re i id ee ne vs i : ne be: ra is - aera) eet ss Senta oa ee Ue 3 ee a oe - srde Ls Rae I Cee oe eS ——a a _ ~~ oy ~ VOL 2. i (AD TO THE PUBLIC: \ HILE taking this opportunity of thank ing our haumerows customers for the| whieh iibera manner 3 they have patrod ed { OUR NEW sTuD!O, we would inform them that we have now] tycrensed facdities for the prodaction of first-class work, und are prepared to make | pyotocnarus of @ Slyle and Quality that | has never been before aliempled in this Cily. | We have on < xhibition, at our Rooms, a} large number of Photograps if every | yariety, including the BEAUTIFUL PHOTO - ENAMEL be mos! beautiful style of Photograph known, possessing a soflness and delicacy of coloring that has never been equalled. | Tis elegant picture has become deservedly | popa ar elsewhere, and caunot fai! to be} ecme so here. Though the finish of our Photographs | cannot be excelled, we would direct attes tion to the beautitul Glaee Pictures which we make. They possess a highly enamelled surface, and are practically tudes- tructible, vsnd wih retain their freshness and beauty for any length of time. ({f they pecome soiled they can easily be cleaned, | as they will not lose any of their beauty by being wet, ‘This valuadie quality, com- pined with their remarkable elegance, make them very suitable for presents; while the difficulty of their production will prevent them ever becoming so common as to Jessen their value. Our patrons ean have one or all of their Photos finished in this style—an advantage which canner be obtained elsewhere. We give special attention to -mekiag Groups of Families, Socicties, Schools, &¢ Our pictures of children are sufficient evidence of our success in this dificult branch of our art. Our *NLARGEMENTS, fiuished im India Ink, Pastel, Creyon, Oil and Water Colors, have fade a favorable reputation fer them selvés throughout the Lower Provinces. Parties intending to have Photographs wade will find it to their advantage to sit early, as the number of our en ‘tomers makes some delay in the delivery of ibe Photos unavoidable. We prefer to have our sitters come by appointment. Photographs can be Obtained for ies» money eisewhere ; but in this case We ask that quality be given the preference, as- suring tue public that they wilt flad our charges very moderate. ROSS BROS.. Cor. Queen and Dorchester Streeis, opposite Connolly s Bank. ee ee International Hotel | (FORMERLY RANKIN HOUSE) Gorner of Pownal & Sydney Streets, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. & Private and permanent Boarders can he ac- vommodated on very moderate terms, during the winter season, at the International. D. MEGISAAC, Proprietor. Dec. 19, 1877 —2m OLASSES— In Store and to arrive for } Winter’s Stock, 125 Puns. Barbadoes & Cienfugos. CARVELL BROS. Dec. 5- pat 3 CHEAPEST YET! In Connection with our Cheap Dry Goods Sale We will offer our entire Stock of BOOTS & SHOES ig § ef about $2,009 worth, at cost to cle r, consisting of — Men's Wellington Beois, Men's Leather Congress Boots, Men's Felt Congress Bovis, Men's Larrigans & Overshoes, Men's Felt and Leather Slippers, Women’s Leather Boots, (lastic and Laced), Women's Feit Beots, “ - Women's Slippers & Overshoes, Misses’ & Children’s Leather iiovts. COME ONE AND ALL AND GET BOOTS CHEAP J. B. MACDONALD, QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN. Jan. 9—ne pat ee FINE ARTS NEW YEAR’S CLASS. RS. W. W. IRVING begs to intimate 4 to the public that she has re-opened her Classes at the late City Hotel, opposite the Rk. C. Chapel, where, having every facility, sh is prepared to give lessons in Oil and Water Color Painting, and Drawing m Crayon an l Penciling in all their different branches. ‘ferms made known on application. Jan. 11, 1877. Se ye Th CHA RLOTTETOWN, PI a teeny eee a oe - yw <<a ) ’ VLAD { ALY pe BOOK & JOB NTING! eatiy and expeditiously executed, J AT THE “EXAMINER” OFFICE i. 1 . . 6 under the careful supervision of J. W. MITCHELL. We are now in 2 position to execute orders for all kinds of Printing, such as LETTER HEADS, DILL HEADS, CIRCULARS, CARDS. 