Che Examiner. - — =a WwW. I ae Manager COMPTON, & ILIditor. VOL. RR NOW OPENED. AT LONDON HOUSE! —Ex CASPIAN— RIBBONS, TURQUOISES, BLACK LUSTRES, BROWN LUSTRES, SILESIAS, DRESS LININGS !! Aug. 24—6in A. McNEILL, Auctioneer and Commission Merchant NO. QUEEN STRET, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. B. ISLAND xP AUCTION SALES, of all descrip- tions, allended to in city and country at moderate rates. May 21, 1877. H. VINNICOMBE, PIANO FORTE REGULATOR. ————n Au parties leaving their orders for Tuning at Bremuer Bros. will receive the best altention. All who have Pianos in Charlottetown would do well to have them tuned by the year, keeping their instruments in perfect order all the time. A visit once a year at least will be made t ai! parts of the Island. or oftner if required Ch’town, July 8, 1877. QUEEN INSURANCE CO, se Capital -- fwa Millians Stans oe eee kinds o Produce NSURANCE effected ona all Buildings, Merchandise, and Also, on Vessels ow the stocks. Specialjrates for isolated residences., Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union*Bank), Agent*for Prince Edward Island June — — a oe — PLASTER PARIS ! F AVBBLS. now on hand. JV CARVELL BROS. h’vown, Aug. 23—pat ar 2w GOLD PLATED Brooches, Ear rings, Lockets, Neckletts, Watch Chains, Scarf Pins, Sleeve Studs, Shirt & Collar Studs, Nickel-plated Alberts. A large assortment of the above Goods at sW. W. WELLNERS. Ch’town, Aug. 22—pat din eod SYRUVUPS RASPBERRY, STRAWBERRY,- GINGERWINE. LEMON, 42 15 and 20 Gatton Kegs, SUITABLE FOR TEA PARTIES. aa Vity CHLAP. CARVELL BROS, Mi MORE SOUR BRED Cillet’s Celebrated Cream Drv Hop Yeast Warranted to give Perfect and Universal Satisfaction. Price 12cts per Package— sufficient for 24 Loaves of Bread, oles ae: a For Sale at th: Flour & Tea Stor BEER & GOFF. ———— THURSDAY Steamer Arrangements. ee Prince Edward Island STEAMERS. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. eee Nova Scotia. Leave §Charlottetown for Pictou every MonDay, WeEDNrsDay, Tuurspay, «€ SATURDAY mornings, at 5 o’clock, con- necling there at 10 a. m., with train for Hatifax. Fare to Halifax, $4.10. Picnic Parties of Twenty and upwards can obtain Return Tickets at Charlotte- town Office to Pictou and back same day $1.00 each. Returning to Charlottet own. Leave Pictou every Turspay, WepNESDayYy Fripay and Sarurbay, about 2.30 p.m. on arrival of evening train from Hall- fax, CAPE BRETON. ave Pictou for Hawkesbury every Mon- pay and THurspay, 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- iug with 10 a.m. Train TursDay and Fri- DAY for Halifax. New Brunswick, Canada and United Siates, Leaves SUMMERSIDE every day (Sunday -xcepted) on arrival of morning train from Charlottetown, connecting at Sueprac with trains for each of above named places, and at St. John with Steamers of INTERN A- ONAL Co. for PoRTLAND and Boston. Also, leave Charlottetown for Summerside every Monday morning, about 3 o’clock. Returning, leaves Sueprac every day (Sundays excepted) on arrival of day train trom St. Jonny, 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 & MACINTOSH, Halifax ; Noonan & Davies, Pictou; A Grant & .'o “awkesbury* Hanrrp/’Bros., St. John. F. W. HALEs. OMY DIRECT TINE ‘RTO BOSTON, steamers Carrdll and Worcester Bot 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 a8 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 Saturday Morning and catching steamer at Hal.fax, and arriving at Boston iMonday morning. LEAVE CHARLOITETOWN Every ‘Thursday, punctually at 5 p.m. LEAVE BOSTON Fivery Saturday, unectually at noon, CARVELL 3ROS. Agent. Ch’town, June 7,31877 WARDED the only Medal, given to: COTTON YARNS of Canadian Manu factura at the CEN.ENNIAL EXHIBITION. Nos. 5’s to 10's, White, Blue, Red, Orange, and Green. Warranted full length and weight. Stronger and betler than any other Yarn n the market. Cotton Carpet Warp. No, 12’8 4 PLY IN ALt CoLors. Warranted fast. WM. PARKS’ & Son, New_ Brunswick Cotton Mills St. Joha,N B. ‘ May 23 77 Excursion Tickets. STEAMERS CARROLL & WORCESTER Parks’ Cotton Yarns, MORNING - - yy Td BOSTON AND RETURN, For $15.00, CARVELL BROS cece angels am maimaee denne ~ MONTREAL & ACADIAN STEAMSHIP LINE. HASZARD BROS., Agents. Montreal, Charlottetown, P, 3B. I,, Sydney, C. B., & St. John’s, N, F. ! 