THE EXAMINER et eh ee SOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, WE — VOL. 3. CHARLOTTE DNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20. 1878... NO, 446 \ THe DartLty KXAMINER) [s Published every Evening. | OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER) AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. FE. I. KATRS OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, : : : $2 50 l Three Months, , 25 One Month, : 0 50 One Week, . : ; 012 — — sw Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- cation. W. L. COTTON, | J. W. MITCHELL, Manayer. | Ofiice Sup’t. P, A. L BATLWAY. Special Running Arrangement. {\N AND AFTER MONDAY, NOVEM. BER 4th a SPECIAL STEAMBOAT MAIL TRAIN will run as follows:— Going West. Going East. A. M. | . P.M Chitown. Dp) 6,25)|Sammerside | Dp. 6.05 Royalty Jne o 6:40! Kensington | “ 6.33 N. Wiltshire} ‘* 7.20)/County Line, * 6.58 Hunter River}, 4‘) -7.32}|Breadalbane ; ‘‘ 7.05 Elliotts “ 7.52) | Elliotts ~ ye Bread albane| *‘ -8:00/|/HunterRiver)“* 7.33) County Line} ‘* 8.07/'N. Wiltshire) “* 7.45 Kensington | ‘* §8.32)/Royalty Jne}] ‘* 8.25 Summerside} ar 9.00||Ch’town ar 8.40 Cc. J. BRYDGES, WM. McKECHNIE, Gen. Sup. Gov't Railways. Supt. P. E. J. R. Ch’town Oct, 30.—p ne ar h pres kca sp sj 31 PRINGE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY, PME TABLE NO. 16. Fall and Winter Arrangement, ON AND AFTER MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4th, 1878, ss ‘Frains Going West. vegaees PS ae f M.Stew’t Jun j acIT OS 7 Royalty Jun. ; Linwee | | Ch'towh : \¢p 9.00 am| Dp 3.30 pm Royalty Jun. ae 5 a Oe NY lt ire | 1912 so it I Hunter River 1 10.28 8) SE SOB... Breadalbane Sel! bel Se County Line HIS! HG oe Kénsington *1Z00 <') «46.99 . | ‘ar 12.30 pmjar, 7.00.‘ Supimerside. i dp 2. amt z Welli t n se 3.32 “ec Port Hill S <— +4 Ol pary ‘7 - se { jar 6.35 “ Atherton ( ldp 6.40 Tignish elit, 1.25 “4, ee te Trains Going East. { STATIONS. No, 2 No, 4. i Express. | Mixed, ° ‘lignish Dp 7.50am ar’ 6.35 * Alberton dp 8.55 “ O’ Lear ee 9.58 ee Port Hi “quis “ : Welli | S95 al r see j ar 12.50 pin) A Summerside t\dp 2.30 “* /Dp 9.45am K . ton se 3.00 se i **10.15 “eé Commande * i140 ** | $10.56 “ Breadalbane_ yo ay *11.07 - Hunter River = ) & 4 ‘o *11.46 “ N. Wiltshire $$ 4.45 * | “19.03 pm, Royalty Jun. * 5.40 ** “12/55 ee Caen ar 6.00 ** jar LIS ** dp 2.55 ** Royalty Jun. m aa ” wee) jax, 4 se Mt. Stewprt ii}! ff} tip 440+ Cardigan a 6.00 se Georgetown ar 6.25 * ' Ig6uri® BRANCH. Going West. Going East. . | Now No.5 STATIONS. | Mixed. |STATIONS.| Mixed. bs po oped Mts tw’tJne| Dp 4.40 Morell ‘7622 St. Peters | “5.55 Harmony | * ni | Souris ar 7: errr C. J. BRYDGES,'/ WM; McKECHNIE, iJ. J. DAVIES § = = Monuments, Tablets, Headstones, ‘ ry _ | |" ee Lauter Tors, Bureau anp Commons | ks, Wasi Down Sans, &¢., &e! Prices. to. suit, and satisfaction guaranteed. B® Designs furnished on application.“@a Cérner Hillsborough and Kent Streets, Char- lottetown. November 6, 1878. aren COMMERCIAL Union Assurance. Company; OF LONDON, ENGLAND, . ay ees Capital, Twelve Million Pive MWun- dred Thousand Dollars. $12,500,090.00. FNSURANCE EFFECTED. against . Fire . on all descriptions of Property throughout the Island. w= Low rates and prompt settlement of losses. HORACE HASZARD, Agent for P. E. Island. 5 | Ch’town, Oct. 19—pat tf = NOTICE. ERSONS who took Tue Examiner before Pp the Datty ExamrNer was issued, and have net yet paid for it, will please send_the amounts of their respeetive accounts, without delay, to W. L. COTTON, EXAMINER Orrice, Ch'towa, } Oct. 17, 1878. \ dy & wkly pence easement od PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Kent Street, Charlottetown, (Three doors from Dr. Johnson’s). S® kKNTRANCE BY SIDE DOOR. “@ Oct. lo--—3m RANKIN HOUSE, ‘OHARLOTTSTOWN, P. BI, Proprictor (formerly of St. Lawrence Hotel, Pictou). FENHIS well-known Hotel is new open under the present management ; and, having been newiy furnished throughout, it offers every comfort to the travelling public. Suit- able Sample Booms for commercial gentlemen. Oct. 15, 1878—}m! recente cts gpa erence ne a Seed Marine insurance Co. ae made arrangements with the Ocean Marine Insurance Co. of Halifax and the British American’ Assurance Co. of Toronto (both offices of undoubted standing), whereby they can elfect insurance on Vessels, Cargoes or Freight in the above-named oftices, in addi- tion to the risks taken in their own office. say Risks taken daily at their Office, corner Great George ant Lower Water Streets, FP. W. HALES, Sec’y. Ch’town, Aug. 39, 1878—8m'eod ee ee ‘DR. CONROY Physician and Surgeon. OFPICH: — City Hotel Building, opposite Roman Catholic Cathedral, Great George Street: Charlottetown, Aug. 29, 1878—3m eod (Daniel MW, Woh & U0, ——-FORMERLY— PERKINS & JOB, | OONMISSTON MERCHANRS _ SHIP BROKERS. 