7 a (2 An SENN NL NO ee ara RP marae Sr Satoh RAP SRI eee or wer nee. eS ae Er eae ¥ mers ‘es ee op Po te oe em ey ~~ INER. ~) “~~ ete “VOL NO. 173. KGOBERET YOUNG UAS JUST RECEIVED, Per 8. 8S. Prince Edward, — y= NEW GOODS, Which he is offering at EXTRAQROISANY LOW PaickS October 1, siz. A. MCNEILL Nuetionger and Commission Merchant NO. A QUEEN STRET, HSLLOTILTON \, —_——— ANICTION SALES, of ail descrip- Hops, attended to in city and country at mederate rates. May 21, 1877. ROYAL HOTEL, Satri SO0AN. STUATE, Ainge HAVE much pleasure io informing my ou | merous friends and the public generally, that have leased the Hotel formerly kaowa as the CONTINENTAL, and thoroughly renovated the same,making it, asthe ROYAL always had he reputation of being, one of the best Hotels in he Provinces. Excellent Bill of F:re, First-class Wines Liquors and Cigars, and superior accommoda on. Blackhall’s Livery Stable attached. THOS, F. RAYMOND. July 3, 1877—6m —— = ee QUEEN INSURANCE CO. ee - fwo Millions Sterling, Capital ~SURANCE effected on all kinds o 5 Buildings, Merchandise, and Produce Aiso, on Vessels on the stocks. Specia] rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union*Bank), Agent for Prince Edward I[slanu June — American & Fereign Patents. Gilmore, Swith & Co., Successors to Chipman, osmer & Co. PATENTS procured in al! countries. No fers I in advance. Nou charge for services until the patent is granted. Preliminary examinations ree. Our valuable pamphlet seat free upon re cipt of stamp. Address, GILMORE, SMITH & CUO., Washiegton, D. C. —— ARREARS OF PAY, BOUNTY, ETC. EDERAL Officers, Soldiers and Sailors of the late war, or their heirs, are in maay exes entitled to money trom the Guver 9 meat, which has been found to be due since final pay- ment. Write full history of service and state amount of pay and bouaty received. Certificates of Agjutant Geueral U. S. A. showing service and hovorable discharge there- trom, in place of discharge lost, procured for a small fee. Eaclose stamp to Gilmore & Co., and ful] re- ply, with blanks, will be sent free. PENSLONS. PENSIONS. ’ LL Federal Officers, Soldiers and Sailors, & wounded, ruptured, or injured, in the line vilduty in the late war, avd disabled thereby, ao obtain a pension. Widows, and migor children of Officers, Sol- ders and Sailors, who have died siace discharge ot disease contracted or wounds and injuries re eived in the service avd in the line of duty, can procure pensions by addressing Gilmore & Co, Increased rates for pensioners obtained. Bounty Land Warrants procured for service in wars prior to March 3, 1855. There are no war- rauts granted for service ic the late rebellion. Send stamp to Gilmore & Co., Washington D.C., tull instructions. Jalp2e i977. — HAY! HAY! FoR SALE AT Ww. W. CLARKE’S. Water St., Ch’town, Dec. 1—eod tf Notice to the Public! ‘UPPLIES for the ‘Soup Kitchen” will , reach the Committee if left at the Store of Mr. Alex. Horne, Corner of Queen and /}- Fitzroy Streets. : Donations of money will be received by them through Dr. Dodd and Mr. J. Quirk, N. B.—Food for the sick carefully prepared by the Committee. Nov, 30, 1877. STEA IFICENT ASSORTMENT. | Leave MonbaY, WEpDNEsbDay, TiHurspay, «! PB. ASLAMD | 4d Prince Edward tsiand MERS. ~_— SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. Nova Scotia. Charlottetown for Pictou every SATURDAY Mornings, ac 5 vo clock, con- necting chere at LO a. im., with train for liaiifax. Fare to Halifax. $4.10. Picnic Parties of Twenty and upwards cau obtain Retarn Tiekets at Charlotte- towi Oece to Pictou and back same ny $1.00 each. Returaiag to Charloitet own. Leave Pictou every Tugspay, WEDNESDAY Fripay and SaTURDAY, about 2.30 p.m. on arrival of evening train from Hali- tux. CAPE BRETON. ave Pictou for Hawkesbury every Mon- pay and THURsDay, on arrival of morning train from Halifax, connecting both ways with stage and Steamer ** Neptune,” to aud from Sydusey aud Bras d'Or Lake. Returning to Pictou same nights, connect- ings with 10 a.m. Train Tugspay and Fri- DAY tor Halifax. New Brenswick, Canada aud United Siates, Leaves SUMMERSIDE every day (Sunday *xcepted) on arrival of morning train from Shariottetown, connecting at SHepilac with trains for each Of above named places, ind at St. John with Steamers of INTERNa- riOnaL Co. for PORTLAND and Boston, Also, leave Charlottetown for Summerside every Monday morning, about 3 o’cluck. Returaing, leaves Suepiac every day (Sundays excepted) on arrival of day train trom St. Joux, for Sum-nerside; connect there, without delay, with train for Char- lottetown. Also, leaves Surgmerside for Charlottetown every Saturday evening, about 6 o'clock. Agents: ALtMon & MacIntTosn, H:lifax; Noonan & Daviks, Pictou; A GRANT & .