areas 2 ee VOL. 6, ————- icicle Tus Datty EXAMINER is Published every Evening. OFPICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, -—— ee } Charlottetown, P. E. 1. | Karas oF SUBSCRIPTION ;: Fix Months, . « fe $2 50 Three Montis, - ‘ ; 1 25 | One Month, ‘ ‘ : 0 50 | Une W eek, - . ° 0 12 gw Advertising at most moderate rates, Coutracts may be made for month!y, quar- erly, or half-ye rly advertisements, on appli- eation. w. L. COTTON, Manager. | me = — Prince “award is!and RAILWAY. _ TIME TABLE NO. 13. Winter Arrangement, | J, W. MITCHELL, Office Sup’t : ee TO COME INTO FORCE esember fad, 1879, Tran A TRAINS GOING Sars> ef vi EST. No. dD, Mixed. < rroNs Nos. lé& > ee Mixed. | . Dp $.20 a. m.} "E45 * Georgetown .. Cardigan...... Mt Stew’t June... Dp osbtee uf Koyalty Junction’ ** iL.27 * Ar 11.50a.m.! ‘Dp 8.00am Dp 3.00pm Royalty Junction; ** 8.22 “* | ** 3.23 ** North Wiltshire! *¢ 9.14 “ | 4.15 « i 466 9.30 * 4s i Charlottetown Hunter River... .| 4. 30 " Breadalbane.. egy: * * £2465 “ County Line.....| ‘* 10.17 “ “ 52s “ . 10.55 é es 5.55 ae Kensington... ...! ‘Ar ll.30am Ar 6.560 pm Summerside .. ‘Dp 1.30pm) Wellington.... :| ‘* mee ** | GE oc, ee) Ot | O'Leary. .... a | Siesten....... x0) Et Tiesish......... ; 610% | TRAINS GOING EAST. ; ‘Nos. 2and4,! No. 6, Stations. |" “Mixed. || Mixed. Tignish...... ..-iDp £30 0m! Alberton... ....| “ 7.25 “ | O'Leary... ees PREM ..co-2-0] ee | Wellington ......| ‘10.22 “ | eee Ar 11.10 am S’mm'rside . . ‘\Dp 2.30 pm|Dp 7.30am Kensington......) “* 3.05 * | ** 8.05 C County Line.. ..; * 3.43 ee ae ; Breedalbane.....; ‘' 3.53 ‘* | ** 8.54 * Hunter River....| “ 430 ‘° | “* 9.30 °° North Wiltshire..| ‘* 446 “ | “ 9.43 ° Royalty Junction’ * 5,37 “ | ‘10.33 “ Chirlottetown |Ar 6.00 pm/Ar 11,00 am Royalty Junction a oie * Mt. Stw't June. ‘Dp. 4.15 “ | Cardigan........| ** 5.35 “ | Georgetown ..... \Ar 6.00 pm! = ~-——— -- _ —_— — A A A a AED SOURIS BRANCH. _—- —_ _— = a + oa i Trains Going West. STATIO ™S. | No, 7, Mixed. | SIE cece, sca ehatil | Depart 7.15 a. m. ; OEE on, inoue pass } 7.37 = me, Peter's....... gael | es epa i < — Mt. Stewart Junction.| Arrive 10.10 a. m. ee Trains Going East. SLATIONS. No. 8, Mixed. eure Mt. Stewart Junction.| Depart 4.15 p. m. Morell ..... Rade «ued. «ae, 2 Te eee | *. mee s', . ncaus tues . ia * Dovsve. eruicevel | Arrive 7.10 ‘* ~ ALEX. MACAAB, / Sup’t and Engineer. Railway Office, Chtown, Nov. 23, 1879. —pat pres h ane sp sj kea pio 61 VALUABLE PROPERTY FOR SALE, | HE Subscriber offers for Sale all that! Valuable Property situated on corner of THE CH Advertises Cheap Half-Yearly....seseceeeeee 2,00 Grafton ani West streets, and comprising | Town Lots Nos. 15 and 16 in the third | hundred of Town Lots in Charlottetown. | Also, that Property on Kent Street, consisting 1 | ly Examiner | ; | Low. | FOR CASH |! en 2 ee UB PRINTING PROMPTLY, NEATLY, AND CHEAPLY DONE. ree ~~ Pri ‘ Wes> Persons who have not yet settled last year’s accounts, will please do so before 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 Local News, Fereign ews, Political News, Secial News, Commercial News, Shipping News, laid before Subscribers, Purchasers, and Borrowers, EVERY EVENING, PRICE 2 CENTS. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Quarterly ...eesecceeceee ofl 20 THE DAILY Largely Increased Circulation AND I§ AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING MEDIUM ee ee ce WEEKLY EXAMINER Made up from Tae Darty—a Compen- | dinm of all the News of the Week. : Subscription price only ONE DOLLAR A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. Sent to any addreas in Great Britain or North America. —— ! } ; i i ' i XAl \ RLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SECOND EDITION Tur Dainy EXAMINER. RI Le LSso. Longfellow is said to be worth $150,000. ee ae | Dr. Hayes, the noted explorer, is the son of a Pennsylvania Quaker. seen ame A nrwsparrr to be called the Plaia Dealer is to be started in