See: WwW. 3° kcoditor, & COTTON, Manager, yy XAMIMNECL. SATURDAY MORNING. oe). - OCTOBER 13 1877. NO. 128 VOL. 1. ~ A, ~McNEILL, hyctioneer and Commission Merchant Nd. al aot | > | ws RTS ner, CHARLOTTETOWN, ——— PR. ISLA ND | ’ ' ' a \UCTION SALES, O. al} descrip- y . 7 : gions, attended to in city and country at | moderate} rates May 21, 1877. ROYAL HOTEL, hing Sqguare, Saint Sohn. HAVE much pleasure in informing my ou l merous frieads aad the public generally, that nave leased the Hotel formerly known as the CONTINENTAL, and thoroughly renovated the same,making it, asthe ROYAL always had he reputation of being, ove of the best Hotels in he Proviaces. Excellent Bill of F«re, First-class Wines Liquors aad Cigars, Quad superior accommoda tion. Blackhall’s Livery Stable attached. " THOS, FPF. RAYMOND. 1IST7—6m July 3, REMEMBER. Electors of Ch’town, REMEMBER THAT THE DAILY EXAMINE daily on Sale at the Stores of — fl, A. HARVIE, South Side Queen St. T. O'CONNELL, Lower Queen St. PHEO. L. CHAPPELL, North Side Queen St. ARTHUR HASZARD, West Side, Qucen Square RICHARD WEERLS, Corner Hillsborough and Luston Sys. QUEEN INSURANCE CO. OF ENGLAND. Capital -- fw3 Millions Sterling, NSURANCE effected on all kinds o I tuildings, Merchandise, and Produce Aiso, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union*Bank), Agent for Prince Edward, Island June — CORNED FEF, COOKED 2 and 4-pound TINS and by the Pound. Ail who have uséd it know of its ex collence. FOR BALE AT BEER & GOFF'S, “Shop and Warehouse to Let. Pua Shop and Warehouse corner of Water and Pownal Street formerly occupied by the late N. Rankin. Terms male known on application to C. D. RANKIN, Druggist a ce a tne H. VINNICOMBE, PIANO FORTE REGULATOR. J LL parties leaving their orders for Tuning at Bremner Bros. will receive the best attention, All who have Pianos in Charlottetown would do wellto have them tuned by the year, keeping their instruments in perfect order all the time. A visit once a year at least will be madet ali parts of the Island, or oftner if required th’town, Jinly 18, 1877. Prince Edward SPTEAMERS. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. -——----—. Nova Scotia. Leave (Charlottetown for Pictou Tevery Monpbay, Werpnrspay, Tuurspay, «& SATURDAY mornings, at 5 o'clock, con- necting there at 10 a. m., with train for liatifax. Fare to Halifax. $4.10. Pienic Parties of Twenty and upwards can obtain Return Tickets at Charlotle- town Ollice to Pictou and back same day $1.00 each. Returning to Charlottet own. Leave Pictou eyery Turspay, Weonespay Fripay and SATURDAY, about 2.30 p.m. on arrival of evening train} from Ifali- fux. CAPE BRETON. ave Pictou for Hawkesbury every Mon- pay and Tuurspay, on arrival of morning train from Halifax, connecting both ways with stage and Steamer ** Neptune,” to and from Sydney and Bras d’Or Lake. Returning to Pictou same nights, connect- i.g with 10 a.m. Train TuesDay and Fri- vay tor Halifax. New Brenswick, Canada and United Siates, Leaves SUMMERSIDE every day (Sunday sxcepted) on arrival of morning train from “hatlottetown, connecting at Sfrprac with trains foreach of above named places, ind at St. John with Steamers of INTERNA- tiONaL Co. for PORTLAND and Boston, Also, leave Charlottetown for Summerside every Monday morning, about 8 o'clock. Returning, leaves Sueprac every day ‘Sundays excepted) on arrival of day train trom St. Jowyx, 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 & Macintost, Halifax ; Noonan & Davies, Pictou; A Grant & Vo 'fawkesbury * Hanrrp/]Bros., St. John. F. W. HALES ONLY DIRECT LINE Steamers Carroll and Worcester BotH Steamers are fitted with new Boil ers, and their Passenger accomodation arranged for every convenience and com- fort, and fitted up in elegant style. FREIGHT carried at moderate rates and 28 low as by any other route. EGGS in boxes and barrels handled, with the greatest care. SAVING TIME, only one business day used in reaching Boston, by leaving here Satarday Mcrning and catching steamer at Hal-fax, and arriving at Boston Monday moraing. LEAVE CHARLO I'TETOWN I{very ‘Thursday, punctually at 5 p.m. LEAVE BOSTON iCvery Saturdny, unctually at noon. CARVELL ‘ROS. ,Agénat. Ch’town, June 7.11877 Parks’ Cotton Yarns, WARDED the only Medal, given tor