‘O Hawkesbury ~* Hanrxp/jBros., Sc. John. > F. W. HALES STEAM COOKING. MAYO'E STEAM CULINARY BOILER ! —_—— ILL the condensed steam is carried back into the boiler-- preventing unpleasant odors in the kitchen. Meat, Vegetables, Puddings, &c., may all be cooked at the same time, without mingling the flavors, while each article retains all its strength and aroma, and is more palatabie and nu- tritious than when cooked by any other mode. Qu exhibition and fur sale at BEER & GOFF 8S. a tae R. D. McRAE, 2 teacher of upwards of 25 years experience in the Province of Ontario, ex-Saperintendent of Schools for the Township of Kingston, intends (if sufficient encouragement offers) to open, during the winter months, Evening Classes, in Writic.g, Arithmetic, Algebra and E)ocu- tion. Mr. McRae would give his earnest atten- tion to Posting Books, Making out Ac- counts, Collecting, &c. Apply at 124 Kent Street. Two permanent boarders can be accom- modated. Chitown, Nov. 15, 1877— MORTGAGE SALE, be Sold, by PUBLIC AUCTION, on TUESDAY, the 12th day-of FEBRUARY, 1878 atthe Court House in Charlottetown, at thehour of 12 o’clock, noon, of the same day, under and by virtue of a Power of Sale con- tained in a certain Indenture of Mortgage, dated the 3rd day of January, 1860, and made between Peter McInnis and Mary his wife, of the one part, and Joun Kyigut, now deceased, of the other part —All that Piece and Parcel ofLand being partof Township No. 45, and situtuated near the head of Sours River, bounded on the west and north by land then n occupation of Donald McCormack, and on the east by land then in the possession of Angus McDenald, and on the saath by Souris River—containing fifty- one acres otland, being the farm then and until lately ia occupation of the said Peter Mclunis, together with all the Buildiogs and Appurten- ances connected therewith. For terms. and conditions of sale, apply to } Messrs. Hodgson & McLeod. Dated 9th day of November 1877. JAMES McFARLANE EDWARD J. HODGSON, vERNON H. KNIGAT Trustees and Devisees under the will of thelat | John Knight. Nor. 10—+t sale SAR Raf, ‘ < ; SeforeTaking. Premature Old Age, and After Takin many other diseases that lead to Isanity or Con. DR. WILLIAM GRAY’S SPECIFIC MEDIC NE. The Great English Rem- RE edy is an unfailing cure for Seminal Weakness Sper- matorriea, Impotency, and ger all diseases that follow asg@a # sequence of Self-Abuse; “4 as Loss of Memcry, Univer- dey. aul Lassitude, Pain in the prot ss Back, Dimness of Vision Vea eae \ sumption anda Premature Grave. #e~ Price, $1 per package, or six packages for £5, by mail free of postage. Full particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to send free by mail toevery one. Address WM. GRAY & CO., Windsor, Outariv, Cénada. ha Sold in Charlottetown by W. R Watson, P. . Fraser, C.D. Rarkin, De Dodd, and a Apotheecauries’ til, aad by all drug ristsany where EVERYBODY'S PAPER. The BEST and CHEAPEST in the World ; tor City, Village, and Coun- try, for Men, Women and Children in all Stations : The American Agriculturist, so-called because started 36 years ago asa tural Journal—hence its name—bit greatly enlarged in size and scope, without change of name, until it is now a large splendid, ///lus- trated Family Journal, adapted to the Wants, Wishes, Pleasure, and Improvement of every member or of every family in City, Village and Country—full of PLA'N, PRACTI- CAL, USEFUL, INTERESTING, RELI- ABLE, and HIGHLY INSTRUCTINE IN.