= ne ee ee ey ote ee eee NS an THE XAMINER., VOL 4. THe Datty EXAMINER is Published every Evening. OFFICE : INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. 1 KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION - Six Months, $2 50 Viiree Months, 1 25 i Miemth, 0 50 {fire VW eck, oS & s@ A vertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- |} —_—— cation. WwW. i. COTTON. 2 ' Manager. } W. MITCHELL, ¢ PRINGE . tAILWAY. _ TIME TABLE NO. il. Winter Arrangement, ON AND AFTER MONDAY, DECEMBER 3th, 1878. ‘Trains Going West. | No. 1. No.3 ; Express. | Mixed. — | Dp 8.10 am STATIONS. Georgetown Cardigan 7 a "4 ° . , ar 9.55 “* M.Stew’t Jan | 4p10.05 “ Royalty Jun. $641.20 °* | cities | $617.40 ** 7 dp 8.00 am) Dp 3.30 pm Royalty Jun. ae: tee N. Wiltshire 1. @ig 1 4 eee Hunter River | +900" 1“ ae Breadalbane "aes ) "ta County Line | “6.36. .%S.1:.% ESI S Kensington “ae ae de lar11.30 ‘* lar 7.00 “ Sqpmersi e | dp 2.40 pm Wellington “ae * Pért® Hill «4.16 O'Leary “é oo “e ar 6.35 ‘* Alberton ap 40 « Tignish jar 7.25 ‘* Trains Going East. * STATIONS. No. 2 | No. 4 a Express. | Mixed. Tignish Dp 7.00 am; ton 7.4n °° O’ Leary sé 8.47 sé Port Hill $30.06 * Wellington aie ” : ar 1}. a Summerside dp 2.30pm) Dp 8.45 am Kensington 2.6) ©) agp County Line oe. ae Breadalbane “3.50 ** | 91006 * Huzter River 64,28 ** Lega * N. Wiltshire *<445 “11. * Royalty Jun. " on o ar eo ar 6.00 ** jarl2. lo pm Ca town } de 7.55 © Royalty Jun. vad, Bhan 4 S art ar 4:30 4‘ Mt. tew dp 4.40 *“ Cardigan ++ 6100; “ Georgetown lar 6.25 “« Fe se oe 2 ee a eS — SOURIS BRANCH. Going West. Going East. pe A a as SN | Nob STATIONS. | Mixed. ||S TATIONS. Mixed. —— — “CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, H. W. Vinnicombe, Resident Piano Tuner & Regulator, ji AS adopted the Dollar system of Tuning visit, 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 Hamilten’s system of even i temperament. | s#® Orders may be left at Mr. Fletcher’s i Musi@ Store, or at Bremner Bros., Queen | Street. Jan. 6, 1879— COMMERCIAL __oseeSwr*Tnion Assurance Company, RDWARD ISLAND: | OF LONDON, ENGLAND. - ‘CAPITAL - - $12,500,000. eae ANCE effected against Fire on all descriptions of Property throughout the Island. sar Low rates and Promrr settlement of losses, FORACE HASZARD, Agent for P. E. Island. Ch’town, Dee, 20, 1S78— QUEEN INSURANCE O0’Y, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING, ee NCE effected on all kinds of Build- ings, Merehandise 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 stay WAGSTAFF'S HOTEL, NHE 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. ie iene BROADWAY HOUSE, BY MACKENZIE. rgX\Ht former ‘City Hotel,” now the Broadway Mouse. 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 small family, together with board &c., can be had May 25, 1878, ‘lin the Broadway House. Nov. 23, 1878—tf RANKIN HOUSE, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. EI, J. J. DAVIES ° @ Proprietor (Formerly of St. Lawrence Hotel, Pictou), FEWIS well-known Hotel is now open under A. M.| P.M the te ra ‘ ote? present management ; and, having a Dp ra oad tJne: Dp po been newly furnished throughout, it. offers se Puien « g42'(St. Peters | « 5.54) Very comfort to the travelling public, Suit- Morell . “9 13) Harmony “ 749 able Sample Rooms for commercial gentlemen. Mt S’tw’t Jnc| ar 9.55{|Souris ar 7.35} ct. 19, 187S—3m; WM. McKECHNIE, C. J. BRY DGES, Supt. P. E. 1. BR. Gen. Sup. Gov. Railways Ch’town, Dec. 27,1878 p ne ar h pres kea sp sj ap 61 GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE. TRADE MARK. The Great TRADE MARK, . Lee English Keni- AS edy, an unfail- 8’ ing cure for Sem- inal Weakness, Spermatorrahe a, 4x oe =e ee mite all diseases tha s Before Takings sow as a se- After Taking. quence of self-abuse; as loss of -Memory, Uni versal Lassitude, Pain in the Back, Dimness of Vision, Premature Uld Age, and many other Diseases that lead to Insanity or Con- sumption. wa. Full particulars m our pam- phiet, which we desire to send free by mail to every one. ta. The Specific Medicine is sold by all druggfsts at $! per package, or six pack- ages for $5, or will be sent free, by mail, on receipt of the money, by addressing The Gray Medicine Co., Windsor, Ont., Canada. g@ Sold in Charlottetown by all Drugists, and by all wholesale and retail Druggists in the United States and Canada. . ‘January 24, 1879. - DR. CREAMER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Kent