| med we EE ca Tae EXAMINER. - »” Aw VOL, Tue Day Examiner! Is Published every Evening. OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER | AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, | : Charlottetown, P. E. I. ii : Kates or SuBScRIPTION : “Six Months, ; $2 50 Three Months, h 25 One Month, 0 50 One Week, 0 12 s® Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made fur monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli eation. | W. L. COTTON, =| J. W. MITCHELL, Manager. | Office Sup’t. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. — TIME TABLE N*@. 5. WINTER ARRANGEMENT, To come into foree MONDAY, DEC. 24, 1877 TRAINS GOING WEST. sie in ale TO | No. 5. | No7 STATIONS. Express {Mixed ot le la alesse cnet shee | P.M GEORGETOWN és Ts ay. 10-25] Mount Stewart Junetion } Dp. 10. 35 Royalty Junction “© 11,46) P.M. | P.M. 9 9 CHARLOTTETOWN = ¢ [AF 12-10, Dp. 2.40 Dp. 9.00 nen oar ** 2.066 No Viltshire 10.22) * 402 Hunter River ** 10.40} “ 420 Bradalbane 11.18] “ 5.00 County Line ae). oe P.M. Kensington me ae os “ 5.50 SUMMERSIDE }|Dp. 2.00] * 6.20 Wellington “ 2.45 Port Hill “ @o O’ Leary ) «* 4,43 Alberton “ 5.45 Tignish “ 6.35 . TRAINS GOING EAST. "T emoatll ; No. 2; Ne s sae .- | No. . RS RONS. Express | Mrxep. 7 aa vUU bee TIGN INH . 8.00 ALBERTON - oe U’ Leary ‘* 9.52 Port Hil | % te Wellington oa!” See P.M. | A.M. vinanenieane Ar. 12.35 SUMMERSIDE Dp. 2.10\Dp. 8,35 Kensington , £28 - oon Hoe ot Las “ 3.30] * 9.50 B bane * 3.40) * 16.10 Hunter River ** 4.20) ** 10.48 North Wiltshire ‘s 4.35) * 10.50 Royalty Junction a oo * 11.56 ~~ | ™ 7 \ ar, . CHARLOTTETOWN } |Dp. 2.05] “ 12.20 Royalty Junction 1 ae MT. STEWART June. | Dr. oo Cardigan’ | GEO IETOWN. Ar. 5.40 ss SOURIS BRANCH. bani — Going West. 3 ee ~ Geing East. "AY at No. 5 +6 . + No. 6 STATIONS.) ,NO.5 1 STATIONS.| srxpp, —~~n— | ——— || rif | AM. P.M. Souris (Dp. 7:30) Mt. St’w’t Je:Dp. 3.50 Harmony | ‘ 7.55'\Lot 40 “© 4.26 St. Peter’s | “ 9.10|/Morell i «© 4,32 Morell | « 9 .49//St. Peter's | “ 5.05 Lot | « 9,48]|Harmony | “ 6.20 Mt St’w’t Juci Ar. 10, 25||Souris jAr. 6.45 W. McKECHNIE Sup’t. P. E. L, Railway. ©. &. BRYDGES, ‘Gen, Superintendent ' Govt, Railways. ————— eee Wotice to the Public! QUPFLIES for the ‘Soup Kitchen” will of reach the Committee if left at the Store & Alex. Horne, Corner of Queen and Fitzroy Streets. Donations of money will be thankfully re- ceived by them through Dr. Dodd and Mr. J. | Quirk, B.-~=Food for the sick carefully prepared | by the Committee. Novy. 30, 1877. | NOTICE TO TEACHERS A LL TEACHERS should send their cer- tificate to obtain salary to the Education — by mail, not later than the 8th of certificate is the only document re- quired at the end of March and September, aud should contain the number of the School District. . EDWARD MANNING, | Supt. of Education. Ch'tewn, March 27—iw CHARLOTTETOWN, P ee ee ee ee 13'78. TE C1) Xa FURNISHES MORE NEWS, FOR LESS MONEY THAN ANY OTHER PAPER IN THE PROVINCE. It Contains Twenty-eight Columns, nearly every one of which is in closely set READING MATTER. CONSIDER OUR TERMS: SINGLE COPIES to the 3lst December, 1878—thirteen months—$1,00 in ad- vance. SEX COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $35.50 in advance, TEN COPIES to on address, or addresse. separately, as clesired, $9.0 in advanced FIFTEEN COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as required, $13.50 im advance, TWENTY COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired. $17.00. IN DULL TIMES -—GET THE— HAPEST AND BEST C2 The Weekly Hxaminer is acknowledged to be ahead of any other paper in the Province in the item of LOCAL NEWS and is always well filled with Political, Shipping, Commercial and General Information. ry The debates of the Local Legislature will be carefully and impartially given. Special tele- grams and letters from ‘Our, Own Ottawa Correspondent” will contain everything of in- terest transpiring in the Dominion Parlia- ment, A Good Story will be made a specialty. ——— 0: The Daily Uxaminer Will be sent to any part of the Province, the Dominion, United States or Great Britain on receipt of For Six Months, - - - - - $2.50 Fer Three Months, - - - - 1.25 For One Month -- + -- 50 se” ADDRESS, W. L. COTTON, Manager Examiner Printing and Publishing Company. ©h’town, Dec. 6, 1877. ¥ THE DAILY EXAMINER, a the latest news—lJoeal and telegrapine; aa nee RINCE EDWARD ISLAN ne ~~ — yz neatiy and expeditiously executed, ~ AT THE “EXAMINER” OFFICE under