Pictow. Edwin Booth, since bis bankruptcy im 1876, has made some $300,000. » 267 words a minute, grapher, can write som: The Crewn Princess Victoria, the wife of Prince Frederick William, of Germany, will visit Rome in April. Mary Walker wanted to be a police’ sur- geon in bat they declined that leap year propesal. Washington, Mark ‘Twain is worth $150,000, whieh he made frem his books, lectures and interests in insurance companies at Hartferd. The Queen of Denmark, although over sixty, is so yeuthful in appearance as to look like the older sister of her « whe is .o as devoted a 3A musician, r daughter. mother a is THe value of real and personal property in the town of New Glasgow, acecerding to the assessment for the present yoar, 18 esti- mated at $665,480 King Oscar IL, of Sweden, has ordered four gold and forty-six silver medals to be struck for the officers and crew of Professor Nerdenskjold’s Arctic Expedition. sonceissctahtiiinnablike A party of three hundred Irishmen and French Canadians, on their way to Manitoba to work on the Canada Pacific Railway, quar- relled at the Belleville station and 70 men en- gaged in the melee, a number being badly hurt. The train was delayed three hours. Goutp Mintnc.—Mr. E. F. Couch, of Newburyport, Mass., has organized a com- pany in New Hampshire, with a capital of $500,000, which has bought the old i** Temple” mine, near the ‘‘ Rose” mine, in Halifax county. ‘The nanie of -the mine has been changed to ‘‘The British- Amerigan Gold Mine.”—He. Hezald. ie 4 oe ERS STARVATION AND Dear, — News reached St. John, N. B., on Tuesday afternoon, of the sad and terrible fate of an eld woman named Diggs, who had resided all alone in a weoden shanty at Loch Lemend. N, B. Mrs. Charles Mirey, who had been out there on Monday last, brought the news to the city. The un- fortunate woman’s sons, Charles, George and Alexander, all of whom live at the foot of Duke street, did not hear ef the oceurrence notil the fellowing afternoon, when two of them went out to the house that had been ten- anted by their mother, only to find that the report was too true. The deceased had been suffering for some time from the effects of a tumor in her throat, and from want of proper treatment, aided by exposure to cold and starvation, she died. No food or fuel ceuld be found anywhere in the house. —7'elegraph, — The family of a farmer, named Tyson, living a few miles from Detroit, Mich., were to have been arrested on the 8th inst., for the murder of a young woman named Martha Whitla. Her body was found floating in the Detroit river on March 13th, bound and gagged, under the stern ef one of the vessels. The pelice have been try- ing to unravel the mystery ever since. They found that she had been werking with the Tyson family and that one of the isons became enamored of and wished to marry her She was willing, but young Tyson’s father objected, and it is suspected that the family took foul means to prevent the marriage. The Princess Vicovaro Belegnetti Ceni, (by birth Miss Lorillard Spencer, of New York) has been appointed Lady of the Palace to the Queen of [taly. This is the third Lady of foreign birth who has been selected for that royal service. When the Savoy Court was first established in Rome in 1871 the Princess Teano, who was a Miss Wilbrahem ; the Marchesa Cala- brina, also an English woman ; and the Marchesa Laoggi, a French woman, were placed in attendance on the Princess Mar- guerite. There has never been a court at Rome, except the Papal one, where there was no female head. The latest claimant for damages from the Dominion Government is @ man named James Hannah, who has sent a petition to the Governor-General for payment of a claim of £26,000, which he asks as a com- pensation fer murder, arson and robbery from which his family suffered in 1866. It appears from the man’s statement that he was subjected to persecution by a set of desperadoes in the township of Bolton, C. E., and