—e Che y Py QmMiner. WY . 1 ae Manager & VOL. 1. A. MIicNEILL, tuctioneer and Commission Merchant nd. al qu NicN sCRET. usRLOrTeTOl, P. R. ISLAND AUCTION SALES, of all descrip- ans; attended to in city: and country at moderate rates. ; - ae PIANO FORTE REGULATOR. (ee LL parues leaving their orders for Puning A at Bremner Bros. will receive the best jenlion. wt" who have Pianos. in Charlottetown would do well to haye*ttem tuned by the ear, keeping their instruments in perfect order al! the time. . A visit once a year at least will/be madet ail parts 04 the Island. or oftner if, re quired Chtown, July 18, 1Sai. JOHN F. McKAY, WATCHMAKER & JEWELLER, NORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE, ] AVING fitted up his Store in first-class —_— Style, will keep coustantly on hand a very nice- assortment of Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, ete. Also, all kinds of Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Cleaned and Repaired. — N. B.—Having had nine years experience with two first-class workmen, I teel confi- dent of giving perfect satisfaction to all who way favor me with their patronage. All work warranted. Ch’town, July ROYAL HOTEL, | SORN. thésa l2in Square, Saint ~ KH AVE much pleasure io iatorming my ou merous frieads and the public generally, that } have leased the Hotel formerly known 98 the tONTINENTAL, and thoronghly renovated thesame, waking it, asthe ROY Al, always had the reputatiog of beiag, one of thé best Hotels in the Provinces. . Excelleat Bill cf F. re, Pirst-class Wines Liquors aod Cigars, aad superior accommoda tion. Llaekhali’s Livery Stable attached. ~ THOS, F. RAYMOND. King July 3, 1877—6m cesses OL LR, “10 PLEASURE SEEKERS! A FIRST-CLASS PLEASURE BOAT, of 42 about Kight Tons Capacity, suitable for Pleasure Parties, Pienics, Fishing or Moonlight’ Excursions (capable of seating 50 persons). can be cngaged by the day or hour, with or without man in charge, by app'ying to GEY, COOMBS, duly 13—1m Lord’s Wharf. QUEER INSURANCE £0, OF ENGLAND. -_-— —-—-_-__—_— Capital -- {wo Millions Sterling, ———— ee shCy effected on all kinds o Buildings, Merehandise, and Produce Also, on Vessels of the stoeks. Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bans), Agent for Prince Edward Island | Jane — a dlasses, Sugar & Salt LO ARRIIE. _——— RIGT. FLEETWOOD will be due here co IvYrOnN \ EBditor. Steamer Arrangements. Prince Edward Island STEAMERS. SURNIMER ARRANGEMENT,. ee ee Nova Scotia. Leave Charlottetown for Pieton every Monpay,. Wrepnespay, THurspay, & SATURDAY mornings, at 5 o'clock, con- necting there at ]O a. m., with traiu for }falifax. Fare to Hatifax. $4.10, Picnie Parties of Twenty. and npwards can obtain Return Tickets, at Charlotie- town QOilice to Pictou and back same day $1.00 each. Returning to Charlottetown. Leave Pictou every Turspay, WEDNESDAY eFripay and SaTurpay, about 2.30 pam. on arrival of evening train from Hal- lax. CAPE BRETON. ave Pictou for Mawkesbury every Mon- pay amd THurspay, 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- iLy with 10 a.m. Train Tuespay and Fr DAY for Halifax. Now Brenswiek, Canada and {inited Siates, Leaves SUMMERSIDE every day (Sanday excepted) on arrival of morning trgin from Sharlottetown,. connecting at Sigprc with train ane ch Of bhove named places, snd at SY. A avitb Steamers of INTERNA- tIONAL Co. for PORTLAND and Boston, Also, leave Charlottetown for Summerside every Monday morning, about 3 o'clock, teturning, leaves SHEDIAC every day (Sundays excepted) on arrival of day train trom St.. Jouy, for Summerside; connect there, without delay, with train, for Char- lottetown. Also, leaves Summerside for Jharlottetoywn: every Saturday evening, about 6 o'clock. Agents; Atmos & Macrnrosn, Halifax; Noonan & Daviks, Pictou; A Grant & Zo ilawkeshury* llaNvip Bros., St. John. F. W.. HALES. ALY GUREGT LINE EOD PRECSW’ EON, N Veo ——- steamers Carvall and Woreesler, BotT# Steamers are fitted) with bias Boil ers, dud their Passcouger accomodation arranged for every convenience and com- fort, and fitted up in clegant style. FREIGILT carried af moderate rates ane as low as by avy 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 al | Hal.fax, and arriving at Boston Monday | morning, ‘LEAVE CHARLO PTETOWN kivery ‘rhursday, punctually at 5 p.m. LEAVE BOSTON ISvery Saturday, unctually at noon, CARVELL BROS.,Agent. Ch’town, June 7,877 -————- - -—- Steamer. HEATHER BELLE about the Sth of August, from Barba- | doe... via St. Martin’s, with ? 