———————E—Ii ee _——- ee te arg men lan a <8 LOL NR. I OE ORES LUI SET aN 1 en A a oe eee as ee ge ae B x z ‘ nae 2a Onaga ne ie ca aon ee ee ta a. anc BX Fee nen’ : ee LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL ELECTION. Liberal-Conservative Candidate for Charlottetown, HENRY LONCWORTH, ESQ. a eee Toe Datty EXAMINER, a : OCTOBER 12, 1875. The Coming Contest in the City. Ir the approaching contest in Charlotte- town were merely an ordinary ‘‘ Legisla- tive Council Election,” it would not be necessary—as it certainly is necessary—to defeat the Hon. Thomas W. Dodd. Mr. Dodd has been a model Legislative Coun- cillor. He has done no good. He has done no harm. And he has cost the coun- try between two and three hundred dollars a year ! But the approaching contest in Charlotte- town is not an ordinary Legislative Council Election. It is a struggle for the life or death of the obnoxious Local Government. On the 12th day of September last the Hon. Thomas W. Dodd allied himself with Messrs. Davies and Stewart, and was ap- pointed a member of the Executive Council and Provincial Secretary-Treasurer. On that {day he took upon himself all the offences of which the Local Government stand charged by the people of Prince Edward Island ; and on that day his for- mer election became “‘ null and void,” and his seat in the Legislative Council became empty and vacant. (Vide Indepemdrice of Parliament Act, 1876, sec. 8.) The fact is denied by the Hon. Thomas W. Dodd and his friends. Mr. Dodd has issued a ‘‘ card,” in which he says, ‘‘ my seat has become vacant by lapse of time.” But the truth is that, had not Mr. Dodd’s election become ‘‘ null and void,” his term as Legislative Councillor would not have lapsed until the third of December— within twenty days of which the law speci- fies that a general Legislative Council elec- tion may be held. To prove this fact be- yond a doubt, we have only to quote the Writ—issued by Mr. Dodd himself—re- quiring the High Sheriff to give notice of an election ; and to make the fact more clear we quote Mr. Dodd’s Writ to the Sheriff in juxtaposition with Mr. Dodd’s Circular to the Electors :— Mr. Dodd’s Circular.| Mr. Dodd's Writ. CHARLOTTETOWN, Mr. Dodd requires the Sept. 28, 1878.|Sheriff to ‘‘ cause to Sin, — Six years be made Public Notice ? . . ago I had the honor of and ee > being elected to repre-|S0™* © the most pub- lic places within the Serie’ nae agen ling divisions for <a ‘Connell. My/|Charlottetown withthe SEAT HAS BECOME|Common. and Royalty VACATED B y|thereof, for all persons LAPSE OF TIME,|*ly qualified by law d I have again to to vote for members to conual to my constitu-|Serve im the Legislative : Council for the said ents for rs town of Charlottetown £ env supporters in with the Common and iat aetetamain enStoan! Royalty thereof to ap- day evening, Ist Oct., |Pe* “ao =e renee at 7.30, to make the inate, elect, anc choose - arrangements one able and discreet for the election, and/™4” “rs ees _ hall present the said town a glad to see you of Charlottetown with r I have the honor|*he Common and Roy- te he alty thereof in the Your obedient servant, | Legislative Council, in : ithe place of the Honor- Tuomas W. Door. jqhie Thomas Walker Dodd, WHO HAS AC- CEPTED THEOFFCE OF PROVINCIAL SECRETARY AND TREASURER OF THE SAID PROV- INCE, AND WHOSE SEAT HAS BECOME VACANT BY LAW,” etc., etc. tf Mr. Dodd had been frank and in- genous towards the electors of Charlotte- town, his Circular to them would have been to the following effect :— CHARLOTTETOWN, Sept. 28, 1878. Sin,---Six years ago I had the honor of being elected torepresent Charlottetown and Royalty in the Legislative Council. My seat is not yet vacated by the lapse of time. I have accepted the office of Provincial Secretary and Treasurer; and, according to law, my election is null and void. I have, therefore, again to solicit your suffrager. As the Government have deemed it inexpedient to have two elections following close upon each other, the election will not take place until the fourteenth of Novembr by which time the law will permit Legislativ: Council elections to be held throughout ¢°. entire Province. You will, therefore, have ample time to criticise my acts as your re- presentative. By accepting office I have en- dorsed every measure of the present Adminis- tration. I have the honor to be, etc., etc., etc., It is clear, then, that on the 12th of Sep- tember -the day on which Mr. Dodd