———— VOL. 1. = cnt EEF, COOKED ? and 4-pound TINS and by the Pound. WwW. tT. ~w— All who have used it know of its exs cellence. FOR SALE AT BEER & GOFFP’S, June !Y. “T0 PLEASURE SEEKERS! A eIRST-CLASS PLEASURE BOAT, of about Bight Tons Capa-ity, suitable for Vieasure Parties, Picnics, Fishing or Moonlight Excursions (capable of seating 50 persons). can be engaged by the day or hour, with or without man in charge, by app ying to GEO. COOMBS, July 13—1m Lord’s Wharf. QUEEN INSURANCE C0, QUEEN Ind | OF ENGLAND. ' ' ' ' ' Capital -- [wo Millions Sterling, NSURANCE effected on all kinds o Suildings, 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 — STADACONA ' 3 ' fire and Life Insurance Company, NOTICE is hereby given that the Board 4+" of Directors of this Company have made a further call of our Lnstalments, of Five per Cen. each, on the Subseribed Capital of the Company. payable at its Office, No, 93 St. Peter Street, Quebec, as follows :— Five per Cent. on or before the Tenth day of August, 1877; Five per Cent. on or before the Tenth day «f November, 1877 ; hive per Cent. on or before the Eleventh day of February, 1878; hive per Cent. on or before the Eleventh day of May, 187s. By order of the Board, CRAWFORD LINDSAY, ¢ } Sceretary {jlr 11 sawing & Planing | MOULUINGS OF ALL DESCRIPS'OKS, Doors & Sashes, Window & Door Frames, Gutters, Manties, etc., etc., mainufictured CHEAPER than by any other establishment in the city, and constantly on hand. Ju ' a 1877 All lom>er asea 18 Kiln-dried, and all work is warranted to give satisfaction. PAUL LEA, Grafton Street une 14,1877. Look Out for Fire. HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID FOR Ecgs, Wool, and Sk::pskins, — AT<-— J. D. CURRIE’S, CJuya Peince and Grafton strets Ch’town, 27, 1877.—6in THE DAILY EXAMIWER ISOM SALE AT THE STORES OF Henry A, Harvie, Theoph. L. Chappelie, and T. O’Connell. Price Only 2 Cents, Ji ne 27, 1877—her li COTTON, Manager & rditor. Che —E— A. McNEILL, Auctioneer and Commission Merchant NO. 11 QUEEN STRET. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. B. ISLAND (Oe RR AUCTION SALES, of all descrip- tions, attended to in city and country at moderate rates. May 21, 1877. Og H. VINNICOMBE, PIANO FORTE REGULATOR. LL parties leaving their orders for Tuning at Bremner Bros. will receive the best atlention. All who: have Pianos in Charlottetown would do well to have them tuned by the year, Keeping their instruments in perfict order all the time. A visit once a year at Jeast will be madet ail parts of the Island. or oftner if. re yuired Ch’town, duly 18, 1877, ne en eee ROYAL HOTEL, os much pleastre ia informing my nu merous friends and the public generally, that I have leased the Hotel formerly known as the CONTINENTAL, and thoroughly renovated thesame,making it, asthe ROYAL nlways had the reputatiou of being, one of the best Hotels in the Provinces. : Excellent Bill of F:re, First-class Wines Liquors and Cigars, and supesior accommoda tion, } ; ‘ ( Blaékhall’s Livery Stable attached. THOS, F. RAYMOND. Satin? Sohn. July 3, 1877—6ém Parks’ Cotton Yarns, ] WARDED the only Medal, given to: COTTON YARNS of Canadian Manu facturo at the CEN: ENNIAL EXHIBITION. Nos. 6’s to 10’s. White. Blue, Red, Orange, and Green, Warranted full length and weight. Stronger and betler thas any other Yarn in the market. Cotton Carpet VJarp. No. 12’8 4 PLY IN Act, CoLors. Warranted fast. WM. PARKS’ & JSON, New Brunswick Cotton$Miils St. Joha.N B. May 23 QUEBEC & CULE PURTS Steamship Company ! “SHORE, - - CAPT. DAVIDSON. “ MIRAMICHI,” CAPT. BAQUET, ILL LEAN E ate; nately from PICTOU (after arrival of Monday Afternoor Train from Halifax) every Monday Midnight; SHEDIAC (after arrival of Tuesday Train from St. John and Ualifax) every Tuesday Afternoon; CHARLOTTETOWN, every Tuesday Morning; SUMMERSIDE every Tuesday: Pashebiae, Perce, Gaspe, Vather Point, and al Above Named Places, LOW RATES. QUICK TIME CARVELL BROS, Agents. Ch’town, June 16, 1877.—mé&th SEWING «MACHINES REPAIRED, ae ee Mr, John O, Fullerton BESS to announce that he willbe at the Rocxiin House for a short time, to Repair Sewing Machines of all Kinds. Having’ had seven’ years experience at Machine work and repairing, he guarantees satisfaction. Apply immediately, July 2, 1S77—4i pd MONDAY MORNING. — - = “xaMUNCL. a =. JULY #0. 