aul tbe. E EXAMINER VOL: 4. TH SS SS f eee aa CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, ONDAY, MARCH 10, 1879. —,— NO, 536," THe Dairy EXAMINER {s Published every Evening. OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. 1. KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, $2 50 Three Months, L 25 One Month, 0 50 One Week, 0 12 — a® Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for month!y, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- cation. W. L, COTTON, {| J. W. MITCHELL, Manager. ! Office Sup’t, = wn PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. Iii. Winter Arrangement, ON AND AFTER _ MONDAY, DECEMBER 30th, 1878, Trains Going West. | STATIONS. No. 1. | No.3 sees | Express. ; Mixed. Georgetown Dp 8.10 am} Card ** $335 “| - Ro M.Stew’t Jun dp10.05 “ Royalty Jun. “11.20 * : on “11.40 * (a town dp 8.00 am) Dp 3.30 pm Royalty Jua. * 8.20 § 7 © 3.50 * N, Wiltshire “238 1° 1 4.468 * Yeeigs Biver ana ‘6 ‘< on sé readal e ‘e . sé sé ‘ ce County Line atan or = sf Kensington “41.60 4 ** GSD ° he at arl1/30 ** far 7.00 ‘‘ Summerside dp 2.40 pm Wellington “ita” Port Hull 4355." 0’ Leary ** 5.33 * AYberton | \ap 6:40. + Lignish jar. 7.25 ‘‘ Trains tioing East. STATIONS: No. 2 No. 4 Express. | Mixed. Tignish | Dp 7.00 am Alberton * Tae 0’ Lear ‘* $47 ** Port Hill **10.05 ** Wellington Bry RS : . \ jar 11.40 ** Summerside } \dp 2.30pm] Dp 8.45 am Kensington wae. 1 ** G15 “ County Line ae + eo. e* Breadalbane “tee “sem Hunter River $4 fieQR 4% <i °*30.47 *° N. Wiltshire ~<a "| “12.4 ** Royalty Jun. ‘$5.40 ** | “11.55 “ , ‘ar 6.00 * jarl2.15 pm Chewa } jdp 2.55 © Reyalty Jun. - i * ; ar Mt. Stewart dp 440 « Cardi ** 6.00 ** Georgetown lar. 6.25 «| SOURIS BRANCH. Going West. Going East. | Nob. | No.6 STATIONS. | Mixed. ||STATIONS.| Mixed. i al a ne ee a nena sis | A. M. o P.M [PR 700 Mts tw’'tJne|Dp 4.40 Souris Harmony 7.23) | Morell * 46 5.54 Morell ‘* 9.13|| Harmony oe 7 St. Peters ‘« §,42//St. Peters |. “ Mt S’tw'tJne} ar 9.55||Souris ar 7.35 Cc. J. BRYDGES, WM. McKECHNIE, Gen. Sup, Gov. Raihways. Supt. P. EB. 1. R. Ch’town, Dec. 27, 1878. p ne ar.h pres kca sp sj ap 61 : enti fon GRAY’S SPECIFIC MEDICINE ax. the Great TRADE MARK. ‘English edy. an unfail- @ ing cure for Sem- NS ee natorrahes S rrahe a, ° Impotency, and F SS ee all diseases that “as Before Takingfollow as a se-After Taking, quence Of gelf-abuse; as loss of -Memory, Uni- versal Lassitnde, Pain in the Back, Dimness of Vision;-Premature Old Age, and many other Diseases that lead to Insanity or Con- sumption.. ¢@ Full particulars in our pam3 phlet, which we desire to send free by mail to _ every one. wea. The Specific Medicine is sold by all druggfsts at $1 per package, or six pack- ages for $5, or will be sent free, by mail, on receipt of the money, by addressing The Gray Medicine Co., indsor, Ont., Canada. aa Sold in Charlottetown by all Drugists, and by all wholesale and retail Druggists in the United States and Canada. January 24, 1879. DR. CREAMER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Kent Street, Charlottetown, (Three doors from Dr, Johnson’s). | notice. ow H. W. Vinnicombe, Resident Piano Timer &: Regulator, H* adopted the Dollar system of Tuning if -~—six visits a year, at one dollar per visit. This system is much more economical and satisfactory than any other, as the cost is less, and the instrument is kept constantly in tune and repair. A visit will be made to all parts of the Island once a year, or oftner if desired. Pianos tuned by Hamilton’s system of even emperament. sa Orders may be left at Mr. Fletcher's Music Store, or at Bremner Bros., Queen Street. Jan. 6, 1879— COMMERCIAL — Union Assurance Company, OF LONDON, ENCLAND. CAPITAL - - $12,500,000. “NSURANCE effected against Fire on all descriptions of Property throughout the Island. ga Low rates and prompr settlement of losses, HORACE HASZARD, Agent for P. E. Island. Ch’town, Dee, 20, IS78— a QUREN INSURANCE CO'Y, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING, NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent fer Prince Edward Island June, 18S77— BROADWAY HOUSE, BY MACKENZIE. HE former ‘‘City Hotel,” now the Broadway House, Creat George Street, opposite the Catholic Cathedral, is now open for Permanent and Transient Boarders. The rooms have been thoroughly renovated and newly farnished. The tables