Sg IRON © A ata oc RI ON IE Sonera ia. b nee Oe ns THE SP See Sr <n == ~~ he VOL. 7. ro. : ——_— — ‘ Tue Dairy EXAMINER| Is Published every Evening, OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. lL KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Month Ss, . . . $2 50 Three Mouths, - : : 1 2 me Month, . ° ° 0 50 One Week, . . - 0 12 em Advertising st most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for month!y, quar- terly, or half-year! cation. Ww. L. y advertisements, on appli COTTON, Manay Prince Hdward island RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 4. J, W. MITCHELL, i or, | Office Sup’t Summer hoes angement. To take effect | 02 a the 2 4th May, 188 TRAINS GOIAG WEST. STATIONS. | EXPRESS. MIXED. | MIXED Georget n.- (Dp 72 fam) Lp ! i 25 pt ™m Cardigan .., “740%, 354% Mt Stew t.' Ar 8.40 ** (Ar 5.20 Souris... Dp bs 30am Dp 2. “BOpt ym Harmony . 1 643 * Po? ee **) St Peter's. bs 71.4.5 °* Fo" Gage **) Morell... .| ‘ 8.03 ee} e449 * | Mt Stew't.| ** 8.40 “Ar 5.20 ** | Mt Stew’. | iy 8. bam Dp 5.39pm ~ ed Jc} ** 9.46 “' * 6.48 « Ch’town .. | Arl0.0 $ “*]Ar 7.10 - | Ch’town .. Dp Dp 6.30aml ‘Dp 9.2 9.25am Dp 4.60pm e . es /Ar 9.47 r i ‘ Royalty Je! 6.46 ‘Dp 0,56 ai &e.* N Wiltsh’e| ‘* 7.24 ‘* | ‘10.49 = 6.06 * Hunter R’r| ** 7.50 ‘* | “11.04 - ioe. * “11.45 “| ** 7.00 * se} i. Dt & se 745 ee Kensingt'n; *‘ 3.40 ** | *12.30pm| ~ ee » +> |Ar 9.05 “| &y 1.05 ¢ aes te Summ'side' p, , 915 * ‘Dp? "ag 6 ay 8.25 § Bradalba’e | ** 5.05 *‘ Co’t'y Line} ‘* 8.12 *‘ Wellingt’n| ** 9 52 | 3.93 « Port Hill..| **10.23 ** | ** 4.07 “* | O'Leary ..| **11.20 “| “* 5.29 « | Alberton..' 12.05pm) “* 6.33 ‘ ‘Tignish .. . Arl2. 45 “| Ar 7.30 ‘ “| TRAINS GOING EAST. i ! STATIONS. | EXP ESS. MIXED. MIXED, } |__| —_--_!___--- Tignish ...|Dp 1. 45pm) Dp 6. 45am) mon 0 Alberton. . | 2. 25 ‘Dp 8.00 “cc | ‘O’Leary...} “ 3.10 **) “ 9.05 ** | Port Hill. .j *‘ 4.07 ** | **210.23 ** | Wellingt’n} ‘* 4.39 “ |) ‘11.09 **| Samm side Ar 5.15 ** | Ar}2.00 m Dp 6.00 * (Dp 1.05pmiDp 6. 40am Kensingt’n_ f 6.95 be 3p 716° Calty Lime] * 6.54 ** | ** 2.19 **{ * 7.54 . Bradalba’e | ** 7.00 ** | * 229 *1 * 8.05 *. Hanter R’r| ** 7.28 ‘* | * 3.07 “| ** 8.46 ** N Wiltsh’e| ** 7.43 ** | ** 3.24 **| ** 9.04 * . 66 q os Ar 4.15 “5 oe ge es Royalty Jel 8.19 [AE Gas a |“ 9.56 Ch’town .. Ar 8. i ** |Ar 4.38 ** |Arl0.16am ss Ch’'town .. Dp 4.00pm! Dp 7.00am! Royalty Je| po -@ ie) Mt Stew’t./ Ar 5.20 “ Mt Stew't. Dp 5. pm! Dp 3.50am Morell....| ** 5.37 “| ** 9.30.** | St Peter's. “* 6.20 | “10.01 “| - rag ll ory « *TLAIT sf Souris . |\Ar 7.35 ** |Arl1.40 ‘* Mt Stew t. ‘Dp 5. 5 35pm Dp 8. 55am Cardigan .. 1s 6 35 46] 6619.21 * Georget’ n..|Ar 6. 55 ‘¢} Arl0.50 ** _N. B—The F xpress Train n from Souris and rgetown connects at Royalty Junction with the Mixed l'rain from Charlottetown for the West, in the morning; and the Mixed Train from the West connects at Royalty Junction with the xpress Train from Ohar- lottetown for Georgetown and Souris, in the afternoon. ALEX, MACNAB, Supt. and Engineer. Railway Office, (‘harlottetown, May 20, 1880. __ pat pres hi rar ne sp sj kea a pio 6i Valuable Property for Sale, Vy BE SOLD, ail that part of Town Lot No. 74, in the first hundred of Town Lots in Charlottetown; aving a front of 67 feet, Dor- chester Street, aud running back $0 fevt, to. gether with the buildings thereon erected. For further particulars apply to Messrs. Hopeson & McLKoo Charlottetown. Sept. 18, ner Reece oo ae sae os Pal a Bones. Bones. E undersi,med ed will pay fifty cents Cash per cwt. for all bones delivered at the Mill, in the Royalty. No quantity less than one ewt. (112 Ibs) taken. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Chitown, Dee, 1, 1879 neha nnereaeee CHARLOTT Bi OWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLA PAG iFic ‘Mutual Insurance Go,, — OP NEw YORE. . BAA R INE. Assets sist Dec,, 1879, .