i tt laa: — THE tea AAMINER. VOL 3 tt a _ CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, eee WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1878, Se ee NO, 343. THe Dairy EXAMINER Is Published every Evening. OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. IL. Kates OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, $2 50 Three Months, 1 25 One Month, 0 50 One Week, 0 12 e®@ Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- cation. WwW. L. COTTON, | J. W. MITCHELL, Manager. | Office Sup’t. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 9. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT | ON AND AFTER MONDAY, APRIL 29th, 1876, Trains Going West. STATIONS. No. 1 No. 3 No 5 ______.. |} Express. | Mixed. |M ed Georgetown {Dp 4.00pm/Dp 7.30 am Cardigan es eo “6 “es 7.59 “ec %. ar 5.25 ** jar 9.20 ‘ M.Stew't Jun | dp.5.35 “ |dp 9.30 « Reyalty Jun. | “ 6.32 “ | ‘10.45 “ ar 6.50 “* jarll.05 ‘* | P. m. Ch'town | dp 6.25 amjdpl1.35 ‘ |dp5.25 Royalty Jun. | “ 6.43 “ | “11.55 “ | 5.45 N. Wiltshire | ‘ 7.18 ‘ | “12.50 pm! ‘6.42 Hunter River ‘é 7.30 se ae 1.07 “é **7.00 Breadalbane a6 7.08 41 © 2.47 “ 1) 7B County Line | “ 8.05 “ | ‘* 1.57 * | -*7.48 Rensington | “ 8.33 “| “2.38 “| “8.95 : ar 9.00 “* jar 3.15 “ jar 9.00 Summerside | dp 9.15 “ |dp 3.45 « W. : se 9,52 sé se 4.40 «és Po ill vane © 1 Ga @lLeary “1118 «| 6.54 © Alberton See ** | * Be * Tignish ar 12.40 pm!ar 8.50 “ Trains Going East. —, STATIONS. No, 2 No.4 | No. 6 Express. | Mixed. |mixed Tignish erro rai ‘ ar » = Alberton 2.30 dp 7.50 * aT “313 * “ 8.57 ** “ee 4.10 sé **10.22 ‘e Wallington 4.40 «| “11.10 S ide | ar 5.15 ** jar 12.05pm| a. M. dp 5.30 * |dpl2.40 * |dp6.30 Kensington 7.6.66 7 2.17 * | 7.07 Gounty Line | “‘ 6.23 “* | “‘ 1.57 “ | **7.46 Breadalbane 6 6.32 8 5 ** 207 * | “7.58 Hunter River | “ 7.00 “ | ** 2.48 “* | *° 8.35 N. Wiltshire * TAS ** | * 306. * 1268 ar 4.00 ** | **9.45 Reyalty Jun. | “‘ 7.47 ‘( j;dp 4.10 * jarl005 Clv'to ar 8.05 * jar 4.30 “ _" dp 8.05 am|dp 3.40 “ : “e «)jar 4. e Reyalty Jun. 8.23 dp 4.10 “ ' ar 9.20 ‘* ,ar 5.25 “ Mt. Stewart dp 40 * [dp 55 Cardigan **10.43 te wT “es Georgetown jarll.05 “‘ jar 7.35 * SOURIS BRANCH. Trains Going West. STATIONS, | No7 Mixed. | No. 9 Mixed. 2 Dp 3.15 ,.a | Dp 6.30a.m. Harmory an “652 * St. Peter's “409 ¢ | « 807 * Morell 'e59 @ | * ggg « M. Stew’t Jun.JA 6.25 “ |Ar 9.20 “ Train Going East. STATIONS. |No. 8 Express.|No. 10 Mixed. seeewert Jum Dp 9.30 am. | Dp 5.35 p.m orell “76.02. * aaa St. Peter’s “10,275 ** oa Harmony “Tha. eae + Souris Arll.40 “ | Ar 8.25 ‘ Cc. J. BRYDGES, WM. McKECHNIE, Gen. Sup. Gov. Railways, Supt. P. E. I. R. ee April 20, 1878— QUEEN INSURANCE CO,Y, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING. NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- i Merchandise and Produce. Also, on V on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptl > LEOD (Union Bank), GEORGE MAC Agent for Prince Edward Island June, 1877— CARD. M*® ROBERTS (formerly pupil of Mr. R. Watson, Royal Aiedéily of Music), begs to inform the ladies of Charlottetown that she would be happy to receive pupils for instruction in Music at her residence, head of Pownal Street. Reference as to capability may be made to Mrs, Bayfield or to Mrs. Pennee, of this City. Charlottetown, June 2], 1878—eod 18°78. TERE Ky EXD 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 3lst December, 1878—thirteen months—$1.00 in ad- vance, SIX COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $5.50 in advance. TEN COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $9.00 in advance. FIFTEEN COPIES to one address, or aidressed separately, as required, $13.50 in advance. TWENTY COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired. $17.00. IN DULL TIMES —GET THE— CHEAPEST AND BEST The Weekly Examiner is acknowledged to be ahead of any other paper in the Province in the item of LOCAL NEWS and is always well filled with Political, Shipping, Commercial and General Information. The debates of the Local Legislature will be carefully and impartially given. Special tele- rams and letters from ‘‘Our Own Ottawa rrespondent” will contain everything of in- terest transpiring in the Dominion Parlia- ment, A Good Story will be made a specialty. = ;:; 0 The Daily Examiner : Will be sent to _ part of the Province, the Dominion, United States or Great Britain on receipt of For Six Months, - - - - - $2.50 For Three Months, - - - - 1.25 For One Month, - -- =: = 50 aa ADDRESS, W. L. COTTON, Manager Examiner Printing and Publishing Company. Chtown, Dec, 6, 1877. DR. CLEMENT, SURGEON' 'DENTIST, Rs to inform the citizens of Charlotte- town and vicinity that he has opened an oftice next door to the Reform Club (rooms formerly occupied by Dr. Caldwell), for the practice of Dentistry. He has adopted the following Scale of Charges, to suit the times, and to put Dentistry within the reach of all :— For a full upper or lower Sett of Teeth, $10 00 For partial Setts—each tooth, . . . 