> een nc ee i, se ttn ii lant etait - . ee ea VOL, 4, THe Datty EXAMINER is Published every Evemng. OFFICE : INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. f. KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION ; Six Months, £9 50 _ Three Months, - 1 25 One Month, 0 50 One Week, 0.12 _—_ — s@ Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for month!y, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- eation. W. L. COTTON, {| J. W. MITCHELL, Manager. Office Sup’t. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. Il. Winter Arrangement. ON AND AFTER MONDAY, DECEMBER 30th, 1878. Trains Going West. CHARLOTTELOWY, a ee ti. W.. Vinnicombe, ; >,” f tent Piano Tuner cd: Regulator, Fy me mtfnil tha liay curct P 1 F AS adopted the Dollar system of Tuning | RB —six visits a year, at one dollar per | visit. This system is much more economical Bus Lins system 3 iuch more economica | aud satisfactory than any other, as the cost is | dess, and the instrument is kept constantly in | tune and repair. F A vistt will be made to all parts of the |island once’ a year, or oftner if desired. iianos tuned hy Haiailten’s system of even | temperdment. Ke” Orders may’ be Teft 2 Mr. Fletcher’s 5 + ’ Music Store, or at Bremner Bros., Queen street, Jan. 6, 1879— COMMERCIAG Union Assurance Company, OF LONDGN, ENGLAND. GAPITAL - - $12,500,600. + ede ANCE effected. against Fire on all . descriptions of Property throughout the {sland.. - ga” Low losses, rates and prompr settlement of HORACE HASZARD, Agent for P. Ei. Island. Ch’town, Dec, 20, 1S78— CO'Y i OUREY INSURANCE OF ENGLAND. “48 CAPITAL, . . TWO fILLIONS STERLING STATIONS: | No. 1. | No.3 , So _ | Express. , Mixed. WY NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- Georgetown ————— ings, Merchandise and Produce, Also, on Cardigan 385 * | Vessels on the stocks. =. ; | jar 9.55.“ Special rates for isolated residences, M.Stew’t Jun ) !dp10.05 ** | Losses settled promptly. — Royalty Jun. 19,90 + | GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), a ' $67) 40 * _Agent for Prince Edward Island Ch’town cp 8.00 amp 3.30 pm June, 1577- loyalty. Jun. wae Bea. CS N. Wilteere <8 2 Oa BS ROAIW YJ . 4 i Hunter River * 0.207" 1 *-6.5 ** red al Breadalbane “ee 1 oa ‘§ 57 3 County Line “10,18 “| 5.51 BY MACKENZI=. Kensington “Tee. 3“ Aa STI Te, ‘ we 5 lar11.30 * lar 7.00 “ |7YNHE. former “City Hotel,” now the —— dp 2.40 pm Broadway House, treat George Wellington ;* oa * Street, opposite the Catholic Cathedral, is Port Hill | "hae * = ee for Permanent and Transient 0’ Lea se 5 83 «Cs oare ers. id jar 6.35 The rooms haye been thoroughly renovated Alberton jdp 6.40 “* and newly furnished. Tignish lar 7.25 * apes tibles will be supplied with the best ZL. sits. sO te market affords, and fares reasonable. Trains Going Last. A Suite of. Rooms convenient for 2 small __ eee © SET MT family, together with board &ec., can be had . , in the Broadway fouse. STATIONS: . a? | No. 4 Nov. 23, 1878—té Express. || Mixed. lh tieihcinnicnitteyilaia lilies thighs nnigaentigurc Tighish Dp 7.00 am) ’ a | 6FE RRA SS Alberton ae. B ft. HUH 5 ER, Bort ia “10.05 Tialian and American . Marble Wellington “10.48 “ uutbass Wk AAG ; arhi.40 * Manamoents, 9: a Haadatona Summerside ap 2.30pm Dp 8.45 am MORTIMER, Tablets, Heatistongs, Kensington * 300 «19.15 “« | Mayties, Cenrne Taste Tors, Burra County Line “349 * 1 © 9.57 * anv ComMope Tors, WasH Bown Breadalbane ++ 3.50. | “10.06: * SLABS, &c., &o. Hunter River “4.283 * | °*10.47 “ | Prices to suit, and satisfaction guaranteed. N. Wiltshire - 4.45 i ‘11.02 i gar Designs farnished on application. “@a Royalty Jun. ar oem “ eae ~ Corner Hillsborough and Keat Streets, Char Ch town id 2 55 6 rane lottetown, Royalty Jun é 3.15 Bs November 6, 1878. r 4.30 “ emma annem rae ey are Mt. Stewart a 4.40 * 77 ~t cg iy a TIT TTHAHIT yi es 66 \, GO LARE ~ ay dy Cardigan | ** 6.00 AUDLEE Db Gg, Georgetown jar 6.25 ‘ | ‘oF —————————e—eeeee aetna SOURIS BRANCH, — Going West. Going East. neg adios fn No.5 | STATIONS. | Mixed. |STATIONS. Mixed. carrer ci alae eager eppectaranagapiaanaaniiaccsaiitta i, alin nC OTN ee OCCA Te ' 8 ity, exy*3 } » hawinag. {+4 r NH “a Subs riber having tlw formerly known as THE RANKIN ITS A414 Lb A N ih AN HO U Ss £, o fxr tn _> “> 9 winwar + > styie, 13 VOW preparea to give dee he fF ts UD the ilotel in first-class eomfortable accommodation tu Permanent and Transient Boarders. ' A. M, P.M Souris Dp 7.00) MtsS tw’tJne|Dp 4.40} Tourists