eee eg aem THE —— a — a : 2 etn ES Lee” 790+ snes XAMD KR. eS VOL. 6. Tus Dairy EXAMINER {a Published every Evening. OFFICE: {N@s’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. 1. HKatzs oF SUBSCRIPTION: #ix Months, - - - $2 50 Three Months, - : - 1 ® One Monta, - - - 0 &O Oae Week, : - - 018 ge Advertising at most moderate rates. fentracts may be made for monthly, quar- | er half-yearly advertisements, on appli- erly, eaten. w. L. COTTON, J. W. MITCHELL, Marager. Utiice Sup’t | Prince Edward is:and RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 13. Winter Arrangement, | TO COME INTO FORCE TUESDAY, Decomber 2nd, 1879. —_—_-————— TRAINS GOING WEST. _ | Nos. 1 & 3, | No. 5, Stations. Mixed. | Mixed, Georgetown ..... Dp 8.20 a. m. | Cardigan.........; °° $.46 e | Mt Stew't June... |}y oo a | Royalty Jnnction! * 11.27 ** | }Ar 11.50 a.m.! Charlottetown. .. Dp 8.00am Dp 3.00 pm Reyalty Junction; “* 822 ‘ | ** 3.23 * Worth Wiltshire..| ** 914 “ |“ 4.15 © Banter River....; ‘‘ 9.20 ‘* | ** 430 °° Breadalbane..... | ee + 686° County Line.....| ‘10.17 “ | “ 6.18 “ Kensington... | ** 10.59 ** Fe oo ” Summerside .. i - Gaeaek eee Welliagton.... . 2.0 * | Pert Hill.......) “ 3.00 ‘* O’Leary...... ee ae Alberton... | 5.17 « | Tignish ...-... | 6.10 * TRAINS GOING EAST, \Nos. 2and4,' No. 6, Stations. | Mixed. | Mixed. Re gt | ee ‘Dp 6.30 am) Pe. «4 ee O'Leary....-. | Se < Port Hill ..... ~. O.* | Wellington ......| 10.22 “ | a |Ar 11.10 am’ S’mm’rside... .. Dp 2.30 p im} Dp 7.30 an Kensington... 725" | aan” County Line....| * 3.43“ | “ 8.44 “ Breadalbane.....; ‘‘ 3.53 ‘* | ‘* 8.54 ‘ Huater River....| ‘* 430 “* 9.20 * North Wiltshire..} ‘‘ 4.46 “ ss 9,43 «* ** 30:35 * Ar 11,00 am ow ~] Royalty Junction’ * Charlotictown.... Dp Royalty Junction; ** Mt. Stw't June . De Gardigan........| ‘‘ Georgetown.....j}Ar SOURIS BRANCH. Trains Going West. ' | > “ Se PONS HS Pm 99 Go Ss SHKRSESS so : 5. SraTiox s. No. 7, Mixed. EERE ae Depart 7. 15 a.m. Harmony lao cca is . 7.37 = MMAGR'G.... cee oe | 7 8.59 ‘ i eas oe Mt. Stewart Junction.| Arrive 10.10 a. m. Trains Going East. ‘ S1aTIONS. | No. 8, Mixed. Mi. Stewart Junction.| Depart 4.15 p. m. EE Vile . ivinnk itis _ 458 ** i ROGUE, .. coicscene ~ bee ee ee + SETS oic.nd . to heeae Arrive 7.10 ‘* ALEX. MAGNA, Sup’t and Engineer. Railway Offices, Chtown, Nov. 23, 1379. —pat pres h ane sp sj kea pio 61 - NOTICE. HE Best, Shortest and Cheapest route of Cape Traverse is via Traiv to County ine Station, thenee vin HvuGches’ Teams to Capes—whicu are in readiness at all times. J. W. HUGHES, J. HUGHES. Feb. 25, 1880—tf Bones. Bones. os undersigned will pay fifty eents Cash per cwt. for all bones delivered at the Bone Mili, in the Royalty. No quantity than one ewt. (112 lbs) taken. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Oe town, foe. 1, 1879 CHARLOTTETOWN, pane enna me am ae I Hauer | 1880. Advertises Cheap | FOR CASH |! JOB PRINTING | GHEAPLY DONE. Wee Persons who have not yet settled last year’s accounts, will please do so betore com. mencing the business of the ‘coming season. Small Profits-Quick Returns, IS OUR MOTTO. _| Warned by the past, we intend to deal closer to the cash | system than ever heretofore. THE DAILY EXAMINER Locai News, Foreign News, Political News, Social News, Commercial News. Shipping News. laid before Subscribers, Purehasers, and Berrevwers, EVERY EVENING, PRICE 2 CENTS. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Quarterly ..--eesececeeesohl do Half-Yearly...-.ceeccseees J,00 THE DAILY FAS A Largely Tnereasad Circulation AND IS AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING MEDIUM TE EE WEEKLY EXAMINER Made up from Tax Darty—a Compen- dium of all the News of the Week. Subscription price only ONE DOLLAR A_ YEAR, IN ABVANCE, Sent to any address in Great Britain or North America. a Persons having relatives or friends abroad * cannot do better than send them Tax WrexLy UxaMINae. sar A few Advertisements only, received J. W. MITCHELL, | W. Lb. COPTON, | Office Sup’t. Manager ge { QU | 1 ' t PROMPTLY, HEATLY, AND | & G. HUNTER, om ‘Tablets, Headstones, &e,, PRINCE EDWARD ISLANDISATURDAY, APRIL 17, 1880, 4 saeieen ie elias: hc cake a — INSURANDE OG «SECOND EDTON OF ENGLAND. SVE Bathe aL. . TWO MiLions steruncd Toe Datuy EXAMINER. i 4 - H CAPIT y NSURANCHE effected on all kinds of Build- Rings, Merchan Produce. Also, on ; $ + APRIL 17, 1880. } anal ojse ano as bi ie Vessels on the stocks a a ae ae | 2 aie : Thoaha: 03 R - Special rates tor isolated residences, ~ hee N8au, King of Burmah. