} L- 3 - oe Re py ae cF J aaa TERMS Five Dottars A YRAR, ‘ NEW SERIES. —_—_ ; f fae DArLy EXAMINER Is [sSUED EVERY EVENING, pr THe Bxay~tven Po! prom THEIR OFFI kg, U Nd GREAT CeokGs STRERTS, mNER OF WATER Charlottetow®, Rares oF SUBSCRIPTION : ; Months, - 2 5 aoe Months, ' . i 26 One Month, 0 50 a Advertising at most nigderate rates, may be made “for monthly, ly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- yplication. ments, on a] p or -~~ SULLIVAN & —_——— HACNEILL, ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW, Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &c. “ OFiallofan’s Building, Great ‘ € Charlottetown. w Money to, Loan W. W. Surtivay, &. ©. Jan. 16, '*3. ~~ BR. WARBURTON, Crrstee B. Macygm, PUNSICLAN AND SURGEON. (EXINBURGH.) Office in Old City Hotel, corner of Great esac Dorchester Streets, opposite the ic ( bapel. Street—night bell. Ch’town, Nov. 14, 82 —3m Entrance on Great George (“TO CARD...) “DR... McLEAN, -- SOURIS BAST. “Royal Oak Hotel,” 1882,--]m 3aw why 3m _McLEOD & MORSON Barristers & Attorneys-at-Law, SOLICITORS, NOTARIES PUBLIC, ETC, : OFFICES : + Bilorva Club Committee Rooms, Opposite Post Office, Charlottetown, P. E. Island, Merchants’ Bank of Halifax Building, Sum- ‘ merside, P. E. Island. , MONEY TO LOAN, on good segurity, a% moderate interest. Nar MeLgop. Nov. 24, 82 —pres her “TOHN MACEACHERN, (Late of Italian Warehouse) AGENT FOR Royal Fire Insurance Company, of : England, London & Lancashire Fire Insurance Company, of England, » City of London Fire Insurance Co., of England, HAS REMOVED His Office to his New Building, Oor. Queen and King Sts.—Up Stairs. Chitown, Dec. 7, 82. Bank of Nova Scotia. ESTABLISHED 1832, Paid up Capital . . Reserve Pand .. W. A. O. Morson. $1,000,000 . 325,000 An Agency of this Bank will be opened on endey next, 19th inst., in the building ly occupied by the Bank of Prince Edward under the management of the under- Deposits will be received on interest, and 62 current account. granted on the varieus Agencies and Srrespondents of the Bank. Sterling and other Exchange bought and and geueral banking business transacted. ; D. ©. CHALMERS, Oh'town, June 17, 1882—tf Agent. Queen Insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. DESBRISAY & ANGUS, Office —South Side Queen Sq uare, town, Sept. 15, 1882. the Chea on P, E. J LISHING CoMPaNy, P. E. Island. INSURANCE OFFICE. | - Lancashire Insurance Company General Agents. Quescripe tor the WEEKLY EXAMI- R, t and Best N ewspaper d, Only $1 per year ‘* This j ii. a oe te —_ is true Liberty, when Free-born Men having to advise the Public, may speak free,”’—EvuxipipgEs. _ CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1883 NOW OPENED NEW Dining and Coffee Rooms, _ North Side of Queen Square, ‘OPPOSITE THE LAW COURTS, ade: DA. Ch’town, Dec’ 12, 1882,— 3m FOR SATE Let's: Sash and Door Factory, SAWING & PLANING MILL, Is now offered for sale. | ’ FPYHE avove property will be sold to purchasers, as it now stands, or buildings jand land will be gold, separate from machin. ery. | ‘Also, that COMFORTABLE DWELLING (HOt Si, situated on Cumberland Street, near Grafton, For further particulars apply to the owaer on (he premises, PAUL LEA, Ch'‘town, Jan, 5, 1883. NOTICE. ELNG about to make a change in my business, it is necessary that ail amounts due me pe paid om or before the twentieth January, 18*3. All amounts not paid will be sued for then, without further notice. PAUL LEA, Sash and Door Factory, Ch’town, Jan. 5, ’82, MORTGAGE SALE, WO be sold by Public Auction, on the prem- ises in Charlottetown, on Thursday, the twenty-second day of February next (1883), at the hour of 12 o'clock, noon, that hand- some residence known as ‘‘ BEACONS- FIELD,” and is deserthed in the ondermen- tioned mortgage as follows: All that piece or parcel of land, being part of Common Lot Number Eighteen, in the Common of lottetown, in the said Province of i Edward