Se ee THE EXAMINER VOL, 4, __ CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1879. NO. 36 THE DatLty EXxaMINcR PRINCE STREET iimae cee ot Gee een tae Seal a enero is Published every Evemmngy, OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. I. — KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION - Six Months, $2 50 Three Months, 1 25 ‘tue Month, 0. 50 Gue Week, 0 12 ee Advertising at must mo lerate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- sation. i, L. COTTON, (| J. W. MITCHELL, Manager. | Vifice Sup’t PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. II. Winter Arrangement. ON AND AFTER MONDAY, DECEMBER 30th, 1878. Trains Going West. oJ STATIONS. No. 1, | No.3 ee Express. | Mixed. — Ueorgetown Dp 8.10 ara} Cardigan ” -e + , ar 9.55 ‘‘ M.Stew’t Jun dp10.05 “ Royalty Jun. “11.90 + | ch’tewn 11.40 « | — dp 8.00 am: Dp 3.30 pm Royalty Jun. “ §.20 «| «3.50 * N. Wiitshire “aig 1 *4@.% Hunter River | ** 9.30 * | ° ep * Breailalbane a 1 County Line ae | ae Kensington “ee. * Gan o id lar11.30 ‘* jar 7.00 ‘ “ummerside ldp 2.40 pm Wellington 7 oe Port Hill ogi hay O’ Leary sa 5.33 i | Alberton ap 6.40 se Tignish jar 7.25 * Trains Going East. STATIONS. No. 2 | No. 4 Express. | Mixed. Tig Dp 7.00 am} Al n “eé 7.45 ‘ 0’ “847 “ Port Hill “10.05 ‘* Wellington 10.48 * d ar 11.40 “ Summerside dp 2.30pm) Dp 8.45 am Kensington sé 3.00 “e 6s 9.15 “c County Line os ae, Breadalbane “200 | Hunter River “205 * | “ag * N. Wiltshire “4.45 “* | 11.02 * toyalty Jun. “ eae . ae " iar 6.00 ‘* jarl2.15 pm Ch town idp 255 * Royalty Jun. “ 313.°° on ar 4.30 “ Mt. Stewart dp 4.40 * Cardigan ** 6.00 ** Georgetown lar 6.25 * | SOURIS BRANCH. Going West. Going East. cars (ae Nos STATIONS. Mixed Mixed. , stations. — | «A.M. P.M Souris 7.00| | MtS tw’tJne| Dp 4.40 Harmony | ** 7,23!| Morell “ 62 St. Peters ** §8,42'|St. Peters “ 5.54 Morell ‘** 9,13)) Harmony - Ta Mt S’tw’t Jne} ar 9.55) {Souris ar 7.35 WM. McKECHNIE, ©. J, BRYDGES ay Supt. P. B. I. R. Gen, Sup. Gov. Railways Ch’town, Dec. 27, 1878. ; p ne ar h pres kea sp sj ap 6i Re, Cane. CE eee _— —- _————— GRAY’S SPECIFIC MEDICINE trape marx. The Great TRADE M m EnclishRem 2% edy, an unfail- Ff ing cure for Sem- inal Weakness, Spermatorrahe a, A Impotency, and <a SSN ee all diseases that “Nh! Before Taking follow as a se-After Taking. quence of self-abuse; as loss of -Memory, Uni- versal Lassitude, Pain in the Back, Dimness of Vision, Premature Old Age, and many other Diseases that lead to Insanity or Con- sumption. 9. Full particulars in our pam- phlet, which we desire to send free by mail to every one. ta. The Specific Medicine is sold by all druggfsts at $1 per package, or six pack- ages for $5, or will be sent free, by mail, on receipt of the money, by addressing The Gray Medicine Co., Windsor, Ont., Canada. - sa Sold in Charlottetown by all Drugists, and by al! wholesale and retail Druggists in the United States and Canada. January 24, 1879. MPLOYMENT.—In every village and township of P. E. Island not yet ocdu- pied, ONE ACTIVE, intelligent Lady or Gentle- man can obtain a most respectable and ve profitable exgagement. Address, with full D. DOWNIE & CO., Box 1964, Montreal. particulars, FURNITURE FACTORY. JAMES HOBBS, Cabinet Maker, Upholsterer and Undertaker. | ao LL kinds of Household Furniture made to order, of the latest styles, CHEAP and GOOD. School Desks made, the CHEAPEST aud BEST in the City. The strictest attention given to the UNDER- TAKING DEPARTMENT at very low charges. March 24, 1879—h ne UNDERTAKING, &6. AMES M. BUTCHER is now prepared to @F give close personal attention to all funerals that may he 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, 1879. E. C. HUNTER, \Ttalian and American Marble, Monuments, Tablets, Headstones, MANTLES, CENTRE TABLE Tors, Burau AND Commopre Tors, Wasn Bown Stans, &c., &c, Prices to suit, and satisfaction guaranteed. w& Designs furnished on application. “@a Corner Hillsborough and Kent Streets, Char lottetown. November 6, 1878S. COMMERCIAL Union Assurance Company, OF LONDON, ENGLAND. CAPITAL - - $12,500,000. aS effected against Fire on all descriptions of Property throughout the Island. sa Low rates and rromrr settlement of losses. HORACE HASZARD, Agent for P. E. Island. Ch’town, Dec, 20, 1878— No. 35 Water St., Charlottetown. Prince Edward Island Branch —OF THEK— NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE. INSURANGE CO. Subscribed Capital, Paid up Capital, - — $9,733,332.00 1,216,666.00 CHIEF OFFICES-—Edinbargh, 64 Princess Street ; London, 61 Threadneedle Street. Nine-Tenths of the Profits of the Life Assur- ance Business are divided every Five Years. The Tables of Rates are moderate. Fire Insurances effected on nearly every description of Property, at the LowEsT RATES of Premium. corresponding to the nature of the risk. Losssgs settled with promptitude and liber- ality. G. W. DEBLOISs, General Agent. Dec. 14. QUEEN INSURANCE CO'Y. OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING. if SURANCE 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), Jane, 1877— WAGSTARF'S HOTEL. rae Subscriber having fitted up the Hotel formerly known as THE RANKIN HOUSE, in first class style, is now prepared to give comfortable accommodation to Permanent and Transient Boarders. tion at the Wagstaff’s Hotel. WM. WAGSTAFF. May 25, 1878 HE the lace to get yourPrinting done is at sXAM ER Printing Roem Agent for Prince Edward Island Tourists and others will receive every atten- Ua) AMINE 13'79. Advertises Cheap FOR CASH! JOB PRINTING PROMPTLY, NEATLY, AND CHEAPLY DONE. Wee Persons who have not yet settled last year’s accounts, will please do so before com- mencing the business of the coming season. Small Profiis-Quick Returns, IS OUR MOTTO. Warned by the past, we intend to deal closer to the cash system than ever heretofore. Seen eEEEERR Enea 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: QMAPETLY «5 occwscscd ace cehls dD DUPPRURTTY coe ccc spe cceccee BAN ‘THE DAILY t ; HAS A Targely Increased -Girculation i ' i i i AND IS AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING MEDIUM | Lets WEEKLY EXAMINER Made up from Tue Darry—a Compen- dium of all the News of thd 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 Werxty Examier. par A few Advertisements only, received? ‘J, W. MITCHELL, | W. L. COPTON, Office Sup’t. Manager. The Newfoundland correspondent of the Halifax herald writes :— tepic of conversation fishery. Most of the steamers have re- turned or been reported. were at an average price, the returns would be geod. But as in all other articles of commerce, there is great depression in the trade. I have been informed that one Jarge firin, doing business here, has not sold the oil made last spring. However, they. have sent out again, hoping that some call will no doubt be made for seal oil. The interest of the first arrival ceptred on the steamship Proteus, Capt. R. Pike, which arrived Friday, March 28th. It was not merely her arrival, but the report of other vessels that made the first sealer so welcome. The following vessels have ar- rived up to the present, with their cargoes of seals :— S. S. Proteus, 12,000 hood-seals. ** Lion, 6,000 hoods, and 1,200 young hoods. ‘* Aurora, 26,000 young harps and 1,600 hoods. ** Greenland, 24,000 young harps. ** Artic, 10,000 a “ ‘* Merlin, 15,000 ’ = ‘* Commodore, 20,000 ‘* - Neptune, 19,000 young harps and hoods. ‘* Hector, 11,000 young hoods. Esquimaux. Brig Isabella Ridley, 5,500 young harps. 8. 8S. Norwhal, 10,000 * 7 ‘< Bear, 8,000 a “ harps and ————— i A Ee Prince Edward Island and Ontario. (From the Toronto Mail.) During the tariff debate the Opposition speakers have been loud in their declaration that the people of the Island are bitterly hostile to the new policy, and were not slow to prophesy that this would be proved at the first opportunity, meaning, of course, the Local elections. The object of this particular move in the game was strictly personal, and all the rhetoric wasted on the subject had for its target, Mr. Pope, Min- ister of Marine and Fisheries. The Local contest is over, and, much to the