ee oe NE a ae VOL. 4. 1 . 1) y 3," ” TY} [He Datty EXAMINER is Published every Evening. OFFICE: INGS’ BULLDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREBTsS, Charlottetown, P. E. L eee KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION - six Months, : : : 32 50 Three Months, : 1.25 he Month, 0 crnve Week, 0 12 es Advertising at wost moderate rates Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- erly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- vation. wW. L. COTTON, bs W. MITCHELL, Manager. Othice Sup’t PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. II. Winter Arrangement. ON AND AFTER MONDAY, DECEMBER 30th, 1878. Trains Going West. STATIONS. No. 1. | No.3 Express. ; Mixed. Georgetown Dp 8.10 am; Cardigan “aa M.Stew’t Jun ar 9.55 © - dp10.05 ** Royalty Jun. **11.20 ** th’t 11.40 « | — dp 8.00 am| Dp 3.30 pm Royalty Jun. "601° 32m * N. Wiltshire "oe 2 oo Hunter River | ** 9.20 * | ** 5.03 * Breadalbane ies. %.5 ** GAL o County Line “See” 1 ae a Kensington “ae 1 Gee 3 PE lar 11.30 “* jar 7.00 ‘ summersic i ldp 2.40 pm Wellington "aoe ™ Port Hill “én O’ Leary se aia ee ar > sé Alberton fp 840 « Tignish jar 7.25 “ Trains Going East. i STATIONS. No, 2 No, 4 Express. | Mixed. Tignish ‘Dp 7.00 am Al ton se 7.45 se O’ Leary ae 8.47 sé Port Hill **10.05 “* Wellington **10.48 ‘* <3 ar 11.40 ‘* Summerside dp 2.30pm) Dp 8.45 am Kensington “360 | ¢% O16 County Line "247 “*" oa ™ Rreadalbane "3.00 “| “see” Hunter River “493 “+ 1 “Rg: * N. Wiltshire © 445 “ |} 11.02 “ Royalty Jun. “6m ** I “11.56: “* " ar 6.00 “ jarl12.15 pm Ch town dp 2.55 * Royalty Jun. * 3.15 * . ar 4.30 “‘ Mt. Stewart dp 4.40 ‘“c Cardigan ** 6.00 * Georgetown lar 6.25 * | SOURIS. BRANOR. ____ ele lt A OLE I Going West. Going East. ee: Cano on No.6 STATIONS. Mixed. STATIONS. Mixed. “ : | mess er Mee Souris Dp 7.00}|MtStw’tJnc/Dp 4.40 Harmony ‘© 7,23'| Morell “* 6.22 St. Peters “« §,42'/St. Peters | “* 5.54 Morell ** 9,13|| Harmony " 7.4% 9. 55| | Souris ar 7.35 WM. McKECHNIE, Supt. P. BE. I. RB. Mt S’tw’t Jnc| ar C. J. BRYDGES, Gen. Sup. Gov. Railways Ch’town, Dee. 27, 1878. ; : p ne arh pres kea sp sj ap 61 A GREAT RUN —TO THE— FLOUR & TEA STORE! And it cannot be stopped while they are selling SUCH EXCELLENT TEA Por 36c., 40c., and 44c. per Ib. GOOD SUGAR For 74c., 8c., S4c., and 9c. per Ib. CHOICE FLOUR From $5.50 to $6.00 per bbl., and OTHER GROCERIES RIGHT CHEAP. S Save your money by buying at BEER & GOFF'S. Ch'town, Jan. 17— Uy TH Y EXAMINER, BY the Tie ieeee tal and telegraphic | | J. W. MITCHELL, _* 4 4 4 Examiner (fie Le (1: JOB PRINTING PROMPTLY DONE IN GO000 STYLE AND AT LOW PRICES! THE DAILY EXAMINER Local News, Foreign News, Political News, Social News, Commercial News. Shipping News, laid before Subscribers, Purchasers, and Borrowers, EVERY EVENING, PRICE 2 CENTS. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Quarterly ....----eeee eee BL.28 Half-Yearly..-+sseeeceeees 2,00 we ee THE DAILY HAS A Largely Increased Circulation AND IS AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING MEDIUM eC ES THe WEEKLY EXAMINER Made up from Tar Daity—a Compen- dium of all the News of the Week. Subscription price only One Dollar a Year! IN ADVANCE. Sent to any address in Great Britain or North America. Persons having relatives or friends abroad cannot do better than send them Tue WEEKLY EXAMINER. pay A few Advertisements only, received} ere ee CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE WT\) Hep Aer eh ERE AN Sia 734 Cr : > y g +” —- YT 4 9 \ he ; 1 a , 4 ; x ’ ¥ ’ 3 oe re | ¥ BS ¢ ’ en 8 we Oh er Re -~ ” x 2 a PAT Seer A - PP THT WUT yOa wi JY Ls Lud 7 £ } latanc tae} Do Vou approve al falsely dating public ° bh uJ accounts Do you approve vi deliberate \ iolations of the law ? Do you approve of sneaking arts to hide illegal practices ? Do you approve of members of the Legis- lature selling goods to, and otherwise con- tracting with, the Government ! Do you approve of members of the Gov- ernment furnishing supplies to the Govern- ment at their own prices ! Do you approve of having. public supplies paid for by the Government, if the Govern- ment does not know that the goods are of the quantity, quality, and value required ? Do you, in short, approve of a Govern- ment which pays the uncertified accounts of its friends and middlemen ? Do you approve of goods being furnished the