TH amo a Dlikiaiam ae a - ry ee eT E HXAMINER. VOL, 2. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8 1878, a cee NO, 228. ALMANAC FOR FEBRUARY, 1878, MOON'S CHANGES. New Moon, 2nd day, 4h 05m. a. m., NE. First Quarter, l0th day, $h. (Sm. a. m. N.E. Full Moon, L7th day, 7h. (Sm. a. m., N.W, Last Quarter, 231d day, Ith. COm. p. m., N.E. Sun (Sun | Moon! High ; Dy’s | b> Mi DAY OF WEEK. irises sets.. rises |w ater, len. - oe en }H. M/H. M)morn jaft’h. | H. M | 1 Friday, 17 29'4 58; 7 14/10 32/9 34} 2 Saturday, 23}5 00} 7 SLill 7] 37) 3 Sunday, 27; 2) 7 50:11 40] 41] 4! Monday, 26 1} S Smorn } 43 | 5! Tuesday, 25 1 S210 8 47 6; Wednesday, | 24 i} 8 36) 0 37, So 7'Thursday, 22; 9 850i 1 9 &2 § Friday, ; 19-10, 9 8| 1 40) 54 9 Saturday, 1G: 331 8 S, B ii: - 10| Sunday, | 17} 13; 9 58} 2 59/10 1} 11| Monday, f 26) 15)10 35) 3 56; 4) 12) Tuesday, ; Jal. 6')1 27s 32) 7 13 Wednesday, 12} ISiaft 54: 6 438! 10 14/Thursday, } 1} 39 152) 8 12) 13 15 Friday, 9) 20! 3 38! 9 7| 15 }6)Saturday, i 8 22: 445110 9| 19 17' Sunday, 7} 23! 6 11/10 55; 22 13| Monday, 6) 25) 7 37/11 28; 25 Wy Tuesd LY, ' 3) 26 8 dsill 59} os 9) Wednesday, 1} 28/10 19laft 34! 31 21: Thursday, 16 59) 211 40) I 12) 34 92| Friday, | 57! 3iimorn' 1 53) 37 23'Saturdzay, | 5d) 33) 0 57; 249) 40 24/Sunday, | 52) 34 2 10] 3 54) 43 25| Monday, dt} 35) 3 12) 5 19) 46 26' Tuesday, | 49) 37} 4 4, 6 49) 49 Q7iWednesday, j{ 47] 38! 4 43) 7 53) 52 238' Thursday, (6 4515 401 5 15) 8 49! 56 PRINCE §EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 8. WINTER ARRANGEMENT, Te come into foree MONDAY, DEC. 24, 1877 EE “TRAINS GOING WEST. : No. 5. |No 7 STATIONS. xpress | Mixed Ise GEORGETOWN Dp. ¢. 5 Cardigan ** 9.02 ‘ Or Mount Stewart Junction j Dr aa Royalty Junction ** 11.46) pm. | PM. ” 9 CHARLOTTETOWN aes Dp 2.00 Dp. 9.0 Royalty Junction - 621 * 3205 North Wiltshire “he.” 6S Hunter River © 10.4L] ** 4.20 Bradalbane ‘© 31.15] * 5.00 County Line © 24.28). °*: B10 P. M. Kensington ** 12.07) “* 5.50 r 5 . Ar. 12.45 SUMMERSIDE Dp. 2.00] * 6,20 Wellington “* 2.45 Port Hill * 2a O'Leary 7 ae Alberton “6 5.45 Tignish s* 6.35 TRAINS GOING EAST. —_— — y No 2: No 4 STATIONS. Express | MrxEp. A.M. TIGNISH Dp. 8.00 ALBERTON pn 8.55) 0’ Leary | ** 9.52) Port Hill | *% 12.07: Wellington Li 11.43! P.M. <2 td iho | | Ar. 12.35) SYR ERAS )|Dp. 2.10/Dp. 8,35 Kensington pt! BOS. One County Line | 3.30) “* 9.5L Brakalbane ode ae Hunter River 3? aa ee North Wiltshire | ** 435) *~ 10.8: Rovalty Junction Re 5.30) *- 11.56 ‘ 4 . ow Ar. 5.55) CHARLOTTETOWN, | Dr. 2.03“ 19.91 Royalty Junction | “* 2.30! MT. STEWART June. oe Cardigan GEOKGETOWN. SOURIS BRANCH. Going West. Going East. vw ‘YT To No. 5 {, CPV ATTY arc | No. 6 STAT 1oxs| Mixep. } STATIONS. | Mixep. recy | P.M. Souris IDp. 7.30), Mt. St'w’'t Je: Dp. 3.5( Harmony | “ 7.58) Lot 40 |" 42 St. Peter’s | ‘ 9.1€||Morell edi Morell | ‘© 9.42/'st. Peter's | ‘* 5.05 Lot 40 ‘* 9,4*|| Harmony | ** 6.26 Mt St’w’t Jnci Ar. 10,22) Souris [Ar. 6.45 W. McKECHNIE Sup’t. P. E. L, Railway. ©. J. BRYDGES, Gen. Superintendent Govt. Railways. Notice to the Public. QS UPPLIES for the ‘‘Soup Kitchen” will bK reach the Committee if left at the Store ef Mr. Alex. Horne, corner of Queen and Fitzroy Streets. D mations of money will be received by them through Vr. Dodd and Mr. J. Quirk. N. B.—Food for the sick carefully prepared by*the Committee. 