ee ee ne eee — ee aa ‘HE EXAMINER. CHARLOTTETOWN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 8 187 9, V OL. 4 4, Rt iaeteisiti NO. 485. The Mennonites. THE Dag’ x {XAMINER QUEEN TISURANGE {s Published every Evening. O0'Y. 1878 DECEMBER i878 Ne [For the By Zcaminer. } the Cradis Bed. only scheme of immigration and OF ENGLAND. achilles The : OFFICE ; : : ns “FANCY LIND COAL VA: VASES oe dreamer, sleeping caimly in thy downy coli oe we 98 aoe ee ae = INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER CAPITAL, - » TWO MILLIONS STERLING, FANCY HELMET COAL SCOOPS | cradle bed, — anada is that of the Mennonite settlers, AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, rn = ! suggesied and achieved by the present | Ony two sweet, painless summers yet crowned thy golden bead ‘Round thy face so fair in smiles are playing now, ; And the perfect peace of childhood ;e3¢s NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build. | By ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences, Minister of Agriculture and Immigration, Hon. J. H. Pope, when he previously hela that portfolio, This undertaking has been upon attended with complete success. The Men- GALVANIZED AND BLACK DO. | COAL TONGS, SHOVELS, Charlottetown, P. E. L slumbere, sunny Kates or Surscriprion : POKERS, of eG AGRA EB MR SM Six Months $2 50 Losses settled promptly. : ; : : id ; ; , > ainite a | thy radiant brow. nonites have shown remarkable thrift and Three raw ; = GEOR ran M. ee cet OD (Union Bank), | FIRE IRON STANDS. | Thon rust cross life’s troubled ocean when | public spirit. They have proved sober, in- aan Week F 0 19 lune. 1877 nt for Prince Hdward Island | 4)) at a Large Discount to clear. the dreams of youth are gone— dustrious and frugal settlers. They have kk, 2 a. e@ Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts May be made for monthly, quar- terly, or Ralf-yearly advertisements, on appli- cation. W. L. COTTON, Manager. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. I. Winter Arrangement, |i ‘MONDAY, DECEMBER 30th, 1878, rCHELL, | 3. W. MI" Office Sup’t. ‘Trains Going Wrest. STATIONS. | No. 1. No. 3 , Express. | Mixed. Georgetown | Dp 8.10 am Cardigan ai ~~ m | r 9.55 ‘* | M.Stew’t Jun \ap10.05 ce | Royalty Jun. | 11.20 * Ch'town } | 11.40 ere { \dp 8.00 am) Dp 3. 30 pm Royalty Jun. "40 + ** 3.50 * N. Wiltshire ite. . ae Hunter River , + 9.29 Se ae Breadalbane | *2O,06-** 7 Gel * County Line 1, 638 S:2 © 5.51 ” Kensington | Valeo." a" Ga ™ sid \ larl11.30 “ jar 7.00 “ Summerside j dp 2 2.40 pm Wellington * 3.32 * Port Hill i” 4.16 " 0’ Leary 7 or : jar 6.35 * Alberton ldp 6.40 * Tignish Jar 7.25 * “2 Trains Going East. a . STATIONS. No. 2 No. 4 express. Mixed. Tignish aa 7.00 am! Alberton - 7.45 * 0’ Leary “847 * Port Hill **10.05 ** Wellington “10.48 * G « \ jar 11.40 ** Summerside } idp 2.30pm) Dp 8.45 am Kensington oe * 7* 9.15 * County Line 1. ** RAO ff 5 o Oe te Breadalbane 1" 3.50 ** | $10.08 * Hunter Kiver p** 423 “| 910.47 ° N. Wiltshire $$ 445 ** 3:9*13.08..% Royalty Jun. | 4" po z ee oo : ; ar 6.00 ‘* larl2. 15 pm Ch town idp 2.55 “ Royalty Jun. " ar Mt. Stewart ap 440 | Cardigan , oa jar 6.25 * 4 Georgetown SOURIS BRANCH. _ Going Ww eat. . No.6 { ST ATIONS. i. Mixed. i N. 5 STATIONS. | Mixed. A.M. P.M Souris \Dp 7. 00} 1] ‘Mts tw’tJne|/Dp 4.40 Harmony = 2a 3} | Morell y St. Peters { ‘* 8,42)|St. Peters “s 65.54 Morell © 9.13 Harmony «; 7.12 Mt S’tw’t Jnc} ar 9.55||Souris ar 7.35 Going ment. . J. BRYDGES, WM. McKECHNIE, Gen. Sup. Gow. Railways ‘town, Dec. 27, 1878. p-ne arh pres kca sp sj ap 61 | COMMERCIAL Union Assurance Uompany, GF LONDON, ENGLAND. CAPITAL - + 82, 500,060. NSURANCE sees against Fire on all descriptions of Property throughout. the Island. 