EK EXAMINER. T CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1878. 1878. i | LE ; Kares or SUBSCRIPTION : | > 50 | ——— A TE ee NO, 271 eae = VOL 2 ee I ELEN IO SANT 14 NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. THE SITUATION. ee ee ’ From the Daily Patriot. er ae a ee - mem te PO names were separated by several others, _.|and that one was asked to give her father’s ) | address, and the other that of a friend in the country,” and say itis to be regretted that a good cause has been damaged in | such a manner. ENGLISH HONESTY. I will-finish with an item from ‘ Truth.” Two gentlemen were travelling, last week, on the railroad between Ems and Ehren- THe Datty EXAMINER Correspondence, Is Published every Evening. OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. L. LONDON NOTES. (By an Island Correspondent. ) . Lonpon, March 29, 1878. LONDON, April 10. | Haying a few spare minutes, I am string- Gortschakoff’s reply shows a genuine de- | ing together some passing topics that may sire to insure a peaceable solution. possibly interest the readers of the Ex- Six Months, $ "i a Betcrape, April 10. =| AMENER. % breitstein. One picked up a purse contain- Three Months, 0 50 [t is confirmed that Prince Gluka is au- LOSS OF THE ‘‘EURYDICE. ” ing money, and asked his Semen Cus en, 0 12 thorized to inform Gortchakoff that the| The weather has been remarkably fine whether is. belonged »to. him, Bin, ob One Week, aw Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli cation. Ww. L. COTTON, i J. W. MITCHELL, Manager. | PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 8. WIKTER ARRANGEMENT, l'o come into foree MONDAY, DEC. 24, 1877 — TRAINS GOING WEST. i No. 5. No7 STATIONS. Express |Mixed ee: eee gona ae P. x GEORGETOWN Dp. &. 5 Cardigan “* 9.02 . § Ar. 10,25 Mount Stewart Junction } Dp. 10.35 Royalty J unction ** 11.46 Pp. M. > Pee. 9 ” CHARLOTTETOWN ae Dp. 2. | Dp. §.00 i Royalty Junctic ‘“ 9.251.°° 306 Noxth Wiltshire «© 10,22| * 4.02 Hunter River “© 10.40] ** 4.20 Bradalbane “1118! * 5.00 County Line “* 11,28} ‘** 5.10 P. M. Kensington “ 12.07| “ 5.50 se Ar. 12.45 SUMMERSIDE Dp. 200] * 6.20 Wellington “945 Port Hill +o 228 O'Leary “4.48 Alberton “© 5.45 Tignish “ 6.35 _. ‘fPBAENS GOING EAST. : No.® : No. 4 STATIONS. Express | MIXeb. wrt AM, ur TIGNISH Dp. 8.00 ALBERTON “ 8.55 0’ “ 9.52 Port Hill ‘ 11.07 Weilington ae ll P. Mi. A. M. y . Ar. 12.35 SUMMERSIDE De. 210IDp. 8,35 K “ 248) “© 912 County Line “ 3.30] “ 9.50 Brakalbane « 3.40) ‘- 10.10 Hunter River +. AO £8 10.48 North Wiltshire eae 10,50 Royalty Junction ** 5.30) ‘ 11.56 ‘HARLOTTETOWN = $ [AF 3-50 c Dp. 2.05] “ 12,20 Royalty Junction “ 2% TxSTEWART J {ge MTS eT June. 4 |Dp. 3.50 Cardi “* 612 GEORGETOWN. Ar. 5.40 SOURIS BRANCH. Coing W: Going East. stations.| \N°-5 1 srations.| Fo. © a MIXED. i" "| MIXED. 7 wal Pe Souris Dp, 7.30) Mt. St’w't Jc! Dp. 3.50 Harmony ** '7.55)/Lot 40 | a St. Peter's ** 9.10} Morell ‘© 4,32 Morell “ 9,42/|St. Peter’s © 5.05 Lot 40 “« 9.48)\Harmony | ‘* 6.20 Mt St’ w’tJncl Ar. 10, 25)/Souris jAr. 6.45 W. McKECHNIE Sup’t. P. E. L., Railway. EE C. J. BRYDGES, Gen. Superintendent Govt. Railways. Notice te the Public \UPPLIES for the ‘Soup Kitchen” will reach the Committee ii left at_ the Store of Mr, Alex. Horne, Corner of Queen and Fitzréy Streets. Donations of money will be thankfully re- ceived by them through Dr. Dodd and Mr. J. Quirk, N. B.—Food for the sick carefully prepared by the Committee. Noy. 30, 1877. | MOLASSES SOLE LEATHER | 2) PUNCHEONS Porto Rico and Cuba ‘MOLASSES, SIDES New York SOLE LEATHER, For sale cheap, at ARCH’D KENNEDY’S. lower Water Street, Ch’town, March 29—(in KI) BXAMINE? 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. SIX COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $5.50 in advance. TEN COPIES to on address, or addresse. separately, as desired, $9.00 in advanced FIFTEEN COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as required, $13.50 in advance, TWENTY COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $17.00. IN DULL TIMES —GET THE— CHEAPEST AND Bast ee ee The Weekly Examiner is acknowledged to be ahead of any other paper in the Province in the item of LOCAL NEWS and is always well filled with Political, Shipping, Commercial and General Information. The debates of the Local Legislature will be carefully and impartially given. Special tele- grams and letters from ‘Our Own Ottawa Correspondent” wiil contain everything of in- terest transpiring in the Dominion Parlia- ment. A Good Story will be made a specialty. —_——0°-—-—— The Daily