St eg ern = P now mine co seurtee i ss oP if i > i ie ie : \ Sales Agents of the Daily Examiner. |7ett’s Cross.” It was a far-famed resting place; and many a tired traveller has toast- Tur Daruy Examiner is for sale every day |ed his frosty toes and sipped his steaming on the trains east and west, and at the follow- punch on Mrs. Barrett’s clean swept hearth. ing places .- H. A. Harvie, Charlottetown. A. D. Haszarp, " T. GCoNNELL, 7 T. L. CHArPELLE, " . S. T. Nemes - G. A. AITKEN, Georgetown. D. SuTHERLAND, Souris East. A. McAvcay, Head St. Peter’s Bay. D. Eaan, Mount Stewart. H. Beer, Southport. Geo. O’ Neti, Halfway House. Morton J. Heaues, County Line Station. Epmunp CampseLt, Prince County Book- store, Summerside. W. D. McNett, Alberton. Jous J. Arsngacx, Tignish. Tur Datty EXAMI NER, DECEMBER 18, 1878. LONG THE LINE. Growth Out West. ‘‘ Younc man, go West.” It will do you good to see what’s been done there during the last few years; and if you're out of work, mayhap you'll find a cheap spot of earth on which to settle down and geta living. Thanks to the Liberal-Conservative Party, you may take the train at nine o’clock—just after you have eaten a com- fortable breakfast; and, thanks to the Grits (who are gathering when they have not strawn), you will travel at such a snail’s pace that you can have ample time to study the gevlogy, botany and topography of the country as you steam along. Remembering that the Railway only five years ago, located, for the most part, through the swamps and barrens and uncultivated parts of the Island, the state of advancement evident is wonderful—and the more wonderful the further you go from the Provincial metrupolis. Cieared fields, newly built houses and barns, new shops new warehouses, new roads meet and please the eye on every hand. As you pass the breezy ups and downs of North Wiltshire, you involuntarily exclaim, ‘‘ What a fine country and what ra was, a thrifty people”! Their fields are {not encumbered with ugly white weeds such ¢s cover the land in the vicinity of Charlottetown ; and their home- steads are surely centres of well-directed rural industry. At HUNTER RIVER STATION, Mr. John S. Bagnall’s hospitable boarding- house forms the nucleus of a thriving com- munity, of which Messrs. Alexander Mc- Millan, Peter McGrath (store-keepers), T. S. McLeod (tailor), and John McDonald (carriage-builder) are the chief members. Hunter River Station is the railway outlet of New Glasgow and Rustico settlements, and it is here that passengers, during sum- mer, ‘‘ take coach for the Seaside Hotel.” BRADALBANE has sprung into existence since the railway was built. Among its present inhabitants are Messrs. Matheson & Co., Mr. M. Matheson and Mr. McLure, merchants and traders. Each has made headway against the stream of hard times. Mr. John Mc- Leod (shoemaker) keeps several hands em- ployed. Mr. Norman Nicholson ‘ runs” a large tailoring establishment. Mr. J. R. McCoubrey employs a lot of hands at the saddling business. Mr. Hector McDonald keepsa boarding house and livery stable. Mr. Donald Graham is the carriage builder of the town, and Mr. Donald Stewart does an excellent business in the blacksmithing line. Three saw mills in the vicinity have capital water power. That of Mr. Charles Murray is a central and convenient site for a factory; and we hope soon to hear of the establishment of a starch or sugar making Company, to manufacture starch from the potato or sugar from the beet, and thus afford a home market for home produce, and an inventive to ome industry and ability. Bradalbane has sold fifty thousand bushels of oats this fall, eight thousand bushels of potatoes and a large quantity of beef, pork, etc.