rah A TS aceite aoe - VOL. 6. - {fs Pubiished every Evening. OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, | Charlottetown, P. E. 1. i i | Karas or SUBSORIPTIOR ; ix Montha, . . ; €2 50- Three Months, - ‘ § 1 % Que Month, . ; 0 50 Dae Week, : [ : 0 1g eee i Advertises Cheap | a@ Advertising at most moderate rates, Contracts may be made for month!y, quar- erly, or hatf-yearly advertisements, on appli- sation. W. L. COTTON, Manager. iJ. W. MITCHELL, Oilice Sap't , Prince Edward Is: RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 13. Winter and Arrange meat, TO COME INTO FORCE PURSIA I, December 2nd, 1378, ~ ‘TRAINS GOING WEST. _ Georgetown ..... Dp 8.20 a. m, | CG. ..0. si Oe . > Ar id. 10 wee Mt Stew’t Ju Colon LOE | Royalty Jnnction! * 11.27 “| \Ar Lh. 50 a. m. | 1 Charlottetown.. ‘Dp $.00am Dp 3.00 pm Royalty Junction, ** 3.22 “ | ** 3.23 “ North Wiltshire..| ** 9.14 “| “ 4.15 © Hantex River....; ‘* 9.30 “ | ‘© 4,30 “* Breadalbane 2 10.07 “ | * 5.08 * County Line.....| “10.17 “ |“ 5.18 “ Kensington. ae. “10.55 °* | 5.45 “ . 5 ‘Ar 11.30a m/Ar 6.30 pm ee ° ‘|\Dp 1.30 p m| Welli jie ae Ret S00 « | O’Leary....... 4 * Ae / iat: . S557 po ee rr a * TRAINS GOING EAST. \Nos. 2and4,' No. 6, Station*, |" Mixed. | Mixed. ‘16h, ——~)— TIER. 30s ccces \Dp 6.30a ue! CS Eee ok: eae O’Leary.....--++> “m6 ** PM... cccstli ae Wellington ......| “* 10.22 “ ane Arll.j0am S’mm'rside ‘*'|Dp 2.30 p m|Dp 7.30 a m Kensington......; ‘* 3.Uo “* | ** 8.05 ° County Line....| “¢ 343“ | 844 “ Breedalbane.....; ‘* 353 ss 9.54 * Hanter River....| ‘* 4.30 “ “ O59 North Wiltshire..| ‘* 446 “ -| * 9.43 ‘‘ -# 5,37 sé sé 10.38 se Royalty Juaction r aad Ar 6.00 p m)Ar 11,00 am Charlottetown... /i5, 2.30 pm Royalty Junction, ** 2.53 * yee Mt. Stw’'t June . a 7 iB « @ardiyan.. “6.35 * Georcetown.....|Ar 6.00 pm wee a are ee _ SOURIS BRANCH. ‘rains Going West. STATIONS. | No. 7, Mixed. eteie <5. issue vases Depart 7.15 a.m, Harmony....... ‘i sa we. Poter's....... + + 6% ° MT; . Gas he ch anael ™ om" Mt. Stewart Junction. | Arrive 10. 10 : a. m. Trains Going East. S1attons. | No. 8, Mixed. Mt. Stewart Junction. Depart 4.15 p. m. Morell ........ dave 453 * aa. * ee” Wes DRY ov ckvetechas ee ae Si. mony soc v Arrive 7.10 “eee enene ADEX. MAUNAB, Sup’t and Engineer. Railway (Office, Chtown, Nov. 28, 1879. —pet pres h ane sp sj kea pio 61 IM G7 24 Gan HE Best, Shortest and Cheapest route of Cape Traverse is via Train to County Line Station, thence vin Hugues’ Teams to Capes— which are in readiness at all times. J. W. HUGHES, J. HUGHES _Feb, 25, 1880—tf Bones. Bones. Di undersigned id will pay fifty aie Cash per ewt. for ail bones delivered at the Bone Nill, in the Royalty. No quantity fess than one ewt. (112 tbs) taken. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Agent. Objtown § Dee, 1, 1879 OH ARL Ort WTO —_— THE DAiLy Bis etal | Waly Exauuer | a vo beeen P RINCE EI a W N, Sah an tany Le hed * “FOR CAEH | ne enemnen anne JUB PRINTING PROMPTLY, ROATLY, AND 4 LIU reclare CHE! PLY Ww witc le Ss Yee Persons who have not yet settled last year’s accounts, will please >. so before com- mencing the busiress of the coming season. ‘.. i Boa fT hesws,t ‘ wee ‘ small Profits-QGuick Returns, IS OUR MOTTO. Warned ba 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, Purchasers, and Berrowers, EVERY EVENING, PRICE 2 CENTS. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Quarterly .-+++seeeeeeeeeeBL2d Half-Yearly..s.cesescccees 2,00 THE DAILY HAS A Largely Increased Cirewlation AND IS AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING MEDIUM a WEEKLY EXAMINER Made up from Tus Darty—a Compen- dium of all the News of the Week. Subscription price only ONE DOLLAR A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. Sent to any address in Great Britain or North America, ee Persons having relatives or friends abroad cannot do better than send them THe Weekty EXAMINER. war A few Advertisements oniy, received J, W. MITCHELL, | W. b. COTTON, 4 Oitice Sup’t. Manager QUEEN INSU RANGE OF ENGLAND. wt wo CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIQNS STERLING. ¥ NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- - ings, Merchandise and Produce, Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated re Loases settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOB (Union Bank), Adent for Prinee Edward Island FARO, Lsvj— MAGLE AN & @ MARTIN ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, sic. ences, 4) i} Newson’s Building ig, vie Post Qifice. Ciharlotictown, Po EL 1, A, A. BeLEAN. Bd. MEARTIN. June 18, 1579.