Hxaminer 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. - - - - For One Month, - - - - - 1.25 00 am ADDRESS, W. L. COTTON, Manager Examiner Printing and Publishing Company. Ch’town, Dec, 6, 1877. toumanian army would be crushed rather than disarmed. [tis stated that Russia is about to relin- quish the clause of the treaty which guaran- tees the passage of the army through Rou- mania, and will send a delegate to treat directly with Roumania on the subject. Rome, April 10. The minister of foreign affairs in the Chamber of Deputies said that Italy was totally free from any engagements except those devolving from treaties which are con- stituted the public law of Europe. The progress of negotiations between Europe and the Cabinets afforded grounds for be- lieving that peaceful settlements would be made in any event. Italy would preserve a strict neutrality. Vienna, April 10. The ‘‘ Fremdenblatt”’ says that peace can only be obtained by Russia modifying the treaty of San Stefano in conjunction with other powers. The press considers that England has already gained 2 moral victory for herself and Europe. - OTTAWA NOTES. _ 4 HIT AT M. LETELLIER AND HIS FRIENDS. (Correspondence to Toronto Mail.) The House had a good laugh this after- noon provoked by one of Sir John McDon- ald’s happy jnots. M. Laflamme introduced a bill to amend the Penitentiary Act. In the most serious way, Sir John rose and asked the Premier if he had received the Governor-General’s assent for the submis- sion of the Bill to the House. Mr. La- flamme looked at the Premier and the Pre- mier looked at Mr. Laflamme, and ‘the Pre- mier hesitatingly said ‘“‘ lt is not neces- sary,’ and Mr. Blake echoed ‘ It is not necessary. ‘: Oh,” aid Bir John! “T am quite of that opinion, but the Lieut Governor of Quebec seems to think that every measure of his Gevernment should have his approval before being introduced. The House readily saw the joke and laugh- ed immoderately. ‘*a NEW I have reason to believe that M. De Boucherville has completed a reply to M. Letellier’s ‘‘explanatory note,” and that the Governor-General has consented to receive it. I have no means of knowing how or when it will be made public, but there is good authority for stating that before M. Letellier’s note was in his Excellency’s pos- session fifty thousand copies of it were printed off and lavishly scattered through- out every parish in Quebec. MEDIUM.” the people of his Province. A NARROW ESCAPE. The Government had a narrow escape from defeat to-night-on M. Frechette’s motion fora Select Committee to secure a better translation of the British North America Act—being sustained by a majority of only sixteen. Ona former occasion Sir John Macdonald pointed out that the exist- ing translation ran through the statutes, and that, at all events, until they were being consolidated it would be inconvenient and improper to have a new translation. To please their friend, M. Frechette, how- eyer, and give the work of translation to M. Frechette’s brother, the Government sup- ported the motion. Had all the Opposition members voted against the motion the pro- bability is that the Government would have been defeated. Their narrow escape may have the effect of making them a little more careful during the remainder of the session. THE P. E. I. RAILWAY. Mr. Pope created considerable amuse- ment last evening by reading a letter from the manager of the P. E. I. Railway to an Opposition editor (Gorman of the Progress) who applied for a pass to accompany the press excursionists, telling him that passes were only issued to ‘‘friendly editors, who would treat the railway and its officers courteously.” Mr. Pope said $6,500 was charged for fencing last year, enough to fence the whole road, and yet less th thirty miles were fenced. KAMINISTIQUIA. The Premier, Mr. Mackenzie having in January, 1876, announced that he requir- ed a certain tract of land for railway pur- poses. Oliver, Davison & Co., in the fel- lowing July deliberately proceeded to erect a ‘* hotel” there, which, says the builder, costs $2,000 at the outside. Mr. McKenzie then buys it of them, their Mr. Brown vir- tually conducting beth the sale and pur- chase for $5,029. This is what is known in Reform circles as practical statesmanship. hak de oe vil Frederick W. A. Osborne, manager of the Dominion Type Foundry Company and publisher of the Canadian Spectator, a weekly semi-religious paper, edited by Rev. Mr. Bray, has been arrested’for embezzle- ment, One may very | well fancy what Lord Dufferin must think of being madé the