SEE oe oobi inesengeataieatanantlimmatinatinmallttiadendiomdatieatttieen sal ae eee Seeeenineiee ee es astnahemetiie oa peed MINER. inutiensemeenandiiiiniine a VOL 2. Toe Dairy EXAMINER Is Published every Evening. OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. L Ratss oF SuUBSCRIPTIO¥ : Six Months, $2 30 Three Months, - - . 1 25 One Month, . 0 50 One Week, 0 12 sw Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- cation. Ww. L. COTTON, J. W. MITCHELL, Manager. | Office Sup’t. The Weekly Examiner Is Published every Friday. OFFICE : NGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, * Charlottetown, P. E. L oe ee Subscription price, postage prepaid, $1.00 per year, in advance. ge Rates of advertising, in the Weekly Examiner, will be as follows : $0 50 First insertion, per inch, Each continuation, ‘ 0 12 Contracts may be made for quarterly, half- yearly, and yearly advertisements on application at the office. . L. Corton, J. W. Mrrcewett, * Manager. | Office Sup’t. — A. McNEILL, Auctioneer and Commission Merchant NWO. 11 QUEEN STRET. GUABRLOTTETOWY, PE. ISLAND PEFTAUCTION SALES, of all descrip- fions, attended to in city and country al moderate rates. May 21, 1877. ‘STEAM COOKING. —_—oo—eee—e—e_ese ere MAYO’E STEAM CULINARY BOILER | LL the condensed steam is carried back into the boiler--preventing unpleasant edors in the kitchen. Mest, Vegetables, Puddings, &c., may all be cooked at the game time, without mingling the flavors, while each article retains all its strength and aroma, and is more palatable and nu- tritious than when cooked by any other mode. (in exhibition and for sale at BEER & GOFF S. CALL AND GET OUR LIST OF THE BEST STOCK OF CQHRRISTMAS —AND— New Years Presents, TOYS, GAMES, ETC. BREMNER BROS. Dec, 5—4i eod FLOUR FLOUR Good Family Flour, For Sate aT W. W. CLARKE’S, Water St., Dec. 1—eod tf MORTGAGE SALE, be Sold, by PUBLI: AUJTION, on TUESDAY, the 12th day of FEBRUARY, 1878 atthe Court House in Charlottetown, at thebour of 12 o’clock, noon, of the same day, under and by virtue of a Power of Sale con- tained in a certain Indenture of Mortgage, dated: the 3rd day ct January, 1860, and made between Pater Meinxis and Mary his wife, of the one part, and Joun Kwicut, now deceased, of the other part —All that Piece and Parcel ofLaad being partof Township No, 45, and situtaated wear the head of Souris River, bounded on the West and north by land then n occupation ot Donald McCormack, and on the east by land then in the possession of Angus McDenald, and On the south by Souris River—containing fifty- owe acres of land, being the farm then and ustil lately ia occupation of the said Peter McInnis, together with all the Buildings and Appurten- @eces connected therewith. For terms and conditions of sale, apply to Messrs. Hodgson & McLeod. Dated 9th day of November 1877. JAMES McFARLANE, EOWARKD J. HODGSON, yERNON H. KNIGHT; Trustees avd Devisees under the will of tle lat Joho Knight, Hors }0—t se The BEST and CHEAPEST in the World ; for City, Village, and Coun- try, for Men, Women and Childres in all Stations ; The American Agriculturist, so-called because started 36 years ago as 0 Rural Journal—hence its name—but greatly enlarged in size and scope, without of name, until it is now a large splendid, /Uue- trated Family Journal, adapted to the Wants, Wishes, Pleasure, and Improvement of eve member or of every family in City, Village and Country—full of PLAIN. PRACTI- CAL, USEFUL, INTERESTING, RELI- ABLE, and HIGHLY INSTRUCTINE IN- FORMATION. It has departments helpful to Housekeepers, and for Youth and Children, bot Interesting and Instructive. Every volume contalns 550 to 650 Ori- ginal Engravings, finely executed and well printed on fine paper, which are PLEAS- ING and INSTRUCTIVE. .#@ No one can read a volume without get- ting numerous hints that will pay back many times the cost of the paper, TERMS, $1.60 a Year, (sent Four copies $5.20 ($1.30 each). $12.00 ($1.20 each). Try it, in connection with the WreEKLY EXAMINER, for one year. ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, Publishers, 245 Broadway, New York VIOLIN CLASS. ME: VINNICOMBE has epened a Violin ~"* Class over Mr. Fietcher’s Music Store. Ages of pupils preferred—from Eleven to Fifteen years. Trerus—§$10 a quarter, half in advance. Twenty-four Lessons a quarter; each Les- son one hour’s duration. Orders for TUNING may be ieft at the above Store. October 13, '77. P. H. TRAINOR, Painter, Carriage Manufacturer, ete. AVING FITTED up suitable Shops and engaged competent Workmen, I am prepared to do all sorts of Carriage and Sleigh Repair- ing and Painting at short notice and on reasonable terms. I am also manufacturing some First-Class Sleighs & Carriages, which I will Sell Cheap for Cash. P. H. TRAINOR, st-paid). en copies