« $44,149.00 _ Insurance effected on CARGOES and FREIGHTS, coverin g $15,000 and upwards on first-class risks, Certificates issued payable in Londen | at the oilice of Bankers, Morton Reser or in New Y¢ ’ X Co., rk, Risks taken and rates fixed without } being | referred to Head Office, FENTON ’ NEWSERY, Charla tietown ig Pietou AND— = ere ELA TL TE'A SS YE on : - ‘ Change of Time Leaving Charlette- town, brill rurt ner Notice. 7 oy Steamers S%, / nwprence an tir o's . : fogs : . Wales will leave Charlottetown for Pictou d Princesa 0} Landing-every MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY and SATURDAY MORNINGS at A ' ify au af STON r¢ I, ‘ f Peoteryeesagracs fee ESS ae 5 7 LCENENINE from Victou every TUt DAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY and SAT URDAY, after arrival of train fron HALL FAX. Daily trips between SUMMERSIDE and POINT DU CHENE, as heretofore, in connec- tion with Railwava. By orde r,; KF. W. HALES, Secretary S. N. Co. Cl'town, May 17, 1880. GUARDIAN FIRE AND LIFE Assurance Company. SS Subscribed Capital, - - - £2,000,000 Total -invested Funds, Upwards of 2,956,000 Tetal Annual Income,- = - 499,750 The undersigned having been appointed Agents at Charlottetown, are prepared to issue Policies of Insurance against Fire on the usual terms, CARVELL BROS. Charlottetown, April 21, “80—Im 2aw QUREN INSURANCE c0’Y. CF ENGLAND. CAPITAL,. . TWO MILLIQNS STERLING. NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vesseis on the stocks, Special rates for isolated resicences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island Inne, 1877-— MACLEAN & MARTIN ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Newson’s Building, Opp, Post Office, Charlottetown, P. £. 1. A, A. MeLEAN. Bo. MARTIN. Jaane 18, 1879..—ex2aw A. McNEILL, Auctionéer, Commission hierchant, and if silé nufacti arg’ Agent, uL» AUCTION ROOMS (the largest in the City.) No. 11 Queen Street (Brick Building.) any quantity and Frost-preof | TORAGE facliities for ia all kinds of Merchandise, Cellar (capacity l, Bankri.pt Stock and Furniture 8 to at reduced rates. Sales of Horses, Carriages, Farin lpn? ments, Stock, &c., on Mar ket Days, at Mar, | ket tioase. Auction Sales of Household Far- niture at Residences, and of General Mer ehandise at Stores, Warerooms, Wharves,Xc., conducted on moderate terms. Consignments of Goods of every description will receive prompt attention. Apples a specialty. Advances made and proceeds guaranteed when required. Business solicited, corres-. Sales atte nded | pondence answered promptly and in con. fidence. A. MoNEILL, Auctioneer, Charlottetown, Prince Kdward Island. N. B.—All kinds of P. E. Island products” bought and shipped to order. April 29, ’80—3r ‘* 600 Barrels) ; Real Estate, | NIE AO, sr nai _ - _ -~ ee en -_< -“~ ner Qn ie cian le too = ate ae XNAMINER. | ©. McLennan, COMMISSION MERCHANT, GENERAL AGENT, | AND AUCTIONEER, 46 QUEEN STREET, Charlotietown. - - PB. island. Pron pit returns nments solicite i; guaranteed, Auction Sales conduet ed in any part of the City or C ountry on reasonable terms, | May 1), 1880—3m eod | GeuRce CARTE R, DEALER IN— i Choice Gr ‘1S8S, FRUIT, SONFECTIONERY, FIELD AND GARDEN SEEDS. ( ‘ons 6 ©) @ & ooh <s de Lan om cry oe & S63 Gi Se oy Ce Sta ge reet, Pin Shopil Gane | Ege a was 8 me a 8-H IS WELL-KNOWN HO?THIivhas been THOROUGHLY REPAIRED and fumnigned in Hingt.ftiaa v Fay ils shi ef ik FiPSbula ay Suyle FOR TUF Accommodation of the Travelling Public, conveyel from the Guests and baggage Steamers free of Railway Station and charge. g V. McGRESOR, PROPRIETOR. Water Street, Ch’town, P. E. L, } eod April 20, 1880. \ pat sj 1m — LT ms BRITISED WARCHOUSE, QUEEN SQUARE. 