Cie xaM iner. VOL. 1. iéPS"ER.. TUESDAY MORNING - - - . AUGUST 28. 1877. NO. 88 - miss GREGOR a SELECT CLASS for girls first of September, at her father's UppER PRINCKR STRERT. will 0 pe D gi the residence, tyhjects Tau rht-—English and French. TESTIMONIAL. | have great pleasure in recommending gre yiss Gregor as an ¢ flicient and conscientious Por vouUDg pupils. teacher for y¢ MARIAN ROBERTSON. Prince of Wales College. —— eee A. McNEILL, tictioneer and Commission Merchant NO. QU EEN STRET, CHSBlOTTETOWN, P. B. ISLAND AUCTION SALES, of all descrip- tions, attended to in city and country at goderate rates. May 21, 1877. ” H. VINNICOMBE, PIANO FORTE REGULATOR, LL parties leaving their orders for Tuning A at Bremner Bros. will receive the best atlenUon. All who have Pianos in .Chariottetown 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 all parts of the Island. or oftner if required Ch’town, July 18, 1877. ROYAL HOTEL, Satri Sohn. king Square, HAVE much pleasure in informing my l merous friends and the public generally, t } have leased the Hotel formerly known a3 CONTINENTAL, and thoroughly renova nese, axing nn, asthe MUYAT al he be reputation of being, one of the best Hotels i® the Provinces. Excellent Bill of Ferre, First-class Wines? Liquors and Cigars, aud superior accommoda tion. Blackhall’s Livery Stable attached. THOS, F. RAYMOND. July 3, 1877—6m QUEEN INSURINCE CO, OF ENGLAND. Sai Capital -- {wa Millions NSURANCE effected on all kinds o Bulldings, Merchandise, and Produce Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Specialjrates for isolated residences., Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union®Bank), Agentifor Prince Edward Island June — EARTHENWARE. Landing ex “ James Duncan,” from Liver- pool, 't CRATES, assorted. For Sale low while landing. FENTON T. NEWBERY & Co. h town, Aug. 16, 1877.—arg pat 2ins. BOARDERS WANTED. 5 OR 6 Permanent Boarders can be com. fortably accommodated in a private ‘mily; lady boarders preferred. Apply © 124 Kent Street, hearly opposite J. Sel er’s Grocery. : Aug. 21—lw* SYRUPS RASPBERRY, STRAWBERRY, GINGERWINR- LEMON, 4k .5 and 20 Gallon Kegs, SUITABLE FOR TEA PARTIEE. wer VERY CALAP. anil, STEAMERS. Leave ECharlottetown Leave Pictou every Tuespay, WEDNESDAY { Steamer Arrangements. eee eee Prince Edward tstand SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. eee Nova Scotia. for Pictou every Monday, Werpnespay, Tuurspay, € SATURDAY mornings, at 5 o'clock, con- necting Lhere at 10 a. m., with train for HIuifax, Fare to Halifax. $4.10. Picnic Parties of Twenty and upwards can obtain Return flckets at Charlotte- town Oifice to Picton and back same day $1.00 each. Returning to Charlottet own. Fripay and Sarurpbay, about 2.30 p.m. on arrival of evening train from Hali- fax. CAPE BRETON. ave Pictou for Hawkesbury every Mon- pay and THURsbAy, 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.z with 10 a.m. Train TugsDay and Fri- DAY for Ifalifax. New Brenswick, Canada and United Siates, Leaves SUMMERSIDE every day (Sunday 2xcepted) 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 InrERNA- rmONAL Co. for PORTLAND and Boston, Also, leave Charlottetown for Summerside every Monday morning, about 3 o'clock. Returning, leaves Sueptac every day (Sundays excepted) on arrival of day train trom St. Jonny, for Summerside; connect there; without delay, with train for Char- tottetown. .Aiso, leaves Summerside for Charlottetown every Saturday evening, about 6 o’elock. Agents: Atmon & Macintosn, ITalifax ; Nvoawan @ Davene, Dictee; A Grant & Uo Hawkesbury* Hanrrp! Bros., St. John. F. W. WALES, i Sante (iinet ANLY DIRECT. LINE "TO BOSTON, steamers Carroll and Worcester Botu Steamers are fitted with new Boii ers, aud their Passenger accomodation arranged for every convenienee and com- fort, and fitted up in elegant style. FREIGHT carried at moderate rates and as low as by apy other route, EGGS in boxes and barrels handledjwith 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 tMonday morning. LEAVE CHARLOTTETOWN Every "Thursday, punctually at 5 p.m. LEAVE BOSTON Every Saturday, unctually at noon. CARVELL %ROS., Agent. Ch’town, June 7, 1877 Steamer HEATHER BELLE Summer Arrangement. ILL leave Charlottetown for Orwel] every MONDAY and WEDNESDAY evenings. Leave Orwell for Charlottetown every TUESDAY and THURSDAY mornings, at 7 o'clock. Returning to Orwell same o’cl ck. Leave Charlottetown for Mount Siewar- every WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY Morn- ings at four o'clock. Leave Mount Stewart for Charlottetown at7 o'clock, returning to Mount Stewart same evenings. Tzaving Charlottetown for Crapaud every SATURDAY, weather and tide per- mitting ; and every alternate SATURDAY will make a return trip JOHN HUGHES, Agent. evening att3 CARVELL BROS, }Chttown May 25, 1877.—3m wkly Excursion Tickets. STEAMERS CARROLL & WORCESTER, TO BOSTON AND RETORN, For $15.00. CARVELL BROS - a ee ee ee MONTREAL & ACADIAN STEAMSHIP LINE. HASZARD BROS., Agents. Montreal, Charlottetown, P, E, 1, Sydney, C. B., & St. John’s, N, F. Capt. Joho A. Hacnarleny Capt: Daniel Anderson Should sufficient f tended to run, the. bis Bi during the present season, regularly, - tweet the above mentioned ports. ‘The at- tention of importers is directed to the ad- vantages offered. 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 N, 8. * VENEZLA,” 8, 8. * VALETTA,” ef this line a mm a a ee ae QUEBEC & GULP PORTS cae Steamship Company ! “SECRET.” - = CAPT. DAVIDSON. * MIRAMICHI,” CAPT. BAQUET. \ ILL LEAN E a.ce nately from PICTOU (afler arrival of Monday Aflernoor rain from Halifax) every Monday Midnight; SHEDIAC (after arrival of Tuesday Train from St. John and Halifax) every ‘Tuesday Aflernoon; CHARLOTTETOWN, every Yuesday, Morning; SUMMERSIDE every ruesday Pasbebiae, Perce, Gaspe, Father Point, and al Above Named Places, LOW RATES. QUICK TIME CARVELL‘BROS, Agents, Ch’town, June 16, 1877.—mé&th Parks’ Cotton Yarns, WARDED the only Medal, given tot COTTON YARNS of Canadian Manu facturd at the CEN.ENNIAL EXHIBITION. Nos. 6’s to 10’s. ite Blue, Red, Orange, and Green. Warranted full length and weight. Stronger and better than any other Yarn n the market. Cotton Carpet Warp. No. 12’8 4 PLY IN axl, Conors. Warranted fast. WM. PARKS’ & SON, New Brunswick Cotton Mills St. Jobn,N B. ; May 23 77 —_—— THE DAILY EXAMINER THE SEA SERPENT AT LABRA That, terrible creature the sea serpent, which has in its time frightened so many ancient mariners half out of their wits, as it presented itself to view, now in this much frequented sea and now in that, bas lately put in an appearance in the Labrador waters. -Hattle Harbor is the basin on the Labrador coast in which the great ()phidian awfully’ shocked Mr. Bendall. resident agent of a large fishing firm of St. John’s, Newfoundland. Mr. Bendall was disport- ing himself in the briny waves on a fine day in July, when lo, he saw bearing down upon hima huge snaky creature, a hund. red feet long, with savage looking head aud a shaggy mane, and blazing terror- inspiring eyes. As this dreadful creature moved its immense dark brown body, tinged with green and purple, it filled the air-with mournful moans and wide and far diffused its musky’ fi » Incontin- ently the terrified bather fled to the rocky shore, and thetice. surveyed the dreadful apparition, Safely ensconced behind his rocky breatwork, the trembling Bendall saw the awful moster of the deep lash the water into foam, and then plunge into the abyss with an unearthly shriek of probable disappointment at failing to capture the lum and tempting biped that watched im without peril from a distance, —\S/. ohn News, en eo <0 RP - 0h mteitedeeine A MYTHICAL LADY. a ee ee ‘A Young Reader” of Dickens’ “Martin at offer, it is in-| Chuzziewit” wonders why Mrs. Gamp’s my- thical friend should be called ‘* Mrs, Har- ris,’ and asks for an explanation. Per. haps some older readers, not learned in the The steamers are in all| amusing literature of the law, may be simi- larly puzzled. “Mrs. Harris,” as the Ledger understands the matter, was the mother of John Doe, Richard Roe, John oer Tom Styles and’ the other fami - liar but imaginary persons who ire in old jaw depots to represent seek eee All of them are lawyers’ apprentices, so to speak, oo