and others will receive every atten- Harmony ** 7,23'| Morell ‘* 6.22} tion at the Wagstaff’s Hotel. - St. Peters | ‘* 8,42'|St. Peters { ‘* 5.54 WM. WAGSTAFF. Morel! « 9,13)| Harmony ‘6 %124 May 25, 1878 Mt S’tw’t Inc} ar 9.55{|Souris ae WM. McKECHNIE, Cc. J: BRYDGES, Sut. P. B. 1. &. Geh. Sup, Gov. Railways Ch’town, Dec, 27, 1878. : ~~ p ne arh pres kea sp sj ap 61 MAIL NOTICE. AILS to be forwarded vit Cape Traverse AY Beer be closed at this Office daily—Sun- days excepted—at 8 o'clock p. m. : fié mail for Great Britain, by Canadian Packet sailing from Halifax on Saturdays, will be closed here on Wednesdays at 8 o'clock, . me THe mail for Great Britain via New York will be closed on Thursdays at 8 o'clock, p.m. Mails for all places West of Charlottetown _ receiving Mails by Railway Train or Postal Car, ,will be closed daily at 7 o'clock, a.m. Mails for Georgetown and Souris East, also for all places on the route to those points, will be closed daily at 2 o’clock, p. m. Post Office open from 8, a. m., till 8, p m. A. A. MACDONALD, : Pestmaster, Post Office, Charlottetown, | 20th Feb., 1879. j ~<_———-— — ER ED _. DR. CREAMER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Kent Street, Charlottetown, '(Lhree doors from Dr. Johnson’s). ae ENTRANCE BY SIDE DOOR, Oct, 15—3m RANKIN HOUSE, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. & J. JI DAVIES -~-.* Proprietor (Formerly of St. Lawrence Hotel, Pictox). HIS weil-known Hotel is now open under the present management ; and, having been newly furnished throughout, it offers every comfort to the travelling public. Suit- able Sample Rooms for commercial gentlemen. Oct. 15, 1S78—Sm oa ee eee z aN MIES HUBBS JAMES : CABINET-MAZER, UPHOLSTERER, £TC.,, i ie REMOVED from MePhail’s Corner to the premises just vacated by Mr. Joun Srumsces, Prince Street, where, with increased facilities, he is prepared to attend to the wants of his customers with punctuality and despatch, and on reasonable terms. Carpgas cut and laid. . Parnttna and Repairing neatly done. Prcrure Frames and Mouldings constantly on hand, or made up to order. All kinds of Household Furniture made to order, cheap and good. New Pattern School Desks made at short notice. A first-class article. za Don’t forget the place: PRINCE STREET | Charlottetown, Oct, 26, 1878— PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, t ; ' ; ' | | i oe RO a es EE OR eT Eat’ Uiee! AES if OB PRINTING PROMPTLY DONE IN GOOD STYLE AND AT LOW PRICES! > \THE DAILY EXAHINER wa: Local News, Forcign News, Political News, Social News, Commercial News. Shipping News, laid before Subscribers, Purchasers, and Borrowers, eh 7 5a & ea wv TF NING, Varro . € “VES. SUBSCRIPTION. RATES: Quarterly . 2... eee eee ee ph a0] Half-Yoarly.+++-+++e+eeeeee 9 50 THE DAILY HAS A >. Largely inereased Gireulation AND iS AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING: MEDIUM oe ats oe WEEKLY EXAMINER Made up from Tur Dar.y—a Conipen- dium of all the News of the Week. Subscription price only One Dollar a Year! IN ABVANCE. Sent to any iddsons in Great Britain or North America, Persons having relatives omfriends abroad cannot do better than send them Tue WeEEKkty Examiner. gax~ A few Advertisements only, received ear th Bapti Shurch in c of : Gestion). ny eust Charel vacuo “de We MITCHELL, |W. 1. COPPOM,: Office Sup't. WEDNESDAY. MR, MONTSGMBRY’S SPEECH | on the inmotion of WANT IN THE LA‘ ; sain | 0° CONFIDENCE GOV BRNMENT. ae OTe Manon 62> | Mr? Monrcomkry said that he rose to; address the Honse under great difficulties, nearly every member in the House having } spoken; so that the whole subject was gone over and very little left-to be said on if. ‘There were, however, certain points to which hon. gentlemen did not refer, and he would.briefly discuss some of those. TWO YEARS AGO a general election was held, and at that time party lines were, to a certain extent, obliterated--it having been found that the great question then agitating the public mind ceuld not be settled unless party dif- ferences should be forgotten, for a time at least. Men who all their lifetime had been Conservatives found it necessary to unite with their Liberal friends, in order to settle the School Question ; but, after two years— haying finished the work which they were sent to perform--the Conservatives thought fit to withdraw from the Govern- ment. He (Mr. Montgomery) had never witnessed such a display of PETTY REVENGE as members of the Government had shawn