: i Pe a a eae THE EX AMINER. VOL 2. BLANK BILL - HEADS BLANK STATEMENTS, BUSINESS CARBS Furnished promptly and cheaply, to order, at the EXAMINER OFFICE, INGS’ BUILDING, Corner Great George and Water Streets. CHEAPEST YET! In Connection with our Cheap Dry Goods sale We will offer our entire Stock of BOOTS & SHOES, of about $2,000 worth, at cost to cle r, <© isisting of- Men's Wellington Boots. Men’s Leather Congress Boots, Men's Felt Congress Boots, Men's Larrigans & Overshoes, Men's Felt and Leather Slippers, Women’s Leather Boots, (Elastic and Laced), Women’s Felt Boots, “ oe Women’s Slippers & Overshoes, Misses’ & Children’s Leather Boots. COME ONE AND ALL AND CET BOOTS CHEAP J. B. MACDONALD, QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN. Jan. 9—ne pat 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. Dec. 27—tf L CARD 10 THE PUBLIC WuHltle taking this opportunity of thank ing our numerous customers for the jiberal mauner in which they have patron ed CUR NEW STUDIO, we would inform them that we have now increased facilities for the production of first-class work, and are prepared to make Puootocrapus of a Style and Quatily that has never been befare allempled in this Cily. We have on exhibition, at our Kooms, a lar;e number of Photograps «of every var et’, including the EBAUTIFUL PHITO- ENAMEL he most beautiful styie of Photograph known, possessing a softness aud delicacy of coloring that has never been equalled. This elegant picture has become deservedly popu ar elsewhere, anu cannot fail to be- eome so here. Though the finish of our Photographs cannot be excelied, we would direct alttea- tion to the beaultitul Glaece Pictures which we make. They possess a highly enamelled surface, and are practically indes- tructible, snd will retain their freshness and beauty fur any length of time. I[f they become soiled they can easily be cleaned, as they will vot lose any of their beauty by being wet, ‘This valuable quality, com- bined with their remarkable elegance, make them very suitable for presents; while the difficulty of their production will prevent them ever becoming so common as to lessen their value. Our patrons cao bave one or all of their Photos finished in this style—an advantage which cannot be obtained elsewhere. We give special attention to making Groups of Fam:lies, Societies, Schools, &c Our pictures of children are sufficient evidence of our success in this difficult ranch of our art. Our ¢NLARGEMENTS, finished in India Ink, Pastel, Creyou, Oil and Water Colors, have made a favorable reputation for them selves throughout the Lower Provinces. Parties intending to have Photographs made will find it to their advantage to sit early, a8 the number of our cu :tomers makes some delay iu the delivery of the Photos unavoidable. We prefer to have eur sitters come by appointment. Photographs can be obtained for less It Contains Twenty-eight Columns, 1878. | ‘Dra Ee) Pal FURNISHES MORE NEWS, FOR LESS MONEY THAN ANY OTHER PAPER IN THE PROVINCE. a nearly every one of which is in closely set READING MATTER. CONSIDER OUR TERMS: SINGLE COPIES to the 3lst December, 1873—thirteen months—$1.00 in ad- vance. SIX COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $5.50 in advance. TEN COPIES to on address, or addresse. separately, as desired, $9.00 in advanced FIFTEEN COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as required, $13.50 in advance. TWENTY COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $17.00, IN DULL TIMES —GET THE-— c2 The Weekly Examiner is acknowledged to be ahead of any other paper in the Province in the item of LOCAL NEWS. and is always well filled with Political, Shipping, Commercial and General Information. The debates of the Local Legislature will be rams and letters from ‘‘Our Own Ottawa orrespondent” wiil contain everything of in- terest transpiring in the Dominion Parlia- ment. A’ Good Story will”be made a specialty. The Daily Examiner Will be sent to any part of the Province, the Dominion, United States or Great Britain on receipt of money elsewhere ; bul in this case we ask that quality be given the preference; as- suring the public that they will tlad our eharges very moderate. ROSS BROS,, Cor. Queen and Dorchester Streets, opposite Connolly's Bank. Bept. 19, 1877—9en eod COAL! ‘COAL! OUND & NUT at w. W. CLARKE’S. For Six Months, - - - - - $2.50 For Three Months, - - - - 14.235 For One Month ----- -50 earefully and impartially given. Special tele-’ BOOK & JOB PRINTING! neatly and expeditiously executed, A’l THE “EXAMINER” OFFICE under the careful supervision of