Kent St., Dec. 11, 1877, ROYAL HOTEL Saint JSohn. King Square, ] HAVE much pleasure in informing my au merous friends and the public generally, that have leased the Hotel formerly known as the CONTINENTAL, and thoroughly renovated the ee it, asthe ROYAL always had he reputation of being, one of the best Hotels in he Provinces. Excellent’ Bill of Fare, First-class Wines‘ Liquors and Cigars, and superior accommoda; zion. Blackhall’s Livery Stable attached. THOS, F. RAYMOND. July 3, 1877—6m American & Foreign Patents. Gilmore, Smith & Co., Successors to Chipman, Hosmer & Co. ag ye hi procured in all countries. No fuss in advance. No charge for services until the patent is granted. Preliminary examinations ree. (ur valuable pamphlet sent free upon re§ eipt of stamp. Address, GILMORE, SMITH & CO., Washington, D. C. —_— ARREARS OF PAY, BOUNTY, ETC. EDERAL Officers, Soldiers and Sailors ot the late war, or their heirs, are in maay caes entitled te money trom the Guver¢ ment, which has been found to be due since final pay- ment. Write full history of service and state amount of pay and bounty received. Certificates of Adjutnat General U. S. A.’ showing service and honorable discharge there- from, in place of discharge lost, procured tor a small tee. Eaclose stamp to Gilmore & Co., and full re- ply, with blanks, will be sent free. PENSIONS. PENSIONS. At Federal Officers, Soldiers and Sailors, wounded, ruptured, or injured, in the line sifduty in the late war, and disabled thereby, ao obtain a pension. Widows, and minor children of Officers, Sole ders and Sailors, who have died since discharge of disease contracted or wounds and injuries re eived io the service and in the line of duty, can procure pensions by addressing Gilmore & Co, Increased rates for pensioners obtained. Bounty Land Warrants procured for service iu wars prior to March 3,1855. There are so war-‘ rants grates for service in the late rebellion. stam Sen to Gilmore & Co., Washington D.C., full instructions. July24 1877. EVERYBODY'S PAPER, 4 9°79 Opposite Rocklin House. = CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1877 NO 184, Apia Rm gmatrene TEE: KI) Examiner FURNISHES MORE NEWS, FOR LESS MONWY THAN ANY OTHER PAPER IN THE PROVINCE It Contains Twenty-eight Columns, nearly every one of which is in elosely 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 addressed separately, as desired, $9,.0@ in advance. FIFTEEN COPIES +t.» one address, or addressed separately, as ~equired, $13.50 in advance. TWENTY COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $17.00. IN DULL TIMES —~GET ‘THE — CHEAPEST AND BEST | 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 Legislatnre will be carefully and impartially given. Special tele- grams and letters from ‘‘Our Own Ottawa Correspondent” will contain everything of in- terest transpiring in the Dominion Parlia- ment. A Goed Story will be made a specialty. The Daily Examiner Will be sent to any of the Province, the Dominion, United States or Great Britain on receipt of For Six Months, +> - - - - $2.50 For Three Months, - - - - 1.25 Fer @ne Month, ---+--+- .50 sw” ADDRESS, W. L. COTTON, Manager Examiner Printing and Publishing Company. @a’'town, Doe. 6, 1977. 2 S & Telegraphy in Europe. Last year there was expended for telegrams in the countries of Europe $15,400,000, at an average of 32 cents per message. In this cx- iture Great Britain led the last with near- y 43 per cent. of the whole; France came next with about 22 per cent. ; Germany, 18 per cent; no other country exceeded 4 per cent. The length of wires in Great Britain very slightly exceeds that of Germany, and is nearly afourth more than ["rance; in this particular Switzer- i takes the lead of the smaller European tes. —_~<~*-< >> —_ -- -—- ‘\ The London Cleopatra’s Needle. Sir James E. Alexander, the gentleman who was chiefly instrumental in getting one of the Cleopatra’s Needles brought to Eng- land, recently stated in a paper on the sub- ject, read before the Royal United Service institution, that he was urged to special ac- tivity by the fear that the Americans might get ahead in securing it and taking it across the Atlantic. The engineer who is to have charge of raising the obelisk described how he proposed to manage the job. The column is to be tilted by hydraulic pressure, first at one end. and then at the other, every foot of elevation being made good by balks of timber placed underneath. On the stacks of timber thus raised iron girders are to be laid, on which the trunnioned monolith is to be swung, under the control of guy ropes. The lower end of the obleisk as it swings will describe an are just sweeping clear of the summit of its pedestal. The adjust- ment will be the work of the small hydraulic screws, which, the engineer calculates, will