ya rao ee, em ete tnt tyrant, 4. “VOL. 4. ’ «fue Datty EXAMINER ™ {s Published every Evening. OFFICE: {INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. L KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, - ° ‘ $2 50 Three Months, - 1 25 One Month, 0 50 One Week, 0 12 aw Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half yearly advertisements, on appli- - cation. W. 1. COTTON, | Manager. ! J. W. MITCHELL, Otlice Sup’t. COMMERCIAL - ‘Tnion Assurance Company, OF LONDON, ENGLAND. “CAPITAL - - $12,500,000. eB NSUKANCE effected against Fire on all _.&- descriptions of Property throughout the Island. ax Low losses, rates and Prompt settlement of HORACE HASZARD, Agent for P. E. Island. Chitown, Dee, 20, 1S78-- ‘ ROBERT HARRIS, ARTIST, FULL’S BRICK BUILDING, QUEEN STREET. * Portrarrs Paintel from Life, &c., during the next six months. + Nov. 30. 1878— QUEEN INSURANCE CO'Y OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING « J NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- ] ings, 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, 1877— ‘BROADWAY HOUSE, BY MACKENZIE. HE former ‘‘City Hotel,” now the Broadway House, (reat George Street, opposite the Catholic Cathedral, is now open for Permanent and Transient Boarders. The rooms have been thoroughly renovated and newly furnished. The tables will be supplied with the best the market affords, and fares reasonable. A Suite of Rooms convenient for a small family, together with board &c., can be had in the Broadway House. Nov. 23, 1878—tf ao eee ln tt LC FRANK COX, M.D. C.M., Physician, Surgeon & Accoucheur. OFFICE Aporrecarts’ Ha. Residence : Capt. Mutch’s, Water Street, ' next door to St. Lawrence Hotel. . _N. B.—Particular attention paid to diseases of the chest and stomach. Ch’town, Nov. 16, 1878—3m TO LET, FEXMLE HOUSE and SHOP a corner of Ken and Hillsborough Streets, near King Square, being an excellent business stand, oc- ied by Mr. Cartmill; also his Residence ‘fronting on Hillsborough Street, adjoining the beg xa of Mr. Bridges. Possession given anuary next. Apply to * PRY’ JOHN BALL : ~Ch’town, Des. 10, 1878—- 2aw till 1st jan pat ‘NOTICE. ' ZRSONS who took THe Examiner before the Datry Examixer wasissued, and ve not yet paid for it, will please send the amounts of their respective accounts without delay,to . W. L. COTTON. EXaMINEn Orricr, Ch’town, } Oct. 17, 1878. dy & wkly, eee COAL COAL FQOUND AND NUT GOAL cheap for eash, by W. W. CLARKE, Agent. Head Lord’s Whart, } Charlottetown, Nov. 23. ' —— MacEachern & Co., ‘€ YONTEMPLATING a change in their busi- at hess at an early date, request all persons ebted to them to make immediate payment, “Italian Warehouse,” Dec. 19, ’78 —1m 2aw oe 0 ee ED i TH CHARLOT BLOWN, PRINGE ee hae e-em >t N 0.35 Water St., Charlottetown. Prince Bdward Island Branch OF TIF NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE. INSURANCE 60. Subscribed Capital, $9.733,332.00 | Pate up Capital - 1,216.666.06 } CHIEF OFFICES-—Edinburgh, 64 Princess | Street ; London, 61 Threadneedle Street ' Nine-Tenths of the Protits of the Life Assur- } ance Business are divided every Five Years. The Tables of Rates are moderate. Fire Insurances effected on nearly every description of Property, at the LowEst ATES of Premium. corresponding to the nature of the risk. ? Lossks settled with promptitude and lber- ality. G. 8. DEBLOIS, General Agent. RANKIN HOUSE, CHARLOTTRTOWN. P. BL I, J.J. DAVIES -- - {Formerly of St Proprietor . Lawrence Hotel, Pictou). PENIS well-known Hotel is now open under the present management ; and, having been newly furnished throughout, it offers every comfort to the travelling public. Suit- able Sample Rooms for commercial gentlemen. Oct, 15, 1878 E. G. HUNTER, Italian and American Marble, Monuments, Tablets, Headstones, CeNTRE TABLE Tops, Bureau anp CommopE Tors, Wasu Bow Srars, &c., &e. Prices to suit, and satisfaction guaranteed. ES Designs furnished on application. “Ga Corner Hillsborough and Kent Streets, Char- lottetown. November 6, 1878S. oe oe — —— - JAMES HOBBS, CABINET-MAEKER, UPHOLSTERER, ETC, H* REMOVED from McPhail’s Corner to the premises just vacated by Mr. Joun StumsBies, Prince Street, where, with increased facilities, he is prepared to attend to the wants of his customers with punctuality and despatch, and on reasonable terms. Carpets cut and laid. PAINTING and Repairing neatly done. : Picture Frames and Mouldings constantly on hand, or made wp to order, All kinds of Household Furniture made to order, cheap and good. New Pattern School Desks made at short notice. A first-class article. g5° Don’t forget the place: PRINGE STREET (near the new Baptist Church jm course of erection). Charlottctown, Oct. 