a —— VOL. 3. ——— a sees __CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, FRIDAY, JUNE 28, 1878 $n A TTrstttesn tenes, a th. i tt as SE ON ee aN = ate EX AMINER._ NO. 334. _ THE DAILy Is Published every Evening. OFFICE ; was’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. I. EXAMINER KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, $2 50 Three Months, 1 25 One Month, 0 50 One Week, 0 12 a@ Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- tesly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- gation. W. L. COTTON, J. W. MITCHELL, Manager. | Office Sup’t. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 9. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT | MONDAY, APRIL 29th, 1878. Trains Going West. A wae) Hes | STATIONS. Ne No 5 Express. | Mixed. |Mixed Jeorgetown = =| Dp 4.00 pm) Dp 7.30 am| on Cardigan -“eae | © Toe 2 | jar 5.25 ** jar 9,20 “ M.Stew't Jun | 11p.5.35 “ dp 9.30 “ | Royalty Jun. Tieee..**.1 “ReS. * | jar 6.50 ** larll.06 “* | Pp. mM. Chitown =| dp 6.25 amjdp11.35 “ 'dp6,25 Royalty Jun. | ‘* 6.43 ‘| “11.55 © | 5.45 N. Wiltshire |“ 7.18 “ | **12.50 pm} ‘6.42 Hunter River | ‘“ 7.30 * oe 1.07 ** | ‘*7.00 Breadalbane | ‘ 7.58 “| “ 1.47 “ | **7.38 County Line on 1 hae 4 Kensington =| “8.33 “| «2.38 « | «8.25 } 00 oe a £ ee i Summerside | lap ote “ ap ee ‘“ mene W > BR } 66 9,52 se sé 4.40 ce Port Hl | “10,22 « “5.97 * O'Leary j *V1L18 “ “ 6.54 “ Aibertoa “ae ** 1 Gee Tignish arl2.40 pmiar 8.50 ‘ Trains Going East. oe i i STATIONS. No. 2 No.4 | No. 6 Mixed. {mixed Tignish Dp 1.50 pm: Dp 6.30am ; od ~fiar 7.20" rm 2.30 } d 7.50 “ se 3.13 “ “ 8.57 sé Yort Hal * 410 * | "2022 “ ellington se 4.40 sé “11.10 ‘e ¥ “te ar 5.15 ‘* ar12.05pmj A. M. dp 5.30 ‘‘ |\dp12.40 * dp6. 30 Kensington eae “+ Toe? 1 7a Roti <é 6.23 ts se 1.57 “ 667 46 adalbane ul > des Bee Me * 7.98 Hunter River | “7.00 “ | “2.48 “ | 8.35 NM. Wiltsbire | ‘‘ 7.12 “* | “* 3.05 “ | “8.52 ar 4.00 * ** 9.45 Reyalty Jun. |‘ 7.47 | dp 4.10 * arl005 Ch'to ; ‘ar 8.05 “ lar 4.30 “ Y dp 8.05 am|dp 2% ‘s sé +} [ar 4. a Royalty Jun. §.23 {Tap 4.10 * ar 9.20 “ ar 5.25 * Mt. Stewart | lap 9.40 * dp 5.45 * bs **10.43 “< ss 7.06 sé e own jarll.05 “* jar dean. *S SOURIS BRANCH. Trains Going West. a STATIONS. | No7 Mixed. | No. 9 Mixed. Souris Dp3.lép a | Dp6.30am. Harmony tse 45S 6S “* Se Peter's | oac ¢ "in Morel! | +7 “ 8.38 “ sn i Siew't Jun.jJA 6.25 “ jAr 9.200 “ nf Train Going East. eee STATIONS. No. 8 Express. | No 10 Mixed. M. Stewart Jun} Dp 9.30 am. | Dp 5.35 p.a Morell [| oe | eee ™ St. Peter's “19,25 “ | 6.47 “ hy | #91,23 “ “602 * Souris | Aril.40 “ | Ar 825 “ WM. McKECHNIE, C, J. BRYDGES, Supt. P, BR. I. R. Gen, Sup. Gov. Railways. Ci’'town, April 20, 1878— SOMETHING ~NEW! KACELETS, LOCKETS, BROOCHES, Ear-Rings, Cuff-Buttons, Charms, &c., at J. F. McKAY’S, North Side Queen Square. Ch’town, May 31 -- Sco ae QUEEN INSURANCE 00,Y, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLICNS STERLING. NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- i Merchandise and Produce. Also, on to. on the stocks. : Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. 7 ; 4 D U on Bank), GEORGE MAUCI ko on Talat Agent for Prince June, 1S77— W. W. WELLNER Has the largest and best selected Stock of First-Class Goods in the City, of the following lines, namely— GOLD AND SILVER, WALTHAM AND GENEVA WATCHES, American & French CLOCKS, Gold, Silver, Gold-plated, Jet and- Horn THWHLRY. —-ALSO— ELECTRO-PLATED WARE, FANCY VASES, &. No. 81 Norru Stpe Quren Sevare. Ch'town, June 3—4i 2aw No. 35 Water St... Charlottetown. Prince Edward Island Branch OF THE NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE. INSURANCE CO. $9,733.332.00 1,°216,666,00 CHIEF OFFICES—Edinburgh, 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. Losses settled