59 Pans. Bright Barbadoes Molasses, 25 Hhds. Grocery Sugar, _ 15 Tiérees~ do, do., ¥.06 Bushels Ground St. Martin's Salt, Suitable for mackerel, Which will be) sald low ontarrival.) LONGWORTIL & CO., . Water Street. h’t wh, July 297 — WANTED. oe Highest Cash price paid for Calf Skins aud Sheep Skins. ROBERT BRIDGES, June 26—tudtr tf Summer Arrangement. 4 ILL leave Charlottetown for Orwell tf every MONDAY and WEDNESDAY evenings. | Leave Orwell for Charlottetown every TUESDAY and’THURSDAY | mornings, at |Z o'clock. Returning to Orwell same evening at_3 oc) »ck. | Leave Charlottetown for Mount Stewar- every WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY Morn- ‘ings at four o'clock, Leave Mount Stewart for Charlottetown ‘at 7 o'clock, returning to Mount Stewart ‘game evenings. Taving Charlottetown for Crapaud every SATURDAY, weather and tide per- ‘mitting; and every alternate SATURDAY wil make a return trip JOMN HUGHES, Agent. Chitown May 25, 1877.—3m wkly SATURDAY MORNING. - ———— Excursion Tickets. TO BOSTON AND RETURN, STEAMERS CARROLL & WORCESTER, or 815,00. CARVELL BROS MONTREAL & ACADIAN STEAMSHIP. LINE. eee HASZARD BROS., Agents. ee Montreal, Charlottetown, P, E, 1, Sydney, C. B.. & St. John’s, N, F. Capt. Johu A. Macmarsters Capt. Daniel Naderen, NS.“ VENKATA,” NS. VALEPPA,” ee Should sufficient freight offer, it is in- tended to run the steamers of this line during the present season, regularly, be- tween the above mentioned ports. The at tention of importers is directed to the ads vantages offered. ‘The steamers are in all respects first-class, well found, staunch, and well adapted jor the route, having ex- cellent passenger accommodation. All freight delivered in good order at lowest rates. For freight or passage apply to -HASZARD BROS., Agents- July 16, 1877—eod tf QUEBEC & GULP PURTS Steamship Company ' *SARET, =e CAPT. DAVIDSON. » WERAMICHL,” CAPT. BAQUET, AY itt LEAN EE ayca nately from PICTOU (after arrival of Monday Afternoor Prain from Ilalifax) every Monday Midnight: SHEDIAC (after arrival of Tuesday Train froin St. Join and Halifax) every Tuesday Afternoon : CUARLOTTETOWN, every Puesday Morning; SUMMERSIDE evepy Puesday* Pasbebiae, Peres, Gaspe, Father Point, and ai Nave Named Places, LOW &ATES. QUICK TIME CARVELL BROS, Agents, Ch'town, June 16, 1877.—méth Parks’ Cotton Yarns. AWARDED the only Medal, given tot COTTON YARNS of Canadian Manu factura at the CEN. ENNIAL EXHIBITION. Nos. 5’s.to 10's. White Blue, Red, Orange, and Green. Warranted full length and weight. Stronger and better than any other Yaron q the market, Cotton Carpet Warp. No."12’s 4fp_y in ALL Coors. Warranted fast. WM. PARKS’ & SON, New Brunswick Cotton{Mills St. John,N b. THE DAILY EXAMINER ISON SADE AT THE STORES OF Henry A, Harvie, Theoph. L. Chappelle, and T. O’Connell. ee ee Price Only 2 Cents, : May 23 77 ne 27, 1877—her 1 RIGHTS. Every man has a right to determine for himself whether he will or will not work for any wages that may be offered him. No man has a right to determine for an. other man whether that other shall or shall not work for any wages that may be of fered, No man has any right to prevent another man from doing any work, not noxious to society and not dangerous to other indi- viduals, which he may think best to do. Every man has a right to his own iree- dom. Every man has aright to act or not act in accordance with the dictates of his own judgment and his own conscience. No man has a right to interfere with the freedom of another by dictating either how he shall think and say, or what he shall do- _ The foundation of society in this country is freedom, and anything except the laws ot God or the laws of the land, which in- terferes with freedom must be suppressed and removed. —N, Y. Sun, ——_——..