‘ Se TEE PI a Se GES PCRS. appieemnmubices Wace Che ¢ 7 — _ nm > *xQuniner. ae cS -— A. McNEILL, tyctioneer and Commission Metchan' A QUEHDN SCRET. P. R. ISDAND NO. CHARLOTTETOWN, ee we AUCTION SALES, of. all. descrip- 1 - attended to in city and country at sank rate rates. i May oi. 1877. $$$ 4. VINNICOMBE, PANO FORTE REGULATOR. 1, parties leaving their orders for Tuning A at Bremner Bros. will receive the best tenon. : : \!i who have Pianos m Charlottetown alt do well to have them tuned by the ear, keeping their instraments in perfect nder all the time. } “4 visit once a yoar at least will be madet :i/ parts of the Island, or oftner if re quired Ch'town, duly 18, 1826. JOHN F. McKAY, WATCHMAKER & JEWELLER, NORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE, AVING fitted up his Store in fixst-class } Style, will keep constantly on hand a verv nice assortment of Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, ete. ; r He eg all kinds of Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Cleaned and Repaired. — N. B.—lHaving had nine years’ experience with two first-class workmen, I feel confi- dent of giving perfect satisfaction to all who may fuyor me with thelr patronage. All work warranted: ° Ch'town, July Weotll thésa }2in ROYAL HOTEL, King Square, Saint Sohn. SHAVE munch pleasure in informing my Bu | merous triends and the public generally, that ! have leased the Hotel formerly known as the CUNTINENTAL, and thoroughly resovated thesame, making it, asthe ROYAL always had tie reputation of being, one of the best Hotels io ihe Proviaces. Excelleat Bill of Fare, First-class , Wines’ Liquors and Cigars, ‘and superior accommoda lion. lackhall’s Livery Stable attached. ' THOs, F. RAYMOND. <= July 3, 1877—6m TO PLEASURE SEEKERS! FIRST-CLASS PLEASURE BOAT, of +% anout Kight Tons Capacity; suitabte for Pleasure Parties, Picnics, Fishing or Mooulight Excursions (capable of seating 50 persons), can be engaged by the day o1 hour, with or without man in charge, by appiying to GEO. COOMBS, July 13—1lm Lord’s Wharf. QUEEN INSURANCE CO. OF ENGLAND. Capital -- {wo Millions Sterling, guns effected on all kinds o . Buildings, Merchandise, and Produce Also, on Vessels‘on the stocks. ; Special rates for isolated residences. Lasses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island June — SEWING MACHINES ~ M john D, Fullerton GS to announce that he will be at the Rocktin House for a short time, to Keyair Sewing Machines of all Kinds. llaving had seven years experience at «chine work and repairing, he guarantees satisfaction, Apply immediately. July-2y S77 —4i-pd : A PLUMBER A PLUMBER FROM HALIFAX.’ 1, le Subscriber having engaged a prac: tical Plumbs fr, any description of work, —ée ther shop or house—in the above Hne, Can how be done at MILLNER’s ‘Tin Snop. GEORGE W. MILLNER. Ch town, June— Tr, ln COTTON, VOL. hk Manager & Editor. a = —— | With trains for each of above named places, Steamer Arrangements, Cee ene Prince Edward island STEAMERS. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. me ee eee Nova Scotia. Lewe Chariottetown for Pictou every Monvpay, WrpnEsDay, THuuRSDAY, ¢« SATURDAY mornings, at 5, a’clock, con- necting there at 10 a. m., with train for Halifax. Fare to Halifax, $4.10. Picnic Parties of Twenty and upwards can obtain Return Tlckets at Charlotte- town Office to Pictou and back same day $1.00 each. Returning to Charlottetown. L«ave Pictou every TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY Firmbay and SATURDAY, about 2.30 p.m. on arrival of evening train from Hali- "ax. CAPE BRETON. ave Pictou for Hawkesbury every Mon- pay and. Puurspay, on arrival of morning train from Halifax, connecting both ways with stage and Steamer ** Neptune,” to and. from Sydney and Bras dOg Lake, » ¢, Returning to Pictou same nights, connect- ; i.y with 10 a.m. Train TugsDay and Fri- DAY for Halifax. New Brenswick, Canada and United Siates, Leaves SUMMERSIDE: every day (Sunday *xcepted) on arrival of morning train from ‘Charlottetown, connecting at Siepac snd at St. John with Steamers of InrERNa- tiONaL Co. for PORTLAND and Boston. Algo, leave Charlottetown for Summerside every Monday morning, about 3 o'clock. Returaing, leaves. Sueptac every. day (Sundays excepted) on arrival of day train from St. Jonyx, for Summerside; connect there, without delay, with train for Char- ‘lottetown. Also, leaves Summerside for Charlottetown every Saturday evening, about 6 o’clock. Agents: Auwon & Macintrosn, Talifax: NOONAN & DavikES, Pictou; A Grant & Zo Nawkesbury* HaNfrp