rar pe reser emrennmeemtign Sn. 5 aaa ee Bb. .—. 4. Ora e saan tn 6 a KX A] een os INE . y ao a ee ae, i " . \°Ty vamp i “ rT S Wy! ts + , . me ‘ a : eae a 5 a4 Sp gR Uche ey rt SL moana VOL 2, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1877 NO 195 on , a iil lil silent eraiel al ia ial li oleiidbiies : : _ a ah 2 LCEa ve Piet " : ms 4 Ut, THE D AILY I XAMINER | A id ai} 1g ih ‘ ria. if ! ai ly i is T A i A ho ti S i ee . a Poetry. ae when —. look back with won- [+ Pushed every Evening , Hb UT OLMIA a Se elm tei arly god opinion of ther at OFFICE: . ——- a 8 ose A New Yoar’s Wish. There is another point that ought not to be INGS’ BUILDING; CORNER OF WATER WV MILE taking this opportunity of thankg —AND— ~ overlooked in the treatment of this subject AND GREAT GEORGE STRELTS, Charlottetown, P. E. L. a RATEes OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, . $2 50 Three Months, 1 2 One Month, 0 50 One Week, 0 12 aw Advertising at nost moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthl terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- eation. W. L. COTTON, | J. W. MITCHELL, Manager. | Office Sup’t, y, quar- ~ ee The Weekly Examiner Is Published every Friday. OFFICE : NGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF Charlottetown, P. E, L. Subscription price, postage prepaid, $1.00 per year, in advance. ge Rates of advertising, in the Examiner, will be as follows : First insertion, per inch, 20 Each continuation, * 0 Contracts may be made for quarterly, half- yearly, and yearly advertisements on application at the office. W. L. Corroyn, Manager. | PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 8, WINTER ARRANSEMERT, To come into force MONDAY, DEC. 24, 1877 WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, i J. W. MrrcHert, Office Sup’t. Weekly 50 12 TRAINS GOING WEST. One No. 5. | No? STATE . LPN i MYy*kp P.M. GEORGETOWN (Dp. ¢ . $i Cardigan | gus M Stewart Jenction 1! Ar. 10,22 en. (| Dp.10.35 | Royalty Junction ; i.e | P. M. P.M. CHARLOTTETOWN = ¢ |r. 12,10|Dp. 2.40 | A.M. ‘Dp. 9.09 Royalty Junction | ** 9.25) * 3.05 North Wiltshire i" * 4 Hunter River i ** 10.40) ** 4.20 Bradalbane | ‘* 11.18) ** 5.00 County Line fhe. oo P.M, Kensington “ 12.07| “ 5.50 SUMMERSIDE ee er } |Dp. 2.00; ** 6.20 Wellington - £¢& Port Hill L.* 228 O'Leary 1 ** 443 Alberton | §.45 Tignish ‘ ;~ ae TRAINS GOING EAST. 7 _ _ | No.2 ; No.4 STATIONS. Express | MIXED. : eke. TIGNISH |Dp. 8.00 ALBERTON I 8.55 O’ Leary } * 9.52) Port Hill | % 11.07; Wellington | ** 31.48) ee) am, a ( | Ar. 12.35) SUMMERSIDE | Dp. 2.10/Dp. 8,35 Kensington | * 248) “*: 232 County Line if 4 ‘“ 9.30 Brakalbane | ** 3.40} *: 10.10 Hunter River De 4.20; ** 10.40 North Wiltshire ‘ 43). * 10.53 Royalty Junction ** 5.30) © 11.56 CHARLOTTETOWN $ [AT 3-59) = " Dp. 2.65] ‘* 12.20 Royalty Junction i a MT. STEWART June. } |} 355 Cardigan hg 6.19 GEORGETOWN. ‘Ar. 5.40 ~ SOURIS BRANCH. Going West. Going East. ra \ Hake avscedora] Me © “au sv 0. , a av O. STATIONS. | arene | STATIONS. | siixep. | A.M. pi} P. M. Souris Dp. 7.30), Mt. St’w’t Je Dp. 3.50 Harmony |“ 7.55||Lot 40 ‘‘ 4% St. Peter’s ** 9.16/| Morell “« 433 Morell ‘¢ 9.42\|St. Peter’s (¢ Kes Lot 40 ‘* 9.48) Harmony ‘© 6.29 Mt St’w’t Jnc' Ar. 10. 25)/Souris Ar. 6.45 C. J. BRYDGES, Gen. Superintendent Govt. Railways. W. McKECHNIE, Sup’t. P. E. L Railway. Smoked Halibut, &e. 40 boxes SMOKED HALIBUT, 20 bundles DRIED POLLOCK. For sale by December 14, 1877. HASZARD BROS.. zea Hthat quality be give: ing our numerous customers for the | liberal manner in which they lave patron- . CURNEW STUDIO, | ,we would inform them that we have now, increased facilities d é ) first-class work, and are prepared to make | did Chromos, Steel Hngravings, and Litho- for the production of Puorockapns ofa Slyle and Qualily that: has never been before ellempled in this City. We have on exhibition, at our Rooms, a large number of Photograps of every variety, including the BEAUTIFUL PHIT)- ENAMEL he most beautiful style of Photograph known, possessing a softness and delicacy of coloring that bas never been equalled. This