis: fyreste.” The Seine is as sacred a river with some as the Ganges; an unfortunate man, disbelieving in the Saone took the express from Lyons to drown him- self in the Seine—* a river which conducts to paradise’; the police rescued him and placed him in a cell, as a half way house. The tribunial of Macon has condemned a shepher!, aged only sixteen, to be guillo- tined ; he waylaid ashepherdess, murdered her, violated her remains, and stole her ear-rings. How we are far from classical times ! I forgot, there is a cat exhibited in the fairof St. Cloud called Polyphemus, having but one eye, and in the centre of its forehead. —_——— — > + am +e oe —————— In New Or_eans.—!be quadroons of New Orleans are very handsome: ani it is an undoubted fact that there is more beauty to be found among them than any other class. Atthe quadroon balls a few octoroons will also occasionally be seen. The quadroons dress with as much taste as their more favored white sisters. They are generally of symmetrical build, smal] feet and hands, regular features and very expressive eyes. Itis rare to meet one of them that has not, at least, an ordinary common school education, while some have a® modern degree of culture and are fair musicians. Inthe balir »m they appear to advantage, becomingly and modestly at- tired, good dancers and easy in conversa- tion. They are not considered as belongs ing to the vulgarclass. ThePrench quads roons are descenied from the best Creole families. The quadroons are mostly aca quainted with their parent stock, and take great pride in mentioning that they are allied to thisor that one of the first fa milies,, Ine female quadroons very rarely associate with the black people of either |sex, They are devoted to the place of their birth, and few of them ever leave there. Strange to say, the females greatly outnumber the males. OCTOBER 6 1877. | Miscellaneous News. Whenever you feel that the land is sufs fering for rain, etther get upa family pic. nic or go and camp out. Kate Lovence has accomplished the feat of walking 100 miles in 27 hours and 40 minutes at Lawrence, Mass, Failures in New York during September number 47; aggregate liabilities $3, 271, « 700; assets $1,397,400, oan Miss Crerswell, daughter of the Post, master at Gibraltar. has been appointed to her father's poiticn. The salary is £3 4 000. _A deficit is expected in the civic expen< diture of Toronto on the year of $13,000, he assessment has increased from $2 930,000 in 1871 to $5,010,700 in 1878,» A London tailor has this sign in his win- dow : ‘No American orders taken with« out a deposit,” Above a bar in Chicago may be read: “No trast for alleged Engy lish noblemen,” 7 , A Maryland farmer put his pipe in his pocket after a smoke the tle anes anc soon found himself afire al] over, receiving ve which caused his death the next ay. It is said that 95 per cent. of the murv ders in France are caused bya desire for g4i0; in Spain love causes 98 per cent. of such crimes; and in America whisky causes 99 per cent, _ The Prussian helmet has bee in the B itish service and all sama wear it. In the case of general officers and surgeons, the characteristic spike will be replaced by a tuft of feathers. With this innovation the traditional cocked hat passes away forever. In arecent pamphlet on [pj i Mr. Gladstone e said to sdmoit, see eae bility of Home Ru'e,—an expression of vpinion that will lead to his further aliena- a oy — Liberal party. Home ule ior ireland finds li in G ee nds little favor in Great While drunk, a man named Snow was thrown from his wagon and killed. This was in the State of Vermont, where the law allows the wife to sue the parties who sold the man the liquor. Mrs, Snow has recovered $2,800 from Carpenter & Sons, the hotel keepers at Reading, for their share in the transaction, Che Halifax Common Council, just elected, 1s composed of an surance agent two builders, a merchant, two doctors a wheelwright, a lawyer, a stationer. a drug~ gist, @ grocer, a victualler, two dry goods dealers, a carriage builder, a ship builder, aud two gentlemea whose occupations not defined, " ™ ‘the Greek sponge fisheries now 150 boats, of which 49 are provided 4 diving bells. ‘I'he fishermen number about 1,000, including divers, who remain under water six hours a day. When fishing. some sume of these divers lose their lives and many of them become deaf in a few years. he total take last year was 240 tons ot sponges, worth $400 000. The statistics of the oil production for August, given by the Oil City Derrick, -how that during the month 253 wells were completed. Of these 45 were dry. Four hundred and sixty weils are now in of drilling, and 325 rigs are up and build- ing. The average daily production dur- ing the month was 38,)14 barrels, an increase over the daily production of Jul of 955 barrels. ’ we A Wilkesbarre despatch says the leaders, Harrison and Bovoy, of the strikers, reach- ed there yesterday, having been released on bail, They were met by 5000 miners, and in great procession escorted ito Dana's grove, where after speeches by others, both Harrison and Bovoy made remarks counselling moderation and urging their brother miners to return to work. There was great satisfaction shown by the miners at the release of these two men, and they have ail gone to work to.day under agree- ment with President Parish. Some twelve mines and slopes are going into Operation. A StRuGGLING Bank.—Montreal, i 29.—The Merchants’ Bank of this Pry = adopted a wholesale policy of retrench- ment. Forty clerks haye received notice of their dismissal, and a reduction of 25 per cent. on the salary of those retained who receive above $500 will be made, Mr. Hague left to.day for London. England, to close the branch there and to make other arrangements. He surrenders $5000 of his salary and the directors will act with- out fees until the bank has been restored to a prosperous condition —N. ¥. Herald. New Yor«, Oct. 2—There is an inc in~ ation at military headquarters to discredit the report that Bullis and Shafter reckless- ly attacked the Mexican troops op Mexican territory. One officer at Gen. Hancock's office says though Bullis is known as a hots headed and brave officer, it is yet known that he had most positive orders from Gen. Ord to avoid anything like casus belli, be« cause it was not the policy of the United States to go to war forthe sake of 4d few traders on the Rio Grande, who are only too anxious to have a large army sent there. These instructions emanated from the de- partment of State. If Bullix has done any such. foolish thing as an attempt to occu the town of Saragossa, he will doubtless get into serious trouble. Aji our own govern- ment want is to keep the Indians across the border, and do not want even to have ofs ficial corresponcence, which will look hike a recognition of Diaz. NO. 122