Bros., St! Jonn. F. W. HALES. ONLY DIRECT. LINE steamers Carroll and- Worcester porn Steamers are fitted with new Boil - ers, and their Passenger avcomodation arranged for every convenience and com- fort, and flited ap in elegant style. FREIGHT carried at moderate rates and as loW as by apy other route. EGGS in boxes and barrcis handled with the greatest care. SAVING TIME, only one business day used in reaching Boston, by leaving. here Saturday Morning and_catching steamer al tHatfax, and arriving at Boston Monday morning, LEAVE CHARLOTTETOWN Kivery ‘Thursday, punctaally at 5 p.m. ' LEAVE BOSTON... ISvery Saturday, unctually -at noon, » CARVELL 4ROS.,Agent. Ch’town, June 7, 1877 ooo Steamer; HEATHER BELLE Summer. Arrangement. \ ILL leave Charlottetown for Orwell every MONDAY and WEDNESDAY evenings. Leave Orwell for Charlottetown every TUESDAY and THURSDAY mornings, at o'clock, eturning to Orwell same evening at3 o’cl ck. every WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY Morn- ings at four o'clock. ; : Leave Mount Stewart for Charlottetown at 7 o'clock, returning to, Mount Stewart same evenings. | ' Teaving Charlottetown for Crapaud every SATURDAY, weather and tide per- mitting ; and every alternate SATURDAY will makeya return trip JOHN HUGHES, Agent. re BOS FON! || + Leave Charlottetown for Mount. Stewar- en, THURSDAY MORNING, =~ - Excursion Jickets. TO BOSTON AND RETURN, PER STEAMERS CARROLL & WORCESTER, For 815,00, CARVELL BROS MONTREAL & ACADIAN STEAMSHIP LINE. ee HASZARD BROS., Agents. ee me Montreal, Charlottetown, P, E,.1., Sydney, C, B.. & St. John’s, N, F. 6 §. © PENBILA,” 8 8 AURIS,” — during the present season, regularly, be- tween the pboy Apentioned ports, The at tention of é vantages offered. The steamers are in all respects first-class, well found, staunch, and well adapted for the route, having ex~ cellent passenger accommodation. lowest rates. For freight or passage apply to HASZARD BROS,, Agents: July 16, 1877—eod tf QUEBEC & GULF. PORTS Steamship Company ! CAPT. DAVIDSON. CAPT. BAQUET, \ ILL LEAN E ate nately from PICTOU (after arrival of Monday Aflernoer Train from Thelifax) every Monday Midnight: SHUEDIEAG (after arrival woh) Tuesday Train from'St, dona aad Halifax) every Tnesday Afternoan: CHARLOTTETOWN, — every fuesilay. Morning;., SUMMERSIDE ayery, Puesiaye 2) ar + WAR MICH,” Disbebiac, Peree, (as e, Father Point,.. and al Above tone me LOW RATES. °° OQBICK TIME: CARVELL BROS, Agents... Chitown, June 16, 1877.—méth Parks A WARDED the only Medal, givet ‘tot COTTON YARNS of Canadian Mand ' facturd at the" CEN.ENNIAL EXHIBITION. OS Tata tw PS ~~+--2- - Warranted fall ‘length and weight... Stronger and better that any other Yarn in the market. de Cotton Carpet Warp... No, 12’s 4§pry 1 a14-Corons:- re Warranted fast. WM. PARKS’ & SON, - New Brunswick Cotton Mills Pe eal” lonely St. John,N B. ht ter a THE: DATA EXAMINER ISON SALE) Al THE, STORES OF enry .A.. Harvie, Theoph. L.| Chappelle, and T. O'Connell, _ ee Cie on vEuston. Street ' ‘ sinking back into the well, Cotton Yarns. | White ‘Blue, Red, Orange, and Green..| ~ Correspondence. DP LO lO tt tl Ee te ONE HUNDRED CENTS REWARD OFFERED, exe kditor Daily Examiners: UNE HUNDRED CENTS Offered by the citizens of the east end of Ward 5 for the appre- hension and conviction of the Councillors for that Ward, for not dealing fair with that section of the Ward. Neither of these gentlemen has been seen, except after sun- down, for some time; and unless they are apprehended, before long there will bave to be beacon lights put up at A. Brown’s corner and at the Free Church, to prevent horses and human beings from being lost in those bog holes. Euston Street has become the most public thoroughfare in Charlottetown, and yet where is there a Street so much neglected ? he side-walk is only the name of a sides walk; and with the exception of this sheep» coe. very little else has been done for the fast three years, Pownal Street can be so weil attended to, and this end of the town get nothing? Is it because the city gets nothing from this section of the town? J think not. aesmali house, and a shop 18x13, without warehouse or cellar, and yet | pay $19.25 taxes, Capt. John A. Maemarsters{ show great wisdom on the part of the valuators ? ‘ant, Dani erson | #150 @ year at the most, the taxes for which Capt, Daniel Anderson shoul be only $12 50 ‘| doubted by any person who wants proof, | a prenncen to prove it; and while we are Ae ‘ reer h eneromous tax ould suflicient freight offer, it is in-]*° C% Upon to pay suc