the careful supervision of J. W. MITCHELL. We are now in a position to execute orders for all kinds of Printing, such as LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS, CIRCULARS, CARDS. PAMPHLETS, DODGERS, HANDBILLS, AND ALL KINDS OF Bank and Legal Blanks, &e. &e. &e. AT MODERATE PRICES. Office :—lngs’ Old Stand, Corner Great George and Water Streets. ST, PAUL'S CHURCH BAZAAR UNDER THE PATRONAGE OF MISS NIACDONELL. —~ i —— THE LADIES OF ST. PAUL’S CHURCH, intending holding a BAZAAR in the MARKET HALL, Wednesday & Thursday, The 24th & 25th April, IN AID OF THEIR CHURCH. Admittance 25 cents. Children half-price The following Committee have kindly con- sented to solicit and receive contributions for that purpose :— Mrs. Bayfisld, Miss 8. Longworth, ‘Ball, Mrs. Manning, ‘* Bolton, ‘* Newbery, ‘* Brown, Osborne, * Davies, ‘* Palmer, ** DPD. Davies, ‘* EK. Palmer, ** Dodd, *« €. Palmer, ** Fitzgerald, ‘* G. Peake, Miss Haszard, ** Pope, ’ Mrs. Hensley, ‘* J. ©. Pope, ‘* Hobkirk, ‘* Sneeston, ‘“« Ings, ‘* Welsh. Mrs, H. Lougworth. ne KING SQUARE HOUSE! GEHN TOE MM eIN Invited to Call and Look at —THE— NIGE NEW GLOTHS JUST OPENED UP nT Our Tailoring Department, LATEST PATTERNS! EXCELLENT VALUE! BEER & SONS. Ch’town, March 23, 1878. STADACONA Fire and Life Insurance Company, Notice is hereby given that the Board of Directors of this Company have made a further call of Four instalments, of Five pe: Cenl. each, on the Subscribed Capita! of the Company. payable at its Office, No. 93 St. Peter Street, Quebec, as follows :— Five per Cent. on or before the Tenih a y of August, 1877; Five per Cent. on or before the Tenth day of November, 1877 ; Five per Cent. on or before the Eleventh day of February, 1878 ; Fivg per Cent. on or before the Eleventh day of May, 1878. By order of the Board. CRAWFORD LIN DSAY, Secretary Are une 21877 t your Printing done is at HE place to the EXAMI R Printing Rooms. POSTERS, | ee BOOK & JOB INE PRINTING! D, SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 1878. A CON tt ae ef ett et teases tate 1S BY TELEGRAPH. WW AR CERTAIN. [From the Patriot. } Sr. Perersnpure, April 5. Mobilization has been ordered in the four remaining Russian military districts. Trilherndeoff has been appointed Comman- der-in-Chief of the Russian special corps, eon sisting of Cossacks and Horse Artillery. This corps Is destined to penetrate into the heart of Central Asia. The authorities here are certain of war with England, and they are making preparations thus early in order that po time may be lost after hostilities have been commenced. The Montenegrins have been requested to prepare immediately for a renewal of hostili- ties. A rupture between Russia and Roumania is now considered very probable. The latter has come to the determination to resist any attack, as she believes that the excitement in Hungary would compel Austria to enterfere. Ignatieff is now far less hopeful that the Congress will meet. He thinks that, every- thing considered, Congress would only lead to war. There are a number of conflicting interests at stake in the Eastern Question which could only be settled by war, and it is impossible that any Congress could reconcile them. Loxpon, April 5. A uumber of jofficials of the *English Ad- miralty department have gone to Belfast for the purpose of superintending the equipment of a number of private steamers which are to be used as cruisers in case of war, | Senator MacPherson on the Public Expenditures. Senarok MacPuerson has taken up the question in relation to the public expendi- ture of the Dominion. He wants té know how it is proposed to restore the equilibrium between income and expenditure. He feels it to be his duty to criticise the extravagance of the Administration, which centres at Ottawa and extends throughout the coun to its remotest bounds. The deficit of last year continues, and the equilibrium is as far from being restored as ever. There has been an increase in de ntal expendi- ture year by year until the present year, when it was claimed by the Goverament there had been an decrease, He considers, however, that while there has been a de- crease in some respects during the past year, there has been an increase in depart- mental expenditures in nearly every depart- ment. The decreases had amoun to $1,810,840, but of this sum the large item of $815,494 was in eonsequenee of cutting down expenditures on public works, such as public buildings, kwskors, yiens, ctc., which ad been finished