ae a a THE BN, {WINER |! 18 PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY PORENOON. BY THE Examiner Printing & Publishing Co. OFFICE: Corner Queen and King Streets. TE RMS—Per Annum, £1.62, if paid within the year—81.82, postae paid; $2 if not paid within the year. 7 Yer CLUB RATES. Tux Examiner will be forwarded to | Clubs at the following rates per year—pay- | ment strictly in advance | 5 copies one addr ess, - = § 7.00} mm 6 12.00 15 or aa 7 oo 20 * “ a 20.00 | Clubs may be made up at any time, but not for a shorter period than one year. ADVERTISEMENTS— Until further notice, Advertisements will be inserted at the following rates :— 1 square, one insertion, - - - $1.00] Each Continuation, - - « «© G20) Special Notices, ‘‘ perline,” - - 00.12 ACCOUNTS RENDERED Ist Decem! for subscriptions, ver, in each year; for standing advertisements etc.,Ist | June, and Ist December, in each year; for | transient advertisements—when ordered should be Pub. POST | out. ALL LETTERS sent by mail addressed ** Examiver Printing and lishing Company,” Lock Drawer, 72, OFFICE, Charlottetown. ———— The Examiner. SOLE SL Ch’town, June 15, 1S74. | i ——— SS ee eRe eR A HE SE See ‘.. | ann NEW ELECTION LAW. “An Act respecting the election of members of the House of (passed during the Dominion Parliament) into oper- ation on the first day of July next. The | leading provisions of this Act should be | familiar to “THE veorie.” In order that the readers of the EXAMINER, ut least, may make themselves acquainted with its most prominent features, we lay before them the following summary. First, then, the property «ualification of candidates no longer Any British subject, of the full age of twenty-one years never been proved guilty of a criminal of- | fence, may ‘set up” and, if elected, may take his seat in the Commons. In the next place, voters throughout the Dominion, will be qualified to vote at the election of ae bers to serve in the Assembly | Commons,”’ late session of the will g 2 is pecessary. and upwards, who has for a candidate; | those Local Prince Ed- bigh each Province respectively. ward Islanders were well of their ‘“‘ manhood suffrage ’ definite period. Clause 41 at first printed) of the Act pr deprived | for an in-| net 42, as wided that in this Province persons qualitied to vote for the election of to serve in the Legislative Council, only, should | henceforth be the electors qua ified to vote at the election of members of the House as the Lo- r the regis- members of Commons,—until such time eal Legislature had provided f tration of voters. This prov happily, strack out. On motion of Hon. Mr. Haviland, it was resolved by the Senate, in Committee of the Whole :-— “ That the 40th clause of the said Bill respecting the Election of Members of the House of Commons, be amended by strik- | ing out ef the words ‘Elective House’ wherever mentioned in the 40th clause; and inserting instead thereof, the words ‘House of Assembly,” or “ Legislative Assembly ;’ and by striking out the words ‘‘ Except Prince Edward Island,” in the said clause and also by striking out the 41st clause of the said Bill.” Public nominations are abolished. stead of a public nominatior notice, signed by twenty-five bona fide electors, will be given the Returning Off- cer at any time previous to or at the time fixed for the nomination. This notice must be accompanied bya letter from the candidate, (if he is in the Province) in which he shall signify his consent to the nomination ; if not Province, his absence shal be stated in In either case, the notice of nomination | must be accompanied with a sum of fifty dollars, as a pledge that the nomination is made in good faith. Any candidate may withdraw before the issue of the election, by fi ing a declaration of his de do with the Returning Officer which may have been cast for ing candidate, shall be Voting shall be by ballot—between the | hours of nine in the morning and five the evening of the day fixed by the Gov- eroor General i in Council for the election. During the whole day, no person shall be admitted within the hooth, but the Returning Officer or his deputy, the poll clerks, the candidates, and not more ision Was, In- a written in th the notice. sire so to Votes | such retir— nul! and void. in polling than two accredited agents of each can— didate. present, then two electors may act in that capacity. shall eontain one or more apartments, in which an elector may mark his ballot pa- per without being seen. Before the bal- lot opens, the ballot box shall be inspected by the candidates or their agents. Then it is to be closed and locked up until the elose of the poll. The voter, on present ing himself at the polling booth, shall have his name, address, and qualification recorded by the poll clerk. The Deputy Returning Officer shall then hand him a paper on which the names of al! the can- didates are printed. This paper the vo- ter will take to one of the private com- partments of the booth, and mark a cross opposite the name of the candidate for whom he votes. He shal! then place the paper in an envelope with which he will be farnished, and having enclosed it, he shall hand it back to the Deputy Return— ing Officer, who shall drop it into the bal- lot box He shall then immediately leave the booth. Voters unable to read, or in- capable, by reason of blindness or other physical cause, of making marks opposite the names of candidates for whom they wish to vote, shall have the marks made for them by the Deputy Returning Offi- cer, in the presence of one agent of each candidate. As coon as the poll is over; the box is to be opened in the presence of the eandi- dates or their agents, or, in the absence of either, in the presence of at least three electors. The ballots shall be counted; all spurious ballot papers, and any bal! ot | In case no accredited agents are claim to Each polling booth paper which has a mark on it which may indicate the name of the vote, and any) ballot paper which may have more marks than there are candidates to be elected, | shali be thrown out. Objections rained | | the free exercise of the franchise, ; elector will be allowed to take his : any ballot by a candidate, or his agent, iall be heard and determined by the “in Officer or his deputy. A re- cord of such objections shall be kept in case of'a subsequent