Street, Charlettetown, (Three doors from Dr. Jolnson’s). aw ENTRANCE BY SIDE DOOR, Oct, 15—3m SS E. G. HUNTER, Italian and American Marble, Monuments, Tablets, Headstones, MantTLes, Cenrre Tasie Tors, Burrau AND ComMopE Tops, Wasn Bow. . Srass, &c., &c. Prices to suit, and satisfaction guaranteed. B® Designs furnished on application. “ea - Corner Hillsborongh and Kent Streets, Char lottetown. November 6, 1878S. CABINET-MAZEKER, UPHOLSTERER, ETC, AS REMOVED from MecPhail’s Corner to the premises just vacated hy Mr. Joun STUMBLES, Prince: Street, where, with increased facilities, he is prepared to attend to the wants of his customers with punctuality and despatch, and on reasonable terms. — CARPETS cut and laid. Patntrne@ and Repairing neatly done. Picture Frames and Mouldings constantly on hand, or made uptoorder; .... “All kinds of Household Furniture made to order, cheap and good. New Pa:tern School Desks made at short notice. A first-class article. (near the new Baptist Chureh un co : erection). ~Six visits a year, at one dollar per} This system is much more economical | JAMES HOBBS, ’t forget the place: ET! Don’t forget the place: PRINCE STREET 15'79. JOB PRINTING PROMPTLY DONE IN GOOD STYLE AND AT LOW PRICES! A OL LOLOL THE DAILY EXAi1HER Local News, Foreign News, Political News. Social News, Commercial News. Shipping News, laid before Subscribers, Purchasers, and Borrowers, EVERY EVENING, PRICE 2% CENTS. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Quarterly ...-eee cece ee ofl ead Half-Yoarly...eeeeeceeeees 4,00 THE DAILY ‘HAS A a Largely Increased Circulation AND IS AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING MEDIUM i i { | Te WEEKLY EXAMINER i } Made up from Taz Damy—a Compen- dinm of all the News of the Week. Subscription price only One Dollar a Year! IN ADVANCE. Sent to any-address in Great Britain or North America. Persons having relatives or friends abroad cannot do better than send them THe WEEKLY EXAMINER. pes~ A few Advertisements only, received? ‘J, W. MITCHELL, | Charlottetown, Oct. 26, 1878— ~~ W. L. COPRON, “Manager. - Office Supt. , Exauiuer Uiee! ,ought todo her duty; and the Governor, | From the Scotiish- American Journal. Emigration. | ans as Cuarorretown, P. E. I., Jan. 18. Dear Sir,—i observe by the late British | TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18. 1879. a ee omens eS NO, 520, a Oe OTTAWA. { THE CAPITAL AS SEEN BY AN ENGLISHMAN, The following extract from the letter of } . } ee : > rAYrTag _ or a : | papers that Earl Derby has been ‘*‘ ventilat- the correspondent of the London Times, : p F . ! . . . ping the remedy for trade depression ‘‘at: now at Ottawa, gives soime impressions of ”» . ; £ . ae 1é * | heme. I am glad of it. Australia and | the capital ;— | America afford ample room for the *‘unem- ‘IT hope Earl Derby’s suggestion will take ' root and bear good fruit. his standing and ability can do much ; Earl ‘Dufferin will, I am sure, assist ; Canada | General and his royal wife will aid the good ieause of immigration. Under their egis jthe ‘‘pent up” laborer and artizan of the | Ola World ought to feel secure in removing their penates across the Atlantic. Our bread acres and sunny skies invite them to our hospitable shores; our cold winters they need not fear. The aged may not, perhaps, enter the ‘‘promised land” ef ease and pros- perity, but they will have the consolation of knowing that those who come after them will live to inherit something better than they could at hone. In the Mother Coun- try there are thousands who would do well amongst us—better than they can in Eng- land. The attachment to one’s native land is, I know, very strong ; but on this side of the water our institutions are the same in spirit, if not identical in form. The Cum- braes are historical, but the honest, indus- trious, old countryman will soon find him- self here among friends, and his prayers bring down the promised blessing as readily as in North Briton, Wales, Ulster, or York- shire. Here we have room for the energy and ambition of the yeuth of our father- land. Let us, therefore, hope that good will result from Earl Derby’s address. C. ~—2 2 Our Washington Letter. Wasuincton, D. C., Feb. 13, 1579. It has now come the turn of the Democratic ox to be gored, and the strange failure of Pel ton’s memory with what he and Weed ae. knowledged, added to what Marble didn’t ac- 'knowledge