chagrin of the Opposition, the Conservatives have gained so overwhelming 2 triumph that their adversaries, at the last advices, are not likely to number more than half a dozen at most, or one-fifth of the House. Mr. Pope, as a sufficient reply to the as- sanlts made upon him asa mis-representative of his Province, announced, in the course of his address, the result of the contest so faras had been ascertained. Mr. McKenzie at once rose up, boiling over with the anger of disappointment, and ‘*felt bound to say” —though he was in fact bound by the rules of order to say nothing—that this was ‘“‘the first time he had ever heard such an an- nouncement in this Parliament.” Surely this was riding the high horse with a ven- geance. The Minister’s words, which gave rise to so unseemly an ebuillition of rage, were simply these, and they were ex- cusable, if excuse were necessary, on ac- count of the virulent attacks made upon him: ‘‘He was happy to say that the Local Conservative Government who supported the National Policy, had been returned by 25 to 5.” That surely was taking a mild revenge for the savage assaults made upon him during the session. In fact, it would puzzle even the ex- Premier to explain vor 2 oe wrong in point of etiquette-—upon which, by the way, he is a great au- thority now—for a Minister to refer to the state of public opinion in his Province, especially when he has been challenged on the point, althongh a private member may do the same thing without rebuke. We venture to say that neither ‘‘ good taste” | nor anything else would restrain Mr. Mac- ikenzie from triumphing, in loud and ex- ultant tones, over a reversal of the Septem- ber verdict in Ontario. It was unfortunate at all events, that he should so far have OvRr cousins over the border are fast re- covering their sense of justice under the Since my last letter, the all-absorbing operation of the new Tariff. The one-sided hag been the seal | plan of getting all and giving none, does ° re- | not work. If oil or skins! . And so we find the San Fran- cisco ‘** Post” saying :-— ‘** The Dominion of Canada and the Ger: man Empire are legislating against Ameri- can manufactures and products. We can- not afford to complain. What is good for American industries cannot be bad for Canadian and German; but it oceurs to us that if all the world were to follow cur ex- ample, and adopt a strictly protective tariff, our exports would sensibly diminish except in the products of the field and orchard. Our workshops and factories would be left to supply the home market only. Is it not time to challenge universal reciprocity by a strictly revenue tariff ?” Miscellaneous Wows: Navigation is open at Toronto. It is proposed to establish a sugar re- finery in Toronto. A great deal of suffering has existed in Labrador during the past winter. There are sixty vessels in the Welland Canal awaiting the opening of navigation. It is said that the English sparrows in immense numbers are migrating westward. The City of Glasgow Bank liquidators have declared a call for £2,250 on each £100 share. Sir Francis Hincks denies the rumor that he is going to England in the interest of the Lieutenant Governor of Quebec. A father was on the bench as judge, and his son at the bar as prisoner, at a Cleve- land court. Further developments leave little doubt that the Ottawa missing man, Thomas Vin- cent, has committed suicide. Five ambitious dogs chased wolves in Sauk County, Wisconsin. The dogs bones were found on the following day. Among Boston’s April fools were eighteen insurance men, who went to the Parker House, arrayed in evening dress, to eat an imaginary dinner. There are at present some two hundred and sixty-eight medical students in Toronto attending the examinations going on at the Toronto University. Mrs. Madden, aged 80 years, of Hamil- ton, was burned to death on the evenmg of the 9th inst., by her clothes taking fire from a lamp explosion. The Pulman Palace Car Company has 24 sleeping and hotel cars in England. Aito- gether in Europe and America, it has 800 cars, of