na ™ rrr ene a a tea —_- ” Leeal and Other Items. a : vat $$ Tue street-signs on Fitzroy Street have | the letter Z reversed. This is sap. A number of the street corner loafers will é Arf he ** Bar” to- row to answer | . nt | ‘ ad a batiaeithbtinr Seiredlier’. ee A Higsointion Proposed \ : : Tus Northern Light arrived at Pictou at} 4 45 to-day, and after ‘‘coaling up,” leit for | Georgetown. Chances are reported good. | Ladies’, Boys’ and Youths’ Rub- | ber Boots only $1.25, Misses’ 90 cts.. Children’s 75 cts., at Borsey & Jost’s.—Iw Acctpent.—This morning a young man named Hooper received a very severe gash in the leg from a broad-axe. He is under) medical treatment. THe large number of schooners that have harbored here during the winter are being prepared for their summer's work. As yet po vessels from the outlying ports have ar- rived. Frrry-rour bags of mail matter left Cape Tormentine at 9% o'clock this morning, and arrived at Cape Traverse about two this | afternoon. They will probably arrive in this city at 9 o'clock this evening. TueReE are now three vessels destined for this port delayed by ice in Canso, viz : the brigantines Laurette and Lady Milton; owned by Messrs. Walsh & Owen, and the brigt. Archibald, owned by McDonald Bros. Tue Hillsborough is now free of ice, and were not the Government so tardy in grant- ing a three years’ contract, we would have steamboet cammunication between Mount Stewart and this city during the past few days. LivERARY AND Musica ENTeRTAINMENT. We ;hear that a Literary and Musical Entertainment is to be held in St. Paul’s Church Schoolroom, on Wednesday, the 40th inst.—in which Mr. Hill, of Halifax, —an accomplished reader—and the Char- lottetown Orchestral Club, will take part. Lo. 0. F.—~QOn Fri-) Te. day, the 26th of April " (the Natal Day of the Order), an Odd Fellows’ Entertainment will be given in the Market Hall. Particulars will be published in a few days. H. Jas. Patmer, Chairman Com. April 2, 1878, Tse Suppressep Memoranpum.—With reference to the ‘‘ Memorandum” which does not appear in the correspondence be- tween the Government and His Lordship Bishop McIntyre, we may explain that it was not the private letter to the Governor- General — of which Mr. Davies spoke in the House the other day. If it is not in possession @ the Local Government, they cannot, of course, be blamed for not pub- lishing it. But itis strange that when the correspondence was published for the self- evident purpose of keeping up the agitation on the School Question, one very important memorandum—submitted in the usual way —by the official channel—should be with- held ! Catepon1a.—On Tuesday evening, at the close of a public Temperance Meeting, at Hopedale, Lot 22, addressed by the G. W. Patriach, a new Division of the Sons of Temperance, ‘‘Caledonia,” No. 105, was formally organized with 32 Charter mem- bers. The officers are :-— W, P.—John D. McLeod, W. A.—E. McInnis. R. 8.—C. McD. McKinnon. A. R. 8.—J. McDonald. F. $.—C. McDonald. T.—J. J. McLeod. Ch. —Roderick McLeod. C.—J. E. McLeod, A. C.—C. McLeod. 1. 8.—W. H. Jewell. O. 8.—William McInnis. P. W. P.—John Patterson. Regular meeting every Tuesday evening SrewART AND THE SuHvurrers.——If there is anything which sorely troubles the Com- missioner of Public Works it is to hear any reference to the stupid blunder he com- mitted when he placed the iren shutters on the Court House windows. This was referred to in the House of Assembly the other day, but Stewart declined to give any explanation, saying that the charges against them in that respect were merely the insinuations of the Press—which he now affects so heartily to despise, but the sayings of which, nevertheless, caused him a great deal of anxiety. Now, anyone who will take the trouble to examine the shut- ters on the Court House windows will see at once that they are utterly useless, and that the money expended in putting them up has been wasted. This is how it