| : yc Esdttor & Ma VOL. l. WW E.coTl ———_ ‘a>oN Tt * i q pharcrera’. cm SDAY_ A, MIicNEILL, Commission Merchant AL QURLN STREET. ISLAM: q +n di Ayctionee! wa}. j pbilaa (\ | | ume \UCTION SALES, of ail descrip- a ms, attended to jy efty and country at) 10 : | wy derate, rates. May 21, 13: ROYAL HOTEL, Aig Square, Saint Sohn. merous frieods aa | INTINEN’ ) ly renovated CONTINENTAL, and thorough; a same,making it, asthe ROYAL always had he reputation of being, one of the best Hotels iu he Provinces. Excellent Bill of Fore, First-class en Liquors aad Cigars, and superior accommoda tio. ll’s Livery Stable attached. agua ” THOS, F. RAYMOND, July a, 1877— om a nce QUEEN INSURANCE CO, OF ENGLAND. Capital -- {wo Millions Sterling, NSURANCE effected on all kinds o Buildings, Merchandise, and Produce Aiso, on Vessels on the stocks. Specialjrates for isolated residences. Lasses settled promptly. “CAePSP rE abr ku MACLEOD (Union*Bank), Ageni-for Prince Edwardglsland | 4. VINNICOMBE, C200 FORTE REGULATOR as loving their orders for Tuning niucr Bros. will receive the best or pa All who have Pianos in CharloUetown i'l do wellto have them tuned by the ir, sping their instruments in perfect ihe time. suce a year at least will be madet par s of the Island, or oftner if required Ch’town, July 18, 1877, < + A \ American & Foreign Patents. eel - Gilmore, Sith & Co., Successors to Chipman, Hosmer & Co, ATENTS procured in ail countries. No tess | Leave ; Charlottetown d the public generally, that pave leased the Hotel formerly known as thie | | ; } Prince aware ‘Island STREAMERS. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. ee ee Nova Scotia. for Pictou | every Monvay, WrEpNEsvAyY, THURSDay, & SATURDAY mornings, at 5 o'clock, con- vecting there at 10 a. m., with train for Hlatifax. Fare to Halifax, $4.10. Picnie Parties of Twenty and upwards can obtain Return Tickets at Charlotte- town Office to Pictou and back same day $1.00 each. Returning to Charlottet own. | | i HAVE muaeb pleasure in informing my ov | | Leave Pictou every TuUnspay, Weanespay PietDay and SaTurvay, about 2.30 p.m. on arrival of evening train from ILali- tux. CAPE BRETON. ave Pictou for Hawkesbury every Mown- pay und THurRsbaY, on arrival of morning train from Halifax, connecting both ways with stage aud Steamer ** Neptune,” to and frome Sydney aud Bras d'Or Lake. i i j j | | Returning to Pictou same uights, connect- ke with 10 a.m. Train TursDay and Fri- DAY for Halifax. Sew Brenswick, Canada aad United Siates, Leaves SUMMERSIDE every day (Sunday *xcepted) on arrival of morning train from tharlottetqwn, connecting at SuHeprac vith trains for each Of above named places, ind at St. Johu with Steamers of [Nrerna- mONAL Co, for PorRTLAND and Boston. Also, leave Charlottetown for Summerside every Monday morning, about 3 o'clock. Returning, leaves Suepiac every day (Sundays excepted) on arrival of day train ‘trom St. Jouyx, for Summerside: connect | there, without delay, with train tor Char- 'lottetown. Also, leaves Summerside for , Charlottetown every Saturday evening, , about 6 o'clock. ; Agents: ALMon & Macinrosn, Halifax: | NOONAN & Daviks, Pictou; A Grant & vo tlawkesbury * HaNFRD,Bros., Sc. John. . W. HALES eT UNE BOSTON, pean SRCRRRERE ‘ ON DIR | "Ro — —— sales Carroll and Worcester B° rH Steamers are fitted with new Boil | @rs, and their Passenger accomodation arranged for every conveniente and com- fort, and titted up in elegant style. FREIGHT carried at moderate rates and as low as by any other route. | EGGS in boxes an | the greatest care, SAVING TIME, only one business day }used in reaching Boston, by leaving here Saturday Morning and catching steamer al | Hal-fax, and arriving at Boston Monday morning. 1 barrels handledjwith ia advance. No charge for services until the | patent is granted. Uur Valuable pamphlet seat free upon re vipt of stamp. ree, Address, GILMORE, SMITH & CU., Washington, D. C. een nna Preliminary examinations | LEAVE CHARLOTTETOWN IXvery ‘Thursday, ; | | } | punctually at 5 p.m. LEAVE BOSTON ARREARS tOF PAY, BOUNTY, ETC. | Every Saturdey, NEDERAL Officers, Soldiers and Sailors ot | the late war, or their heirs, are in mauy | at eaes eatitled to money trom the Gover ¢ ment, | which has been found to be due since final pay- | tent. Write full history of service and state) amount of pay aud bouaty received, Certificates ot Adjutant Geueral U. S. A. | showing service and honorable discharge there- | from, in place of discharge lost, procured tor a' -——~ sipall fee. p 4 Huclose stamp to Gilmore & Co., and full re- unctually noon, CARVELL $3ROS.,Age6nt. Ch’town, June 7.1877 rks’ Cotton Yarn S: ply, with blanks, will be sent free. PENSIONS. PENSIONS. Ax Federal Officers, Soldiers and Sailors, wounded, ruptured, or injured, in the liu oilduty in the late war, and disabled thereby, | #0 obtain a pension. Widows, and minor children of Officers, Sol- ders aud Sailors, who have died since discharge +! disease contracted or wounds and injuries re erved in the service and in the line of daty, can procure pensions by addressing Gilmore & Co. lacreased rates tor pensioners obtained. Bouaty Land Warrants procured for service in Wars prior to March 3,1855. There are 00 war- rauts granted for service in the late rebellion. WARDED the only Medal, given to COTTON YARNS of Canadian Manu facture at the CEN ENNIAL EXHIBITION. Nos. 5’s to 10's. Sead stamp te Gilmore & Co., Washington D.C., fall fastructions. . White Blue, Red, Orange, an Green Ji vde 1977. at Warranted full length‘and weight. COAL e VASES, | Stroager and better than auy2other Yarn nm the market. Handsome and Cheap [ Cotton Carpet Warp. callin No.§12’s 4fety uy avi gCorors. a BEER. & SONS Vcnerice fast. Oct 25, 1877. ! WM. PARKS’ & SON, @ * J } MORNING. - Excursion Tickets, 1 BUEN AT URRY ee te SEK i } | | } } j STEAMERS CARROLL & WORCESTER, For 815,00, . CARVELL BROS SINGH R's SEWING MACHINES | The Perfection of Mechanisin, So Light and Simple that a Child cau Work them, So Durable that they last A Lifetime, ight Thousand Machines now Manufactured every Weék. To be had only from the Authorized Agent, Robert Younes, South Side Ch’town, Sept, 13, 1877. STADACONA tre and Life Insurance Company, Queen Square. TOVICK is hereby given that the Board of Directors of this Company have made i further call of a four instalments, of Five per Cent. each, on the Subscribed Capital of the Company, payable at its Office, No. 93 St Peter Street, Quebec, as follows :— Five. per Cent. on or before the Tenth d y of August, 1877; Frve per Cent. on or before the Tenth day of November, |877 ; live per Cent. on or before the Eleveath day of February, 1878 ; rive per Cent. of oF before the Eleventh day of May, 878, By orler of the Board. CRAWFORD LINDSAY, Sccrelary } ieee [jlr 1) DR. WILLIAM GRAY’S SPECIFIC MED) The Great English Rem- edy is an unfailing curé for Seminal Weakness, Sper- matorrhea, Impotency, all diseases that follow as Rr 7 yas of i as Loss oO emcry, Univer snl Lassitude, Pain in t) Back, Dimness of Vision SS Premature Old Age, and AfterTaking. that lead to ae Con- Se Price, $1 ailfree of ticulars in our pamphlet, which ree by mail toeveryone. Address GRAY & CO., Wiudsor, Ontario, Cinada. a Sold in Charlottetown by W. R Watson, P. Fraser, C. D. Rankin, Dr Dodd, and a Apothecaries’ Ffall, and by a\l drugyistsanywhere WANTED, CINE, BeforeTaking, many other diseases sumption anda Premature Grave. wer package, or six packages for $5, by m postage. Full par we desire to send f wm, 7." Highest Cash price paid for Calf Skins and Sheep Skits, ROBERT BRIDGES, 26—tudfr tf ROBERT YOUNG HA S°IUST RECEIVED, Per &.-8., Prince, Edward, ‘A MAGNIFICENT ASSORTMENT -—-OF — i | i ; i | i ' | NEW GOODS, tsken outani has remained in a semi-un- | from Liverpool. Wiich §he is offering at EXTRAORDINARY LOW PRICES October 1, 1877. - Schooner Fi or Sale. **MARY LOUISE,” 133 tons, chiefly built of Oax, and is well found, is now due at Charlottetown, and cao be purchased at a very REASONABLE FIGURE. * Full perticulars and terms at ; ' i j Cl’town, Oct. 24—2w eod pat 2w | To the Baditor of the Daily Examiuer: wa Valley is about assumio ing into the business this winter in x OMUNEY. a seins - - NOVEMBER Corresp )1 feace | Bar” (We do nol hold otrselers ‘rap rmn yible | or the Opinions sla'emiats of oes sik Or Carre- / | poadents, —~ Sik,~—Since the Crancil of this city is Miking such an onslaugit amongs¢. the officers, and having fewer to do the work. they will hive to use great caution in thei, choice of new.ones, Chainges of Goverrn~ mentsin P. BE. !sland have always been productive of & host of discharged o“ficers, iu many respects to be replaced by men wholly untit and incapable to take their places—much to the expense of the coun- try. {t miy seem allright for a goveraing | body to make those exchanges. and “in some cises, probably, it is wholesome to do so. Butto discharge an officer for the simple reason that he is found ia opposi- tion before knowing that his successor will be suitable, is, to say the least, a mistake which goes to adda greater debt on the city or government. Now, as our City Council his discharged some Offiters, ani muy dischirge mre it may be well to enquire, lst, Hive those officers the necessary quiiilications? 