os eg ee all a ini OE RT te EOIN. i 9 ee BY i § - VE ete a RE, Sh SNe oa) ow a ees OSs atalts Se Laas THE —— —— iA MIN FGIa. VOL, 2. Toe Datty EXAMINER Is Published every Evening OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. FE. L. - - KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, . 2 “Three Months, l One Month, - . 0 ne Week, - 0 2 50 95 50 12 n es” Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli cation. * W.L. COTTON, [| J. W. MITCHELL, : Manager. | Otlice Sup’t. PRINCE EDWARD . ISLAND ~ RAILWAY. WINTER RARAWBERLENT, fe come into force MONDAY, DiC. 24, 1877 TRAINS GOING WEs?. No. 5. |} No7 STATIONS. Express | Mixed ie | as a — ccimantnensititiainen: sngiiniinmmanianitinniae Pp. M GEORGETOWN Dp. coh Cardigan " 9.02 / or Mount Stewart Junction } Dyi10. 25 Royalty Junction ** 11.46 a a . . ” CHARLOTTETOWN ee sm Dp. 9.00 Hoyalty dence yee Se North Wiltshire “O28 * 4 Hunter River | «© 10.40} “* 420 Bradalbane * 41.18) * &O County Line a: he P.M. Kensington a ao “* oe Ayr, 12.4 SUMMERSIDE Dp. 200| * 6.20 Wellington 2.45 Port Hill 35 O’ Leary “« 4@¢ Alberton * 66 ‘Tignish ** 6.35 © RAINS GOING EAST. f STATIONS, Rie. 2.; Na 4 t. < | EXPRESS | MIXED. | ' ee ——— —_—---- Yj A.M. TGNISH \Dp. 8.00 ALBERTON 8.5 55) Leary “ 952! Port Hill oa, 07, Wellington “ 1148 P. M. A, M. . ><TNT Ar. 12.35} SUMMERSIDE Dp. 2.10\Dp. 8,35 Kensington “ 24." @2 County Line “« 230) ‘9.80 Brakalibane ‘¢ 3.40) * 10.10 Hunter River *$ 4.20; ** 10.48 North Wiltshire ‘¢ 4,35) * 10.50 toyalty Junction ** 5.30). ** 11.56 CHARLOTTETOWN =} [8% 3-20) . ’ Dp. 2.05, * 12.20 Royalty Junction “ 22 MT. STEWART J | |Ar. 3.40) MT. STEWART June.) |p, 3.50! Cardigan ~ a2 GEORGETOWN, Ar. 5.40 SOURIS BRANCH. eee een atta et NR LC CCC ttt Going West. Going East. a | No, 5 . No. 6 STA’ LION ” wire || STATIONS. MIXED. Ths | pe A.M, } 0 sie Souris iDp. 7.30) Mt. St’w’t Je Dp. 3.50 Harmony ‘* 7.55)| Lot 40 4.26 St. Peter's ** 9.10)| Morell “© 4.32 Morell “« 9,42)/St. Peter's “ 6.05 Lot 40 ** 9.48}| Harmony “ 6.20 Mt St’w ‘tJne Ar. 10.2. 25|/Souris Ar. 6.45 W. MeKE )CHNIE Sup’t. P. E. L, Railway. C. J. BRYDGES, Gen, Superintendent Govt. Railways. es _ ~“Watice to the Public ! SUPPLIES for the “ the ‘‘Soup Kitchen” will reach the Committee if left at the Store of Mr. Alex. Horne, Corner of Queen and Fitzroy Streets. Donations of money will be thankfully re- ceived by them through Dr. Dodd and Mr. J. Quirk, N. B.—Food for the sick carefully poegent; by the Committee. Noy. 30, 1877. a ateitemenanntiie atl MOLASSES -——-AND— SOLE LEATHER 2 PUNCHEONS Perto Rico and Cuba MOLASSES. SIDES New York SOLE LE For sale cheap, at ARCH'D KENNEDY’S. Lower Water Street, Ch’town, March 29—6in | ATHER. ' | + abo FURNISHES MORE NEWS, LESS MONKY THAN FOR ANY OTHER PAPER IN ‘HE PROVINCE ee. It Contains Twenty-eight Columns, nearly every one of which is in closely set READING MATTER, CONSIDER JUR TERMS: SINGLE ©GOPIES to the 3ist December, i878—thirteen months—$1,.90 im ad- vanee. SIX COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $5.5 in advance. TEN COPIES to on address, or addresse. separately, as desired, $9.60 in advanced FIFTEEN COPLTES to one address, _or addressed separately, as required, $13.50 in advance. TWENTY COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired. $17.00, IN DULL TIMES CET CHEAPEST AND gast THE--- Quneenet, The Weekly ixaminer) - is acknowledged to be ahead of any other paper in the Province in the item of LOCAL NEWS and is always well filled with Political, Shipping, Commercial and \ fsneral Information. The debates of the Local Legislature will be carefully 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 specialty. =i The Daily Examiner Will be sent to any part of the Province, the Dominion, United States or Great Britain on receipt of For Six Months, - - - - - $2.50 For Three Months, - - - - 125 For Gue Month - - --: 0 sax ADDRESS, W. L. COTTON, Manager Examiner Printing and Publishing Company. Ch’town, Dec. 6, 1877. ae | ARCHIBALD KEN Globes (Above Mr. D. Fare phar 8010 ; tore) } CorRNER OF Queen & DoncHEsTER « Renovating a nd ‘Repairing Clothes. " R. PATTERS 50N guarantees that no iV _ matter how badly faded or stained gar- ments may be, he will restore them to their origina il color. JOHN ] LA TT ERSON. Feb. Onin THAVRAD Ing fly. St Lawrence Marine Ins, Go, OF P. E. ISLAND. ——°0!