Government and paid for though they were never ordered ? Do you approve of supplies being furnish- ed for any department of the Government without a requisition signed by the author- ized officer ! Do you approve of the extravagant Luna- tic Asylum ? Do you Act? Do you approve of pimps and spies going about to inspect your property ? Do you approve of unfair valuations and unequal taxes ? Do you approve of over-taxing the in- dustrious and the enterprising anc under- taxing the lazy and thriftless? approve of the Assessment Do you approve of paying valuators and tax-gatherers ONE DOLLAR for every six dollars they collect ? If you do approve, vote for Louis H. Davies and his followers ! If you do NOT approve, vote for the new Government and its supporters. PRINCE STREET FURNITURE FACTORY. ee ee JAMES HOSBS, Cabinet Maker, Upholsterer and Undertaker. LL kinds of Household Furniture made to order, of the latest styles, CHEAP and GOOD. School Desks made, the CHHEAPEST and BES? in the City. The strictest attention given to the UNDER- TAKING DEPARTMENT at very low charges. March 24, 1879—h ne UNDERTAKING, &6. FAMES M. BUTCHER is now prepared to give close personal attention to all funerals that may be entrusted to him. COFFINS, CASKETS, &C., of various sizes, styles and quality, always on hand, ready-made. ‘PRICES TO SUIT THE TIMES.” Ch’town, February, 24, 15879. COMMERCIAL - Union Assurance Company, OF LONDON, ENGLAND, CAPITAL - - $12,503,000. NSURANCE effected against Fire on all descriptions of Property throughout the Island. a= Low rates and prompr settlement of losses. HORACE HASZARD, Agent for P. E. Island. Ch’town, Dec, 20, 1S78— RANKIN HOUSE, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. gL J. 3. BAVYIES - - + Propricter (Formerly of St. Lawrence Hotel, -Pictou). rRXNHIS well-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, 18S78—8m QUEEN INSURANCE 00'Y. OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING, NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island June, 1877— ourPrinting done is at | W. L. OOPPON, t. Manager. Uttce Sup Tae EXAMINER Printing Room ay i, Ty TE 4 ; ‘ea } } ~*~ > i , 244A/ LVRS 2 t ii i i 5 we ean TN TRATES SS eS Comme <yoOrnporT + rm sm DY 1 ' id 4 Lit Cr iv , (The Progress.) 4 2 3? vey ; . _ } ° j , 6, Peavies NOW vO have sueun an ar- | ; dent love ier his relatives that none but a | consin, an uncle, or a brother-in-law will he} laccept as a colleague to contest Charlotte- itown in the Grit interest. Mr. Thomas! Morris —a cousin of Mr. Davies—is his cob | leagne. After filling the Public Depart- | ments with his relatives, Louis is now en- | deavoring to get some of them into Parlia-' ment. In the course of his speech, on Monday} last, Mr. Davies, we hear, reiterated the statement that each member of the Legisia- ture received fifty dollars for attending the short session recently held ; and that he (Mr. Davies) had been offered a cheque for a like amount and had refused. Now, we have no hesitation in saying that the late Premier told a deliberate untruth. He was offered a cheque for thirty-nine dollars, and refused to accept it, because the amount was too small. This is patriotism with a ven- geance. It is significant that, in the pub- lished report of Mr. Davies’ speech, his statement regarding the fifty dollars ses- sional pay is not mentioned. (The Argus.) Some temperance men in this city justify their action in supporting the candidature of Mr. Thomas Morris on the ground that the Hon. George Coles in his day, and the Hon. J. C. Pope, both of whom have been engaged in the same business as that in which Mr. Morris is now engaged, have been largely supported by temperance men. It is true that these men have been brew- ers; but we fail to see that any comparisen whatever can be instituted between them aud Mr. Morris. Men possessed of such minds and talents as the late Hon. George Coles and the Hon. J. C. Pope are exceed- ingly fewin number, and itis not to be supposed that because they happened to own a brewery they were thus to be de- barred from serving their country. When Mr. Pope is endowed with talents which eminently fit him for public life, Mr. Morris has nothing to recommend him to the electors of this country. The idea of tem- perance men espousing the cause of Mr. Morris, who is engayed in the liquor traffic, because Mr. Coles