eich a a Wt A NA EA ELLE OIE SE PIO ee ee ET ee Lo = 8 EE MIDE 8 5 ae a a a alah 5 alge 2 ee BREE eB THe KXAMI VOL. 5. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRI LOOK HERE! BRITISH WAREHOUSE. As we intend to inake a change in our business at the end of the vear, we are now closine out our Large and Well-Assorted Stock of DRY Goons At Unusually Low Prices, Meet the Which. we Hard Times. are Sure. Will —_—— —— 2 {}* —— Dress Goods from 6 cents upwards. Grey Cottons from 4 cents upwards. Prints from 6 cents upwards. Hemp Carpeting from 12 cents upwards. Tapestry from 59 cents upwards Brussels from $1.00 upwards. W. & A. BROWN. All other Competition. Charlottetown, June 30, 1879. J. B, MacDonald HAS JUST RECEIVED 3 Cases Gents American Felt Hats 1 CASE GENTS’ STRAW & CHIP HATS, 30: Dozen Gents’ White & Coloured Shirts, 50 DOZ, GENTS’ LINEN COLLARS (New Styles) 2 Cases Gents’ Paper Collars, 26 DOZ. GENTS’ MERINO & COTTON HOSE, 2 CASES NEW PRINTS 9 CASES NEW WHITE COTTONS, 50 Dozen Women's & Children's Cotton & Merino Hose, WILL BE SOLD AT THE LOWEST PRICES. J. B. MACDONALD. Queea Street, Charlottetown, June 26, 1879—her rg : 7 PIANO FOR SALE. oe NE FIRST CLASS Second-hand PIANO Union a ES Se COMMERCIAL Assurance Company, OF LONDON, ENCLAND. — CAPITAL - - $12,500,000. will be sul cheap. Good terms. Apply at this etlice. TH. TBA TEA 190 Packages New in Stock. Something very superior, and at very Low Figures. May 22, 1879. Glass. Glass. ~ Glass. NSURANCE effected against Fire on all descriptions of Property throughout the Island. sa” Low rates and promrr settlement of losses. HORACE HASZARD, Agent for P. E. Island. Ch’town, Dec, 20, 1878— No. 35 Water St., BEER & SONS. ee 300 BOXES, al! sizes, VERY CHEAP. : Charlottetown. “Vay 22, we, BEER & sons. Prince Edward Island Branch BEST HORT BRITISH & MERCANTILE Nsat Londen, White Lead, Turpentine Oils, Colours, Gold Leaf, cheap. FIRE AND a IFE. BEER & SONS. | June 10, 1879-- | me Toes’ | a Iron. Tron. LYON. isubscritvea capital, $9,133,332.00 lPaid up Capital, - 1,216,666.00 CHIEF OFFICES—Edinburgh, 64 Princess [ae TONS Refined, Assorted Sizes, Street ; London, 61 Threadneedle Street. BEER & SONS. Nine-Tenths of the Profits of the Life Assur- ag > 2h 3 ance Business are divided every Five Years. VEEN SURANCE HOY The Tables of Rates are moderate. '} Fire Insurances effected = nearly every description of Property, at the LowEsr RATES OF ENGLAND. of lean: corresponding to the nature of the risk. oe Lossrs settled with promptitude and liber- CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING, BUN tedsmaiueietDae|" GW, DEBLows, on the stocks. eneral Agent. Special rates for isclated residences. Dec. 14. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), | Q\UBSCRIBE for the DAILY EX ane, wre for Prince Edward Island ho Abedin te Peoria - most newsy NCE EDWARD [SL 1879. SUMMER TRADE. ee DS Go DO IIMS © SMerus STANDARD ORY GOODS STORE to replenish your Stock of 1379, Table Linens, Napkins, Towels, Towelings, Counterpanes, Bed Tickings, Sheetings, --AND- COTTON GOODS OF EVERY DISCRIPTION. ——:0: Special attention is solicited to our Stock of DRESS GOODS! BEAUTIFUL FABRICS IN Elegant Desions & Low Prices, BARGAINS IN Black Silks & Gashmeres, TRIVININGS, OF ALL KINDS. Buttons, Velvets, ALSO, A FINE STOCK OF LACES, PRIDLINGS, TIES, &e. een rt as ‘ Fringes, Ve are head-quarters for Gloves & Hosiery, and have some very choice Goods in addition to the most popular makes & prices. ENGLIS+,, American, & Canadian Corsets AT THE LOWEST PRICES. Carpets & Oi Cloths, RUGS & MATS. New Goods by every Steamer. ee Give VSACALI. Pati & Se Ch’town,' Jane 24, 1879. ie i = NER. AND, SATURDAY, JULY 5, 1879, NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. CANADIAN DESPATCHES. Orrawa, July 3. The Weights and Measures appointments will date from the Ist of November, in ac- cordance with amended Act. This morning Mr. Fred Sparks left by ‘* Occidental” with two car loads of very fine horses, bought in Western Ontario and intended for the English market. Over 26,000,000 feet of lumber have been shipped from Chaudiere this summer, 5,- 000,000 feet more than for the same period last year. BELLEVILLE, Onrt., July 3. Yesterday afternoon, a bey 14 years old, nained Donohue, was