1 th RST INSTALMENT OF SPRING GOODS, Received per Northern Light To-day, =; os Worsted Cloths, Tweeds, Cashmeres, Carpets, Mattings. Rugs, and Room Paper. ‘the Subseribers having enlarged and re- fitted their establishment, will, ina few days, be prepared to show their customers a very large and well selected stock of Goods, bought for Cash, which they will dispose of at their usual low prices. Ww. & A. BROWN & CO. Aj pril 23, 1880. E.G HUNTER, Manufacturer & Dealer in MONUMENTS Tablets, Headstones, &c., at LOWEST PRICES. BEST STOCK. Superior Workmanship. SATISFARTION GUARANTEED TO PATRONS N. 3.--Farm Produce taken at market rates, in payment, during shipping season. Avent Street, Charlottetern, P. H. I. & Prices. in varie sty, Please eall and examine Designs ¢ Mar. 20, 1880.—w d—tn sa 6m ! | JOSEPH GILLOTT’S STEEL PENS. BY ALL DEALERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD. “ Wises and. Meal. : O. will be ‘Le eaived for the follow- ing Brands of Flour and Meal !— ‘ Buda” (Patent), ‘‘ Alabaster,” ‘‘Golden Age,’ ‘*‘Wareup’s Superior,” ‘‘ White Rose,’ ° “Florence, «Beaver, ” §*Pastry” and ‘* Amber,” and cheice K. D. Corn \eal—‘‘ Golden Star.” Quotations for the above Brands of Flour ‘and Meal £ o. b. at Boston, or delivered at Charlottetown or —a R. FOSTER, Millers ox Shippers’ Agent, + May 6, ’80. Moncton, N. B IND, SATURDAY, MAY 29, LR80, NO. ALE lt BS ee ee ee ee ae Old Country Jottings. ENGLAN ‘* When Adam Acived a nd Eve span Who was then the gentleman ?” Mr. Themas Brown, of recently elected member of the Local Board, | he was described as a | On the voting papers ‘gentleman.” it happens that he. by pro- fession is an ‘‘ eating house keeper.”’ His opponent objects to the result on the plea of mis-discription. So new, perhaps, we shall learn the precise legal meaning of the term ‘‘ gentleman. COLLECT YOUR OWN DEBTS, The ether day a tradesman applied te the Mayistrate for adviee—saying he agreed that the British and Moreign Accountancy Office should collect for him two bad debts amounting to £2 Gs, 10d ; after several in- quiries at the cilice he receiv dd a post than £2 Is. office ordei Sd. being charged for ‘* expenses. The the char ves were Magistrate remarked that shameful and advised ; pplicant ceedings against tlie company. Charlottetown is not, it only place in which there are ba: Ninety truant the Swansea Sch. 0} Bourd reports, defy all parental, aid magisterial authority, and refuse to at- tend school. It was decided on Wednes- day io esteblish a ‘‘ truant begs’ school like thos se at Sheffield and that 1 he °¢ ie ehs vary edi scati mh ] > for D3. 2d, ho icss - ty take pro- ay pean 3. the } by 5 5, ! gregate of £61,586; and forty-three of lower value than 41,000 apiece, worth alto- gether £12,655. Ninety-two functionaries, dividing between them £168,960 @ year! Some few, like the Mastership of her Ma- jesty’s Buckhounds, or even the Gentle- manship of the Lord Lieutenant’s Bed- chamber in rel: und, might possibly | »@ dis- pensed with witheut ruin to the State. IRELAND. - wenty sheep have been seized for rent in the neighborhood of Loughrea. The tenant, a man named Morgan, with a body of peasantry, proceeded to the bailiff’s house,after retaking the sheep, bennd him, and threatened him with his life. After the sheep had been taken away, the police arrived in great force but there was no dis- turbance. Morgan and his party are threatened with proseeution by the land- lord. Great distress prevails in the neighbor- hood of Loughrea, especially at Kilreecle. On Thursday evening 2» farmer's wife waited on the local clergyman, and told him that she had six children who had not eaten anything for two days, and who were gasping “for food. The clergyman adminis- tered relief from his private purse, the re- lief funds being exhausted. Several cases of the same nature exist in the lecality, and hundreds must inevitably perish if the people are not supplied with food. On Tuesday afternoon the freedom of the City of Dublin was conferred upon Captain Potter, commanding the United States relief-ship Constellation, now at Queenstown. TTheceremony took place in the ‘own Hall, and the Lord Mayor, in presenting the certificate, which was en- closed