took office—Mr. Dodd's seat was not vacant by the lapse of time ; and that Mr. Dodd is obliged to appeal to his constituents by reason of his acceptance of a seat in the Government. But there is another graver reason why Mr. Dodd is obliged to appeal to his consti- tuents. Mr. Dodd has violated the plain letter of the law for securing the Indepen- Ne ee re ee eee denco of Parliament; and he has there- by forfeited his seat. The law reads :— ‘‘No person whosoever holding or enjoying, undertaking or executing directly or indirectly alone or with any other, by himself or by the interposition of any trustee or third party any contract or agreement with Her Majesty, 0” with any public officer or department, with res- pect to the public service of the Province ol Prince Edward Island, or under which any public money of the Province of Prince Edware Island is to be paid for any service or worw OF who shall become surety for the same, shall bi eligible asa member for either the Legislativ Council or of the House of Assembly, nor shall he sit or yote in the same respectively : Pro- vided that nothing herein contained shall be construed to apply to ary person holding a share in any incorporated company. firm which has contracted with the Gov- ernment for the supply of glass, register grates and many other articles for the new lunatic asylum ; and, if we are not misin- formed, he has received large sums of pub- lic money by the supply of hardware to the Government. He now therefore presents himself to the electors of Charlottetown as a violator of the law which he, himself, helped to make. Under these circumstances the duty of the electors of Charlottetown is quite plain. Their duty is to transfer their confidence from the Hon. Mr. Dodd—who has issued a disingenuous card, who has endorsed the rash acts of the present administration, who has violated the law of the land, who stands to-day the sole remaining prop of a hated government—to one of the oldest and worthiest of their fellow-citizens, viz., Henry Loneworta, Esa. —-—_—__.<>>-— That Glass. Ir gives us great pleasure to note that the Patriot does not renew, against THE ExAMINER,its wild charges of falsehood and of traducing the Hon. Mr. Dodd. It is evident that the Patriot is, at last, impress- ed with the axiom, that ‘‘ people in glass houses should not throw stones.” The gist of the Patriot’s article is, that Mr. Chance cheated Messrs. Dodd & Rogers. and that the Government knew nothing whatever of the matter. We sincerely trust that this is the right solution of the glass question. It is painful to think that any one on the Island could be mixed up in a transaction in which a superior article was bargained for, and an inferior article supplied. Before saying more about it, we should like to know whether or not any of ‘* Chance’s No. 1 glass (as per tender) is available?’ And if not, whether or not it can be obtained in time for use before the winter sets in. THE NEW GOVERNMENT. Sir Joun McDonatp, Dr. Tupper and Mr. Tilley are engaged in the formation of anew Cabinet. The result of their labors will probably be known in the course of a few days. Sen ~canagnilMilieahe Se Exit. a This is the way the Ottawa Herald (Liberal) speaks of the late government:— “The policy of the late government has been singularly disastrous to those who supported it, and it would be vain to at- tempt concealing the fact that the Liberal ministry retires without even ashare atof th sympathy which, in most cases, accom- panies men in their position. The feeling that they have misused their opportunities, neglected their friends, crouched to their enemies, succumbed to their own timidity, is felt throughout the land. As leaders they have failed to satisfy those who placed them in power. No doubt they tried to be as honest as men in their peculiar position could be, but the Nemesis of the Pacific scandal wreaked its revenge upon them for the manner in which it had been discovered. The Reform party had long been divorced from office. Their leaders had no sins of administration to answer for, yet, in five years, by pursuing a policy of masterly in- activity, they have fallen from power and place, simply by their inability to control the forces at their disposal. Of course the long continued commercial depression had its effect upon them; but the people lost heart and confidence at the unvaried croak- ing which was the distinguishing feature of Mr. Cartwright’s