gently drop the now perpendicular monolith on its base. e >> <> -o The United States Navy. The navy of the United States costs that nation a good deal of money, but according to the report which Mr. Secretary Thomp- son has just presented to Congress, it is far from being in an efficient state. It consists of 67 steam vessels, 23 sailing ves- sels, 23 ironclads, 2 torpedo boats and 26 ferry boats and tug boats. There are 12 ironclads in readiness for active employ- ment when needed. In the list of vessels in active service, in ordinary, undergoing repairs, etc., is mentioned the ‘‘ Colossus,” now on the stocks at New York, so decayed —having been built of white oak timber— as not to be worth completing. The ‘‘Massa- vidpets.” is i saine voudilion” ab Kit- tery, and the °° Oregon,” also, at Boston. The active list of the mavy is reported to be composed of 829 officers of the line, 594 of- ficers of the staff, and 249 warrant officers. The retired list is stated to comprise 137 officers of the line, 103 officers of the staff, 25 warrant officers, and 4 professors of mathematics. There were in the service on the 24th day of November, 1877, 7,012 enlisted men and boys. There is probably not a single vessel in the United States navy fit for modern warfare, yet it costs $20,000. - 000 annually to keep it up. As the Secre- tary ef the Navy does not recommend the construction of any modern ironclads, there is little prospect of the United States navy being improved for some time to come. —_—----—_——- — oo <DD> -e Reciprocity. The New York ‘‘ Nation” says :—A still more insiduous way of sapping the founda- tions of the protective system is finding favour at Washington. Reciprocity is again becoming fashionable, and it is argued in official circles that a great impulse may be given to trade and industry by admitting certain articles from some particular coun- try free, or at low duties, on condition that the country shall admit certain other articles from the United States on like terms, and the further condition that the principles of free trade be not mentioned by the contracting parties. The famous com- mercial treaty between France and Eng- land, which resulted in so great an increase of Trade between the two countries, and which has contributed more than every- thing else to demoralize and weaken the protectionist bias of France, might well serve to reconcile free traders, to that mode of dealing with the question. It is expect- ed that a new treaty of reciprocal trade with Canada will be proposed this winter and the fate it meets in Congress will perhaps decide whether the Executive will feel jus- tified in opening negotiations in other quar- ters. Asregards Canada there never was any commercial reason for abrogating the old treaty. It has been a source of profit to us for more than ten years, and its termin- ation was felt to be a loss on both sides—a loss less felt onour sidethenthe other,as the influence of the moon’s mass upon the earth is less than the earth’s mass upon the moon. Weare not in such flourishing circumstances now that we can offord to despise any help that may be offered us. Small favours will be thankfully received and Canada is likely to find a warmer welcome as buyer and sel- ler than was extended to her three years ago. It is, of course, an objection to treaties of reciprocity that it is a mode of legislation conducted in secret, and that when the measure finally becomes public, and is re- ferred to the House for concurrence in the fiscal changes adopted, it is not open to am- ndment, but must be accepted or rejected sawhole. Yet this is an objection not ikely to be raised by those who think that no mistakes can be made by lowering or abolishing duties levied for protection ra- ther than for revenue. ——___+-<40->-——____-— Mr. Barnum has made a bid for a portion of Temple Bar, London. He covets the three figures and ornaments, — Miscellaneous News. _—_—— Tut famous forest of Fontainbleau cone tained33,000 acres of land almost covered with ancient trees, and presenting most in- viting drives, London Bridge is to be widened after all The beauty of the structure will become sadly impaired, but the atilitartan results will be considerable, no less than twenty- two feet being added to the carriage way. It is stated that Lord Bute is about to transfer an English church to the Roman Catholics in the Rhondda Valley, Wales. It was built by the Marquis’ trustees while he was @ minor, but as they omitted to make it over to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners he has full power to divert it from its present use General Miles says that Chief J oseph is the beat specimen of an Indian ever saw, and that he conducted against the whites # careful, skilful, and humane campaign. The General shares