ee | Lijec ——w ae seen vO! 1 w on COTTON de ° Esdytor & Manawer. ———— ’ { I SATURDAY MORNING - - - ee "y A. McNEILL, | Prince Edward istand huctioneer and Commission Merchant S PE AME RS. WO. 11 QUEEN SUTRET. aes CE ALLUVALTOMY, ). £. isLNy, SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. —— a Nova Scotia. | Leave gCharlottetown for Pictou ever\ MonbDay, WrEpNEsDAay, THURSDAY. «& SATURDAY mornings, at 5 o'clock, con- necting there at 10 a. m., with train for Hatifax. Fare. to Halifax. $4.10. Picnic Parties of Twenty and upwards can obtain Return Tlckets at Charlotte- j \UCTION SALES, of ail descrip- tions, attended to in city and country al. moderate} rates. May 21, 1877. ROYAL HOTEL, SOMN. | aay _ Returning to Chariottet own. HAVE much pleasure in intorming my nou | l merous friends and the public generally, that | ‘have leased the Hotel formerly known as the | CONTINENTAL, and thoroughly renovated the same,making it, asthe ROYA L always had | be reputation of being, one of the best Hotels ia he Provinces. town Oifice to Pictou and back same . | Ae. $1.00 each. hing Sguare, Satni $1.00 each Leave Pictoa every Tusspiy, Weovesviy Peipay and SATURDAY, about 2.30 p.m. on arrival of evening train from Hali- fax. CAPE SRETON. Excellent Bill of Kere, First-class Wines | ave Pictou for Hawkesbury every Mon- Liquors aad Cigars, aud superior accommoda | pay and THURSDAY, on arrival of tion. inorning train fronr Ualifax, counecting Blackhall’s Livery Stable attached : i both ways with stage aad THOS, F. RAYMOND. ** Neptune,” to and Bras d'Or Lake. Steamer from Sydney aud July 3, 1877—6m UEEH INSURANCE £0. ENGLAND. teturning to Pictou same nights, connect- i.g with 10 a.m. Train Tugespay and Fri- bAY for Halifax. New Breuswick, Canada and United Siates, or Leaves SUMMERSIDE every day (Sunday *xcepted) on arrival of morning train from harlottetown, connecting at Suepiac | With trains for each of above named places, ind at St. John with Steamers of INrerna- MONAL Co. for PORTLAND and Boston. \lso, leave Charlottetown for Summerside every Monday morning, about 3 o’clock. Returning, leaves Sueprac every «ay (Sandays excepted) on arrival of day train trom St. JoHn, for Summerside: connect there, Without delay, with train for Char- lottetown. Also, leaves Summerside for Charlottetown every Saturday evening, about 6 o'clock. Agents: ALMON & Macinrosn, Halifax: NoOwsn & Davirs, Pictou; A Grant & <0 tlawkesbury- HaNFRDABRos., St. John. F. W. HALES WNL) DIRECT “EN ‘PO BOSTON. Capital -- Two Millions Sterling, NSURANCE effected on all kinds o Buildings, Merchandise, aud Produce Alse, on Vessels on the stocks. Speclalgrates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union'Bank), | | Ageatifor Prince EdwardjIsland | June — | | | ee H. VINNICOMBE, | HANO FORTE REGULATOR i ———— ence fp el parties leaving their orders for Tuning | * at Bremner Bros. will receive the best | sealers Carroll and Worcester attention. | in Charlottetown All who have Pianos would do wellto have them tuned by the | year, Keeping their instruments in perfect | JOTH Steamers are fitted with new Boll order ail the time. ; ae ih oie : ' ers, aud their Passenger accomodation \ visit once a year at least will be madet| | °®: ; cs eee = : f the Island. or oftner if required | *'89ged for every convenience and comm- ‘ aris ¢ sie F a8 ot ‘ > *s all parts of the 18 1877 vege I fort, and titted up in elegant style. Chitown, duiy 18, 1877. FREIGHT carried at moderate rates and — | 43 10W as by ary other route. Shog and Warehoue to Let. a eee we]: | EGGS in boxes and barrels handiedjwith | the greatest care. | SAVING TIME, only one business day used in reaching Boston, by leaving here corner Of Saturday Morning and catching steamer al paar Shop aud Warehouse Water and Pownai Street formerly | Hal-fax, and arriving at Boston Monday occupied by the late N. RANKIN Perms | morning. maie known on application to C. D. ot shire doa deal ncsineataletiaiadi lat | LEAVE CHARLO PTETOWN Arie y : jo es oi American & Foreiga Patents o— ‘hursday, punctually at 5 p.m. LEAVE BOSTON tiimore, Swmith & Co., Successors to Chipman, liosmer & Co, ie . JATENTS procured in all counties. No fees | Buy ery ] in advance. No charge for services until the | Patent is granted. Preliminary examinations | tee. Our valuable pampbliet sent free upon re tipt of stamp. Saturday, unctually at noon, CARVELL $ROS.,Agent. Address, GILMORE, SMITH & CU., Cl’lown, June 7.11877 i conenenliineeeinenanl Washington, D.C.) _ ” : ae ARREARS OF PAY. BOUNTY, EC- Parke’ Cotton Yarns NEDERAL Officers, Soldiers and Sailors of ’ the late war, or ‘their heirs, are in macy Cres entitled to money trom the Guveroment, Which has been