Island, and bounded as follows, that is to say: By a line commencing at the south- west angle of West and Kent Strects, and running thence southwesterly along Kent Street two hundred and ninety three feet, to the iront of a wooden breastwork, thence along the same southeasterly (mersuring in a straight, line) one bundred and forty-six feet seven inches to a post in the breastwork, thence northeasterly two hundred and fifty- five feet, or to the western side of West Street, and thesce along the same northerly one hundred and eighty-one feet nine inches, to the place of commencement. And also all the right title and interest of the said James Peake, in and to all that piece er parcel of land lying between the aforesaid breastwork andthe channel of the Governor’s Creek. © The above sale is made under and by virtue of a Power of Sale, contained in an Indenture of Mortgage, dated the.ninth day of August, A. D. 1575, and made between James Peake of Charlottetown, aforesaid, merchant, and Edith Alice Constanee Peake, his wife, of the one part, and Jedediah Slason Carvell, of the same place, .merchant, of the other part, which sai@ Mortgage was by Indenture dated 29th day of a rn A. D. 1875, assigned to William Cundall, now de- and of which said Mortgage the cealed, undersigned are now devisees and assignees. For further particulars apply to 4H, J. Cundall, Dated this twentieth day of November, A. D. 1882. MILLICENT CUNDALL, PENE! OPE ANN CUNDALL, TH@mRESA CUNDALL. Nov. 20, '82.—-t s mon. —_—— DR. SMITH’S GERMAN WORM REMEDY has been used by thousands of persons, who universally endorse our claim for it as a pleasant, safe, reliable ard prompt remedy for the removal of stomach and seat or pin worms from child or adult. It is easy to take ; never fails ; absolutely harmless, and requires Ro “physic. PREPARED BY THE SYITH MEDICINE CO'Y, 45 BLEURY ST., MONTREAL, AND TROY, N.Y. Pa gee SOLD EVERYWHERE. Ua ae SOLD IN CHARLOTTETOWN AT Apothecaries Hall. Ang, l—eod, wkly, A CURE GUARANTEED. Magnetic Medicine: 2 laa see 2 3 2 = ae z For Old and Young, Male and Female. esitively cures Nervousness 1m ALL its stages, Weak makers. Loss of Brain Po wer, Hanes kare tration, Night Sweats Supermatorrhaa, Lewco ® Barrenness, Seminal Weakness, i cone am of Power. It repairs Nervous Waste, the Enfeebled ates the Jaded Intellect, St pea Vigor to the i Surprising A. CAPITA ee ont onl in either sex. £27 With EN q ted Generative Organs ™ € . L, FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS | &zhausted Gone ackages, accompanied with five nce effec " dollars, we will send our Written Guarantee ~~ sone effected on all kinds of property | 11. money if the treatment does not effest a ee O * , Fates. L > ettle we nd Best Medicine . equitably. ae ay - Rit perticubass in our pamphlet, which we 1a i ail free to any address, 2 “ae Magnetic Medicime is sold by one ists at HO cts. per box, or 6 boxes for $2.50, or w £5 mailed free of postage, on receipt of the moncy, by addressing : y MEDICINE CO,, maces Mage ase r, Out, Cannda agent in Charlotte Steud, wad Ur cerywhere * eiuaed On Short Notice, in Good Style, at Cheap Prices.: FURNITURE, FURNITURE, AT COST. Opposite Post Office, Charlottetown. EDSTEADS, Chairs, Tables, Washstands, Sofas. Lounges, Parlor, and Drawing Room Bedroom Suits, Looking Glasses and Mirrors, Window Furniture, Picture Frames and Pioture Mouldings. iu JOHN NEWSON, iL. EH. PROWSE Will, for the next Two Weeks, give SPECIAL “BARGAINS, Men’s Overcoats, Reefers- & Ulsters, MEN'S” FUR... CAPS, Tweeds, Winceys, Wool Squares, Scarfs, Sacques, & Everyone should call and see those Goods, as Great Bargains will be given. L. E. PROWSE, 74 Queen Street. Chariottetown, Jan. 2,1883—ly © ————$—— ee eer Ch'town, Dec. 19, 1882. aE adnan SR REN CHEAPEST, SAFEST. SIMPLEST LIFR INSURANE IN THB WORLD. The Dominion Satety Fund Life Association , OF ST. JOHN, N. B. <b : $50,000 Deposit with the Dominion Government, Working under Government License. ye %4 0 eros An Assessment Company witha Safety Fund. Life Insurance at.its actual cost. O—-—-—— 4 Wa Good Canvassers Wanted. LEONARD MORRIS, General Agent for P. E. Island. The Business Premises Known as “83 Queen Street,” Lately in the Occupation of 8. W. Tremaine. The Stock on hand is now selling at COST and GHARGES, will be cleared off at AUCTION about the middle of January, of which due notice will be given. JAS. DESBRISAY. Charlettetown, Dec. 29, 1882.