a MISCELLANEOUS. Mr. Gladstone was warmly welcomed | in Venice. Sir Rowland Hill left an estate valu. | el at $250,000. i England is to be hovored with a visit from the Mikado of Japan. Saturday was the four hundred and sixty-fourth anniversary of the battle of Agincourt. | A wealthy American in Rome has secured permission to havo a copy made ef the statue of St. Peter. | The Queen has intimat id her inten-| tion of giving Lad , Cavagnar! the next} vacant suite of rooms at Hampton | Court. i Tho mother of Major Cavagnari, who lost his life at Cabul, is to be pensioned by tho British government, as her son’s death leaves her without means of sup- port. Timid young men are counting the days intervening from now until next year, which happens to be a leap year, when it will be the privilege of the ladies to propose. The Gaulois publishes an account of an interview with Mr. Gladstone, in mae The Oabul Massacre. S3 { London Times. ) e We have received from a private source the following account of the massace, as from the lips of one of the taken do , survivors :— | have just had a long converstion with ‘one of Sir Louis Cavagnari’s servants, who 'escaped ; he and three others are, as far as ‘known, the sole survivors of the hideous | massacre, of which doubtless you have been ® already in‘ormed »y wire. The particulars |of the occurrence are as follows: At about |7.30 a. m., on the Ynd, crowds of Afghan isoldiery were perceived rushing towards the Residcnecy. Six Louis Cavagnari must have expected something, as he ordered all the Sowars inside, and had the gates closed. Soon a mob of four thousand men had col- lected. The gate was broken down, 5 and in a few seconds the Sowars, though they fonght nobly, were borne down by numbers and massacred to a man. A few soldiers, with the four white men, met the assault of the infuriated throng, who wild with fanaticism and the exultation of feeling their prey in their grasp, swarmed to the attack. No _ flincli- N HH : VV, ing, no wild firing was to be seen inn the gallant liitle band that met and re- pelled the attack. Agoim and again did the , Afghans, like a recurring wave, forced on by the pressure of those behind, vain- ly essay to win their way into the house. Each effort but increased the heap of _ slain that _— fast 70: A large assortment of which that statesman is alleged to Lave expressed his intention not to assume} the Liberal leadership. The British fleet in the Pacific is to be reinforced and none te soon, for it is far too weak to protect the important interest there confided to it. Russia has a couple of ironelads in the Pacific while England has no more, and one of these is on the eastern shore of the Pa- cific and, therefore, not readily avail- able for any warlike operations against Russia. Meeting a newsboy whose face was scarred with scratches, and looked like & map of some great railroad centre, a newspaper reporter asked the young: ster what the matter was. ‘Feller spoke disrespectful of my sister ; said he’d bet she was cross-eyed, and I sail ed in.’ ‘Is your sister cross-eyed ?’| asked the reporter. ‘Hain’t got no sister, was the reply. ‘ it was the prin- ciple of the thing that I got licked for.’ A gentleman sent his Irish servant up to his room for a pair of boots, and at the same time told him to be sure and get mates, as there were two pairs in the closet. Patrick returned with two boots, but odd ones. ‘Why don’t you see that these boots are not alike— one is a long top and the other a short one ?’ said the gentleman, out of pa- tience with the fellow. ‘ Bedad, your honor,’ said Pat in apology, ‘ and it’s true for ye; but thin the other pair was just so, too !’ The King Cetewayo received a les- son in the social duties of Civilization while zoing to Cape Town on the Na- tal—he was photographed! We will do His Majesty the justice to say that he submitted to the operation at first with extreme reluctance. Stratagem was necessary to get him on deck, and he appears to have regarded the camera with much apprehension as something which might go off and hurt him. When he found that the portraying*pro cess caused no pain, he kept still enough to furnish a negative; but when the insatiate photographer begged him for another, the King sternly refusel. One, however, will be sufficient to furnish all the picture shops of the Strand with six-penny copies, and the ex-king will soon figure there, and by his supreme ugliness prove a valuable set-off to the charms of Mrs. Langtry and other British ladies. —_——___-- <> eo Boschees German Syrup ean now be purchased right at home, it is the most suecessful preparations ever introduced to our people. It works like a charm in all eases of Cousumption, Pnuemonia, Hemorr- hages, Asthma, severe Coughs, Croup and all other ‘Throat and Lung Viseases. No person has ever used this medicine without getting immediate relief, yet there are a great many poor, suffering, skeptical persons going about our streets with a suspicious cough, and the voice of consumption coming from their lungs, that will not try it. If you die, it is your own fault, as you can go to your druggist and get a sample bottle and tryit; three doses will relieve any case. Rogular size only 75 cts. MAIL NOTICE. AILS for Great Britain will be closed at aVi 10 o'clock, p.m., on THURSDAY in ewh week, to be forwarded via Rimouski, and also on MONDAY, the i3th and 27th inst., at 4 o’cléck, a. m., to be forwarded via Halifax. Mails to be forwarded via Sunimerside and Shediac and also for all places on the route to Summerside and in Prince County, wiil be closed dai'y at 5.30 o'clock, a. m., also for Summerside direct, at 5 p. m. Mails to be forwarded via Steamers to ) Pictou will be closed every MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY and SATUR-. DAY, at 5 o'clock, a. m. Mails for Georgetown and Souris East, and all re on those routes, will be closed daily at 6 o'clock, a, m. Post Office open from 8, a.m., till 9, p. m. A. A. MACDONALD, Postmaster. accumulated around the house. Cowed by their reception, they withd ew to the cover available from walls and houses, and from their vantage grounc poured a hail of lead into every opening in the building. Gallant Hamilten, so lately adorned with the Victoria Cross, adorned it by his heroic bravery. He exposed him- self undauntedly to the hottest fire, fora time he seemed tq bear a charmed life, but at length a bullet pierced his heart, and he, fighting nobly, fell. Dr. Kelly ran to his aid, and a bullet speedily laid him low too. : Jenkyns was the next to fall. Cavagnari, Dress Materials still unhurt, cheered on the gradnu- ally lessening band; his presence in- : : spired all. Cheerfully and resolutely they and Trimmings dealt out death to manya_ treacherous 9/Afghan. Cavagnari would strike while he could ; he ordered the treasure chest to be emptied into the courtyard ; the fire mo- mentarily ceased. The Afghans, yielding to their greed, and thinking resistance over, crowded to seize the glittering rupees. Ina moment our men concentrated their fire on the crowd struggling for the plun- 5 A fire more infernal than before was der. ULSTER CLOTHS, Per “ Nestorian,” “ Prince Edward,” and other Steamers. MANTLES and MANTLE soon re-opened by the attackers, and now, to their other misfortunes, the magazine of the defenders exploded, and the roof was on fire. With numbers reduced by half, fire within, bullets from without, nothing daunted, —_ — — te a ; but the reduced numbers told—a sudden rush FELT & STRAW HATS, of the enemy gained the door, that feeble barrier gave way; yet no sign of fear was shown—all met their death fighting. A surging throng filled the room where Cavagnari, a jemadar, and three natives