7 Low) rates and rromrr settlement of losses. HORACE HASZARD, Agent for P. E. Island. Ch’town, Dec, 20, 1878— a ee WAGSTARF'S HOTEL, : ign 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 penne every atten tion at the Wagstaff’s Hote Wat WAGSTAFF. May 25, 1878, Supt. P. E. I. RB, No. 35 Water St., | Charlottetown. oe Prince Edward Island Branch oF THE— | WORTH BATTS & MERCANTILE FIR= AND LIFE. INSURANCE 0. Subscribed Capital, $9,733,332.00 Paid up Capital, - 1,216,666,.00 CHIEF ¢ EF P ICES -Kdinbu irgh, 64 Princess Stre: bs oe 1, 61 Thread noodle Street. Nine-7 * the Life Assur- ane Ba: iness are divided every Five Years. Che Tables of Rates are mo rate, Fire jn ees vitected ou nearly every description of Property, at the LowEsT RATES of Premium. corresponding to the nature of the risk. Losses settied with prou:ptitnde and lber- lity. s , 2 G. W. DEBLOIS, (reneral Agent. Dec. 14. E. ¢. HUNTER, Italian aid American Marble, Monuments, Tablets, Headstones, Crenrre TABLE Tors, Burzau anp ComMMoDE Tors, Wasu Bow. Srars, &., &¢. Prices to suit, and satisfaction guaranteed. aa Designs furnished on application. “@a Corner Hillsborough and Kent Streets, Char- lottetown. November 6, 1875. ROBERT HARRIS, faE0L bi o's BRICK BUILDING, GUEEN STREET. during FULL’S ”"\ Porrrairs Painted from Life, Xe., the next six months. Nov. 30. 1S7S— BROASWAY FIOUSE, BY MACKENZIE. LS ryNE former ‘City Hotel,” now the Broudway House, Great 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 sma] family, together with board &ec., can be ha in the Broadway fiouse. Novy. 23, 1878—ti OTICE. ee ERSONS who took Tux EXAMINER before the Datny Examiner wasissued, and have not yet paid for ity wil please send the amounts ° f thei ive accounts without delay, t L. COTTON. iY Test Per WwW. EXAMINER Orricc, Ch’town, } Oct. 17, 1878. dy & wkly, § RANEIN HOUSE, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. BL J. 3. DAVIES - - - (Formerly of St. Lawrence HIS well-known Hotel is now open under the present management ; and, having been new'y furnished “throu: ghout, it offers every comfort to the tra welling public. Suit- able Sample Rooms for commercial gentlemen. Oct. 15, e-. uw Proprictor Hotel, Pictou). D gR. CR EAMER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Kent Street, Charlottetown, (Three doors from Dr. Johnson's). sa ENTRANCE BY SIDE DOOR, “Wa Oct. 15 —3m GOAL. COAL. OUND AND NUT COAL cheap for cash, by r W. W. CLARKE, Agent.. Head Lord’s Wharf, Charlottetown, Nov. 23. BIER & SONS. — FUR GOODS. MUFFs, BOAS, CAPS ' Promenade and Heavy Wool SCARFS, MUFFLERS, CLOUDS, White & Col’d. temainder offered at low figures. BEER & SONS. W 7COLENS. Bine & Black - Beavers, Wiaitneys, Presidents, Yoscows, Worsteds, Tweeds, Suitings. -made up to order at ER & SONS. LADIES’ au CLOTHS, PLAIN AND FANCY. A Choice Collection— short notice. Balance of Stock offered at extra discount. BEER & SONS. E have received the chief part of our FALL STOCK, and can confidently call attention to LARGH IMPORTATIONS, aie. SUGARS, FRUITS, SPICES & GENERAL GROCERIES. We are also in receipt of Full Line, in REFINED & COMMON IRON, SLEIGH-SHOEING STEEL, SPRING, CAST, and BLISTER DO Paints, Colors, Oils, Gold Leaf, Transfers, Varnishes, cic. TEAS, A Large and Well-Assorted Stock of WSO? Sau... FOR SLEIGH & CARRIAGE BUILDERS. BEER & SONS. Ch’town, Dec. 13, 1878— JAMES HOBBS, CABINET-MAZXER, UPHOLSTERER, ETC, to the premises just vacated by Mr. JouN STUMBLES, Prince Street, where, with increased facilities, he is prepared to attend to the wauts of his customers with punctuality and despatch, and on reasonable terms. Carpets cut and laid. ParinTING and Repairing neatly done. PicTURE FRAMES and Mouldings constantly on hand, or made up to order. All kinds of Householkl Furniture made to order, cheap and good. New Pattern School Desks made at short notice. A first-class article. (near the new “Baptist Charch in course of erection). Charlottetown, Oct. 26, 1878— BOOK & JOB PRINTING! neatly and expeditiously executed, AT THE “ EXAMINER” OFFICE under the careful supervision of J. W. MITCHELL. We are now in a position to execute orders for all kinds of Printing, such as LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS, CIRCULARS, CARDS, PAMPHLETS DODGERS, HANDBILLS, POSTERS, AND ALL KINDS OF Bank and Legal Blanks, &c. &c. &c. AT MODERATE PRICES. Office :—Ings’ Old Stand, Corner Great George and Water Streets. ] ie REMOVED from MePhail’s Corner a@ Don’t forget the place: PF ‘INCE STREET Grope amid the thousand pathways reaching | to the Great Unknown; Thou must choose the ways of folly or the | ehining g pethe of faith — wlike will lead thee downward to the silent stream of death. All: When the restless world around the lays its cares upon thy heart, When its heritage of sorrow bids the anguish- ed tear to start, When the ebb and flow of passions, and the light and shadc of life Reach thy soul and wake within thee all the pains of mortal strife ; When temptation lures the onward, wilt thou then be brave and strong ? Or wilt thou, in evil moments, listen to the syren’s song?