in a bog oak casket, said that only three names preceded that of Captain Pot- ter on the roll of honorary freemen—ithose of isaac Butt, William Ewart Gladstone, and Ulysses 5. Grant, President of the Unitel States. On Tuesday night there was a ball at the Mansien Heuse, when | Captain Petter and the officers of his ves- sel were present. FRANCK. We hear sometimes of the bie ter bit, but very rarely do wo meet with so tragic an illustration as is repens ted from the suuth- ernmost department of France. The in- habitants of the Commune of Uston, on the Spanish frontier, near some of the glaciers which fill the hollows on the northern side ofthe Pyrenees, are in the habit of rearing the young Bears which the snows of winter enable them to find among the mountains. After training them, the creatures are led about to the neighboring festivals and fairs where their antics bring the means of liveli- hood to the exhibitors. Lately, a mounte- bank travelling with a bear found himself at nightfall at a farmhouse uear Massegros, and | begged the hospitality of the farmer. The latter was willing to shelter the man, but objected d to his companion, until the showman’s impertunity led to the arrange- ment that the pig ) :nsferred to the stable, aud Ursus jor the night ihe pigstye. night three h iad fixed upon for robbing the Une of entered the should be tre should occupy That thiéves siye. cantiously, and, turned to his companions and sai i, ‘* He's there.” The thiei went back to drive out their prey, when the bear, disturbed from its sik BePs seized the man in its arms, and hurled him dead upen the ground. Thiei No. 2 not seeing the pig appear, and won- dering at his companion’s silence, ad- vance; but the bear, sian ding upon its hind legs, received him with a Claw which laid him’ prostrate upen his dead fellow. The third man was riveted to the spot by fear, and his cries soon brought to the stye the farmer and the showman. They found that the bear bad done the work of the constable wery effectually. One of the marauders was dead, the second was dan- gerously wounded, and itis believed that the third will lose his reason. rand of them yara official, | hearing a duil grunt, re- i Stapleton, was) ' t boys. | Liver pool, SO be ; . ' an iAWS hay ve | on no louger set at nought, i li ig worth noting jast now that the Pre- | nicr had to dispose of fourteen offiess, in-} eluding his own as First Lord of the Treas- | ury worth from 84,000 to £20,000 a year, or £94,925 in ali: thirty-five, varying be- tween £1,000 and £25,000, making an ag- ; ’ oni r » 7 ;CUe CUOVMPUE OF WA Correspondence, we” We do not hold ourselves responsible for he statements or opinions of our correspondents, THOUGHTS. PART FIRST. L'a the Editor of the Examiner. Srrx,—At this eminently educational pe- riod of the World’s History, it may seem like Treason against the majesty and per- fectionability imputed by some men to themselves and their species, if any one venture to ‘‘ hint a fault, and hesitate dis- like” to the plan of making Education uni- versal. Man is doomed to labor; Saint Paul has written so trnly and so justly on the division of labor between the different parts of the human body, in analogy to the difivrent parts of the community, that nothing more need be said on that subject. {ff amateur musicians, amateur artists of all classes, were, or could be, led and taught to appreciate works of High Art—to prefer | Mozart’s inimitable ‘ Three Waltzes,” to the dot-go-one strains ef the Pelka, per- formed by street musicians ; to preter the ‘Temples of Prostum or Athens to the gor- geous and barbarous Pavilion at Brighton in Engiand ; to prefer the Landscape Gard- ening of Wheatley or: Re pion to the tame id clumped insipidi¥ of Brown, or the eometrical ce foeesitiek of ‘ee hotre, some- hing wonld he 2: to the intellect and 4 ’ ae li, £ ait . » comMmMON peo- frie of Athens conkd, I 2 ‘lieve, neither read