fornd to be due since fiaal pay- Put ‘rite fi i r service a state . , ' ; —— . “a 7 eos ae: . oe - “a WARDED the only Medal, given to! Mount of pay r ce a. Ts ane “et : Certificates ot Adjutant Geueral U. S. A. COTTON YARNS of Canadian Manu showing service and honorable discharge there- facture ab the trom, ia place of discharge lost, procured for a CEN. ENNIAL EXHIBITION. ee ee smali fee. “uclose stamp to Gilmore & Co., and full re- ply, with blanks, will be sent free. PENSIONS. PENSIONS. Ar Federal Officers, Soldiers and Sailors, wounded, ruptured, or injured, in the line ¥idaty ia the late war, and disabled thereby, a & pension. e Warranted fall length and weight. dows, aed minor children of Officers, Sol- 2 eal ditties | ee iii i a “ers aad Sailors, who have died since discharge otaager and better, than any other Yarn vl disease contracted or wounds and injuries re |" She market. “ved in the service aud in the live of duty, can procure pensions by addressing Gilmore & Co. lucreased rates for pensioners obtained. Bouaty Land Warrants procured for service in Wars prior to March 3,1855. There are no war- raats granted for service in the late rebellion. White Blue, Red, Orange. an Green Cotton Carpet Warp. No.312's 4fery iN ati JCoLors. ead stamp to Gilmore & Co., Washington V .maiw: fast D.C., full instructions. . uly 24, 1877. WM. PARKS’ & SON, XONUNCY. - NOVEMBER 8 1877, Excursion Tickets, 1) BUPIN AY QUPIRN STEAMERS CARROLL & WORCESTER, Efor 15.00, CARVELL BROS SINGER'S SEWING MACHINES | The Perfection off Mechanism. So Light and Simple that a Child can Work them® So Durable that they last A Lifetime, Kight Thousand Machipes Manutactured every Week. To be had only trom the Authorized Agent, Robert Younc, South Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Sept. 13, 1877. -STADACONA tire and Life Insurance Company, now ~~ N VUliCe is hereby given that the Board +" of Directors of this Coinpany have made a further call of . Your Lnstalnents, of Five per Cent. each, on the Subscribed Capital of the Company, payadle at its Office, No. 93 St. Peter Street, Quebec, as follows :— Five per Cent. on or before the Tenth d.y of August, 1877; Vive per Cent. on or before the Tenth day of November, 1877 ; hive per Cent. on or before the Eleventh day of February, 1878 ; ; : Five per Cent. on or before the Bleventh day of May, 1878. By order of the Board. CRAWFORD LINDSAY, Secretary [jlr 13 totes ) 1877 ? —— nena apie, DR. WILLIAM GRAT’S SPECIFIC MEDICINE, The Great Eaglish Rem- ; edy is an unfailing cure for Seminal Weakness matlorrhea, Impotency, and, all diseases that follow as ® ¥ ene belt Aba as Loss of Memcery, Univer- ' sd Lassitude, Pain in SVU Lack, Dimness of Visim= BeforeTak ng.Premature Ola Age, and A aking. inany Other diseases that lead to lnsanity or Grave Price $1 sumption anda Premature . ee ) ,er package, or six packages for $5, by mail free of postage. Full particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to send free by mail to every one® Address WM. GRAY & CO., Windsor, Ontario, Canada. ka Sold in Charlottetown by W. R Watson, P. Fraser, C. D. Rankin, Dr Dodd, and a Apothecaries’ Hall, and by ail druggistsanywhere WANTED, Ee Highest Cash price paid for Calf Skins and Sheep Skins, ROBERT BRIDGES, 26—tudfr tf ROBERT YOUNG HAS-JUST RECEIVED, Per S. S. PrincezEdward, A MAGHIFICENT ASSORTMENT —-OF — NEW GOODS, Whichjhe is offering at EXTRAORDINARY LOW PRICES October 1, 1877. | HE undersigned has been appointed Ad- ministrator of the Estate of the late | Ezaa CHURCHILL of Rustico, deceased, in- | testate. All parties owing ‘he said Estate | are requested to pay fortwith, and parties ‘having claims against Estate are required: » | file same, daly provec, without delay. ee." J. S. CARVELL, | Adininistr ator, ‘Charlottetown, Oct. 3, 1877—m SUICIDE OF A WOODSTOCK GIRL|SENATOR simpson FURTHER DEVELOPMENT; — CROOKED BINTED AT, On the 15th inst., it will be remembered & young lady named Josie Schofield, be- longing to Woodstock. Unt., committed suicide at Niagara falls, the direct cause of her rash act being enve:oped ip mystery. “An old G. T. R. man,” a telegraph Operator in New York, throws some light on the matter, however, in a communica. tion to the Montreal Gazette, says :— _ ‘Some three or four months since a | Canadian lady, Miss Josie Schofield, for- | merly of the Dominion Telegraph ‘Com« pany’s office, Toronto, Out., sought and obtained a position as telegraph operator in the Western Union Telegraph Com pady’s main offica, at 197 Broadway, in this city (New York:. The lady was talented, refined and accomplished. For two or three weeks prior to the 15th of the pre- sent month, it was noticed that she re- ceived