with promptitude and liber- Subscribed Capital, Paid up Capital, - ality. G. W. DgBLOIS, General Agent. AGENCIES —OF THE— General Mining Association, Limited, i -—~AND THE— Halifax Company, Limited. ORDERS FOR COAL, —+oON THE—- Old Sydney Mines, Cape Breton, Lingan se sé Albion Mines, Pictou, N. S., can be obtained on — to the Subscriber. Terms as usual. G. W. DEBLOISs, Sole Agent for Prince Edward Island. May 18—2aw NOTICE OF REMOVAL. John Bell, TAILOR & CUTTER, having removed from Fitzroy Street (West), to Mr. George Scantlebury’s new House on KENT STREET, will be glad to see his friends and customers, and attend to any orders he may be favored with in his line of business. JOHN BELL. — Kent St., July 15—3w sat tuth pat mw fri GRAIN ID RAILWAY PIGNIC \HE METHODIST SABBATH SCHOOLS ‘I will hold their Annual Picnic thirteen miles out on line of Railway (East), at BEECH GROVE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 10th. Further particulars will be advertised. June 12—2i law2w arg-lin DE. WILLIAM GRAY’S SPECIFIC MEDICINE. The Great Enclish Rem- A. - = < edy is an unfailing eure : for Seminal Weakness Sper- Ere matorrhea, Impotency, and ie ; all diseases that follow asg%& a sequence of Self-Abuse; LOA as Loss of Memcry, Univer ers Lae eed eae ie, Pain in thes = MA Back, Dimness of Vision ave BeforeTaking. Premature Old Age, and After Taking. many other diseases that lead to Jusanity or Con- sumption anda Premature Grave. #a~ Price, $1 yer package, or six packages for 5, by mail free of postage. I] particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to send free by mailtoevery one, Address WM. GRAY & CO., Windsor, Ontario, Canada. sar Sold in Charlottetown by W. R. Wat- son, Dr. Dodd, C. D. Rankin, P. G. F raser at Apothecaries Hall, and by all Druggists anywhere. SHOP on Queen Street, adjoining the Drug Store of P. G. Fraser. Rent $300 per year. Also, two Good OFFICES on the s2cond flat, Possession given about 25th July. Apply to P. G. FRASER, Ch’town, June 13, 1878—3i* WAGSTAFF'S HOTEL, 4 yen Subscriber haying 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. _ Tourists and others will receive every atten tion at the Wagstaff’s Hotel, ~WM. WAGSTAFF. May 25, 1878. Starch Manufacturing Co.. CAPITAL . .° $25,000, /n Shares of BI5.00 each. FFXHIS COMPANY has been Incorporated by Act of Parliament during the present session, and one-third of the Shares have been taken up by the leading men of Charlottetown. Farmers holding Stock in this Company will have the benefit ot the preference in the large purchase of produce which the working of the Company entails. Applications for Shares to be made to Messrs. Hyndman Bros., witill the Di- rectors and Officers of .the Company are ap- pointed, April 16, 1878— PAINTING! | NHE Subseriber takes this opportunity of thanking the Public for the liberal patron- age he has received during the five years he has been in business, and solicits a continuance of the same. He is now prepared to execute, in a very superior manner, House, Sign, and Car- riage Painting, Paper Hanging, &c. ga Special attention 1s given by lim to WHITENING, CoLoRING and tlie Dsecoratina of CerLinaes, WALLS, ete. On hand and made to order— EVERY DESCRIPTION OF CARRIAGES, aw Carriage Repairing promptly attended to, ~&2 PRICES TO SUIT THE TIMES. P. H. TRAINOR, $2 Kent St., opp. Roeklin House. April 2—3m eod ~ JAMES HOBBS, CABINET MAKER. Cor. Kent and Prince Sircets, Charlottetown. HE SUBSCRIBER, in returning thanks to his customers and the public generally for past favors, would take this method to so licit a further continuance of their patronage. I am better prepared than ever to execute any orders that may be entrusted to me. The latest styles of all kinds of Household, Office, Church and Sehool Furniture, made from well-selected and seasoned stock, at short notice. Special attention paid to Cutting, Making and Laying Carpets. 