COTTON YARNS of Canadian Manu factura at the CEN ENNIAL EXHIBITION. Nos. 5’s to 10's. White Blue, Red, Orange, an Green. Warranted full length and weight. Stronger and better than any other Yaro n the market. Cotton Carpet Warp. No, 12’8 4 PLY IN ALI, CoLors. Warranted fast. WM. PARKS’ & SON, New Brunswick Cotton Mills ? St. Joha.N b. 5 Islanda | Excursion Tickets. TO BOSTON AND RETURN PER 'STEAMERS CARROLL & WORCESTER, ior S15.00. | Cijirtsii'. BROS SIN GER’ SEWING MACHINES ! The Perfection of Mechanism, So Light and Simple that a Child can Work them, So Durable that they last A Lifetime, Kight Thousand Machines now Manufactured every Week. To be had only from the Authorized Agent, Robert Young, PSouth Side Queen Square. Ch'town, Sept. 13, 1877. ee STADACONA rie and Life Insurance Company, NOtICe is hereby given that the Board 4‘ of Directors of this Company have made a further call of Four snstaulments, of Five per Cent. cach, on the Subscribed Capita! of the Company, payable at its Office, No. 93 St. Peter Street, (Juebec, as foliows :— Five per Cent. on or before the of August, 1877, Five per Cent. on or before the Tenth day of November, (877 ; Five per Cent. on or before the Eleventh day of February, 1878 ; Tenth doy Five per Cent on or before the Kleventh day of May, 878. By order of the Board? CRAWFORD LIN DSAY, ~ Secretary 1877 {jlr 0 DR. WILLIAM GRAY’S SPECIFIC MEDICINE, The Great English KRem- edy is an unfailing cure for Seminal Weakness,Sper- ) matorrhea, Impotency, and ail diseases that follow as Aa seyuence of Self-Abuse; ™ as Loss of Memcry, Univer- - m «al Lassitude, Pain in thes “2 REA. Back, Dimness of Vision SSS , BeforeTaking. Premature Old Age, and After Taking. many other diseases that lead to Jnsantty or Con- suiaption anda Premature Grave. a@>- $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, Ontario, Cunada. k= Sold in Charlotietown by W. R Watson, P. . Fraser, C. D. Rankin, Dr Dodd, and a Apothecaries’ Hall, and by ull druggistsanywhere WANTED, 7 Highest Cash price paid for Calf Skins and Sheep Skins, ROBERT BRIDGES, BIRD CAGES. Brep CAGES, Cheap, at SIMON W. CRABBE’S, ‘* Sign of the Stove,” Queen Street. Cl’town, Oct. 5—1w eee DR. T, W. POMEROY H*S returned to Charlottetown. He is staying at the ‘* OspoRNE Housr,” where he may be consulted until further notice,. Examinstions free. Ch'town, Oct. 4—6in* ROBERT YOUNG HAS JUST RECEIVED, Per §S. A MAGNIFICENT ASSORTMENT —-OF— S. Prince Edward, ‘NEW GOODS‘ Which he is offering at EXTRAORDINARY LOW PRIGES October 1, 1877. DIPTHERIA, AND HOW TO PRE- VENT ITS SPREAD. spirit power. A few weeksago he held a a friend who had been drowned: On the Che Massachusetts Board of [ealth re-| 20th ult., the night before he retired from cently issued ‘local authorities throughout the State the necessity of more thorough attempts to control diptheria, They say :— stances not entirely known very highly so, it is important that all practicable means ‘should be taken to separate the sick from ‘the well, As it is also infectious, woollen \clothes, carpets, curtains, hangings, etc., ‘should be avoided in the sick room, and only such material used as can be readily ‘washed. All clothes, when removed from ‘the patient, should be at once placed in |hot water. Pocket handerchiefs should | be laid aside, and in their stead soft pieces ‘of linen or cotton cloth should be used, jana at once burned. Disinfectants should always be placed in the vessel containing | the expectoration, and may be used some~- | what freely in the sick room, those being | especially useful which destroy bad odors | Without causiug others (nitrate of lead. ‘chloride of zinc, etc.) In schools there | should be especial supervision, as the dis | ease is often so mild in its early stages as ‘not to attract common attention; and no ‘child should be allowed to attend school | from an infected house until allowed to do /30 by a competent physician. In the case of young children all reasonable care should be taken to prevent undue ex- posure to the cold, Pure water for drinks ing should be used, avoiding contaminated sources of supply; ventilation should be insisted on, and local drainage must be carefully attended to. In country towns, privies and cesspools should be frequently