J. W. MITCHELL. W e are now in a position to execute orders for all kinds of Printing, such as LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS, CIRCULARS, CARDS. PAMPULETS, DODGERS, HANDBILLS, POSTERS, AND ALL KINDS OF Bank and Legal Blanks, AT MODERATE PRICES. Office :—Ings’ Old Stand, Corner Great George and Water Streets. bn A 1878 PRICE 12 CTS. Wholesale and Retail at QUEEN SQUARE, and sold by all respectable dealers throughout the Island. Jan. 3— HERRING! HERRING ! E have on hand a choice lot of HER RING—Barrels and Half-Barrels. Also ES HAPEST AND BEST { a large quantity of CODFISH, which we will sell cheap. W. P. COLWILL. Ch’tow, Jan. 21—3in WE CONTINUE TO SELL ALI OUR —ON THE-— Most Favorable Terms, IN STORE: 1125 Bbls. Flour, , 20 Boxes Axes, 500 ‘* Cornmeal, | 100 Boxes 3 in. Nails 500 Hhds Molasses, | 100 “ Ilsin. ** 30 ‘* Sugar, 50 Boxes Horsenails 50 Bbls W’te Gran- | 200 b’xes Confection- ulated Sugai, ery (assorted), 20 Bbls Crushed do | 800 Reams Paper (all 400 Chests Tea, sizes), 125 half Chests Tea, 50 Doz. Brooms, 75 Boxes Tea, | 50 Doz. Pails, 60 Boxes Glass, 150 Boxes Bartlett's 500 Coils Manilla, 500 Sides No. 1 Sole Leather, Blue, 200 Sides No. 2 ‘* | 100 Gross Bartlett's 230 Boxes Raisins, | Shoe Blacking, 100 Kegs B’ng Soda, 30 Bbls W’ng Soda, 75 Boxes Cheese, 60 Casks Vinegar, | 200 Boxes Soap, 50 ‘* Toilet Soap, | 35 Bags Nuts, +600 Boxes Table Salt | 50 Bbls. Currants, | 100 Tins Pepper, 100 ‘* Mustard, 40 ‘* Ginger, 40 ‘* M’xd Spices 20 ‘* Allspice, — 30 Packages Whole Cloves, 30 ‘* Nutmegs, 159 Boxes Yeast, 25 Boxes Flat To- bacco, 10 Kegs Isl. Twist | 20 Bbls. W’te Beans Tobacco, 150 Casks Kerosene, 15 k’gsAcadiaTwist | 25 Bbls. Onions, Tobacco, ' 50 Boxes Candles, Carvell Brothers. Ch’town, Dec. 22—2w 3aw pat ar 2w ag ADDRESS, W. L. COTTON, Ve'town, van, b-<t7 2aw | Gh'town, Dea. 6, 1877. THREE STAR BRANDY. 30 CASES Three Star BRANDY, . or S ” JAMES BYRNE, Great George Street. Jamuary 205i HARVIE’S BOOKSTORE, STAPLE GOODS 150 Jars Creamtartar ! ; ' Lecturers’ Fees. The fees of prominent lecturers, according to figures furnished by the American Literar Bureaa, are as follows : Gough, $250; Beecher, $300 to $600 ; Tilton, $150 ; Eli Perkins, $100; Phillips, $200; Scott Siddons, $150; Bret Harte, $125; Bayard Taylor, $125. Reduc- tions are, however, made from these figures for small towns. Beecher is worth $300 simply because he will draw that amount. Gough will draw $190, Anna Dickinson will draw $125; Mark Twain will draw $150; Eli Per- kins will draw $125, and Mrs. Scott Siddons is worth $150, Readers are not worth as much as original thinkers, simply because they are not original. They are copies. They simply read what the dramatist or humorist has writ- ten. Their material is not fresh. -&>- Great Suffering—Fifteen Thousand People in the Snow. Loupon,, Monday, Jan. 2lst, 1878.—A des- patch from Constantinople yesterday, to the ‘* Daily Telegraph” says :— Mr. Master, agent for the English Relief Fund, has just arrived here with a train full of refugees from Adrianople. These unhappy people have been in open cattle trucks three days. Many perished from cold weather. Last night fifteen were found dead in the trucks. The sufferings of all are described as awful. Mothers are reported in their frenzy to have thrown away their living babies rather than to see them die in their arms. As the train moved from Adrianople numbers of people tried to cling to the outside and framework of the carriages, and many attempted to ride on the buffers. At one station, where hundreds of people had congregated without food for two days, the men threatened Mr. Masters with violence if bread was not given them. Yesterday there were 15,000 women and children out in the snow atChorlon. Three trains full are hourly expected at Constantinople. It is not known where they will find shelter. The snow is several inches deep and is still falling; the cold is intense. All that can possibly be done is aflected by the administrators of the relief fund, but many lives are being sacrificed. a Mehemet Ali on England and Russia. Mehemet Ali recently spoke as follows to the correspondent of the London Times at and Russia :— “You might land thirty thousand men at once, and in a month or two thirty thousand more, and you might possibly bring from India an equal number, and so throw into the field a final force of one hundred and twenty thousand men. Now, sucha force would have been invaluable as an adjunct, altogether apart from the splendid moral support which Eng- land could have rendered us ; but I am not dis- posed to think