happened that such a large sum of money has been spent in repairs to the various Court Houses. The shutters will have to be taken down, as they are of no use whatever, and only tend to spoil*the appearance of the strue- ture. They are, however, a fair specimen of what Stewart can accomplish in the me- chanical line. It is no use for him to say that he ‘‘does not care for the Press.” We never knew a newspaper published which was not more reliable or more respected than the Commissioner or the Goyernment of which he is a member. Stewart is a first-class failure in more ways than one, It is truly laughable to hear him tell mem- bers of the Opposition that they ‘‘must use more courteous language ‘in speaking to heads of departments.” He tuld Mr. Me- Kay the other day, that unless he used more courteous language towards members of the Government, he would never get the money for the West River Bridge. All persons, therefore, who wish to obtain any share of justice in the way of public works, must first do homage and swear allegiance to that greatest of political quacks, the Commissioner of Public Works. —Progress. matter _ NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. THE SITUATION. os Vote of Thanks to the (ueen. OPINIONS OF THE PRESS, (Special Despatch to Daily Heaminer.) Lonpon, April 9. The Pall Mall Gazetie, in view of the fac- tious opposition which, not daring to move hostile resolutions, seem to hamper the Goy- ‘ernment by such speeches as these of Earl Granville, Earl Derby, the Duke of Argyle, and Mr. Gladstone, calls upon the Govern- ment to dissolve Parliament, and thus ter- minate the anarchy which has partially pre- vailed during the last two years. ~ In the Commons, this afternoon, Sir Stafford Northcote again stated that the House would adjourn for Easter recess on the 16th inst., provided that the pending debate on the Address to the Queen was concluded to-night. In the Commons, to-night, the debate on the address to the Queen, in reply to her recent message, was continued. Sir Wil- fred Lawson, on behalf of the Radicals, moved the amendment of which he had previously given notice, contesting the ne- wessity of calling owt reserves. The amend- ment was rejected by 319 to 64. The Mar- quis of Hartington, W. E. Foster and many other Liberals abstained from voting. Messrs. Gladstone and Bright supported the amendment. The amendment proposed by Sir George Campbell, praying her Majesty to accept the preliminary conference suggested by Germany and abstain from isolated action, support the powers against the spoliation of Roumania, was withdrawn. The address was then agreed to without division. Sr. Perersspure, April 9. The Journal De St. Petersburg, adverting to the hopes of the maintenance of peace which have gained ground during the last four days, points out what would have to be done in order to effect a solution of the crisis. fits obtained for Be secured by an the Christians shall not inefticacious stipula- tion like those of 1856, but by a material guarantee. Russia cannot accept an ephemeral decision of the Congress, be- cause it would not assure peace. If Europe be disposed to undertake the settlement of the Eastern Question in a sense of emanci- pating the Christians, Russia will not raise any difficulties. But the discussion of the question at issue must be inspired by confi- dence-—not by jealousy. — aos 7 moo iene S = = Fraud on a Bank. A mest ingenious fraud has just been dis- covered on the Sandbach (Cheshire) Branch of Parr’s Banking Company. On Saturday last aman respectably attired, giving the name of William Edwards, called at the office in Sandbach, and obtained a banker’s draft for £8 3s. 6d., payable to Wm. Rob- inson on Messrs, Gly, Mills & Currie, Lan- don. Edwards, by some chemical agency, obliterated the whole of the writing on the whole of the document, and, altering the date, made it payable for £200 to John Robinson. This was cashed at the Com- mercial