and Tilden didn’t know, have formed the staple ef political discussion for the past 48 hours. ‘This diversion has, perhaps, come very opportune to the Republicans, rent and torn asunder as they were by the demor- alizing family fight over the N. Y. Custom House nominations, from which they have just emerged with victory perched on the Ad- ministration banners and the colors of Mr. Conkling trailing in the dust. If Republican Senators fairly reflect the sentiments of their respective constituencies on this matter, we must suppose President Hayes and Secretary Sherman have won a victory which a majority of their party had preferred to have been a a defeat. Of the 33 votes recorded in favor of the confirmation of Mr. Merritt, 20 were Democrats and 13 Republicans ; while against it there were 18 Republicans, 5 Democrats, and 1 Independent, which, it is almost super- fluous to say, was David Davis, of Lilinois—24 in all. However, I believe Republicans are generally glad that they can at last wash their hands of a fight which partisan interests dic- tated should never have been made, and which left no margin of profit to any but their oppon- ents. Mr. Sherman seems to have been moved to make public the letters from Cabinet and other oflicials, soliciting places, under Collector Arthur, for favorites or friends, or others who were thought entitled to reward for political, personal or other service. These letters were i ‘| read at the long executive session of the Sen- ate which culminated in contirmation, and form the basis for many not over-complimen- tary reflections heard on the difference they were alleged to have betrayed between theory and practice, as applied to the reform of the Civil Service. In the face of the President’s famous Civil Service order, it must be acknowl- edged that his request for the appointment of Howard, the Presidential biographer, to a very responsible office, looks a little inconsistent on the face of it; and the Secretary will find it a little difficult, probably, to make the ‘‘mani- fest reasons,” which he hoped would lead to the appointment of Justice Bradley’s son to a place in the N. Y. Custom House, appear any other than those growing out of a vote of the father on the ‘‘8 to 7 Commission,” to many Democrats. The letter last named has been given to the press, but no explanations accom- panied it other than those deducible from its text. The action of the Democratic caucus on Saturday night is construed, by Republicans, to mean an extra session of Congress for the distribution ef the Senate offices, which will fallto them after March 4th. It is evident to everybody acquainted here, that about a score of Democratic wayfares for every office to be tatives and Nevato:... the necessity of dividing up these spoils now, instead of waiting till next December, with all the chances that the country will go to the ‘“‘deminition bow wows,” in the interim, if they are not put in some official position where they can work to more advantage than as private citizens, to arrest its descent to such an untimely fate. The restricitive action taken by the British authorities against the Importation of Ameri- can cattle, has aroused a good deal of resent- ful feeling, and it finds one form of expression in schemes of retaliatory legislation urged on Congress. The proposition for a revision oi the sugar tariff to come up to-day in the House, will likely lead to a stubborn fight from the mag- nitude of the diverse interests involved, The riders with which it is proposed to load down some of the appropriation bills makes their failure a foregone conclusion if it is still persisted in. The bill for the distribution of the balance of the Geneva Award seems to have been lost sight of among the vast number of jobs striv- ing for precedence before Congress. The hope of living to marry his wife’s sister has brought many a man round when physicians, on their own admission, were in vain. filed, are in town vrrging on their Represen- | ployed” of England, Ireland and Scotland. | i ; i A nobleman of | ‘stand is in every way ‘*To the circumstance of Hler Majesty selecting Ottawa as the eajial of Canada, this city is indebted for its crowning orna- ment. But magnificent ». ‘.