hs none eneenmametnnaanain VOR: moo > Vln a “a ee ee KX AMINER. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, FRIDAY, JANUARY. 17, 1879. NO, 493, THe Dairy EXAMINER Is Published every Evening. OFFICE : INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. 1. KATss OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, $2 50 Three Months, 1 25 One Month, 0 50 One Week, 0 12 aw 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. | Office Sup’t. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. II. Winter Arrangement. ON AND AFTER MONDAY, DECEMBER 80th, 1878, Trains Going West. eS STATIONS. | No. 1. | No.3 | Express. ; Mixed. Georgetown Dp 8.10 om Cardigan “835 «6 ’ ar 9.55. ** M.Stew’t Jun dpl0.05 “ | Royalty Jun. “11.20 *« | *h’t i **11.40 ma vee {lap 3.00 am) Dp 3.30 pro Royalty Jun. * aoe | eee N. Wiltshire 1 go «| 445 « Hunter River “Soe 1 ae Breadalbane 10.08 “« | “ 5.41 “ County Line "ee | ** GS) Kensington “alee “*| ** 630 °° e id larl1.30 “* lar 7.00 * sammerside ldp 2.40 pm Wellington “332 * Port Hill " en " ’'l eary “é i ‘sé ar 6.35 ‘* Alberton dp 6.40 “ Tignish lar 7.25 * Trains Going East. STATIONS. No. 2 No. 4 Express. | Mixed. Tignish | Dp 7.00 am Alberton - Tae. 0’ Leary a. Pert Hill “10.05 ** Wellington 10.48 ** 5. ar 11.40 ** Summerside dp 2.30pm) Dp 8.45am Kensington * 260 .% 1 218-" County Line le + ae Breadalbane + oe * | age * Hunter River ‘64:98 ** }.9910.47 N. Wiltshire 245 ** }.91.02 * Royalty Jun. oo * | “ane * ‘ ‘ar 6.00 ‘* jarl12.15 pm Ch town idp 2.55 “ Royalty Jun. - = re Mt. Stewart ia 440 * Cardigan | ** 6.00 * | Georgetown lar 6.25 “ SOURIS BRANCH. Going West. Going East. | Nob No.6 STATIONS. Mixed. ||STATIONS.| Mixed. A. M. Pp, M Souris Dp 7.00||/MtStw’tJnc/Dp 4.40 Harmony ‘* 7,23! | Morell ‘¢-- §,22 St. Peters ‘« 9 42!/St. Peters ss 6.54 Morell ** 9,13|| Harmony “ iL. MtS’tw’tJnc| ar 9.55)|Souris ar 7.35 Cc. J. BRYDGES, WM. McKECHNIE, Gen. Sup. Gov. Railways. Supt. P. B. I. R, Ch’town, Dec. 27, 1878. : p ne arh pres kca sp sj ap 61 PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. SPECIAL TRAIN, in connection with the Winter Steamship Northern Light, beginning December 24th, 1878, will run as under :—— Leave Charlottetown, 5.25 p. m.; Mount Stewart, 6.37 p. m.; arriving at Georgetown, 7.55 p. m. On arrival of Nothern Light from Pictou, a Special Train will leave Georgetown for Char- lettetown. ; These Trains will stop at Royalty J unction, Little York, Bedford, Mount Stewart, Peake’s, Baldwin’s and Cardigan, — to take on and leave off passengers, and will run only to con- nect with trips made by the Northern Light. C. J. BRYDGES, W. McKECHNIE, Gen. Supt. Govt, R’ ways. Super: nt, Charlottetown, Dec. 27, 1878—6i COAL. COAL. OUND AND NUT COAL cheap for cash, b stad W. W. CLARKE, Agent. Head Lord’s Wharf, Charlottetown, Nov. 23. —_ H. W. Vinnicombe, Resident Piano Tuner e: Regulator, AS adopted the Dollar system of Tuning, r=. SIX visits a year, at one dollar per visit. This system is much more economical and satisfactory than any other, as the cost is less, and the instrument is Kept constantly in tune and repair. A visit will be made to all parts of the Island once a year, or oftner if desired. Pianos tuned by Hamilton's system of even temperament. &# Orders may be left at Mr. Fletcher's Music Store, or at Bremner Bros., Queen Street. Jan, 6, 1879— DENTISTRY. FFNHE cry of “Hard times” and “No _™meney” is universal. Yet people lose their teeth, and in consequence their health. Again, recent improvements have cheapened the cost of Dental material ;—considering which { have decided to reduce my prices, and for three months from the date of this I will make a sett of teeth for Ten Dollars. Parts of setts correspondingly cheap. More than this—I will use good material and guar- antee, in every case, a perfect fit. C. L. STRICKLAND. Ch’town, Jan, 4, 1879— y COMMERCIAL Union Assurance Company, OF LONDON, ENGLAND. CAPITAL - - $12,500,090. NSURANCE effected against Fire on all . descriptions of Property throughout the Island. se Low rates and prompr settlement of losses, HORACE HASZARD, Agent for P. E. Island. Ch’town, Dee, 20, 1878— BROADWAY HOUSE, BY MACKENZIE. HE former ‘City Hotel,” now the Broadway House, (reat George Street, opposite the Catholic Cathedral, is now open for Permanent and ‘Transient Boarders. The rooms have been thoroughly renovated and newly furnished. The tables will be supplied with the best the market affords, and fares reasonable. A Suite of Rooms convenient for a small family, together with board, &c., can be had in the Broadway House. Noy. 23, 1878—tf JAMES HOBBS, CABINET-MAEZER, UPHOLSTERER, ETC, H’S REMOVED from MecPhail’s