iXAMINER. - veo rr ee = a entice eeetaneetansiat -— an ey nnn VOL 6 CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1880. NO; 65 Pee dae 6 110; an ie . JeRnnAn re | “MISCELLANEOUS. DarLy IXAMINER| _ every Lvenng. THRE {s Publishe: OFPICI | ILDING, CORN} OF WATER | RGE STREETS, -EAT (FEO: I. -—— INGS’ Bi oR AND u Charlottetown, P. E. KNATES OF SUBSCRIPTION 3; Six Months, - : $2 50 Three Montas, - - 1 25 One Month, - 0 50 june Week, - - 0 12 aw Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- erly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- cation. W. L. COTTON, Manager. | > | J. W. MITCHELL, Office Sup’t a A Prince Edward Isiand RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 13. Winter Arrangeme at, TO COME INTO FORCE TUESDAY, December 2nd, 1879, TRAINS GOING WEST. . Nos. 1 & 3, | No. 5, STATIONS . } ¢ a . Mixed. | Mixed. ! Georgetown ..... Dp 8.20 a. m.! Cardigan i.cs.. wp F 3.86" es Ar 10.10“) | Mt Stew t June... | ip 10.15 * 5 | 7 es ! Royalty Jnnetion' ** 11.27 oe jAr 11.50a.m. Char! ttetown.../ » &COam!Dp 3.00pm Royalty Junction, “ 38.22 ‘** ; ** 3.23 *“ North -Wiltshire..| ** 9.14 ** | ‘* 4.15 * Hunter River... .| $6. BD Meat 4* : MOB: Breadalbane..... , AOR. 5 BOS *° County Line..... Be. 2 lige bea. 6a Kensington......| 10.53 °* | “ 5.55% _ a ‘Ar 11.30a m Ar 6.30 pm Summerside... .. [Dp 1.30 p m| Wellington.... ‘ewer we ee + ,4> QAMIET, 00 <0 05 hae. ces andes sees ~~ hae | ee (ae. | TRAINS GOING EAST. ramen | Nos. 2 and 4,| No. 6, [coe | Mixed. | yee ‘Dp 6.30a m! Mettets i 3...) 2 384 CLany sss. .-. ee ROIS Bate Bw | Wellington ......| “10.22 “ | ‘Arll.10 am S’mm'rside...... i\Dp 2.30 pmjDp 7.30am Kensington...... ne ee County Line.. ..| ‘* 3.43 “ ~~ io Bresdalbane..... ae 2. ee Hunter River....| “* 4.30 ** | « 930 “ North Wiltshire.. ‘6 4.46 “ | “* 9.43 °* Royalty Junction ‘‘ 5,37 “ ** 10.38 * Ar 6.00 pmjAr 11,00 am Charlottctown.... 1), 9 39 p i} P Royalty Junction ** 2.53 “ | ‘tw't J Ar 4.10 ** Mt. Stw’t Junc .. Dp. 4.15 “ Cardigan........ " 635°“ Georgetown . Ar 6.00 pm) "SOURIS BRANCH. ——— ——— ee Trains Going West. rr STATIONS. No. 7, Mixed. MMs este ris. Lot | Depart 7:15 a. m. 7” Harmony .... 22+. .+++] , cas S6. Peter's....... ‘a | = 8.55 ** ae "> Om. ¢ Mt. Stewart Junction.| Arrive 10.10 a, m. oo an irains Going East. | STATIONS. | No. 8, Mixed. ! ED Mt. Stewart Junction.| Depart 4.15 p. m. pe Pre ee ’ 458 ‘ St. Peter’s...... iia re aa 7 Harmony....... be of . oe GG Series ni! ae ae ALEX. MAGUNAB, Sup’t and Engineer, Railway Office, Chtown, Nov. 28, 1879. —pat pres h ane sp sj kea pio 6i COAL. COAL. OR SALE, at the Gas Works, and Koughan’s Scales, a quantity of Round Lingan Coal, at $3.50 per ton. This Coal gives a great 1 eat, and being al- most free from sulpiur, is suitable for either grates or cooking stoves, Dec. 27, 1879—city papers 6i Valuable Property for Sale, YO BE SOLD, all that part of Town Lot No. 74, in the first hundred of Town Lots in Charlottetown; having a front of 67 feet, Dor- ehester Street, aud runaing back 30 feet, to- gether with the buildings thereon erected. For farther particu apply to Messrs. Hopason & McLsop Charlottetowr. SINGER SEWING [MACHINES Sept. 18, 1879. ike Se ao. Ce Gy Be A é A Uy ‘a q> a BEING ABOUT TO MAKE A Change in their Business and Firi, Take this opportunity of informing the public that all accounts due them by Note, Book Account, or Otherwise, WILL REQUIRE TO BE PAID ON OR Betore the Ist day of and all unsettled claims at handed over fer Hare next, Ensuing, that date will have to be collection, Persons having claims against the firm are requested to furnish the same before that date for adjustment and payment. a large discount. Ww. Charlottetown, January 8, 1880. They will also close out balance of stock during said time at & A. BROWN. ESTABLISH 29 A ae CANADA oe a ou re JOHN A. CONVERS —2 ED i825. CORDAGE FAGTORY. ~— or omy MONTREAL. AY “ANUFACTURER OF CORDAGE of Every Description, includiag all sizes Manilla | Rape, Hambroline, &c., &¢., equal in quality to the best Amerivan. Jan. 7, 1879. —— . * tee ete eee _ —— meatt nen ———— ae Cant? ee a ‘§XHE SHOP en Upper Queen Street, new occupied by Simon W,. Crabbe. Posses- sion given the Ist June, 1880. 