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), 4 Agent for Prince Edward Island June, i877— pA FIEND IN HUMAN FORM. — THE STORY OF THE MURDER OF NINETY PRINCES AND PRINCESSES. £ i oe : Prince Theebeaun, the recently deceased a , a7 a > ’ . MAGLEAR afd MARTIN King of Burmah, whose recklessness and eG 6 fiendish cruelty during bis short reign of ' two years, 2nd which has just culminated by the sacrifice of seven hundred lives, sue- ceeded his father en the threno, October, $1878, when just twenty years of ag He S~* ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Newson’s Building, Qpp, Post Ofice, jsurrounded himself with a stailf of ignerant : Z M. fie H. and bluod-thirsty officials, who, led by their A, A. MeLEAN, Ba. SEARTWEN, | monarch, entered on a life of drunkenness and debanchery hitherto unsurpassed, even in Burmah. Being inexperienced and sur- jgounded with inexperienced ioimisters, the young king plunged into trouble on every hand. A few months after his accession te the throne, a number of Princes and Prin- i eessea, together with about two hundred of the nobility were cast into prison, and a reist of terror inaugurated in Mandalay, the Burmese capital. In March, 1879, a eprrespondent writes :—‘‘ The King’s fears BEST | Continued to gain upon him as one after | another of the princes pined away and died in Charlotietown, June 13, 1879.---ex2aw Manufacturer & Dealer in MONUMENTS in varietv, at LOWEST PRICES. STOCK, Superior Workmanship. SATISFAGTION CUARANTEED TO PATRONS | 9 ene rricurrun UNDERGROUND PRISONS N. B.— Farm Produce taken at marketj of the palace, loathesome with the filth never removed since these dens were con- structed years ago. Fears of British inter- vention alone prevented him from putting them ail to death months ago. Suddenly the news of the disaster reach Mandalay, That apparently decided him, and a work ef cold-blooded butehery began which will hardly find a parallel in history. At first the massacre was carried on according te old Burmese use and wont. The victims oncton, X, B., were led out of their cells in twes and RRPRERSENTING IX THE MARITIME PROVINCES | threes, brought to shekio to the King, and then disposed of in the ordinary Buddhist fashion. ‘The head of the victim was tied down to his ankles, and a blow on the back ef the head froma heavy ciub put him out of pain. But this soon preved too mild a spectacle for the fiendish mind of Thee- beaw. Lhe Fhongzai Prinee,.whese insel- ent bearing ENGLISH VISITORS TO MANDALAY rates, In payment, during shipping season. Kent Street, Charlottetoun, P. E. J. Please call and examine Designa & Prices. Mar. 20, 1880.—w d—tu sa 6m Gntario, Chicago and Western Riillers and Shippers, FLOUR. MEAL, GRAIN, Seeds and Provisions. reverence to his young brother—the King The following are some ef the leading | is past twenty-one years—-professed an utter branda of Flour for sale wholesale, in car-load-} scorn for what could be dene to him, and iots only, via: — ‘* Buda,” ‘‘ Alabaster,” | was flogged to death. The late King’s ‘* White Rose,” Warenp’s Superior, ‘‘Pastry,” | oldest brother—the truculent Mekhaya ‘‘ Beaver Mills,” ‘‘ Red AAX,” “Amber,” | prince, who used to look upon all foreign 25.5 OF. re tai ers as so much dirt under his feet, turned — —_ x same = ig eg aaa craven, and was taunted and driven to ers, C OTaAhe 4s ie é f ots 2 o's eae? eae nie alae Provilen: madness before fecsiving sae blow, which Samples of ail kinds of Seed Grains, and othe: only stunned him, when ANS writhing body voods will be sent to any address on applica | W@S throwa into the gigantic trench dug to receive the victims. The massacre was tion free of charge. ; } ' Ask for quotations by telegraph in| carried on ina leisurely fashion extending ‘«Cipher,’’ which will be supplied to all eor-| over several days, fiendish ingenuity being respondents on application. taxed to the utmost to devise fresh horrors. Nov. 25, 1879—ly HORRORS UPON HORRORS. Moungoke, the Gevernor of Rangoon when it was captured by the English in 11856, had his nose and mouth filled with | gunpowder, a light was applied, and he | was then flung into the trench to be stifled | by the bodies of succeeding victims. The | t nn pre eee ST, MARGARET'S