8. 8.“ VENBATA,” 8. 8. * VALETTA,” Capt. John A. Macmarsters Capt, Daniel Anderson Should sufficient freight offer, it is in- tended to run the steamers of this line during the present season, regularly, be- tween the above mentioned ports. The at- vantages offered. The steamers are in all respects first-class, well found, staunch, and well adapted for the route, having ex-~ cellent passenger accommodation. All freight delivered in good order at lowest rates. For freight or passage apply to HASZARD BROS,, Agents: July 16, 1877—eod tf / QUEBEC & GULF PORTS — Steamship _ Company ! “SERET” = - = - _. CAPT. DAVIDSON, * MIRAMICHI,” CAPT. BAQUET. ILL LEAVY E a.te nately from PICTOU (after arrival of Monday Afternoor Train from Halifax) every Monday Midnight; SHEDIAC (after arrival of Tuesday Train from St. John and Halifax) every Tuesday Afternoon; CHARLOTTETOWN, — every Tuésday, Morning; SUMMERSIDE every Tuesday 5 ——— — Pashebiae, Peree, = Father Point, aad al Above Named Places, LOW RATES. QUICK TIME CARVELL'BROS, Agents, Ch’town, lune 16, 1877,—méth THE DAILY EXAM. NER ISON SADE AT THE STORES OF ‘Henry A. Harvie, Theoph. L. Chappelle, and T. O'Connell. Price Only 2 Cents June 27, 1877—her 1 J. F. McKay, (NortH Sipe Quzen ,Squarr) IIas just received a varied assortment cf American and Geneva Waiches, Gold and Silver, Ladies & Gents’ Chains, Gold and Silver; Pian & Fancy Rings, Gold Lockets, Prooches, Larrings, Sluds, Watch tention of importers is directed to the ad- : —-= 7 (ry CA Beit ¢ " " AUG wd KD FAIRY MYTHOLOGY Gi ’ Toe Evi Eyve,—N Some years «20 a woman 1 Kervy declared thal -he was “o: ” uF the Evil Kye. She had no ain ier life and no c »mfort, and st d 2w-y, because of the fear that we com d by the followir x singular . Ince *— Every ‘ime thet she hapr 2° © Jeove home alone, aid that no s wit! ‘n call, she was mt bv 9 worst ally \ oe ! nown to her, yi'w, tiaing Lev e.s on ber in silence, with a ter)’ expre. ion, cist her to the gros ° 4 proceed! to boat and pinch her ti’) she wos ne. rly somseless ; after which her tom er « pp ared. Having exper.enc 1s iweatment scvs eral times the pox © woman fis ily abstained altogether “vom ier: oe the house, unicss protec'ed by @ s°1) 4a.‘ ¢r companion: and this precaution the «served for several years, dur og waich time she never was mole:t 4. Soa lust ':¢ began to believe the spe". was brokan, and (ho her strange enemy had de. rted for ever. In consequence she gre less careful about the usuai precaution, and one day stepped down slone toa lit:ie stream that ran by the hous, to wash some clothes. Stooping down over her work she never thought cf any danver, and began to sing £8 8} 2 used to do ia the li. it-hearted days befie the spe.. was on her, when suddenly adai<x shadow fe:| across the water and, looking up, sue beheld to her horror the strange woman on the opposite side of the little stream, with her terrible eyes intent - ly ixe Jon hee, as hard and stillas if she were ‘stone. Spring ag up with « scream of terror. sxe flung down her work, and ran towards tue house; but soon she heard footsteps Les hind ber, and .n an iastant she was seized, thrown down to the ground, and her tor- menter began to beat her even worse than before, till she lost all consciousness; aod in this state she was found by her husband, lying on her face, and speechiess. She was at once carried to the house, and all the bestow were lavished on her, but in vain. She regained sufficient consc:ousness +o tell them of the terrible encuunter she had gone through, but died before the night had passed away. It was feared that the power of fascin- ation by the glance, which is not necessar- ily an evil power like the Evil Eye was pos- sessed ina remarkable degree by learned and wise people, especially poets, so that | they could make tl-emselves loved