will be supplied with the best the market affords, and fares reasonable. A Suite of Rooms convenient for a small family, together. with board &c., can be had in the Broadway House. Nov. 23, 1878 —tf £. Q. HUNTER, Italian and American Marble, Monuments, Tablets, Headstones, Mantries, Cenrre TaBLe Tops, Bureav AnD CommopE Tors, WasH Bow. Stabs, &c., &c. Prices to suit, and satisfaction guaranteed. a@& Designs furnished on application. “Ge Corner Hillsborough and Keat Streets, Char lottetown. November 6, 1878. een WAGSTAFF'S HOTEL. PP XHE Subseriber having fitted up the Hotel formerly known as THE RANKIN HOUSE, in first-class style, is now prepared to give eomfortable accommodation to Permanent and Transient Boarders. Tourists and others will receive every atten? tion at the Wagstaff’s Hotel. WM. WAGSTAFF. May 25, 1878 RANKIN HOUSE, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. BE. 1. 3.3. DAVIES - - - Proprictor (Formerly of St. Lawrence Hotel, Pictou). ot the well-known Hotel is now open under the present management ; and, having been newly furnished throughout, it offers every comfort to the travelling public. Suit- able Sample Rooms for commercial gentlemen. Oct. 15, 1878—3m! JAMES HOBBS, CABINET-MAZER, UPHOLSTERER, ETC, AS REMOVED from McPhail’s Corner to the premises just vacated by Mr. Joun StrumBLEs, Prince Street, where, with increased facilities, he is prepared to attend te the wants of his customers with punctuality and despatch, and on reasonable terms. CARPETS cut = laid. tie PAINTING an pairing neatly done. Picture Frames and Mouldings constantly on hand, or made up to order. All kinds of Household Furniture made to order, cheap and good. New Pattern School Desks made at short A first-class article. a@ Don’t forget the place: PRINCE STREET (near the new Baptist Church in course of erection). sw ENTRANCE BY SIDE DOOR. @™ Oct, 15—3m Charlottetown, Oct, 26, 1878— | } Eraniuer (ie! 13°79. JOB PRINTING PROMPTLY DONE IN GOOD STYLE AND AT LOW PRICES! THE DAILY EXAMINER Local News, Foreign News, Political News. Social News, Commercial News. Shipping News, laid before Subscribers, Purchasers, and Borrowers, EVERY EVENING, PRICE % CENTS. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Quarterly ....-.eeeee eee e G28 Half-Yearly.....eceeeseess 4,50 ~—————— -—- THE DAILY HAS A Largely Increased Circulation AND IS AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING; MEDIUM THE WEEKLY EXAMINER Made up from Tue Datrty—a Compen- dium of all the News of the Week. Subscription price only One Dollar a Year! IN ADVANCE. Sent to any address in Great Britain or North America. Persons having relatives or friends abroad cannot do better than send them Tue WeEkLy ExaMrver. sax A few Advertisements only, received J. W. MITCHELL, | W. L. COPPON, Manager. Office Sup't. T'o the E itor of the Hramine «lie Correspondence. a Ba We do not hold ourselves responsible for ‘the statements or opinions of our correspondents. Dear Srr,—In my list of the aged dead, in your Saturday’s issue, add the following, as ther come within the two months I se- lected for my researches : - YEARS. Jean Bateman . ; : 96 Mrs. John Campbell . ’ et Catherine Treanor ; ; , 93 The husband of the latter is siiil living, aud in his ninetieth year. Yours, &c., Cc. Ch’town, 10th March, 1879. — <> oa —__—___ --—- Post Office Department. The total number of pest offices in Can- ada at January Ist last was 5,378, with 38,- 730 miles of post route; the annual rate of mail travel was 15,427,323; letters sent by post, 44,000,000; post cards, 6,455,000; registered letters, 1,980,000; free letters, ,250,000; newspapers and periodicals, 9,973,148; book packets and miscellaneous articles, 5,090,000; parcels by parcel post, 107,800. The revenue for the year was $1,620,022; expenditure, $2,110,365. The number of nioney order offices Ist January, 769; amount of money orders issued in the year, $7,130,895. Number of Savings Bank Post Offices 1st January, 297; num- ber of depositors in do., 25,535; amount deposited, $1,724,371; ameunt of deposits and interest to credit of depositors, $2;754,- 484. Of money orders with the United States there were issued 328,264, and there were paid 246,586. No defalcations or losses of a serious nature occurred in car- rying on the money erder system last year. Some interesting facts are stated in reference tofree delivery of letters and papers in the leading cities. It is shown that the total number of both delivered free in Hali- fax was 11,385; Hamilton 19,024; London 15,303; Montreal 50,051; Ottawa 24,408; Quebec 12,657; Toronto 58,647; St. John, N. B., 13,725.