-—— SUBSSRIBED C DIRECTORS: : wevy, Esa:, sg. 3 BOARD OF President ; Joun ArremMais Lop, Eso. ; W. E. 3 ' Poy o Morris, Eso. ;: “ F. ROBERTSON, ; G. UW. LONGWOoORTA, Dawson, Esq; Titomas P. W. Hynpman, Esq. Risks tak Ns * HSQ. en daily at their Office, xchange Building. rm — LT WNT 7 - ower, YN HY ND MAN, saat JEEN INSURANCE €0,Y, ne Pi:Al, . : Woerye ig —_ CAP TW Mil LUIGHS STERLING. NSURANCE effee Ries lon ae kinds of Build ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rate; S for isolated rex ridences, Losses settlec d promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (U Agent for Prince » 17T. ‘ion Bank), Edward Island, BLANK - BILL HRADS, BLANK STATEMENTS, —-ANI})— BUSINESS GARDS, Furnished promptly and ae order, at the EXAMINER OFFICE INGS’ BUILDING, Corner Great George and Water Streets. International Hotel (FORMERLY RANKIN HOUSE) Corner of Pownal & Sydney CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E. + purects, £ Private and permanent Boarders can be ae commodated on very moderate terms, during the winter season, at the International. D. iNMOGISAAG, Pr opriator. 2m Dec, 19, S77 PAINTING! fags Subscriber takes this opportunity of thanking the Public for the liberal patron- age he has “received during the he has been in business, and continuance of the same. He is now prepared to execute, in a very superior mammer, faouse, Sign, and Car- riage Painting, Paper Hanging, &e. gar Special attention is given by him to WHITENING, CoLoRING and the Decorative of CEILINGs, WALLS, etc. On hand and made to order— EVERY DESCRIPTION OF CARRIAGES, sy Carriage Repairing promptly attended te, “4 five years solicits a Prices to suit the times. P, i. TRAINOR, GS Kent St., opp. Rocklin House April 2—3m eod JAMES HOBBS, ~ CABINET WAKER, Cor. Hent and Prince Strects, Chariotictown, ay EH SUBSCRIBER, in returning thanks io his customers and the public “generally fer past favors, would take this method to so licit a further continuance of their pene I am better — thaa e ver to execiite any orders that may be entrusted to me The latest styles of all kinds of Hows usehold, Office, Church and School made from well- selected and at short notice. Special attention paid to Cutting, and Laying Carpets. ea Repairing neatly done, at short notice I would also invite the attention of Trustees of City and Country Schools to A DESK, one of the Cheapest and Best ever offered here for School purposes, Please call and inspect it it my Show Room. o JAMES HOBBS. Corner Kent and Prince Streets, Ch’town, Feb, 23, 1878. | § 3m-Zaw urn tbar ec, as SERFOUCYE stock, « Making ‘leaning Dat, NEWS | | STREETS. | | | CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE ‘EDWARD Is SLAND, WEDNES DAY, APRIL 10, 1878, Ag 73s. | BY TELEGRAPH. ee THE SITUATION. Froud the Panett 1onpvon, April 9. 5 ¢ i Lord Derby, in the House of Lords, re- ferred to his differences with his colleagues previous to his resignation. He said he was opposed to the early summoning of Parlia- ment and to the six million vote ; but he was afterward persuaded to assent. He said that in the event of could be hoped from Germany war, all that was bare and not be enevole nt neutrality. The San Stefano Treaty was. discussed and the address to the Queen, thanking her for calling out the reserves, was adopted. CONSTANTINOPLE, April 9. Mr. Layard, the British Ambassador here, has received a report from the British Ambas sador at Rustchuk, claiming satisfaction from the Russian Government for an outrage com- mitted by Russian troops in entering z the con- sulate there and taking possession of its Arch- ives, notwithstanding thai the British flag was hoisted over the buildin ig at the time. or. Prermrspunc, Apnil 9 The belief that Germany is abandoning her strictly passive attitude 1s tast gaining ground, It is said that Bismarck will use his in- fluence in favor of peace. it is now supposed that negotiations for a Congress will recommence on some new basis. Corr respondence, Ss iW" a not Ie M id ourse ives Fespon sidie Jor the Opinions or statements of corre spond nis. eee eee eating eel — nes nrrerasasaties ew A: 3 lum Foundation. The 1 » the Exditor of the Hesutieers Sim,—Yon will do me a kindness if you al- low me space fora few lines in your paper. As the talk in town and country is about the New Asylum, I thought 1 would go and see for myself. i went out on Monday, April Sth ; and I found a kind of survey going on at the time. I! had a fair view of the work inside and outside. Seme of the names of those in- specting it were Mr. Corbett, from the City ; Mr. Rodd, from Summerside, and another from the southern part of the Island. They pointed out a number of stones laid in the outside of the wall that were not laid accord- ing tothe rules of masonry. You may want to know. where those stones are to be