investigation. There shall, } tor has voted ; an elee shall, in 1owever, be no clue of how and no elector | such subsequent investigation, be required After the Deputy Returning Officer has counted to tell for whom he has voted. all the ballots, they are to be replaced in the box, which shall then be locked, seal and forwarded to the Keturning Offi- A certificate of the number of votes ed, cer. | polled for each candidate, is to be given to the Deputy Returfiing Officer's candi On “ Declaration Day,’ shall all the ballot boxes, and declare the re- sult of If it should hap- pen that the vote be equal in any case, dates, or their agents. ’ the Returning Officer open the election. then the Returning Officer is to have a easting vote. The prevention and punishment of corrupt practices, occupies much space in the Act. involidate an election, bribery, Corrupt practices, proven, will The offences of treating, or undue influence, or any of such offences, as defined by this or any other Act of the Parliament of Can- ada, or the inducing person to commit personation, corrupt practices within the the of the Act.” by a fine of two hundred dol- personation any shall be meaning of provision Bribery is No liquor shail be dispensed or sold on the day of election. The law reads No spirituous or fermented liquors or strong drinks shall be sold or given at any | hotel, tavern, or shop, within the limits of any polling district, during the whole of the polling day at any election for the House or other place of Commons, of one hundred dollars and the offender shall be subject to imprisonment, not exceed- uuder a penalty for every offence, ing six months, at the diseretion of the Judge or Court, in default of payment of such fine ”’ and the is also strictly prohibited. The hiring of teams, of railway fares, payment “ The person so offending shall forfeit the sum of one hundred dollars to any person who shall sue for the same; and apy vo- ter hiring any horse, cab, cart, wagon, sleigh, carriage, or other conveyance for any candidate, or for any agent of a can- didate, for the purpose of conveying any voter or voters to or from the polling place or places, qualified from shall ipso facto, be dis- at such election, shall forfeit hundred dollars to any voting and for every such offence the sum person suing for the same.” of one Threats of violence, which may impede are for- bidden, and punishable by a fine of two hundred dollars, The gift or the offer of sideration for the purpose of inducing a or joan of money, any valuable con- a candidate to vote or refrain from vot- ing, is a misdemeanor, and subjects per- sons so offending to a fine of two hundred dollars. Any person who, in such considerations, either votes, or return for duces others to vote, is liable to the same penalty. in return for services rendered at an elee- tion, shall be permitted to vote.. No ballot The of- fender against this provision shall forfeit two hundred dollars :—“ Every candidate who curruptly by himself or by or with No person who receives money | paper from the polling booth. any other person on his behalf, compe!s or induces or endeavors to induce any person to personate any Voter, or take any false oath in any matter wherein an oath is required under this Act, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall in addition to any other punishment to which he may be liable teit the sum of two hundred dollars to any for such offence, be liable to for- person suing for the same.” Every candidate guilty of corrupt prac- tices shall, ‘during the seven years next after the date of his being so proved or found ed to, moos, member of that House, or of holding an office in the nomination of the Crown or in Canada. If any can- didate personally engages at his election guilty, be incapable of being elect- and of sitting in the House of Com- and of voting at any election of a of the Governor, as canvasser or agent a person known to | him to have been found guilty of corrupt | practices, the election will be void. Any person other than a candidate found | guilty of any corrupt practice shall, dur- ing the eight years next after the time at which he is so found guilty, be incapuble of being elected to, and of sitting in the House of Commons, and of voting at any of the Commons, or of holding any office in the election of a member House of nomination of the Crown or of the Goy- ernor, in Canada. Stealing or tampering with the poll books, shall be punished as felony. Clauses 1,2, 3, provides that no payment (except in respect of the per- sonal expenses of a candidate) and no ad- vance, loan or deposit, shall be made by or on behalf of any candidate at any elec- tion, before or during or after such elee— tion, on account of such election, othere wise than through an agent or agents,whose name or names, address or addresses, have been declared in writing to the Returning Officer, on or before the nomination day, or through an agent or agents to be ap- pointed in his or their place; and any person making any such payment, ad- vance, loan or deposit, otherwise than through such agent or agents, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. A statement of all expenses is to be sent to the agent within one month after the election. A detailed account of the candidates ex- penses must be made out and sent to the Returning Officer within two montha after the election; and within fourteen days after its reception the Returniog Officer shall advertize it at the expense of the candidate. A false statement of account is to be punished as a misdemeanor. _ eo Deatu or Hon. Cuartes MoPurrson.