elegant picture has become deservedly popu ar elsewhere, and cannot fail to be- come so here. Though the finish of our Photographs cannot be excelled, we would direct atten- tion to the beautiful Gliaee Pictures which we make. They possess a highly enamelled surface, and are practically indes- tructible, and will retain their freshness and beauty for any length of time. If they become soiled they can easily be cleaned, as they will not lose any of their beauty by being wet, ‘This valuadle quality, com- bined with their remarkable elegance, make them very suitable for presents; while the difficulty of their production will prevent them ever becoming so common as to lessen their value. Our patrons cap have one or all of their Photos finished in this style—an advantage which cannot be obtained elsewhere. We give special attention to making Groups of Families, Societies, Schools, &c Our pictures of children are sufficient evidence of omr success in this difficult branch of our art. Our YNLARGEMENTS, finished in India Ink, Pastel, Crayon, Oil and Water Colors, have made a favorable reputation for them selves throughout the Lower Provinces, Parties intending to have Photographs made will find it to their advantage to sit early, as the number of our ca tomers makes some delay in the delivery of the Photos unavoidable. We prefer to have our sitters come by appointment. Photographs can be obtained for less money elsewhere : but in this case we ask the preference; as- suring the public that they will flad our charges very moderate. ROSS BROS,, Cor. Queen and Dorchester Streets, opposite Connolly's Bank, Sept, 19, 1877—3m eod Coarse Salt for Packing. >... TONS Coarse Salt, three hundre Bags do. For sale by HASZARD BROS. HERRING! HERRING! For SALE AT W. W. CLARKE’S. Water St., Ch’town, Dec. 1—eed tf P, #. Island Railway, In connection with the Winter Steamship NORTHERN LIGHT! A Special Train will Connect Closely. RAIN will leave Charlottetown at 6 a. m., on the mornings of the day on which the Steamer will leave (reorgetown, arriving at the latter place at 9a. m. ‘he Boat will leave immediately after the arrival of the Train. The Train will be ready immediately on the arrival of the Boat from Pictou and will start at once for Charlottetown. This arrangement will continue during the winter, and until the ‘‘ Northern Light” ceases to run. WM. McKECHNIE, Sup’t. Ch’town, Dec. 17th, 1877—6in A. MeNEILL, Auctioneer and Commission Merchant NO. sl QUEEN STRET. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. B. ISLAND xMATICTION SALES, of all descrip- tions, attended to jin city and country at moderate rates. May 21, 1877. QUEEN IASURLACE C0. Capital - - {wo Millions String NSURANCE effected on all kinds o Buildings, Merchandise, and Produce Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences, Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union*Bank), —_~ «Agent for Prince Edward Islanu June = bi NEW YEARS MHERISTMAS AND / coming. presents. NEW YRAR’S are We begin to think about our, LEWIS has a large stock of splen- graphs, large and small. collection—something new. times. They are a choice Prices to suit the ——- Miouidings- He has Ten Thousand feet of Mouldings, thirty different patterns, all new, suitable for all kinds of pictures. Frames will be made and sold for 25 per cent. lower than any other place in the city. Frames. Fancy Frames, all sizes and kinds, from 12cts, upwards, -——- Aibums. Mottoes. Brackets, Wall Pockets, Cards, and Transfer Pictures in great variety. Photographs and GLACE PICTURES, If you want a good Photogragh, go to LEWIS’ and you will get it. He has the best facilities in the city for making Pictures ; besides, he knows how to make them. His specimens are all his own work, as you will see by calling and looking at them. You will know them all. Special attention given to Children’s Pictures and Family Greups. Old Pictures copied and enlarged, finished in India ink, water colors, oil, or crayon. Also, the Photo-Enamel Picture. Persons wishing to learn to make the Photo-Enamel Picture can be taught in one