emptied and disinfected ; slop water should not be allowed to soak into the surs face of the ground near dwelling houses, and the cellars should be kept dry and sweet, In cities, especially in tidal dis- tricts, basins, baths, etc., as now connected with drains, should never communicate directly with sleeping apartments. In all cases of diptheria, fuily as great care should be taken in disinfecting the sick room, after use, a5 in scarlet tever. Aiter a death from diptheria, the clothing disueed shoaid be burned or exposed to nearly or quite a heat of boiling water; the body should be placed as soon as prac- ticable in the coffiin with disinfectants, and the coffin should be tightly closed. Children, at least, and better adults also in most cases, should not attend a funeral from a house in which a death from dip theria has occurred, But with suitable precautions it is not necessary that the funeral should be private, provided the corpse be not in any way exposed. In the opinion of the Board, the fre. quent visitation of this disease, and especially its continued prevalence, my be taken as sufficient evidence of unsani- tary surroundings, and of sources of sicks ness to a certain extent preventable. The extracts quoted above, apply with as much force to many localities in the Maritime Provinces as they do to the stat® of Massachusetts. “wom + so SPIRI7 UA é ISM. A brief announcement was made _ in the papers a few days ago that the Rev. John Marples, a prominent Presbyterian Minis« ter of Toronto, had retired from the Church and become a_ spiritualist. Of course, this unexpected event has caused a great sensation’ Mr. Marples hws been a leading clergyman in hischurch, With» in the last few years he met in public de- bate a Mr, Underwood, a Free Thought lecturer from Boston, and his friends were sO Well pleased with his success in the dis- cussions that they made him the recipient of sundry valuable presents, Mr. Maur. ples has since altered his convictions, hows ever. Addressing a crowded meeting in Albert Hall, Toronto, on an evening last week, and referring to the subject of his conversion, lle said that twenty years ago when a student at Edinburgh he directed his at» tention to Spiritualism, seeking to over- throw it, and after witnessing many sean- ces came to the conclusion that it was based on fraud and trickery. Eighteen months ago he took the subject up again, and discovered that tnere Was in nature an elemet and power somewhat akia to elec, tricity, which for the want of a better name he called the Spirit of Matter. [i was the connecting link between the physi cal nature and the soul. That this ele« ment was known to the men of old he tirmly believed, indeed that it was des- cribed by Job, 4th chapter, 12th to 17th verse, and it was doubtiess through it that the Witch of Endor called up betore Saul the spirit of Samuel. The appearance of Christ to the disciples after the cruci» fixion, as related by St. Luke, 34th chapter, 36th to 40.h verses, was also, he thinks, due to the exercise by the Saviour of this wonderful power. He summned up spiritualism in this way: ‘* This spirit of matter is the medium through which the soul or Mind Operates in the human body, apd when through death or debility it imparied, it flies off into spirit world. It is the quintessence of soul.’ He had late iy witnessed some amazing exhibitions of 4 a circular. urging upon the the WVresbyterian Church, he conversed | With the spirit of the Rey. Dr. Burns at | one time the leading Presbyterian a | of Western Canada. ‘The spirit approached | him, and, after carefully feeling bis head, » . : . le a 7 . . ar >} & 2 ‘In the first place, as diptheria is a con- | “* Hiimed that he [Mr. Marples) must be tagious disease, and under certain cireum- | &#4Y- He then asked the spirit what it thought of Spiritualism and how it came to be there. Dr, Burns replied, in his na- tural voice, thatas a matter of fact he did not know that he was dead, although he heard so. Atall events he was sure he was not in heaven—and this convinced Mr. Marples of the existence of a Hades, or intermediate place of spirits. At the same seance the spirit of Rober! buchanan, the celebrated Scottish divine, appeared and told him to go on with his work of