'PAMPHLETS, DODGERS, HANDBILLS, POSTERS, AND ALL KINDS OF bank and Legal Blanks, &e, Xe. &: . AT MODERATE PRICES. Office :—Ings Old Stand, y ‘Y ¥ . ’ Corner Great Lreorde and Water Streets. Da. WILLLAY GRAY'S SPECIDTIS MEDICINE. <— bhs Great Kaelish Rem- ss -y% STA edy_is an unfailing cure gg Pee me & for Seminal Weakness Sper: J ‘eee & mulorrhea, Impotency, and ge i.) all Ciseases that follow asda ‘ sequence of Self-Abuse; “Ss as Loss of Memcry, Univer- eul Lassitude, Pain in the SoA « ~ “ex Back, Dimness of Vision SSRer' BeforeTaking. Premature Oid Age, and After Taking. many other discases that lead to lusanily or king. sumption anda Premature Grave. aa Price, $1 per package, or six packages for $5, by mail free of postage. Full particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire tosend free by mail toeveryone. Address WM. GRAY & CO., Windsor, Ontario, Canada. KE Sold in Charlottetown by W. R Watson, P. . Fraser, C. D. Rankia, De Dodd, and a Apothecaries’ fall, and by al! drugygistsany where y CAPSICUM The Greatest Medical Discovery since the Creation of Man, or since the i Commencement of the There never has been a time when the heal- ing of so many different diseases has been caused by outward application as the present. It is an undisputed fact that over half of the eee = ? ' } ; } j OO tree ane en nen cee: j ' i ‘ { ? Christian Era. | i entire population of the globe resort to the use of ordinary plasters. a Dr. MELVIN’S CarsicUM Porots PLASTERS are acknowledged by all who have used them, to act quicker than any other plaster they ever before tried, and that one of these plasters will do more real service than a hundred of the ordinary kind. All other plasters are slow of action. and require to be worn continually to effect a cure; but with these it is entirely dif- ferent: the instant one is applied the patient will feel its effect. Physicians in all ages have thoroughly tested and well know the effect.of Capsicum; and it has always been more or less used as a medical agent for an outward application; but it is only of very recent date that its advan- tages in a porous plaster have been discovered, Being, however, convinced of the wonderful cures effected by Dr. MrLvin’s CAPSICUM Porous PLASTERS, and their superiority over all other plasters, they now actually prescrib them, in their practice, for such diseases as rheumatism, pain in the side and back, and all such eases as have required the use of plasters or liniment. After you have tried other plas- ters and liniments, and they have failed, and you want acertain cure, ask your druggist for Dr. Mevvry’s Capsicum Porous PLASTER. You can hardly believe your own convictions of its wonderful effects. Ithough powerful and quick in its action, you can rely on its safety for the most delicate person to wear, as it is free from lead and other poisonous material commonly used in the manufacture ef ordin- ary plasters. One trial is a sufficient guarantee of its merits, and one plaster will sell hundreds to your friends. Ask your draggist for DR. MELVIN’s CAPst- cum Porowus PLASTER, and take no other; or, on receipt of 25 cents for one, $1 for five, or $2 for a dozen, they will be mailed, post paid, to any address in the United States or Can MANUFACTURED BY THE NOVELTY PLASTER WORKS Lowell, Mass., U. 8. A., j G. E. MITCHELL, Proprietor, Manufacturers of Plasters and Plaster Compounds W.R. WATSON, Agent. December 7, 1877. ee To Trustees of Country Schools HE Trustees of several Districts have been applying fer school furniture, and in every instance consider the American and Canadian Combination Seat and Desk too ex- pensive. [I have just got up a Combination that is stronger, neater, and one-third cheaper than those that have been imported. Call and see samples of the different sizes. City School Trustees fully approve of them. MARK BUTCHER Dec, 18, 1877-—ex lm ne a pat pres 41 Will be sent to any part of the Province, the | } atm an 13'78. TEH CI) Eamier FURNISHES MORE NEWS, for LESS MONEY THAN ANY OTHER PAPER IN THE PROVINCE. It Contains Twenty-eight Columns, nearly every one of which is im closely set READING MATTER, UUNSIDER OUR TERMS: SINGLE COPIES to the 31st December, 1s75—thirteen months—%#1,00' in ad- vance. SIX COPLES to one wddress, or addressed separately, as desired, $5.50 in advance. TEN COPIES to on address, or addvease. separately, as desired, $9.00 in advanced FIFTEEN COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as required, $13.50 im advance. TWENTY COPTES ‘to one sddress, or addressed separately, as desired, 817.00, Iv DULL TIMES kT THE HHAPES?T AND BROT | The Weekly txaminer is ackuowledged to be ahead of any other paper in the Province in the item of LOCAL NEWS, and is always well filled jwith Political, Shipping, Commercial ; and General Information. & The da@bates of the Local Legislatnre willbe earefully and impartially given. Special tele- grams and letters from ‘Our Own Ottawa Correspondent” will contain everything of in- terest transpiring in the Dominion Parlia- ment. A Good Story will be made a speciaity. —:0:---— The Daily Examiner Dominion, United States or Great Britain on receipt of For Six Months. - For Three Months, For One Month, - 30 ss” ADDRESS, W. L. COTTON, Manager Examiner Printing and Publishing Company, Ch’town, Dee, 6, 1877. a ——= XAMINE E EDWARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1878. iin ” —= Merchants’ Exchange. THE MANAGER'S ANNUAL REPORT. ’ ‘This valuable fastitution was first organized in January, 1560, and haa ever since continued to command the support aud patronage of newly all the leading merchants and profes- sional men of Charlottetown, —_<—- The annual list of daily pepers and other periodicals ou ita tables have gradually in- creased year after year to meet the growing fequirements of the mercantile community. On the revised list of papers tor the cnrrent year are ;— London.—The Mail, Mitchell’s Maritime Register, Dlustrated News, Panch, News of the World, Saturday Review, Spectator, Pub lic Opinion. _ Liverpool. —Daily Telegraph and Shipping Gazette, Edinburgh.--Seotaman, Dublin Freeman. New York.—Daily Herald, Shipping and Commercial List and Prices Current, Maritime Register, Tribune, World, Times, Scottish American, Harper's Weekly, Wilke’s Spirit of the Times, Scientitic American, &c, Boston.—Daily Journal, press. Ottawa. —Citizen, Advertiser, Ex- Free Press, Montreal.—-Daily Gazette, Witness, [lias trated News, &c. Toronto,-—-Daily Mail, Globe, Monetary Times, St. John, N. B.-—Daily Telegraph, Freeman. Halifax, N. 8.--Daily Chronicle, Herald, Reporter. All P. E. isiand papers, and a large number of exchanges from California, Australia, and other places. Also, daily Telegraphic despatches, contain- ing tae latest Lurop@n, American, and L’o- inion news, shipping intelligence, gold quota- tions, sterling exchange, &c., In connection with tbe Reading Room was also organized, and for many years conducted, the Charlottetown Debating Club—the weekly meetings of which were held, during the winter rmduths, in the Reading Room, This arrangement afforded young men fuacilities for exercising their talents as debaters, and public speakers. A re-union, of a kindred character, for the benetit of young men, is again coutem- plated ; and, in all probability, will, at no distant day, be consummated. The decisions of the Reading Room Debating Club, on im- portant questions, were, in those days, re- garded with deep interest. Governments were frequently forced to acknowledge the powerful influence which this Club exerted in the community. Many of the young men who then took part in the debates of that Institution have attained high positions in Society. They are to-day first among their compeers in Parliament; at the Bar; on the Bench; in the Pulpit; aud one of them oc- cupies the Gubernatorial chair of one of the new Provinces of this vast ‘Canada of ours.” The privilege of the Charlottetown Reading , Room are always extended, free of charge, to the members of both branches of the Legisla- ture, the clergy of all denominations, editors and publishers of newspapers, strangers intro. duced by members of the room, and gentlemen from the country. Government and Opposition, at home and abroad, are fairly and wapartially represented, the leading political ;papers on both sides being on our files. The Room is couducted on purely secular principles. The financial position of the Charlottetown Reading Rvom js self-sustaiming, the annual receipts being suflicient to meet the expendi- ture. Detailed accounts, showing the annual cost of gas, papers, telegrams, &c. ; also the annual amount received—how and by whom