a - ee Aen = Local and Other Items. Tue Marquis of Lorne is 33 years old. Dr. TUPPER is, at boro. present, in Parrs- THERE was not a sovereigncoined in Eng aud during the year 1877. Hi and Shoes so Call and he will tel! you. ow can Gass sell Boots cheap ? A large number of politicians left the city this evening to attend the meeting at Milton, THERE was a large attendance at the market to-day. Sales were brisk, at prices similar to those of Friday last. THe annual prize meeting of the Pro- vincial Rifle Association commences at Ken- sington Range to-morrow. Tur Grasshopper has been heard from in Minnesota. He is stretching his wings | and letting his teeth grow. Tur brigantine Siena, twenty-one days from Barbadoes, passed through Canso on the 9th inst , bound for Quebec. Sir Epwarp Sitspy Smyrue left Quebec for England on the 7th. He will accom- pany the Marquis of Lorne to Canada in September. SEVERAL Canadian papers—French and English—have published mourning columns out of respect to Dr. Conroy, the deceased Ablegate. Tue Liberal-Conservative Committee tooms have been removed to Mr. D. Me- Kinnon’s store, on Queen Street, next to P. G. Fraser's Drug. Store. THere will be a meeting of the City Council this evening, at 7.30. The ap- pointment of officials for the ensuing year, is the principle business to be transacted. Tur Small Debt Court was nominally opened in this city to day, and further ad- journed until to-morrow, when the judg- ment in the cases reserved will be given. Last night, at 12 o'clock, steam tug Henry Aitken sailed for Pictou with a party of excursionists, who will take part in the Odd Fellows’ festivities, which will be held in that place to-day. Mr. A. A. McLean, barrister and at- torney, has severed his connection with the firm of Sullivan, McLean & Morson and has opened a law office for himself in Mr. 4. Newson’s building, opposite the Post Oilice. We wish him success. A partial eclipse of the moon was visible in this city yesterday evening for an hour and a quarter. When the moon emerged from the clouds which hid it from view dur- ing the early part of the evening the eclipse was at its height. Tue moonlight excursion under the auspices of the Victoria Debating Society, was weil patronised last night. Those who attended spent quite an enjoyable time in dancing and promenading as the Southport gently glided o’er the deep. At the Stipendiary Magistrate’s Court this forenoon John McLeod, drunk and in- capable, was fined $2 and costs or eight days. Samuel McDonald was sentenced to twenty days’ imprisonment for an assault on Mary McLeod. Thomas Godfrey, summoned for allowing a nuisance to exist on his premises, excused. Henry Palmer, for the same offence, was fined five cents and costs. THeEre will be a lively day’s racing at the Summerside Driving Park to-morrow. A large number of gentlemen from this City will be in attendance. In the three minute race we notice that Mr. A. N. Large’s ‘* Messenger Boy” and Mr. A. Holman’s ‘* Lookout” have entered. R. Crabb’s stallion, ‘‘Kentucky Bill,” and E. Clow’s ‘* Nelly” represent Queen’s County in the running race. On the 9th Dr. Mutiart held an inquest on the body of William Lyons who com- mitted suicide at Souris on Thursday last. The jury returned a verdict that deceased came to his death by drowning while labor- ing under temporary insanity. Lyons was a quiet, industrious man. He was addicted to periodical spells of excessive drinking and his premature death is but another warning against the use of liquor Tur City School Board, at their last meeting, made the following appointments :‘ Mr. Peter Curran, to be Acting Principal of the Queen Square School ; Miss Bessie Mitchell, to be teacher of the Ist Primary Department in the Upper Prince Street School ; Miss Mary F. Cox, 2nd Primary Department of West Kent Street School, and Miss Ada Wadman, 2nd Primary De- partment of Rochford School. Tre “ Ring Case” was further tried at the Stipendiary Magistrate’s Court to day. Louise appeared and testified that Samuel vave her the ring which, he said, he pur- chased. She was the only witness ex- amined. A doubt rested on the mind of the Magistrate as to whether McDonald did feloniously take the ring, and, giving the prisoner the benefit of that donbt, he ex- cused him with twenty days’ imprisonment with hard labor. Drownep av Camppetton, Lor 4.