-- ¢- 4 @ > - 0 WHAT MAKES BOW-LEGS, Bow-legs and knock~knees are among the commonest deformities of humanity, and wise mothers assert that the crooked- neas. in either case, arises from the aftilicted one Waving been put upon his or her feet too@arly in babyhood, But a Manchester (Erfgtund) physician, Dr. Crompton, who as watcheg for the true cause, thinks dif- erently, He attributes the first mentioned *listortion toa habit some youngsters des light in, of rubbing the sole of one fooi against that of the other; some will go to sleep with the soles together. They appear to enjoy the contact only when the feet are naked; they don’t attempt to make it when they are socked or slippered, So the re~ medy is obvious; keep the baby’s soles eavyered. Knocksknees, the Doctor ascribcs to a different childish habit, that of sleep ing on the side, with one knee tucked under the hallow behind the other, He has found that where ane leg has been bowed inward more than the other, the patient has always slept on one side, and the uppermost member has been the most deformed, Here the preventive is to pad the inside of the knees, so as to keep them apart, and let the limbs grow freely their own way. All of which is commended to mothers who desire the physical upright~ ness of their progeny. ~_—~ ———- 2 2° > -:—-- MOVING MOUNTAIN IN SAVOY. The Journal des—Debals contains farthe: particulars concerning the unprecedented tail ofa mountain in the district of Saint Foy, Savoy, the spectacle having been most majestic and terrible. Tbe catastrophe which betel, and which still threatens, Mazure and Miroir, two of the most flours ishing villages of Saint Foy, has been er- roneously reported as an instantaneous phenomenon, and as completed, nis is uot the case, 4s it is nota mountain that has fallen down, but one that seems break. ing up, and which for the last twenty 20 days has, night and day, without interrup- tion, filled the valley beneath it with heaped-up stone blocks, with a noise like thunder, darkening the atmosphere and filling the air with thick clouds of yellowish dust and sand. ‘The dismantled cracer of the Beo-Rouge reaches to a height of 2.460 metres, or 8,200 feet, above the level ot the sea,and is situated 1,340 metres or nearly 4,500 feet above the valley of the Magure and Miroir. The general veclivity or inclination does not exveed 5U degrees, the surface haying a diagonal length of about 1,800 metres, or 6,000 feet. The entire mass, which threatens to crumble down, forms 4 mutilated or lopped cone of 200 metres width at the top and 600 metres at the base, and is composed of hard and compact flaky stone-blocks, but entirely disconnected. This massive group of rocks is attached to the mountain by a vertical part, already cleft and tottering, measuring a thickness only of 40 to 5U metres. The whole seems to tumbie down like a wall ulied down by an unceasing process and an invisible power, The vertical part of the declivity may at any moment join the much larger mass, already in motion, of 1,200,000 cubic metres of gigantic rough stones, The spectacle is indescribabie; the upheaving of the ocean or the eruption of a volcanic mountain can alone give some slight ‘idea of the process of those mys= terious forces of nature in convulsions, the process of falling having continued with- out interruption, excepting for a few moments now and then, for more than 500 hours. Blocks of some 4U to 5) cubic metres in circumference seem to detach themselves without any apparent Cause, as if uplifted by the efforts of subterranean powers. These, in halfa minute, leap of trom 400 to 500 metres—descend the de- clivity of 1,800 metres, to break to pieces at the bottom of the ravine, or to dash through the pine woods, mowing down the pine trees like so many sticks, with a ter- rifte noise, The trunks apd branches of the trees disappear in the air like the flashes of rocket. Sparks also rise when two of these monster blocks strike against one another, and when the thunderslike shock, splitting them into smaller parte, sends the fragments fiying down the valley like a swarm of swallows carried away by u hurricane. Then follow the masses of irs regular and smaller blocks, and lastly the smalier flint stones. This phenomenon resists all attempts at explanation, save on the hypothesis of a subterranean upheayal, ei nee Ce 4° tear $91,183.19. “month amounted to $64,128.15, an increne of the World. LPO PLO OMA he LOL werner SPAIN, Twenty-five million dollars haye been advanced by the promoters of the new Cuban loan, for the expenses of the next campaign, News SIRNAS TOS UNITED STATES. On Monday last the St. John Relief Fund in Boston amounted to $46,965 53. In Boston last week 153 children died, eighty-two of them from cholera infantum. The death of two of the great ones of the earth is announced: Ruth Benton, of Wisconsin, age 51; height 7 feet 4 inches, weight, 585 pounds; and Modeste