the year previous, and did not require expenditure last year; conse- quently it was not retrenchment. The ex- penditure on buildings at Battleford and Fort Pelly was enormous and uncalled for. He had been told, and he had no doubt in | his own mind that it was a fact, that there had been a systematic holding back of the ac- counts of expenditure in the Northwest, so that they would not get into the Public Accounts for last year, an expenditure of so enormous @ character that it might yet be a subject for a Royal Commission to enquire into. In piers and harbors there had been a reduction of expenditure last year, amounting ‘in all to $207,700. These har- bors, he supposed, were completed andl re- quired no further expenditure, so that he could net give the Government credit for retrenchment on these points. In the mounted police and light-house and coast service, there had been considerable re- duction, principally in salaries and maim- tenance. It showed that there must have been extravagance in 1875-6, when the ex- penditure for light-house and coast service had increased from $394,904 to $427,161, when in 1877 it could be reduced again to $391,000. He asked if the Government, as well as every thinking man in the country, does not know that it was impossible from the present sources of revenue to meet the deficits. He believes the Government are perfectly well aware of, and they must have some scheme of taxation which they have not communicated to Parliament, or to the cown- try— some unpopular scheme of income or land tax that they were afraid to make known for jear of turning the coming elections against them. tli le I 9 a Sims REEvEs.—Sims Reeves, the famous English tenor, though elderly, is hale and ac- tive. He is described as a square-shouldered, thick-set man, rejoicing*st home in a suit of tweed of uncertain hue—between a tortoise- shell and a tabby—relieved by a rose-colored necktie, a turquoise and diamond ring, and a famous watch chain of mingled gold and coral. It is entirely to the sage counsel of the vener- able Mazzucato that the English tenor attri- butes his long lease of voice. The method of the master may be explained in half a dozen words :—‘*We must keep the voice in the middle.” This is the secret of really fine tone, of the faculty of singing cantabile passages with effect, and of making a coup onahigh note when it is wanted. Nothing is more destruc- tive than perpetual excreise of the upper regus- ter. wtb: 9 pvsi Bigos The following is going the rounds of the United States press: “ You don’t get any money outof me,” said he, as the man pre- sented his bill, ‘I’m a savings bank—that’s what lam.” And the creditor went diseonso- lately away. i ‘Advice !” said an old man of much expe- rience. ‘‘Why;Inever had anyone come to me for advice who, befere he got through, wasn’t willing to give twice as much as he | anamenigoepgyellionteaaee aa NO, 267. Anecdote of Jefferson. Mr. Jeseph Jefferson is not only a consum- mate dramatic artist, but has gifts as a painter and speaker. the dinner recently given to him and his son-in-law, Mr. Farjeon, at the Lotus Club,he made a. few remarks which were quite pat on the occasion. He apolo- gized for using technical terms, but asserted that it was an unconscious habit contined to no single profession or calling. He illustrated it by referring to aremark of a railroad conduc- tor, who, after seeing “Rip Van Winkle,” talked with the actor on the train, not on the merit of the star, but on the construction of the story. He said to Jefferson, ‘‘I couldn’t see how you were going to get round it when you fousd Gretchen had switched off on to another fellow.” The actor then spoke. of former days, when he and ¢his associates al- ways made money enough in the winter to spend in giving plays at Reading in the sum- mer. ‘‘In fact,” said he, ‘‘ the people of Read- ing expected it of us every year.” On one o¢ cassion the manager, who had a talent for making speeches before the curtain, rushed out in grief and distraction to apologise for the absence of the leading man. ‘‘Ladies and. gentlemen the fact is, our tragedian’s father is dead. Under these circumstances, | threw myself on your generosity, faithfully assuri you, if you will overlook his fault, that it shall never happen avain.” ——_ ——-8 <> o----— The Dangers of “ Pig-tails.” Around the monkey’s cages and the giraffes’ pen in the Aquarium in New York are posted various notices to ladies, warning them not to approach