that finally on the 2nd of August, a man named Chamberlain entered his dwelling,beat Mrs. Hannah,who ran away, of ‘ewn Lots Nos. 67 and one-half of 66, also Persons having relatives or friends abroad and then fired the house and brvtally mur- ia the third hundred. This property is a/| most desirable one for private residences, and will be sold low. If not disposed of by private | Bale, it wil) be offered at Auction about June | Ist, next. Offers for part of the work will | received. For further particulars opply to rs. Dayres & SurnERtanp, or to the) sabseribor. ' F. MITCHELL, Oh’ wrwi, F's. 19, 1960—Paw Trastee. | cannot do better than send them : Tae Wrexty EXAMINER. ' pay A few Advertisements only, received J, W. MITCHELL, | W. L. COTTON, Office Sup’t. dered a three-year old child. Chamberlain | was tried and acquitted of the charge of murder, but were sentenced to seven) vears penal servitude for firing the house ; | Hannah claims that the Freemasons werked | against him, and that a number of the’ d;ake Pills. jury were bribed. There is little doubt | W. R. Watson. but the man has gone mad over his afflic- | Giles, 120 West Broadway, N. Y. Trial size Manager tions. the s ! haps, Eugene Maswell, a California phone-! LI - =~ - nee eee ee Correspondence, ow — oo eet . cere te ° 4 rege 25 . - ' er Wedonot hold ourselves responsible for | the sialemente or opinions of our correspondents | re a any ee os ° - ae — To the Editor of the Examiner. Dear Sizn,--The New Era of Saturday contains a bitter, if not elegant; article against the leader of the Local Government forallowing the Orange Bill to passthe House of Assembly. The editer must know that Mr. Sullivan had not the power to prevent | the passage of stich a Bill when the majority | were against him ; but, however, he seizes upon this opportunity to show his disap- proval of the present Government, and raise a ery against its leader, which, per- might take effect in the district represented by him. The ediior’ of the New Era has spent the last two or years sitting on the} fence Which divides the Liberals andj Conservatives of this Island, and frequent: | ly bas he clapped his wings and threatened | to jump, but owing to his lack of political influence, neither party seemed anxious about him, and in that pesitien he remained nntil last Saturday, when he bade good bye to his old reost, and announced himself a full-fledged Grif. I do net know if the Grits approve of his. action in this matter, but before long they will discover that he is not much of an acquisition to their party. When the Davies Government passed the} Orange Bill a few vears age, did this in- dividual, who has the gross impudence to consider himself the mouthpiece of the | 3 ? : *, : Liifree Irishmen of this Province, raise his yoice against it. His paper of that date don't show auy marks of indignation Can that time he at what he row calls an outrage. it be possible that at favor of the Orange Bill? Surely the man who devotes a whole ave of his paper to denouncing this ‘Bill page of his paper to denouncing this bi at the present time could never allew it to pas@ quietly a few years age, if he is sincere in his professions now. But he was a great friend ef Mr. Bavies while in power, and, was in from the nature ef the man I believe { am safe in saying that he would Jend a helping hand tewards the framing of the Bill at that time. It appears to me that there is another and more weighty reason for the New Era’s attack on Mr. Sullivan. It is well known that the editer of that paper has been fora long time aspiring toa seat in our Legis- \lature. True, he ran an election for the Council ence and was returned home fer many good reasons; but he is still hepe- ful that he will occupy a seat in the Lower House at no distant day, and believes that by raising a cry against Mr. Sullivan on the Orange question, he may yet, unfortunately for the district, be an M. P. P. The electors of