pas reen ola names, anciently introduced into legal forms, but. . now dis- continued, om Doe and Richard Roe were pe best known in this country. Tom Styles John 0’'Noakes went to. ther in actions of ejectment: Butler, in udibras, writes:— — And, like blind Fortune, with asleight, © rom Styles’ pocket into Noake’s, - As easily as hoeus pocus, ‘* Snooks,’’ which nameas a by~word rex mains still in-use is in one form a corrups tion of Seven Oakes, though it also comes from the Noakes or Nokes above referred to. If Mrs. Gamp had referred to Snooks as her friend, the allusion would have been better understood in this country. In lingland, however, the reference to “ Mrs, Harris,” the mother of the four person, ages (she must haye been married four times) was understood at once. And when Betsy Prig declared to Mrs. Gamp con» cerning Mrs. Harris, ‘I don’t believe there’s no sich person,” it was as it Betsy had denied the whole system of English legal practice, if not the whole intitution of the empire. — *— oe ->.- FRIGHTFUL RUSSIAN ATROCITIES. The Turkish Minister of Foreign Aftairs has sent the appended circular to the Dips lomatic agents of the Porte abroad, being a telegram from Suleiman Pasha, as fols lows :— The conduct of the Russian army during the 11 days it occupied Eski Saghra shows that their first act on entering the town was to disarm the Mussulman population. The employed the Moldars of the place who, deceived as to the real object of their mission, were ordered to fetch Mussulman out of their houses, and as soon as the lat« ter appeared they were massacred, Eleven hundred Mussulmans were thus put, to death. A telegram from the Karmakour of Lovatz, reports that when the Russians entered that town, fifteen women and chil. dren fleeing from the invaders, were killed by the fire of the enemy’s artillery. Others of these unfortunate prisoners, in order to escape outrage or death, had to abandon everything, even their children. Every Mussulman’s house in Lovatz was piltaged by Cossacks and Bulgarians. After the re- capture of the town by the imperial army the Russians carried devastation and carn; age into the neighboring districts. The Russians and Bulgarians drove out all the Mussulman inhabitants of the village of Henste and burned all the men and some of the women. Seyenty Mussulmans and the Imaum of Yuklem were shut up by the Bulgarians in barns, to which the latter in conjunction with Cossacks, set fire. ‘An English military attache himself witnessed all these horrors. The Russians on enter- ing these parts, disarmed ali the Mussul- mas Of Eski Saghra, Kezanlik and the neighboring villages, and distributed the ISON SALE | AT THE STORES OF Henry A. Harvie, Theoph. L. Chappelle, and T. O'Connell. Price Only 2 Cents arms seized among the Bulgarians. The latter then drove down 400 Mussulmans from Mogblis, in the district of Kezanlik, to the bank of the river Tundja and there massacred them. At Eski Saghra and ita neighborhood, the Bulgarians continue to massacre the Mussulman population. After a fight with the enemy, Sulieman Pasha entered Hski Saghra. Several can. nons feil into our-hands, The Russians met with considerable losses. The atro« cities committed by the Cossacks and Bul- dune 27, 1877—her.1 garians still continue. News of the World. SVP IOI RPL LOL LL Wh YOO CANADA. Mr. W. 8, Coen, youngest partner in the firm of McNab, Marsh & Cven, of foronto has decamped. He is a defaulter in 4 large amount. He was a fast young man. Four hundred and thirty-nine found-« lings have been left up to date at Grey Nunnery, Montreal, Of this number 329 were of French origin. When the New Brunswick legislature meets shortly, it is proposed to passa measure regulating the rebuilding of St. John. Toevade its probable provisions, feveriah activity now prevails in the build. ing of wooden siructures in the fire dis: trict. People are getting their buildings up before the proposed law can be enacts ed feeling contident that they will not be compelled to tear them down, ex post facto legislation not being usual. Wooden and brick~cased houses for shops and residen ces are springing up with magical rapidity, and advancing towards completion with « speed rivalling that displayed in the build. ing Of railway cities on the western plains. People will be ‘* penny wise and pound foolish” to the end of time; and rothing but cast-iron “legislation, in such an im- portant matter as protection against fire, will force wisdom on them. A DgLecate.