bobted to run the steamers of this line | Pills. we in return get, nothing for our How is it that lower [ own ffow is that for high? Does it not This property is only worth If the above is money. The sideewalk on Hillsborough Street was stopped at Fitzroy Street, Even mportérs is directed to the ads} PUMps are not properly attended to. A pond of dirty water lodges around it, have been in a manner forgotten by the 7 city, excepting when the season for taxing All freight delivered in good order at } MS around, | I know it is easy to find fault with public men; but when 80 much money is collected from the citizens, it is nothing but reasons able to suppose that they will grumble if they are recognised in the Couneil, and fair play shown, Now, can we not get one- halt dozen cart loads of mud to put around the pump. snd a smail: wooden crossing at the’carner of Euston and Hillsborough streets. At present | have to keep plank oa hand to ferry folks across in times of | freshets or in the wet season. We also want some of the deepest holes filled on Euston Street. Any hole not over eighteen inches we uon’t mind. We can pry the produce carts out from tiese holes. But | where the wheels go down out of sight, we earnestly request that some Clay, or coat'ashes “be’ put’ in them.’ As for drainage’ we don't want any very bad, -as at my corner, the,.earth ..is. very porous,.so tat the water scarcely ever lays longer than a fortoight after a rain storm, The* above" rewards will be pafd to the person Or persons who will give the neces- sary information,.,.and do,.tha necessary work, Ra | ; East END, * Jply 50¢h; 1877." ; ate P. S.—f ‘might’ say thiit a’ property “of mine in Charlottetown valaed’ by the Govys sroment. Assessors at $380 rental, is. valued by tent kA enegeone at $159 rental. , Oniy a difference of $70 per year. Not much, is iv? The quéstion comes up which of thosé valuators ‘are right—the inhabiants around here, knows whieh, Haye tay py ¥ a _' News: of the World ©. a. Sta. ~- The crop prospects throughout [udia, are far from reassuring, but are not hopeless. The Government is preparing for the worst. i FRANCE, . The population of Milhouse, Alsace, have subscribed a million francs to the French Republican Electoral Committee Fund. ,. GREAT. BRITAIN, A Jewish student of Trinity College, Dub. lin, complains that one of the days fixed in the pollege calendar for holding an exany- i n for a senior exhibition is a Saturday in October, As he carinot do any work on the Jewish Sabbath, he will be debarred from .competing,.which will be a great hardship to him, ashe is highly qualitied. The Board were appealed to.on his behalf tu change that day, as could easily be done without any injustice or inéonvenience to -others,since there is ‘ample time to give notice, but the answer, was a curt refusal. The Messager de Nicolaief announces an enormous increase along the northern coast ot the Black Sea in the numbers of the very poisonous black field spider, the bile of which ciuses serious suffering to mén and animals. {t excites a’ very vioa lent local pain and swelling of. the whole body, especially in the abdominal regions, These bites are however, rarely fatal, as in the generality of the cases the morbid days. ‘Some of ‘these poisonous spiders had already been observed in the year 1875. in the middle of Russia, especially in the district of the Dnieper, Government of Taurida, The unusual’ multiplication of these dangerous insects is most probably to be.attriblited to an accidental decrease in Price Only 2 Cents, | Ch'town May 25, 1877.—3m wkly June 27, 1877—her 1 . ro” the numbers of birds and hedgehogs, con< sideréd th3 natural enemies of this per- nicious bluck field spider, ’ ball 2. In fact. we} phenomena disappear after three or fou; | - AUGUST 2. 1877. NO. 6G CANADIAN, sip Francis Hincks publishes two long lettars strongly antigonistic to Orangeism., bringing forward their big figures, A cops per Mine at Bett’s Cove is yielding at the rate of 60,000 tons per annum and bas an ascertained deposit of 700,000, enough, says the local scientists, ‘for twenty years to come. de ? in Ottanbee township, near Keene, livas a family of four brothers named Maciar- lane, of whom the eldest, Duncan, stands 6 feet 7 inches; two brothers, Peter and Alexander, are between 6 feet 2 inches and 6 feet 3 inches in height; whiie Donald is something over 6 feet. | _ A mechanic who wént to St. John, N. B., for. employment, writes te the Lewiston Journal to advise carpenters and masons not to go there for work. Wages