lesson, for $2. No art required. For Sale, pictures of MR. & MRS. D. BANKS McKENZIE, large or small. a@ Don’t forget the place — Upper Great George steet (Taomas’ Old Stand). CHRISTMAS PRESENTS NEW YEAR'S GIFTS | IN GREAT ABUNDANCE, | AT HARVIE’S BOOKSTORE. Ch’town, Dec. 20, 1877. GENERAL AGENCY KOTICE BEG to announce to the Traps of this City. and the Island generally, that on the 14th of JANUARY IL will have a com plete ASSORTHENT GF SAMPLES, of the following lines of Goods for Spring and Summer: English & Canadian TWEEDS & WOOLLENS, BOOTS & SHOES, AMERICAN COTTONS, eadymade Clothing AMERICAN RUBBER G09D8, IN GREAT VARIETY. Tobacco & Cicars, Confectionery, Coffse & Spices, Naval Stores, Teas, Sugars- I am also Sove Aqent for the Lower Provinces for Wryatr & Co's (London) CELEBRATED Pickles, Sauces, Jellies, Ete,, —AND— E. James & Son’s (Plymouth) celebrated STARCH, BLUE & DOME LEAD. This Notiee is only to the Trade—no Re-| tail orders being solicited or accepted, 4 Sample Rooms at No. 9 Queen St., over | the Office of Messrs. Hyndman Brothers. JOHN H, CATHRAE, Ch’town, Nov. 23, Lx77—w k&lew » 20, HE Trustees of several Districts have been applying for school furniture, and in every instance considerthe American and Canadian Combination Seat and Desk too ex- pensive. I have just got up a Combination that is stronger, neater, and one-third cheaper than those that have been imported. Call and see samples of the different sizes. “City School Trustees fuliy approve of them. MARK BUTCHER. I ask one little boon, Ur the New Year: § May i through all its days Carry Sohie creer : To those who sit in gloom, Weeping for To hearts that siowly break, Under a cross. } 49335 I who have left my dead, With none to care ; I who have wept alone, Facing despair— Would gladly sweeten lives, And make them dear— This little boon I ask Of the New Year. They best can serve the gods, Their errands run, Who call no love their own, Under the sun. Let me bear help to want, And hope to tear : I ask no other boon Of the New Year. ~~ ~ ROOR tT AT TIE TOP. AN OPENING CHAPTER FOR THE NEW YEAR. To the young men annually making their entrance upon active life, with great ambitions, conscious capacities and high hopes, the pros- pect 18, In ninety-nine cases in a hundred, most perplexing. They see every avenue to prosperity tironged with their superiors in ex- perience, in social adyvautages, and in the pos- session of ali the elements and conditions of success. Lvery post is occupied, every office filled, every path crowded. Where shall they find room? 1t is related of Mr. Webster that when a young lawyer suggested to him that the profession to which he had devoted himself was overcrowded, the great man replied : ‘* Young man, there is always enough room at the top.” Never was a wiser or more sug- gestive word said. There undoubtedly is al- ways room enough where excellenze lies, Mr. Webster was not troubled for lack of room. Mr. Clay and Mr. Calhonn were never crowded. Mr. Evarts, Mr, Cushing and Mr. O’Conor have plenty of space around them. Mr, Beecher, Dr. Storrs, Dr. Hall, Mr. Phil- lips Brooks would never know, in their person- al experience, that it was hard to obtain a de- sirable ministerial charge. The profession is not crowded where they are. Dr. Brown- Sequard, Dr. Willard Parker, Dr. Hammond, are not troubled for space for their elbows. When Nelaton diced in Pasis, he died like Moses or atnountain. When Von Grate di in Berlin, he had no neighbor at his altitude. It is well, first, that all young men remem- ber that nothing will do them so much injury as quick and easy success, and that nothing wili do them so much good as a struggle which toaches them what there is in them, educates them gradually to its use, instracts them in personal economy, drills them into a patient and persistent habit of work, and keeps them at the foot of the ladder until they become strong enough to hold every step they are en- abled to gain. The first years of every man’s business or professional life, are years of edu- cation, They are intended to be- in the order at nature and