1877. * | 2 ee + emcee ee mm #s> | & "ay. Gis Steamer Arrangements. ———— —_—_ -——— a ee , Prince Edward Island STEAMERS. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. on oeietad Nova Scotia. Leave Charlottetown for Pictou every MonDAY, WrEpNESDAY, THursDay, € SATURDAY moruings, at 5 o'clock, cons necting there at 10 a. m., with train for Halifax. Fare to Halifax. $4.10. Picnic Parties of Twenty ang upwards can obtain Return Tlckets at Charlotte- town Office to Pictou and back same day $1.00 each. Returning to Charlottetow.. Leave Pictou every TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY Frrbay and SATURDAY, about 2.30 p.m. on arrival of evening train from Hali- fax. CAPE BRETON. ave Pictou for Hawkesbury every Mon- pay and TruUrspay, 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- iuny with 10 a.m. Train TugsDay and FRri- DAY tor Halifax. New Brenswick, Canada and United Sines, Leaves SUMMERSIDE every day {Sunday 2xcepted) on arrival of morning train from Charlottetown, connecting at SHepIAC with trains for each of above named places, ind at St. John with Steamers of InreRNa- rIONAL Co. for PORTLAND and Boston. Also, leave Charlottetown for Summerside every Monday morning, about 3 oeclock. Returning, leaves SHEDIAC eyery day (Sundays excepted) on arrival of day traia 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: ALmMon & Macrntosn, Halifax; NoONAN & DavirEs, Pictou; A Grant «& Uo Hawkesbury* Hanrrp Bros., St. John. F. W. HALES. AVL DIRECT LINE TO BOSTON, oteamers Carroll and Worcester, Bor Steamers are fitted witi new Boil- 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 luw as by apy other route. ve EGGS in boxes and barrels handled with the greatest care, SAVING TIME, only one business day used in reaching Boston, by leaving here Saturday Merning and catching steamer at Hal.fax, and arriving at Boston Monday morning. LEAVE CHARLOTTETOWN Every Thursday, punctually at 5 p.m. LEAVE BOSTON Invery Saturday, unctually at noon. CARVELL BROS.,Agent. Ch’town, June 7, 1877 of Steamer | HEATHER BELLE Summer Arrangement. iLL leave Charlottetown for Orwell every MONDAY and WEDNESDAY evenings. —— The New York Herald of the 25th inst., remarks :— They rather reproach us on the other side of the Atlantic for our big things— tendency to grandeur in our conceptions, the consequence, perhaps, of the posses~ sion of big things. Because we have got the biggest waterfali at Niagara,and the biggest cave in Kentucky, the biggest prairies, tne biggest rivers and the biggest hotels they laugh and regard us as only a gigantic toadstool that fancies itself a mushroom, But they will have to acknows ledge now that we have one more thing on a scale so large that there would hardly be room for it in Europe. This is we support ithe bigge.i strike that ever was—one that covers 30r@ space, involves more daggers and proves the possession of more folly than any strike ever before made. > > o__-____—_ —Txe New York Herald of the 24th con- tains full particulars of the great.gtrike and riot. These particulars it thus sums marizes :— The strik of rajlroad employes which be- gan on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad a week ago yésterday, and which first showed its head as a movement bent on gaining its ends by iorce at Martinsburg, W. Va., on Wednesday, has nOw assumed such wide and deplorable proportions as to threaten a national calamity, On Friday the bloody event at Baltimore, with its long list of casualities, gave @ terrible shock to the community. The spread of the strike to the Pennsylvania Railroed next concentrat~ ed attention at Pittsburg, and on Saturday and Sunday the scenes of fury,intemperance and lawlesshess, whose fruits’ were hom- icide, arson and wholesale robbery, startled our citizens more than they had been in tifteen years. Meanwhile the sirike was spreading, and everywhe.e that the hands were quitting work the same spirit wes manifesting itself. Freight trains were stopped, engines seized and run into round houses or left on the tracks. The Western division of Erie, the Reading, the Lake Shore, Fort Wayne and Chicago, Ohio and Mississippi; Cleveland, Columbus, Cincin- nati and Indianapolis; Vandalia and many branch lines quickly followed the strik- ers of West Virginia. It has been a universal demand for a restoration of the old rate of wages, a refusal and then a strike. Through the great belt of Middle States from the Atlantic