2ad. Can there be got those who are better qu tlified to discharge the duties devolving upon them? Now, for instance, until very recently there were an Enzincer and City Surveyor, those ofticers did not or could not doall the work, for we find an out sider drawing plans and specifications for the Bell Tower and the various other buildings erected by the city, and another maaan setas inspector over the fences on the squares. This arrangement must cer- tainly cost a good deal more money than there is any occassion for. The City Sur veyor should be able to furnish plains. specifications and estimates of all the pub lic works connected with tha city. A re port of the public works should be mide at least once a month; that report to in. clude proposed improvements to streets, the best and mo:t efficient way to do the work ; also where plank si lings are wante |, and what the cost would probably’be. The above and many other things coming under the superintendence of the City Surveyor should be mide in adyanee ot the work being done, so that the Councii would know exactly where and how to piace the money. As it is now, those gen-~ tlemen who are “told” off from the City Council as « Street Committee. go forth without pay to lose their time for the pur- pose of showing the City Engineer what to do. This I consider is put- ting the wrong end foremo-t. That Com- mittee should act on the Surveyor report, and ascertain how much of said report could be complied with. The citizens of Charlottetown cannot expect that ihe Council can always work for nothing, an‘ as the Frenchman onae said * eat himself’ fboard himseif}]. Better. by far, hive one efficient officer who can do al the work. suppose that the city has to pay something more. It may ba that the Council are do- ing the very best they cin do undor the ircumstances; ant to°miks mach reform may be tedious. But reform is wante tif it will lighten the burden of the city, or give them more volus for the taxes they pty lhanking you, Sir, for the privilege of occupying sv much of your valu tb e space, [ will subscribe myself, A FRIEND oF Ogpgr, Ch’town, Noy. lst, 1877. ene. A FIRE AND ATR AGEDY, ONE PERSON BURNED TO DEATH—TWO OTHERS FATALLY INJURED, Montegat, Nov. 2.—At one o'clock this morning the inbabitants of St. Alexander Street, in the heart of the city were awake~ ened by the wild shrieks of a woman. A young girl, named Mary Burke, the daugh ter of a boarding house keeper, was seen standing at a second story window giving vent to frantic cries of tire. There was considerable delay in sounding the alarm. and it wasfully 15 or 20 miautes before the fire brigade arrived, In the meantime Miss Burke had taken aleap fur life, and | felling some twenty feet below to tha sides | walk, sustained serious if not fata! iwjus | jries. Oathe arrival of the firemea, they bravely entered the house at the risk of their lives. The dead body of a boarder named Christian Ramoussan, a Dane. was foundin a closet, the door of which. it is supposed, he mistook for the exit tothe ha:l. On further search, Ma op Burke, aged 16 years.son of the owner of the! house, was discovered in an almost lifeless state from the effects of smoke. He was ' conscious state since, but it is hoped he | will soon recover. The inmates on the | first floor escaped without difficuity. The) origin of the fire is supposed io have been | rats eating matches. ! —--- =P -* o- The export of phosphates from the Utta- 8 large propor- A number of lumber firms are go> the Gatineau district. The supply is immense and the demand abroad is larger. |!as New Brunswick no deposits of this sort ? Ottawa is enlarging fast. More than balfa million dollars worth of buildings has been done there this year. besides the extension of departmental! oftices. tious. 6 1877, ee | show: that some people can here from Boston | ously the past few weeks. 