and {ol- lowed by any g'rl they lik od, simply by the influence of the glance. About the year 1790, @ young man resided in the couuty Limerick who had the power in a singular and unusual degree. He was a clever, witty rhymer in the Irish language; and, pobably, had the deep poet-eyes that cha- racterise warm and passionate natures— eyes that even without necromancy have been known to exercise a powerful mags netic influence over female minds. ‘Ine day, while travelling far from home, he came upon a. bright, pleasantslooking farm-house, and feeling weary, he stopped and requested a drink of milk and leave to rest. The farmer’s daughter, a young, handsome girl, not liking to admit a stran- ger, as all the maids were churning, and She was slone in the house, refused him admittance. The young poet fixed his eyes earnestly on her for some time in silence, then slow- ly turning round left the hotise, and walk- ed towards a small grove of trees just op. posite. There he stood for « few mvs ments resting against a tree. aud facing .the house, as if to take some iasi vengeful or admiring glance, then weni » way Withe out once turning round. The young girl bad been wit hing him from the windows, and the gent .e moved she passed out of the « uke one in a dream, and followed h :, wily, step by step, down the avenur maiis grew alarmed, ind called :> father, who ran out and shouted . to sto», but she never turned or sevmxe. 1 heel. The young ma. however, ce found, and seeing ‘:e whole fam pursuit quickened his pace, first g. vi: fixedly at the girl for a moment. Imisediateiy she sprang t Weeds bm, cud .2y were both aimost oui of sig... wuen one of the maids espied uj ‘sce <i paper t ed to the branch of a tree where (ie poet Lod rested, From curiosity sie | six down, and the moment ive jun. was untied, the farmer's daugher + di only stopped, bes came quite si.) sau len her father ¢ame up she allowed sim to lead ber back to the house w.thou. res): ance, When questioned sie said that she felt herself d wn by #1; invii.b'e force to fols low toe yo ig tiranger wherever he might lead, and that » would have fo owed him tarou” 2 te wor', for her life seemed to be bound up in i':; she bad no will to resist, and was «. us of nothing else Silver Lhimbles, etc —ALSO— Watches, Clocks, and $Jewelry skilfully repaired.—Satisfaction gu -ranteed, and a work warranted. Aug. 21—I1m a 1000 MACKEREL BARRELS, FOR SALE CHEAP! ; Apply to | A. MCNEILL, Auctioneer. | Aug. 27—4in d but his preser:e. Suddenly, however, the spell was bioke1, and then ehe heard her ;. 2€1'3 voice. * ni Kaew how strangely ‘shehsd ac'-d. A the sume time the ‘power of the young man over her vanished, ‘and the impulse to follow him was no long. er in her heart. The paper, ou being opened, was found to cont. n fivem sier:ous words written in blo 1 *.din this order :—Sator, arepo, tenet, opeia, rotas. juese letters are so up or dow. the same words are produced; and when wriv.en in b:ood with a pen made of an eagle’s feather, tuey form a charm which no voman [it is said] can re.ist; but the incredulous reader can easily test the truth of this assertion for himself, care that effection and rural skill conid } 30.1877. NO. 90 _ These poplar stories are provokingly incomplete ar one cannot he!p regretting thai the roma © of “The Poet and the Farmer's Dau; happy termin: in veneral rr remembered [; that a comp! er was not brought toa ‘on; but the Irish tales are her incoherent, more like gments of ancient stories » well organized, dramatic composition, +» h lights well placed, and a string cates ophe. [he opening is ustally attraciive, with the exciting for~ mula, “Once .pon a tine,” from which one always expect so much; and there is sure Lo be an oid woman, weird and witch« like, capab’e of the mo.t demoniacal ac- tiuns, and a my: ‘erious man who promises to be the unredeemed evil spirit of the tale; but ia the end they both turn out childishly harmie -. ard their eyil actions seldom go beyond sealing the neighbours’ butter, or abductiug a pretty girl, which sins more mortal would be quite equal to even without t!.e “ gods of the earth” and their renowned leader, Finvarra, the King of the Futri-s. The following tale, hows ever, of a case of abduction by fairy power is well constructed. The hero of the nars rative has our sympa by and interest, and it ends happily, which is considered a great merit by the Irish, as they dislike a tale to which they cannot append, as an epilogue, the hearty and outspuken “ Thank God.’ =e - eee nee een ae ’ . 7 Se) tt News of the World. OE OEE IO Ya te rere CANADA, it is reported that Bishop Walsh, Lon don, will shortly succeed Archbishop Lynch, Typhoid fever is ruging in Quebec, and people are afraid tc return from the sea- side. The papers advise the schools and colleges not to open. V. Hudon, of Montreal, wholesale grocer and president of the Hochelaga Cotton Company, hac failed. Hig liabilities, it is believed, will not exceed $100 000. He has been forty years in business in Montreal. Archbishop Lynch, of Toronto, who is said to have resigned, has been in charge of the diocese for teventeen years, haying succeeded Mgr. de Charbonelle in the bishopric in 1860. He was rai ed to the archiepiscopal rank on his return from the Council of the V..tican, A gentleman, who asserts most of Cana« dian failures are due to ‘commercial gambling,” and who has just returned to this country from Britain, Says that mer- chants across the Atlantic are now be-~ coming very careful about giving Canadian firms credit. — Montreal Witness. A Liverpvol vessel Struck by a Water. spout. —The barquentine Albion, of Livers pool, N. S., Capt.~ McFarlane, from Balti- more for Demerara, put into Bermuda on the 18th inst.. having been struck by a waterspout and hove down on her beam end. She lost her foremast and yards, and head of her mainmist. ‘The vessel will make repairs, and be ready to sail for her destination in about ten days. — Hx, Chron icle, UNITED STATES, The tax on every man, woman and child in Pittsburg is $40 « head, A field at Walla Walla, Oregon, gives 3,000 bushels of clean wheat from fifty acres. In some cases the yield £0es up to eighty bushels to tae acre, LowELL, Aug. 25.— Ezekiel Worthen, Jr,, 27 years old, shot bis wife at her boarding house, 62 Lawrence Corporation last night, inflicting a wound which may prove fatal. ‘They had been married some years and they have had five children, She some t'm- since left Worthen on acs count of his avuse, and it was in order to persuade her t» return that he called on her last night. EUROPEAN, Robert Mat!ew, cattle dealer, Aberdeen, on the 27th’in .., was charged at Toronto With U.tering © rged notes to the amount of about fiv > t: Gus. ad pounds of the Ab- erdeen Town aud C unty Banks, and will be tried. Chief Justice Harrison refuses bail. The expense of horse racing in England is said to be $12 000,000 a year, Baron Rothsrhild’s horse Favoniers, a Derby winner, valued at $60,000, has died of typhoid fever. The instructions to Terry and Corbin, it .8 said, will be a demand for the surrender of Sitting Bu!! and warriors as prisoners of wa". The commission will be escorted from Fort Benton to tue Canadian berder by the Seventi Cavalry. The Canadian Government will then furnish an escort. Buff.lo are reported scarce and the | ndians are anxious to return to the United States, The Cabinet wili decide on the instructions on Tuesday, A Texas ‘amily living near Englewood, coniis'ing of father, mother and twelve children, count three hundred and twenty- eight fingers and toes as naturally belong- ing tothem. Each of the twelve children has twenty-four fogers and toes fully de« veloped, but the parents only have forty between them. Tbe Pope has recommenced work upon his memo.rs, begun eight years ago, his collaborator being Fa*her Dreschan, one of the most learned of the Jesuits. The work will contain all the confidential corres « pondence with Napoieon Ill., Victor Ema manuel and Charies Albert, but will not be published till .en years after bis deat eg Ee di a RO Pini ait ui Digs * RW, gee TOR