—- Rainbow hopes that smile and vanish, prom- ised joya that never come, Only leading weary pilgrims in the wilds of woe to roam. Will the wandering beams of Folly, like the marsh’s shifting light, Dazzle thee and iead thee downward to the awful gloom of night ? Or will Faith’s fair star above thee guide thee in thy tender youth, Leading thee from doubt and darkness upward into light and truth ? When the throes of human suffering crush thy soul and ‘rend thy breast ; When the eyes can get no slumber, and the weary limbs no rest— Will the pangs be rendered painless hy the thought that thou has trod Closely in the shining footsteps of the sainted sons of God ? And when o’er thy golden tresses age has shed its silent snows, Will the dead years yield a fragrance like the dead leaves of the rose ? Wiil their perfume rise around thee like some melting mystic power, Making sweet the solemn twilight of life’s sombre gleaming hour ? Mystic future! veiled in darkness pierced by human eye, None may know what awful issues in thy silent bosom lie. Cleave thou to the right sweet dreamer, and when life’s brief day is done, Thou shalt wear the crown in glory faith on oat hath won, >_> 2° <P +e never that thy a ambestie, Auld Scotch Bodie (loquitur)—‘‘ Weel, weel, what wi’ aff-gauns in India an’ on- gauns in Glasga’, I dinna ken what the world’s comin’ tae.”-—Punch. A teacher, after reading to her scholars a story of a generous child, asked them what generosity was. One little boy raised his hand and said, ‘I know; it’s giving to others what you don’t want yourself,” An old gentleman of 84, and his bride, aged 82, entered a railway car the other day and took seat by the stove. A youth occupying the seat behind says he overheard the following : : Old gentleman to his bride— en ho’s a ittle lamb?” Bride—‘‘Bofe of us,” Yesterday the blush ef health was upon her cheek, and the light of a happy spirit | in her eye. ‘To-day, as she sits apart, look- ing as yellow as satlron, and feeling as sul- Jen as a mud turtle, he asks her tenderly what ails her, and she answers, sharply, **Mince pie, you idiot.” GOING THRO’ THE RYE. Says the captain to Pat, ‘*Come, I'll have none o’ that !’ PAs addy of whiskey was drinking his fill. With a satisfied sigh, As he finished his ‘‘rye.” Says Paddy, ‘ Be jabers, I don’t think ye will.’ --- Yawcob. ‘The Marquis of Lorne has accepted the offico of Commodore of the Nova Scotia Yacht Squadron, vacated by the Earl of Dufferin, who remains a member of the Squadron. Documents showing that Napoleon III. repeatedly offerec Egypt to England in con- sideration of the occupation of Morocco by France are said by a Paris journal to be forthcoming in printed form. Don’t.— Don’t speak angrily to a child. Don’t kick a dog when he is asleep. Don’t go back on the friends of your parents. Don’t often visit your neighbors at meal time. Don’t neglect a cough, thinking it will cure itself. The fiood in Great Britain produced by the sudden thaw is the greatest known for fourteen years. The country around Dar- lington and Lexington is flooded for miles and much damgge- is reported at Berwick and Aberdeen. A bill will shortly be submitted to the United States Congress having for its ob- ject minority representation in that legisla- tive body. It is proposed inthe draft bill) y that the majority of the voters shall be en- titled to clect two out of three or three out of five. In case a district is entitled to three negate an elector can vote for two candidates, and so on in proportion. The question, which undoubtedly is an im- portant one, will be fully ventilated by | Congress. constructed roads through their settlements, |and are now striving to secure the advan- tages of local lines of railways. The Men. nonites settled near the boundary line de- sire to have a railroad built, which would commence from Emersun, thence pass through the Pembina country, and west- ward via Portage la Prairie. They offer to build sixty miles of road for any solvent company, on the line being located and ties and rail supplied. Se The Chinese have a very effective, if somewhat primitive, way