4 See anes 7. NO. 140 WHAT BOSTIN TOURISTS saw LV VHE MARIV/M Ht PRO VINCE£S, the following from the Boston Globe “Ome down ni sse something be- ides § ‘ leing ? «6 ai: e din 2y buildiags, red«facad men with side whiskers moving slowly along un- pived streets.” and ladies Weaving pork pie hats” : Major C. S. Haldeman, Manager of the Pennsyivania Colonel D. K. Allen, ed last eveniog, after ness trip of over 3000 England and the Britis} New E Rails and his assistant, return. & four weeks’ busi. mes through New i "n lana visited Montreal, Quebec Father por , Gaspe, Perce, Paspebiac, and the famous | Chaleur Bay, Ch ‘tham, N be sutiful country along tha and river, Poiut du Chena Summerside, Charlottetown ‘ud Sourison Prince F iward tou: ‘Praro, Halifax, Windsor aud Longfellow’s Acadia, Mc John, Fredericton, and Portiand, [he ~perk ia the highest terms of the variety of the :canery, the beauty of many picts of ‘ue scenery, the wildness and grandeur o* some portions sill unsatiled, or nearly s: the vast resturces gti!| undeveloped ; the good times enj -yed by the inhabitants RS 4 rule when compared with many found iy our OWo) Cities; and the &eneral evidences which they saw of thrift, enterprise and prosperity, which they little expected to find. They visited many coast fisheries the great salmon fishing grounds of East. era Nova Scotia, the lumber regions of the Miramichi, the coal fields of Pictou and New Glasgow, the Government railway snops at Charlottetown, P. E. 1, and Moncton ; the fine fruit Browing country ofthe Avon and Annapolis Rivers, the last but not least, the burat districts of Portland and St. John. They speak in praise of the enterprise manifested by the citizens of these unfortunate towns —in the way they have gone to work to rebuild their ci:ieés—and the 8yMpithy and aid they merit in not yielding to the force of circumstances under which they were pliced. Business in the Provinces, as a rule, they found 800d. while the ple were peo sand happy. They visited the Bay o Fundy, where the tide rises and falls Seventy-four feet, and at Moncton saw the tidal-wave as it rojls in from the sea at every flood-tidelike the breaker on the shore after a stora. The party were out In the great storm ot the 10th and 12th inst. lu the gulf of St, Lawrence. Mrs U.S. Haldeman, Harry J, Haldeman and W. iy Cooper, E:q., of Trenton, N, J accompa nied them on the trip. turned from St. John on the * City of Portland,” Steamship Line, eweartle and the M'ramiehi Bay and Shediac. Mt. Stewart Island, Pics Annapolig Moncton, St. en Ly ER They re- steamer of the Internationsl The city of Belfast, century ago had 12.000 j the present da —_— Ireland, which a aero, has in y & population of 200,000, of which ane 56,000 are ata Catholics, »While upwards of 60,000 sre Presbyterians and accept the Westministe, Contession of Faith. Next to these in polnt of uumbers rank the Episcopalians who are about 47,000 strong, and of course every variety of beliefand nonsbelief baz its representatives in this large and pros. perous town. _ A passenger train on the Railroad, going South, at noo when near Farmington, track and turned upside-down by the wind. ‘Two passenger cars and a baggage car were turned over, and the fire from the stoves were scattered over the floors, but were extinguished before any damage was done. Several persons were badly hurt but it is thought none fatally. Cattle are simply and easily killed in the London abattoirs noOW-a-days by the use of dynamite. A charge is fastened to ng. One end of which is attached io exch horn of the animal, «|. lowing tho charge to hang directly ip the middie of the forehead. Tue explosion blows a hole through the skull. shattering the brain to pieces and j nstantly killing the animal. _ Ustrep States Minssrer to ENGLanp. — Of Mr. Jobn Welsh, of Philadelphia, who has been nominated by the President as Minister to Eogiand, the New York Herald says: © Mr. Welsh is not merely a wealthy merchant, but a gentlemen of culture, who is likely tdplay a part in England like that of Abbott Lawrence years ago: Mr. Welsh’s confirmation is regarded as certain.’’ Mr. Welsh was President of the Board of Finance in connection with the Centenvia! Exhibition. One hundred and thirty Mormon cons verts arrived at New York the other day Utah Centra! n on Tuesday, was lifted from the the centre of a stri United States Senator Morton, whore death took piace yesterday, was a prom n= ent Republican politician He was one of the principal men in his party for many years. Ile filled various offices, including that of Governor of Indiana,—his native State. He was only fifty-four years oid. His place in the Kepublican ranks cannot be easily tilled. The sudden death of ‘ex-Senator Foater was a sad surprise. A leading railroad man, and active politician, he bas beep in a good deal of troub'e the past two or three years, which has culminated scri- There is litt'e doubt that his sudden death is due to the excitement caused by his jate trouble in Vermont