2j—tt } 3 Oe st 7S. THE | | ' i ; ' Lae? } { { FURNISHES MORE NEWS, FOR LESS MONEY THAN ANY OTHER PAPER IN THE PROVINCE. It Contains Twenty-sight Columns, nearly every one of which is in closely set READING MATTER, CONSIDER OUR TERMS: SINGLE COPIES to the 3ist December, 1878—thirteen months—#1,.00 in ad- vance, SIX COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $5,350 in advance, TEN COPIES to on address, or addresse. separately, as desired, $9,090 in advanced 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 ~—GQkKRT THE— PEST AND BEST ! The Weekly Examiner is acknowledged to be ahead of any other paper in the Province in the item of LOCAL NEWS. and is always well filled with CHE Political, Shipping, Commercial and General Information, The debates of the Local Legislatmre will be carefully and impartially given. Special tele- srams and letters from ‘‘Our Own Ottawa Correspondent” wiil contain everything of in- terest transpiring in the Dominion Parla ment. BOOK & JOB | PR NTING! neatly and expeditiously executed, AT THE “EXAMINER” OFFICE under the careful supervision of J. W. MITCHELL. We are now ina 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 aad Legal Blanks, Xe. &e. & C. AT MODERATE PRICES. Office :-—~Ings’ Old Stand Se . , Coriuer Great George is PY ater, Arar ents, Harve Alla 1878 PRICE i2 CTS. Wholesale and Retail at HARVIE'S BOOKSTORE, QUEEN SQUARE, and sold by all respectable dealers throughout the Island. Jan. 3— HILE taking this opportunity of thank ing ovr numerous customers for the iiberal manner in whieh they have patron ized QUR NEW STUDIO, we would inform them that we have now increased facilities for the production of first-class work. and are prepared to make Puorochapus of a Slyle and Quality that has never been before allempled in this C_-y. We have on exhibition, at our looms, a ‘large number of Photograps «f every | variety. including the BAUMFIL PAIT)- ENAMSL he most beautiful style of Photograph known, possessing a sofiness and delicacy of coloring that hus never beeu equalled This elegant picture lias become deservedly popu arelsewhere, and cannot fail to be- come so here. Though the finish of our Photographs cannot be excelled, we would direct atten- | tion to the beautiful Glace’ which we make. They possess a highly enamelled surface, and are practically indes- tructible, ynd will retain their freshness and beauty for any length of time. {f they become soiled they can easily be cleaned, as they wiliaot lose any of their beauty by being wet. ‘This valuadle quality, com Pictures bined with their remarkable elegance, make them very suitable for presents; while the diificaity of their production wil] A Good Story will be made a speeialty. The Daily Examiner Will be sent to any part of the Province, the Dominion, United States or Great Britain on receipt of $2.50 1.25 For Six Months, - For Three Months, - - - - | prevent them ever becoming so common as to lessen their value. Our patrons cao have one or all of their Photos finished in | this style—an advantage which cannot be obtain: d cisewhere. We give special attention to making i Groups of Fain lies, Societies, Schools, & Our pictures of children are sufficient evidence of onr success in this difficuit branch of our art. Our “NLANMGEMENTS, finished in India Ink, Paste!, Creyou, Oi! and Water Coiors, have .made a tavorable reputation for them selves throughout the Lower Provinces. Parties intending to have Photographs made wil] find it to their advantage to sit) early, a3 the number of our Cu stom:rs| makes some delay in the delivery of the Por One Month, - - - =: - ge ADDRESS, 50° Photos unavoidable. We prefer to have our sitters come by appointment, Photographs can be Obtained for icas money elsewhere ; but in this case We ask that quality be given the preference; as- suring tne public that they will flad our eharges very moderate. W. L. COTTON, Manager Examiner Printing and | Publishing Company. | Ch’towa, Dee. 6, 1877. ROSS EBROS,,. Cor. Queen and Dorchester Streets, opposite Connolly's Bank. Sept. 19, 1877—3m eod Tho Hilyard-Harmburger Case. A writ of at‘achment has been issued against L. tlarmburger & Co., importers of fancy and tobacconist goods, by E. FE. Hilyard, of st. Johan, N. B., for some $4,000 odd. ‘The 13 contested by Mr. Harmburger, who disputes the claim, and says he has a contra claim. Tha trouble arises out