and Mr. Pope, who were engaged in the manufacture of beer, have received the support of temperance men, is simply absurd. It is a miserable plea, and those who put it forward, either publicly or privately, lay themselves open to the ridicule of all thoughtful men. (The Montreal Witness—Opposition. ) Mr. Tilley has raised the general duties two and a half per cent., just as Mr. Cart- wright did, and for the same reason, name- ly, a heavier prospective deficiency in the revenue. It will be remembered thata year ago Mr. Cartwright, counting on bet- ter times, declined toe increase the taxation to meet a small deficit he expected. This deficit has been more than realized, and had Mr. Cartwright continued in power he would have had to increase the duties pro- bably as much as Mr. Tilley has done, or found some other way of getting the two and a half millions which the reduced quan- tity and values of imports render neces- sary. (St. John News —Opposition.) The situation as it respects the new fiscal policy is a striking one, but it has few real surprises connected with it. The readjust- ed tariff involves a considerable increase of taxation, but nubody can be surprised at that, for everybody knew such an increase was inevitable, seeing that there was a large deficit to provide against. Had the new tariff contained net a single element of the so-cailed National Policy, it must have imposed heavier burdens on Canadian tax-payers than the one superseded by it. Had Mr. Cartwright remained Chancellor of the Canadian Exchequer, he must have proposed tariff changes designed te raise as much additional revenue as Mr. Tilley hopes to get through the readjustment pro- posed by him. So much is perfectly well understood by every intelligent Canadian. (Toronto Mail.) Mr. Cartwright submitted his budget on the 14th April, 1874. On the 17th, the Globe’s Ottawa letter chronicled the arrival of delegations from Toronto and Hamilton to protest against the sugar duties. On the 18th, deputrtions from Montreal, Torento, Hamilton, L.ingston and Ottawa are re- ported as interviewing Mr. Cartwright ‘‘on tariff questions.” On the 20th—the 19th was a Sunday—he was waited upon, says the same authority, by a Western delega- tion with reference to the excise duty on petroleum, and by a Maritime delegation on the subject of shipbuilding. On the 21st, the capital appears to have been crowded with delegations, for the despatch says the sitting of the Committee on Manufactur- ing Interests was attended by ‘‘ a number of gentlemen, who have arrived on various matters counected with the tariff.” A stove deirgation turned up in the evening, headed by Mr. Edward Gurney, jr. On the 22nd, says this chron- icler, ‘‘the proccedings of the Manufactur- ing Interests Committee were very lively and interesting, the room being well filled with gentlemen nowin Ottawa in connection with the tariff changes under considera- tion.” It wasa large room, too. Same’ day—*‘No less than eleven deputations | waited on the Finance Minister to-day to| represent their various claims and alleged | grievances.” Delegations then became chronic; at least we infer so from the {following item on -the 24th : “Tho larg eee ee Tee AERO BERR A Ok Le le TE ORR FE EER SEE - SS ~~ f Vi a J Uy oo e/, i | . e be BF Fe 0 I BBA I DAL AB EIT i, Bs TO a number of strangers—tarif delegations, &e. —in town gives the hotels a lively appear- No doubt it was ‘‘ lively” for Mr. Cartwright On the 30th April he withdrew his tariff, and simply increased the general duties from 15 to 17} per cent. For tifteen clear days the business men of the conntry were alarmed by the mountain in labor ; and on the sixteenth they went home disgusted with the ridiculous mouse. —“-+ m +* oe - Intercepted Letter. ance. also. Cu aRiorreTown, March 3ist, 1879. My Dear Docror,—According to the Examiner of to-night, 1 see that Prowse was nominated unanimously. I de not be- lieve all in that paper; and, again, the Patriot is much teo sanguine in its reports of meetings. Were | to judge from that paper alone | would be deceived as to the real state of events politically. Of course the Patriot is doing just what we want— painting our triumph in glowing colors; but he overdid it during the late Dominion elections, for I lost money onit. I took their account of meetings for correct, and bet accordingly. I