-—ex2aw arene anaemia iliitmatthceastat cn amcconnane senctacenipeccenaeetncsiiilagpetaas b= Py s 3 ye an * fT brent ii — ye ose a G. | ib Un Boum 3 Vtg Mauufacturer & Deal rin MOT? UU MENTS 7 anaa 2? LESUORAS, GC, PRICES. BEST AI nates eee vy @kmanship. id 16 US, ne in variety, at LOWEST STOCK. Superior CawT Cis ~—- SATISFACTION GUARANTERD 70 PATRONS N. - Farm Produce taken at market rates, in payment, during shipping season. harlutietvwn, P. H. I. igns & Prices. —tu sa Gm Please call anid examine De 7 a Mar. 20, 1880.—w J. h. FOS STER; . = & Moncton, N. R., REPRERSENTING IM THE MARITIME PROVINCES Gutaric, Chicage and Western Millers and Shippers, a , FLOUR. MEALs GRAIN, Seeds and Provisions. The following are some of the leading brands of Flour for sale wholes sale, in car-load- lots only, viz:— ‘ Buda,’ ” ** Alabaster,” ‘‘ White Rose,” Warenp’s Superior, ‘‘ Pastry,” ‘¢ Beaver Mills,” ‘‘ Red XXX,” ‘* Amber,” &e., &e. The above choice brands of flour, with many others, can be obtained at all the leadipg Flour Houses in the Maritime Provinces. Sam ples of all kinds of Seed Grains, and other yoods will be-sent to any address on applica tion free of charge. Ask for quotations by telegraph in **Cipher,’ which will be supplied to all cor- respondents on application. Nev, 25, 1879—ly a ae ee ST, MARGARET'S HALL. HALIFAX, N. S. SGMINARY FOR YOUNG LADIES. ao ‘ my if T iis Lord Bishoy e iF = —" HOV Seotia PRINCIPAL: Fhe Rev, John Padfield, ‘UiS SCHOOL offers, at very moderate cost. the advantages of a comfortable and pleasant home together with a thoreugh and refined education, The course of Instruction is the same as that of the best Schools in England and is founded upon the University Lxaminations for Women. Eight young ladies from this School passed the Local Examination of the University of King’s College in June last. This is the only School in Canada that has passed pupils at a University Examination. The number of pupils is limited, rendering the school select, and while it possesses all the educational advantages of a large public school, each pupil is enabled to receive that individual care and oversight which is so important, and which cannot be given in a large establish- ment, Mr. and Mrs, Padfield are assisted by a staff of four resident governesses, besides visit- ing masters. Parisienne French is taught conversation- ally. There are two resident French Gov- ernesses, References given to parents of pupils. For further particulars address the Prin- cipal. ei: 19, 1879. Valuable Property for Sale, WO BE SOLD, all t that part of Town Lot No. 74, in the first hundred of Town Lots in Charlottetown; having a front of 67 feet, Dor- chester street, and running back 80 feet, to; gether with the buildings thereon erected. For further particulars apply to Messrs. Hopeson & McLeop Charlottetown. _ Sept. 13, 1878. PUY the DAILY EXAMINER for the MINK Wa RD ISLAND, THU RSDAY latest news—loeal and telegraphia APRIL 0, SECOND EDITION! . P.. . Th - w> £3 TAMING THE Dp AILY TM XAMINER. ~~ 21 RIL ‘15. 880. Ayla Citny A Mule Story. MR. J. DB. PLUMB IN HI8 BUDGET SPEECH. good story was told by Mr. J. B. Plumb inthe course of his late Budget Speech: ‘*The desperate struggle of honorable gentlemen opposite to prove that the country, which their policy did so much to j injure, is utterly ruined, and the heroic and sc olf- sacrificing, but hopeless efforts to obstruct and resist the movement which is bringing abeut the return of pros- perity. reminds me of a story that I will venture to relate, the eppha ation of which will be byvipue: rome » tren hve® years ago, « The following e, about twentre ertain enter] prising English capitalists and onntadaiadel. obi con- 6es8sions froin the Spanish Rois nment for the corisiruction.of a system of railways in thats ramantic and mountaineus country. The Grst line was bniit, if L remember cor- rectly, from Mis adria northward, towards the French tier, through formidable cad “TT fc passes, and a s sotion n of forty or fifty y. miles having been sansa. it was determined 1 Sue ca enee oh —— or to run the first tram oeverit wi ADPrO- aia? = : ra ae . —_ i priate celubration and ceremonies. Pre-j ns eT a VIOUSIY, as.sowill Be Known to. every! te ‘ jee? 43 Nae iota 134 one convereann With G2 12 ck Uniry, ail the travel irafic -had been in ? } ee ~ . 