1 00 Vor Gold Villinm, . + -.+. 4 2... sh For Amalgam and all composition fillings, 50 ALL WORK CUARANTEED FIRST-CLASS. In inserting Artificial Teeth, the Best Ma- terial only is used, and a perfect fit warranted in all cases, or no pay. Ch’town, July 6, 1878—pat 3aw ar pres. DR. H. A. PARKER, SURGEON DENTIST, (LATE OF OTTAWA), OFFICE . . OVER APOTHECARIES’ HALL. Office Hours: 9 a, m. to 6 p, m. Ch’town, June 3, 1878—2aw WAGSTAFF'S HOTEL. ( aye Subscriber having fitted up the Hotel formerly known as THE RANKIN HOUSE, in first-class style, is now prepared to give comfortable accommodation to Permanent and Transient Boarders. Tourists and others will receive every atten tion at the Wagstaff’s Hotel. WM. WAGSTAFF, May 25, 1878. MPLOYMENT. —In every village and township of P. E. Island not yet occu- pied, ONE ACTIVE, intelligent Lady or Gentle- man can obtain a most respectable and very profitable engagement. Address, with full particulars, D. DOWNIE & CO., Box 1964, Montreal. May 25, 1878—- Fk. Fe: EZ: Starch Manufacturing OCo., CAPITAL . . $25,000, In Shares of $25.00 each, IS COMPANY has been Incorporated by Act of Parliament during the present session, and one-third of the Shares have been taken up by the leading men of Charlottetown. Farmers holding Stock in this Company will have the benefit of the preference in the large purchase of produce which the working of the Company entails. Applications for Shares to be made to Messrs. Hyndman Bros., untill the Di- rectors and Officers of the Company are ap- pointed, April 16, 1878— - JAMES HOBBS, | CABINET MAKER. Cor. Kent and Prince Streets, Charlottetown. E SUBSCRIBER, in returning thanks to his customers and the public generally for past favors, would take this method to so licit a further continuance of their patronage. I am better prepared than ever to execute any orders that may be entrusted to me. The latest styles of all kinds of Household, Office, Church and School Furniture, made from well-selected and seasoned stock, at short notice. Special attention paid to Cutting, Making and Laying Carpets. aw Repairing neatly done, at short notice I would also invite the attention of Trustees of City and Country Schools to A DESK, one of the Cheapest and Best ever offered here for School purposes. Please call and inspect it at my caclinn JAMES HOBBS. Corner Kent and Prince Streets, } Ch’town, Feb. 23, 1878. { 3m-Zaw St. Lawrence Marine Ins, Co, OF P. E. ISLAND. oe SUBSCRIBED CAPITAL . . $120,000.00. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: ARrcHIBALD Kennepy, Esq., President ; Joun F. Ropertson, Esg.; ARTEMAs Lorp, Esa. ; G. D. Lonaworta, Esq.; W. E. Dawson, Esq.; THomMAS Morris, Ese. ; P. W. Hynpman, Esq. Risks taken daily at their Office, Exchange Building. ‘ FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Secretary. March 25—ly law HARPER’S HISTORY OF THE MARITIME PROVINCES, COLLINS GEOGRAPHY, Chemistry Of Common Things and other School Books just received at THE SCHOOL BOOK DEPOT. HARVIE’S .BOOK-STORE; Ch’town, April 8—eod Corresyondence. wa” We do not hold ourselves responsible for the statements or opinions of our correspondents, To the Editor of the Examiner : Srr,—I highl appreciate James McDonald’s letter in yesterday's issue, but in one respect he has fallen into a serious error, for he has by misquotation entirely ruined the beautiful pastoral allusion to which he calls attention, “J. G.” does not speak of ‘‘mowing” a field; that would be a very common place affair; but he does speak of ‘‘moving” a field. The beauty of this illustration will now be apparent: ‘‘And never let the field be moved, For fear it might be broke.” When it is considered how frequently a field is mowed, and how impossible it is to move one without it being ‘‘broke,” it is at once ap- parent that ‘J. G.’ has a much keener sense of the poetical and the beautiful than James McDonald, whose allusion to the ‘‘mowing” is exceedingly poor and weak. I hereby congratulate ‘J. G.” upon his beautiful and appropriate lines ; and you, sir, too, are entitled to cur gratitude for your ap- preciation of the sublime and the beautiful, which led you willingly te publish this