were. vag 3 revolver oT, three ' times, the death-kne!! of as many Afghans, Black Ostrich Feathers and then a blow frou a heavy Afghan knife laid him low, His i:urderer did not long AND TIPS survive; with one tiow of his sabre the : jemadar swept off his head. A few more such blows he mace, and then he lay beside his master. But on» escaped, the narrater of the tale tome; hh» nid in a bath. The roof was now blazing, 3 part had fallen on the dead body of Cavagnari, so the crowd (did not wait to search, but dragging the bodies of the killed from the burning house, they did nei search for any conc: ued per- sons, and so my inforimant escaved. He was a man who was thoroughly couversant with the Afghan tongne, and, being a FRILLINGS, Mussulman, he managed after lis name from the house, to pass himself off as a Cabuli. Tie bodics were treated with all unmentionable indignities which <Asiatics FANCY WOOL GOODS, inflict on their enemies. From eight WHITE & GREY COTTONS a. m., till two p. m., the attack on the Residency continued. Yakooo had plenty of other troops besides those that attacked the Residency, yet he made no attempt even to send them to the rescue. Daoud Shah, the Commander-in-Chief, found a suthcient reason in the pelting of a couple of stones at him not to inter- SHIRTINGS, SHEETINGS, fere. Yakoob’s son a mere boy, visited the SHA WL85, scene of attack, but being politely told not to interfere, could not conquer his feelings of sympathy with the slayers of the Kaflirs; J he, too, did nothing. One noblé old man there was, a Mollan (a mussulman priest), who sought Yakoob during the attack and begged him to interfere, and reproached him with the disgrace of killing a friend and an ambassador ; but Yakoob said: ‘‘I : ' : can do nothing.” It is stated tliat all was Ladies & Gents Underclothing, ' Yakoob’s designs, and the seeming mutiny ,of troops was but a skillful cloak for the murderous act of his own origination. It is strange that at the massacre of Mc- Naghten of the former mission, a Mollih had similarly reproached the Ameer, and that his words were the means of saving Hxcellent Teas ithe lives of George Lawrence aad others of ’ the misson who had been seized, and were momentarily expecting their death. No such good fortune was in store for our un- | fortunate countrymen. _ NOTICE. OHN MeliT’y RE, Sho miker, wishes to inform his customers in town and T & coutftry that he has REMOVED from his old stand to his new place, next to Mr. Snel- grove’s, Grafton Street, where he will be glad ; to see all his old customers, and as many new ones as may give him a call. I work cheap “Wareete tt "NO SECOND PRICE. J AMES D es B RIS AY, aigptch Repairing done with 83 QUEEN STREET. | LADIES’ BEAVER, BONNETS, &c., COLORED TIPS, &e., SILK & VELVET RIBBONS, HAT ORNAMENTS, TWHEDS, Paper Hangings, c., eB Post Otfice Charlottetown, Ooc, 8th, 1879, By THE DAILY EXAMINER, Ch’town, Oct. 4, 1879. for the latest news—local and telegraphic | = «NOW'S THE DAY” AND - ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. “THE EXAMINER” supplies to country | districts all the home news--whi.. a foreign paper cannot clo. Send One Dollar by registered letter or /money order and get the CHEAPEST AND BEST oaper published in P. E, island. N. B.—-Persons who have relatives or friends in any part of Canada, the United States or Great Britain, may have them pro- vided with Tug EXAMINER for a year on pay- ment of One Dollar—postagé paid by this{ fiice, This is the very cheapest way to pro- vide a friend abroad with the Island news. Mortgage Sale. TO be Sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, at the. Court House in Charlottetown, in Queen's County, in Prince Edward Island, on Tuesday, the second day of December Next, 1879, at the hour ot twelve o'clock, noon, by Virtue of a Power of Sale in an Indenture of Mortgage dated the