— We learn, with regret, that Hon. Charles McPherson, who has been in poor health fora longtime died last evening at his residence in Fredericton. Mr. McPherson sat in the House of Assembly prior to the | Union, and was at ene time Surveyor Gen- eral of the Province. He was again elect» | ed for York in 1870, at the General Elec. tion. He was a worthy and estimable man, of fine social disposition, and will be uni- _versally regretted, for he had hosts of friends all ovsr the Province,—St, John Telegraph, in- | ae GOOD HEALTH. “ The Guide-book to Health, Peace and Competence, or the road to Happy Old Age,by W. W. Hall, MD., New York. Author of ‘ Soldier Health,’ ‘ Sleep,’ ‘ Journal of Health,’ etc., ete. D. Archibald, General Agent for P. BE. Island. This is a useful book. thing more precious than good health. It is one of God's best gifts, Bat how lightly is it prized? How few take the trouble to learn the simple laws of nature it ? antly and thoughtlessly drive it far from them—banish happiness suffer till their end of life? This “‘ guide-book "’ should be studied. It suggests thoughtfalness about health, There is no- which preserve How many ignor- and and dispels much of the ignorance which It is intelligible to all. It is full of useful hints, which may be What a boon it would be to Charlottetown, were its citizens and the invites disease. acted upon by all. corporation to act upon fo'low- ing : “ Hard water,” as it is commonly called, not only Jays a foundation for many lorment- ing chronic complaints , but it tails to soften meat and vegetables in preparing them for food; and for cleansing purposes it expense for additional soap or other alkaline substances, and increased labor in its appl cation.’ That the water of this city is ‘ hard,’ is demonstrated to every cleanly person every day. That it is unfit for drinking purposes, involves was declared by Professor Dana Hayes more than two years ago. Coun- try horses, of geod taste, will not touch it. —a physician—has water drawn from And yet thousands of our citizens are compelled to A prominené stock-raiser of the town Spring Park for his cattle. which is ob- a drink the “ slow poison’ tained from our street pumps In con- | versation the other day, of our most skilful doctors, admitted that the debility, fever, and diptheria which prevails, was to the bad True, many persons buy water But these aristocra to visit one due, in great part, use water. from the watermen. tic will not deign gentlemen the outskirts —the districts — of White, asked, to take water to a house within the poor the no Waterman, Was, four the city. last times, limits of the city proper,—a one hundred yards out of summer, less than house not his regular route—and each time he refused the re- quest. This cirveumstance is mentioned for the special benefit of our City Coun- Dr. Hall says, ‘‘the first con- sideration soft water,” trust our City take steps towards supplying it to those cillors. is pure, and we Fathers may immediately who need it most—the poor people of the town. We advise our citizens (who have to contend against the influences of poi- sonous water) to buy Dr. Hall’s ‘* Guide to health,’’ and read it carefully. Those who are so fortunate as to reside in the should also obtain it. country, They will ICELA trvee ND. Iceland, says James in the “Corns hill’? for May, is most easily described by negatives. There are no trees, though ap- parently there were plenty in the tenth century, when hear of men hiding | among them and being hanged by them. No corn is grown, nor any other crop, exs cept a few turnips and potatoes, which taste The only wild quadr upeds | we only halfsripe. as the white bear now and then does, on icesfloes from Greenland), and the reindeer a century the —the latter introduced about ago and still uncommon, ranging over desert mountains. There is no town, cept the capital, a city of 1,500 people, no other place deserving to be called even a village, unless it be the hamlet of Akureyi, on the shore of the Arctic Ocean, with some | fifty houses ; no inn (save one in the vil» single jug and basin, and a billiard table); no hens, ducks or geese, except wild geese : no pigs,no donkeys, no roads, no carriages no shops, no manufactures; no dissenters from the established Luthernism; no army, navy, volunteers, or other guardians of public order, except one policeman in| Reykjavik; no criminals, only two lawyers, and finally no snakes. ‘What, then, is there ?’ springs, volcanoes, lights, ravens, morasses, and above all, dess erts. Or rather—there is the desert! For Iceland—and this is a point which none of the books of travel bring out—Iceland is really one vast desert, fringed by a belt of pasture land which lies along the more level parts of the coast, and here and there runs up the valleys of the great rivers into the interior. And a desert in Iceland does not mean merely a land waste and solitary, such as large parts of Scotland and Ireland have become (especially since deer forests grew to be so profitable), but land that has always been and always be desolate—-land bare and drear, treeless, grasss less, where not a sheep or a pony can browse, and where shrubless, by consequence man can never plant his dwelling. Of this great central space a part is oc- cupied by glaciers and snow fields. (ne tremedous mass, out of which the highest some four thousand sqauare miles, never been crossed, and never will be. mountains are not very high; level of perpetual snow is only some 3,000 feet above the sea, and the larger glaciers descend almost to the sea level. Other parts are filled by volcanic mountains, sures rounded by fields of rugged lava, sometimes like the great Oado Hraun, spreading over hundreds of miles, and not only barren but waterless. of black voleanic sand and pebbles, or, panse of bare earth, strewed with loose blocks of stone, from among which no herb springs, over which the nimble pony can hardly pick his way. one may have at least birch and willow, nestling, with a few tiny | ferns, in the chinks and hollows of the | mouldering rock, but on these stony wastes all is desolation—not a flower, On the lava fields not an learn from it how to appreciate the pure air and water with which they are blessed. _—ee “PU N . BETTER THAN PHY. SIC. A neat, well got up little book, with the above title on its back, and “ Every- body's Life Preserver,’”? by the well. known Dr. W. W. Hall, author of the “Journal of Health,’ “ Health by good | living,” ete. We can safely recommend to the heads of and, what is of more importance, the care— ful perusal of this work, What we like about itis its detestation of quacks and The maxims are the result of and a families the purchase, quackery. good sound sense, series of olser— vations derived from experience. great rocommendation is, that it is writ- One sect, not a bird, except the sombre raven, Odin’s companion; least of all, human presence. A far less imaginative people than the Icelanders might easily have peopled sueh a wilderness with trolls and demons. - + << ++ oe TERRIBLE DEATH. his life in Salt Creek Township, Mason County, lil., recently, under very painful circumstances. Jt seems that he went into a well for the purpose of taking up a curbs ing. The well was dry, and some eighty feet deep. and he had succeeded in removs ing but a few pieces when the o'd curbing burst, and he was buried beneath about twenty feet of coarse gravel. sion of every one that he must have been killed immediately was natural. A large number of the neighbors were collected, ten in that plain, simple style, so as to be | intelligible to the simplest capacity. We eannot do better in recommendation of the work, than to copy a few of the max- ims for getting and retaining health :-— hence cricket, We believe in fun more than physic, we ‘still live,” and lively as a too. Heat rarifies all noxious gases and odors, and sends them to the clouds; these are most pernicious at sunrise and sunset; hence building fires in the family sitting-room at those hours, will, other things being equal, exempt families from epidemics, chills, and fevers, and perhaps even cholera itself. Bearing about in one’s heart the sweet memories of a mother’s care, and affection, and fidelity, often has a resistless power, for many a year after that dear mother has found her resting place in heaven, to res strain the wayward and the unsettled from rushing into the ways of wicked and aban- | doned men. Many a cold, cough, and consumption are | excited into action by pulling off the hat or overebat as to men, and the bonnet and shaw] as to women, immediately on entering the house in winter, after a walk. An in. terval. of at least five or tem mHiutes should be allowed; for however warm or ‘ close ” the apartment may appear on first entering, it will seem much less so at the end of five minutes, if the outer garments remain as they were before entering. Any one who judiciously uses this observation, will find a multifold reward in the course of a lifetime. We think that the perusal of the tore- going will have the effect of rendering the book acceptable to our readers, NEARLY A FATAL RAILWAY ACz CIDENT. The train ran off the track at Blue- shank switch on Friday night last, and the fireman barely saved his life by jump- ing. On examination, it was found that the straps had been taken off, and the rails moved about six inches out of its place. When the engine came along, it, asa matter of course, ran off on the sleepers. Fortunately, the spot was mud- dy; or, in all probability, we should be now compelled to chronicle a fatal railway accident. There can beno doubt that the person who “ shifted the switch ”’— not a lunatic—did so with a maliguant design. The authorities will, we under- stand, make vigorous efforts to discover the scoundrel. We trust they may suc— ceed. —-- ~»ee- How to Cook Ducks.—It came to pass that on one occasion agentleman hunter and a gourmand, too, stumbled across a wild man in his lair. With the hospitality of a savage, the wild maninvited the new comer to dine with him on a magnificent wild duck which he proposed roasting. It was a lovely sight to see how the noble bird, turning slowly before the fre, was just assuming a delicate golden tint. “Looks nicely, dose it not?” said the savage, “but I shan’t roast it.” In vaia‘did the guest plead for roast duck. Remorselessly the savage tore the bird from the spit, cut oft the legs, wings, divided up the bresat, and pitched all pell-mel] into a stew pot. Sad, even despairing, the hungry guest, a re- monstrance on his lips, saw the wild crea- ture thrown into the pot, apinch of salt, then a few whole peppercorns, two table- spoonsful of olive oil, then a half tumbler of Bordeaux wine, and last the juice of a lemon, Then the untamed man stirred it and let it simmer for half an hour. Some- what doubtfully the guests tasted the dish Oh! ecstacy, it was delicious! Full of en- thusiasm,that worthy man has disseminated the receipt. and efforts were directed to the recovery of the body. Owing to the danger of work- | ing in the well, on account of the nature of the soil and the difficulty of putting in | proper curbing, digging was notcommenced | until next morning- In the afternoon, the men in the well imagined they heard groans from the buried man, but this seemed so incredible that at first no reliance placed in the report. Work at night was | impossible, from the danger to the diggers, and consequently it was suspended at dark, but resumed again early on the second | morning. Over a hundred men gathered at the mouth of the well, when the diggers announced it as being an unmistakable facf that the man was still alive, and his groans were distinctly heard. The most despers ate efforts were made to reach, and if pos- sible, save him from his position and agony. As they got near to him the men in the well plainly heard the sufferer ing for death to relieve earnestly prays him from his ex- cruciating torment. ‘Death! Death! 0 Lord!’ he was heard to exclaim. About three in the afternoon, when hope ran high, and he was almost reached, the attempt to remove some of the planks of the broken curbing caused a new caving in of a small amount of sand, and nothing more was heard, With almost superhuman labor he was at last reached about seven in the evening, but too late—the body was still warm, but life was extinct. The diggers succeeded im uncovering his head, but found the body pinned down by the fallen and broken curbing, and as night had set in, were obliged to relinquish their labor until morning. Next day labor was re- sumed, and the body was brought to the surface about noon. bruised, the left lung crushed, and the right hip bone driven apart from the backs bone by the timbers which had pinned him down. wee _ POLAND PROSPEROUS, A remarkable instance of a country, in spite of recent political convulsions, bes | coming rich and prosperous, beyond the most sanguine expectations, is afforded in the case of Poland. The most trustworthy evidence of this is given by the report of Consul General Mansfield, which has just been made public. Polish fabrics of every kind ere gradually driving out of the market, both for the kingdom itself and the Empire of Russia in general, a vast number ofarticles of inferior quality hither- to imported from Germany, and the ins dustrial production for exportation into