> Parliament buildings are, the site upon which they worthy of them. The combination of both is very striking when viewed from anv point of the compass north of east and west. On the face of the cliff upon which the Parliament build- ings are built has been constructed a path lo- cally called the lovers’ walk, on account of which name, I am told, lovers carefully avoid it. From this path a view is obtain- ed of the surrounding country of great ex- tent and grandeur, and in the summer time this view must be very beautiful. The city of Ottawa is believed to have a popula- tion at present of some 30,000. The census of 1871 accorded it a population of 21,545, of which number 8,021 are of Irish origin, 7,214 of French, 8,721 of English, and 2,- 585 of Scotch. Adherents of the Church of Rome numbered 12,783 when the census was taken; of the Church of England, 4,- 274; of the Presbyterian Church, 2,298; and of the different Methodist bodies, 1,520, From some pamphlets I lit upon in the Parliament Library I gather that the first settlement of this district was affect- ed in 1800 by a Mr. Philemcn Wright, of Massachusetts, who cleared the country and conducted farming and milling operations on an extensive scale. A grand- son of his is at present member of the Do- minion House of Commons for Ottawa County—Mr. Alonzo Wright, better known as ‘‘the King of the Gatineau.” Bytown as this place was originally called, after Colonel By, R. E., who identified himself closely with it, became a city in 1826. The name was changed to Ottawa in 1854. The corner stone 6f the Parliament buildings was laid by the Prince of Wales in 1860, and since then, greatly owing to the pros- perity of the lumber trade during the sne- ceeding twelve years and in no small de- gree to the fact of its having become the seat of Government, Ottawa has assumed all the outward aspects of a thriving city.” ———+--__— -—-__—_-<@ ©: <p -e @-—— The Pope as a Poet. It was well known, beth in Rome and England, when Cardinal Pecci ascended the Papal throne as Leo XIII. that he enjoyed a reputation for sound and elegant scholar- ship, but it was not then known that he was a poet. The Pope, however, has lately been given a proof at once of his scholarly attainments and of his poetic powers. The occasion has been a recent visit of a certain well-known photographer to Rome in order to take new and anthentic potraits of the Pope and other members of the Roman Curia. The object of this visit having been attained, and some excellent negatives having been taken, the Pope wrote the fol- lowing lines, which are at once thoroughly elassical in expression and also ecclesiastical in their form, being a close imitation of the rhythm and metre of the hymns of the Western Church :— ““ARS PROTOGRAPHICA. ‘* Expressa solis spiculo ** Nitens imago, quam bene ‘* Frontis decus, vim luminum ** Nefert et oris gratiam. ‘**O mira virtue ingeni ! ‘*Novumque monstrum imaginum ‘t Nature: Apelles cemulus ‘**Non pulchriorem pingeret.” ~*~ eo A gunner of B Battery while on parade on Friday morning in Quebec all at once burst out langhing, which hilarity he con- tinned to indulge in, having seemingly no control over himself. He was finall marched off to the guard house, and will undergo a medical examination. — > <—s o---—_-__ —~ Miss1ine—There were two individuals in Halifax last week for whom there are vacant chair at their respective dinner tables now. One had figured in various capacities, but latterly as a bar-keeper for the other, who occupied his time lately as a bock-keeper for a firm in the city. Pressing engage- ments necessitated their presence elsewhere, and they left in Sunday’s steamer for New York, with the usual army of mourners to lament their departure. --———— <> _ “* The courts of the state,” said a Colorado, judge, in dismissing a suit about a wager on the time by which a railroad would be com- pleted, ‘‘have enough to do without devot- ing their time to the solution of questions’ arising out of idle bets, made on dog and cock fights, horse raves, the speed of ox trains, the construction of railroads or the number on a die. -_—- —- <> eo — -— An old sea captain recently died at Guil- ford, Conn., leaving most of his property to the Episcopalian Church. In accordance with the terms of his will the mourners went afoot after a grocery wagon, which was substituted for a hearse. While Mr. E. A. Payson was trimmjng out a piece of timber for a vessel, at West- port, Digby Co., N. S., last week, he came in contact with a stone enclosed in the ceutce of the wood, breaking his axe there- by. The stono weighed 1 Ib 4 oz, -