Providence. Doors do dot open to aman until he is prepared to enter them. The man without a wedding garment may get in surreptitiously, but he immediately goes out with ailea in his &r. We think it is the experience of most successful men who have watched the course’of their lives in retrospect, that whenever they arrived at a point where they were thoroughly prepared to go up higher, the door toa higher place has swung back of itself, and they have heard the eall to enter. The old die, or voluntarily retire for rest. The best men who stand ready to take their places will succeed totheir position and its honors and emoluments. The young men wil! say that only a few will reach the top. That is true; but it is also true that the further from the bottom one goes, the the more scattering the neighborhood. One can fancy, for illustration, that every profes- sion and every calling is pyramidal in its livieg constituency, and that while only one man is at the top. there are several tiers of men below him who have plenty of elbow room. and that it is only at the base that men are so thick that they pick the meat out of one another’s teeth to keep them from starving. If a man has no power to get out of the rabble at the bottom, then he is self-convicted of having chosen a calling or profession to whose duties he has no adapiation. The grand mistake that young men make, during the first ten years of their business and professional life, isin idly waiting for their chance. They seem to forget, or they do not know, that those ten years they enjoy the only leisure they willever have. After ten years in the natural course of things, they will be absorbingly busy. There will be no time for reading, culture, and study. I[f they do not become thoroughly grounded in the princi- ples and practical details of their profession during these years ; if they do not store their minds with useful knowledge; if they do not pursue habits of reading and observation, and social intercourse, which result in culture, the To Trustees of Country Schools’ Dec. 18, 1877—ex 1m ne a pat pres 4 question whether they will ever rise to occupy a place where there is room enough for them will be decided in the negative. The young physicians and yonng lawyers who sit idly in their offices, and smoke and lounge awav the time ‘waiting for something to turn up,” are by that course fastening themselves for life to the lower stratum, where their struggle fora bare livelihood is to be perpetual. The first ten years are golden years, that should be filled with systematic reading and observation. Everything that tends to professional and personal excellence should be an object of daily pursuit. To such men the doors of success open of themselves at last. Work seeks the best hands, as naturally as water run down hill; and it never sevks the hands of a trifler, or of one whose only re- commendation for work 1; that he needs it. Young men do not know very much any way, and the time alwzys comes to those who be- Younz men look around them and see a great measure of worldly success awarded to men without principle. They see the trickster crowned with public honors, they see the swindier rolling in wealth, they see the sha man, tae overreaching man, the unpriaciple. man, the lar, the demagogue, the time. | server, the trimmer, the scoundrel who cun- ningly manages, though constantly disobey- ing moral law and trampling upon social courtesy, to keep himself out of the clutches of the legal police, carry- ing off the prizes of wealth and place. All this isa demoralizing puzzle and a fearful temptation; and multitudes of young men are not strong enough to stand before it. The ought to understand that in this wicked west there is a great deal of room where there is in- tegrity. Great trusts may be sought by scoun- drels, but great trusts never seek them; and pertect integrity is at a premium even amo scoundrels, There are some trusts that they wiil never confer on each other. There are occasions when they need the services of true men, and they do not find them in shoals and in the mud, but alone and in pure water. In the realm of eminent acqirements and eminent integrity there is always room enough. Let no young man of industry and honesty de- spair because his profession or calling is crowd- ed. Let him always remember that there is room enough at the top, or rise above the crowd at the base of the pyramid, will be de- cided by the way in which he improves the first ten years of his active life in securing to himself a thorough knowledge of his profession and a sound moral and intellectual culture.