beauti- ful poem. Yours, oak 5 JOHN JAMES McDonaLp. July 9, 1878. His Mother’s Executioner. A RUSSIAN BOY KILLS HIS MOTHER TO AVENGE HIS FATHER’S HONOR. (From the London Times.) There is now occupying the Russian criminal tribunals a tragedy which throws into the shade the gloomiest imaginings of the old Greek playrights. It is the murder of a mother by her son, a child nine years old. The story is one of the most appalling in the whole annals of human crime, and withal is it heart-touching as showing the misdirection of a noble nature. For the motive of the crime was honor, and the son slew his mother that her blood might wash out the stain her infidelity had put upon her husband’s name. The case is a most remarkable one. There seems to be no evidence of a vicous disposition on the part of the boy. On the contrary, he seems to have had a loving heart, and to have been tenderly attached to his dead father; but a cloud came over his young existence, when his mother, forgetting her duty to the liv- ing and the dead, contracted an illicit al- liance with a government employee. The woman seems to have troubled herself little to conceal her hwmours from her son, think- ing that a child of such tender years would not be likely to pay any attention to her actions. She does not seem to have ever suspected the precocious sensibility of her child. The boy, however, very soon began to suspect the true relations existing between the stranger and his mother. The func- tionary entered frequently before the child’s eye and at unusual hours into the house that had belonged to the dead father. The child felt himself cruelly injured by the dishonour cast upon his father’s memory, which had remained enshrined in his young heart like a sacred i For a long time he concealed his anger and his shame ; but one day his indignation mastered him, and he resolved to make an effort to win his mother from the path of shame. Throwing aside all fear, he reproved the widow for her infidelity to her dead hus- band, and besought her to return to her duty by respect to the memory of the dead, and out of respect to her son. The mother treated these remonstrances lightly, and burst out laughing at the child. Without even deigning to hear him to the end, she advised him to occupy himself with matters more appropriate to his age. Several times he seemed to have renewed his exhortations always, however, meeting with the same re- ception. Feeling that it was useless to appeal to the better nature of his mother, the child conceived the horrible design of washing out in her blood the stain she persisted in putting on his name, and which he knew was no longer a secret from the neighbors. Having once made up his mind,his thoughts became wholly absorbed in plans for carry- ing his vengeance into execution. Where- ever he went he carried with him this idea of avenging the injured honour of his name. In solitude he pondered over it, until it be- came in his eye a holy duty. Besides, this child of nine years taking upon his con- science the responsibility of judge and exe- cutioner, thinking and planning before tak- ing action, Hamlet tormented by visions and simulating madness is only capable of inspiring pity. The heart is moved at the thought of the ish the child must have suffered. First he dug the grave. This was, for his infant hands, a long and pain- ful labor. When he had everything pre- pared he resolved to execute his terrible purpose. One night, while his mother slept, he armed himself with a hatchet and silently approached her bed. When his eyes rested on the author of his being his resolution was shaken. He gazed on the face he had long loved and respected. The sight was too much for his childish heart and, burst- ing into tears, he fell on his knees before his mother’s bed. There the morning light found him stretched in slumber with the deadly hatchet still clasped in his tiny hands. When his mother rose she was terribly frightened at the sight. She awoke the boy, who explained his presence on by a pleasant fable, then took the oppor- tunity to once more beseech his mother to dismiss her lover and return to the path of honor. She, however, lost her temper, and, ordering the child to hold his tongue, dismissed him curtly. - This action of the widow decided her son to out this marderous resolution. The following night he entered his mother’s bedroom and, finding her asleep, with one blow of the hatchet he killed her. He then took the body, which he dragged to the grave he had prepared and there interred it. The trial of this strange parricide is