accidentally shot. The result is uncertain, but there is much danger. Lonpon, Ont., July 3. The thermometer was 90 here to-day. in the shade Brytue, Ont., July 4. Salé was struck here to-day, at a depth of 1,125, in the last well which is being sunk ; the drill has penetrated the solid salt rock seven feet, and there is every in- dication of a great depth of sait rock. Montreal, July 3. Walter Shanly, the arbitrator, has award- ed Duncan McDonald $150,000 and Mr. Abbott, his partner in the contract for building the Quebec, Montreal, Ottawa and Occidental Railway from this city to Hull, $59,000, in settlement of their claim against the Provincial Government. A report comes from Cowansville, in this Province, that a boy answering to the de- scription of the celebrated Charley Ross is living in that neighborhood with a French- Canadian family. Orrawa, July 3. Private information received from the North-West states that Sitting Bull is camped at Woody Mountain, and that Long Knife and Little Dog are between thirty and forty miles south of that point. The three encampments comprise about 150 or 160 lodges. A petition from Lunenburg, N. &., ia favor of commuting the death sentence of Hirtle, a convicted murderer, has been for- warded to the Governoi-General. It is said, on reliable authority, this evening, that Messrs. Langevin and Abbott both sailed from Liverpool for Qnebee to- day. Quebec, July 3. Yesterday afternoon, while a number of boys were bathing in St. Charles River, at the Rubber Company’s slip, one of their number, a boy 16 years of age, named Ed- ward Griffard, was drowned. The body was recovered shortly afterwards by one of his companions. James Mahoney, aged 33 years, while walking on Hall’s booms at Sillery, yester- day afternoon, fell and died shortly after- wards—it is thought from sun-stroke. Monrreat, July 3, Yesterday afternoon a boy named Cor- nelius Crowley, 15 years of age, lately re- siding with his mother, who keeps a green grocery store on University street, was drowned while bathing in the Island. Flanagan, at the coroner’s inquest, last night, persistently denied all knowledge of the Connolly murder. The Heraid understands that Messrs. T. J. Claxton & Co. have obtained a composi- tion at forty cents on the dollar. GREAT BRITAIN. Lonpon, July 3. A despatch from Blackburn, Lancashire, says: ‘‘The cotton trade in this district is urprecedentedly gloomy. Several more will close.” The Rev. Dr. John Cumming, the writer on the millenium has been medically ordered to renounce all mental work. It is said that 32,000 steam colliers of Merthya, Sonth Wales, have decided to refuse the reduction. UNITED STATES. New York, July 3. A frightful accident occurred on the Metropolitan cievated Railroad, New York, shortly after one o'clock, Wednesday morn- ing. Several trackmen on a hand car, going down the east track to make repairs, discovered an engine coming up the road. David Shadley, one of the oldest employees on the road, volunteered to get off and warn the approaching train, when he was struck by the regular south-bound train and his bedy was mangled in a horrible manner. One of his legs cut off remained fon the track while the body was thrown into the street below. His death was instantaneous. A Bismarck, Dakot» special says :—A ‘terrific wind storm, swept over Bismarck ‘and Vichy last evening, unroofing houses, | tearing up trees and wrecking the steamer | **Montana,” the largest and finest steamer on the Missouri River. The storm broke 'every chain on the steamer and carried the | cabin ashore ; pieces of the cabin were car |ried 500 yards ; damage over $30,000; damages in the city, $50,000. | Five hundred French Canadians passed ‘through Plymouth, N. C., this afternoon, on a pilgrimage to the shrine of Ste. Anne ‘de Beaupre, at a little village near Quebec. This is the first pilgrimage from the United States to that shrine. NO. 37 GERMANY. Bern, July 3} It is stated that Minister Falk has re- signed, because he is convinced of the im- possibility of affecting a reconciliation with the Vatican. RUSSIA. Ovgssa, July 3. The trials of 45 Nihilists have been con- cluded ; six were sentenced to from two to four years’ imprisonment, and the rest were acquitted. AUSTRO-HUNGARY. Vienna, July 3. The eiection