budget speeches. It was bad policy to rob the people of hope. Even at the worst of times the human mind takes comfort from the thought that there are brighter days in store. Mr. Cartwright never held out the slightest glimmer of a brighter future. At last the people got tired of the raven and his eternal ‘‘neyer- more” aud when the opportunity came sent him packing after - his unhappy master Whom unmerciful disaster Followed fast, and followed faster,” till the general elections sealed his doom. During their administration the Liberal Government has enacted some good and some questionable legislation. On the whole the balance is in their favor. Like the peas in the pod, as Hans Christian An- dersen tells, they looked around and all within their little pod was n and flourishing, so they thought all the world was in the same happy condition. The little ministerial pod, however, has burst, and the cabinet peas are learning that things are by no means what they, in their innocence, imagined.” Mr. Dodd is the leading member of 2) tee ae Ne | McKenzie’s Moderation. Ovr Grit friends ave rather priding them- iT santo has withstood so much of the i selves that in going out of power Mr. Me- | temptation to appoint his friends to office. | 'Wor their benefit we publish the following little anécdote : ‘ A colored brother whose eyes 'watery, and who had evidently been im- |hibing experience whiskey, Was telling his ‘young friend George that he ought to ‘‘gine ‘too.” Said George: ‘i would, but de ‘temptation to do wrong is too strong for | ine.’ ‘*Whar'’s yer backbone, dat ye can’t ‘rose up and stand temptation ?”’ explained ‘brother Peter. “I was dat way myself lence. Right in dis yere chance to steal a pa’r of boots— mighty fine ones, too. Nobody was dar to see me, and [ reached out my hand and the debbil said ‘take em.’ Dena goud spirit whispered for me to let dem boots alene.” ‘An’ you didn’t take ‘em?’ ‘‘No, sah, not much. i took a pa’r o’ cheap shoes off de shelf, an I left deem boots alone !” Our Grit friends have been very much tempted to take some big boots, but have contented themselves with ‘‘a pair o’ cheap shoes off de shelf !”— Halifax Herald. + <r Hiarl Dufferin’s Reply to Roman Catholic Ecclesiastics. The following is the Governor General’s reply to the address presented hin by the Archbishop and Bishops of the ecclesiastical Province of Toronto during His Excel- leney’s recent visit to Ottawa:— “Your Grace and My Lords—I{ can as- sure you it is with feelings of the very deepest satisfaction that I acknowledge the address with which you have honored me. Iam well aware that throughout Canada there does not exist a more patriotic body, one more devoted to the interests of the country, or more attached to the Empire of Great Britian, than that great ecclesiastical community over which you preside as its spiritual pastors, and I rejoice to think that under your advice and guidance it should be so ready, as on all occasions I have found it, to acknowledge the justice and benignity of Her Majesty’s rule in Canada. That personages in your exalted position should address me personally in such flatter- ing terms is very gratifying to my feelings, and I shall ever retain the mest grateful recollection of the courtsey I have always received at the hands of the Catholic Hierarchy of Canada. I shall have great pleasure in conveying to Her Majesty the sentiments of loyalty to her throne and affection for her person you have requested me to repeat in your behalf. In leaving Canada I carry away with me an increased appreciation of what can be done to super- induce a sentiment of good will and content amongst a population composed of different religious convictions, by the administration of equal laws and an impartial justice.” The address was signed by Archbishop Lynch and the Bishops of London, Kings- ton, Hamilton and Surepta. >_> Indian Outrages. A FEARFUL STORY OF BLOOD AND RAPINE, — A Kansas city despatch says: The In- dians crossed the Kansas Pacific road Tues- ( day, and, proceeding north, sacked the Post Office, but Bayless, the Postmaster, escaped. They then went in a north- easterly direction and killed every person and sacked everything in their way. Near Beacon Creek they attacked a ranch owned by Thomas Lynch, who fled to a dug-out with his wife and two children. The In- dians came up, but Lynch killed two with a revolver, and the rest fled. On Sappa Creek the demons came suddenly