Bank, Manchester,!which forwarded the draft to their London agents, who in turn presented it to Glyn, Mills, Currie & Co. The latter paid over the £20Q, and then returned it to Sandbach, when the fraud was revealed. Edwards, who is well known to the detective department of Scot- land-yard, is about Sft. Yin. high, with a ruddy complexion, sandy hair, and whiskers turning gray; stout-built, and about 45 years of age. The Manchester Guardian expresses its surprise that bank drafts are not printed on colored paper hke chromos. > ©: “Mir ++ > - The Rich and Poor Alike. The scriptures do less in distinguishing between men by their possessions than we do. To hear many speak, even Christians, and to read in many books—of the senti- mental order particularly—one would sup- pose that the ‘“‘ working classes’ or the ‘¢ lower 6rder,” were a distinct species, and specially hardened, irreligious and depra- ved, and that the mission of the Church, as composed of superior beings, is specially to them. You can point to the fact that there are sO many more crimes among them than among the rich. But there are so many more of them than of the rich, that their crimes are less easily hidden. A rich man in his home or in his hotel can be kept from the public eye for days, while he is sottishly drunk ; the same sin in a poor man or woman, precluded from privacy, cannot be hid. So we had better not make much of this distinction, which is un-Amer- ican, and the emphasizing of which only | raises class feeling against the ‘gospel. As ‘largefa proportion of comfortable people ‘neglect God as of the poorer, and with less ‘temptation. It is not of the straitened in means but of the rich Christ says, ‘‘ How hardly shall they enter into the kingdom of Heaven.” -—LHe. ee Died. At Orwell, on the Sth inst., of liver com- ee Mr, John McPherson, aged 58 years, aren wife and large family to mourn their oss. He died trusting in Christ. = - JS PRINTING Neatly and Promptly Executed at the EXAMINER Print- ing Rooms, Water Street, Charlottetown. eae _s while declaring that England is ready to > S } Russia, it says, demands that bene- | Wants, Lost, Found, <e.! &EPRIN 2. 6 32? f ¥ Fine t} “gr P 22> . “ ! | AdCeVePreiwsemMmenets Wie? Mis MeGAAL, Vis SACO Y | ‘ . . . , ‘17 2 ’ LORE diuug half db VN, UU Hl be wa ed for T" rv ¢ nts per daw. 5 ; opt } OL ©. ert } 7 ANTED,—By a young man with three | years experience m business in a Que- | bee house, an engagement as Bookeeper or' Clerk in a wholesale or retail establishment. Good recommendations from his former em- | : ployer. Address, F. P., care of Mrs. Pennee, HX \ ‘, Northern Light Great George Street, Charlottetown, ’ April 10, 1878—1 w Hi 4Y FOR SALE—Nine Tons,-—in bales of about 275tbs, each,—good—at $1.00 Apply to JOHN NEWSON. i- a per hundred. April 9—lw “% y oo — Board aud Lodging for | \ three persons. Address, stating terms, | W. M.,”’ EXAMINER OFFICE. Charlottetown, April, 2, 1875-—pat 6i oe" London House y V LNTED ‘ well recommended, and a good washer and ironer. Enquire at the EXAMLNER OFFICE. Charlottetown, March 30, 18S77—lw \ TANTED—By a steady, respectable | young man, a situation in a Store or Office, or at any respectable employment. |Good references. Apply at this Office. March 20— W Aaeae -At a moderate rent, a HOUSE containing 6 or 8 rooms. Ap- ply by letter at the Office of this paper. March 11 W Ltt BE SHOWN ON MONDAY, the 4th March, 206 PATTERNS UUMAMLAL TWEED, West of England and Scotch Makes. Wee. — A complete set of the / “ROYAL GAZETTE” for the last five years, or any intermediate years. Apply at this Office, stating price. Feb. 28, ’78— MORTGAGE SALE, Valuable Property in Summerside. To be Sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, on THURSDAY, the- Eighteenth day of JULY next, at the Court House, in Sum- merside, in Prince County, in Prince Ed- ward Island, at the hour of TWELVE o'clock, noon, under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained in an Indenture of Mortgage, bearing date the Eighth day of July, in the year of our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Seventy- five, and made between James Ludlow Holman, late of Summerside, in Prince County, in Prince Edward Island, and Ada L. Hoiman, his wife, of the one part, and the Honorable James Colledgé Pope, of Charlottetown, in Queen’s County, in the said Island, merchant, of the other part, (and which said mortgage was duly assigned by the said James Celledge Pope to Ralph Brecken, of Charlettetown, afore- said, Msquire, by assignment, bearing date the Fourth day of October, A. D. 1875, endorsed on the said Mortgage and duly registered in the Registry Office of the said Island, on the Sixth Gay of Novem- ber, A. D. 1875, in Liber. 1, Folio 765),— A that Tract, Piece and Parcel of Land, situate, lying and being in Summerside, seme Ge in Prince County, in Prince Edward Island, bounded and described as follows : Lying south of the public highway leading into Summer side from Wilmot Creek, beginning at the east- ern line of a lot of land in possession of John Clay, near to the Railway Station, and follow- ieg the course of Bedeque Bay eastwardly a distance of seven hundred and ten feet or thereabouts, or until it meets land in the pos- session of Ronald Campbell, and bounded on the north by the aforesaid highway or Water Street and on south by the Shore of Bedeque Bay, and on the east by land in the possession of said Ronald Campbell, and on the West by land in the possession of John Clay, together with the shore privileges in front of the said piece of land to the channel of Bedeque Bay, as con- veyed to the said James Colledge Pope under a grant from the Lieutenant Governor of the said Island, under the Great Seal, issued on the Ninth day of January, A. D. 1872, together with all ways, waters, watercourses, rights, oo easements and appurtenances thereto elonging or in anywise appertaining. For further particulars, apply to Messrs. HODGSON & McLEOD, Solicitors, Charlotte- town. Dated this Fourth day of April, A. D., 1878, RALPH BRECKEN, Assignee of Mortgagee. aan = A LS( ’ one BLACK & BLUE Worsted & Fancy COATINGS! SINGLE GARMENTS ‘and SUITS made upin the best styles and at the shortest notice.’ UR O TORING = DEPARTIERT A GREAT SUCCESS. A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT Men's and Boys’ Hats, April 4, 1878.-——w tls Vicks FLOWER & VEGETABLE SEEDS : MILLION PEOPLE IN RE PLANTED AMERICA. Vick’s Cataisgue,—300 Illustrations, only 2 cents. Vick’s IHastrated Monthly Maga- zine, 32 pages, fine Lilustrations, and Colored Plate in each number. Price $1.25 a year; Five copies for $5.00. Vick’s Flower and Vegetabie Gar- den, 50 cents in paper covers; with elegant cloth covers $1.00. All my publications are printed in English and German. Address, JAMES VICK, Rochester, KX. ¥ Jan. 1, 1878— BY A ue Ve offer Sprcran [NpvuckMENTs in Honse Furnishing Goods— DAMASKS, REPPS, : CRETONNES, MOREENS, ETC. SHEETINGS, PILLOW COTTON, WINDOW HOLLAND, j White & Grey GALI§O,.ETC. " NOTICE! | SARPETINGS, HEARTH RUGS, | MATTS & MATTING, LOOR O! CLOTH, ETC. | NHE undersigned Executors of t!.. last} Will and Testament of SamuEL Epwanp Dawson, late of Denver, in the County of Arapahoe, and Territory of Colorado, in the | United States of America, and formerly of! North Tryon, in Prince Edward fsland, de-, 4 CHOICE ASSORTMENT OF ‘ceased, hereby notify all persons indebted to} eI aper Hangings Pa or ia i the’ Estate of the said Sameel Edward Dawson, | \to make immediate payment to ‘Thomas 8. | Dawson, of North Tryon, aforesaid, one of the | ‘said Executors ; and all persons haviug any } claims against the said Estate, are hereby re- | | quested to render the same to the said Thomas | S. Dawson, duly attested, within one year | from date. Dated this Twenty-second day of February, | | A. D. 1878. THOMAS 8S. DAWSON, saan’ GEO, DAVIES & 60. Executors, &c. | ® | March 2—lm 2aw ———_— 0: — March 8—3m BROADCLOTHS, | nen Auction Sales. FAT OXEN. FAT OXEN. | MILCH COW & CALF. HAY, STRAW, WHEAT, &. ] Wt SELL by AUCTION, on Monday next, the 15th inst., AT 11 O'CLOCK, at the Farm of Thomas Morris, Esq. Charlottetown Royalty, opposite St. Dunsten’s College, 4 Iieavy Fat OXEN, in splendid order, i Very Fine MILCH COW and CALF~ calved about ten days. About 15 Tons HAY, 15 Tons STRAW, in lots to suit purchasers. 