—all carried away to market by means of the invaluable railway. Be- fore leaving we must not forget to note that an unwilling Government was forced, by means of the rapidly increasing business of of the place, to give Bradalbane an enlarged station house, and the advantage of a com- petent and obliging station master. COUNTY LINE STATION. Five years have transformed County !.:: Station from a bare field into quite a :i. lage. Mr. J. W. Hughes is the chief man uf the place. He has a wellassorted stock, and vigorously carrics on a general busi- ness. The Dairy Examiner has a special But Mrs. Barrett is gone; and the times she knew will be known no more forever. Instead of emerging from the high old ‘coach or boxed up sleigh to straighten his ‘ cramped limbs in the lee of Glover's shed, the traveller now sits at his ease in a cushioned railway car and looks out upon a small forest of stores and dwellings. Of the old inhabitants, Messrs. Thomas Suns and Wm. Glover still remain. Messrs. ©. W. Bentley and Reuben Tuplin have re- moved from Margate, and in new stores and warehouses are carrying on a large business with the people of Malpeque and New Lon- don. There are several other stores and a fine hotel, called the ‘‘ Eureka House,” kept by Mr. Grady, formerly of Summerside. The station house has recently been en- larged, to meet the constantly increasing demands of the public for more railway ac- commodation. [The remaining portion of the report of the young man’s excursion westward and, of all that he saw, is crowded out. It will ap- pear to-morrow. ] oo mo Backing Down. Tue Patriot of the 14th inst. is made to ‘‘ eat the leek ” for publishing an article in his previous issue headed ‘“‘ A Real Griev- ance,” in which he adverts to mismanage- ment in the Railway Department. And because we dare to notice the fact that our contemporary ‘‘ woke up” to the public in- convenience caused by this mismanage- ment, he takes us to task in his usual way. To show that we have not misrepresented our contemporary nor his ‘‘ efficient public servant” Mr. William McKechnie, we now give our readers the full text of the Pat- riot’s article headed ‘‘ A Real Grievance,” as follows :-- ‘6s REAL GRIEVANCE. ‘The time of the arrival and departure of tke eastern trains is exceedingly inconvenient to those who have business to do in the city. The train from Georgetown and Souris is due in Charlottetown at 12.40, and the train going to those places leaves the City Station at 2.55. Our readers can see at a glance that the east- ern train arrives here at the very worst time in the day for doing business. 1t will be one o’clock, or dinner hour, before the passenger who arrives by that train can get up town. Most of the business men and public officials aie then at dinner or lunch, and cannot be seen until two o’clock. Our friend from the wast has then only forty minutes to do his business in, and, if he cannot be attended to promply, or if it takes longer than that to transact, he must, at considerable expense, stay in town over night. The gentleman who complained to us about this inconvenience and hardship is not given to grumbling. We saw at once the reasonableness of his complaint. The hour and a quarter, including dinner hour, is too short an interval between the ar- rival ard the departure of the only train for the eastern parts of the Island. We think that the inconvenience need only be pointed out to Mr. McKechnie to be remedied. We weretoldof a Georgetown man who, owing to the train arrangements, was obliged to lose three days in order that he might be able to attend a business meeting in Charlottetown that commenced before twelve o'clock and was not concluded until after