pro- gressing in the town of Va ok, in the Gov- ernment of Kharkow. Seldom have the Russian people been so interested in a criminal trial, but the sight of a child nine years old, standing in the dock as the assassin of his mother, is well calculated to excite the compassionate sympathy among a people by whom the family ties are regarded with something of the respect of the patriarchal times. Mr. Niadimir, Pro- fessor of Criminal Law at the University of Kharkow, has spontaneously undertaken the defence of the unfortunate child. A Gang of Youthful Burglars. A SERIES OF ROBBERIES BY FIVE BOYS UNDER FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE. (Montreal Witness. ) During the past few months a number of petty burglaries have been perpetrated on St. Lawrence Main Street, which led to the conclusion that a gang of practised thieves were systematically at work. The dry- goods’ store of W. B. Bowie & Co., No. 215, was several times broken into and goods taken, the thefts usually being com- mitted on Sunday afternoons or holidays. Every effort was made to discover the crim- inals, but without avail. The hardware store of Avila Bourbonnier was entered on St. Peter and St. Paul’s Day, and a quan- tity of goods stolen. The circumstance caused considerable alarm, and the detect- ives, Lafon and Cullen, were communicated with. The began a search among the noto- rious thieves and ‘‘ penitentiary birds” of the city, but without avail. A robbery from Maurice Michael’s cigar store on Mce- Gill Street put a new aspect on the matter, and the detectives obtained a clue upon which they discovered that a company of boys had been the delinquents. A screw- driver was found in the yard, and had evi- a been me Pag ty Goumtiien: the premises. A nam rault, aged twelve years, was arrested, and confessed that he had taken THE SCREW-DRIVER FROM HIS MOTHER'S SEWING-MACHINE to open the back window of the store they contemplated robbing. The chain of evi. dence was soon completed, and the detec- tives arrested Joseph Brodeur, 13; Lucien Plamondon, 13 ; Gonsalve Plamondon, 10; and Magloire Labelle, 14. They confessed having carried on these robberies from time to time ; and a large quantity of the goods were recovered in cellars, where they had been carefully stored, while another pile was found concealed under a fence on Sherbrooke Street. The youths were brought up at the Police Court this morn- ing, where the five were arraigned before His Honor, Mr. Desnoyers, and with many tears told the whole story of their crimes. It was a wonder to the detectives them- selves, when they discovered the thieves, that such SHREWDLY APPOINTED ROBBERIES could have been committed by children. A private detective, named Charles Maroni, had been employed to sleep on the pre- mises, but could find no clue to the thieves. The spoils contain articles representing all conceivable trades, and were piled on @ table in the Police Court this morning. Six boxes of cigars, about twenty penknives, and as many pair of gloves, violin strings enough for a whole orchestra, heavy chains, merschaum pipes, gentlemen’s rubbers filled with cigars, many pounds of tobacco, istol caps, and almost everything concey- able in small tools, boxes, &c., were repre- sented. The youths admitted stealing $5 in cash, as well as the goods, and said they used to enter by the back doors and win- dows. The total value of the goods cannot be estimated,but will probably reach several hundred dollars. The boys are respectably connected, and their conduct creates great surprise. The depositions are being taken in the case, and the boys were remanded in the meantime. SENTENCED. Gonzalve Plamondon and Lucien Plamon- don were fined $10 or one month. George Perrault was sent to the Reformatory for four years, and Joseph Brodeur and Mag. loire Labelle for two years each. It was proved that the Plamondon’s did not ac- tually participate in the robbery. Tue Great $10,000 Horse Race.—The t four mile race between the celebrated Tteky horse ‘‘ Ten Broeck” and the ually celebrated ‘‘ Mollie McCarthy,” which came all the way from San Francisco, resulted in a great disappointment to the twenty-five thousand people who assembled on the Lousville course to witness what was expected to be one of the greatest contests of the = ag wapcronchs =e in the first heat, having stop completely fagged out at the end of 3? miles. The coal was very heavy, and the excessive heat was too much for the mare. ‘‘ Ten Broeck,” also is said to have been greatly distressed. He ran the four miles in 8.193. at * Ly ‘ oe eee peri