of the purchase an@ sale of a large quantity of cigars in which Mr. Hillyard claims Harmburger was interested with him on joint account, while the latter says he was working on a commission only. The transac- tiou resulted ia a loss, and now Mr. Hillyard is endeavoring to collect what he considers Harmburger’s proportion of this loss. It will be remembered he had Mr. Harmburger arrest- el on acapiasin this same matter about a week ago, and it was understood subsequently that it would be submitted to arbitration ; therefore the above action is surprising to most people and has taken Mr. Harmburger alto- gether unawares. Mr. Harmbnrger claims he is perfectly able to meet all just demands, but this claim he does not regonize as just or due in any way. A late telegram says that Mr. Harmbur- ger has instituted proceedinga against Mr. Hillyard for perjury. ib Aili wis tin A Millionaire Priest. By the provisions of the will of his mother filed on Wednesday, Father Denny, the Pre- fect of the Roman Catholic Charch of St. Ig- natius, attached to the Loyola College of the Society of Jesuits in this city, becomes a imil- lionaire. Mrs. Elizabeth F. Denny, his moth- er, was one of the oldest and wealthiest resi- dents of Pittsburgh, Pa. Her estate was chiefly property located in Pittsburgh and other parts of Pennsylvania and in the States of New York and Illinois and the District of Columbia, which was purchased by her father many years ago, and multiplied in value during half a century since. The property was valued before the panic at $10,000,000, but its present market value would not be over $6,000,000. Mrs. Denny, who had been sick for some time, grew worse about a week ago, and Father Den- uy, her son, was summoned to her bedside. she died peacefully a few days ago, surround- ed by a large circle of relatives and friends. By her will the property is left entirely to her children. No charitable bequests were made; but during her lifetime Mrs. Denny gave at least $1,000,000 to different charitable institu- tions. The heirs named in the will are Rev. Harmer Denny, S. J., of Baltimore; Mrs. J. Walton Spring, Mrs. Wim. C. Denny, Miss Matilda Denny, Mrs. James O. H. Denny, and Mrs. Hon. Robert McKnight, of Pittsburgh; Mrs. Wm. M. Paxton, of New York; and Mrs, Captain Brereton, of Younkers, N. Y. Father Denny gets a large shere of the prop- erty, somewhat to his surprise, since his moth- er could not become reconciled to his attach- ment to the Catholic Church, but more es- pecially to his acceptance of the vows of the Society of Jesus. The family were old achool Yresbyteriane.-—-Lullimore American. -+ +--+ ~~ P-———- -—.- +. The Dardanelles. This strait, anciently known as the Hel- lespont, has taken its present name from the four forts built at 1ts entrance in the seventeenth century-—-two by Mahomet IL. and two by Mahomet JV. These were con- structed to prevent the approach of war ships to Constantinople. Put in good con- dition and armed with the artillery of these days, they would trouble the passage of any ileet, though they have been repeatedly passed, and might therefore make thé pre- tence of the Porte to close the strait rather more than a diplomatic curiosity. This pretence has been formally recognized by treaties in 1808, in 1841, in 1856, and in 1871. In 1871 the Conference of London, called in consequence of Russia’s repudia- tion, in 1870, of certain clauses of the Treaty of Paris, decreed the continuation of this restriction as declared in the Treaty of Paris, but conceded the Sultan’s author- ity to permit the passage of the ships of friendly Powers im time of peace. This concession of the Sultan’s ‘‘authority” in his own dominions indicates that the clos- ure of the Dardanelles had in course of time become of greater interest to another Pow- er taan to 'turkey, and it was the consent of ,that Power—-England—that