—tf THE EXAMINER JOB PRINTING OFFICE HAS LATELY BEEN REPLENISHED WITH A Large Supply of Printing Types and Material OF THE LATEST INVENTION AND BEST DESCRIPTION, AND WE ARE NOW Under the Careful and Skilful Supervision of Mr. J. W. Mitchell, TO PRINT LETTER HEADS, RECEIPTS, POSTERS, DODGERS, &ec., Ke., PREPARED, BILL HEADS, BLANK CHEQUES, NOTES OF HAND, HAND BILLS, «| at ail. CORRES POADENCE. We do not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions or statements of our correspondents, Srincie Corres Two CExTs. VOL 12.--NO. 58. aa although none were refused admittance. , Your correspondent tells the trath in this one respect that the Readings, itations, eens er and Singing wer@ exe t, al- thongh he or she forgot to ififor _ that per- omnes .thirty or forty children were the Winter Communication— Terms of | formera But that Prof. J. H. Smith Union. ‘expected to be present is a gratuitdus ee ‘Tt ig unreasonable and silly’’ no person whatever expected him...» ¥¢ jor the correspondent ‘‘G” must have known that ~_ people of Prince Edward Island to ask for | Prof. J. H. Smith had left thie Island the literal fulfilment of the Termsof Union. Mr. Epiror,—-By the report of the meeting held at Cape Traverse, which ap- peared in the Examiner of the 19th inst., Mr. L. H. Davies, M. P., is reported to have said : “‘The Terms (of Union) must be carried out, and experience had shown that if they are to be carried out, our pro- tests against the inaction of the Govern- ment must be made with no uncertain sound, a strong expression of public opinion isrequired * * * * weask no favors, the improvements required are ours by right, and we ought not to be mealy mouthed in demanding them.” With these sontiments Lam sure the people generally fully and heartily agree, containing as they do sound “sense” and good advice, but no sooner was this uttered than the speaker immediately qualified, or rather repudiated it, in the follewing words :— ‘*To say that the terms must be literally carried out would be unreasonable and silly, they must be construed in a reasonable sense, and our demands upon the Govern- ment must be reasonable demands.” Is it possible that the above has been cor- rectly reported? Surely if the Terms must be carried out, it must be done literally cr not Every treaty, contract, or bargain, if carried out at all, must be done literally, If itis the intention of our Dominion repre- senatives to abandon our just rights in demanding the literal fulfillment of the Terms of Union as is indicated by their speeches at Cape Traverse, by all mears. let them say so plainly, and let the people know the worst. Are we to understand that this Island was coaxed and persuaded to enter into Confederation upon certain t#ims and conditions which were not in- tended to be literally carried out? Admit this, and we must conclude that the men who made such terms, with such an under- standing, are deceivers and traitors of the deepest dye. But even if these men are pre- pared to tell the people of this Island that when they negotiated the terms they under- stood then that they were not to be literally carried out, it will not invalidate our claim. The people accepted the terms im good faith, and had every reason to believe thafthey were made in good faith, and were intended to be Jiterally fulfilled. If a literal fulfilment of the terms is ‘‘unreasenable and silly,” how can they be carried