breaking down the superstitions of ortho- doxy. ‘This spirt also said that spirits dif- fered from mortals only in that they had put off the material body, but that they were nevertheless subject to the same weskness as when on earth, hence the of- ten contradictory and even grossly false statements of some spirits. Mr. Buchan- an said also that the reason why the spirits were more communicative in the dark than in the light was because darkness was es~ sential to their economy, just as it was ne cessary to cause a grain of wheat to sprout, and for all the other works of nature. Mr. Marples, we are told, ‘‘ concluded by prophesying that Spiritualism would yet overcome the mythical religions now in vogue, and promises to consult Mr. Buch anh On the subject of the creation, the crucifixion and the Day of Judgement. Miscellaneous News. PRR AARAAAAAA BOW "5 7 OS Pew The Canada Coffin Company's manufac- tory at Toronto was burned on Sunday morning. Loss, $20,000; insured for $10,- O00, An Insurance Company leaving Cnadaa, -A notice appears in the ‘ Canada Gas zette” announcing that the Scottish Pro- vincia! Assurance Co., bas ceased to carry on business in Canada. Mr. J. Montgomery Sears, the Boston millionaire; has a larger yearly income than the Prince of Wales. Judge Samuel T. Spalding, a prominent lawyer in Western Massachusetts, and for many years Judge of Probate, died at Northampton after a brief iliness. A blighted female in San Francisco, 63 years old, has brought a suit for breach otf promise of marriage against & gay deceiver of 70, the damage being laid at $15,000. lhe wife and three -isters of Gilman, the New York forger, offer to give up all their personal fortunes, some $150,000, to secure imunity from prosecucion of Gilman. Ohio—President Hayes’ State—has been curied by the Democrats by a large major« ity. The Republican majority in lowa has been reduced. A Prohibitionist estimates that about =100,000,000 more is expended yearly in the United States for rum than the total gross earnings cf all the railroads amount to. A Washington despatch says it is gen- erally conceded that a new Minister to Eogland will be sélected from New York. and Levi P. Morton, the banker, is-the first choice of a large and intelligent Class. ‘he rasealities of Gilman, the forger of insurance scrip, etc , mutiply rapidly, Ile swindled a Connecticut lady out of $12- 000, and another lady who requested him to register some Government bonds for her has never seen them since, Nothing is yet known of his whereabouts. A Richmond, Ind, despatch says Senatoi Morton’s digestive organs are unable to perform their proper functicns.and a deep~ seated conviction pervades the commu- nity that he will not recover. A despatch from Mayor Allen of Port Royal says there are forty-eight yellow fever patients there, They are in want of food, nourishment and nurses, and there are not enough convalescents to care for the sick. The New York Wor/d says :—An English polo club, has imported thirty mustangs from Texas. We venture to say that when thirty typical Englishmen, with eye-classes and mutton’chop whishers, get astride of those thirty mustangs, and those thirty mustangs begin to buck, there will be a crisis which will fully test the resisting capacity of the English coustitution. The Texan mustang laugheth a _ horse-laugh at the shaking of a spur with rowels less than three inches long, so judge how im- potant will be the remonstrance, “ 0. come, now; ‘ang it all, this won’t do, you know.” In the -‘Availanche” and “ lorest’’ col- lison the Court enquiry has decided that the ~** Avalanche’’ was primarily respon- sible. as according to the rule of road she should have given way to the “ Forest.” The Court reprimanded the captain of the ‘Forest’? for not acting with greater promptitude at the moment of collsion, but decided not to cancel or suspend his certilicate. The imes (financial) says: ‘Everything p ints to dearer money. It seems likely that even 5 per cent. as a bank rate of discount will not be sulficient to arrest the outflow of gold. One hundred thousand pounds of American eagles ordered for to-~ day. The attempt plant into conversation with the materialized spirtt of te Yio? aed ret eee we a Rae “ip cishthaliiaiaciicaratione