nor” write; bat rtainly they enjoyed that atmosphere of high excellence in the Fine Arts, imwhich they lived and moved and had theirbeing. The several depertinents of the Fine Arts operate on the mind threugh the medium of the senses ; the very same feeling may be pro- duced by really good cathedral architecture as by sacred music, by a good painting as by a good poem, by a ‘pastoral landscape of Claud Lorraine as by a pastoral symphony by Haydn. Unity of expression is the great requisite in all works of Art: one leading object should be kept in view ; one particular key note of the mind should be addressed. ‘The paintings of Claude, the landscape gardening of Wheatley, Repton and Londen, the Idyls of Gessner, the nvusic ‘Hardn,” “Beethoren and Men- delssolin,the classic purity of Greciau archi- tecture, and that matchless statue of ‘* Venns semeridueta,’ which has immortal- ized the name of the Princely House of Medici, al! these possess in common the leading character of beauty and grace ; while Salvator Rosa in his paintings, ‘Dante in his poetry, Karl Maria Von Weber in in his spirit-stirring Opera of ‘ Der Freisehutz,’’ Michel Angelo in sculpture, and the Architects of the frowning and battiemented castles of our Ancestors, have been equally successful in raising ideas of the terrible, the wild, and the sublime. Professors in each department of Art, use the same terms : harmony, contrast, chaste- ness, redundancy, spirit, tameness, ‘variety, and repetition. Now, let us apply all this to Landscape gardening. As good taste must disapprove of a bombastic or harsh style in Poetry, and of too stunning a re- petition of Drum, Trumpet, and fortissimo passages in music, so in Landscape garden- ing, and in Architecture conjoined with it, we inust not introduce glaring or discord- ant colers into our scene ; we must guard against red bricks or snowy white stucco, Cream color, stone color of different shades, or the soft yellow tint of a certain kind of brick, are much better adapted to preduce a pleasing effect. Nature confirms this principle ; her favorite color is green, of all celors the most pleasing to the eye for a centinuance ; whenever she introduces her more splendid and dazzling lights, she modulates and shades them off, into the general tone of the scene. Ob- serve the refiection of either the sun or the moen in the sea. The middle tint of the water, where it is not il- luminated, being brighter than that of the land, connects and harmonizes the fore- ground with tue extreme hight. The modern music of Italy is too much frittered or breken, to satisfy the ear which can ap- preciate Handel and Mezart. Se, by anal- ogy, the landscape gardener should guard against that scattered and contused disposi- tion of trees, that dotted and unsettled air, which characterizes the pictures of Rubens, and many parts of the real scenery of Kag- land, im Essex and Sussex especially. Having been, from my youth upward, a professor of Landseape Gardening, in con- junction -with Land Surveying, Land Ageney, and Architeeinre, | am. perhaps, apt to mags ey my office, and to look upon the man who mars or lessems the beanty of 2 landscape, as an offender against nature, anda destroyer of “one of innocent sources of pleasure which were leit to man when, after the fall, he was doomed to eat bread -in the sweat of his brow. Let his eye look out upon a pleasing prospect, and his work wil! be lightened, his heart cheered, and his arm strengthened. Iam, sir, your ob’t servant, View DuomnivuL Naw Onn. ———-—.- A Good Account. ‘*To sum it up, six long years of bed-rid- den sickness and suffering, ‘costing $200 per year, total $1,200—all which was stopped by three bottles of Hop Bitters taken by my wife, who has done her own house- work for a year since, without the loss of a day, and i want everybedy to know it for their benefit.” — ‘““Joun Werks, Butler, N. Y.’. Lhose Sn ane eee ee eee tees, pe gs