found. That is an easy maticr. In most of the parts of the wall, where the projections from the other walls in the ; ae iL is Wory batily ned where every other state has a sutticient bond or hold on its neighbors; not so ina number of those angles. Again, my attention. was taken with a hole f saw in the wall. It had been broken for the purpose of seeing how it was built; and I must say that 1 never saw such a piece of dry work in a wall of stone that mortar was to be used in connection with the stone. I know that they had a person to inspect the work ; but what he has been doing I cannot think. It appears to me that a pr actical man should be there all the time to watch the work in its construction. It is very easy for the contractors to save greatly on mortar when they heart the wall with dry stone. No wonder Mr. Stériing said in his letter, the secret those men had of building cheaper than other contractors,that they never paid out more than a dollar for a dollar’s worth of work. Very good, Mr. Sterling. Dry wails show that. But I must pass some things an- noticed this time ; but one more item I must notice. That is the sand on which the mortar was to be made, Now, every man that read the specifications knows that the sand in mak- ing the mortar was to be taken from a fresh water river. That was one of the reasons I did not tender for the Asylum; and I thought that the idea was carried ont, till I saw it ves terday, and I was surpised, and nota httle offended, No wonder the mortar washed out of the joints of the stone in the wall. Sand taken out of the river late in the fall and built in the wall with salt and all! What a piece of unfairness toward me and others who posed the sand would have to be imported. What is the reason those favorites, those cheap men, shaald be sent for---hunted up—to make the country pay for it. Somebody may ans- wer this question if they please. At is said that a ‘new broom sweeps clean.” If the parties that did this thing had been tarred and feathered, they would have received no more than their conduct deserved. They have set a trap for themselves that will spring on them at the next clection, or lam mistaken. Thank- ing you jor your space, J remain \ ours, CHARLES Su s up- >; HEAR Apn i 9, 1878. ow cannon —so- - The Bismarck Policy The New York J Nation says that Bis- marck’s oratory is so novel and at the same time so pregnant, that the analysis and in- terpretation of it have become a sort of specialty among Continental politicians, and NO. 270, present crisis for accomplishing it. That, were it accomplished, would cause the Slavs of Southern Europe to look to Vienna rather than to St. Petersburg, and might in time to come prevent Russia from using the aspirations of the whole Slavic race as a lever for her ambition, to the extent that she has been able to do in time past. Apropos of this view of Bismarck and his policy, he is not the first European states- man whose policy has given employment to what may be called a school of commenta- tors. The late Lord Palmerston had a synilar distinction conferred upon him in his time, and his policy was as elaborately discussed then by Continental experts as that of Bismarck is now. He was always on the side of freedom and progress, a fact which made him at once disliked abroad and popular at home. Englishmen may have their sigh of regret for this indication of a de} varted sceptre ; by, if they have, they need be at no loss whom to blame for it. . It was after the death of Palmerston, and under the rule of Mr. Gladstone, that the change took place ; though ‘it has to be added that the ex-Premier has been able to follow up his unpatriotic work perhaps even more effectively in Opposition then when in contro! of the nations’s affairs. To him, in a great measure, itis due that Bismarck’s policy is to-day looked upon as what must ‘prevail in Enrope, no matter who says nay. ~Toront o Mail. eer. Money as a Source of H fappiness. Ze who gra asps at large and speedy re- sults, who rushes into speculation, borrow- ing freely, expanding a business beyond its leg ‘itimate resources, has a fitful, feverish pleasure which even success cannot preserve and failures must utterly ruin. Money gained thus rapidly never gives the perma- nent happiness which is hoped for; exhaus- tion, weariness, ennui ensue, while still oftener what is thus s suddenly and lightly ac- quired as suddenly and rapidly takes its flight. But he who is content to begin humbly, to toil for what he gets, to extend nly so far and so fast as his actual means will warrant, who craves