629 or Ch’town, Dee. 22,1879.— taw pat pres ne her Im Hor Sale. aces Land and Dwelling House owned and occupied by William B. ifeartz, situated on Enston street, opposite Admiral Bayfield’s SS ee dwelling. for further particulars apply to CHARLES HEARTZ, Queen Street. Jan. 5, 1880. 73,620 MORE SOLD EIN 1878 THAN IN ANY PREVIOUS YEAR. | In 1570 we sold 127,833 Sewing Machines. sé 1878 sé se 356,432 ae sé Our sales have increased enormously every year, through the whole period of ‘‘ hard times. We now Seil Three-Quarters of all the Sewing Machines Sold .in ARCIVD. WHITE. | - > | Varred Mantila Hawsers, Lobster Marlin, Tarred Hemp Rope, Houseline, = Prices on application, FOR THE HOLIDAYS oat: ae ANY OTHER TIME. W. R. BORSHANM Has on hand, and coming, per steAmer North- ern Light, alarge stock of Men’s, Women’s and Children’s Boots, Shoes, Rubbers, Over- shees and Slippers, all styles aud prices to suit allages and p@ckets. | Come along to W. R. BOREHAM, South Side Queen Square. Dec. 23, 1879.—-3mostaw ST, MARGARET'S HAL, HEALIFAX, N. &. SEMINARY FUR YOUNG LADIES. VISITOR + Tue Lard Bishoy of nova Scotia PRINCIPAL: The Rev, John Padfield, FEXHIS SCHOOL oifers, at very moderate cost. the advantages of a comtortable and | pleasant home together with a thorough and refined education. ‘he course of instruction is the same as that of the best Schools in Engiand and is the World. Waste no Honey on ‘cheap’ ‘ ee ountericits. gw Send for handsome Illustrated Price List ROBERT YOUNG, South Side Queen Square, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. Ch’town, March 18, 1878—2aw tf Bones. Bones. FANHE undersigned will pay fifty cents Cash per ewt. for all bones delivered at the Bone Mill, in the Royalty. No quantity less than one ewt. (112 lbs) taken. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Agent, Ch town, Dee. 1, 1879 SNOW THE BAY” “NOW'S THE HOUR” SUBSORIBE The Weekly ixaminer, ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. “THE EXAMINER” sup; lies to country districts al: the home news-~ -which a foreign paper cannot do. send One Dollar by registered letter or money order and get the CHEAPEST AND BEST paper published in P, E. Island. N. B.—Persons who have relatives or friends in any part of Canada, the United States or Great Britain, may have them pro- vided with Tuz ExamtIner for a year by pay- ment ‘of Une Dollar-—-postage paid in this oifice. This is the very cheapest way to pro- vide a friend abroad with the Island news. UY the DAILY EXAMINER for the latest news—local and telegraphia i ee upon the University Examinations ior Women. Eight young ladies from this {School passed the Local Examination of the ‘University of King’s College in Jane last. This is the only School in Canada that has passed pupilsat a University Examination. ‘The number of pupils is limited, rendering the School select, and while it possesses all the educational advantages of a large public school, each pupil is enabled to receive thatandividual care and oversight which is so importznt, and which cannot be given ina large establish- ment. Mr. and Mrs. Padfield are assisted by a staif of four resident governesses, besides visit- ing masters. Parisienne French is taught conversation- ally. There are two resident French Gov- ernesses. References given to parents of pupils. For further particulars address the Prin cipal, Sept. 19, 1878. A SOUP KITCHEN “N connection with the Women’s Temper- ance Union and Benevolent