will be wiser in the fu- ture. I think Henry and Son are natural- ly a trifle mendacious, but I suppose they think all is fair in love, war and politics, Now, I want to know exactly how things are in your District? What chance Samuel has? and how about your own! I have counted on you sure, with a colleague al- most as certain. Iam sorry I cannot speak so confidently of my own. You know of course, Morris is with me; we could not get better; he is a dodge to split the Con- servative vote. I always felt sure of Tom. he so intensely protestant. All I had to do was to shake the ‘‘ red rag” a little before him (red rag, i. e., the School Question, not safe in Sullivan’s hands, Roman Ca- tholic leader, etc.), and | had him fast and furious. Poor Tom, not a bad fellow, but purely of on# idea, what a colleague he would make for either of those ‘‘ Home Rule” fellows, Biggar and Parnell, the ob- structionists in the British House of Come mons. Thomas Walker, in spite of all I could say or do, would not keep his fingers out of the Treasury, and the confounded supply of articles to the unfortunate Asylum after he became Provincial Secretary and Treasurer, leaked out. How I wish the elections were well over; I am afraid that more unpleasant things may follow. Then, it is all up a gum tree with us. It was a great mistake for us to hold the refuta- tion meeting. It looks so peculiarly funny our not calling a second to refute the later and more serious charges. We should have treated them with silent contempt in the first instance ; for we can’t get over the requisitions and counterfoil business, tho’ the anti-dates look the worst feature in it. I hope nothing wrong will be discovered in Will Dunbar’s Department. I am very much-afraid tho’! He was always a heavy drag on us. When aman is not the clean thing, he had better keep out of politics— better for the country anyway. Iam sure you will agree with me, Dector. You never fancied him any more than our quondam friend Prowse did; and now I remember you fancied yourself a bit of a physiogno- mist—a regular Laratee in fact. Certainly the late Commissioner’s countenance is not in his favor. Ithonght he would havea good chance, McNeil and Campbell both opposing him, and one another. McNeil has since retired in Campbell's favor, so poor W. D, 8. will be left out in the cold. Iam sure of our good friend from Port Hill and the neph’y from Biddeford, No chance in King’s County, except your District. LIexpect you to do your ablest. Belfast is all awry. I wonder how the old genileman would take there again, as I ex- pect he will leave the Paymastership shortly. But quit rents are things of the past, so that would never do. Calhoun is a gone coon this time, tho’ perhaps he may Tryon the ‘‘ school smock-frock” again among the Protestant settlements with some success. Our only chance really is to raise that ‘‘cry” again. We are doing it secretly where we can. I have one expres- sion almost stereotyped on my mind, viz., ‘“‘Well, with a Seperate School man, two or three R. €.’s, and an R. C. Leader in the Government, you may know what to expect.” I never have to say any more. That does the business. How easy it is to gull people—really sensible folk, too—when you learn their peculiar bias and flatter their judgment a little! I have long ago lost all hopes of a Government, and I am afraid the Opposition will be terribly weak ; so instead of having to do 3or4 men’s work, besides trying to prevent pich- ing and stealing, as I had to do in the late Government. I will have to be the whole team myself, with yourself and another, perhaps, to help me if I get in, which is impossible now with the latest develoy- ments. How would I take in Murray Har- bor again? : pot I made out of the fishing business to beat Samuel in his own district. Answer right away. Keep me posted in your dis- trict. Remember me kindly to Mrs. R., and believe me, Yours very truly, . L. H. Daviovs. Dr. Robison, Montague Bridge. ——— Oe mm oe The sky is a drinking cup, that was over- turned of old : and it pours in the eyes of men its wine of airy gold. We drink that wine all day, till the last drop is drained up, and are lighted off to bed by the jewels in the cup.—{Richard Henry Stoddard, But on a stormy night, when the jewels fail to shine, we wish the cheering cup hac T ‘ I would give part of the big - ‘ : ee ee