—Total 205,200. Number of letter carriers employed, 246. The mails are carried by railway 5,129} miles. There are 69 postal cars on the railways. The re- port says the Pembina Branch of the Can- ada Pacific Railway between Winnipeg and Pembina and the section of railway within the United States, between Pembina and Glyndon, having been completed, from 16th Jan., 1879, there has been a continuous railway communication with Winnipeg, re- ducing the time of transit between that city and Windsor only to about three days. The payment of the Department for mail transportation, during 1878 amounted to $31 ,448.35—distributed as follows :— _ County Mail Carriers $12,213 31 Muttart & Irving 1,640 00 Steam Navigation Comp’y 10,000 00 P. E. Island Railway 7,595 04 $31,448 35 The payment for salaries in this Island amount to $12,217.46, distributed as fol- lows :— Charlottetown Post Office, $6,600 00 Railway Postal Cierks, . . 1,403 50 Summerside & other Post Offices, 4,213 96 $12,217 46 Advertising and printing for the Depart- ment in the Island cost $75.10; stationery (supplied from Ottawa) $402.72. Tue Duke of Edinburgh, who is not only a royal personage, but something of a vielinist recently appeared at a concert of the ‘* Royal Albert Hall Amateur So- ciety,” when, according to the London Figaro, the following musica] and dra- matic scene took place :—‘‘The Duke was asked to play, but he excused himself on the perfectly justifiable ground that the conductor, Mr. George Mount, had foolish- ly omitted to put the Duke’s fiddle preper- ly intune. The Duke was then called to the conductor’s desk, and the first violin, drawing a crumbled slip from his waist- coat pocket, read what purported to be an address of welcome of the Duke to Eng- land. The affair was, of course, purely an impremptu one, but the Duke, doubtless imagining in advance that which actually took place, had provided himself with a re- ply. He drew another crumpled slip from his pocket, and stammered a goed deal over the following eloyuent oration :—‘‘I am very much obliged to all my kind friends, and am very thankful for the magnificent reception you have given ie. I intend, that is to say, I hope I intend, which is to say I should like to say I hopel should like to say I should like to attend, or rather to show my gratitude by attending as punc- tually as my many engagements will permit the rehearsals so excellantly,admirably ana elegantly conducted by our good friend Georgie Mount.” Tue Zulu king—Cetewayo-—has apeculiar way of responding to ultimstuns. One of the demands formulated in the ultimatum sent forward at the clese of last year to his Majesty by Sir Fartie Frere, Governor- General of British South Africa, was that henceforth he should not on any pretence, without previous and fair trial, put his sub- jects to death. This demand incensed his Majesty greatly. He arose in his wrath and instantly ordered that the men, women and children of three villages, accused or suspected of withcraft, should be massacred. The peor creatures thus doomed to death numbered sixty in all, and they were all murdered, as ordered by the dusky tyrant. | Marine’ and Fisheries Report. We have received the Eleventh Annual Report of the Department of Marine and Fisheries for the fiscal year ending 30th June, 1878. An examination of its pages show that the fisheries are improving, and that their produce compares favorably with the returns of the preceding year. In‘1877 it was valued at $12,029,957, and in 1878 at $13,373,486, being an increase of nearly half a million dollars. The value of fish exported was $6,929,. 