ee ‘acco SR INP aa me NA CM eS i as a eg atin ae. ae VOL. 3. D AILY Is Published every Evening. OFPICE : THE \ND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. I. KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : six Months, 32 50 three Months, . . i 25 ‘ue Month, : 0 50 One Week, : 0 12 — s® 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, | Ottice Sup’t. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 9. SUMMER ARRANCEMENT ! MONDAY, APRIL 29th, 1978. -_—- — —— Trains Going | West. STATIONS, No, 1 No.3 No. 5 , Express. , Mixed, ,Mixed Georgetown =| Dp 4.00 pm) Dp 7.50 am, Cardigan , i sy Tee | i xm OR 66 € ‘é M.Stew’t Jun | |2" Os? jar 9.20 } jdp.5.35 * idp 9.30 * | “@2a0 * **10.45 ‘* | | far 6.50 “ jarl1.05 ‘* ic toyalty Jun, P. diel, M. Ch town \dp 6.25 am/dp11.38 * idp5.25 Royalty Jun. | * 6.43 “ | “11.55 “* | “5.45 N. Wiltshire | “ 7.18 “ | 12.50 pm| ‘6.42 uhter Geet Pe ST“ tae dae Breadalbane | * 7.58 «| «© 1.47 « | «7.38 County Line | ** 8.05 “| “* 1.57 ** | °*7.48 Kensington PrO.83 ‘4 ** SES * | “£8.25 lar 9.00 “* lar 3.15 “ lar 9.00 Summerside {dp 9, 15 ‘cc dp 3.45 $6 Wellington ; eee 1 ae Port Hill |e: | ee U’ Leary | 1.18 «| «6.54 «| Alberton | 12.00 «| © 8.00 © | Tignish lar 12,40 pmiar 8.50 ‘ | Trains Going East. <p { 1 STATIONS. No. 2 No.4 | No. 6 Express. Mixed. jmixed ‘Tighsh Dp 1.50 pm: Dp 6.30 am} Alberton jaan «far 7.20 = dp 7.50 ** O’ Leary ek semi Sede. foe Port Hilt [amy |°*1G22 * Wellington “2a | “1r.10* ‘de | j@° 5.15 ‘* jar 12.05 pmij a. M. Summerside | |p 5.30 “ |dpl2.40 “ |dp6.30 Kensington | “ 5.55 “| “1.17 “ | **7.07 County Line |“ 6.23 ‘* | ‘* 1.57 “ | °°7.46 Breadalbane | “ 6.32 ‘* | ‘* 2.07 ‘* | ‘*7.58 Hunter River | “ 7.00 “ | ‘* 2.48 “ | *°8.35 N. Wiltshire | ‘* 7.12 ‘* | ‘* 3.05 ** ; *°8.52 ar 4.00 ‘* | *°9.45 Royalty Jun. | ‘* 7.47 7 dp 4.10 ** jarl005 lar 8.05 ‘* jar 4.30 ‘ dp 8.05 am}dp a - er ar 4. si 8.23 ‘7 Tap 4.10 « | . ie 5.25 ‘* Mt; Stewart | 5 9:40 fe dp 545 Z Cardigan “ae 1 1 Georgetown = jarll.05 “* jar 7.30 SOURIS BRANCH. Trains Going West. Ch’town Royalty Jun. ~ — i i STATIONS. | No7 Mixed. at 9 Mixed. Souris — Mp 3.15, a | Dp 6.30a. m. Harmony | 7 ee * i * St. Peter's 4.26 | * oa 2 Morell t.59 “« 665 + i Ar 02.“ An ~ Oumm “f M. Stew’t Jun. Trains Going East. i STATIONS. |No. 8 me 10 Mixed, M. Stewart >) Dp 9.30 am. | Dp 5.35 p.m Morell “10.02 “ | 615 St. Peter’s “10.25 ** | “6.47 « Harmony “a | “Gee “ Souris Arll.40 “ he OS . * WM. McKECHNIE, ». J. BRYDGES, Supt. P. BE. 1. RB. Gen. Sup. Gov. Railways Ch’town, April 20, 1875— oe st Lawrence Marine Ins, Co, OF P. E. ISLAND. SUBSCRIBED: CAPITAL . . $120,000.00. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: ARCHIBALD Kennepy, Esg., President ; Joun F. Roserrson, Ese. ; ArremMas Lorp, Esg.; G. D. Loneworta, Esg.; W. E. Dawson, Ese.; Tuomas Moree, Esq. ; P. W. Hynpmay, Esq. _ Risks taken daily at their Office, Exchange building. _ FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Secretary. March 25—ly law ry We WEEKLY EXAMINER, — Per- sons having relatives or friends abroad, and desiring to keep them informed concernin P. E. Island, cannot do soin a better or chearg er way than by subscribing to ‘THE Weexur EXAMINER. Sent, a , to any address in Great Britain, the Un‘ted States, ov the Dominion, wreceipt of One Dollar. HE lace toget our Printing done is at the E NE R Printing Rooms ‘ EXAMINER | Physician INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER | prem DR, 7 netting am ff — DR. CONROY, OFFICE; ' | | and Surgeon. ‘ i City Hotel Building, opposite Roman Catholic | Cathedral, Great George Street. Charlottetown, Aug. 29, 1878—3m eod Daniel W. Job & Co, PERKINS & JOB, COMMISSION MERCHANTS AND SHIP BROKERS, 9] Stati Street, - e August 23, 1878—3in , Boston. Young Ladies’ Institution, Hillsborough Street. os Institution will re-open on MON- DAY, September 2nd, at i0 a. m. Prospectuses on application. J. CUNNINGHAM DUNLOP. Ch’town, Aug. 27, 1878—6i PROFESSIONAL CARD. 20: A. A. McLEHAN, Barrister and Attorney-at-Law, Newson’s Burtpinc, Opprostre Post Orrrcr, South Side Queen Square, CHARLOTTETOWN, - - P. E.I. Aug. 13th, 18S78—3m eod E. G. HUNTER, —IMPORTER OF — Italian and American Marble, Monuments, Tablets, Headstones, Tomb Tables, &c., &c. Also, Mantles, Centre Table Tops, Burean and Commode Tops, Wash Bowl Siabs, Bracket Shelves, &c., &¢. Granite, Freestone, and Soapstone Work done in all its branches. PRICES TO SUIT, SATISFACTION CUARANTEED. B® Designs furnished on application, “a Next Door to Mark Butcher's Fur- niture Factory, Kent Street, Charlottetown. August 7, 1878.—3taw General Insurance Office. IRE and MARINE, LIFE and ACCI- DENT INSURANCE effected. * Otiice, opp. Post Office, South Side. HORACE HASZARD. SURVEYOR OF SHIPPING, OPPOSITE POST OFFICE-——-SOUTH SIDE, HORACE HASZARD, Surveyor. Ch'town; Aug. 2— Tinsmithing, Gaslitting, &.. FENHE Subscriber thankful for past patron. age, would inform his friends and the public generally, that he is still prepared to do all work in his line Tinsmithing, Gasfitting, and “Seneral Jebbing punctuaily attended to, On hand, a lot of Tinware, which will! be sold very cheap, wholesale and retail. Also wanted, a good steady man to peddle Tinware- GEO. E. MILLNER, Cor. Great George & Fitzroy Sts. Ch’town, May 16— WAGSTAFF'S HOTEL, FPN Subscriber having fitted up the Hote tormerly 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 Wagstatf’s Hotel. WM. WAGSTAFF, May 25, 1878. _P. & I. Starch Manutacturing (0., CAPITAL . . $25,000, In Shares of $25.00 each, IS 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 of 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,, untill the Di- rectors and Officers of the Company are ap- inted, April 16, 1878— j j f } han 18°78. —————_ 2a CI) XA fFURNISHES MORE NEWS, FOR LESS MONEY THAN ANY OTHER PAPER IN THE PROVINCE. [t Contains Twenty-eight Columns, nearly every one of which is in closely set READING MATTER, CONSIDER OUR TERMS SINGLE COPIES to the 3lst December, 1878—thirteen months-—$1,.00 in ad- vance, SIX COPIES to one address, or addresse. separately, as desired, $3.50 in advance TEN COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $9.00 in advance. FIFTEEN COPIES 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 eer THE— CHEAPEST AND BRST The Weekly lxaminer 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 General 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. oe The Daily Examiner : rennet fhe staat NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. New York, Sept. 18. Reports from Memphis this morning state that the situation there is becoming more frightful hourly; 96 deaths and 205 new cases reported yesterday, and physi- cians and nurses are rapidly diminishing from pure exhaustion ; 306 new cases and 31 deaths at New Orleans yesterday, and at Vicksburg, 22 deaths and 60 new cases. Mortality at other points in Mississippi not Sv” great. Lonpon, Sept. 18. It is reported that a violent eruption of Mount Hecla occurred August 22. A correspondent at Berlin hears from the highest authority that Von Beust, the Austrian ambassador at London, has re- signed, and that Count succeeds him in November. Vienna, Sept. 18. The following report is official : Burning and bombardment of Brezka from River Save, not having sufficed to silence the in- surgent guns there, the Austrians on Tues- day attacked the town by land on both sides and captured it after a desperate re- sistance, which lasted till 8 o’clock in the evening. The losses are not yet known. In the movements prior to the capture of Brezka, the Austrians captured Krezpic and Dubrava to the westward of Breska, after prolonged and stubborn fighting. Lonpon, Sept. 18. A Belgrade despatch says friendly rela- tions exist between the Albanian leaders and the Servian frontier commanders. A despatch to the Pall Mall Gazette from Theropia says the Russian General Skobe- loff has publicly declared that Russia will keep an army of 100,000 