—Mr. James Scott, of Shemogu, N. L., a single man, aged about 27 years who had been running a fishing stage at Campbelton, left his stage in a sail-boat, on the night of the 26th July last by himself, to pick up a dory which had gone adrift. Not returning, his friends became alarmed, and more so in a few days, when the dory was found at Mim- inigash, and the boat picked up at sea. The body was picked up on Friday last, about half a mile from the place at which he embarked. It is supposed, on reaching the dory, that he attempted to catch her and fell overboard. hide atediknal Pecenierinnn til NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. Vienna, Aug. 11. The seventh division of the Austrian army of occupation, under the Grand Duke of Wurtemburg, is operating to the westward of the main body and fought two battles with insurgents—one on the 5th inst., at Varearvakuf, and on the 7th at Jaieze. The latter appears to have been a serious en gagement. ‘The official report says :—A victory has been gained over the superior force of the insurgents. The fortified town of Jamaica has been occupied after nine hours of sangninary fighting. The Ans- trians displayed devoted valor. Lonpon, Aug. 11. The statement that the Sultan had tele- graphed to Queen Victoria asking British mediation to stay the advance of the Aus- trian army of occupation at Banjaluka is confirmed. The British Government has declined to intervene. Epinruren, Aug. 11. The Scotsmans London correspondent says there is a strong reason for believing that the English intend to gain a footing on the mainland of Asia Minor. Scanderoon, a port of Aleppos, is named as probably the objective point. Lonpon, Aug. 10. A Trebizond despatch reports that the native tribes, who are mustering in great force in the defiles leading to Antivin, are determined to oppose the carrying out of the decision of the Berlin Congress. It is estimated that their numbers will soon reach 15,000, A despatch from Batoum says that the population are armed, and preparing to resist the occupation by the Russians. The local chiefs have held a Council, and decid- ed to fight. The disaffected mountaineers on the Choruk frontier are said to number 20,000. The excitement is intense. The Turkish regular army remain neutral, and 30,000 Mohammedan horsemen have ap- peared in the north-western point of the Province. A Russian military attache has gone to Leipsic, apparently on a special mission. A special from Shepteche, on the 8th, gives some particulars of a heavy battle which raged that day along the whole line from Magla to Shepteche. The Bosnians were defeated. The loss of the Anstrians was 50 killed and wounded. The Bosnian forces numbered. 5,000, and included artil- lery and a large force of Turkish regulars led by the regular officers; 400 of the latter were captured. The captive Turkish troops claim they were compelled to fight by the insurrectionary government at Serajevo. <OME, Aug. 10. Yardinal Lorenzo Nina, the new Papal Secretary of State, has addressed a circular to the Papal Nuncios announcing that he follows the policy pursued by the late Car- dinal Franchi, and recommending the Nun- cios to act with great prudence and to avoid all unnecessary embarrassment for the Holy See. He instructs them to assure the pow- ers that the Holy See will endeavor to maintain with them relations of sincere friendship. Lonpon, Aug. 1]. At the grand naval review and inspection by the Queen which is to take place on Tuesday next, the fleet will comprise 10 broadside ships, 8 turret ships, 6 sloops of war and gunboats and 2 torpedo boats, car- rying a total of 218 guns, 6,691 officers and men, aggregating 99,541 tons and 72,350 horsepower. For the accommodation of persons desiring to witness the