St. Peters are not likely to be guiled by such sballow pre- tentions as those made by the editor of the New Era, aud they will never place the representation of their district in his hands. The late hon. Edward Whelan represent- ed that district seme years ago, and it is an acknowledged fact, that had the late Edward Whelen, junior, reached manhood, he also would have been their representa- tive. Now, the people of St. Peter’s and Morell have great respect for the memery ef their late lamented representative, and i can.scarcely believe that they will ever se far forget themselves as to return to Parlia- ment the man whe opened the columns of his newspaper to a number of base and cowardly attacks upen the only son ef the late hon. Edward Whelan. There is only ene journalist in this Province who would do such a contemptible action, and thai is the modern O'Connell who aspires to represent the intelligent Irishmen of St. Peter's and Morell. When Mr. Bowers enters St. Peter's again, the electors will tell him, as they did before, that he never lived up to his pretentions, and itis hypo- eritical howling against Mr. Sullivan will co for naught. Yours truly, ANTI-ORANGEMAN. St. Peter's, April 12, 1880. The Queen’s Birthday at Quebec. The celebration of the Queen’s birthday at Quebee this year will be on a grand scale. The Vice-Regal party will be present, and probably, says the Quebec Chronicle, H. R. H. Prince Leopold, and the two sens of the Prince of Wales. The military display will ba ena large scale and will form the principal attraction. The Quebec Squadron of Royal Canadian Hussars, 8th Royal Rifles, 9th Bat- talion and Quebec Ficld Battery, numbering altogether some 800 men, ‘‘B’ Battery, Que- hee, aud ‘‘A” Battery, Kingston, numbering some 350 men, the Fusileers (two battalions, ) Prince of Wales Rities, Victorias, Field Bat- tery and Cavalry of Montreal, numbering 2,000, the Princess Louise Dragoon Guards, Citawa, about 50 strong, and the Governor General’s Foot Guards, and probably the Green's Own, of Toronte, 600 streng, and the Kingston Cadets, both of which corps are anxious to be present and are awaiting the Government's permission. Bgsides the above the country battalions of the Province are de- sirous of attending, as well as the Cadets of the Montreal High School and of Bishop’s College Schools, Lennoxville. The Quebec City Council will be asked to vote $1,500 to- wards the demenstration. i nm HasirvaL Cosrivengss, the cause of so many troubles, Lowness of Spirits, Dizziness of the Head, Loss of Memory, Indigestion, Flatulence, Beating ef the Heart, Nervousness, all these are cured by Giles’ Improved Man- Giles pills cure Gout. Sold by Send for pamphlet. Dr. 25 cents, tural Store.--R, May, ‘ER. MONDAY, APRIL 12, 1880, NO. 120 Sad Drowning Accident.. mee ~ A BOAT CAPSIZED—-THREE MEN DROWNED— 18 CHILDREN LEFT FATHERLESS. It is our painful duty te record this morn- ‘ing, another sad drowning accident, which occurred near Tancock, on Wednesday aiternoon last, whereby three men lost their lives. It appears that six men, fishermen belonging to Taneock—John Wilson, Geo. . Masou, David Langille, Isaac Mason, (brother of George), Wm. Thomas, and Charless Ross,-—left Tanceck en the morn- iny of the day above mentioned, in a centre beard beat, 15 feet keel, (the same as used hy lobster men in visitmmg their trawls) fer the purpese of geing to Chester to procure some lobster steck consisting of bows, &¢. rhey arrived at Chester in safety, got their boat loaded and started te return, leaving at 2 e’clock in the afternoon. Everything went allright until near Tancock, they had occasion to jibe the beat : in doing so she capsized and threw the six men into the water. Willam, Young, of Long Reef, South East Cove, Big Tancock, seeing the accident from the shore, immediately put out ina dory. When he arrived at the scene of the accident, he found the six men clinging to the botiem ef the capsised