26, 1878 DF. CREAMER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Hent Street. Charlottetown, (Three doors from Dr. Johnson’s). eam ENTRANCE BY SIDE DOOR. “ea Oct. 15 —-3m Leck Here! THREE PRIZES IN {2 MONTHS. vam $0) 3 + 7 G, MUGFORD, sole Licensee for W . City and Queen’s County, for Lam. bert’s Patents for Permanent Photographs Being composed of Indian ink and Parchment, they CANNOT: FADE. Took {st Prize bition last Fall at Georgetown; Diploma for Excellency of Work at New_York, Jan. Ist; 1878—contesting with the United States and Dominion of Canada,—and ist Prize at Summerside, Oct. 3, '76. Davio Wrson’s Op STAND, Ci rows. Oct. 5, 1875—3m-law § HOTEL i 1 ee FEMIE Subscriber having fitted up the Hotel formerly known as on - rrr ‘ ae THE RANKIN HOUSE, in first class style, is now prepared to give comfortable accommodation to Permanent aud ‘transient Boarders, ; ‘ i ' ' ' ' tion at the Wagstati’s Hotel. — ( WM. WAGSTAFF. May 25, 1575 a Qo for the DAILY EX AMINER the Cheapest and most newsy Paper published in the Province, Tin a bidSiit Printing Rooms at Previneial Exhi-. Tourists and others will reeeive every atten: | 1878 DECEMBER 1878 FANCY LINED COAL VASES FANCY HELMET COAL SCOOPS, COAL TONGS, SHOVELS, POKERS, FIRE IRON STANDS. All at a Large Discount to clear. BEER & SONS. nn ee rere ee FUR GOODS. MUFFs, BOAS, CAPS, Promenade and Heavy Wool SCARFs, MUFFLERS, CLOUDS, White & Cel'd. Remainder offered at low figures. BEER & SONS. WOOLEN S. Blue & Black Beavers, Whitneys, Presidents, Moscows, Worsteds, Tweeds, Suitings. A Choice Collection --made snort notic: up to order at _ ss CBEER & SONS. LADIES’ SACQUE CLOTHS, PLAIN AND FANCY. Stock offered at extra discount, BEER & SONS. Ww have received the chief part of our FALL STOCK, and can confidently call attention to LARGH IMPORTATIONS, IN 3alance of TEAS, SUGARS, FRUITS, SPICES & CENERAL GROCERIES. We are also in receipt of Full Line, in REFINED & COMMON IRON, SLEIGH-SHOEING STEEL, SPRING, CAST, and BLISTER DO Paints, Colors, Oils, Gold Leaf, Transter, Varnishes, ete. A Large and-Well-Assorted Stock of WOOD STUFFS, FOR SLEIGH & CARRIAGE BUILDERS. BEER & SONS. Ch'tewn, Dec. 13, 1875— BOOK & JOB PRINTING! neatly and expeditiously executed, AT THE “EXAMINER” OFFICE under the careful supervision of J. W. MITCHELL. We are now in a position to execnts orders for all kinds of Printing, such as LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS, CIRCULARS. CARDS, PAMPULETS, DODGERS, HANDBILLS, POSTERS, AND ALL KIND? OF | Bank and Legal Blanks, &. &c: ‘ke. AT MODERATE PRICES. Ofjice :—Ings Old Stand, Corner Great George and Water Streets. NOW READY: THE Great National Work ! ART ILLUSTRATIONS By ©. R. TUTTLE. FYE new and only Iniusrratep Hisrory ot the DoMINION OF CANADA. and handsomely bound, with 25 fine Steel Plates, 20 original Wood Cuts, and 290 Photo ‘nent public men. county in P. E. [. Send for terms and onffit | at once. D. DOWNIE & CO., Sole Publishers. ; Box 1964, Montreal. GALVANIZED AND BLACK DO. | Just pub- | i lished. ‘The most popular and saleable Work for the teaching of painting, scu}pturing, of the day. In2 Magnificent Grand Quarto engraving, gem cutting and architecture. | Volumes, 600 pages in each, or in monthly | pay] Delaroche’s great masterpiece occupies | numbers at 50 cents. Beautifully illustrated |. semicircular apse or hall in» this Palace; ‘it represents 79 life size figures of the great l artists of ancient and mod time a : : - ‘artists of ancient and moderu t1mecs. Lithograph Engravings, on stone, of our promi. | may |whichis the tomb of Napoleon. EDWARD [SLAND, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1878. Soiting From .a Journal : -OR, ~ ‘Four Weeks oa the Continent of Europe in the Month of September, i878. | DEAR |I find that the subject of Paris is not more ‘than half exhausted. ‘The Champs Elysees | shows to best advantage on Sunday. Pari- ‘elas are not at all particular on the re- The parks and Bovlevards are gay with well-dressed , On looking over my journa ligious observance of this day. people, and carriages and elegant equipages are seen on all sides. The Bois de Bou- logne is a beautiful park covering an area of over 2,000 acres. In an enclosed park of the Bois de Boulogne is the: ‘* Jardin @ Acclimatation,’ a botanical and zoological tcarden, combined. The Pare de Monceaux is a beautiful little place. From it you can see the gilded domes of the Russian Church. It ts a pe- culiar and tasteful edifice inside. The arches have an unusual form. The walls are frescoed and all the floor is carpeted. There are ne pews, and only a few chairs. From the Buttes Chamont you obtain a very fine view of Paris. A few years ago it was used asa place