review ves- sels have been appropriated for the Lords of the Admiralty, members of the House of Lords and House of Commons and Foreign Diplomatists and other distinguished per- sons. The Queen will be on board the toyal yacht Victoria, and Albert, Prince and Princess of Wales will be on board the yacht Osborne. Four o’clock is the hour fixed for the review. Vienna, Aug. 11. Official intelligence has been received fully confirming in all its details the report of the battle on the 8th inst. along the line from Margli to Shiptsche as_telegraphed by the correspondent of the London Daily News. Ofticial reports place the number of in- surgents at considerably over six thousand with four cannons and rocket battery. Fighting lasted eight hours, the insurgents obstinately holding possession of the strong positions. The Russians lost 500 killed and wounded and 700 prisoners. On Friday the Austrians advanced against a strongly en- trenched position of Vrunduk. Bocuarest, Aug. 11. The news received from the insurgent sources is to the effect that the opponents to the Austrian occupation, consisting of Bosnia’s Turkish troops, Arnants and Al.- banians, number 100,000 men well armed. All strategetic points on the road to Sera- jevon are occupied and entrenched. Both the insurgents and Austrians are being re- inforced daily. Panis, Aug. 11. The ‘* Constitutional’ reiterates and maintains its former statement that the Prince lnperial will espouse Princess Thyra of Denmark. New York, Aug. 11. A young boy named Charles Gates, aged fourteen years, residing in Brooklyn, while bathing from a boat in East River, on Thursday afternoon, was horribly and fa- tally mutilated by an eight-foot man-eating shark. A companion in the boat, seeing him struggling with the shark, threw a rock which was intended to be used as an an- chor, at the shark, striking it on the head, stunning the monster and causing him to release his jaws from the body of young Gates. The boy then dragged his mutilated companion into the boat and rowed ashore, taking the almost lifeless body to the police. The back and sides of the boy are in an awful condition, and he cannot possibly live. | & FIO-Mxre, under the auspices of the Liberal-Conservatives of Lot 34 and Scotch Fort, will be held at Tracadie Harbor ON Saturday, the i7th instant, A Special Train will leave Charlottetown at 9.30 a. m., and return, leaving Bedford Sta- tion, at Sp. m. ‘Teams will be provided to convey the excursionists from the station and back, Speeches will be delivered by the Hons. J.C. Pope and F. Brecken, Austin C. Me- Donald, Esq., and other leading politicians, Liberal-Conservatives from different sections of the Island are respectfully invited to at- tend. tefreshments at reasonable rates may be obtained on the grounds. No intoxicating liquors allowed. Railway tickets, 40 cents ; fare from station to grounds and back, 25 cents. By order of Committee. ABRAM GILL, See’y. Little York, Aug. 8—ar pres n e her li E. C. HUNTER, — —-[IMPORTER OF— [talian and American Marble, AND MANUFACTURER OF Monuments, Tablets, Headstones, Tomb Tables, &c., &. Also, Mantles, Centre Table Tops, Bureau and Commode Tops, Wash Bowl Slabs, Bracket Shelves, &c., Ke, Granite, Freestone, and Soapstone Work done in all its branches. PRICES TO SUIT, SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. ha” Designs Surnished on application, 2a Next Door to Mark Butcher's Fur- niture Factory, Kent Street, Charlottetown, August 7, 1878,—3taw —— ———$—————— hl oe — Mackerel Barrels ASH HOOP. 1,000 IN STORE. | CARVELL BROS, Ch’town, July 30—pat 2w 2aw §. §, “ MIRAMICHI” A TILL CALL AT CHARLOTTETOWN going to Montreal, on TUESDAY MORNING, the 13th inst., and also on TUESDAY, the 27th inst. CARVELL BROS., Ch’town, Aug. 10.— Agents. PLAISTER PARIS |! $2.50 Per Barrel—Cash. CARVELL BROS. Ch’town, July 26—pat 3w 2aw General Insurance Office, qURE and MARINE, LIFE and ACCI- DENT INSURANCE effected. Office, opp. Post Office, South Side. HORACE HASZARD. SURVEYOR OF SHIPPING, OPPOSITE POST OFFICE—SOUCTH SIDE, HORACE HASZARD, Surveyor. Ch’town; Aug. 2— To Blacksmiths, Lime-burners, &c. (ae COAL! COAL! RDERS for ALBION MINES’ (Pictou) SMALL COAL can be obtained from the Subscriber until further notice. G. W. DeBLOIS, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. 