medium by a Lieutenant- | Governor of issuing a political manifesto to | (for this moist country) for the past few weeks; but the last day or two has been colder. On Sunday last the morning was fine, but at3 p.m. a heavy snowsquall came on very suddenly, scattering the boats on the river and clearing the streets of loungers. And next morning the current subject of conversation was the loss of H. M. 8. Eury- dice, a training ship, on a homeward bound cruise. She left Bermuda three weeks ago, and was passing the Isle of Wight under all sail, expecting tc ancher at Spithead in an hour or two, when the squall struck her and she capsized directly, only two persons being saved out of her crew of three hun- dred. CLEOPATRAS NEEDLE. The obelisk still is moored in the river off the embankment. A great many sites have been proposed for it. to be erected on. A medical man writes thus respecting it:‘‘It’s previous history, hieroglyphies and attend- ant associations make the monolith as un- suited to the Thames’ banks as a factory chimmey to a coral reef. Does not every- thing, even climate, point to Egypt as its appropriate site! There accordingly I beg to suggest it be placed.” “Truth,” in noticing the letter says, ‘‘I like this medical men, for his note paper is headed with his coat of arms; they are a duck with the motto, “Quack, Quack, Quack.” ONE OF BISMARCK'S JOKES, The same journal also quotes slhona of Prince Bismarck apropos of England and Russia. Said the Prince, ‘Horses and fish cannot fight ;” but he adds : ‘“‘but surely,the dialogue between the Angel and the Prophet in the Book of Esdras, is far more to the point :— He (the Angel) answered me, and said, I went into a forest, into a plain, and the trees took counsel, and said, come let us go and make war agains? +h) con, that htaay depart from before us, and that we may make more woods, ' The floods of the sea also in like manner took counsel, and said, Come, let us go up and subdue the woods of the plain, that there also we may make another country. The thought of the wood was in vain, for the fire came and consumed it. The thought of the floods of the sea came likewise to nought, for sand stood up and stopped them.” THE EASTERN QUESTION. The Eastern Question, of course, fills the papers, and the theatres and streets teem with songs alluding to it. One which you may have heard has one yerse something like this :— ‘* We don’t want to fight, we don't ; But, by jingo, if we do, We've got the arms, we’ve got the meu— And we've got the money too.” Another version has :— ** We don’t want to fight, we don’t ; Bunt, by jingo, if we do, Ve’ll have two shillings on the income tax— And a jolly good licking too.” The ‘‘ Church Times” begins an article by saying : ‘* Althouyh we don’t swear by the war god jingo;” aul some of the French papers are curious to know who jingo is. BAKER PASHA. Col. Valentine Baker (Baker Pasha) has returned to London, and it is said has dined with the Prince of Wales. Some of the papers hope the saying may be contradicted. A CLEVER SKETCH. One of the clever sketches in the shop windows contains the four principal parties to the coming Congress. The Czar, the Sultan, John Bull and the Emperor Francis Joseph ; and underneath the words ** Who will solve the Eastern Question,” then the whole thing folds up and shows, as the an- swer, ‘‘ Bismarck.” FASHIONABLE COLORS. London fog, London smoke, Damascus blade, lizard green, golden lizard, toast, beetle brown, wood moss, copper, Floren- tine bronze, Spanish sky, black pearl, flesh pink and almond green area few of the fashionable colors this spring. Beads are used a great deal in trimming,—moonlight beads being the latest novelty. TRADE. ‘he shop windows are filled with new spring materials, but there is a universal eomplaint of dullness of trade. ANTI-CONFESSIONAL, A great anti-confession memorial has just been presented to the Queen. It seems strange, after reading “that your memarial ists, as sincerely attached to the National Church of their fathers, view, with deep alarm,” &c., to find the list of memorialistsa headed by His Highness the Maharajah Dulup Singik. Many of the secular papers comment strongly on the way the petition is said to have been got up, and ask whether the statement is true “that the memorial was taken to a young ladies’ boarding- school, where all the pupils were ordered to sign, and were told not to give the school as their jaddress, but their home residences ; and also that in the case of two sisters,their served the German, ‘‘ youmust be an Eng- lishman, because