- FORMATION. It has departments helpful to Housekeepers, and for Youth and Children, both /nteresting anc! [nstructive. Every volume contalns 530 to 650 Ori- ginal Engravings, finely executed and well printed on fine paper, which are PLEAS- ING and INSTRUCTIVE, sg No one can read a volume without get- ting numerous hints that will pay back many times the cost of the paper, TERMS, $1.60 a Year, (sent post-paid). Four copies $5.20 (31.30 each). Ten copies $12.00 ($1.20 each). Try it, in connection with the W2erKLY EXAMINER, for one year. ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, Publishers, 245 Broadway, New York “St. John Fire Waltzes.” TUST OUT, COMPOSED BY MAX. STERNE, PROFESSOR OF Music, SACKVILLE ACADEMY. The above Waltzes are really good. Get a copy. For sale at FLETCHER’S MUSIC STORE, Queen Street. Nov. 22, 1877. Clocks & Timepieces A VARIED ASSORTMENT, FROM $1.25 UCTPwaARbDs, WARRANTED, AT J. F. McK AY’S, North Side Queen Square, Noy. 24-- ViOLIN CLASS. \ R. VINNICOMBE has ovened a Violin I Class over Mr. Fletcher’s Music Score Ages of pupils preferred—from Eleven to Fifteen years. TrerRMs—$10a quarter, half in advance. Twenty-four Lessons a quarter; each Les- son one hour’s duration. Orders for TUNING may be icft at the above Slore. October 13, UNION BANK of P. E. ISLAND. Noe is hereby given that a Divi- AN dend, at the rate of Ten per Cent. per Annum, has this day been declared on the Capital Stock of this Bank for the past half year, payable forthwith at its Office here. GEORGE MACLEOD, Cashier. Charlottetown, Dec. Ist, 1877—6i TENDERS. "'e- ‘fed across the river to Cincinnati. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1877. | The Beauties of Paris. j , KEEPING THE TREES AND SHRUBBERIES IN ORDER—BOOK STALLS AND NEWSPAPER) STANDS. It costs $375,000 annually to keep the trees, shrubberies and seats upon the boule- _vards and in the public squares and gardens of Paris in order. It is estimated that the trees in the avenues and boulevards of Paris number 82,000 ; those in the cemeteries, 10,400, and those in the squares and court- yards of various buildings, 8,390. There are also 8,000 seats for the accommodation of the public. The expense of keeping up all the extra-mural recreation grounds, ex- clusive of the Bois de Boulogne and the Bois de Vincennes, is rather more than $60,000. The Bois de Boulogne covers 2,152 acres, and in summer 20,000 cubic feet of water per diem are used to lay .the dust, while more than 23,000 cubic feet are required to feed the ponds and cascades. The Bois de Vincennes covers 2,302 acres, and consumes nearly 50,000 cubic feet of water per diem. A sum of $45,000 is paid annuaYy by the proprietors of restaurants and cafes for the right of placing chairs and tables upon the pavement in front of their establishments, and about half as much is paid by ithe own- ers of shops for exhibiting their goods ovt- side their windows. The book stalls which are plaeed upon the parapet of the Seine, and the boot-blacks and commissionaires contribute to this sum, All the un. ccupied corners of streets and public buildings, where rubbish always finds its way in other large cities, are utilized, and the munici- pality obtains $0,000 for permission to erect stalls there for the sale of knicknacks. “A much larger revenue is derived from the kiosks in which the newspapers are sold, and this privilege has been leased to a com- pany for a term of fifteen years, which will expire in 1834. ‘The company pays the municipality a sum of 50 franes for each kiosk, and has also to bear the cost of keep- ing them in repair and lighting them. There are 309 of these kiosks at the present time, Sut the number will shortly be in- creascd to 300. The muncipality has the right of appointing the persons who rent the kiosks from the company, and fixing the rent, which varies from 5 franes to 30 francs a month, according to the situation of the kiosk. ‘fhe company obtains a large sum from the advertisements cut into the glass of the kiosk windows, in addition to the rent paid by the news-vendors. In ordi- nary years the public vehicles plying fer hire in the streets bring in a revenue nearly $740,000, and there are 150 cab- stands, to each of which is attached an in- spector, appointed by the Prefecture of Police. ri o Curious Case of Mistaken Identity. Cincinnati, Noy. 27.