Russia is assuming very large proportions. In many cases the contractors can hardly meet the demands. Labor has risen in price in the same ratio, and active and in-~ telligent hands find ready employment at a remuneration quite owt of proportion with the price of living. The population is undergoing a steady increase, no emis gration takes place for America or else- where, and the number of Israelites who run away to escape military service, is more than counterbalanced by the return of exs iles from Russia, Siberia and abroad, under the provissons of various imperial amnesties, —London Paper, are the blue fox (who has probably come, | exX- j lage whose resources consist of two beds, a | Snow mountains, glaciers, hot | earthquakes, northern | peaks of the Island rise, covers an area of | has | The | but then the | The rest is an undulating waste | perhaps, what is most dismal of all, an ex- | shrublets of dwarf | ins | a sign of | A young man named Hendrickson lost | The conclu- | was | The head was found | THE VICE REGAL SPEECH AND THE DOMINION VOLUNTEERS, [From the Oltlawa Citizen.) The graceful and lelivered by His Excellency the must prove pecu~ to the to statesmanlike speech Governoi General on Monday last, jliarly gratifying, not only corps 'which it was more particulary addressed, but to the entire volunteer and militia the Dominion, There was a and honesty permeating every thoroughly in keeping | forces of manliness, | sentence uttered +! with the record of His arriving in Canada as the representative of | Her Majesty the Queen. Himself in hearty sympathy with the people, and possessing | | a great national sense of the responsibility of his position —a man of large and refined culture—Lord Dufferin, whilst ctmplimenting in the highest terms, th regiment to which Her Excellency had but experience 'an hour before presented a set of colors, | ae was not utilize the presenting an oppor | warm sympathy and regard for the forces slow to event as one tunity of expressing his | throughout the various provinces. With | that candor which has already made him | popular with the masses, a popularity not the took occasion circumstances of to tell the country alone achieved by he the as position, s and through them emblage, at large, that he was aware in remoter diss tricts, and amongst a more scattered popu- tton, not exist facilities for frequent drill, nor the stimu. lus of repeated parades where there do the same as at head-quars ters, we must be content with such a vary- ing standard of efficiency; but whatever allowances have to be made on that acs count, he felt certain that there was not a Canadian regiment between the Atlantic and the Pacific that was not animated with the same loyalty to the Queen, the same patriotism, the luty as were the oflicers and men of the “oot Guards. He hoped it would be un- derstood that in the pre vhich had taken place, there was no in, same anxiety to do their sentation of colors iention of paying a capricious to a peculiarly favored compliment corps. And his lordship was right, when adding that he believed the men of that corps would be the first to resent any invidious distinctions; pr there esprit de corps manifested upon the part | of all Canadian volunteers highly creditable is, and for years has been, an | to them, and it is pleasing to know that this spirit is increasing, and will continue te increase, if a few envious appointed agitators do not, by their inter- ference mar the harmony existing. | The volunteers of Canada are too sensible, critics or diss now | however, to allow petty considerations to destroy what is citizen soldiery, | adjunct to the fast becoming a powerful and must prove a powerful regular forces should occas sion ever require active military service. In evident allusion to events which have | lately transpired, were the closing words of his Excellency when remarking that he | was aware there were persons to whom al | display kind distasteful, and | who, inthe name of soscalled Republican simplicity, abolish ard sign and symbol of the great ‘imperium.’ | But on reflection he thou; ght this philosophy would be found faulty, and if pushed to its is of life would destroy much of the ease, amenity At our- of this was would every outw | | logical conclusion in all the relatior and decorum of social intercourse. all like events, a great historical people | selves, might be pardoned for clinging to those ancient usages which are the land marks of constitutional progress, and for this reason he thought it his duty to retain, without, however, adding to them in the slightest degree, the observances which he found established by his predecessors, in which the Foot Guards played so conspicu~ ous a part, and in doing so were acting in harmony with Canadian sentiment. His Excellency further said that, were it other- wise, he would of course be willing to mox dify the customary procedure, but the readers of history would remember that it was the least constitutional of European | monarchs who thought jack boots and a hunting coat a dress good enough to meet | Parliament in, and he was quite sure it was understood and felt whenever the Governor General came down in State to open the that the forms through on that occasion, were parts of no idle and vain ceremonial, but the testation on the part of a proud and free people of their veneration for constitu» se ssion, solemn gone manis | | tional Government, and of their deep sense of all that is implied in the annual rea | sembly of their representatives in the great Council of the Realm And without doubt the sentiment of Canadians is one favorable Ss | towards maintaining in most particulars the observances of the Mother Country, and | re-producing here, in so far as political and social limitations will permit, the admirable Those who, in attain public system of Great Britain. their desire to or political ation of existing volunteer and military arrangements, certainly commit a very graye error, and are responsible for an | attempt to create envy, ill-feeling and ties of friendliness are observable. Tos for any service, is to tell the volunteers Foot and well quires. The Governor General's Guards are a thoroughly trained disciplined body, and if there is one weak point about the volunteers of Canada, it is in lack of discipline. Here starts