an average value of $14,000 each, or a total of $11,200,000. The first Pul- man car was built 20 years ago, and was run on the Chicago and Alton Railway. The Chicago Inter-Ocean says there are now nearly 12,000,000 bushels in their ele- vators, and expresses a hope that the navi- gation of the Straits were open, for the railroads are lugging off the grain. faster than it arrives. Then there are 4,000,000 bushels at Milwaukee, which will keep for vessels. A keg of gold amounting to $12,000 was lately recovered from a mill pond, where it had been hidden for fourteen years: A guide that was with Jeff. Davis when he was making his flight throngh Georgia de- serted the party on arriving in Wilkes County, stole the keg of money and rolled it into the pond. Onhis deathbed at the penitentiary where he was soon afterwards sent, he disclosed the locality of the trea- sure. A letter just received from Natastquan Point, on the Labrador coast, states that the first snow fell there on the 16th December, in small quantity. Really cold weather was not experienced till between the 12th and 25th of January, but it was nevertheless mild in com- lost his temper as to refuse to take his seat wien called to order by Mr. Bowell, after usurping the floor in the middle of the Minister’s speech. The interruption was Leeal elcctions. man about the impropriety of dragging | ** the petty local politics” of Prince Edward , Island upon the floor of the House of Com- mons. Premier of Toronto. | i ‘ i varison with former years-—so much so, in fact, that the bays continued as clear of ice as in summer. The missionary, Rev. J. <A. Chlafour, who usually goes as far as Blane Sablon in winter, was obliged to await the in every respect, lamentable, and merely ,opening of the navigation. The destitution served to show the poignant feeling of dis- | and suffering among the inhabitants along the appointment caused by the result of these! coast were very Parliament will not be | many would have died of want but for the as- sitting in June; if it were, the ex-Pre-j|sistance sent down last fall by the Govern- mier would have another opportunity of ment: and unless similar aid reaches them displaying his constitutional infirmity. | Very 00” this spring, a catastrophe may Something was said by the hon. gentle- °°": reat this winter—in fact, ee The Death-rate of Our country is getting to be fearfully al- In Ontario, when Premier, he was arming, the average of life being lessened not above hunting in couples with the little | every year, without any reasonable cause, Had he been still on | death resulting generally from the most in- ‘the Speaker’s right, Mr. Mowatt would significant origin. At this season of the tam game. | have made him ¢ho trump card of the Ban- | year, especially, a cold is sucha common ‘The petty local politics” of | thing that in ~he hurry of every day life we | Ontario, so long as the present Administra- ‘are apt to overlook the dangers attending tion controls them, are quite as insignificant as those of the Island; yet Mr. McKenzie) | will once more soil his firgers with him, | | as he did before accident gave him a leftier | position. The issue here will turn dis- i'tinctly upon Dominion questions, if the | Local Government can have its own way. | It was to court an irrelevant verdict on the | National Policy that they prolonged the ‘existence of the Legislature beyond its term; it is for this that they have, unfortu- nately for themselves, determined that the , clections shall take place in June. it and often find, too late, that a Fever or Lung trouble has already set in. Thou- sands lose their lives in this way every win- ter, while had Bosshee’s German Syrup been taken, a cure would have resulted, and a large bill from a doctor been avoided. For all diseases of the Throat and Lungs, Boa- ehee’s German Syrup has proven itself to be the greatest discovery of its kind in medi- cine. Every Druggist in this country will tell you of its wonderful effect. Over 950,- 000 bottles sold last year without a single failure known.