—A young man who repre- sented himself as adelegite from the Halifax Relief Committee, put in an aps pearance at a house in St. John, where he was dined and wined, on condition of his giving in return a cooking stove. The and the family who entertained him want no more relief delegates from Halifax. He was a fraud.—Az. Herald. UNITED STATES, Peaches ave now so plentifuiin the vicin- ity of Columbia, S. C., that they are fed to hogs. During a late thunder storm at Antrim, . #., some persons who were driving put up’ their horse and wagon in a shed, which was soon after struck by lightning. . On visiting their property they found thejhars ness stripped from the horse and torn to shreds, the thrills broken and the borse turned from the*wagon, but uninjured. The town of Gayvilie, Dakota Lerritory, as rt as almost destroyed by fire, only one or ro houses being saved. The fire origin- ated in Narne’s resturant and there being no water for fire purposes it spread rapidiy, and in three hours destroyed about 200 houses. Total loss $60,000; no insura ance. Herbert Blanchard, the Savoy (Mass. ) murder, isa very bad egg. He began by threatening his schoolmaster, married at seyenteen and hammered his girl wife till she got a divorce, was hunted out of Cali. fornia as a thief, enlisted in the Mexican army, and deserted, Jeaving a wife and child, went to France to complitee his crimi~ nal education, and returned to Savoy to do murder and qualify himself for the gal- lows. News comes from San Francisco of a murder committed there by one Daly on the 7th ult. Daly and another man called Kusanda were stock brokers and partners. A man called Hanks struck Kusanda. Daly espoused the quarrel of the latter. A fight took place, and the parties separated. On a subsequent occasion, and after another battle, Daly approached Hanks with ¢ cane, Tbe latter, supposing it was his intention to flog him, shot his opponent, who died shortly after. A verdict of murs der was returned by the coroner's jury, but Hanks anticipated the result by commit- ing suicide. He left a letter in which was the following sentence: «+The coolest act of my life. Had totake of my boots to pull the trigger with my toe! EUROPEAN. In Servia all lawyers are excluded from the Assemb y. It is stated that two hundred Cuban In- surgents killed thirty Spanish soldiers near Santi Spiritus, recently. Bismarck is moving, and som thing of interest is likely toturnup. Heis a sort of Deus ex machine, and rarely moves for nothing. Bismarck does not let up on Count Von Arnim. Lately the Count asked leave to cross German territory to go to Carisbad, in Bohemia, but was curtly refused. The Lord Lieutenant of Lreland has of- fered a free pardon to any one, not the ac» tual firer of the shot, who will give infor. mation that may lead to detection of the murderer of Mr. Young, of Castlerea, the magistrate lately shot in his own avenue. The reward offered of £1,500 failed to dis» cover any clue, Field Marshal Count Moltke, it is said, was asked by a princely personage the other day whether be would not presage a speely and complete victory by the Russ Sians and the entire subjugation of Turkey. ‘*Certaialy,’’ said the Count; “ the Rus, sians will vanquish Turkey as soon as their commander-in-chief is found to possess the feur ‘G's’ whici: are necessary to every general,”” ** Ant wich four * G’s’ do you mean?’’ asked the Count’s questioner, Moltke replied. ~‘ield, Gedold, Genie and Gluch [money, patience, genius and good luck, |” Daa ie Baal next morning the delegate disappeared, | ateeceellinneiierieimmmenaatinen aie a sam Emenee Sp due cgnenenen 4 i 4 . 1 iy . ni is ee Ee. ee ee * : <Sooeang “ is Sc oe open « ppene teenie Biases gn a. EF AN iy oh 2 Nh Sail | “ om “g at er "Pa , i pt bot . aE ehigea > Pape ra ee