that such a force will be able to stand against the Russian armies when we— who would have fought side by side with Eng- and—are exhausted. “The true issues of this war, and the true motives of Russia in making it, have been front deal more than those who have talked. There are two motives assigned to Russia. One is that she was roused to enthusirsm by the spectacle of the oppression of a race kind- red with her own, and the other that she made war to acquire territory. I am not ready to deny the existence of a popular sentiment the history of wars when a Cabinet has taken advantage of a popular phrenzy and turned the tide of popular excitement to work its own mill and grind its own political grist. ‘* Russia wants no present increase of _ terri- tory. Her object in making this war was to establish herself in the opinion of Europe as a great military power, and, therefore as a de- sirable ally. Hadshe crushed Turkey with the rapidity and ease she looked for, she could have made overtures to France and Germany, and would certainly have expected France and Germany to make overtures to her, one outbid- ding the other until the price she had fixed upon herself should be reached. In accordance with tha failure of one or of her programme may proceed the growth of another; but I do not believe that the demands of Russia will in- clude a yard of Turkish territory. Her pro- mises in thatregard were made to conciliate Europe, and she dare not break them even if she would. ‘** But Russia’s political game was never so shallow as to induce her to play for a mere bit of added European territory. She played for eater stakes. She desired to prove herself formidable, and to secure an ally combined with whom she might become dominant in Europe and Asia. Russia’s policy is never on the surface ; the roots of that policy lie deep, and she stretches cunning hands toward the future.” Some three thousand nnemployed workin men of Boston, claiming to represent 75, others, have had a procession to the City Hall and asked Mayor Pierce to relieve them. They were not in the least turbulent, holding a | quiet mass meeting on the Common and dis- ‘playing a banner inscribed on one side, ‘‘ No ' limitation to popular suffrage ; no extension of : terms of office,” and on the other, ‘‘On the ‘employment of labor depends the safety of the | republic, for hunger knows no law.” Their ,address to Mayor Pierce asked that the city take measures to employ the unemployed, and to support those whom it cannot employ, bor- |rowing the money for the purpose, Mayor | Pierce dissented emphatically from this pro- | position, but said he would do what he could ‘to furnish work to deserving men who belong in Boston, when the city needed work done. | The Liverpool Post’s London correspondent | telegraphs :—The opinion is gaining und 'that general election for mem of Parlia- | ment is near, and that Conservative managers ‘are already preparing. Therefore,secretaries of different Conservative associations have been in town during last week, consulting with va- | rious members of the Government. They re- | part strongly in favor of dissolution. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, JANUARY 28, 1878, Sophia in relat¥jn tothe policy of England strangely misunderstood by politicians, unless’ those who have been silent have known a’ in Russia, but this is not the first occasion in 4 ~s em oom asiannaae NO, 218 |The Deadly Embrace of a Cuttlefish. _ Early last August a party of Cape Flattery | or Makaw Indians, returning from a visit to |their friends (the Songish of Victoria), en- , camped the first afternoon out on the beautiful Bay of Metchosen, V. I. The weather being very fine, most of the party went bathing, and among the number a maiden of perhaps eighteen summers, who had accompanied her grand- father on the trip. Desiring seclusion, she went round a point away from the other bathers, and being known as a bold swimmer, 18 supposed to have taken a header into deep water. However taken, it proved to have been a plunge into the arms of death, for when the swimmers reassembled around the camp. fire the girl was missed, and, notwithstanding a diligent search that evening, could not be found. The following morning, with sad hearts, the party left ; But very soon those in the foremost canoe, on rounding the first point saw (the water being calm and clear) a human body as if seated on the sandy lea bottom, with what seemed like a flour bag immediately behind it. The natives knew what this meant, As soon as the canoes got together, two of the most active young men