— Dr. J. G. Holland. : a GOLD DUST. Every nation may traffic in charity and com- mute for pleasure.—Jeremy Taylor. He who conceals his joys is greater than he who can conceal his griefs.—-Lavater. Death is a friend of ours, and he that is not seeny to entertain him is not at home.— con. _ How would you be if He which is the top of jedgomont should judge you as you are?— Shakeephere, A jest’s prosperity lies in the ear of him that makes it.—Shakesphere. Friendship is the medicine for all misfortune; but ingratitude dries up the foundation of all goodness. — Richelieu. There is nothing that is meritorious but vir- tue and friendship, and indeed friendship itself is but a paft of virtue.—Pope. Letgiter 1S; imtecd, wkin io weepiug, aad the humor is as closely allied to pity as it is abhorrent to derision. —Henry Giles. Necessity.—Necessity is c-uel, but is the only test of inward strength. Every fool caa live according to his own iking-—Anon. As to the touchstone which tries gold, but is not itself tried by the gold, such is he that has the standard of judgment. —Epietetus. Too much attention cannot be bestowed on that important, yet much neglected branch of learning, the knowledge of man’s ignorance —Whatley. To doubt is an injury ; to suspect a friend is a breach of friendship; jealousy is a seed sown but in vicious minds ; prone to distrust, because apt to deceive. —Lord Landsowne. Judges onght to be more learned than witty, more reverent than plausible, and more ad- vised than confident. Above al things in- tegrity is their portion and proper virtue.— Bacon. Little do men perceive what solitude is, and how far it extendeth. For a crowd is not company ; and facts are but a gallery of pie- tures ; and talk but a tinkling cymbal, where there no love,—Bacon. Every heavy burden of sorrow seems like a stone hung around our neck, yet they are often lke the stones used by the pearl divers, which enable them to reach the prize and to rise enriched.—Anon. I wish your daughters to resemble me im nothing but the love of reading; knowing by experience how far it is capable of softening the cruclest accidents of life; even the hap piest cannot be passed over without many un- easy hours, and there is no remedy as easy as books, which, if they do not give cheerfulness, at least restore quiet to troubled minds. Those that fiy to cards or company for relief, gener- ally find that they only exchange one misfor- tune for another.—Lady Montagu’s Letters. FACTS AND SCRAPS. A woman’s heart is just like a lithographer’s stone—what is once written on it cannot be rubbed out. Agony personified—A bachelor editor trying to prepare an able and judicious article on the baby show. There are 3,064 languages spoken, and a man feels like using all of them when he sits down on a cat. Aman who went home early the other morning with a black eye remarked that he had met his morning star. An exchange asks: ‘‘Of what use are the legs of a pair of trousers below the knee?’ To roll up on a muddy day. When a young lady offers to hem a cambrie handkerchief for a rich batchelor, depend upon it she means to sew in order that she may ee An experienced school boy says he regards hunger and the schoolmaster’s rattan as about the same thing, as they both make him holler. A San Francisco artist has just suceeeded in getting a picture of the race horse Occident, enafull run, It must have been in fast col- ors, then. ‘** Your heart is made of flint,” ‘said a jealous lover to his sweetheart. ‘‘Is it?’ she sobbed, ‘is it? I never’ad-a-man to say such a thing aa that before,” -