1% Sail ail st : the ianas Ui LHAd MmwWeEteers,*® ¥ ‘ Csi . : ; : ; oe : maine men Of much earnestuess and soiemn- . Pa ee Pa, life lone as my ol ene racter, but, Irom a Hie long as- } = ne useful anima ith the referred sympathetically 8OCTATI 1© hb WwW no doubt, Minister of Finance in his speech against the policy of my honer- able friend who has succeeded him in efiice, the muleteers have imbibed and assimilated to on nselves the firmness, the temper and gravity of demeaner for which those anti- ala are - celebrated. The muleteers watched with much solicitude the progress of the line, and came to the conclusion that it would d estroy their occupation, and that™ trains ninst not be permitted to run upon it, which would spoil their pas- senger traftic and empty their pack-sadles. to the other day. by the late ¥Y 410 They met in many an anxious consultation, and their head- man, who might he called the Grand Old Muleteer—who had grown gray in the inule traffic,and had heen buffeted by storm and tempest, until his long visage resembled that of the Knight of the Ruefal C ountenance, immortalized and portrayed by the pen of Cervantes— harr: angued them in excited language. ‘¢ We cannot permit this intruder to inter- fere with ns,” he shouted; ‘‘it is progress in a direction that we do not believe in Let us all turn ont, mules, donkeys and all, range ourselves on the track on the opening day, and prevent the passage of a train.” Well, sir, they dressed themselves in their best velvet jackets and silver-buttoned trousers, and crimson sashes and bread sombrercs, and invited all their neighbors and friends to accompany them and see the glorious triumph of principle. They selected as the place of operations a difficult pass in the moutains, on a heavy upward grade, with ravines and _precipices on ecach side of the track. The engine, decked with flags and wreaths, drawing a long train of carriages filled with the chief personages in the Gd¥ernment and their Fries ids, came rushing on, when the en- gineer discovered at some distance ahead, a) on the track, an immovable mass, which, on a nearer a} proach proved to be a con- course of six or seven hundred muleteers, mounted on their faithfnl animals, whose more than Roman firmness is sometimes stigmatized as obstinacy. Their tails were turned towards the approaching train, and the gaunt form of the chief could have been seen in characteristic position, a leader in the rear of his party, astride of the big- gest mule, with the longest ears of the whole, and with feet thrust in the largest stirrups. in vain the signal was rung and the whistle screamed, the “mules kept their position and the train came toa momentary pause. The engineer then, upon a brief consultation with the manager, backed down to a con- venient spet, uncoupled his engine from the train, opened the throttle valve, and at full speed rushed into the obstructionists. It was mere than — or drivers had bar- gained for, there was a general stampede, and meat was abundant: in that vicinity for some time afterwards. The road was successfully opened for trafic and trains have been running regularly ever since. This is an illustration of the ob- stacles presented to the National Policy by hon. gentlemen opposite. They are trying to stop the Government train, but 1 am afraid if they persist, that mule-meat will be plentiful for the next few months. —S §$o---—-— ih mie fr. Huen Grtxis, farmer, of Hay River, was drowned at McInnis’ Cove, North Shore, on Saturday last, while on his way frem Souris. A man named McPhee had started before Gillis to go home on the same route. McPhee’s horse fell through the ice, and while he was away to procure aid, the sleigh of Gillis came up and went into the open hole. When Mr. McPhee’s party came down, they feund two horses and sleizhs in the water. Both were taken out. The body of poor Gillis was found on Sanday in six inches of water. CLARK'S DIAMOND DUST POLISH.