in‘life, ten chances to one at an early age, and knowing that the future depends upon himself, he naturally arrives at man» hood with the firm conviction that Jack is as good as his master, and it is difficult for him to divest himself of the same independence of feeling upon being called to fulfil the duties and obey the mandates of military law. For this reason, then, the man who fans ill.feeling, or encourages envy tween various regiments or arms of the service, does a grave wrong to society, The modern system of warfare exacts the strictest subordination, and it has been truly said that by subordination, as b#uni- versal intelligence, parts apparently the most averse and discordant, are operated on, and combined in the strictest unison with ease and advantage; the submission of individuals in every rank produces unis formity and energy in the whole, and en- ables the directing power to work for the public benefit, The kindly, well-timed remarks made by his Excellency the Gev- ernor General, should have the effect of dispelling any temporarily rising cloud, and should cause those who desire to act the role of agitators, to discover some real national grievance other than the existence of the Governor General’s Foot Guards. We sincerely trust that the speech in ques~ tion may exercise a beneficial effect over all classes, and particularly the volunteers and militiamen, and that with a representa- tive of Her Majesty ready to co-operate at all times with the people in solving the problem of national progress, those in power and those out of power may work in harmony towards building up a great nationality—not only a dependency but an ally of the mother country—on this side the Atlantic, a Canodian be- GERMANY “AT PEACI Pall Mall Gazetle remarks : Society and all respectable enthusi- The “The Peace : usts who believe in early disarmament will learn with some regret that the increasing Krupp at Essen has made it necessary * him to advertise for a gigantic loan for he carries on in the manufacture of guns. 500,000, ecured (he amount to secure is £1, Excellency since | on the works as a first charge, and bearing live per cent. intere eet; but the issue of the t allotment of £900,009, which was to be six, it closed on Tuesday, was made at ninety notoriety, commence by sapping the founds *“Y | he has not lived in vain, —[* that in Canada we ‘have regiments adapte od | | in The Danbury ees) at | large that they must strive to emulate the example set by such corps, and must en- | troublesome “Finance Minister’ deavor to become efficient and able to co. | time—Secretary Richardson, : fa k ind the special attraction offered vo capita development of the enormous works of Kerr | | for the | has completed his Spri peci: il enlargment of the prolit ible business | | Pei sts of repayment by a sinking fund, which lis arranged so that by means of suecessive drawings the whole loan is to be cleared | , | 08 between 1876 and 1883 at the rate of £110 returned for each £100 of principal subseribed. It is understood in Germany that the already vast works at Essen have increa for the There are large orders, for instahce, the payment are more tempting than those of the Porte. A fact like this, which may be part from the savings of careful capitalists, have recently been favoured with, that the cause of arbitration has made real progress since the grand experiment at Geneya of which we are so proud,”’ > THE NEW CABLE, The London 7imes refers to the sailing of the steamer Furaday from Gravesend, with the new Atlantic cable, as a piece of news full of interest to the world of science and business. The Furaday is the first vessel ever constructed expressly for cable-laying, and ship.builders,engineers and electricians are anxious to see how s!e will acquit her~ self. where she will make the shore connection and will then sail to New Hampshire, at or She proceeds first to Nova Scotia out cable by the way. The Am/as: 3000 will accompany her with the Some difficulty has been pre- tons, shore ends. foundland, as other companies have enjoyed the monoply there. The Newfoundland Government bas the right to terminate the monoply, and it is understood will do so in owners of the new line. her first load of cable, the Faraday will re- turn to England, take the second instalment on board, and lay the line between Ireland The whole work will if everything goes It is owned by the Direct United ible Company, whose capital is £1,- and Newfoundland. be completed in August on well. States C 300,000, subscribed for wholly in Eng! and, France, Germany and Belgium. The com- pany propose to make the rates to and from America two shillings a word, or less. This well be a great reduction from the present prices. - nna re iNBURY AT THE COURT OF ST. JAMES. It is, I believe, no longer a secret that the pvrpose of Mr. Bailey's visitto Europe is to restore harmony among the members of the British royal family. The trouble arises, it appears, from the fact that the | Princess of Wales and the Duchess of Edin- and when one enters the dining-room before the other, or sits near to the head of the table, the defeated being refuses to eat and back hair therefore, not only goes up stairs and lets down her and screams. There is, starve to death. Victoria has tried to in- Mr. Bailey has gone over to see what can be done about it. arrival in England he will go to Windsor Castle, ring the front door-bell, and tell the hired girl to ask the girls down into the parlor. His general idea will be then to the floor of the diningsroom at the same moment, by means of a couple of stage traps and then be seated at a circular table. If this is not accepted, he will then suggest that they shall take turns about, or draw If they prove intractable, his notion is that he will write to the Czar, explaining the matter to him, and insisting upon his coms pelling his daughter to behave, then advise Disraeli to cut off the allowance of the girls until they reform. will bid them good-by, and take his rella from the rack in the entry home to dinner, unless the fol's castle ask him tostay. Itisa high and holy umb- and mission, worthy of such a philanthropist,and when he rerurns and Victoria’s annual subscription to 7/ News ‘tied up in the corner of his pocket- jealousy, where naught save the warmest | handkerchief, he