no German ever picked up a purse and said anything about it.” My correspondent, who sends me the story, re- joices that our national character has not lost its prestige. But, may not the Ger- man have perceived, by his companions ac- cent, that he was an Englishman and wished to pay him a compliment! Moreover, the German seems to me to have been as honest as the Englishman, otherwise, he would promptly have replied, thatthe purse was his. Vox. A Gallant Nova Scotian. THE LOSS OF THE “‘LAURETTA”—ADMIRABLE MANAGEMENT BY THE OFFICERS OF THE INMAN STEAMER ‘‘CITY OF NEW YORK.” On the 27th of February a serious col- lision occured in the English Channel, by which the Nova Scotian brigantine Lawretta was immediately sunk. The Lowretta was bound for Liverpool, and the City of New York was on her trip Eastward. At 3.40 a.m. the Lawretta struck the steamer on the port bow, breaking one of the plates about five feet from the water line. In an instant the life boats were lowered, under orders of the experienced commander of the City of New York, and the Lauretta was found in a sinking condition. The work of saving her crew was proceeded with, and in a few minutes all were saved, the last one having been taken from the wreck after cutting away a portion of the deck. The City of New York cruised about the neighborhood until 6.50 a. m., and as no more were to be rescued, proceeded to her destination. The crew of the Lawretta re- ceived the best of care and attention at the hands of the officers of the City of New York, and many expressions of thankful- ness weew heard from the lips of all. The boats of the Lawretta had been lost in the storm of the few days previous, and the officers and men of the Inman. steamer de- serve great praise for their noble conduct, and special praise is due to 3d officer Pas- sow, who rescued the last man through the most heroic exertions, by cutting away a part of the deck when the vessel was almost engulphed in the water. ——— > 4 The Northen Light. TESTIMONIAL TO CAPTAIN AND OFVICERS. Sarurpay, April 6.—During a trip of the steamer ‘* Northern Light” from George- town, P. E. L, to Pictou, N. 5., extending over three days of the first week of April, a meeting of the passengers was held in the cabin, at which the following resolution was unanimously adopted :— Resolved, That we beg to express our sincere appreciation of the care and ability of Captain Finlayson and the officers of the ‘* Northern Light,” and of their courtesy and patience dn- ring a most trying and dangerous period,while detained in heavy ice, densely packed by con- tinuous northeasterly winds, Experienced navigators who were on board expressed thigir unqualitied approval of the able manner in which the boat was handled in ice of greater thickness and extent thanthey had ever before seen in yg Northumberland Straits. (Signed), H. D. Faster, St. John, N. B.; T. G. La- vers, Baston, Mass.; E. F. Kimball, Boston, Mass.; Captain John McLeod, New London, P. E. L: J. J. Davies, Pictou, N. 8.; Wm. E. Allen, P. EF. Island; L. B. Tewkesbury, Boston, Mass.; C. W. Lavers, Boston, Mass., James P. Donovan, Souris, P. E. I. (Committee ex- pressing unanimous opinion uf passengers. ) =) eee The Seal Fishery for 1878. The following information from the Seal Fishe:y, which, as far as can be judged at present, promises to be very successful this year. The sailing vessel Prospero, arrived at Channel, on the 30th March, with 2,000, She reports having seen no other vessels. The 8S. S. Falcon, arrived at St. John’s on the Ist of April, with 20,000. She reports having struck the seals on the 24th March. Tho S. S. Arctic also arrived at St. John’s on the Ist inst., with 33,000 (old seals.) The S. S. Walrus arrived on the 2nd at St. John’s with 7,000. She reports the S. 8. Kite coming close after, full The sailing vessel Rusiana, of Bay Balls, arrived on the Qnd at St. John’s with 2,000. The sailing vessel Glengarry, of Harbor Grace, was lost in the ice ; all hands were saved, ten of whom arrived in St. John’s in the Falcon ; the remainder are on board of other steam- ers. Larger. —The 8. 8. Kite has arrived, and reports the following steamers :— Wolf, 15,- 000: Bear, 15,000; Ranger, 11,000; Nim- rod, 2000; Panther, 6000 ; Merlin, 4000; Neptune, 8000.—North Sydney Herald. a sae lll acini Milk-dealers in England are being heavily fined for adulterating milk with water. Fines go as high as $30. The Montreal Star says “ Rine’s transgres- sion cannot be measured by the standard of an ordinary sinner,”. He used to measure it by pints,