91 State Street, . 2. -.- - Boston. August 25, 1878—3m —_————___— cr a “PROFESSIONAL GARD. | A. Avo McLEAN, Barrister and Attorney-at-Law, Newson’s Bur.pine, Opposrre Post Orr:ce, South’ Side Queen Square, CHARLOTTETOWN, - -- PEL Aug. 13th, 1878—3m eod WAGSTAFF'S HOTEL, E Subscriber having fitted up the Hote ly KnoWn'as © : if Railways. Supt. P. E.LR- Ts A 8 ‘Side a T6 : me et RANKIN HOUSE, © 0) 4p nearh pres kea sp sj 6i qo 0614, 99) 5 transtent in Sen ieee style, is now prepared to give OARDERS — A few permanent: and] Como rtable accommodation to JL) transient Boarders can be sccommodatec | Poymanoiit and. Transient Boarders. Quincy House, next to Mr. John Seller’s Groce Store. — Good Siable"accommodation can-also be had im connection with this Hotel. Oct, 142i Taw* Tourists and others will receive every atten? tionat the Wagstaff’s Hotel. May 25, 1878, “WM. WAGSPAFF. : E.G. HUNTER). ‘Tialiancand American Marble, 1878. | DELS eek) Ea FURNISHES MORE NEWS, FOR LESS MONEY THAN ANY OTHER PAPER IN THE PROVINCE. It Contains Twenty-eight Columns, nearly every one of which is in closely set READING MATTER. CONSIDER OUR TERMS SINGLE COPIES to the 3ist December, 1878—-thirteen months-—$1,0@0 in ad- vance. SIX COPIES to one address, or addresse. separately, as desired, $5.50 in advance TEN COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $9.0 in advance. FIFTEEN COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as required, $13.50 in advance. ‘ , : cA TWENTY. COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired. $17.00 IN OULL TIMES —GQk' THE—~ CHEAPEST AND BEST The Weekly Examine! is acknowledged to be ahead of any other paper in the Province in the item of LOCAL NEWS and is aiways well filled with Political, Shipping, Commercial and General Information. The debates of the Local Legislature will be rams and letters: from. ‘‘Our -Own Ottawa orrespondent”’ will contain everything of in- terest. transpiting in the Dominion Paflia- ment, , A Good Story. willfbe made a specialty, ——:0:-—— The Daily Examiner : Will be sent to any part of the Province, the minion, United States or Great Britain on receipt of For Six Montlis, - - - - - For Three Months, - - - - For @ne Month, - - - - - $2.50 1.25 30 “9 ADDRESS; carefully and impartially given. Special tele- | THE MeCARTHY MURDER, ANNIE PARKER’S EVIDENCE CONTINUED. Witness then went to bed; was expecting witness said she always called him Fred.) She heard the front door open and came down. She heard from Fraser by letter about a month or over ago; he was in Bos- ton. She did not know McCarthy’s voice. She saw him hang his rubber and overcoat up in the hall and kept his hat ‘on. The coat had false, pointed cuffs with butténs jons He had pants and yest dark like his coat, She would not say whether he had leggings on or not, Mrs. Osborne said, * Let us all go in the bar-room,” and they did so; witness followed. She'tlien showed the positions occrpied in the, bar-room. McCarthy, Mrs. Osborne and . Eliza’ all | drank pale brandy, for which he paid in silver. He talked of being to the Riley girls’ house. Witness condemned this action, but he (McCarthy) said it was tle case of good men.” Witness then des- eribed the drugging. Mrs. Osborne, taking a pinch from a paper containing about a tablespoonful, put 1t in the pale brandy, which made it turn dark... Finally he_ be- came apparently unconscious, calling for his wife and son and then could not be-under- stood. He then had his arms and head on the counter. Mrs. Osborne ¢ame round, took his roil of money, three inches thick, from the righ; hand pants pocket, offered witness halt, which she refused, and asked what would be done with him. © Harry said “finish him,” and his mether gave him the hatchet and said ‘strike him once, not not twice.” .The blow was delivered be- hind the right car, He fell.on the left side, but face