eight day of y; 1873, and made bi cersen’ ieeaaliee Ae tin, of the one part, and Edward Jarvis Hodgson, of the other part, — LL that tract, piece and parcel of land situate, lying and being on Township number Sixty-two, in Queen’s County, in the said Island, and bounded and described as follows, that is to say : Commencing at a stake fixed at the edge of the Creek making John Nicholson’s southern boundary line and run- ning from thence due east fifteen chains, fifty links; thence south three degrees east thirty- four chains; thence west ten degrees north sixteen chains and fifty links; thence west tifteen degrees north to the edge of the dry land; thence following the courses of the ary land along the inner edge of the marsh north- erly and easterly tothe place of commence- ment, containing eighty-seven and a half acres of land, a little more or less, together with the appurtenances thereto belonging. For further particulars apply at the office of Messrs. Hodgson & MeLeod, Solicitors, Char- lottetown. Dated the 27th of August, 1879. EDWARD J. HODGSON, [aug 28, oaw till sale]—mon ; 73,620 MORE SINGER SEWING MACHINES SOLD IN 1878 THAN\IN ANY PREVIOUS YEAR. In 1870 we sold 127,833 Sewing Machines. sé 1878 sé sé 356,432: ae sé Our sales have increased enormously every year, through the whole period of ‘‘ hard imes,”’ ‘ ; We now Sell Three-Quarters of all the Sewing Machines Sold in the World. Waste ne Money on ‘cheap’ Counterfeiis. aa Send for handsome Illustrated Price List. ROBERT YOUNG, South side Queen Square, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. Ch’town, March 18, 1878-—2aw tf -~-——— —— eee CATA RRE. fonst cutional Catarrh hemody CURES CATARRH. Tear what a Reverend Gentleman says of the Constitutional Remedy. | lr. J. B. Harpine, Esq., Brockville, Ont. :— Dear Sir—Itis now two years since your ‘‘Censtitutional Catarrh Remedy’ was intro- duced tome. Ihave waited this ong to see i? the cure would remain permanent before do- ing this, my duty, te you, as at first the happy effects seemed to me to be “‘too good rg true.” I was afilicted in my head for years before I suspected it to be Ca‘arrh. In reaiingin your Circular I saw my case described in many par ticulars, The inward “drop” from the head had become very disagreeable, and a choking sen-ation often preveating me from lying long, I would feel like smothering and be compelled to sit up im the bed. My health and spirits were seriously affected. When your agent came to Walkertown in August, 1876, I secured three bottles. Before I had used a quarter of the contents of one bottle I found decided re- lief, and when I had rfsei two bottles and a third, | quit taking it, feeling quite cured of that ailment, and have not used any since until of late I have taken some for a cold in my head. A sense of duty to sufferers trom that loath- some disease, Catarrh, prompts me to send you this Certificate, unsolicited, with leave to make wiat use of it yon may see proper Yours truly, W. TINDALL, Methodist Minister. Port Elgin, Ont., Aug. 24, 1878. Ask for Littlefield’s Constitutional Catarrh | Rericdy and taxe no other. T. J. Lb. Harprye, Dominion Agent, Brock- | ville, Ont For sale by all Druggists at only one Dollar per bottle. BUY if. ~ . m . TRY iT, ATENTS and how to obtain them. Pamph- et of 60 pages free upon receipt of stamps for postage. Address GILMORE, SMITH & O©O., Solicitors of Patents, Washington, D.C, ‘NOW'S THE HOUR.” SUBSCRIBE The Weekly Examiner, Prince Edward Island RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 12. Summer Arrangement. ON AND AFTER TUESDAY, MAY 27th, 1879, TRAINS GOING WEST. _ Nos. 1 & 3,! No. 5. | No. 7, Express, | Mixed. | Mixed. a ee | ee _~- STATIONS, S ictidliiiainigis Goorget’n..| Dp. 7. 10am! Dp. 3.45pm Cardigan. .|Ar. 7.30 ** |Ar.4,14 ** | Mt Stwt Je Dp.840 : Dpare a Royalty Je ““ 9.38 oe sé 7.18 ‘sé Ar. 9.55 “* |Ar.7.40 * ‘Lop, 6. 