366, against $5,874,368 in 1877, being an increase of $1,055,006. The value of fish imported into the Dominion and entered for domestic consumption was $1,300,468, against $1,360,350 in 1877, or a decrease of $66,882. The returns of the several Provinces are not given, so that we can offer no com- parsion of the returns of each. But we find that Ontario has absorbed no less than $12,723 in the protection of her compara- tively small fisheries, and Quebec no less than $13,662, while Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, which yield more than twe- thirds of the whole catch, has received but $15,292 for the former Province, and $10,- 926 for the latter. Possibly the reason the yield of each Province is not given, is to hide this great discrepancy in the apper- tionment of the sum voted by Parliament for the protection of the fisheries. ; Under the head of Fish Breeding, we find that Ontario has had $5,234, Quebec $7,059, Nova Scetia but $3,550, and New Brunswick only $1,468, while Prince Ed- ward Island has been entirely neglected in this respect. The whole amount she re- ceived for the protection of her fisheries, which far exceed those of Ontario, was $1,836. —————-—--_-. <> o——-——— An Unlucky English Regiment. (From the Washington Capital.) The recent fate of the 24th Regiment of the British line in Zululand is peculiarly melancholy. The regiment is nearly 200 years old, having been originally embodied by William of Orange in 1691, for service in the Flemish War and the Netherlands. Its record shows a tour of service unsur- passed by any other regiment of the British army for variety and hard knocks, and it has always been unlucky. Its first experi- ence was a disaster, being almost annihi- lated at the battle of Steenkirke, when it was hardly two years old. Subsequently it suffered out of all proportion to its comrades at Blenhein, Ramilies and Malplaquet, and was finally relieved and sent home, in the latter part of Queen Anne's War, in conse- quense of the impossibility of keeping its ranks recruited. Forty years afterward it had an almost similar experience on the same ground, in the war of the succession, and still later, in the 18th Century, it suf- fered immense losses, and was at last cap- tured bodily in the American Revolution. Returning to England, it enjoyed only a few years of rest when it was sent to Egypt, and participated in Sir Ralph Abererombie’s operations, where its bad luck did not de- sert it. Thence the regiment went to the Peninsula, where it campaigned five years, sutlering, as usual, beyond all proportion. It was foremost at the storming of Ciudad Rodrigo and St. Sebastian; in the defiles of the Pyrenees; in the forcing of the passage of the Bidassoa and Nine, and in the battles of Nivelle, Orthes and Toulouse. It escaped Waterloo only by coming to America, after the first abdication of Napoleon, and _ participating in the operations which terminated the war ef 1812 in humiliation to the arms of England. Then it was sent to India where it had a hard round of service under Ceombermere, Hardinge, and Napier, suffer- ing, as usual, excessively in the first Sikh war. It was no novice at the Cape, either, for it had already borne the brunt of two Caffir wars, and had done as much to estab- lish British rule in that quarter as any other regiment that ever served there. In short England has had only one great war in nearly two hundred years, in which the old 124th has not bourne a hand. That one was the Crimean war, which it escaped chiefly on account of the sympathy at the Horse Guards for its unlucky tradition, and thongh it was on the roster for foreign ser- vice when the Crimean expedition was made up, another regiment was detailed to take its place, and it was sent to one of the colonies. Finally, after nearly two hun- dred years of slaughter in every clime, and in battle against every enemy of England, civilized or barbarous, the 24th has been annihilated by savages in South Africa. ee ern If a man looks for fresh eggs every morn- ing at this season of the year, he is en the wrong lay.— New Orleans Picayune. And if a man loafs on the corners every day in the year, he is on the wrong stand. —Detroit Free Press. And if he goesto bed ona horse railread he will be found on the wrong track.—New Orleans Picayune, And amine the chair, he is liable to be on the wrong tack.—Boston Globe. And if, in- stead of a tack, he sits down a crooked pin he is on the wrong bent.—N., Y. Herald And if he is cheated with a bad half penn he is on the wrong cent.—Toronto Nats And if he mistakes a man wearing an ulster in the distance, fora woman, he will have the wrong clue. >. — invented. Satisfaction teed, or money refunded. —W. R. Borenam, South Side Queen Square—lm taw ifhe be a schoolmaster and neglects to ex- — Try our Climax Ice Creeper—the best: ever: ei