three. We see that the train does not leave Georgetown until after nine o’clock in the morning, and that the Souris train starts at eight. What is to hin- der them starting a couple of hours earlier ?” The Moncton ‘‘ Times” comments :—- ‘Mr. McKechnie, the P. E. Island Rail- way manager, has not only proved himself a violent partisan, as evinced by his course strongly marked at various times and by his continually toting around after the Grit Ministerial party during their recent visit to the Island in the interest of ‘‘ the lost cause,” but he has proved himself to be grossly incompetent in his railway manage- ment. So hard has he been pressed by the Examiner and the other Conservative jour- nals, and so dissatisfied have the public be- come with his management, that even that Grit monstrosity, the ‘‘ Patriot” has been compelled to admit a *‘ real grievance” to the public. The ‘‘ Patriot” characteristic ally thinks ‘‘ that the inconvenience” (com- plained of and admitted) ‘‘need only be pointed out to Mr. McKechnie to be rem- edied.” But the Examiner complained of the grievance at the time the error was committed, and why did not Mr. McKech- nio ‘‘ remedy” it at that time, and further why should a “remedy” need to be applied to an arrangement for running the trains on such a short line of railway as is the Island Railway,—or to be more clear,should acompetent_man not be able to frame a passenger time table in such a way thet no such inconvenience as the one complained of would ensue ? —_——————} @}- fia - Says the Argus :—‘'The Summerside Jour- nal, whose editor is an official of the Dominion | ‘tovernment, who received his appointment from the McKenzie Adminstration, 13 laboring ° ‘hard and earnestly to shew that the policy of | dismissing officials is a pernicious one. The editor of the Journal does not contemplate | with feelings of pleasure the prospect of being |ejected from his official position by the party ‘that now holds the reins of power. But we correspondent at County Line Station; and | cannot see why, with even the smallest show he wiil, doubtless, do it ample justice. we pass on—glad to learn that a Company is about purchasing the mill site, known as the Haslam mill property, for manufactur- | ing purposes. Sojof reasonon his side, he and others of his ‘stripe should expect any leniency at the hands of the present Government.” >e---- —- | —_ means a home market and prosperity to the and fined before James McWade and W. J. farmers of the settlement surrounding. KENSINGTON used to be known by the name of “ Bar- ‘Logan, Esquires, two of Her Majesty’s Jus- itices of the Peace for Queen’s County, in the sum of twenty dollars with costs, for selling | spiritzous liquors without license. | Convictioy.—On Saturday, the 14th inst. | The success of the Company | Wallace Clarke, of Mt. Stewart, was convicted WHOLESALE. SPECIAL INCUSEMENTS FOR CASH OR GOOD PAPER. TEA, FLOUR, MOLASSES, SUGAR, CURRANTS, RAISINS, RICE, a Charlottetown, Dec. 17—-pat 3i \ I Fresh Currants,§ Figs, Dates, COKE ELLING at the Gas Works, a superior quality of COKE, at 5 cents per bushel. WM. MURPHY, Manager. N. B.—Persons having steam boilers will find Coke a very superior and cheap fuel. Dec. 18, 1878—2i OVU'T! CHAPPELLE'S RELIABLE ALMANAC -FOR— 1879 A Decided Improvement on any Work of the kind yet Published. MODERN, ACCURATE, AUTHENTIC. ONLY 12 CENTS. GET A COPY. WHOLESALE & RETAZL. Theo. L. Chappelle, DramMonp BooksToRE, 85 North Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Dec. 17—3i tue th sat | NOTICE. QNHE Petitions to the Governor-General of Canada, in Council, praying that an Elec- tion may be held to decide whether the Elec- tors of Charlottetown are