for members of the Reich- strath has gone against the Liberals. CABLE BRIEFS. Lonpon, July 3. It is formally announced that the busi- ness of the late Lionel DeRothschild will be carried on by the three sons of the de- ceased. In the race for the Chesterfield Stakes to-day, Lorillard’s ‘‘ Papoose” came in fifth and his ‘‘ Cherokee,” ‘‘ Geraldine ” and *‘ Nereiad” were scratched. A large meeting of Home Rulers unani- mously condemned the Irish University Bill now before Parliament. Rome, July 3. The Italian Ministry has tendered its resignation. The Times’ Constantinople despatch says the Grand Vizier refused to accept Mahmoud Medim Pasha as Minister of the Interior. > -- —_————— A New Trance Sensation. Many cases have been reported of per- sons lying in a trance for weeks at a time, but the majority under investigation have been proved either myths or complete frauds. Ait the present moment, however, English physicians have a case in a London hospital under their own eyes, so that, as the showman says, ‘‘ there can be no de- ception.” The patient, as in most of these cases, is a girl, who lies still and motionless upon the bed. Her eyes are closed, but when the lids are raised be- neath the doctor's fingers, the gaze is bright and intelligent, as thongh the mind were- perfectly conscieus of all that is passing around her, while the pulse beats strong and regular as. that of a person in fall health. The girl has been lying in this state of trance for more than three weeks without food. The account of her seizure is remarkable. She had already beena patient for a few days at the hospital when the nurse was called in the middle of the night to her bedside by the most terrible shrieks and moanings. The girl was found writhing in agony, exclaiming that death was coming on and that she had but a few moments to live. Before the nurse could summon the doctor, the patient had stretched herself out stiff and senseless, and has never recovered motion or conscious- ness since that moment. creating a great sensation medical authorities. _ zee —— The case is among the Shocking Occurrence. ——- 4 YOUNG MAN GORED TO DEATH BY A BULL. Late on Tuesday afternoon, Mr. Hiram Etter, living with his father, Mr. Bradley Etter,a prominent farmer of Westmoreland Point, N.B.,went into the pasture ashortdis- tance from the house, to take a bull tethered there to the barn for the night. What then transpired was not seen by the family, but a few minutes later Mr. Bradley Etter observed his son tossed in the air by the savage animal. Raising the alarm for help, he rushed into the field. By this time the bull was standing over the prostrate body of the unfortunate young man. The brute was quickly driven off and the young man carried into the house. He was frightfully gored in the abdomen, having evidently been tossed in the air more than once, and perhaps then trampled on. A doetor was immediately summoned, and everything that human care conld do was done to al- leviate his suffering. He died in about an hour anda half, a portion of the time being quite conscious and conversing with those about him. The affair is acceunted for in this way : The bull, a savage and powerful animal, was tethered with a rope. An iron rod with a hooked end, which slipped in the ring on his nese, served as an instrument by which to lead him about. The rod was picked up afterwards on the spot with the hook broken off. When it broke, it left Mr. Etter practically at the mercy of the bull. ————-- 7008 ---——- - Shot by Wis Master. Mr. Joseph A. Blair, the paying teller of the Mechanics’ National Bank of New York, went to his home in Montclair last Thurs. day afternoon, at his usual hour, and took his supper with his family. After supper he went out of his house, and accosting his coachman, John Armstrong, near his stable door, spoke to him in reference to certain improprieties of conduct which had been reported to him. An altercation ensued, and Mr. Blair re-entered his house, got from an upper room his leaded revolver and returned to the stable. The coachman en- ‘tered it and Mr. Blair followed. While inside he shet Armstrong twice, inflicting wounds that proved fatal the next night. ee mT eae, ore: tert a a tc CH RN ollleteetaatn oo tiem ade tee letter Sg Ree em