a great number of notes each day, which were left at the door of the operat- ing room. The missives seemed to dis- tress her greatly, and -her nervousness at- tracted general attention. During the day she wore her hat, and a .heavy crape veil (she was dressed in deep mourning) while on duty in the office. On the 15th of October a lady committed suicide in Nias gara Falls ; it was Miss Josie Schofield. Now comes the curious part of the busi- ness, Although the lady was employed in New York, in. one of the most public offices of tue city, with newspaper report- ers in it, who are fully cognizant of all the facts, nota word has appeared in a city paper, directly, as to who the suicide at Niagara Falls was, and where she was last employed. There isa strong impression among the operators here that some c:ooked work drove this young Canadian girl to suicide, and as an ‘ influential’ name might be mentioned in connection With it, the matter is hushed up.” -_ oe en nara — EE i ee Bip mmennen DOUBLE TRAGEDY IN SHEFFORD, ONTARIO, A YOUNG GIKL'S CRIME, AND HER MOTHER'S sv 1- CIDE 1N CONSEQUENCE, The following facts regarding some shocking events in the eounty of Shetford, in tbe Eastern Townships, are given :—A young woman named Mary McAdam, daughter of a local 4 est Shef~ ford, aged about 22 years, was seduced by a young man named Jobn Harris. [n ors det to avoid the disgrace of exposure, the unfortunate young gir! went to Waterloo to have an abortion performed, and, it is alleged, she stopded tor some little time at the house of a medical man in that village. Oue day last week she etarted from the latter place from South Stukley, but, be- fore leaving, itis alleged bad a powerful dose admidistered to her. Itis supposed the drug affected her too speedily, for she was unable to proceed furth r than St. Ann's, nine miles from Waterloo. She put up at a public house, and, during the nigh}, while entirely aione, gave birth to a child, which was discovered dead in her satchel. Next morninga coroner’s inquest was held, and a verdict of infanticide ren- dered, andthe unfortnnate girl was com. mitted to Sweetsburg jail for trial. Mean time Mrs. McAdams, mother of Mary, was so overwhelmed with grief whea these painful revelations came to light that she | was taken seriously ill, and on Saturday last, in a moment of desperation, poisoned herself with a Jotion which it is supposed ber daughter had been using to produce an abortion, and died within an hour after taking the poison. Another inquest was ‘held and a verdict of death by her own _hands was rendered. tt a + antennae _ | Three highwaymen and four officers bad a hand-to-hand fight in Deadwood. |The rodm was lighted at the out-et. but | the lamp was overturned, and they were left in perfect darkness. Six of them |were coupled in the struggle, and had ‘there not been a seventh no misunder- | standing would have ensued; but this sey« enth man, by engaging in the scrimmage, confused the combatants. Soon no body | knew whom he was fightibg, and the re« sult was that friends grappled with friends. Revolvers and knives were used, and ope ‘death and many wounds resulted. A serious tidal disturbance occurred at | Rsmeraldas and Buenaventura, on the west coast of Colombia, on the llth, Shocks /of earthquake occurred on the Isthmus nextday. It is believed that a serious eartbquaxe has taken place at the south and east. inthe Island of San Andreas, Carribean Ses, in a hurricane on Sept. 22nd, a large amout of property was des+ troyed. There is great distress. At the Paris Exhibition Canadians are likely to make a very good exhibit, and to gain credit for the Dominion. Their com. plete success at Philadelphia last year has no doubt stimulated a greater effort at Paris than would otherwise have been WORE | (From the AND MARI. TIME PROVINCE MEMB ERS OF PARLIAMENT. St. John ‘News~a Government Organ, ) Senator Simpson, President of the On. tario Bank, has won a verdict against Wilkinson of the Durham News in @ cri. minal libel suit at Cobourg. The gist of the libel suit was that the Senator had used the money of his bank to bribe mem- bers of the House of Commons to defeat Sir John A. Macdonald's Government in 1873. The accused tried to justify by put-~ ting Col. Cubitt, for ten years Mayor of Bowmanville, in the witness box, who swore that on a certain Saturday evening in 1874, the Senator in his own house, in presence of a Mr. Thompson, had told him that a great deal of trouble had beed ex. perienced in getting members over, that considerable sums of money had been paid to accomplish thay task, that the last man got had a $17,000 mortgage on his pro, perty, which the witness understood the Senator to say, “ we”’—that is the bank ‘‘had to pay.” and that the Senator said. the Maritime members were a ‘‘d —d set of soundrels or a set of d—<d scounde rels."’ The prosecution rebutted this eVic dence by the testimony of Mr. Thompson, aud by that of Senator Simpson, who both denied on oath that any such statements hid beén made in the conversation re, f-rred to abou buying up any-of Sir John’s supporters, or about the paying off any *17,000 mortgage. Clearly, the justifica. tion was not made out, but as it seemed that Wilkinson thought he had solid ground for his charge, the Jury recom, mended him to mercy. But Senator Simpson acknowledged that he probably branded the Maritime members as ‘*a d ——d set of scoundrels.” but why or wherefore or whom particulars 1/, he bad in view, he did not say. A lits tle light on this subject would be interest« ing. It strikes us that the Maritime members, generally, will bear comparison with the Outario members. We should in- fer that the Senator is rather unguarded in speech sometimes. enema ~~ > -. — The San Francisco ‘ Mai(’’ says: “ At a meeting of the California Academy of ~ciences last evening, Dr. Behr called at- tention to a eucalyptus tree standing in the grounds of the o'd German Hospital on Brannan street. The tree has passed through the fire of August, 1876, and ex- hibited the peculiarity of resisting the ac« tion of the flames—a property well under- stood in Australia. Dr. Ketlog stated that eucalyptus shingles were in common use in Australia, on account of their being fires proof, [twas impossible to fire a root made of this material. There were some 132 species of eucalypti, but all seemed to possess this non-combustible property to some extent, Dr. Gibbon said that the planting of trees in the public streets would be an important means of checking % conflagration, and as the eucalyptus -eemed to be peculiarly valuable for that purpose and for building, the attention of the public and lumber-growers should be called to it.”y The above hints may be of some benetit to the Maritime Province people, who are now having experience of combustible wood, —_ - > _eom «+ There was a sad scene at the Tombg Police Court, New York, on the 23rd ult.. when two boys of 16 were arraigned for burglary committed on Sunday night, the 2Iist. A padlock had been wrenched from the rear door of the store, which opened on the yard fully in sight of a dozen of windows. The safe in the store had been tampered with, and altogether the job looked like the work of daring, uousebreakers. Ward Detectives Handy and Fogarty were put on the case and succeeded in fastening the crime upon the two prisoners, John Wygand and James Reilly. When arraigned the prisoners pleaded guilty. The plea was being en~ tered when an elder brother of Reilly, a respectable looking man. arrived in Court, crying bitterly. He pressed forward to the Justice and begged to speak to him. The request was granted, and he stepped up to the bench, and in the paesence of his disgraced brother told that when the news of the arrest of James was made known to his mother she fell dead "cen the instant. The Court and al! present, but Reilly, the prisoner, were deeply mceved at this narration. He did not even witece, The Court hesitated a moment, but as the prisoners pleaded guilty there was no other course than to hold them, and they were held in $500 to answer. The only pro. ceeds of the burglary were six cigars. The brother of Reilly pleaded piteously with the Justice for his erring brother, ssying that he had been led away by Wygana, who was the more cupnicg of the two. Finally he went out and brought in pis father,a man about 5) years old, and in Appearance a respectable man. Ihe ojd man with tears in his eyes told the Court how a messenger had come to him with the news of his boy’s arrest. ‘] told my made. Europe will learn something of the great manufacturing enterprises of, Can- ada, for it is these chiefly which will bene- fit, or rather gain reputation, by the ex- | ; ' hibition, forasampie of wheat does not | dispiay the agricultural development of | the country as does a finely constructed and finished complicated machine, and | superior woolen and other goods its pro-~ gress in manufacturing. : wife,” he said, “and she telldown eudx denly. When I went to her she Was dead.” The father begged for God's sake that James might be allowed to attend the funeral of his mother, but as the matt-, had passed from the uands of the Justic.. His Honor referred him to the District Attorney, who could permit the son to attend the funeral in the company of ay officer. " " ae sie wn vas set i si eotlhs, stage ee ee capt ta eo * lp ecteemnespi - <i ni ctype pene nett