towards the counter, his left hand under him, making a gurgling sound’ in breathing. Harry struck him again. She saw aman die once, not with such a long breath. During the hard breathing Me- Carthy drew himself ina bimch and -bled in a heavy stream from the nose and mouth lessening as it ¢anie. Nothing was said. Harry went out round the honse, brought in a stone and put it on the floor © He asked for a rope; went up stairs, got a piece of old bed-cord one and a half or two yards long. . Witness ‘held’ the end and Harry tied a‘ stip-knot and tight knot, put the rope on his’ neek and on ‘the’ stone, which he placed ‘on the’ breast, and took McCarthy’s watch, chain and shell from the pocket’ and pleced them on the “counter. Mrs. Osborne then ‘mixed . witness a drink without stirring itj‘and witness swallowed two mouthfuls. Harry then swore witness never to tell. Harry got a horse and wagon, backed it up over three steps of the front platform, came in, and the three car- ried him out head-first, turning in the bar- room, head from the counter. Blocd dropped some in the hall. By Harry’s di- rection witness gob in the wagon and turned the seat round. They gave him a jerk. ‘in the wagon, laid him’ on his* back—head towards the left side— towards Point du Chene. ‘Harry asked witness to go. She refused) | Witness asked Eliza-to go and she refused. ‘He then drove away. Allcame in. (Hatchet shown.) Witness says the handle was longer. She never saw it in the bar-room befure that night. She used the hedeord for a swing and Mrs. Osborne said’to put it back; it was not theirs (Osborne’s). | Wit- ress put it back in the room; it was old rope; don’t know how many strands; looked aout two strands. (Rope shewn and iden- tified as about the size. Stone produced, but it looked longer than the one used.) Harry used a dark, faded horse and a light wagon. She knewa Frenchman was there with @ wagon containing barrels one time, but'sle Co1’t know when. It was between two and three o’clock that Harry drove away. It was not dark; could see the Johnson House’ and drug store plainly. covered with yellow and’ green -eotton ‘blinds. A’ tian came in and got a drink | while McCarthy was there drinking. No one spoke; she heard him coming in. » Dr. Tuck asked witness if anything was said by or to him: said no ohe spoke. fis Honer thought witness meant no one spoke while he way coming in. ° The question was put and answered in the negative. ‘Witness said he was nothing like as old a mata’ Dr. Tock; he seemed about 26 or 27. (Dr. Tuck said he felt better than if she had said 45.] Witness described the stranger as before. Eliza and Mrs. Os- borne went into the sitting room after Harry left with the body. They said noth- ing. Witness stood at the front door (which was open six or eight inches) while Harry was gone. Harry told her he put him a mile above the Scadouc bridge. Wit- ness then went up-stairs, and Mrs. Osborne called her and directed her to wash up the blood, which she did’ by scrubbing half the barroom and the stains in the hall. Dur- ing this time Harry, Eliza and Mrs. Os- borne remained in the ladies’ sitting room. ‘Next morning they took ‘breakfast in the kitchen.’ No one but the familly were pres- ent. Witness offered’ Harry ten cents for the shell of “McCarthy’s chain and he, would not *sell it, (Watch shown and identified.) “Don’t know WL COTTON, ira ey reer of seeing any of the money afterwards; saw both coats next is0rning. Mrs. Osborne took the overcoats up stairs. She never Chtown, Dec. 1877. saw the rubber coat again, but saw the i } lat 2 o'clock. ‘Mr. Palmer opjected, as witness had just clin, __sitivennttinatladlttinsngyentitttminet ius ili tin ctianesiitean, | overcoat in the clothes press. Mr. Osborne asked whose coat it was and tried it on. | He was weak and could not put the sleeves on. Mrs. Osborne then put it away. Mr. Osborne thought witness would tell about the murder, and asked if she shared the | * oS i y “4 }a young Fred. Fraser about midnight and | bree » and Mrs. een neato Hy | did not go to. sleep. (Dr. Tuck intimated | 20% 2© money and would always liye wi that he understood his name was Jim, but) ‘hem. ' The Court then adjourned until Monday | SueEprac, Noy. 16. The Chief Justice, Sheriff and Jury ar- rived at the Scadouc railway bridge at 10 ‘a. my surveyed it, and found that the stone