seaboard to the Mississippi the movement has spread, and even the New York Central seems about to join, in spite of the hopefulness of Mr. Vanderbilt, The Union Pacific and Cen- tral Pacific have only prevented a strike by rescinding the reduction of wages. The number of railroad employes already on strike is estimated at 17,000 men. A gen. eral foreboding of continued disasters to life and property, not to speak of the cer- tain injury t» our already crippled trade, occupies the public mind. Up to yester- day nearly one hundred lives had been lost and over two hundred persons had been injured. The loss to property is set down in Pittsburg alone at over five millions. The New York Herald of the 25th con- tinues : — A day of painful anxiety has passed over the country without, up to the hour oj going to press, any addition being made to the chapters of horrors which the great railroad strike has been furnishing daily ‘since last Friday. The strike, however, has been extending, and the elements of danger have increased in many parts of the country without any positive outbreak, The matters of nearest moment to New Yorkers have been the strike of the men on the New York Central and on the Dele» ware, Lackawanna and Western. At Chis cago the men already on strike forced others to join them, and even brought compuision to bear upon men of otber trades, This, one of the most pregnant sources of evil in the present aspect of af- fairs, has been repeated elsewhere. in Pittsburg the stoppage of the freight lines has already left the iron mills short of iron and coal, A very few days will suffice to bring this condition home to thouands al! over the country enaged in others busi- nesses, and, by a sudden rise of prices of necessaries of life, add materially to the present sufferings of the poor. The strike against the rich soon works round to the detriment of the class that starts it, The energetic efforts of the general gov- ernment to provide troops for the protec tion of the threatened property has been markedly successful in Philadelphia and at Other points, but it is evident that in many places the mob has not that dread of the militia which would be wholesome for them, and this leads to the fear that more danger is ahead. The National Guards- men of New York have responded with alacrity to the Governor’s call. The splen- did Ninth Regiment reached Albany yes- terday, and the other regiments spent Monday night and yesterday at their arm- Leave Orwell for Charlottetown every TUESDAY and THURSDAY moruings, at | 7 o'clock. Returning to Orwell same evening at3_ o’cl ck. Leave Charlottetown for Mount Stewar- | every WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY Morn-! ings at four o'clock. | Leave Mount Stewart for Charlottetown | at7 o'clock, returning to Mount stewart | Teaving Charlottetown for Crapaud mitting; and every alternate SATURDAY will make a return trip JOHN HUGHES, Agent. Ltcown May 25, 1877.—3m wkly same evenings. every SATURDAY, weather and tide per- | ; ories. To.night a mass meeting is called i Tompkins square by certain Communists. Precautions of formidable proportions to deal with any possible outbreak have been taken. The hope i; .generaliy indulged that New York workmen will not heed the incendiary taik of irresponsible nohodys. No responsible man has hitherto spoken on behalf of the strikers: Lience the inter- view published with Mr. P. M. Arthur, chief of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, will be read with inierest. He before work is resumed. ’ At Reading, Pittsburg and Baltimore ° terse me things are quiet. A rioter accused of mur- dering one of the Philadelphia railitiamen has been arrested at Pittsburg. The deat of the firing on Monday at Reading now number ten, ED eee —Two interesting tables are annexed by Baron Henry de Worms to the fifth edition of his work, ‘ England’s Policy in the Kast,”’ only recently published. The first gives the population, trade, financial, iail- itary, and naval resources of each power concerned in the Eastern question. The second presents the various creeds and number of each of the nationalities in the Turkish Empire. Beside the 86,586,000 inhabitants in Russia, 35,904,435 in Aus- tria-Hungary, and 28,500,000 in Turkey, etc., Montenegro locks sirangely insignifi- cant with a population of 19/)000. the revenue of this little State is