to deposit the rnbbish of the city in ; now it is transformed into a very pretty park. [ts mimic wild- ness, its cascade and its lake, forma great contrast to the busy city viewed from it. We were there on Sunday afternoon. The people were amusing themselyes with sWings, very un-Sanday like music, sitting at little tables, drinking coffee or claret, or walking abont. We were disappointed in Pere Lachaise Cemete ry. The uray s are literaily eovered with wreaths of *‘immor- telles’ and commen black, bine and white glass beads, producing a most frivolous and the graves have little chapels over them ; through the grat- ing in the door you can see a little aitar 'with Crucifix, candles, etc., and before the altar achair to kneel on. [tis said that the mourners often go to these little chapels to pray for the souls of the departed. They are large enough to admit only one person. The street Rue de la Roquette, leading to the cemetery, is lined with the Afeliers of funeral statuary and shops where beads and immortelles are sold to adorn the tombs. Among the numerous churches the most noteworthy are the beautiful Sainte Chapelle, used only once a year,—-at the re-opening of the courts. There are two chapels, one above the other. The upper one is re- markable for its elegance ; nearly the whole ' But - 7 . . , . . 3 ait TONE ATS trashy effect. Many of of the wall is filled in with magnificent stained glass windows, arranged so as to to soften and = subdue the light, producing a rich and — harmonions effect. It is one of the most beautiful Gothic sanctuaries in Europe. The fine old cathedral of Notre Dame, situ- ated on the *‘Ile de la Cite”, is noted for its imposing appearance, as well as for its his- torical interest. It was founded about the middle of the twelfth century, but since that time has un- dergone frequent alterations. In the Sac- risty are relics of martyred Archbishops of Paris, also fragmenis of the ‘*‘ Crown of Thorns” and of the ‘‘ Trve Cross’—a nail of the ‘* True Cross” and other relics taken from Sainte Chappelle. The Church of St. Eustache, built in the degenerate Gothic style, was commenced in the sixteenth century, and not finished for more than a hundred years. Iis roof is very lofty. Both exteinally and internally it presents a very picturesque appearance. Its organ is second only to that of Notre Dame. The Pantheon, in the form of a Greek ‘cross, issurmounted with a dome 272 feet ‘in height. It presents a very grand ap- ipearance. In the vaults are the remains of a number of celebrated men, and the tonib ief Voltaire and Rousseau. Their remains ‘were removed secretly, and buried in some ‘unknown place. In these vaults there is a ‘remarkable echo. Our guide stamped his foot on the ground, and it sounded like the 'yoar of cannon. Jn the lantern of the Pan- ‘theon, situated above the dome, a fine view may be obtained; but the 480 steps to climb will, by many, be considered a great draw- back. ; The ‘* Madeleine,” im the Greek style, is approached hy a broad flight of steps; it is a very fashionable and aristocratic church. | There are a great many other handsome Cc } i ; hurches in Paris; but in no place did we | feel so much at home as in the quiet, un- | pretending little English church in the Rue | d’Aquepan. In the Musee de Cluny will be found an ‘extremely interesting aud taluable collection |of paintings, wood carvings and sculptur- lings; antiquities and curiosities from all | parts of the world. The Palais de Thermes, _or Roman baths, adjoining the Museum is | the oldest relic of the Romans in Paris. The Palais des Beaux Arts is intended In the Hotel des Invalides we did not } . : oe cs i ; ct ser : WaAW ee ae ee ‘think the old soldiers looked as comforia}te j AGENTS WANTED in cvery tows ont ‘as they do in the Chelsea Hospital in Lon-| don. The Eglise des Invalides is divid- ed into two parts—the old Church of St. Louis and the Dome—under It is an , EK HXAMINER. NO. 479. ‘immense sarcophagus, weighing 70 tons. It consists of a single block of porphyry, beau- 'tifully polished. The light from the dome— | 160 feet above—falls in direct rays on the ‘tomb, and heightens the solemn aspect of 'the place. The entrance to the crypt is hat the back of the High Altar. Over the ‘entrance are these words in French, from i the will of the captive Emperor, ‘‘ I desire {that my ashes shall repose on the banks of the Seine, in the midst of the people whom IT 80 dearly loved.” The Halle Centralles is the great market place of Paris, and when completed it will cover an area of 22 acres. We were sur- pxised to see the sellers pricking poultry, cutting beans,and doing many other things to make a litter which our country people would