Society, wili be opeued for the winter if sufliciently assist- ed by the charitable public ~ Ln order to dis- tribute judiciously, only tlose wiil be reliev- ed who identify themseives with the Society, which will enable the committee to look par- ticularly into each case. In view of the present pressing demands for help, the iriends of the poor are urgaitly requested to send donations immediately and as regularly as possible, which will be :eceived by Mrs. W.:Kennepy, Confectionely. Clothing will likewise be very acceptable. E. McRAE, Secretary of the Women’s Benevolent Society. Dec. 23, 1879. ‘Notice to Importers, f igs E Fast Sailing brigwwtine Shamrock, classed 7 years Al at English Lloyds, | William McPhee, commande’, will saill ton Glasgow, carrying freight diect to this Port, about the 15th MARCH, nex, lss0, or terms, freight, &c., apply to JamMEs KeExso, Ese., 134, St. Vinemt street, Gias- gow, Scotland, or here to the owner. OWEN CONNOLLY. Ch;towa, Dee. 97th, 1970. TON SECOND ED } | a ‘ ‘THe Dain KH XAMINER, FEBRUARY 6, 1880 Winter Navigation. Tue Mentreal Gazette, in a recent number, published a letter from a correspondent rela- tive to the construction of a winter steamer, by a shipbuilder in North Germany. As the aubject of Winter Navigation is of great im- portance to the people of well as other Provinces of the Dominion, we | here reproduce the letter in questien :— To the Editor of the Gazette. Dear Str.—The Gartenlaube, one of the best German illustrated journals, brings in one of its last numbers an article which, I think, is of 30 much interest to Montreal that I venture tu give you a short extract of it, trusting that you will grant it a space in your esteemed paper. The winter in the north of Germany is not as severe asin Lower Canada, and the Elbe is not closed by ice every winter, but it hap- pens often enough to cause serious loss to Hambury’s trade, and naturally the question has often been raised whether, in such a case, nothing can be done to break the ice blockade, To judge from the statements given in the Cartenalaubc—-and the respectabiiuty of the this Provirce, as rect—-the question has been settled satisfac- terily. The journal says that the shirbuilder, Mr, structing a vessel which will keep communica- tion with the sea open evenin the severest winter, The ship is built entirely of iron, 130 feet long. 82 feet beam, and the depth of hold amidst ship 164 feet. The leading principle in the construction aud slanting surface, to enable the ship to mount the ive and crush it by her weight. She is a screw steamer of 600-horse power, aud the engine is placed as much forward as possible to increase her weight there. ‘two boilers, each large.enough to work the engine in case of need. Room for abeut 106 tous coals. The whole ship is heated by steam, and as her deck is also of iron, and always warm, there is no danger of ice forming on it. She draws 1! ft. 6 inches aft, and by means of lage tanks placed on board the draft can be increased te 16 feet 10 inches ; to fill or empty these tanks requires 10 minutes only. The crew consists of 14 men, eight for the navigation ef gthe vessel, and six as engineers and tiremen. The cost of the ship in 1871 was $47,509. As to her performances, it is stated that she breaks ice of from 8 to 10 feet thickness and packed ice upto16 feet thick without any diffieulty. Ice 3 feet thick and smocth ice of any size is broken without any perceptible delay. Ten miles of strong ice have been cleared in five hours, the ship moving with great ease, and towing at the same time. Such has been the satisfaction given, that the Senate of Hamburg, seeing the importance of the vessel to the commerce of the city, took her off the hauds of those who had clubbed to- gether to make the experiment, and contract- ed at the same time for another aud