may very j stly feel that ‘Max Goolor,”’ a —— Pre aiden nt On ant has got rid of the most The worthy | of unpopularity, and his chief subordinates | have taken their departure with him. The President stood by the Treasury as long as he could, and he @id not yield until the demands for a more efs ficient financier became universal. The new Secretary is General Bristow, a gentles man of fair reputation and likely to prove a good officer, though not a brilliant one. he president in selecting him did not act upon the advice of the party, but simply upon his own idea of what was best. When Grant first tried his hand upon Cabinet- making, he declared that he would as soon be dictated to in choosing a wife asin sex lecting a constitutional adviser. This streak of independence has not been with- out its ill effects; but the present selection appears to satisfy the Republican party. Secretary Bristow will get a fair trial. Finance is the most troublesome question the United States rulers have to deal with. The contest between inflation and contrac- tion is not yet over, and itis quite likely that it will end in breaking up the Repub- lican party. The great financial centres are in favor of hastening as rapidly as pos~ sible to specie payments. The “ West,” on the other hand, cries for more greens backs. Much anxiety will[be felt regard-~ ing the plans and projects of the new Sec~ retary. There is a most inviting field be- fore him for the exercise of financial genius and genuine practical statesmanship. How Gladstone would rejoice to grapple with such a * situation.’ his Secretary of ’—Colonist. Great excitement prevails in Russian financial circles, owing to the discovery of defalcations,amounting to 2,009,000 roubles in the administration of the Moscow rail- way. Mr. Disraeli’s lack of health is causing considerable anxiety among his personal and political friends, and it is rumoured that he may find it necessary to withdraw fora few months from the duties of Pre- mier, which, in the meantime, will be pers formed by Earl Derby, measured ‘in solid coin, advanced in great | near Rye Beach [already arrived], paying | ador, | dicted in making the connection at News | response to the application made by the | Having got rid of } | burgh each claims precedence of the other, | | sing, on the Railrodd, two miles and he will | } Then he} : two planks were placed on the rail by some go at the | ' | obstructions wer with a glow in his heart | |and punishment of : | guilty of any of the for some time past been unable to meet the sing demands on them made partly | rearmament of the German army | and fortresses, and partly for foreign States. | from | Turkish Government out-standing, not to mention other Siates whose promises of | may perhaps weigh against the opinions we | wag » paid, and work for the year | _June 15, 1874.—8w rou nd. Remember it is one of the best | shops iu town. ‘The best of references can| FOF Sale, at a Bargain! ® be aaa! Apply to | — GEORGE H. FOSTER, | / HANDY size ROW BOAT, Lon 1 ye Lord’s Whart. old, with tixings complet Ch’town, June 15, 1874.—3in a h i? FENTON T. rewenslll a June 15, 1874.—1i } « > CASCUMPEC PACKET. TENDERS eT REE XY Tee ee ae ee Se a, ee ee ee NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Veh 10 Hhs MOLASSS | ‘ SUGAR, 1,000 bush. SALT, Pes Si h. r Weater L lly ” from B ton 400 Bbis. FLOUR, A) PILOT BREAD. Hy ss Refined PETROLEL M, 50 * CORNMEAT { Cases MATCHES, Boxes CRACKERS, CHEESE, 50 Sides SOLE LEATHER, 10 boxes TOBACCO. 6 bales OAKUM, s OIL CLOTHING, MANILLA ROPE, assorted PAINTS, ich, SPIRITS TURPENTINE MACHINERY OIL, Together with a large lot of Furniture. 30 bundles Forks, Rakes,Hoes, Shovi ls, 20 pkgs. Buckets. Brooms, Clocks, &c., 5 pkgs. Fishermen's droods, ses Glassware, from 2 to 3}in and &C, 5 ci Pi r Steamer from Nhe diac, ‘“ Winnie? from the Dominion of ( anada. 20 boxes Horse N , 150 kegs and boxes Cu NAILS. and SPIKES, 6S pkgs. DRY GOODS, SHOES, HATS, and C IES, 4 casks Boiled OIL, 2 cases Patent MEDICINE, &c > 5 pkgs. DYE STUFFS, 1 case Canada TWEEDS, 10 boxes Edge TOOLS, 1000 rolls Room PAPER, 2 crates GLASSWARE, 25 boxes RAISINS, Per Brig Nelic yr 6O chests TEA, 2 bbls. CURRANTS, 12 boxes SOAP, 11 PIPES, 3 casks PAINT, Bee LINSEED OIL, 4 bags RICE, 1 bbl. PURE OIL, 8) bundles OAKUM, 10 tons Refined and common IRON, 175 pieces PLOUGH METALS, 6 ANCHORS from 3 to 5 ewt. 1 cask CHAIN, tt) re 35 boxes GLASS, 2 cases Ready-Made l cask PUTTY, 10 casks and c 10 crates EARTHENWARE, The above goods have been bought well and will be sold Cheap for Cash on approv- ed credit. N. B.—Th« Fish at ¢ and per Sehr. and Wrought all sizes, BOOTS and APS, GROCER- * from Liverpool. CLOTHING, 43 ait highest pric will be ‘ascumpec or Tignish. GEORGEW. June 16 y 1874. —Jm TED AT ONCE! HOWLAN. A Albe rton, WY i ph APPRENTICES from the country, to learn sacksmith Trade. Also, } one to go unde ‘tions, I also want instruc a first-cl: in, to whom the highest Government Service. TH R TI 4+ ii fast-saillng Schooner '¢, Will run ling at Shediac. THOMAS COSTAIN, Agents—Hon. G. W. Howlan, Cascum- pec; J. B. Forster, Shediac; Carvell Bros., | Charlottetown. grievous annoyance to the neighbors, who | don’t like such howling, but grave danger | that one of the two lovely creatures will } | duce them to behave, but in vain, and now | | By His Honor Immediately upon his | suggest that the twoshall be shot up through | | of May last past, Ch’town, June 15, 1874. A PROCLAMATION Sir kobert Hodgson, Administrator of the Coverin- “ince of Prince Edward | Cctienins thereunto Kn igh f. ment of the Pre Island, and the Lelonging, Chancellor and Ordinary of | the Py me, &c ot. |: ae. [L. S.] R. HopGson, Administrator. WHEREAS, on Wednesday, the 2)th day between noon and the hour of two o'clock, p. m., at Hogg’s Cross | east from placed upon the Rail, which caused the throwing off the track the Con- struction Train, Cars, ilso the injury of a Workman: Whereas, on Thursday, the 28th day of May last past. at the Tracadie Cross Roads as i ee sill ; person or persons,with a view to the obstruc- tion of the Construction Train, and which ‘e encountered by the night wart: Train from Mount Ste * oa No . LRereo . in order to the discovery uwny person or pe rsons aforesaid felonious acts, I have thought fit, by and with the advice and consent