managed with daggers so to disable the monster (for it was a gigantic devilfish), that the octopus, with its victim, was brought to the surface. The foregoing facts have been communicated to our. inform- ant by an intelligent and respectable half breed woman from Metchosen, who saw the body of the drowned girl with some of the pre- hensiles of the mollusk still adhering to it. She compared the head of the octopus in size to that of a fifty-pound flour sack, full; the said tentacles were twelve in number, of dif- ferent sizes, and the largest about the circum- caren ofa man’sarm, Victoria (C. B. ) Col- onist. a General News. Lowell, Mass., had # $40,000 fire on Sunday last. Two more Mollie Magui have been ar. rested for murder committed in 1870. Paris has 100,000 trees, each of which costs about $36.00. They live about fifteen years. Owing to the bad system of London sew- age, several kinds of fish have forsaken the mes. Annie Parks, a pretty girl, eighteen years old, has disappeared from Seeshien, nN. ¥,, and enquiries are being made concerning her. _An exchange speaks of aman who recently bit another man’s thumb off in a quarrel. The poner does not say where the man came from, ut the Keneb Journal thinks he must have | been from Gnawthumberland. Perhaps with the best intentions, but yet with indiscretion, especially at the time of the year, the Burlington Hawkeye says that cures corns. If, adds the New York Herald, advice of this kind continues, everybody wil] be curing corns. Truth asserts that there is not a vestige o doubt that if Lord Beaconsfield had his own way England would have declared war against Russia last year, and that he is endeav. oring to drift England into a declaration of war now. The fact that consols rose one-quarter upon a report that Lord Beaconsfield had re. signed is worthy of serious consideration. While hearing a divorce case in Saco, Me. last week, Ju Virgin remarked that the should examine the matter carefully before giving his decision, He said he intended ereaiter to be very stringent in divorce cases. The Courts in Maine were now decreeing at the rate of one thousand a year; there been an increase from five hundred to one thou- sand within the past five years. If affairs went on at this rate, there would not be any married people in the State. A MAN IN THE River FOR THREE-QUARTERS or AN Hour.—The ice in the vicinity of the Kennebeccasis has for the past week been eon. sidered very dangerous. Many parties have received cool baths, free, in consequence of the many air-holes in that direction. Yesterday morning, Mr. Cronk, of Portland, while skat- ing, ran into an air-hole directly opposite Sand Point, and after laboring for upwards of three quarters of an hour to get himself out of his uncomfortable position, his cries for help were heard by Mr. John Souther, and his cousin and Mr. Davy, who had also been skating. As the ice near the air-hole was unsafe, it waa with the greatest difficulty that Cronk was taken from the water, and for some time afterwards the man was utterly uneonscious of his situa- tion. Mr. Cronk was immediately taken to Mr. Hannah’s, at Milledgeville, whee’ he was furnished with a fine warm suit of clothes and some brandy.—St. John News. New York, Jan, 16.—A terrible murder and suicide was committed in this city this afternoon. James Johnson, about thirty-four years of age, a picture-dealer, was heard auar- rellin oe a MS gems Soon after a scream was , and, on a neighbor going to John- — _ he on J chines and the woman ying close together in a of blood. Both were dead. From what eas subsequent] learned, it a pa that, after a brief q Johnson sta the woman sixteen times in different of the body with a shoemaker’s knife, and then cut his own throat with» razor. Both died withina few minutes. John- son was formerly very wealthy, and belo to a very well known family out West. Hig true name was John Jacques. He lived im reported to have heen at thattime a man of great wealth and social standing He. left after the fire with $14,000, and came to thie city. After remaining here a short time he went to Euro He returned some months after and got mto trouble about a lot of dis- monds and other precious ssones, which were worth about $6,009. Recently Johnson hae been very poor, and a few, d 8 ago 25 cents from @ nei, rr, cause of the deed of to-night is.at-pres Shots.’ The woman's a was. ie Surnam. was the wife of a cattle dealer, had separated from her busband, and with her four children ceme. bere with Jacques. Chicago previous to the great fire. He was. nna wre ‘A ae iy = i i t i