was thus given to the Padishah. In the circular of 1868, in regard to the passage of the Wa- bash, the Sultan claimed to exercise this restriction as a territorial right. It was in that sense that the Treaty of Paris affirmed the right, as an ancient one; but that treaty even deprived the Sultan of the right of consent in regard to it. There are, therefore, some rational and legal entangle- ments that are rather queer. The Darda- nelies are within the Sultan’s territory ; but they are closed, not by his will, but by the will of a remote naval Power, and yet that Power does not exercise authority there as it might by mere force on the high seas, but constitutes the sovereign Sultan the executive of its will; and though it is not ready to fight for the maintenance of this right it calls out on Europe to maintain it and not to let victorious Russia encroach therein, because this would be a violation of the privileges of that poor old Sultan.— N. Y. Herald. > 8 oe —- — - An orator from Wales. who had the misfor- tune to lose one of his limbs, happened to come into a verbal encounter with a son of Erin. The witty Welshman, who imagined he was pretty successful in bantering the Irish- man, was interrogated thus by the latter: ‘*‘How did you come to lose your leg?’ ‘‘Well,” replied the other, ‘‘on examining my pedigree, | and looking up my descent, | found there was ‘some Irish blood in me, and becoming con- vinced it was all settled in that leit Jeg, I had to cut it off at once.” ‘‘Be the powers,” said The Montreal Journal of Commerce says: | writ } The Eixcessive Use of Tobacco—Its Sad Effects. ; | Lately we drew attention to the prevalent jand injurious habit among the working | youth of our community, gf chewing tobac- eo, and gave the result f an enquiry of ® Medical Committee, appointed in deference to the express wishes of the French Gevern- inent to inquire into the effects of tobacco upon the human system. The New York correspondent of the Buffalo Commercial Ad- vertiser, writing on the subject, says :— A case of my own intimate acquaintance has this very week appalled a large circle of friends in this city. The victim was exactly of my own years, and a companion of early boyhood. For thirty years, at least, he has been a daily smoker of the choicest cigars, but in all other habits temperate and regular, and of excellent constitution——one who of all men would have laughed at the suggestion that tobacco was killing him. A week ago he was stricken with progressive paralysis characteristic of nicotine, and he died. His death was one most pitiful. First, sight was lost, then speech, then motion of the neck, then motion of the arms, and so on throughout the bedy, and he lay for a whole night unable to move or make ~@ sign, save @ pitiful, tongueless, inarticulate sound, which sometimes rose to almost a frantic effort, all in vain to make known what he wished to say to his family or friends—for his consciousness and menial faculties were left unimpaired till within two hours of the last, to aggravate to the utmost the horror of his situation—a living soul in a dead body. The sense of hearing was left unimpaired, so that he was conscious of all around him, while incapable of communication with them as if dead, save by a slight assent or dissent to a question. The doctors were fully agreed that tobacce was the sole cause of the stroke. o> 6-— - ‘ Brtry’s Bany.”