men in Bulgaria and 45,000 men in Roumelia, notwith- standing the Treaty of Berlin. Ber In, Sept. 18. The North German Gazetie intimates that Germany will probably take no further steps at present for jvint remonstrance against the Porte’s tardy execution of the Treaty of Berlin, as circumstances have changed by the evacuation of Batoum, and by the Porte otherwise exerting itself more actively to fulfil the Treaty. Bompay, Sept. 18. The native envoy sent to Cabul to pave the way for General Chamberlain’s mission has been well received. He handed the Ameer letters forthe Vieeroy. The envoy, believed to be the bearer of letters from the Ameer, is hourly expected at the fron- tier. Chamberlain is at Thestawur, await- ing the expected communication. Lonpon, Sept. 18. In a speech at York, to-day, James Low- ther, Chief Secretary of Ireland, said that Europe will scarcely view patiently the re- opening of the Eastern question by the in- ordinate ambition of Greece. Lonpon, Sept. 18. Subscriptions have been opened in Paris for the yellow fever sufferers, at the news- paper offices, the U. S. legation and con- sulate, and at the Exposition. Mr. Elbridge L. Hill, a well-known rail- road man of Boston, committed suicide in the Parker House in that city on Monday night. No cause is assigned for the act. The grand jury in the notorious Cobb- Bishop poisoning case at Norwich, Conn., after three days’ hearing of the facts, found on Monday true bills against both Wesley sishop and Mrs. Cobb, for murder in the} first degree. The final trial will take place at the November term of the Superior Court. Particulars of this case were pub. lished some time ago in the ‘‘ Telegraph.” Dean Stanley, of Westminster, arrived in Boston on Monday by the Cunard steam- ship Siberia. A Chicago special says the frosts of the last three nights have done no damage to the corn crop of the west and northwest. Gambetta, yesterday, addressed an audi- ence of 10,000 persons in a townin the de- partment of Drome in justification of the Republican policy. He was enthusiastically received. The American rifle team of 1878, in the absence of foreign teams, will shoot a ‘* walk over” match at Creedmore on Tues- day and Wednesday next. (Qe An Astonishing Fact. A large proportion of the American peo ple are to-day dying from the effects of Dyspepsia or disordered liver. The result of these diseases upon the masses of in- telligent and valuable people is most alarm- ing, making life actually a burden instead of a pleasant existence of enjoyment and usefulness as it ought tobe. There is no good reason for this, if you will only throw aside prejudice and skepticism, take the ad- vice of druggists and your friends, and try ‘one bottle of Green’s August Flower. Your 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, - - - - 1.25 For One Month - -- : - 50) a= ADDRESS, W. L. COTTON, — Manager Examiner Printing and Publishing Company, Chtown, Dec, 1877, spoedy relief is certain. Millions of bottles of this medicine have been given away to try its virtues, with satisfactory results in every case. You can buy a sample bottle for 19 cents to try. Three doses will re- lieve the worst case. Positively sold by all druggists on the Western Continent. ~~ Of Longfellow’s five children, Onslow, the eldest, is married and in business in Boston; Ernest is a painter, studying in Europe; Alice, the eldest daughter, is a writer; Edith is now Mrs. Richard H. Dana, 3rd; and Anna is literary in her in- clinations. AMINER. CHARLOTLETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD {SLAND, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1878 NO. 404, Mr. Goldwin Smith on the Poli- tical Leaders. The following letter is taken from a Toronto contemporary :— “Sir, -I perceive that Mr. Brown has been imputing to me, through his organ, some sinister and dishonest motive for avowing my conviction that, in our present circumstances, our best chance of obtaining a Government on a broad