Corner to the premises just vacated by Mr. JOHN SrumMe es, Prince Street, where, with increased facilities, he is prepared to attend to the wauts of his customers with punctuality and despatch, and ou reasonable terms. Carpets cut and laid. Paintine and Repairing neatly done. Picrure Frames and Mouldings constantly on hand, or made up to order. All kinds of Household Furniture made to order, cheap and good. New Pattern School Desks made at short notice. A first-class article. aa” Don’t forget the place: PRINCE STREET (near the new Baptist Church im course of erection). Charlottetown, Oct. 26, 1878— RANKIN HOUSE, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. EL J.J. DAVIES - - - Proprietor (Formerly of St. Lawrence Hotel, Pictou). -_--—-- HIS well-known Hotel is now open under the present management ; and, having been newly furnished throughout, it offers every comfort to the travelling public. Suit- able Sample Rooms for commercial gentlemen. Oct. 15, 1878—33u QUEEN INSURANCE CO'Y, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING, NSURANCE 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), Agent for Prince Edward Island June, 1877— E. ¢. HUNTER, Italian and American Marble, Monuments, Tablets, Headstones, Centre Taste Tops, BuREAU AND CoMMODE Tors, Wasu Bow. Sass, &c., &c. Prices to suit, and satisfaction guaranteed. aw Designs furnished on application. “@t Cerner Hillsborough and Kent Streets, Char- lottetown. November 6, 1578S. Merchants Bank OF P. E. ISLAND, CHARLOTTETOWN. DIRECTORS: Rozert Lonawortu, Esq., President. Hon. L. C. Owen, WiLt1am Dopp, Esq., GEORGE R. Beer, EsQ., Hon. H. J. CAtiBeck, Hon. L. H. DAvIes, WILLAM H. Finpiey, Esa., Wm. McLean, Cashier, ; AGENCY AT GEORGETOWN : H. C. McLxop, Agent. DAVIES & SUTHERLAND AGENTS : London . ; ° : The City Bank. New York, The Bank of New York, N. B. A. Boston ‘The Boston National Bank. Montreal, St. John and Halifax, Bank of Montreal. Collections made in all parts of the Island on the most favorable terms. Jan. 3, 1878—3m No. 35 Water St., Charlottetown. Prince Rdward Island Branch -——OF THE— NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE. INSURANGE GO. Subscribed Capital, $9,733,332.00 Paid up Capital, - 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. Lossks settle. with promptitude and lber- ality. G. W. DEBLOISs, General Agent. SOLICITORS : Dec. 14. WAGSTAFE'S HOTEL. PENILE 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. Tourists and others will receive every atten} tion at the Wagstaff’s Hotel. WM. WAGSTAFF. May 25, 1878, FRANK GOX, M.D. G.M., Physician, Surgeon & Accoucheur. OFFICE ; ApoTuscaries HA Residence : Capt. Mutch’s, Water Street, next door to St. Lawrence Hotel. N. B.—Particular attention paid to diseases of the chest and stomach. th’town, Nov. 16, 1878—3m NIGHT SOIL. NHE Subscriber, having obtained the Con tract to remove night soil from the City, no one else is authorized to do so. Night Soil only removed between 8 p. m. and 6 a. m.,—at 75 cents per hogshead. Payment to be made only to me. a® Orders left at the Police Station will be promptly attended to. DANIEL GORDON. ) 3m wed & th j}ne patm & tues Charlottetown Royalty, Nov. 13, 1878. Look Here! THREE PRIZES IN 12 MONTHS. —:0:—— G. MUGFORD, sole Licensee for . City and Queen’s County, for Lam. bert’s Patents for Permanent Photographs Being composed of Indian Ink and Parchment, they CANNOT FADE. Took Ist Prize at Provincial Exhi- bition last Fall at Georgetown ; Diploma for Excellency of Work at New York, Jan. Ist, 1878—contesting with the United States and Dominion of Canada,—and Ist Prize at Summerside, Oct. 3, °78. Davip Wrtson’s O_p Strand, Cu’Town. Oct. 5, 1S7S—3m law HE WEEKLY EXAMINER. — Per- sons having relatives or friends abroad, and desiring to keep them informed concerning P. E. Island, cannot do soin a better or cheap, er way than by subscribing to THE Week.y EXAMINER. Sent, tpaid, to any address m Great Britain, the United States, or the Dominion, on receipt of One Dollar. BY THE DAILY EXAMINER, for the latest news—local and telegraphic , Sentenced but not Hanged. & MAN IN MONTREAL WITNESSES PREPARA- TIONS FUR HIS HANGING, BUT ESCAPES. Some years ago aresident of Montreal was | under condemnation to suifer the extreme | penalty of the law for murder. He lay for some time in jail watching the preparation for his approaching doom, and could hear eyery knock of the hammer as the scaffold proceeded to raise its ugly head above the stone walls of the prison. His feelings were not of the most pleasant description, as may well be imagined, and day after day as the fatal hour drew near, he grew more and more despondent. He had had