—The Drayton ‘‘New Era” has the following Story: ‘* On the evening of Sunday, Jan. 20th, whilst the churches in Palmerston were filled with worshippers, a gentle knock. was heard at the door of the house on the south-west corner of James and Victoria streets, and before the owner of the house—who is an old man, and consequently not so active as he was fifty years ago—could get to the door, it was quickly opened, and a woman entered the room, bearing a basket, which she deposited on the floor, saying at the same time, ‘‘ There’s Billy’s baby, safe and sound,” andthen left the house and the baby. When the old gentleman recov- ered from his astonishment at finding an infant only a few hours old thus thrust upon him, he sent for the town constable and requested that ofticial to take charge of the ~ little stran- ger. Having no desire to add to his family expenses in that way, the constable betook himself to the Mayor for advice, but when his Worship learnt where the child was left he wisely declined to advise in the pyatter, as he related to the gentleman on whose care the child had been se uncere- moniously thrust. The constable then sought the mother of the child, a pretty young woman residing on East York street, but he failed to persuade her friends to have the infant back again. Since that time, however, negotiations have been carried to a result satisfactory to ali the parties con- cerned. Dr. Strousberg, the railway contractor, whose tremendous collapse astonished all Europe jately, has another surprise for the public. He proposes tofmake Berlin a sea- port, by the building of two deep sea canals, one connecting with the mouth of the Elbe, and the other with the mouth of the Oder. Eight millions sterling is the estimated cost, and profits enough to pay ten per cent. on this are promised. If the plan could be realized, Berlin would be raised, so says the Prussian correspondent of the London ‘‘Times,” to the position of a dominant commercial, manufac- turing, and military centre on the continent, Whether Bismarcks lends his countenance or refuses it to the enterprise, the indications that some important movement towards making Germany a great maritime power is in contem- plation, are many and significant. It may be by building certain ship canals, or it may be by the seizure of Holland; but in some way or other the attempt will be made. a —-OipPoe--—-— tecent statistics, says the Sunifary Record, shows that the rate of mortality among grocers is a8 76 to 100 amon the general population at equal ages, while the death rate among drapers iaas 105 to 100 by the same standard. On analyzing the cause of this difference between the drapers and the grocers, it was found that it lies in the mode of living. The disease which destroys the draper is pulmonary con sumplion, The explanation is simple, The grocer lives ina shop, the door of which is open the whole day, and he is very active him- self in business: the draper, on the other hand, lives in a close place with the door of his shop closed, and in a dusty, close atmosphere. No one whose pleasure or business calls on him to enter the majorty of our large drapery em- periums in London but will feel in a position to testify to the truth of his description. The heat and closeness which are their usual char- acteristic sufficiently aggounts for the general pallor and unhealthy appearance of the male and female attendants in them. Mr. Moody, the revivalist, said at Hart- ford, last Wednesday, that it was a small affair now-a-days for one to be cast out of a church, for if the Methodists will cast out a man the Baptists will take him in, and there are plenty of otehr churches to receive him. Speaking of the difference between earthly and heavenly affairs, he said: “ If the President or Queen Victoria should die there would be a great stir in the world. But if that little boy yonder should repent there would be joy in heaven.” Blas —_—-~—- <> + — _ -__— | There were 76 suicides officially recorded Pat, “it ud av have been a duced good thing in San Francisco the last year, while there if it had only settled in your head,” ' were doubtless others not reported. ae a gee eae ae ' ners OO oe ee reg oe" . iA poe se or cial er od a eee coat a Saas, hss irene os iF aaainiiaanaaeY imeem ieee iam, ‘a one ' ‘dee ae 4 My salen arhatet r% oe re iA