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 i ye neatly done, at short notice School purposes. Please call and inspect it at my Show Room. JAMES HOBBS. Corner Kent and Prince Streets, Ch’town, Feb. 23, 1875. St. Lawrence Marine Ins. Co. OF P. E. EISLAND. SUBSCRIBED CAPITAL . . $120,000.00. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: ARCHIBALD KENNEDY, EsgQ., President ; Joun F. Ropsrrtsoy, Ese. ; ARTEMAS LorD, Ese. ; G. D. Loyeworta, Ese.; W. E, Dawson, Ese.; THomas Morais, Esq ; P. W. HyNpMan, Esq. Risks taken daily at their Office, Exchange Building. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Secretary, 3m 2aw March 25—ly law OFFICES TO LET QUEHEN SQUARE. FFICES, suitable for Lawyers and others, to let in building lately occupied by 8. Keith & Co. Apply to : HORACE HASZANRD. Ch’town, May 27, 1875— BLANK Bibb - BLANK STATEMENTS, —AND— BUSINESS CARDS, T HADS, | Address Presented to the Vener- able Archdeacon Read by the Diocesan Church Society. At aspecial meeting of the Executive Committze of the Diecesan Church Societ of Prince Edward Island, held in St. Paul’s Schoolroom, on Monday, 17th June, 1878, it} was resolved wnanimously— ‘* That in prospect of the departure of the Venerable the Archdeacon—J. Herbert Read, D. D.—from this Province at an early day, that the Rev. Alfred Osborne, T. B. Reagh, and Mr. H. J. Cundall, be a Committee to draw up a suitable address on the occasion, and that the said Committee, with Messrs. John Ings, Thomas DesBris- say, and R. R. Hodgson be a deputation to present the same to the Archdeacon on be- half of this Executive Committee. (True extract. ) WitiiaM C, Dessrisay, Asst. Secretary D. C. S. (iarLorrrrown, F. E. Island, June 2ist, 1878. To the Venerable J. Herberi Read, D. D., Archdeacon of Prince Edward Island, and a Vice-President of the Diocesan Church Society. VENERABLE AND Dear Sir,-——-We, the Ex- ecutive Committee of the Diocesan Church Society, hearing of your intended departure for England at an early day, beg to record our sincere regret that domestic affliction has ren dered it necessary that yon should, for a time at least, be absent from our midst. The committee not only fully appreciate the personal care and attention which you in your position as a member of the committee, and as one of the Vice Presidents, have always be- stowed upon the business of the Society; but we also recognize your earnest and unremitting endeavors to forward the work of the Church of England in this Province. Your long and arduous Missionary services, extending over a period of more than thirty- five years—many of them speut amid priva- tions and discomforts unknown to these later days of pastoral work—have earned for you the esteem and affection of all persons with whom you have been associated. Your inva- riable success bears evidence of your self-deny- ing zeal and energy in the Master’s work ; and we are satisfied there are many witnesses to the benefit of your faithful ministration, The Committee, moreover, freely testify that your interest in the affairs of the Church has not been limited to your own parish, but has been cordially extended to the other par- ishes in your Archdeaconry. Permit us, dear sir, to express our sympathy with you and Mrs. Read in her affliction, and we trust the visit to your native land may be beneficial oe se, and apt, Res bisesing of Almigh ou ; restored to in want health nd vigor. i ” Signed on behalf of the Executive Com- mittee, ALFRED OSBORNE, Curate of St. Paul’s. T. B. Reacu, Curate of Milton. H. J. CUNDALL, Joun InGs, Tuos. DrsBrisay, R. R. Hopeson. The deputation, accompanied by F. L. Haszard, Esq., waited