basis and a re- spite from the dangerons excesses of party strife, is the restoration to power of Sir John McDonald. ‘‘Imputations of sinister and dishonest motives I will leave to find their own level, which will not be higher than their source. But I will confess that, to my mind, an ad- ditional reason for desiring the restoration of Sir John McDonald is that he alone, as matters now stand, can save the country and the public service from being domin- ated, for years to come, by the narrow and vindictive mind of a man who never, in the whole course of his long public life, has been generous or even just to an opponent. ‘Yours faithfully, **GOLDWIN SMITH. ” ---—+——- + - —— - @-~< © ES -2 ————_ — What to Teach Girls. Teach them self reliance. Teach them to make bread. Teach them to make shirts. Teach them not to paint or powder. Teach them to wear thick, warm shoes. Teach them how to make their own dresses. Teach them how to wear calico dresses, and do it like a queen. Teach them accomplishments — music, painting, drawing—if you have money enough of your own to do it with. Teach them the essentials of life—truth, honesty, uprightness—and, at a suitable time, let them marry. ——_386e——————— —— A farmer whose cows were sick was ad- vised to dose them plentifully with whiskey. He did so, and was rewarded with a choice variety of corned beef. Only a small percentage of men love their glass, but every mother’s daughter dotes on hers. Those we shall Miss—Our daughters till they are married. There’s a bright side to every woman’s character ; the only trouble is they don’t exhibit it very often—unless she wants a a new bonnet or a pair of shoes with three cent pieces for heels. When an editor receives a communication on corsets, he should consign it to the waist basket. You may think you know the ropes com- pietely, but a pretty girl can get you on a string any day. Clifton W. Tayleure, the writeure, ac- teure and autheure, is added to the list of failures. Josh Billing’s Philosophy—If yu under- take io hire a man to be honest, yu will have to raise his wages every morning, and watch him dredphull cluss besides. ———-—> o> a> -e o— Joaquin Miller has returned to New York. Pere Hyacinthe is to have a church in Paris. Gen. Grant says he has never felt fatigue in his life. Longfellow pays a tax of $2,230 on prop- erty in Cambridge, Mass. ~ Sir John Lubbock has owned some of his pet ants for more than five years. Thomas Humphrey, the well known Eng- lish cricketer of Surrey County, is dead. Queen Mother Christina of Spain, who has just died, was sister to ‘‘ Bomba,” of Naples. It is reported that Lord Cairns, Lord High Chancellor, is about to be created Earl Cairns. Patti is said by a Cardiff paper to have purchased Craig-y-nos Castle, near Istra- dynglais. Prince Arthur will, after his marriage, settle in Ireland, and either purchase or build a residence in the neighborhood of the Hill of Tare. Mr. Archibald Forbes, while returning to England from Cyprus, was laid up with fever at Messina. He is expected to be about soon. Lord Rosebery has been elected Presi- dent of the Scottish Football Association over the Marquis of Lorne and his brother, Lord Colin Campbell. M. Gambetta is becoming very stout, and as his strength does not increase with his growing corpulence his friends are becom- ing alarmed about his health. The native Bishop of Hayti recently preached in Westminster Abbey—the first recorded instance where a colored divine has been listened to within the walls of that venerable place of worship. The three Fox sisters, introdacers of Spiritualism in 1848, are alive. Margaret, who was said to have been married to Dr. Kane, the explorer, is in England; Kate is married in France, and Leah is married in New York. Mr. Whittier says Ralph Waldo Emerson is the one American wno is sure of being re- membered a thousand years; and the Buf- falo Express believes the memory of Whit- tier will be on hand to see that he is re- membered.