favorable to the adoption of the provisions of the Canada Temperance Act, 1878, have been deposited for pullic examinaticn in the office of the Registrar of Deeds for Prince Edward Island, in Charlottetown, pursuant to the said Statute, where they may be seen by parties who desire to examine tiem. | A. A. MACDONALD, Chairman of Committee. Charlottetown, 16th Dec., 1878—2i law h2i PARLOR BRACKETS ed UST ep . NEWSON. i Nov. 22—lm | | ; | 0 BAKING-SODA, TOBACCO, Kerosene, Sole Leather, Manilla, d&c., &c. A eee Qe ee es, Raa omen CARVELL BROS. JUST RECEIVED AND TO ARRIVE, 900 BOXES CHOICE RAISINS, IN LAYERS, MUSGATELS AND VALENCIAS. —ALSO— Prures, Nuts, Oranges, Lemons, Green| Grapes, Cheice Confectionery. RAISINS VERY CHEAP BY THE BOX. ICALI AT THE Flour and Tea Store. We Sell, WHotxsaLe and Reram—cuear. Our TEA is very choice. BHR & GOH HE. Charlottetown, December 12, 1878. COKE! | 1878 DECEMBER 1878 FANCY LINED COAL VASES FANCY HELMET COAL SCOOPS, ‘GALVANIZED AND BLACK DO. COAL TONCS, SHOVELS, POKERS, FIRE IRON STANDS. All at a Large Discount to clear. BEER & SONS. FUR GOODS. MUFFS, BOAS, CAPS, Promenade and Heavy Wool SCARFS, MUFFLERS, CLOUDS, White & Col’d. Remainder offered at low figures. BEER & SONS. WooLEewNs. Blue & Black Beavers, Whitneys, Presidents, Moscows, Worsteds, Tweeds, Suitings. A Choice Collection—-made up to order at short notice. BEER & SONS. eee LADIES’ SACQUE CLOTHS, PLAIN AND FANCY. Balance of Stock offered at extra discount. BEER & SONS. -7 E have received the chief part of our FALL STOCK, and can confidently call attention to LARGE IMPORTATIONS, wali SUGARS, FRUITS, SPICES & GENERAL GROCERIES. We are also in receipt of Full Line, in REFINED & COMMON IRON, SLEIGH-SHOEING STEEL, SPRING, CAST, and BLISTER DO. Paints, Colors, Oils, Gold Leaf, Transfers, TEAS, Varnishes, etc. A Large and-Well-Assorted Stock of WooD sTUFFS, FOR SLEIGH & CARRIAGE BUILDERS. BEER & SONS. Ch’town, Dec. 13, 1878~ SMOKED SALMON, Very Delicieus, at BEER & GOFE’S. UY THE DAILY EXAMINER, for the latest news—local and telegraphic. A a St EE” ~ cee TOYS! in great variety, and aK, ~~ QB 2) \PYSC EC RAC 9 P BY DEPAGCL Sy g' ~ oO ge) 0("" 44) (Xx . 2 7) ALE POE: bpaed: SA xh ; - n\n ¥ AS, APY) TA (2,5) Bed oR SA KOON The Best Stock ever imported for the Christmas Trade, at BREMNER BROTHERS. | ‘ Dec. 16,78. 31 arg era 21 DECORATE YOUR HOMES WITH ARTIFICIAL VINES THE LATEST NOVELTY. We have received several varieties, such as:—EnGiisH Hotty, MistTLeror, GERANIUM, Ivy, MapLe, &c. BREMNER BROS. CHRISTMAS NOTE & ENVELOPES, AND OVER 200 Designs Christmas Cards, __ Including the New CANADIAN WINTER SCENES, for sale by BREMNER BROS. Dec. 16, 78. 21 CHOICE BALDWIN APPLES, Cheap by the Barrel, at BEER & GOFF’s. Queen Square Livery Stables, NORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE. NHE Subscriber, having purchased a num- _ber of New Sleighs and Furs, is p to hire Single and Double Teams, at shortest “— during the winter. orses, Coaches, Buggies and Open Wagons kept for hire daily, fa ays oxoiglal ERMS REASONABLE. 1 STEPHEN T. STUMBLES. Ch’town, Dec. 12, 1878—1m 2aw ar ne 4i DRIED SHOKED BEEF, A FRESH LOT, VERY NICE, AT BEER & GOFF'S. THe Christmas Examination Of the City Schools VILL be held on FRIDAY, the 20th inst., at 10 o'clock, a.m. The usual routine work of the schools will be carried on by the Teachers in their several Departments. The parents of the pupils and the citizens generally are feapocttully invited to attend. By order. | {ISAAC OXENHAM, Sec’y of City School Board. Office of City School Board, Charlottetown, Dec. 16th, 1878. 3i o —— UBSCRIBE for the DAILY EX AMIUINER the Cheapest and most a Paper published in the Provinen. x eae "a Bia ASS