out in any other way: Suppose we adopt Mr. Davies’ advice, as I understand it, and abandon our claim for the literal fulfilment of the Terms of Union, and make only such demands as some are pre- pared to advocate, who, I ask is to decide what shail be reasonable? Will that ques- tion be left to the people of this Island? Not at all. The Dominion Goverument supported by a majority of Parliament, will be the only body to decide that question for us; and we may as well understand at once what that decision will be. 1 venture te predict that it will be nothing more than building the branch railway to Cape Traverse in lien of the ‘Northern Light” which will be withdrawn from the service and which, virtually, is done already. We know how the terms have been carried out in the past by the present Government ; what right have we to expect anything better in the future from them, unless we, as a province, adopt the same means as British Columbia did to compel them/ Need we expect better treatment from the present Opposition should they come into power? The following sentence from the late leader, Mr. McKenzie’s, speech fully answers that question : ‘‘I think we have done very well by the Island, and we have carried out the Terms of Union to the utmost possible extent.” It must be evident that if we abandon our claim to the literal fulfilment of the Terms of Union, we need expect little or nothing instead. It will be exactly like the equivalent that was promised to Belfast and Murray Harbor in lieu of the railroad. An equivalent forthe representatives, in- stead of for the people. By the literal fulflment of the Terms ot Union with British Columbia at a cust of over one hundred million dollars forced from the Dominion Government, together with the nonfulfilment of the Terms of Union with this province, thousands of our able-bodied young men are leaving this Island for the Northwest, which would not Terms of Union be the case if our had been carried out in good faith in regard to our inter-communication with the Mainland as agreed, upon in the following words: ‘‘efficient steam service for the conveyance of mails and passengers to be established and maintained between the Island and the mainland of the Domin- ion, winter and summer, thus placing the Island in continous communication with the Intercolonial Railway and the Railway system of the Dominion.” I am, your obedient servant, SaMUEL Prowse. Murray Harbor, Jan. 24, 1883. oe eanttiliedines ; The Tryon Entertainment. To the Editor of the Examiner. Mr. Eprror,—I should like well to know who your correspondent ‘‘G” is, that gave you your information respecting the ‘‘grand literary and musical entertainment” that was held in the North Tryon schoolhouse on the evening of the 13th of the present month. Whoever it may be, male or female, I find that Truth is a matter of little consequence to them. I[ am well aware that the writer of this communication intended it as a general slur upon the whole School District, upon our young teacher, and myself in particular. The entertainment was intended par- ticularly for the people of this District, some time ago, to be absent for the winter. The best of order did prevail crowd of rowdies from Cape Tra in, from which time the order was nothing to boast of. Your correspondent also states thet, at | the close several young men refused to quit _. the building; he might have added and” several young ladies (?) as well. As to the disturbance which to-k place, it amounted to this that the yonng man who peueeres to be the most unwilling to leave the build- ing was summarily ejected from it “by the collar of the coat and the seat of the breeches.”’ Captain Ives said never a word respect- ing the Volunteer force. He at one time threatened to swear in some ial con- stables to clear the house; but when he became aware that the persons most likely to offer resistance were those of the fair sex, he altered his intention. Had the young women been willing to leave, there would have been but little trouble with the young men; but some of them persisted until the lights were put out and the doors barred against them. Time —a few minutes to twelve. As your correspondent did not think fit to make yon acquainted with these facts, I judge that he or she, as the case may be, is in sympathy with the above-mentioned graceless crowd, if 1ot one of them. Please print the above and oblige the writer. Tuomas Ives, January 29, 1883. To the Editor of the Examiner, Dear Sin,—A number of the citizens of Eldan and vicinity met at Moore's Hall, on the 5th inst., for the purpose of organ- izing a literary society. It was unanimous- ly agreed that the society be known as the ‘Eldon Club,” to conzist of an unlimited number of male and female members, who shall meet every Monday evening for the improvement of their moral, social, and intellectual qualities. The following are the ofticers appointed for the current quan- ter :— W. H. Lord—President. A. Me. G. Smith—Ilet Vice President. J. T. Lautz—2nd Vice-President. K. R. Morrison— Treasurer, John A. Nicholson—Secretary. Managing Committez—Mersrs. D. A. McLeod, James Nicholson, Dr. McSwain, M, J; McLeod, and W. F. Dugay. Several meetings have since been held and now the ‘‘Eljdon Club,’ jis firmly rooted. Its numbers are enthusiastic, willing to im- part, and coger £0 im , and when such a society contains within itself these three elements we need not fear for its success. Although they despair of attaining to the high position won by the “Mill View, Liter- ary lnstitute’’—unless aided by a gaseous, millviewing, and reviewing Secretary—atill they hope by using the ‘‘few talents in- trusted to their care” to so improve them- selves that they will not regret the hours spent in their society room, nor the efforts made to secure ‘‘that which will make their motives habitually great and honorable, and light up in an instant a thousand noble disdains at the very thought of meanness and fraud.” Yours respectfully, Hoprx. a Giants in These Days. ABOUT 8OME OF HAMILTON’S TALL MEN. The Toronto Globe says that the three tallest men in Ottawa are said to be as follows: Donald Fraser, 6 feet 2 inches, John Grant, 6 feet 3 inches; Richard Morely, 6 feet 5 inches. Hamilton has tall men in abundance, and four could easily be found who would constitute a fire escape for the tallest build- ing in Ottawa. Here is a sample ft. im. Emanuel Morton - - - 4 ea Wm. McCartney - - - 6 7 Police Constable Donald Smith - - 6 5 Chief of Police Stewart - a; oe George Sayers - ‘(2 = Alex. Harvey, sr. ee James Harve - > ve Police Constable Watson oo ne - Harris” - . 6 2 “ Donald Camphell Ss 3 John Stuart - : - - oo © Chief Atchingon (Fire Dept) 6 2 These giants can be seen in Hamilton every day.— Homilton Spectator. —___s.ee___—— The imports into British Columbia for the fisical year ending June 30, 1882, are as follows: The total value of imports was $2_899,223 ; of the goods entered for con- sumption, $2,472,174 was dutieble goods and $404,287 free guods, a total of $2,875,- 451. The amount of duty paid was $678,- 104 52. Of the imports but $449.768 were from Canada, this being on the free list. The exports from the Province for the same period were: Product of the mine—Gold $723.225, coal $113,147, iron ore $700— 1,437,072 ; product of the fisheries, $976,- 993; product of the forest, $362,875 ; animal products, $300,419; agricultural products, $948 ; manufactures, $2,615 ; total $3,080,811 ; goods not the product of Bri- tish Columbia, $56,050. The exports for the quarter from June 30th to September 30th amount to $813,989, and for the quar- ter ending December 3lst, to $1.338,934, showing a total for the half-year of $2,151,- 893. This half-year’s returns do not in- clude the lumber apd fish exports uf New Westminster sod Burrard Lale:. pammarne scr teppei ae a