paid, &c,—are open forthe inspection of members, at the office of , A, McNei., Manager. Exchange Building, Jan. 23, 1878. . ~~ Gip>-« Barque Lizzie Cameron, Alexander Cameron master, sailed from this port on Sunday morn- ing last, January 13th, tor Queenstown, with 28,685 bushels of oats and 522 pieces deals, shipped by the owners, Messrs. James Duncan & Co. and Capt. Cameron, of steamer J’rincess ot Wales. This vessel loaded the entire cargo in less than four days, and was only one week in port. Brigt. Curmenta, Captain Scott, sailed yes- | terday, the 16th inst., also for Queenstown, Oey with 15,993 bushels cats, and 222 pieces of deals, shipped by the owner, Angus McMillan, Esq-, of Summerside. Brigt. Fortune, owned by Messrs. James Dunean & Co., is also loading oats, and will tinish her cargo to-day, completing the export of 100,000 bushels of oats from this port since the Ist instant, and the extraordinary despatch which all those vessels have had, and the faci- lities offered for loading, combined with the advantayes afforded by our unrivalled harbor, completely free of ice, in mid winter will, no doubt, be made a note of by exporters in other parts of the Island. Mr. Robertson and Mr. /McMillan are down here looking after their ' vessels and speak in high terms of the facili- ' ties to which we have referred. The Carmenta loaded on Monday last 12,8 bushels of oats in 10 hours, or 1,280 bushels per hour, which we believe has never been | equalied in this Island, add altogether casts in the shade the steam elevator which we sce noticed in the Halifax Recorder as having moved 1,000 bushels an hour. | The obliging Superintendent of the P. E. Island Railway, William McKechnie, Eagq., esta iw $2.50 contributed in no small degree to the success of the operations, which must be gratifying to 1.25 the ship owners, by running extra trains to carry the oats from the different stations along the line. Mr. E. T. Wickwire, Station Mas- ter here, also receives unstinted praise from these men for lending all the assistance is his power.—A. C. Advurtisar. - 82068 -—_——__ ----- > Lewis Bunner, a young man of Ellice, Ont., ‘was to have been married on Thursday last, ‘buat falling suddenly ill on Tuesday, was ; buried at the hour and date set for the wed- | ding, and in his wedding clothes, f san |Chariottetown Reading Room and | { } cscareninnaeeannneoaaeeiaent ee NO, 214. A New Climate for Canada. [From the Baltimore American.] Captain Graham, of the steamship ‘‘ Mo- ravian,” of the Allan line,who is now in Balti- more, has caused quite a sensation throughout Lower Canada with his proposition to close the Straits of Bolle Isle, which is also ‘attracting much attention in England, His idea is that, by building « breakwater across the straits the imnieuse flaw of Northern water which’ fiow passes through them rushing into the Gul of St. Lawrence will be carried direct to the At. lantic. ‘This water during the early spring months is laden with icebergs,’ and has the same eifect on the climate of Canada, as well 2s of Mame and most of our Eastern States, that the Galf Stream has upon the climate of the Gulf States. The theory of Captain Gia. ham is that if this cold current and the annual iucursion of icebergs were diverted from the Gulf of St, Lawrence the surrounding tempera- ture would be materially raised, the chilly cold of Arctic floods would no more be feli along the shores of Quebec, vegetation would take the place of sterility, and a vast tract of land now lying idle and uncultivated, owing to the adverse influences of climate, would be made amendable to the plow and prove a great source of wealth to the country. Moreover, the absence of the present current, which now sweeps into the Gulf and up the St. Lawrence, would permit of a greater influx from the south of the warming influence of the Gulf Stream, which at certain seasons of the year, by the action of the trade winds, is forced into the Gulf of St, Lawrence, the result being that on the neighboring shores,as in Prince Edward Island, the temperature is high and vegetation iiourishes. Not ofity; Captain Graham con- teuds, would we have such results, but there is every reason to believe that the St. Law- rence would remain open all winter, as-al- though