20am | Dp10. 05am) Dp, 5.25pm : lcs can of Lee. Royalty de 6.37 Dp10.30 “) 6 547 NWiltah’'ve} ** 7.18 */| 1125 * | * Gap “ Hunter R’r! “* 7.25 “| *11.40am' * 6.57 © Ch’town .. Breadalb’n; ‘* 7.53 ‘* | ‘*12,.23pm! “* 7.36 “ O'ty Line. .| * 9,00 “812.34 “1 «7.45 « Kensingt’n! ‘* 8.28 **| ** 1.16 **| ** 826 S'mm'rside |r 9:10 sé D235 ‘ anges” Wellingt mlAr, ae i "a: Port Hill. .| ** 10.20 **| ‘* 407 ‘, Leers.. |) “AL. “| * 621 “ “é 6.40 “ec Alberton. | ** 12.00pm Tignish ...i ‘12.40 “ (Ar. 7.40pm __TRAINS GOING EAST. | Nos. 2 & 4) No. 6, No. 8, Express. | Mixed. Mixed. STATIONS, | Tignish... ./Dp.5.15am Dp.6.20am| Ar.7.15 “!) ) { | a Alberton. .| ‘* 5.55 ** Dp.7.45 ‘ O’Leary...| “6.41 “| “* 8.54 Port Hill..| “« 7.38 “| “10.20 “ Wellington| ‘ 8,09 “| ‘11.08 * a ~ yy [Ar 8.45 * }Arl2.05pm S'mm'rside |1) 5.30pm! Dp12.40 ** |Dp.9.05 am Kensingt’n! ** 5.52 | © 1.16 “| “ 9.4) « C’ty Line..| ** 6.24 **| ‘* 1.55 **| ‘10.20 “ OEE ae ‘*¢3).0¢1 * 2a “1 ‘Gag, « Hunter R’r! “ 6.57 “| “2.44 “| “11.07 « NWiltsh’re! “7.12 “) “ 3.01 “| “11.95 « pa Pee * ee ae Royalty Je} ‘* 7.49 Dp.3.55 “ 12.18pm Ch’town .. 'At- 8.05 “ 1Ar415 © aed « Dp.4.30pm! Dp. 6.50 am : Royalty Jc| ** 4.49 **| ** 7.13 ** ’ 5.45 | Ar. 8.30 * M. Stw't Jel 6.00 « 'Dp.8.50 “ Cardigan..| “ 7.03- “| “10.16 “ Geo’town..|Ar.7.25 * |Arl0.45 ** SOURIS BRANCH. Trains Going West. No. 9 Express|No. 11 Mixed. 2.50 p. mm» STATIONS, OE so coc -..|Dp. 6.15 a m. Harmony...... ae St. shee - Jee ee ee © Morell........| * 7.68 “ 1 6.00 * Mt. S’tw’t Jnc,./Ar. 8.25 “ |Ar. 5.40 p. m. Trains Going Eas. |No. 10 Express|No. 12, Mixed STATIONS. Mt. S’tw’t June. |Dp. 5.55 p. m.|Dp. 8.45 a. m MOG oc ages | (het ee St. Peter’s...... ae i ae De... ae" eee Souris... ........ |Ar. 8.05 ‘* j|Ar1L35 ALEX. MACNAB, Sup’t and Engineer. Railway Office, Chtown, May 22, 1879. —pat pres h ane sp sj kea 61 Steam Navigation Co, Steamers MAY. 1879. NTIL FURTHER NOTICE the Steam- ers “* St. Lawrence” and “* Prin- cess of Wales” will leave as under :— NOVA SCOTIA. From Charlottetown to Pictou, every MON- DAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY and SATURDAY mornings, at five o'clock. Returning” from Pictou every TURSDAY WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY, on arrival of morning train from Halifax,3 GAPE BRETON. Leave Pietou for Hawkesbury every MON. DAY and THURSDAY, on arrival of m train from Halifax, connecting both ways.wi stage and Steamer ‘‘ Neptune,” te and frem Sydney and Bras d’Or Lake. Returning to Pictou same nights, connect with 10 2. m. Train TUESDAY and FRIDA for Halifax FOR CANADA AND UNITED STATES. Leave “unuuerside for Point Da Chene EVERY DAY about 9a. m., on arrival of morning train from Charlottetown. Returning to Summerside EVERY NOON, on arrival of morning train from St. John, By order, F. W. HALES. Charlottetown, May 6, 1879. GRAY’S SPECIFIC MEDICINE Trade msex. The Great *RAve MARKs (me, English Rem- “Aedy, an unfail- @ ing cure for Sem- > inal Weakness, Spermatorrahe a, ¢ Impotency, and SNES“ Fe all diseases that Before Takingfollow as a se- After quence of self-abuse; as loss of Memory, Uni- versal Lassitude, Pain in the Back, | Dimness of Vision, Premature Old and many To Inventors and Mechanics, ‘other Diseases that lead to Insanity or Con- ‘sumption. sg. Full iculars in our pamj phlet, which we desire to send free by mail to ers 1 Suen ba Specific Medicine is wee y ruggfsts at $1 per package, or six . ages for $5, or will Ga’ caus free, by i on ‘receipt of the money, by addressing The Gray Medicine Co., oronto, Ont., Canada. N. B.—The demands of our business have necessitated our removing to Toronto, to which place please address all future communi- cations. ' g@ Sold in Charlottetown b Drugists ‘and by all wholesale and retail Druggists im ‘the United States and Canada, | January 24, 1 79 Pg git gE IA HD Hne iene