too near, lest the animals seize their bonnets ; yet the attendants say it frequently occurs that some lady disregards the notices and her millinery suffers damages. Recently, however those in the Aquarium were startled by a sudden crash of broken china from the erase room, and hastened thither were greeted with a remarkable sight, The noise, or so much of it as did not consist of the chat. tering of the animals, came from the mouth of an almon-eyed oriental gentleman, in a blue blouse and black trousers. He stood with his back to the cage in which the largest monkeys are kept, and with both his hands'to his head, was 8 ling to tear himself away. He was try | firmly held, however, by the pig-tail, which, firmly attached by nature to the back of his head at one end, was almost as firmly grasped at the other by as many monkeys as could get hold of it. e one at theend uibbled com- placently at the neat bow4 of ribbon that se- cured the hair, and the others were blasphe- ming vigorously in their native tongue. As quickly as they could, from laughter, the at- tendants opened the door, and on enteri beat off the monkeys and rescued the gentle- man. He shook his fist vindictively at the cage, and hurried away without leaving his card, while the baffled apes made din enough te induce the seals, the hippopotamns, and all the birds to jein the chorus. ll OBO ne The Laughing Hyena. The laugh of the Hyena is a misnomer, as it has no laugh at all, thugs certainly when heard at some distance it has a great resem- blance to the la of some humans; but it is no laugh, in fact just the contrary, as it is only when in anger or terribly excited that he thus lifts up his voice. Watch him then as he. paces round and round his eage! See aow the. rough hair or inane which runs all along the dorsal line bristle up. No other animal pre- sents such a peculiar back bone appearance. See his sharp fangs exposed, his eyes flashing, and his whole frame in spasmodic action, and all because his keeper has given his next-door neighbor his portion of meat, while as yet none to Thith ; and yeu will readily perceive that, these discordant sounds are the result of rage and unsatisfied desire, and in no way related to merriment or gleeful mirth. It has been supposed by some that the hyena is rather a cowardly brute, but it is a mistake, as his courage is quite equal to his voracity. Man he will not attack except in self-defence, or when driven to desperation for food, but he will wage fierce war against quadra much larger than himself. He fears neither kingly lion, the wily panther, nor the fieree ounce ; and by either stealthy attacks or i manoeuvring, the hyena seldom fails to con- quer his foes. The most serious charge against the hyena seems to be that of robbing the graves of theirdead, and feeding on putrid meat, which charges are doubtless true. im those lands where other food is scarce; but certain it is that in the Zoo our hyena, be he striped or spotted, will not touch any pound of flesh or bone that is “high.” Perhaps im- prisonment has taught the brute better habits. As to the charge that he is untameable, we have said he ean be made a companion of, and most travellers and naturalists now agree im | the statement. Stealman says, “At the Co | (Africa) {the spotted hyena (considered the | most untameable) is domesticated in the houses, where he is preferred to the dog for sagacity and even qualifications for the chase.” There is a saying of some one that “every kind of heast is tamed, and hath been tained of mankind ;” and pronenny the hyenas of either variety are as fully susceptible of kindness and as capable of education as other wild and fero- cions heasts. -_> - The happiest piece of intelligence we have read in many a long day is a despatch i that a man in Memphis shot and killed another man for saying ‘* What do you s-o-y ?’ tohim. Send that man to Burlington; we'll pay his expenses, guarantee a two weeks’ en- gagement, and furnish revolvers and ammuni- tion. All we want is the man.—Burlington Hawke ye. ar DS IP oO A Brooklyn lawyer was noticed at a re- cent coficert quite enthusiastically applaud- ing one of thesingers. ‘‘Fond of music, isn’t he?’ said one acquaintance to another. ‘*No,” was the reply; ‘‘it’s mere profession- al instinct. He’s moving for a new trial.” ee Photographer—‘‘ Now, sir, if you will look a little less as if you had a bill to meet, a little more as if ye’d been left a legacy, you'll get @ picture,” asked for,”