HALL, RiALIFAX, N.S. danghter of the Nyoung Yan, a young girl of sixteen, was handed over te eight sel- SHMINARY FOR YOUNG LADIES. diers of the reyal guard, to be pitched in- VISITOR : : Th I, ( Bi Se fy . (sensible into the same heaving grave when f iil i 5 f i they had gratified their brutal lust. The : ut ISO) 0 NUVG ul le wife of one prince, far advanced in preg- at anes 4 inancy, was ripped up, and the agonized EEAVER AI ¢ husband was brought up to see his wife and The Rev, John Padfield. | dated ony snare Salads he Glad | (Ailes at very moderate | ; | some days of this sort of thing, the ex ‘i ase i their task ecutioners got weary and hurried through Little children were put in cost. the advantages of a comfortable and | , : : j ' «ple ie 7a ' blankets and swung against the palace walls, pleasant home together with a thorough and | o”s eae refined. education. 'women were battered over the head, as a ; aS Pee is -toemtel an tring ¢ fhe course of Instruction is the same as | taking less trouble than tying them up, so Altogether that of the best Schools in England and is/ as to get 2 blow on the neck, founded upon the University Examinations! about ninety persons are believed to have for Women, Eight young iadies from this! been put to death in this way.” School passed the Local Examination’ of the! Tho queen’s mother, who is said to have University of King’s College in June last. | been one of the instigators of these horrors, This is the only School in Canada that has! jg now an old lady of fifty, with wrinkled passed pupils at a University Examination. (| cheeks and forehead andscanty gray hair, The number of pupils is limited, rendering ‘has an unenviable notoriety for putting a the School select, and while it possesses all the | 15) princess many years ‘ago to a most educational advantages of alarge public school, |)". ” reer . ” each pupil is enabled to receive that individual | atrocious death. care and oversight which is 80 important, and | MATTERS DAILY GREW WORSE : which cannot be given ina large establish-| until the British Consul and British resi- ment. - i dents were compelled to flee from the city. Mr. and’ Mrs. Padfield are assisted by a| Subsequent events are familiar te our read- staff of four resident governesses, besides visit- ers. King Theebeat grew reckless and de- oe eee _ | fiant and added insult to injury by pretend- Parisienne French is taught conversation- | ing to send an Embassy to the Vice-Rey of pn de wage are twe resident Froach: Gev- | India, ut without any instructions or au- References given to parents of pupils, | tho rity. The sudden death of the King ‘and his heir will probably prevent any For further particulars address the Prin7| aoly | diel. a 2 | further unpleasantness with England and Sept. 19, 1879. | prove a great blessing to the country. It is ovctonmaieiamnata “ z ‘to be hoped that the civilized world will ‘never again be shocked with the sad story . i ; ts *. . - > te PHA SOUP. of another ‘‘ prepitiary sacrifice” of 700 ‘innocent lives te satisfy the brutal ;super- a with Pea Flour and seasoned | stition of a heathen monarch. and flavored with the finest herbs and’ Excluding the seabord Provinces, which seasonings, to which is added Liebigs’ Hxtract comprise British Barmah, this Kingdom of Meat, making one at - most nytritious has an area of 192,000 square miles, and a dishes that can be obtained. | pepulation of abeut three and a half mil- A 25 cent Tin will make 3 quarts of thiek [5.6 The annual revenue is about $450,- 1 ; ~e Vor sila at 000, with the addition of one-fourth of that i a {in laber-and produce. Burmah has com- BEER & GOR F *S. mercial relations with India, England, Feb. 15, 1380. France, Ltaly and China. b will remember, on being brought to do NU. 125 Correspondence, a s® Wedo not hold ourselves responsible for the statements or opinions of our correspondents a ————— ne) To the Editor of the Examiner. | Sir, -In your paper announcing the de- inise of the late Lieut.