35 Water Street, Ch’town, July 31, 78. dy p tf Wants, Lost, Found, &x. Advertisements under this heading, in space not exceeding half an inch, will be insert ed for Ten Cents per day. a ee a ee = ne tee” OOK & HOUSEMAID WANTE —Wanted, immediately, a good Plain Cook and a Housemaid, for a family just ar- rived from England, Apply at Mrs. WAG- STAFF’S, Pownal Street. OARDERS — A few permanent and transient Boarders can be accommodated on reasonable terms at the Quincey Hovsg, next door to John Seller’s Grocery Store, LIBERAL CONSERVATIVE New Books PIC-NIC! Kent Street. Ch’town, Aug. 1— i TRAYED—From Godkin’s Pasture, on' Monday, the 15th inst., a white and red | spotted COW. Any person knowing of her whereabouts will be suitably rewarded by | leaving information at the Revere Hovse. | July 22— BREMNER BROS. omen $C) 5 TEXTILE following STANDARD WORKS just received : Macaulay’s Essays, Writings & Speeches, a Life & Letters, Barne’s Notes on the Ola and New Testament, Cruden’s Concordance, Talmage’s Sermons, ' Daily Thoughts. Childhood, the Text-Book of the age, for Parents, Pastors and Teachers. Matchless Gems, a new book of Songs, for public and social gatherings. Forrest’s American Farrier and Horse Doctor NEW NOVELS. The Jericho Road, By the Author of / Grown Up Babies, Helen’s Babies. ( Other People, r \ The Scripture Club, &c., &e That Husband of Mine, My Mother-in-Law, Shaving Them (by Titus A. Brick), Story of a Honeymoon, Cent per Cent, Bret Hartes’ Two Men of Sandy Bar, Mr. Brown on the Goings On of Mrs. Brown, Hans Breitman’s Ballads, Babies and Ladders, Xe. YOUNG FOLKS’ .LIBRARY, 30 Cents Each, Orlando, the Outeast of Milan, Dashing Rodman, Charlie Archer's Luck, Theseus, Frank, the Fishboy, The North Pole, dilly Boswain, Ned Stanley, Fred Hilton, &c., &e. Together with a variety of Dialogue and tecitation Books, Prohibition Reciters, Tem- perance Books, Letter Writers, &e. 44 Queen Street. BREMNER BROS. PARTNERSHIP NOTICE. VHE Partnership heretofore existing be- tween the undersigned, under the style of PERKINS & JOB, is hereby dissolved by mutual consent. Either party is authorized to sign the name of the firm in liquidation. JAMES D. PERKINS. DANIEL W. JOB. New York, Aug. Ist, 1878. - The business of the late firm of Perkins & Job will be continued in NEW YORK by the undersigned under the style of PERKINS & CO. JAMES D. PERKINS. Ff. SEAVERNS, Jr. New York, Aug. Ist, 18S78—2 4w law COAL! COAL! 1 50 TONS NUT & ROUND COAL, e) cheap from Shed, by W. W. CLARKE, Agent. Head Lord’s Wharf, Charlottetown, June 24. SYDNEY COAL. :0: REDUCTION IN PRICE ! NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC! rAFYHE GENERAL MINING ASSOCTA- TION (Limited) beg to intimate to the Public that the price of SYDNEY COAL has been Reduced to $2 per ton of 2240 Ibs., a price which it is hoped will place it within the reach of all consumers, The opening of the new winning at ‘‘ THE SYDNEY MINES” and the fact that the SYDNEY COAL now being shipped is. all from the DEEP taken in connection with re- cent improvements in the process of screening, afferds purchasers a positive guarantee of the very superior quality and condition of the SYDNEY COAL now offered for sale. It is a well-know fact that for many years past the prices of other Cape Breton coals have been regulated by the rates tixed for SYDNEY COAL; but while it is true that other coals, to get a sale at all, have been pressed on the market at various prices under the current rate of SYDNEY COAL, it is no less true that, taking into account the superior lasting qualities of SYDNEY COAL when compared with other Cape Breton coals, the advantage, both as to economy and convenience, is in favor of SYDNEY COAL, even at a much higher price. The General Mining Association (Limited) regret that they should again have to