of preventing the directors of a savings bank running the in- stitution they control into insolvency. They reckon the president’s head among the assets. “»—eo-— London exults over a rara avis in th shape of a polygot eloeutionist. A young Portuguese lady, by name Malle. Antonini, of a good family in her native land, has been. giving lately, several recitations in private drawing rooms. She has a wonder- ful memory, and declaims in the purest ac- cent in French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and English. The latter language she has made her special study. Her Lady Macbeth is said to be admirable in tone, fire end passion. She has a fine voice and a great facial expression. -_— 2 —--- The great fortune left to the heirs of John Jacob Astor was at the time of his death estimated at $40,000,000, and he was the sixth in the list of the rich men of the world. Baron de Rothschild, the Duke of Devonshire, Sir Robert Peel, and Louis Philip were said to have greater fortunes than Astor. In 1873 the Aster estate was estimated to be worth $90,000,000. At the time of the death of A. T. Stewart, in 1876, his estate was valued at $80,000,000. The richest man living in New York is undoubt- edly W. H. Vanderbilt, who was made the heir to the bulk of the immense fortune of his father. - Pp ----—- -- The true story of the four shares which involved the Duke of Sutherland in the troubles of the City of Glasgow of Bank is said by Mr. Labouchere to “be as followt : Some time since, the Duke’s father owed the Duke some £600, which he was desir- ous of paying [off by transferring to the Duke four shares he held in the City of (Glasgow Bank, and mentioned his intention ‘one day to the agent of the Caledonian at Inverness, who said: Oh, never mind troubling the Duke with them ; we'll take the shares and credit the Duke’s account ;” and this was done. A bad job for the Duke, each share carrying a full liabilit for all the losses of the creditors of the baisk by its failnre ! Bav.iy SoLtp.—The St. John - Teloys ‘aph and Sun, and Moncton Times. have been badly sold by copying from the New Era an account of the death of seren persons by suffocation, in England, but which the New Zra neglected to credit to an English paper, and the above | mentioned papers located it at Charlottetown, and copied, and one paper sub-headed the paragraph as ‘‘a shocking occurrence at Char- lottetown,” etc. The Halifax Herald also gives the { ollowing to its readers: ‘‘ Another serious case of small-pox has broken out in Charlottetown—this time the infected is one of the children of Mr. R. Tuplin, proprietor of the hotel in which Capt. Koeing, of the brig- antine Corinne, was staying, when the first case was detected. The fact that this case has broken out a month after it was thought the place was thoroughly rid of the disease, has caused great alarm.” It is needless to say that there is no smali-pox in Charlottetown. The case referred to is in Alberton. | E> —- ~ et sae Mr. SPURGEON ON WoMEN. id ® most amusing speech at the opening of a bazaar at Norwich, in aid of a female educa: tion in India, Mr. ‘Spurgeon said : “I think there is no one of us but feels that women are a superior part of the race, especially if we are married, for we know then by ex- perience. When I am marrying a young couple I generally tell the young lady to let her husband be the head, for that is ac- cording to Scripture and to nature; but I always advise her to be the neck, and twist him around which way she likes. I believe the practical experience of most of us men is that, though we like to be at the head, though we like the nominal sovereignity, yet we mostly like to be twisted abouta little, and with our full consent, under the supreme rule of the queen of the ‘household® for there we generally find our safety and our happiness.’”” Mr. Spurgeon, in the same speech, related an anecdote of a black man and his wife whom he received in the church at the Metrepolitan Tabernacle. When the negro came before the church, Mr. Spurgeon said, ‘‘Well, friend, I sup- pose you can speak well of your wife-—she is a Christian woman?” To which the negro made the following remarkable ans- wer: ‘Yes, I believe she is a good woman ; but even black women are voking some- times.” But they received her into the church,