upon the Archdeacon at 12.30 p. m., on the 21st inst. On the presentation of the Address the Venerable Archdeacon made a most feeling reply. He thanked the Committee of the ‘‘D. C. S.,” through the deputation, for the kind ex- pressions contained in the address,—spoke of his long residence in this Province, and the grief to him to sever friendships of so long standing. He wished success to the “DPD. C.S.,” and hoped the Commitie2 wovli ever be faithful to the doctrines and prin- ciples of the Church of England. seen ike Tuer New York ‘‘ Herald” is being pretty well laughed at for a mistake it has fallen into through the hasty acceptance of what it feigns to consider as news. It appears that on the day of the October elections the ‘* Herald” published a very lengthy cable special, giving the views of, the principal liticians and editors of Paris. The fol- owing month the Figaro reproduced these interviews, at the same time giving the ‘* Herald” great credit for having this cable special,—made a fortnight previously, and sent by steamer. There was one mistake, however, the Figaro made. The ‘‘Herald’s” cable special gave, with other information, the presumed circulation of the different Parisian papers. Some of them very much under the mark, and when the Figaro re- published this, it made them angry. . The Univers instituted a suit for damages agai it. In the evidence it came out that the ‘ cable special” was sent by a reporter of the Figaro, and the several of the gentle- men whom he professed to have interviewed would not even admit him to their offices, and the opinions credited to them were simply the products of his imagination, based on the reading of their papers. The Figaro has been compelled to pay damages to the Univers, and to print the decision of ‘the court on its first pages as a brand, while ‘in the aninds of many, heretofore faithful |in the reliance placed upon the ‘* Herald’s” ‘cable specials, has been shaken. ‘correspondent writes as follows to the Mail: af ~*~ ° . ° ‘Politics are quiet here just now. It is only in Selkirk that the Government will /be able to find a champion, and there is a fixed determination to keep the head of the \railway and Kittson line ring out of the House, the excitement of the contest will | Pouvtes iv Manrropa. —A Winnipeg Furnished promptly and cheaply, to | centre in the action of Selkirk. Dr. Schultz order, at the EXAM i N ER OFFICE, for Marquette. INGS’ BUILDING, Corner Great George and Water Streetz, has never been so strong in his constituency as at present; and Mr. Morris is all right Dubuc has received great encouragement from the electors of Pro- vencher, ” | Telegraphic News. QUEENSTOWN, June 25. The steamer Palestine, from Liverpool for Boston, which returned here on the ¥ | 19th with machinery damaged, has repaired and resumed her voyage yesterday. Lonpon, June 25. The latest official bulletin from Madrid shows ne improvement in the condition of the Queen. , A Royal Engineer Company has been or- dered to Cape of Good Hope. : Lonpon, June 25. The Mark Lane Express says of crops ;— ‘‘The wheat plant generally looks siekly and yellow which augurs unfavorably for heavy sheaf at harvest. The present sit tion cf cereal crops is highly critical, noth- ing but a continuation of normal weather can present another addition to the succes- sion of an unproductive and unremuner- ative season.” Continental advices promise a fair aver- age yield, but, in Eastern Russia, thousands of acres of grain have been cut to pieces by the succession of unusuully heavy hail storms. Panis, June 25. A banquet of one hundred covers was given Leon C. Motteau, on board the steamer St. Laurent at Havre to-day, by Deputies and menibers of the French Chath- ber of Commerce. | Numerous toasts were offered and