—A curious case of mistaken identity on one part and heartless deception on the other hand has just been brought to light in Covington, Ky. Seme eight or ten years ago a man named Igna- tius Goetz lived with his family in Lewis- bury, a village near Covington. Not pros- pering in his affairs he entered the regular army and went to Texas. After remaining there two years he received injuries of some nature and was discharged, and in- stead of returning home went to Chicago, turning up just before the great fire there. Here he fell in with a stranger named Allen, strongly resembling him in personal appearance, and the two set out during the fire to plunder and rob, in which scheme they were caught and narrowly escaped lynching. On being tried both men were convicted and Goetz was sentenced to serve six years in the Penitentiary, his partner being’sent only for four years. Upon reach- ing the Penitentiary they were both placed in adjoining cells aud became very intimate friends. Allen, after serving out his sentence, came to Covington, aud, finding Mrs. Goetz, claimed to be her husband. At first she would not believe him, but he finally suc- ceeded in convincing her and took up his abode with her. Everything passed quietly until about a month ago, when Goetz him- self returned, having served out his time. When the first meeting had taken place Goetz was informed of the deception that had been practised on his wife and at once sought out legal redress. But Allen had learned of his coming, and Goetz followed, with his family, and undertook further proceedings, but soon learned that an-- | he had fled this city and gone to parts un- Mayor’s Orrick, 29th Nov., 1877 * | known. The woman is respectably conect- eS TENDERS will be received! 4q in Covington, and is earnest in her pro- at this Office until noon of the 2@th day of December next, from persons willing to Contract to supply, for one year, the City Stables with Hay, Oats and Potatoes. The C il will not be bound to accept the | ; acca? . | Tammany Ring thieves, is a very candid | and outspoken man. lowest or any Tender. : WM. B. MORRISON, City Clerk. Nov. 30—pat t 20th dec GROCERIES. Hhds. SUGAR, Bbls. de,. 255 Packages TEA, 135 Boxes RAISINS, , 10 Bbis. CURRANTS, of 25 All of Finest quality and at lowest figures BEER & SONS. Ch’town, Nov, 30, 1877. | testations that she was a victim of deception. _—_—_— oS SD Oo E. A. Woodward, formerly clerk of the New York Board of Supervisors, and of the When examined be- fore the Tweed investigating committee a | few days ago, he acknowledged that he had | defrauded the city of $300,000. As he had ' returned half of that amount as a compro- ‘mise, he thought he had acted as squarely ,as he should act. | return the balance. He calmly assured the / committee that there was no such a thing as /an honest politician. Any man would have acted as he had done, and he would do the same over again if he got the chance ! | A schoolmaster cannot commit suicide withoutt stating the propositiou. A fort- He had no intention to ‘The Wretched Streets of New York. No street in New York is ever really swept, and the garbage from the kitchens is never really removed. The sweeping- machine traverses the principal avenues at night, gathering up a part of the outside layer of dirt, where the way is clear. A gang of lazy and decrepit scavengers follow the machine aiver a while, to do some fool- ishness with brooms. They collect into heaps a part of what has been thrown up in ridges ; and finally, after the heaps have been partly scatiered by the winds and pass- ing vehicles, the dirt-cart gathers part of what remains. When the butcher, and grocer, and baker, and drayman receive the carts which they have left in the streets over nighi, vast accumulations of unmolest- ed dirt and ru‘ bislr are disclosed beneath them, where the machine could not sweep and the Droom-}rigale would not. None of the a, paratus does its werk thoroughly. The machine, the broom and the shovel are managed with equal carlessness, and the men, being under no effective supervision, give for their pay only the fa*ntest presence of labor. ~~ 2008 -—---—__—_ Miscellaneous News. For three years a man has lived alone in a tenement house in Troy, N. Y., working at his trade as a wheelwright, doing his own cooking and having few friends. A sen- tence that was often on his lips was, ‘When aman can do nothing else he can die.’ Some days ago his body was found in his room, where he had built a fire in the char- coal furnace, closed the windows and gone to bed to die. On a play-bil'! he had writ- ten some rambling sentences : “Thus endeth the fivst lesson. 1 leave my daughter and my geandchild. So mote it be. Now will we vest the grand mystery of science. If a man die shai he live again! Where is my son! Where is my wife! Where they are, I shall be. I am glad my course is endd. How tired I am.’ Four Hunprp anp Forry-rour Trays a Day.—London is at length promised the completion of the underground railway. All that has been wanting to this since the opening of the Metropolitan line to Alder- gate has been the making of a line hardly over a mile in length from that station to join the District Company’s railway at the Mansion House. This is to be set about at once ; the prospectus has been issued. The Metropolitau Board of Works and the City of | Commiseioners of Sewers give a subvention in the aggregate of half a million. The District Company are bound to run at least 444 trains a day over the line as soon as it is completed, and these will traverse the whole of the inner circle without change of engine or break of any kind. The line will cost two millions sterling. Cavucuon’s Fiicut.—An Emerson special to a Chicago paper says Cauchon’s flight from Tetu, the i ion Agent, when the latter rode toward him for the purpose of welcoming him to Manitoba, ‘‘ will never be forgotten by those who were there. The new Governor was in a carriage, and when he looked back and saw Tetu waving his hands frantically, urging his horse to the utmost and madly shouting, he put his head, covere.l by a velvet skull cap, out of the window and yelled to the driver to drive like—well, something like Jehu, the son of Nimahi.” Surely his Honor took the gen- tlemanly Emigration Agent for an escaped Beauportite. A well sinker at Conches, near Rouen, in France, 18 years of age, has been extri- cated from a wel) after twenty days’ im- prisonment, caused by the giving way of amass of earth. Food was supplied him during that time, and his spirits remained so good that he frequently played cards with one of the men ame in liberating him, a task effected by sinking another well at a short distance and making a com- munication between. During the labor troubles in Pennsylva- nia last summer a Vigilance Committee was organized at Reading for the protection of life and property against lawless aggression. On the Ist of August a procession of works ing men was passing through the streets, and under a mistaken idea that the city was about to be sacked, the Vigilantes into the crowd, and three 1men were shot dead. Forty men have been fully indicted for the murder, and their trial has begun. A British member of Parliament, Mr. Jenkins, has devised an original way of spending a honeymoon. He has been in Seleetla viewing the horrors of war and ir- vestigating atrocities. One of the social stars of Paris is rebuked by a friend, who says, sternlp, ‘Cora, if I were you I should be afraid of having bad luck. The way you neglect your poor, old blind father is awful, and you so rich now.” Tue Fioops my Virers1a.—The damage by the floods in Virginia is said to be un- precedented in the inundated district. Along the James River hundreds of have lost from $100 to $5,000 worth of property, and many from $10,000 to $15,- 000. Inthe neighborhood of Buchanan, ‘twenty colored persons were drowned, and 'much destitution prevails. ‘Tn life, what has struck you most?’ night ago, a pedagogue in San Juan, Cal.,| was a card question read out to a sad mem- ‘shot himself after school hours,but not until | ber of an evening party. | he had chalked on the blackboard the words, | ‘* May this solve the problem. ‘* My husband,” ' replied the questioned, in the most, abstract jand innocent of manners. a NE 2 5 a :