the hope held out to him of a reprieve, but none came. As the last day on earth drew on, so progressed the final arrangements for his death. The Sheriff had engaged the hangman, and the pair were in the habit of nightly practicing with a stick of wood, about the size and weight of a man. Hear- ing an unusual noise on the night be- fore his exeeution was to take place, the condemned prisoner looked out of his cell window, and, as 1t was a moonlight night, could see very plainly what was in progress. The Sheriff was adjusting the noose around the log of wood’s neck, and at the proper time the hangman was to pull the end of the rope which dangled from the pulley in the beam above. The signal was to bea clap of the hands. The hangman waited. The Sheriff clapped his hands, but the hangman’s nervous system had received a shock. He saw at the cell window the face of the man whom he was hanging by proxy, and, shaking from head to foot, he was unable to pull an ounce. ‘ Pull, you coward!” shouted the Sheriff, and he clapped his hands more vehemently. Fin- ally, he looked in the direction of the hang- man’s gaze and saw what had caused his horror. He let fall the log. There was no more practice that night. The indivi- dual in telling the story remarked that he was the coolest man of those three indivi- duals just at that time. He had no other feeling than curiosity when looking upon the hanging process, notwithstanding that he had then, as he thought, not more than half a day to live. The preparations for his death were made, but a reprieve came in the morning. He was sentenced to im- prisonment for life, and after having served 18 years was pardoned, and is now a citizen in the enjoyment of a position of trust in that city-—a repentant man. © ee The Miller of Balbirnie. King James, while residing at Falkland, called one day upon the minister of Mar- kinch, and let him understand that he was not pleased with his preaching, and gave him three questions (which he had to answer in a few days) and if he failed to do so'to the king’s satisfaction he was to lose his kirk. The three questions were as fol- lows:—‘‘ Where is the centre of the earth ?’ ‘What am I worth?’ and ‘What am I thinking.” The minister was greatly puzzled, and did not know what he was to do. One day as he was walking along Leslie road he met one of his flock, viz., the miller of Balbirnie Flour Mills. The miller was somewhat astonished at the minister’s sad countenance, and he asked him if there was anything wrong. ‘‘Not much,” re- plied the minister, ‘‘only I had a call from the king, and he has rather puzzled me.” He then related the conversation between himself and the king, adding at the samo time that he did not know what to do. **Man,” says the miller, ‘‘if you lend me your clothes and your staff I might sort him.” The minister agreed to de so, and, accordingly, the miller went to the king at the time appointed. ‘‘ Well,” says the king, ‘‘ where is the centre of the earth?’ The miller put the point of his staft on the greund, and said, ‘* That is it.” The king asked him how he knew. The miller replied, ‘‘If you take a string, tie a stone to the end of it, and go round you will find that Lam right.” He then asked him the second questicn, viz: ‘‘ What am I worth?’ The miller replied, ‘‘ Twenty- nine pieces of Silver.” The king asked him how he made that out. The miller again replied, ‘‘ Our Saviour was sold for thirty pieces of silver, so I think you to be worth one piece less.” He then asked him the last question, which was, ‘‘ What am I thinking.” The miller replied, ‘‘ You are thinking I ain the minister of Markinch, but you are in a great mistake. I am only the miller of Balbirnie Flour Mills.” —_——= «60... To Keep Eggs the Year Round. About a year ago the Prairie Farmer contained a recipe for keeping eggs a long time. It was simply to pack them ina cool place, small end down, in kegs or boxes filled with finely-powdered dried earth, or common road dust, or sifted coal ashes. These settled between the eggs, kept them from access to the air, and pre- vented evaporation of the white or spoiling the yolk. The experiment was tried last June, be- fore the intensely hot weather that succeed- ed. On taking the eggs out of the packing a few days ago, they were as fresh and clean-looking as if fresh laid. On testing them for the table, they could not be told from fresh ones. When these were put down, eggs sold at 6 centsadozen. They are now worth 18 cents, or an advance of 200 percent. This ought to pay. The shell of an egg is a very porous car- bonate of line. Left ex to the air, it passes through the shell and soon spoils the contents. When placed in a pickle of lime ‘are usually quoted ‘‘ not wanted.” 