more powerful one at the price of $68,700. I know that the distance from Montreal to open water is greater than from Hamburg to the sea, and there may be other obstacles here of which 1 am not aware; but if the plan sheuld be at all possible here, I think its im- portance can hardly be over-estimated, as Mentreal would be freed of the one great drawback to its becoming one of the largest shipping ports on the continent. Yours truly, C. M. Brockville, 26th Jan., 15890, smerny ithe iene aaliedtinaicie Late Scotch News Notes. A paper has been read before the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, giving an ac- count of a charter of confirmation by King Frederick [1I, of Denmark and Norway (1662), and other documents in the Norse language, relating to Shetland, by Mr. Gilbert Goudie, F. 5S. A. Scot. Provost Alexander, after forty-seven years’ connection with Peterhead—nineteen years of whica he has been Provust—has just been presented, in presence of a large bedy of his townsmen, with his por- trait, painted by Mr. George Reid, R. 8S. A., together with a replica for Mrs. Alexan- der. Mr. A. Mathieson, Kirkfieldbank, has re- ceived the following note from Miss Glad- stone: ‘‘ Miss Gladstone begs to return her most sincere thanks for the beantiful piece ol cloth received from Mr. Mathieson, and wishes him to know how gratified she and her father were by the kind words whica accompanied the gift.” Ata meeting of the Scottish Food Re- forin Suciety, the company, to the number of twenty, sat down to a repast, consisting of six courses—lentil and barley soup, hari- cot bean pies, laricet bean omelets with sauce, hominy pudding, pearl meal pudding and tapioca and apples. The cost of the whole, exclusive of cooking, came to 3}d per head. Miss Vandermeulen, a lady of Dutch ex- traction, who, after living for a long periud of years in Nairn, died on-the 5th of De- cember, has left legacies to the U. P, Church for the spread of the Gospel, £500 ; for the poor of Nairn, £200; to Nairn U. P. Church, £1,000. The residue of her estate, about £5,500, is to be applied for the support and spread of the Gospel at somes and abread, and in aiding Christian work, paper warrants mein accepting them aa cor-. <== | ing because his wife hasn’t settled more prop- Scott-Siddons’ husband is, complain Mrs. erty on him, and the Kanzas City 7'imes sug- gests that she should yet give him a clear title ____—-~ | to a corner lot in a stylish cemetery. | The German Emperor will open the Reisch- stag in person. The German Newspapers are discussing England’s probable attitude in the event of a coutinental war. Prince Bismarck is working with extraordinary vigor. ‘if you were a decent person,” remarked a shrill female voice on the railway, ‘* you would shut down that window, and not ex- pose me to the draft.” ‘* Madam,” was the reply, as the window was softly lowered, ‘‘I thought from your face that you were over ‘forty-five and, therefere, out of the draft.” Ferdinand Steinhaus, has succeeded in con- | was to offer tothe ice everywhere a round | And notwithstanding the fact that this wretch was on the train the cars did net run off the track or the engine burst its beiler. A bridal party in a St, Louis justice’s effice lacked the ,bridegreom. He had quarrelled with the bride, and after waiting an hour beyond the appoirted time,” she teld her friends that he probably did not mean to come at all. ‘Thereupon an old admirer offered to take the missing man’s place. The woman hesitated, but tifteen minutes of vigorous courtship won her consent, and the ceremony was perfermed. The Times Berlin correspondent asserts that a complete understanding has beeu arrived at on all the important questions regarding home and foreiga policy, between Prince Bismarck aud the imperor William. The same corres- poudent says that the rumor that the Crown Prince has been commissioned te visit the Pope, to come to an understanding oa the church struggle is unfounded. Prince Bis- marck bas resumed his functions with all «his old energy. ry The Times Cabul correspondent says :—‘'No apprehension is felt that the present tranquii- ity will scom be disturbed.. Business in the city has been entirely resumed.’”’ The Times despatch from Candahar says; ‘‘Terrible ae- counts reach here from without the British lines. It is reported that nearly two thou- sand families have been exterminated by the Ghilzais, and that seven of the villages | of the latter were afterwards captured by the I OF Hazaras, and every son! in them slain.” In view of the year 1881 being the year prophesied when the world will end, Mother Shipton’s prophecy has been revived. Here are the principal events which have come to pass since that remarkable prophecy was pub- lished in 1448 :— Carriages without horses shall go, } Rail- And mishaps {ill the world with woe. { roads. Around the world thoughts shall fly } Tele- In the twinkling of an eye. | graphs. Tron on the water shall float } As easy as a wooden boat, { Gold shall be found and shown } Australia and In Tands not now known. } America. England shall at last admit a Jew, ) Premier. And fire and water wonder do, { Steam. The world to an end shall run he In eighteen hundred and eighty-one. | a a Leap Year Note. Iron ships. Ona recent night the members of the Kentucky Legislature were escorted by the young ladies of Frankfort to a leap year hop. The men were called for in carriages. ; The Americus, Ga., Republican tells of a Sumter county man who went to a leap- year party and was offered the heart and fortune of a rich maiden lady. When the students at the University of Virginia attended a leap year entertain- ment given by the ladies of Charlotteville, they found that every lady had invited and expected to entertain six gentlemen. A notable event in Chattanooga, T enn., seciety was the entertainment successfully conducted there by a number of “young ladies on Jan. 8. Accompanying the in- vitation was a notice asking “‘the pleasure of the company” of the yeung men, with the request to ‘‘please Iet us know, if agreeable, when to call for you.” None of the young men had any previous engage- ments and readily obtained the consent of their parents to attend. The ladies called in carriages. After the dancing the young men were Offered feminine arms and escort- ed down town+o a restaurant, where they were regaled handsomely. Apropos ef leap year Chainbers’ Journal records a lady’s proposal made in a novel manner: The yeung man paying his usual evening visit, asked his lady love how she got along with her cooking. ‘‘ Nicely,” re- plied she. ‘‘Im improving wondrfully, and make splendid cake, now.” “Can you?” said the young fellow, ignorantly rushing on to his fate. ‘* What kind do you like best?” ‘*I like one made with fiour and sugar, with lots of currants and citron, and beautifully frosted on the top,” respouded she. ‘* Why, that’s a wedding cake |” cried he. ‘I meant wedding,” said she ; aad there was nothing left for him but to say ho meant wedding, too. Leap year makes no changes in the ma- turity of a nete of hand in Indiana. Paper dated on February 28, 1880, payable one day from date, becomes dues March 1, the same as any otheretber. The question has cone beforo the Supreme Court in respect to serving ef process of 1876, the previous leap year. The law there requires ten days previcus service for the entry of judgment. in the case before the Court the judgment was premature if ¢ 28th and 29th of February were co dasone day. The Court said: “It must be regarded as settled in this State that the 28th and 29th of February in every bis-sextile year must _ computed and considered in law as one ay.