was found on the opposite side of the deep channel. They examined the flats and took a horse on them ; viewed the | Stone quarry, where there were stones sim- jilar to the one in question, ¢ame down the track and took dimner at the’ Weldon House, and are now examining the Waver- ley House. It seems to be the intention of all concerned to make a thorough investiga- tion and gain all the information within their reach. - a —— on Reporters—A True Picture. The newspaper reporter is undoubtedly a peculiar person, and none know his pecu- liarities so well as those who employ him. As a species of the human family, present- ing, of course, a certain proportion of ab- normal exceptions to the yeneral rule, he és a’ person of enthusiasm, .enterprise and much endurance. He is always or gener- ally imaginative. His best types run rather towards systematic accuracy as to facts, the tendency toward imaginative flights being usually crushed out by editors, who prefer facts to fancy in their news columns. The fancy reporter, of whom ‘‘ Gath”. is per- haps the highest American type, dwells wholly in the regions of imagination, and wins literary renown and reward at the sacrifice of moral reputation as. a person mindful of the truth. But the regular, average daily reporter is a hard-worked drudge, for whom a’ great diversity of gifts is needed, He must be ubiquitous. He must be of all parties, schools, or creeds, or else of no party, school, or creed. . He must be ambidextrous, and capable of living without food or sleep. ‘He must ‘keep the run” of a variety of things past, pres- ent and to come, as incongruous and con- flicting as the articles in a cyclopeedia. He must never make a mistake. He must have the patience of Griselda, and ‘the sweet temper of a saint. He must return snubs with smiles, and when he is refused at the front door he must get his ipforma- tion at the hack gate. He must be in- tensely interested in the most intensely stupid people and things, and) must fre: quently sit in the seat of the scorned at the feast he is to glorify in the next day’s paper. He must be as methodical as a Hock. and as versatile as a weathercock. Hernust be all things to all men; if by any means he may get anitem. He iust >be a person knowing all things, and having no opinions jabont anything. He must contribute largely to his newspaper, and never have his individnality recognized. v= oe lid ings Josh Billine’s Almanax. SOME OF THE GOOD THINGS TO BE FOUND . IN THEM, I never tri to settle other peeple’s quar- rels;i have seen men tri to do this, and git bad’y whipt bi both partys. Hunting for happiness iz like hunting fer hen’s eggs away under the barn; after yu hav fotind them haff the tine yn find they are addled. Thare iz lots ov peeple in this world who say they haint got enny faith in. heaven or hell, and yet they hay got faith enuff to in- vest their last dollar in a lottery ticket, or a bottle of quack medisin. I kno ov men whoze™ word iz better than | The-windows round the ‘front doors were | their bond, these are the knight errants ov honesty. : Mules are like stm men; after yu hav studdid their karakter for 5 years cluss, the best thing yn kan do-iz to git an average on “them. OTS No man haz ever yet. kum so wize az to kno how mutch he tuys himself, and how little hiz nabor: ; It iz quite;common to. meet peepel who hav more relijon, and even moraliti, than they have common sense, Young man, studdy politeness, even if yn ask a man for his tooth pik, after he haz got dun using it, don’t fail to thank him politely for it. Lasting friendships can only exist be- tween equals, superiority insists upon res- pekt, and inferiority is too often apt to ex- cite pitty. Virtew 4 the wok standard to mezzure men, or things bi; it iz possible to be grate and devilish at the same time. , Thare iz only one kind ov person who iz fit to liv in solitude, and he iz the one who iz capable of adorning enny posihun in so- ciety. Thoze who hay real merit ar the last ones to see it in themselves, and the fust ones to see it in others. If thare is a perfeR¥l¥ ha rson found in this world,. it mill. bd. tho ohalaniihes got but little, and don’t want enny thing Lasting reputashuns are ov a alo | rowth, ithe man who wakes up famus ste morn- ing 12 very apt to go to bed some night and ‘sleep it nition oo | Sst : ; : : 4 Se ae See ’ 7