190 Vushels Choice Seed Wheat. B. WILSON HIGGS, bs ‘Auctioneer. | Ch’town, April 8—pat t sale ar & ne li | SALE OF STALLIONS FAT CATTLE B HAVE been mstructed by the Hon. J. C., Pore to offer, at AUCTION, on the Market Square at !25 o'clock, on ‘Thestay, the 18th April next, ‘The splendid thoroughbred HORSE | “*S¥ARRIOR,” 7 years old, imported by the Government in 1875. His Colts, which can be seen at Kensington Brewery, are very promising, and prove him to be a first-class stock getter. | Also—The handsome and powerful Draught HORSE “CHAMPION,” 17 hands high, weight 1,600 lbs., compact, active, and a splendid worker, Also—3 FAT GXEN, s@” The Stock can be viewed at the Brew- ‘ery any day previous to sale. WM. DODD, Auctioneer. Ch’town, March 30— - AUCTION! Fishing Station at Rustico, TO BE SOLD, ON Thursday, the 9th May next, at 11 o'clock, on the premises, TRVIE FISHING STATION of the late E. E. Churchill, which comprises all that tract of Land situate on Rustico Beach, in Lot 24, bounded and described as follows : Com- mencing at a stake set in the west side of *\Waver Terrace, and in the northeast angle of Fishing Station No, 1, in possession of R, B. Morrison. and running thence by the Magnetie Meridian of the year 1764, south sixty d west, two hundred feet, to the shore of Rustice Bay ; thence north sixty degrees east to the said Terrace ; and thence southwardly along the same to the place of commencement—to- gether with Buildings thereon. —ALSO— 4 Fishing BOATS, 8 DORIES, 38 PUNCHEONS, Lot of Fishing Gear, Baits, Barrels, &e., &e., &e. : Terms at sale, : 41. $ CARVELL, Administrator, Ch’town, March tl--cod wkly t sale ~~ ee — AUCTION | ——:0:—-— MORTGAGE SALE. To be Sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, on Tues. day, the Fourth day of June next, A. D. 1878, at the hour of Twelve oclock, neon, at the new Law Court } House, in Summerside, in Prince County, in Prince Edward Island, under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained in an Indenture of Mortgage, bearing date the Kighth day of February, One Thousand Kight Hundred and Seventy, and made between James Ludlow Holman, late of Summerside, in Prince County, in the said Island, and Ada L. Holman, his wife, of the one part, and Jane Dover, late of Keswick, in the County of Cumberland, in England, of the other part, — LL that Tract, Piece or Parcel of Land 44 situate. lying and being in Townshi | Number Seventeen, in the Parish of Richmond, in Prince County aforesaid, bounded as fol- | lows, thatis to say: Commencing at a stake ' tixed in the Bank of Bedeque Bay, in the centre of the road leading from the Main Road to said Bay, and running from thence north untilit strikes the Main Koad aforesaid ; thence west along said road until it strikes Alexander Kennedy's east line ; thence south along said | line to Bedeque Bay ; thence eastwardly along | said Bay to the place of commencement, con- taining ‘Twenty-four Acres, a little more or ‘less, together with all Buildings, Rights, Members and Appurtenances thereto eke ing or in anywise appertaining. | For further particulars apply to Messrs, Hodgson & McLeod, Solicitors, Charlottetown. Dated this Twenty-ninth day of March, 1878. MODGSON & McLEOD, | Attorneys for Executer and Aduwinistrators _ of Mortgagee. April 4—wkly t sale TOBACCO. TOBACCO a i ' 25 TONS Prime Chewing & Smoking Tobacco, SECOND TO NONE. i i } i , Sold at prices to suit the times. , call. Give usa HICKEY & STEWART. | No, 1 Queen St., Ch’town, March 13—1m eo@