upon the house of H. Long, and, after killing the father and two sons, outraged the mother and two daughters; then saturating the house with kerosene, set it on fire. The two little daughters were only eleven and thirteen years of age, and are now in a state of semi-madness, all of them escaping from the burning building after the red devils left. Just north of Long’s place, Kate Abernathy, a school teacher, was also ravished and murdered. Seventeen dead bodies were gathered up by the settlers and buried at Bowden, all of whom were known, besides nine unknown and unrecognized ones. Until after the In- dians passed Beaver Creek, they killed men, women, children’ and stock with guns; but after leaving that stream they wereevidently short of ammuni- tion, and used axes to kill in nearly every instance, crushing faces and skulls and mu- tilating bodies in the most barbarous man- ner. Among those known to have been killed where Mr. Humphrey,from Illionis, Geo. Smith, H. Long and two sons, H. Hudson, D. Westfall and two sons, George Evans, Henry Abernathy, Mrs. Westfall, (outraged and terribly wounded), Frank Lull, Frederick Walters, ranchmen from New York, R. Kelly, Theodore Young, and eight children found strewn along the prairies with brains beaten out. The situa tion is frightful; but the Indians have now left the State and the people will now re- turn to their homes. During all this time the troops were only a few hours in the rear, and the stockmen and settlers are very severe in their denunciation of the way they were handled. One one occasion about 200 soldiers came up with the Indi- ans, but neglected to engage them, giving as an excuse that the soldiers were tired out and needed rest. General Jeff C. Davis had his headquarters at Wallace, but did not take the field in person, and Gen- eral Pope, department commander, seemed to have little knowledge of the state of affairs, as he telegraphed on the day the men were ki south of Buffalo, that “there was not an Indian in Kansas,” were | town I had a/P a atte re ye —_"0: ——— LOT OF THIRTY HOUR DAY CLOCKS just re- LARGE and EIGHT ceived, and will be sold at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. Ww. W. WELLNER, 81 North Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Oct. 12—whly 2 pres ar 8 h 4i >) EMOVAL —GEORGE E. MILLNER, Tinsmith, Gasfitter, &c., has removed his lace of business from Great George Street to DesBrisay’s Block, Upper Queen Street, where he will be pleased to attend to all orders entrusted to him, at the shortest notice, and on reasonable terms.—Tinware and Stovepipe constantly on hand. Charlottetown, Oct. 12, 1878—6i 2aw Merchants Bank Notes Taken at Their Face For _ ff FEET SPRUCE BOARDS, 65,000 4,500 CLAPBOARDS. F. S. HANFORD & CO., Oct. 11—3i Water Street. Merchants Bank ‘Hotes VAKEN AT THEIR FACE in exchange for Boots and Shoes, at E. W. SMITH’S, Mrs. Stamper’s Corner. Oct. 11 187S8— NOTICE. revi Ss. S. ““M. A. STARR” will take Potatoes, at fifty-five cents per barrel, through freight fron: Charlottetown to Baltimore or New York, via Halifax, N.S., until further notice. Apply to Purser on board. By order of F. W. FISHWICK, Halifax. Ch’town, Oct. 11, 1878—tf “SCHOONER WANTED. | 7 ANTED—A Schooner of about 4,000 bushels capacity, to load Potatoes for the United States. Apply immediately. HASZARD BROS. Ch’town, Oct. 11, 1878—2i NOTICE. N ERCHANTS BANK NOTES taken at their face in exchange for goods, by the Subscriber, at the Glasgow House. FREDK,. LePAGE, Oct. 11, 1878—2i SPECIAL NOTICE. SPECIAL MEETING of the Share- holders of the St. Lawrence Marine Insurance Company will be beld at the Ex- change Reading Room on MONDAY, 28th October, instant, at 2, p. m.. to take into con- sideration the advisability of winding up the affairs of the Company, or otherwise. By order, FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Secretary. St. Lawrence Ma. In. Co., Ch’town, Oct. 8, 1878. 