in the opinion that the Nez Perces were defrauded and forced into the war. Now they have lost everything but their clothing, arms, and blankets. One of them, an old man, had $20,000 when the war began, $6,000 of it in cash. Prince Bismarck likes to find everything in his study in disorder and general topsy terviness, Just as he left it—bottles, mugs. cigars and cigar boxes, odd gloves, books, boots, pamphlets, papers, letiers, spurs, stray antiques, swords, hand mirrors, pis- tols, fiddle-strings, flutes—these are all ar- ticles he wants to put his hand on at short notice, and see lying around his table, floor and sofas. Whenever he discovers any signs that his wife and servants have been trying to set things to rights, a terrible row is raised. Rumors of Earl Beacensfield’s resignation of the Premiership, which were authoritatively contradicted a fortnight since, are again circu- lating. The London correspondent of the Edinburgh Scotsman says; ‘It is confidently anticipated in well-informed quarters that Earl Beaconsfield will retire before Parliament as- sembles, that Lord Derby will succeed to the Premiership, and that the Marquis of Salisbury, now Secretary of State for India, will succeed Lord Derby as Secretary of State for the For. eign Department. However speculative the rumors now current may be, there is no doubg of Far] Beaconsfield’s early retirement.” The Queen does, as everybody knows, many entle, womanly things. ‘‘I was never more slighted in my life,” said Colonei Henderson, Cniét of the ndon Police, to a London World interviewer, ‘‘than at one of those charming actions of the Queen in which her kindness of nature and good sense were ad- mirably exemplified. I had had the honor of showing Her Majesty over Parkhurst Prison, Among the women there several had had children born during the term of their im- prisonment. Two days later I received an en- ormous box of toys for the little prison-born children.” In his work, New Jreland, Mr. A. M. Sulli- van, M. P., illustrates the intensity of politi- cal animosities in O’Connell’s day, by the fol- lowing story: ‘‘ Do you rest all your hopes on the merits of your Saviour, Ffolliott?’ in. quired a rector of a dying anti-Liberator. “Yes, I do—all.” ‘“‘And are you directieg all your thoughts at this moment to the heavenly Jerusalem?’ ‘‘And nowhere else.” ‘Above all, I trust you forgive everyone, and feel at peace with all men?’ ‘‘ With all mankind.” Then there was a solemn pause. ‘‘ Mr. Halli- day,” whispered the dying man, ‘‘is the Dub- lin mail in yet?’ ‘* Yes, sir; half an hour ago.” He raised himself eagerly. ‘* How about the trials—is O'Connell convicted »”’ ‘*Found guilty, sir.” ‘‘Thanks be to God !” was the last ejaculation. He did not live to learn that the House of Lords set the sentence aside as illegal. Politics ran decidedly “thigh” in those days. Tue Sap Errect or a Practican Joke. — A man, named Somerville, belonging to Thore, Pontiac county, Ont., has become insane through a practical joke being play- edon him. A short time since, a party of shantymen were on their way up the river, Somerville being one of the number, when they all got on the drunk, more or less, The day following, Somerville was told that he had shot a certain magistrate while intoxicated, and that he would likely be arrested. In order to avoid this, he was advised to clear to the woods. and during the ensuing night he didso. It was four- teen days before he was found again, and then it was discovered that he was a raving maniac, having become so through fear, ex- posure and want of food. Eartuquake.—On Sunday morning last, a short time before five o’clock, a very sen- sible shock of earthquake was felt in these Islands. The vibrations lasted about eight seconds, and were seemingly moving from West to East, increasing in volume as they progressed. The shock was sufficiently severe however to shake furniture, &c., in many houses. It is some years since an earthquake was felt here before. Since writmg the above we learn from friends at St. George that the earthquake was felt there more severely, we think, from re- ports, than in this part of the country ; for persons there were roused from sleep by the shaking of their houses. The large sail- boats moored between Ordnance Island and the market wharf, were in motion, as if they were being rocked by the waves from a passing steamer. It was perfectly calm at the time. Mr. Perenchief, the princi keeper of the Gibb’s Hill Lighthouse, ine forms us that he was in the ‘‘ Lantern at 5 a. m. on Sunday, when he felt the earth. quake, which lasted for a few seconds only, There was not much wind at the time. The sea was making a great noise on the South shore. There was lightning in the S§, w,” | Bermuda Royal Gazette, Nov. 20, ‘ _ fe ee j if