'may also be oiled or varnished, or covered /with glycerine or mucilage. 'so much as to injure the sale. and salt the egg may be preserved,’ but at the expense of quality. Eggs that are limed They These all answer the purpose, more or less, but change the external appearance of the eggs As a first experiment, eggs packed in dry dust, are a complete success, and could not be distin- guished from perfectly fresh ones, just laid. > 2: <-> -e oe ——_ -- Facts and Scraps. Out-door relief —a breath of fresh air. The traveller’s berth-right is to get the best bunk in the steamer. Mock Turtle—Kissing before company and quarrelling afterwards. Remark by a man with a new watch—‘‘ I buyed my time.”’ The man who never wore tight boots is courting the woman who never saw a look- ing-glass. Time at last sets all things even, with the exception, perhaps, of a hen that is not ready. Another natural history fact. One swal- low doesn’t make a spring, but one black- smith can. A tailor in. Broadway has a bill in his window like this:—‘‘ Wanted several thin coatmakers.” This is a good for "spare tailors. A determination is expressed by &« hun- dred thousand colliery men in England to strike if their demands are not complied with. Susan fell in leve with a book-keeper, and when Aunt Mary asked about his position in life, Susan said demurely, ‘‘He’sa count, aunt.” ‘* Why should we celebrate Washington’s birthday more than mine?’ asked a teach- er. ‘‘ Because he never told a lie!” shouted a little boy. The French Government has ordered 300 of Paul Boynton’s life-saving dresses. The money thus received will enable Paul to keep afloat for awhile. **Do you know, Elvira, that I saw a sing- ular sight this morning? I saw our poor old crippled gardener walk.” ‘* That’s nothing, William, I saw the garden walk.” Who was the first king crowned in Eng- land?! James I. The others were crowned king, but» he was King of Scotland before he was crowned King of Englard. So teach us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom.—What shall it profit aman if he shall gain the ot world, and lose his own his own soul. Instructor— What does Condillac say about brutes in the scale of being? Stu- dent—He says a brute is an imperfect ani- mal, Instructor—And what is a man? Student—Man is a perfect brute. A country doctor announces that he has changed his residence to the neighborhood of the church-yard which he hopes may prove a convenience to his numerous patients. As for man, his days are as grass: as a flower of the field, so he flourisheth. — For the wind passeth over it, and it is gone ; and the place thereof shall know it no more. Mrs. Pepper asked rather sharply, ‘‘Do you think that a little temper isa bad thing ina woman!’ And the gallant philosopher replied, ‘* Certainly not; it is a good thing and she shouldn’t lose it.” - ‘““She paints beautifully,” whispered a young lady to her escort, referring to a beautiful woman who had just passed.” ‘It struck me that she had put on rather too much this evening.” There was a lull. A wag met a milkman the other day, and said he, ‘‘ Jones you ought to roof them cows of yours.” ‘*‘ What for?’ asked the other. ‘‘'To keep the water from running into the milk,” replied the wag. ** Maria! Maria ! please let me in !” said a man to his wife, who was looking out of the window watching him trying to open the door with a toothpick; ‘ I’ve trod on my key, and it’s all flattened out.” A preacher in Kentucky, the other day, becoming exasperated, paused in his dis- course to say : ‘‘ Ladies and gentlemen, if you will give me your close aitention I will keep a look-out on that door, and if any thing worse than a man enters I will warn you in time to make your escape.” << The People Want Proof. _ There is no medicine prescribed by physi- cians, or sold by Druggists that carries such evidence of its success and superior virtues as Boscurer’s German Syrup for severe Coughs, Colds settled on the breast, Consumption or any disease ofthe Throat and Lungs. A proof of that fact is that any person afflicted, can geta Sample Bottle forl0 certs and try its superior effact before buying the regular size at 75 cents. It has lately been introduced in this country’ from Germany, ane its wonderful cures are astonishing everyone that use it. Three doses will relieve any case. ‘Try it Sold by all Druggists on the Western Continent 2 nade thaerermene MARMALADE, 22c. per lb. and Jam 25, per llb., in bulk, at Beer and Goffs. CaLiroxnia Honey, very choice,—in the eomb and strained,—at ‘‘ The Confectionery.” _— Picktes, in bulk, 12c. a pint, at Beer and Goff's, A ett TT