nothing more than the fair meed of his exertions,and prefers te risk only what belengs to him, while know- ing nothing of the ex:iting pleasure of the speculatd wr, yet lays te foundation of hap- piness w hich will grov and endure, because the principles which ° iphold it are eternal. The same is true in expenditure, pieasure which rightly belong: to it isprogressive. It has small beginnings limited rigidly to the means possessed, ard only expanding in proportion. No one can comprehend the full satisfaction which the spending of money can give who aas not subjected him- self to the restraint which economy, pru- dence, and strict equity impose. Seeming impediments to his desires, they are yet the necessary barriers beyond which the fulfil- ment of those desires cease to give happi- ness. One with tasie, ingenuity and self. denial, who plans and labors to make an at- tractive home out of moderate means, who contrives to extract the blessings of life for a family, in the order of their importance, and to save a little at the end of a pleasant surprise or a healthful amusement, knows far more of the real happiness of expendi- ture than one who disburses witha lavish profusion that knows no stint and compels no sacrifice. The Household. To Wash Chamois Skins.—Wash in cold water with plenty of soap, and rinse well in clear, cold water; thus treated the skins will never be hard, bunt soft and pliable. faked JHams.—Choose a small ham, and soak over night, putting it in quite warm water ; in the morning lay it to drain and wi dry; mix flour and water in a stiff batter, and cover the ham with it; place it on a trivet or on sticks jaid across the baking pan 5 > when cooked, fhe rind and garnish as you would a boiled hain. trim Removing Freckles.—Piease give me a cure for freckles. —W. G. Mara,.—Get ten cents’ worth of Gum-benzoim and alcohol. Let it stand until the gum has disolve edsufficiently to redden the alcohol, axl then pour off the mix- ture into a pint bottle, t to the depth of half an inch, and {ill the bottle with soft water. The preparation will then resemble milk, and is ready for use. Bathe the freckles with a soft cloth dipped in the liquid. If the skin smarts under the application, add a little more rain water. rom Drakneuea in CHrLpRRN.— Take one « cup wheat flour and tie ina stout cloth and drop in cok L water ; then set over the fire and boil three hour steadily. After it is cold, remove the cloth and crust formed by boiling, The bail thus prepared can be kept REMEDY may alinost be said to have produced a s-hool of commentators. The one thing he man interests, and that Germany neithei fears nor reason to fear anybody. Among close observers of his language and policy the prevailing belief is that Bismarck does not look yor any trouble between Aus- tria and Russia—that is, he knows that one or the other, and probably Russia, will ai bhe last moment yield what is required to avoid war between the two, and that there- fore there is no need to declare himself on either side, or mar that cordial understand- ing which he says still exists between the three Emperors. This view is somewhat confirmed by a recent dispatch to the eifect that the idea of an Anglo Ausirian alliance has been abandoned. ‘The Nation holds to the theory that Bismarck’s design is to make has 3 makes plain is that he is looking after Gor-! | ready for use for any length of time. ‘To use, grate a tablespoonful for a cupful of bolling water and milk—each one half. Wet up the ur with a very little cold water ; stir in and inutes. ten to taste. Use a salt if desired. honed. 4 Oil nvye.mM Swe CrackeD Waeat.-—This exeellent dish is often spoiled by very good cooks who think they must stir it all the time to keep it from burning. Too much stirring makes it like paste; putting in more water when nearly done has the same effect. One-third of wheat, by measure, to two-thirds of water, soft, if you it, will make it about right. The water should be cold when the wheat is put in; it should cook slowly and be covered closely, In this way searcely any stirring will be found necessary. This is way seareely any stirring will be found necessary. ‘There is a delicious- ness is this dish when cooked as above which is never found if stirred while cooking. The same may be said of oatmeal, only the latter should be quickly stirred into boiling water; cover closely and let it cook for about twenty minutes. Wheat may be cooked about the alacet Austria a more distinctly Slavic =. than she now is, and that he expects to use the ame time, although it bears cooking longer,