boat. lt was blowing su hard andthe sea was so rough that he was able to get ove man cnly into the dory; he succeeded, however, in lashing two others ta the sides ef iis beat. Py the time this was accomplished the re- maining three, benumbed with the cold, were unable to retain their hold any longer, slipped from the bettom of the capsized beat to the water, and sank almost imme- diately, although they were all able to swim. Young then put for the shore but finding himself unable to make any prog- ress, called for help. His appeal was re- sponded to by his son-in-law, whe put off from Cross Island, and towed him to the shore. It was feared for a long time that the three men who had been saved would net recover, for benumbed from expesure and cold they remained a long time uncon- scious. They are now, however, doing well. The names of the three men drown- sd are John Wilson, leaving a wife and six or seven children ; George Mason, wife and six children ; and David Langille, wife and five children. The names of the three saved are Isaac Mason, brother of George, Win. Themas, and Charles Ross. Up to yesterday morning the the bedies of the men had not been recovered. This sad calamity has cast a gloom over the whole village. Allthe more so from the mourn- ful fact that this makes no less than five of the inhabitants ef Tancock whe have de- parted this life within a few days.—H-. Herald, -_e-. A. Periodical Kansas Cyclone. GREAT DESTRUCTION OF PROPERTY,.—LOSS OF LIFE, ETC, Orrawa, Kansas, 'April 3.—A_ cyclone last evening demolished seven residences, injured many others, destroying many barns, tore the roof off the railway freight house, and overturned several freight cars. In Nerth Ottawa fifteen residences were totally destroyed or badly damaged. The evening train from Lawrence was caught north of the town. The passenger car and two freight cars were upset. One passen- ger was seriously injured. The storm then proceeded to the northwest, destroying four farmhouses. Many persons were seriously injured and one child killed. Lumber and furniture was scattered for blecks. Merses, cattle, wagons, and even persons were hurled through the air. . Grirarp, Kansas, April 3.—A _ cyclone passed near here on Friday night. Seven- teen honses were destroyed. §S. Sanders and Mrs. Jones, near Mulberry Grove, were killed, and a five-year-old child was fatally injured. Many ethers were badly hurt. Grass, hedges, grain and trees were pulled out of the ground, feathers were plucked from the ponds, and houses were torn to splinters. Thetrack of the storm was from three to fifty reds wide. Cincinnati, April 4.—A severe storm last night along the Ohio Valley. At Evansville, Ind., dwellings, and the turret of the Unitarian Church were blown down, with trees, fences, etc. The tug Dick Wil- liams wrecked, with a barge of corn and one of staves sunk. eee A Good Thing. German Syrup is the special piescrip tien of Dr. A. Boschee, a celebrated German Physician, and is acknowledged to be one of the most fortunate discoveries in Medicine. It quickly cures Coughs, Colds and all lung troubles of the severest nature, removing, asit does, the cause of the affection and leaving the parts in a strong and healthy condition. It is not an experimental medicine, but has stood the test of years, giving satisfaction in every case, which its rapidly increasing sale every season confirms. Two million bettles sold annually. Beware of medicines of similar names, lately intro- duced. Boschee’s German Syrup was in- troduced in the United States in 1868, and is now sold in every town and village ‘in the civilized world. Three doses will re- lieve any ordipary cough. Price 75 eents, Sample bottle, 10 eents. —— 000 SEEDS. —-Just received, English, American aud Canadian Flower and Vegetable Seeds of the finest and best qualities at the Agricul. mi22 12i eod incense NNN AE” . nepal Shogo “cent cist in ties i. Ce ee A - he Sa ar i me at SS IES Se