— Unrivalled for cleaning Gold, Silver and r i *% ° accoryry 1 ovaeys L880, —_— Co Orres spondence. a —— ar W e do not hold ouraelues responsible for the si statements or opinions of our correspondents, eee me aN ~ - eee Cour rte: To the Editer of the pe Sur,—It appears that our Legislature pfo- pose reviving the bi-monthly sessions of the County Vourts. ‘This is a retrogade step and an upwise one at best, for so far from provin an advantage to the public, I feel satisfi that it will increase litigation and impose ad- ditional burdens om that class of persons who are least abie to bear them. In fact, we have, as if is, too many sittings of those courts for the good of the country. The more oppor- tunities exist for petty law suits, the greater will be the demoralizing effect on the commu- nity. Besides this, the machinery of the Coun'y Courts is quite teo cumbersome and quite too expensive to apply to disputes—un- fortunately very numerous—involving.claims ranging only from one to ten dollars, Cases of this description shenld not be brought in the County Courts at all. The costs are wholly ont of all reasonable proportion to the cebt or demand. kaw suits of this class should be relegated to icss expensive tri- buuals fer disposal, and there shonld be one of such tribunals. established in each town- ship of the Island and be presided over by persons.of good standing and intelligence, whoshould receive their commission from the Supreme Court and not from the Government, urts are established and work satis- ther Prov inces ef the Dominion, . ’ . » miiiar U¢ ihe scale of fees toa be ch arged sh ould be even less than half that a low: et fi wv similer services in the County Ce sand a respen- rr sible Bailiff could per torm the duties now im- posed on the Sheaiff and equally as efficiently These institutiens wonld entail no costs on the Government, for the official fees to be charged would fairly remunerate the individ- nals char; ved with the administration of the laws in these courts. Justice would then be easily accessible to that large number of suit- ors and witnesses who have now to travel from remote parts of the country to attend the cireuits of the County Courts, in prose- cution and defence of the innumerable petty squabbles that oceupy so mueh of the time of these Courts. Yours respectfully, Wry ss, Crapaud, llth April, 1880. a « Scott Act—Constitutional. To the Editor of the Examiner. Mr. Eprror,—Now that the Cahada. Tem- perance Act has been sustained by the Supreme Court of the Dominion, it behoves the man y friends of the Act in this Island, who have kad to bear patiently ‘‘ the law’s delay,” to org vanize at ence, bring Queen’s Cour tv into line with the rest of the Island, and then stand by the Act. It is natural to suppose that every advaat- aye will be taken by our opponents. This we , but if our temperance men are true to f they are men and not mere e xpec ea es, if trimmers, | have no fear as to the result, Yours, &c., Son or TEMPERANCE, April 1oth, 1880, i> ©: QP +e &-—- Cara of Thanks. To Mr. William Reid, jun., A. Shaw, D. Me- Kinnon, Cernelius Lowther, Robert Reid, Robert Rogerson, James Arbing, H. W, Robertson, William McNeill, James Best, Dp. McQuarrie, Jehn J. McLeod and others :-— GENTLEMEN,~-I feel it my duty to thank you through the press for the way you so nobly and manfully werked in extinguishing the fire that caught in my house on Frida night the 9th of April, at about 11 o’cleck. I shall ever remember the valuable services rendered by you all on that occasion, and also for coming g to my assistance with such prompt- ness. Mra. Wadman also tenders her sincere thanks to Mrs. William Reid, Mrs. Peter Newsom and Mrs. A. Shaw for their kindness to her. Yours truly, Oxtver B. Wapman, Crapand, April 12th, 1880, (Other papers please copy. ) rte ne -~«-—me @ 7S ¢ —etecnenanaonemas Xin, Fixtay McNeEIrxu lectured to a small audienee in the Market Hall last night. The lecture was not as good as expected, bein merely an obscure sketch of the life of Genera Grant. It afforded much amusement to these resent and terminated by a short debate on the subject, in which Messrs. W. Crabbe, A. A. McKenzie and W. Haszard took part. Tue ‘ Annual Fire” toek place at the cor- ner of Richmond and Queen streets, yesterday evening. A spark from the chimney ignited the roof of Mr. Mugford’s Photograph Saloon, It was “extinguished before any serious dam- age was done. eee MINFATURE ALMANAC, PRIMA 6.3 ii ss aac APRIL 16, i$s0, Son Rises...... ed Hich Water 2.29. p,m SunSSars..... 44 | FuLL Moon 24, 6,37 .6m Weather Bulletin. Probabilities for the next 24 hours for the Maritime Provvaces. Toronto, April 15. Fresh southeasterly tosouthwesterly winds, partly cloudy to cloudy weather, with local rains, SO me meee seen et inner A Good Account. den sickness and suffering, costing $200 year, total $1,200—all which was sto a 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 cverybody. to knew it for Nivkel ware, Kaugquire ier i, their benefit.” “Joux Weexs, Butler, N.Y.” “To sum it up, six long years of bed-rid- =! SS St ee a Spat ae te Sto —— i