towards those four hen. members, He would not object to hon. members using any amount of argument, but the venom displayed was altogether uncalled for, and did not add to the dignity of the House. The Hon. Commissioner of Public Works made the remark that great measures had generally been carried by . men who had sunk party differences. That remark is true; but it 1s also truo that Coalition Governments never existed for any great length of time. The only one which remained in existence as long as our present Government did, was the one which had been formed by Earl Aberdeen, if he (Mr. M.) remembered. A Coalition Gor- ernment never existed for any length of time, except when some great ptional question was befere the, country which could not be carried without entirely ob- literating Party lines. In 1867 when the GREAT NATIONAL QUESTION of Confederation of. those Provinces was discussed, it was considered that the coall- tion of Liberals and Conservatives, formed to carry it, would continue to exist. The Leader of the Government could not have desired that the coalition of Liberals and Conservatives— such as the present Gov- ernment had been—should continue for any great length of time; and if so, since the business for which they were called to- gether was accomplished, was’ it not the proper time for the separation to take place. As soon as those men withdrew from the Government, an attempt was made to get the hon. member from ‘Tignish to take one of the vacant seats, and other gentlemen on the Opposition side of the House were asked te suppori them. Now, if it wasa erime for the feur hon. members to’ leave the Government and join the Opposition, surely if was as GREAT A CRIME to «et lion! members of the Opposition to take sdats in the Government. The hen. Leader “of the Government looked ‘upon himself as politically ruined, and blamed the four hon. gentlemen who left the Goy- ernment for rnining him ; but if those four hon. members were the means of elevating him to the position of Leader, as they un- doubtedly were, if was very ungrateful of him to abtise them because they did not keep him in that position as long as he de- sired. ‘These four gentlemen Were the means of politically making the hon, mem- ber (Hon. Mr. Davies) and when they with- drew from him he had to go down. Char- lottetown had always been a Conservative constituency, and it was only by uniting with a Conservative that the Leader of the Government could be returned by the city. It was by the SUFFERANCE OF THE CONSERVATIV BS that the Leader of the Government: oceu- pied the position J e did, and it ill became him ty turn round on the men who elevated him. The Government at the’ present time was of a very different complexion frem what it was before those four hon. members left it. The hon. member from Murray Harbor (Mr. Prowse) was asked to support the hon. member from Montague (Dr. Robertson), who, for the last two years, gave the Government a very indiffer- ent support. The hon. member from Mon- tague had once before been a mem- ber of a Government, and his connec- tion _ with Governments seemed to be very unfortunate—he was never called to take a seat until t'te Government was struggling for existenee. He appeared to be called in as’ medical adviser to ex- amine into the state of THE BODY POLITIC. te aN LC NE a MARGH 12, 1879. NO 558 against them that the poople were preventt- ed from asking him to resign. Hon. Dr. Robertson said the statement was false. Mr. Montgomery would not make any statement which was false. He dfd not de- sire to misrepresent any hon member. He would give the Leader of the Government credit for great ability, bat ha had one fanlt tu find with him, and that was that whenever a statement whieh he had for- erly made was brought to lis notice, if it suited his purpose, he would deny having made such a statement, or twist it in suche manner as to destroy its moaning. It was possible. the hon. gentleman might forget what he had previously siated, but his (Mr, Montgomery’s opinion. was, tint the reason he so acted was because WHAT HE SAID IN ONE LOCALITY would. not suit in another. When the hon. member from Montague was called in as medical adviser of the Government, he found. the patient in a very low condi+ tion, and. recommended that much food should not be given; so the Government, acting on that advice, admitted. the hor. member from West River. After, a time the medical adviser reported that the Gov- ernment were