1lth—t meeting REGATTA! IE REGATTA will take place in the Harbor, at Georgetown, On Wednesday, the 16th inst, OVER Si00 CIVEN IN PRIZES. Regatta open to all-comers. Excursion Re- turn Tickets will be issued at all points along the Railway at single rates. For particulars, prize list, &c., see hand. bills. P. McCOURT, Sec. & Treas, Georgetown, Oct. 11—2i Prime Labrador Herring, OURLY EXPECTED, per Schooner ** Ada R.,” direct from Labrador, a full cargo of about 1,200 Barrels, which we will sell cheap while landing. MATTHEW, McLEAN & HEARTZ, Ch’town, Oct. 1l—dy pat COAL! COAL! Arrived, per schooner ‘ Lusteria,’ 1 80 TONS Gowrie Mines Small Coal—will be sold low while landing. Oct. 8—i WM. KOUGHAN, GANG PLOWS! THE BRANTFORD —AND— NATIONAL GANG PLOWS, which were so much admired at the trial held on the day of Exhibition at Summerside, are for sale by DONALD FERGUSON, Charlotteto Oct: 8—3w strat J. G. ECKSTADT, SURGEON CHIROPODIST. Office, Lower Hulsborough Street, near the Railway Station. R™ to inform the public that he is now ) ready to attend to the duties of his pro- fession. Bunions, Clilblains, In n Nails, Club Nails, etc., etc., cured. ll who may favor him with a call will receive prompt at- tention. Satisfaction guaranteed. Corns ex- tracted, 25 cents, Ch’town, Oct, 7, ’78,—lm Legislative Council Campaign COMMENCED! Abolition of Legislative Couneil! oe ‘Economy and Retorm in the Civil | service of the Province. Reduction of Expenditures, and Low Taxation! Mi ihiects GS of the electors of the First Electoral District of Queen’s County will be held at the following places, viz. :— 3readalbane Station, Saturday, 12th Oct., at 2 p. m. Stanley Hall, New London, Lith Oct., at 4p. m. Rondibane: Friday, 18th October, at 2 p. m., to nominate a Candidate for the Legislative Council, Ist District Queen’s County, 8th October, 1878. pres 2i ar li ST. MARGARET'S HALL, HALIFAX W.S. Diocesan Seminary for Young Ladies VISITOR: The Right Rev, the Lord Bishop of Nova Scotia; PRINCIPAL; Fhe Rey. John Padtield, i SCHOOL offers, at a moderate cost, the advantages of a thorough and retined education and a comfortable home. The course of instruction, which is conduct- ed hy four resident Governesses and two Waiters, is the same as that of first-class schools im England. Arrangements are being made whereby pupils who desire it can present themselves for examaintion; and if successful, obtain certificates from the University of King’s College, Windsor, TERMs.—Board witi tuition in the English Branches, Latin, French, Drawing, i - ics and Music, with use of Piano for daily practice, $300 per annum, to be paid quarterly in advance. Next Term Commences Oct. 3st. Halifax, Oct. 3, 1878.—2w —_——-—— THREE PRIZES IN 12 MONTHS. — 30 :——. W G. MUGFORD, sole Licensee for - City and Queen’s County, for Lam. bert’s Patents for Permanent soseeaen Being composed of Indian Ink and Pare 3 they CANNOT FADE. Took Ist Prize at Provincial Exhi- bition last. Fall at WH ; oma for Excellency of Work at New York, Jaa. lst, 1878—contesting with the United States and Dominion of Canada,—and Ist Prize at Summerside, Oct. 3, °78. Davip Witson’s O_p Stranp, Cxu’Trown. Oct. 5, 1878—3m law Don't You Believe It, WEN they tell you that the Steam Pump} at the Gas House is pumping all the wells dry. They cannot lower the Tubelar Wells put in by JONES for Thomas Caseley, Wm. Murphy, Paul Lee, E. J, H n, Archibald Holmes, John Morris, &e., &e., &e., or any other man, when a living ,vein of es water is pierced, as has been done at the Gas House and at Quirk’s pump. Cc. C. JONES. Ch’town, Sept. 21—tf Wants, Lost, Found, sr. Advertisements under this heading, in space not exceeding half an inch, will be insert. ed for Ten Cents per day. OS'T—Between the Revere House and Post Office, a Leather POCKET BOOK, containing about sixty dollars and five blank checks. The finder will be rewarded by leav- ing it at the Examrner Office. Oct. 10— $ 50 PER WEEK made by agents. Send twenty-five cents for sample, and try it. No humbug. Send for circular, Address, with stamp, P. O. Box 163, Ch’town, P, E. I. Oct. 9, ’78.—tf $10 PER MONTH made at the Tub- / lar Well business. Tools and stock furnished to agents at cash pri No capital required until it is made out of the business, Send for ciccular. Address, P, 0. Box 163, Charlottetown, P. E. I. Oct. 9, °78.—tf VO LET.—The two story Dwelling House, Garden, Coach House, &c., ite the residence of the subscriber, Grafton { Street, west end. Apply to Joun Wm. Morrisoy.) Oct. 9, 1878—eod ()FFICES TO LET.—Threo large ana commodious Rooms, suitable for offices or Sample Rooms, in the business part of the city. Rent moderate. Apply to Frepx: LEPAGE. Oct- 9, 1878—3i Li LET— Half the House and — situ- ated at corner of Hills and Water Streets, near the Railway. Apply to WM. G. WRIGHT, Prince Street. Oct. 8—pat eod = LET—A House containing two tened ments of three rooms each and a large yyard, Apply to JOHN MORRIS, “Oct, 8, 378—