Malhoit, of Quebec, age 6°: height6 feet 5 inches; weight 618 pounds. A petition to the President was unani- mously signed at San Francisco with a view to having a treaty effected between the United States and Italy, similar to that entered into between the United States and Queen Victoria in ]1870.. Richard H. Chuck was executed at Owentown, Ky.. on Friday, in the presence of over five thoasand persons. Ile was convicted of the murder of Nelson Parish, but died, saying, * Don’t hang me gentle- men, | am an innocent man.” He ex- hibited remarkable composure, asserting his innocence to the last and hoping God would forgive the false witnesses, On the same’ day, Albert Trammell, ® negro preacher, was hanged at Rosston, Arkansas, tor the murder of his wife five years ago. Trammell confessed his guilt. INDIA. An ofticial telegram from the Viceroy ot India gives a rather more favorable impres» sion as to the famine prospects than pres vious reports. CANADIAN. His Lordship Chief Justice Richards, as Deputy Governor, will act during the ab- sence of His Excellency the Governor General, in Manitoba and the North-West, St. John merchants are quickly replacing the large stocks which were destroyed by the fire. Goods are arriving daily by rail and from sea, and trade*is falling into the usual channels. ‘he imports in the month ot July just ended were necessarily much heavier than in the same period last year. The duties collected amounted to $89,- 988.36, against $49,237.34 in 1876. Toe total customs revenue last month reachect in Halifax the revenue for tre of $11,048.58. The Canada Gazette of the 28th ult, eon- tains the following statement of the exports and imports of Canada for June: The total value of goods entered for consump- tion in the Dominion (British Columbia excepted) during the month of June last was $8,153,150, of which $5,740,797 was free goods and $4,4°6,353 dutiable goods, on which duties to the amount of £953,635 were collected. The valua of goods ex- ported during the same month amounted to $10,288 408, of which $950,759 was goods not the produce of Canada; $16,40) coin and bullion, and $9,316,258 the produce of Canada, composed as follows: Produce ot mine, $170,661 ; produce of fisheries, $667 s 111; produce of forest, $5 390,004; ans imals and their produce, $1,208,903; agri. cultural products, $848,878; manufactures, $302,314; ships sold to other countries, $697,020; miscellaneous articles, $51,344, The comparative fewness of the fires ocx curring throughout the Dominion since the great fire in St. John is worthy of res mark. It may be partially traced to the circumstance that the public have taken warning by that calamity, and have since exercised greater vigilance. But the most extraordinary feature is that the insolvent companies, the Beever Mutual, the Niagara District and Provincial have escaped als most without loss. We do not know how to account for this unless we take into consideration the moral hazard, and todo this casts a serious reflection upon us as @ community, Can it be possible that build. ings will not burn when there is no proba- bility of getting immediate payments ? The news from the cod fisheries in the Gulf of St. Lawrence is somewhat unfayor. able. Reports trom the Magdalen Islands are to the effect that fogs and high winds have prevented fishing boats from starting, while the off-shore fisheries find cod fish scarce. Newfoundland advices state that the catch has not been so short for fifteen years, for the number of men and the class of craft employed. On the other hand, fat herring are caught in abundance at the Magdalens, and the hooking of mackerel has begun promisingly. FRANUE. Last year in Framce, out of 406,000 young men drafted for the army, there were but from 500 to 600 who did not respond. In Germany, during the same year, out of 406 000 drafted, 40,000 neglected to re- spond, GREAT BRITAIN. England is sending 10,000 troops to ‘Tur. key. They will land at Gallipoli, at the entrance of the Sea of Marmora, and will thus be within easy distance of Constati- nople. The British ironclad fleet will also be near at hand, The preparations seem to imply that England expects the Russian armies to rout the Turks. After Russia and Turkey have lost heavily in severely fought battles, Austria and England will probably dictate the terms of peace, NO. 68 ek ase neat cree eee: 3 iy si a ; ! | | d :