-Governor Dundas, you say that the award of the Land Com- missioners, in 1860, was set aside by means of the influence of the Proprietors with the Home Government. This statement is a great error on your part, and on the part ofany person who may make it. The Award was illegal aud inequitable, insomuch as? it greatly exceeded and went beyend the powers of the Commissioners. They were appeinted te do a certain thing, which they found it impossible te do. Instead of frankly avowing and confessing this, they referred, or rather. transferred, to parties unknown, that which they, the Cémmissioners, had been. ap- pointed te do, and authorised to do by the late Sir Samuel Cunard, and certain other Proprieters, whe were se ill advised as to concur with him in his assent te the Commission. Upon this illegal transfer, the Proprietors applied to the British Government, and the justice ef that Government set aside the Award of the Commissioners. Lerd Carnarvon, speaking in the House ef Lerds, appeared to confound the Commission with the ‘Tenant League, its natural offspring. His Lordship (if his speech were reported correctly) was not far wrong after all, for the two were, as Colman has it, ‘* Like two single gentlemen rolled inte one!” Then, in 1875, came the crowning measnre of the Land Purchase Act ; so that how, as ** vacnus viator, cante,” because I have nothing else to do Some of the writings of the Commissioners have in- spired me with a poetic, or doggrellic, afflatus :— Strip the ‘‘ poisoned garments” off each ten- ants back ! Seize the Landlord varments, put them in a sack ! ‘Threw them in the sea, sir ! ing’s work ! . There’s a morn- Tenants then will be, Sir! grand Turk ! Quickly ‘‘permetted,” all the world shall see Wisdom ‘‘ animated by vitality !” My quotations are verbatim et literatim frem the original documents. . Yours very truly, View Daomnutrt Naw Orp, ie SP eo -————- - The Cost of Future Wars. Each a small How ruinous future wars will be judged frem the remarks made by a recent French writer on the cost of an Infantry division, which he roughly sets down at £2,000 a day. France has forty divisions, without counting her Cavalry divisions and Rifle batallions, and consequently on a war foot- ing they would cost £80,000 per diem, or £2,400,000 a month. But in the event of the Territorial Army being called out, fand of eighteen new army corps being formed, the above expense would be doubled. Ner would these figures really represent the sacrifices to which the country would be ex- posed, When war breaks ont the inciden- tal expenses is enormons ; immense prices have tobe paid for articles and fer ser- vices. immediately required. There is great waste, trade and commerce come toa stand still, numerous branches of industry are ruined, public securities fall, and alto- gether the picture of modern war, with its frightful material losses, is depicted in colors so gloomy, that one almost longs to go back to the days of limited armies, when compulsory service was not the fashion. rr? -- The wonderful record made by the cel- ered man Hart, in the walking match in New York, which terminated on Saturday night, serves only to exhibit the endurance of which the human body, if properly cared fer, is capable. But no beneficial result is attained by the sport, and the marvel is that several thousand peuple can be got to- gether at this day to watch the tedious monotony of the tramp. Walking matches extending over six days cempel too severe a strain upon the system te be of any good services in physical development ; more than one man has breken €ewn and died from the fatigue undergone en the track, and none who engage in a series of matches can hope to come through them with vigor and strength unimpaired. But while the pub- lie supports and applauds, there will be no lack of aspirants fer the gate money, and we may look for another grand inter- national contest shortly between the African champion ef the United States and the English walkers Rowell and Brown. —— oe <P oe Mr. Charles Stewart Parnell may justly consider himself one of the most justly hon- ored men of the nineteenth century, he having been elected in three constituencies —Cork, Meath, and Mayo. Prominent public men are often elected for two con- stituencies, as in the case of Mr. Gladstone, in Leeds and Midlothian, and Lerd Hart- ington, in Radner Burghs and Lancashire, at the late election; but to be honored with the confidence of three>constitvencies is an event that eccurs but few times in a century. ir. Parnell will probably sit for Mayo. The City of Quebec has a debt of $4,580,- 000. Debt is, net prosperity in this in- stance, as a focal paper says the eity is bankrupt, and is sadly in want of street repairs, etc. a scart po aa a ae +n] hain