of Her Majesty’s Council, to | proclaim, and I do hereby proclaim and d | LARS to any person or persons, of the | FIVE HUNDRED DOL- l (not the actual party to the acts), who will give such offer areward of ' | information and evidence as wil! lead to the operate with such whenever occasion re- gentleman has retired under a dense cloud | discovery, apprehension and conviction of the offender or offenders. Given under my hand and the great seal of this Island. at Charlottetown, in the said Island, this fifth day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hun~ dred and seventy-four, and in the thirty- seventh year of Her Majesty’s reign. By Command, T. HEATH HAVILAND, Coloniai Secretary. WURRAY HARBOR FERRY. ases SHELF HARDWARE, | paid for fortnightly | susan the present Season, be- | tween Charlottetown and Cas- | Owner, | | cation left at John Stewart's. | : 1S erside, a plank was, bys rson | lots, or have their meals sent to their rooms. | "U2 ide, a plank was, by some person | or persons, | pany each tender, and the destruction of four | BEER. NEW ADVERTISEMENTy - 3 ‘an Manilla ! The best and the che aye atin he ad manntens ; Mark nunufuctured by the Ct, ayy Canada Cordage C 0., Montreg WE SOLICIT ORDERS. at manufac lowest prices, and deliver at ¢ harloy on the shortest notice. tom Samples always in oa We refer accompa shipbuliders ing cort and all dealer, ,. i CARVELL PROS 1 June, 187 : Ss Agen th town, 151] | CERTiIiriC |} Having used large MANILLA, the ada Cordage Cor Messrs Carve. AO ee ly during the past * manufacture of tate pany, ord red te Bros., and having mitted it to the severest té sts, recommend its use to all iets, we gal PEAKE BROS.. & C0, JAMES DUNC AN &O HYNDMAN BROS. "? ARTEMAS LORD. LONGWORTH & CO., | BOURKE GILLAN WELSH & OWEN, . 00, 2mo Paper AND WEAPPING PApRe 150,000 art ER BAGS, Nos, E tags Like > amd 6, and 350 reams gery and Dry Goods WRAPPING es a CARVELL BRog Ch'town, June 15th, 1874.—3y COTTO. WARP. 10 BALES Red, W hite, , and Blue, Numbers, aa w Brunswick Wan ufaetups CARVELL BROg 1874.—3w FAVORITE BRANDS OF Fy B 200 ae bbls. * OURBRAND? Just Received, and qualities well known, and 500 Barrels Spring Extras, for sale All te CARVELL BROg June 15, tT EAROSE,” diferent brands | arrivals, June 15, 1874.—3w BROOKS AND PAILS, | _ : 15" e DOZ B ROOMS, different sizes, 60 doz 2 ho« »p PAILS. CARVELL BROS, June 1s, 18 Nails. Nails, Nails 140° 5 10dy 7, dy, and Sdy, of a pe srior qi iality and cheap. CARVELL BROS, RES June 15, 1874.—3w ray rT Tea. Tea. DER Lady Rodney, 135 Chests, seled i specially for onr trade, and weak guarantee quality CARVELL BROS, Government Works, ty EALED TENDERS will be received — the Secretary of the Board of We vntil SATURDAY, the 27th inst., from ties willing to contract, and find proper az curity for the following Works: , Building a new Bridge at Curtisdale, peque Road. Tenders to specify cost é Stone Arch, and also cost of wooden B Specification can be seen at the officeot undersigned. -ALSO,-—~ across John Stewart's near Forbes’ Mili. § Anew Bridge stream, Lot 48, —ALSO,— near Edward Specific aoe leit at A new Cedar Bridge Mill, Greenville. Edward Heury’s. —ALS0,— A new Bridge across Foun d's Mill St and the keeping ia repair ¢f old Bridge, m& til new Bridge is built. Stal« price of stom” and also of wooden Bridge. Speciticatic eh | left at R. Found’s Mill. New London. —ALSU,— | Repairs to Campbelton§ Bridge, 9 Marsh. near Stanley Bridge. Specificatia left with George Bell, near Bridge. F signatures of two good and sufficient secungy ities, willing to become bound for the faithee ful performance of the work, must accow Government not D lowest tenders. RICHARD WEEKS, Sry nite nde ni Pu Llie W orks Ch’town, June 15, 1874. BEER. BEER L ra to aecept the | From the Tlorne r oe . THE ERSLISH WHISKEY WAR “QO woman, in our hours of ease, You know we'll do whate’er yon please We'll promise to renounce the sin, Of whiskey, brandy, rum and gin, To shun all clarets a: . refrain, Whenever tempted, from Champagne! But have some mer : ‘pees, my dear, And leave, Oh! leave a man his beer.” For sale by the Subscriber: 100 doz Brighton Brewery Pale 40 doz Arrol's Pale Ale, 25 doz Arrol’s Sparkling Ale. Also, Bright« hogshe ads, mn Brewery Ale in barre and puncheons, JAMES REDDIX. June 15, 1874.—4i AUCTION. F Building Lots in in “Summerside b TUESDAY, The 2nd day of july next, ON I WILL SBLL BY Pt AUCTION, Sixty Bertpine ; Lots: P in different parts of Summers e; comment ing at 3 o’c for k, p. m., in the — east & 4 lots aud evel) E BLI« the Convent. Plans of the Ee CoLoNntiaL Secretary's Orvice. | information given at my office : aces, — st ae Terms liberal. Sale positive Sealer enders Wi received at this seurennr . INT, office until Wednesday, the 17th day of : K e HARD HU ~ June next, at noon, from any person or Summerside, June 15, 1874. —/ persons willing to contract for the running &é ofa Ferry at Murray Harbor, between the j a RE Basin Wharf onthe north side, and Mach- 3 jf on’s Point Wharf on the south, (extending , H one run after calling at Machon’s Point to ena w¢;prw the Store Beach, at least once a day, or Qt LEN ~T] REET. when signalled for), for the term of three : years, iu terms of the Act 3d, William 4th . cap 8. ; --,,,| At lowest possible Prices) The tender must express the rates of fer- : ‘= riage to be demanded for passengers, horses, CHOICE catue, sheep, calves and swine; also for 7 LE. vehicles, luggage per cwt., aud produce per GROC I 2He E bushel. The signatures of two responsible per- MAGNIFICENT WIN sons willing to become bound for the per- formance of the service, must accompany scene . . each tender GEAULNVE LIQl os «Tender for Murray Harbor Ferry,” must be endorsed on the envelope. AC. «ke. ~ Y. HEATH HAVILAND, IJ inert Colonial Secretary. | Warranted Pure aud hd q June 8, 1874. CO F ninct. So ose MACEACHERN & CO. _— ask = amteda, June 8.—Im : ae x anvaemmpemcnan ae oe Notice. ; a | 7 A cncanoicese : SLAN \RK HOTEL- sive OE Ss V ISLAND P: lav given the exclus! HAVE this day gi to Wand * ; nal b Ten Girls as Waiters and ¢ ‘hambermaids, | of my Nickel on an be. °F RL W ages SS iw atson, kL Sq., W hole sale slant . Seer : Cearlottetown, tor Prince Edward 1 to $88 per month. ‘eran JACOBS: J. L. HOLMAN. ISAAC pd Summerside, June J, 1874.—tf Cl’town, June 1, 1874.—4i