have done at home. The Bourse, from 12 until 2, exhibits a scene of unusual animation, numbers cf men wound up to the highest pitch of ex- citement, buying and selling stocks, act more like madmen than yational beings. The New Opera House occupies a site nearly three acres in cxtent, and between four and five hundred houses were pulled down to make room for this magnificent building, On the Place de la Bastille, so famous in history, now stands the Columne de Juillet. The Palais Royale, with its fine shops ; the stately Vendome column; the Are de Triomphe, the ruined Hotel de Ville, the Palais de Justice, the Garden and Palace of the Luxembourg, the Jardin des Plantes and the Stalem and Capucines Boulevards, are always interesting to stranvers, The panorama of the “Siege of Paris” must not be forgotten. After visiting the Palais de L’Jndustrie, vou cross a garden and enter the hall where the pictures are exhibited ; they are of immense size, and arranged so so as to look like, actual objects. In looking at them the idea of pictures is lost altogether, and you feel as if these ter- rible scenes were being enacted before you, When we went to Versailles we took the train, traversing the right bank of the Seine, passing Clamart, Mendon, Belleone, Severs, celebrated for its porcelain), and Chaville ; the scenery 18 very pretty all along this road. The station at Versailles is nearly a mile from the Palace, so we had to get into an omnibus which we found waiting. A few minutes brought us to the Court yard of the Palace, which is paved with large rough stones, very trying for tender feet. Ver- sailles, as you know, owes its origin to Louis XIV... The palace and park, Bedeker says, ‘‘cost the treasury the im- mense sum of one thousand million franes, while its annual maintenance aiso involved heavy expenditure: ‘* The accounts hand- ed down to us regarding the erection of this sumptnons palace and the laying out of the grounds almost border on the fabulous. Thus no fewer than 36,000 men and 6,000 horses are said to have been employed at one time in forming the terraces of the gar- den, levelling the park, and constructing a road to it from Paris and an aqueduct from Maintenon.” The building of the aqueduct was aban- doned; the waterworks of Marly and pounds on the plateau furnish all the water re- quired. The Palace is a quarter of a mile in length; it contains some sPlendid rooms and a great number of paintings, some cf great value and others pcssessing only his- torical interest. The gardens are laid ont in a very quaint, stiff style, in geometrical precision; but tke goneral appearance of the palace, sheets of water, fountains, orangery, statuary, and two great flights of steps leading to the terrace all harmonize and carry ones thought’s back to the time of the gay monarch. In the Franco-Prussian war the King cf Prussia made this palace his headquarters, and used part of the building as a hospital. On the 18th January, 1871, King William was here saluted as Emperor of Germany. Paris looks very gay in the evening. Tle shops are brilliantly lighted, and in front of the numerous cafes little tables and chairs are arranged on the spacious sidewalks, Numbers of people occupy these chairs, talking, smoking and drinking coffee or claret, while gay throngs are continually passing, dressed in “the latest style, and all is bright and lively, the Parisians are such a pleasure-loving people. A friend told us that he would like to live in Paris, but it was a poor place to die in. It is time te close this epistle, so with * I remain yours, ete., The People Want Proof. ‘here is no medicine prescribed by physi cians, or sold by Druggists, that carries such evidence of its success and superior virtues as Boscuek’s GERMAN Syrvp for severe Coughs, Colds settled on the breast, Consumption, or any disease of the Throat and Lungs. A proof of that fact is that any person afilicted, can geta Sample Bottle for 10 cents and try its superior effect before buying the regular size at 75 cents. It has lately been introduced in this country from Germany, and its wonderfu. cures are astonishing everyone that use it. Three doses will relieve any case. Try it Sold by all Duggists on the Western Cntinent - + =e ++ & CUIRISTMAS AND New YEARs.—Now is the time for presents. Call at Lewis’ Photograph Gallery and see the great variety of Prang and other Chromos. Christmas and New Year's cards in. great variety, cheapest in the city ; all kinds of Frames, in velvet and fancy wood, wall pockets and brackets. If you want to give your friends a good Phe eall and have it taken at Lewis’. All kinds of Pictures framed to order, cheap. Motto Frames 40 ceuts each. Upper Great George treet,