are low and board high. The City Council ‘voted to. let their own contractors have: all the work, Large numbers are loafing and ry on the contributions received from the States, and will not work so long aa supplies hold out, Che Kingston News is informed that there is at present in the General Hospitat & very distinct oase of hydrophobia, the patient being a boy from the country, who was bitten in the forehead by a dog some time last year. All the symptoms are clear, and the lad, who is thirteen or fourteen years old, bites and snaps ‘just ‘like & dog. Un Saturday evening a fashionable party assembled at the residence of Prof, A. M. Bell, of Brantford, to meet Prof. A. G. Bell, the inventor of the telephone, and his bride, An enjoyable part of the evening’s entertainment was an exhibition by the. Professor. of the wonderful powers of his invention, conversation, readiig, and sings ing being distinotly: conveyed’ by the tele- phone over three miles of wire, _. ' A large meeting -was. held late! St; Patritk’s Church in support of my wr paper. Capt. ‘Kirwin is editor, and hopes co issue next month.’ There isnow a come plete break between the Devlin party, and the party represented by Kirwin, _UNITED STATES, Robert . Burton, a prominent Meme : has been arrested at Sait Lake city far the in $10,000 bonds to answer, ©. Boston did an’ uncommonly heavy straw- bringing 250,000 quarts at ene time, The: farmers about Boston, too, took in large cents a quart. _walifornia will ‘not be able to send ss nee P supply of wheat to England as ormeriy, On account of the partial fail ‘ofthe crop in that State. ' eo ' 4 Ys i ry rat ys vas ries AN inreres ING PHask OF Mormonisw.— A curious incident came to our notice a few .jdays ago, which - is worthy of" notices, A. living a. few miles south of Salt Lake City, who desired a oath ‘of polygamist, young widow residing in Zion and pleaded for her hand—the heart was not : quess ‘tion -—but was flatly refused. As his own leadings had availed him nothing, he orthwith dispatched his No. 2 to do-his _ fevariing and carry out his design. En. treaties on one side met with rebuttal on the other, when at Jast the young widow asked if she (No, 2) did not act against her will, and to her own detriment, when the last mentioned answered: “I do not wish Mr; ——- to take any more wives, but ‘I so detest and hate the sight of his No. 3 that I would dd anything in my power to thwart her happineéss.”"—Salt Lake Tribune, The ‘matrimonial lottery” set up some time ago in Kansas City, Mo, has been ras: garded as @ good joke, but has a serious skie to it. The newspaper which has organized this business, has, with its mock professions of honesty of purpose and methods, drawn hundreds intoa foolishness which must be repented of with mortifica« tion and sorrow. a ‘matrimonial drawin,’’ for which maid« ens and widows send their names (and pho. tographs if they choose), and bachelors and widowers also furnish to the newspa- per their names and addresses, The for.- merare the premiums and the latter the subscribers,—the latter, for the drawing already held, being by far the more num- his: signature that hewas an unmarried man. Drawing takes place as in a lottery. the man whose name is drawn With a woman’s number being expected to make her acquaintance, and if agreeable, to marry her. At the July drawing two hun, dred and forty-two women thus put them. selves up for chance acquaintance with men equally silly, and the result of the drawing is announced in the next issue of the paper. The motive in most cases is, doubtless, curidsity and a liking for “ fun,”’ as many look at it. On the part of the paper, however, it is simply a o-nsurable device to make money. Besides the mat- rimonial there is a pecuniary lottery, en~ tirely distinct, where the amount of money to be distributed is small, but the privilege of buying a ticket is limited to patrons of the paper, which thus enlarges its field for mischief. This novel and reprehensible idea has only begun to work, Further “ matrimonial’ and pecuniary drawings are arranged to take place ina few weeks Newfoundland mineral treasures are now murder of Joseph Morris in 1862, and held berry trade this year, one Nortolik steamer’ quantities; netting frorh seven ‘to’ nine © ~ fourth, boldly declared hia intentions tog — The paper has instituted erous, each one of . whom had stated over . Smee ons Put Lees a # Piast or a es a Te, OR Mseitie. f a “Ree Rhee Danie, Soe ae A pee ME SQLS | ye EES Ser ee eReee ee * fap amemeiatlle e a a ok Bie ee