speeches made expressing the desire of the people of France tor the treaty of Commerce with America. Extensive arrangements are being made for a grand festival in honor of the Exposi- tion of next Sunday. The official pro- gramine provides for decoration, illumin- ation, triumphal arches, fireworks, and .or- chestral and choral music in each arrondige- ment; monster orchestral and choral fete in the gardens of the Tuileres ; special fire- works in the evening in the place of Du Trone Place. New York, June 25. . The Socialists held a great mass meeting last night to celebrate the anniversary of the Social revolution of 1848 in Franée. French Hall was crowded, and red flags floated all round. A strong force of “police were present, and entire harmony prevailed, Several speeches of a Communistic tend- ency were made. Boston, June 25. Isaac Cohen, the leader of one bratich of the Laboring Men’s Organization at Wash- ington, who was instrumental in getting up the meeting recently held at the cap @p- nounces that 10,000 workingmen from ~Bel- timore, Philadelphia and New York will be in Washington in a few days. He does not say what is the object.of the meeting. Harrissure, Pa., June 25, Four large boilers of the pudding mills of the Chesapeake Nail Works exploded. - The mill was almost demolished. . Chambers Bower, the master foreman, was instanth killed, and four others were badly scalded: four men were injured by the flying debdfia. One boiler was carried over and into “the other building, doing much damage. SPRINGFIELD, Vr., June 25. The buildings of the Novelty Works were burned to-night. Loss $70,000; insurange $30,000. ~~ > ip Montreal Star: ‘Mr. Cartwright’s policy is jug-handled, for instead of having made Canada a cheap country to live in, at) hae made it a cheap country to live out of.” True, O Star! If the Bureau of Statistics is to be believed nearly 120,000 left their count et we Ist January, 1874, and the 3ist December last; in other words, as many people as Montreal can boast of. The London Figaro says “‘ Signor Runcio’ is a handsome man, and many opera goers thought on Saturday a lucky man. At any rate, a young and good looking testor has rarely received so many kisses as Alfredo did on the stage of her Majesty’s Theatre. The Princess of Wales shook with laughter, but Miss Minnie Hauck, like a, true artist, would not give in hugging her stage lever again and again, until Alfredo, fairly out of breath, ran away. . Zare who was sittirig in Titiens’ old box, clapped her hands in girlish delight; and -Mr, Mapleson has received due notice from three ‘ first tenors’ that unless each is per- mitted to play Fanst to the young Ameri- can lady’s Marguerite, he will be expected to choose between swords and pistols.” --—-_--+ Recently, when presiding at one of those cookery lessons which are now oan fashionable in England, Mr. Gladstone: this story :—Somebody, travelling in_ the United States, saw in a hotel yard a heap of ox tails, all thrown away as refuse. The ex-Premier at first looked upon this as an- other proof of how wasteful the American people are, but afterwards he heard the ex- planation. Throwing away ox-tails, as useless is an old English habit, » which the first emigrants to America took with them long ago. But at the time of the French Revolution many refugees from over the Channel came to England, and in their saving, methedical way, taught the English the value of ox tail soup. t the Americans, not having learned this leason, continued the old English custom of throw- ing away the tails. Some of the newspaper critics challenge the accuracy of Mr. Glad- stone’s statement of facts, and it would not be surprising were a controversy on the sub. ject to arise, for the States bet weesi‘the - hl ane iin cee cmt Seni eee