put at $25,- 000, and its fighting capacity at 26,- 000 men, which is equivalent to say» ing that all male Montenegrins of full age are soldiers, The Russian debt is given as $1,504.000,000, the Turkish at #1,~ 00,000,000. The total Russian army he gives as 1,789,571 men; the Turkish 629,- 736: the German, 1,248,834; the French, 1,118,525; the Austrian, 964.028; the Ita~ lian, 871,871; the English 655,808, all of which is, in fact, a great exaggeration. For instance, there is a force of only 183,- 342 in the English army, and of these 62,, 849 are in Jndia, and 21,172 in the colonies. In number of iron-clade, France comes first wich 63, and 366 other vessels of war. Eng- land has 61 iron-clads, and 449 other ves- sels of war; Tussia has 31 iron-clads, and 124 other vessels of war; Turkey has 21 iron-clads, Italy 17, Austria 12, Germany 5, and Greece 1. In the whole Ottoman Euspire, including now the tributary States, there are 13,QU0U- 000 Turks, 1,500,000 Arabs, 603,000 Tur- comans, T'artars and Gypsies, 122 000 Roux mans, 2,000 000 Greeks, 3,027 065 Servians, and 4,800,000 Bulgarians profess the Mos hammedan religion. There are 450,000 “ervian Roman Catholics, and 109,000 Als banians of the same faith. With the tri- butaries the total population of Turkey is 52 092,068, but 10,700,000 Nubians, 5 000,~ 000 Egyptians, as well as Servians, etc., go to make up this rather deceptive total. Kews of the World. CANADIAN, The majority of votes for Hon. Dr. For- tin, in the late Gaspe election is officially stated to be 83. Dr. Holland, of Scribner's Monthly, has bought an Island in the St. Lawrence for a summer residence, ee rrouble is reported ia the ‘Juebee Gov, ernment. Mr. deBoucherville, it is said, insists upon ,resigning, being unable to agree with his colleagues. Mr, Beaubien, Speakerof the Assembly. will, it is said, resign and enter the ministry. Dr. Fortin taking his place as Speaker. AvsTR\LIAN T'rRabE.—Meesrs. Sessions, Cooper and Smith, on Saturday. made eight diflerent consignments of boots and shoes from Toronto to Australia via San Francisco, This is the second shipment to the Antipodes. UNITED STATES, A London special says a bad impression prevails relative to strikes and riots in America, A Berlin despatch says the papers there have daily editorialson Ameri- can strikes, and Socialists are loud in eulo- gies of ‘‘ martyred ’’ Mollie Maguires, The shipping of Baltimore is almost com- pletely crippled, and Pittsburg shows a decrease in the volume of her trade of more than 75 per cent. The strike on New Jersey Central has stopped all travel and freight. Escobedo’s party, arrested by the United States authorities, was released on giving bonds aot to violate neutrality, Gen. Valledez, after giving bonds, commenced to raise another force to invade Mexico. His re-arrest is probable. The middie span of the Cincinnati, Georgetown, and Portsmouth narrow guage railway Bridge, over Little Miami, within ten miles of this city, fell about 3 p.jm., on the 24th, precipitating fifteen laborers about fifty feet. Three were instantly killed, another has since died, and. two others were fatally injured, Eight were severely wounded, EUROPEAN, A number of Deputies of the Hungarian Parliament are preparing for a meeting on Thursday in favour of the Turks, at which a resolution will be offered, condemning the Russian outrages in Bulgaria, and de~ manding that Kussia make peace and pre- serve the integrity of the Ottoman Empire. it is telegraphed from Cravaara that the Turks are massacr.ng Christians without mercy. A despatch to the Greek Ambas- sador at Constantmople asks prompt assist~ ance, as Otherwise not a man will be left. The English war sloop /tapid, with Aus. trian Lloyd steamers, left immediately to receive fugitives, The Lutberanean telegraph line between Berlin ani Mayence, was completed on Monday, The line comprehend seven circuits, is 80 German miles iong, and unties Mayence, Frankfort, Leipsig, Cassel, |proclaims that the companies must yield | Halle, and Berlin. Another subteraanean ‘line will be laid this year, between Berlin, ! Hamburg and Kiel. at ee cama dah saad ace & tt ie - — 2 Meet — enya went! eo ESD orton 8 [ee eee ae oe wt i ee ee Sea er Een ra = Seed “ii yma cin. ke pata lle a Mieke RM a: py slieic Se wei + shite is de sds i perdi we . ic Pag i ie aera oa 0 ae AN Ct Mt hl tp pol idle SS teste IO Se