caution the Public against the attempts being made from time to time to induce them to buy in- ferior coals purporting to be ‘* EQUAL TO SYDNEY,” **SUPERIOR TO SYDNEY,” etc., etc., while some yet more unscrupulous vendors have not hesitated to advertise their coalas SYDNEY COAL (from some designated locality). All these efforts to sell coal by such means are only so many admissions on the part of those who make them of the stanDARD character of SYDNEY COAL, It has come to the knowledge of the Asso- ciation that in frequent instances i. i orders to truckmen and others for SYDNE COAL have been furnished with other and inferior coal. The Public are cautioned against permitting themselves to be imposed apon in this way. Every vessel loaded at THE SYDNEY MINES is furnished with a certificate of the cargo being Sydney Coal. Parties purchasing should satisfy themselves by demanding the production of this certificate. AUCTION SALES. AUCTION! W E have been instructed by Tomas Lewis, to sell, by Auction, at his Store, on Great George Street, (near the Store of W. EK, Dawson, Esq.,) on FRIDAY, the 16th inst,, AT 11 O'CLOCK, A, M., HIS STOCK OF COODS. — CONSISTING OF--. Vases. Jewelry, Concertinas, Goods, Readymade Clothing. —ALSO—- 1 Shop Stove, 1 Good Cooking Stove, 1 Parlor Stove, Tables, Bedsteads, Chairs, Wash- stands, Mattrasses, &c., &c. Sale positive. No reserve. MACKENZIE & STUMBLES, Auctioneers, Fancy Dress 4 Uh'town, Aug, 13— BANK STOOGK. ae FEN be sold by Auction, at the Subscriber's Rooms, on Friday, the 16th instant, aT 12 o’cLocK, 20 Shares in Summerside Bank, eo ** Union Bank, ie ‘** Merchants Bank, a. ‘** Bank of Prince Edward Island, ) * * Ch’town Gas Light Co. WILLIAM DODD, ; Auctioneer, Ch’town, Aug. 12, 1878— Apples. Apples, CARROLL” from “ r¥NoO arrive by “S. 8, Boston, — 30 Bbls. Good Apples, which will be sold, by Auction, on WEDNESDAY, the 14th inst, AT 12 O'CLOCK, NOON, MACKENZIE & STUMBLES, Auctioneers Ch’town, Aug. 12, 1878.—pat d Te <A esenehuee/tnnh/ethen~ StSOSGRSSSRNNSED Woodenware & Sundries, E will Sell by AUCTION, at our Sales- room, on Wednesday, the 14th inst., AT ELEVEN 0’CLOCK, A Consignment comprising Half-Bushel Meas- ures (folding), Sawbucks, Mop-Handles, Churns, Clothes-Racks, Step-Ladders, Knife-Trays, Towel-Rollers, Croquet Seta, Knife Boards, Bread Cutters, Children’s Sleighs, Wheelbarrows, Potato Mashers, Toy Pails, Whisk Scrubs, Curry-Combs, Butter Pails, Stove Brushes, Washing- Machines, Clothes-Wringers, Brooms, Pails, Washboards, &c. Also—at same time— 100 Bbls. K. D. CORNMEAL, 10 Puns. MOLASSES, 20 Casks KEROSENE, 10 Boxes WAX CANDLES, 10 Bbls. Granulated SUGAR, ee “ g® Terms at Sale. F. T. Newbery & Oo. Ch’town, Aug. 6— pat 3i ar her li BANKRUPT STOCK, AT AUCTION, -—( IN -— Thursday, the 22nd August, commencing at 2 o'clock. at the store of J. R. Coffin, Mount Stewart, LL. HIS STOCK IN TRADE, consisting of a well-selected Stock of Merchandize, viz.: Hats and Caps, Boots and Shoes, Men’s Readymade Clothing, Dress Goods, Shawls, Jackets, Millinery, White Cot- ton, Handkerchiefs, Rubbers, Groceries, Spices, Soap, Confectionary, Hardware, Stove and Pipe, Scales, Shop , Furniture, &e., &e., &e. bas> Everything Will Be Sold Without Reserve. Terms—Under $20, cash ; over that amount, three months’ credit. CARVELL BROS. Ch’town, July 31—pat 2aw t sale NEW COODS. NEW GOODS. ROBERT ORR & CO. Have now open, and ready for inspection, a very large stock of STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODS! Which they are selling, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, es The ‘‘ Sydney Coal” is registered under the | laws of the Dominion, and unauthorized parties | using the Trade Mark *‘SYDNEY COAL” | } are hable to prosecution. CUNARD & MORROW, Agents G. M. A., Halifax, N.S. | G. W. DEBLOIS, CHARLOTTETOWN, Sole Agent for P. E Island. | July 15, 1878-——3m —\, LOWER PRICES —THAN— Ever Before Offered. They respectfully solicit the patronage of their customers, and the public generally, Ch'town, May 8, 1878, ST aides ae besa iad ee 5 Ee stomata Csgtegeer