there may be seen ice forming about the mouths of fresh water rivers, salt water ice 18 never seen in the Gulf or Straits of Belle Isie until the northern jicld ice is close at hand, when the slab ice begins to form. Certain it is, that wherever the influence of this Polar stream is not felt throughout Cana. da, or is navigated by the Gulf Stream, ferti- lity abounds, as “in* Prince Edward Island, along the south side of the St. Lawrence and on the west coasts of Newfoundland and Nova Scotia, whilst wherever the North Seas wash the shores nothing but rocky ground and bar- renness abound. A glance at the map shows that were the Straits blocked up, the Polar current would pursue its south-easterly course until it was lost in the mighty Atlantic, leav- ing not only Labrador and Quebec territory to fructity unmolested by its withering colds, but mayhap the northeast shores of Newfound- land as weil. High engineering authority has pronounced the work ot blocking the Straits quite feasible and practicable. It will, however, be an im- mense undertaking, as the Straits are eight miles wide, with anaverage depth of thirty fathoms. The material, in the form of tower ing rocks, is on the spot ready to be thrown into the sea, and though the work no doubt looks a {stupendous ong, it is beliéved to be not beyond human skill to complete it. The probable cost may be considered a detriment, but Canada has large resources, and a large expendrture would be more than justifiable, oe at the great result which would flow rom it. ——?> 2° > -° oe -— -——--— War or Peace. A special to the ‘*Times” from St. Peters- burg says a person who helped to draw up the armistice conditions states that they are not iikely to be aecepted by the Turks. The same despatch states that the Russian Minister of the Interior has instructed the press to be moderate in its remarks about Austria and England. The ‘‘ Times” Pera despatch says: ‘Tt is said that Grand Duke Nicholas, accompanied by his staff and General Igateu, met the ‘Turkish delegates on Friday morning at a station on the Jamboli railway. The Grand Duke had advanced to meet the delegates be. cause of difficulty on the road, and courteously invited them to return by carriage with him.” The correspondent of the ‘‘ Times ” at Vienna declares that Austria has made no commanica- tion to the Porte concerning the terms of peace since her answer to the Porte’s note of Decem- ber 12th, asking mediation. The present re- port seems founded upon reservations that Austria then made. The Turkish delegates met Grand Duke Duke Nicholas at ‘lirnova Lemenli, and pre- liminary notes were exchanged. The Grand Duke then announced that he had decided to treat only ai Adrianople, which should be im- mediatelly evacuated. The delegates have as- sented,an orders were telegraphed to Semil Pasha to evacuate Adrianople. Upon this decision being communicated to foreign Consnls at Ad- rianople, they telegraphed to Ambassadors for instructions, and were ordered to remain and protect their countrymen. Djemil Pasha then prepared to retire upon the fortified lines before Adrianople, where reinforcements are now concentrating. Russians will probably arrive at Adrianople in two days, and negoti- ations then begin, It is generally thought there that the wisest policy is for Turkey to make at once. The Council of Turkish Ministers on Thurs. day decided to order Turkish Ambassadors at Vienna and London to request explanation of protest against separate peace recently lodged by Austria and England, and to ask how far ‘lurkey may count upon support of those coun- tries. Reports from St. Petersburg and Berlin debate on address, though regarded as pacific, have not pleased the Russian Govarnment, and that Lord Salisbury’s declaration that the tide of war was approaching a point at which British interests might be touched, and where it must be stopped if necessary, is regarded as a serious menace coming from such a source. Ep We understand the Premier has writtex an autograph letter to each supporter of the Government inthe House of Commons, re- minding thei that Parliament will assemble on theyth of February, and requesting them to be in attendance,—Ottawa Herald, unite in declaring that the Queen’s speech and ©