semewhat convalescent, and, could take more subsiautial food, so the hon. member from Summerside was ad- mitted. . There. were two of those’ hon. members who were very UNCERTAIN SUPPORTERS of the Party, and it was only by giving them seats in the Executive that they were, secured—the member from West River and the member from Montague. The hon.’ member from Strathalbyn made a very good speech ; he attacked no person except the editor of the Presbyterian, As the editor of that paper wielded a large scimitar, or some other weapon, there was no need to defend him. When the hon. member had entered into a contest with the editor of the Presbyterian in the public press, there was no need’ to attack him in this House. That hon. member stated that they hada NEW GOVERNMENT, a new policy, and new men, and whenever they adopted a new policy and formed a new Government, those four Conservative proposed by the would never support men who adopted a policy merely because it was popular. Mention had heen made of the Civil Ser- vice Bill and the part taken by the Leader of the Opposition in introducing it. At the time that Bill was passed, the hon. of Public Works) spoke of it as follows :— ‘‘ In their dying moments, the Government had caught at the ideas advanced all along by ihe :Upposition, because they felt that the position taken by their opponents was the correct: one, and had: introduced this measure in order that they might have some show in going to the polls.” The hon. that time to give the hon. member from St. Peter's credit for passing that Bill, but he supported the Bill and wanted to get credit for it himself. ‘The Government after having been in EXISTENCE FoR TWO YEARS, a popular one—and they adept it in’ their dying moments. expect to be supported 1° He did not con- sider the Government sincere. They never would have brought down those. measures except for the sake of holding en tu power. !f the Governnient had been in a position to carry on the business of the country in the way they had been doing, they would never have adopted a different policy. The Leader of the Government spoke of the Opposition—if they came into power— making ‘' DUCKS AND DRAKES ” of the public accounts, which implied that a Government could manipulate the public accounts in any shape they thought proper ; and, if that was the case, what confidence could be placed in the accounts as brought down by the Leader of the Government? He(Mr. Montgomery) and his colleague were the only Opposition members in the House who represented a district that had, a short time ago, been represented by sup- porters of the present Government. There was not an elector in the district who did not know that he was determined to oppose the present Government, and it was ridict- lous for hon. members to imagine that that district would now send men to support the present Administration When the elec- tion was held there, NO FALSE ISSUE was raised, except it was raised by members ot the Government. The present Govern- ment had been two years in power, and when they found their lease of power drawing toa close, they adopted a policy entirely difierent from what they had been carrying on. The people would not judge them by the speech they had put in the hands of the Lieutenant Governor, but_y their record for the last two years. Tt was very casy to make promises The hon. doctor stated that. Murray Har- _when they were going out of power; but] bor would return two members to support the present Government,—an . ex-; travagant statements which very much surprised him (Mr. Mont- gomery.) The learned doctor knew that he had to come dewn on the acts of the Government, and it was by attacking the Government and appearing to be indignant if they were in power, it was very doubtful if they would carry out those reforms. Tle nor’s speech :— +e ‘* A Bill will be submitted to you, alter- ing the constitution of the git and previa one Legislative Chamber for the rovince, in lieu of the existing Legislative = se MN AL EE RTE TOMO OS RN sis es 2.2 a a ag eee nee ES Om nnn NSINOINNIS ONIINTU SS WOE NI ne eemnannnEEEEEES SS: x members were free. He (Mr. Montgomery), would support the policy of retrenchment, Government, but he- member from Strathalbyn (Commissioner: member from Strathalbyn did not want at ~ find out that the policy of the Opposition is © On what grounds did they . following paragraph I find in the Gover. _ [Aileen es anos ee Nnggomn eitinaitataamte eta ene ih tnnaen ; ea