es eS A A eX. = Jn enestteeteeeeerteeene — te Nt mm CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, eet ee THe Datty EXAMINER Is Published every Evening. OFFICE; INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. I. KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, Three Months, One Month, One Week, conte wos a@® Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- cation. W. L. COTTON, Manager. | J. W. MITCHELL, Oflice Sup’t. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO, 9. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT ! ON AND AFTER MONDAY, APRIL 29th, 1878, Trains Going West. STATIONS. | No. 1 No.3 | Nod | Express. | Mixed. |M ed | Dp 4.00 pm) Dp 7.39 am | éa 4.90 «§ | 66 7.59 * al | jar 5.25 ‘* jar 9.20 *¢ | M.Stew't Jun | l4p.5.35 « ldp 9.30 “ Royalty Jun. | * 6.32 «| 10.45 « | | Georgetown Cardigan Ch’town | jar 6.50 ‘ jar1l.05 “* | Pp. wm. | |dp 6.25 amjdpl1.35 ‘* jdp5.25 Royalty Jun. ~ ee" | “Eee ¢ 1 oe N. Wiltshire | « 7.18 « | 12.50 pml “6.42 Hunter. River. | “7.30 ‘| * 1.07 “ | **7.00 Breadalbane "1 1. oe oe County Line | ae | 2a | ee K ensington “aoe + "fae Two - ia, | 9.00 ‘* jar 3.15 ‘* lar 9.00 Summers? | |dp 9.15 * |dp 3.45 “ Wellington "952 «1 4.40 & Port Hill “aa 1) a7 O’ Leary 6411.18 ce se 6.54 se Alberton TES.6O ** | ** €.E8 “* Tignish lar 12.40 pm.ar 8.50 * Trains Going East. STATIONS. | No. 2 No.4 |No.6 Express. | Mixed. {mixed Tignish Dp 1.50 pm; Dp 6.30am Alberton « 9.99 «) [ar 7.20 © dp 7.50 “ 0’ “219 * 14 a5] « Port Ell a0 * i “ies « Wellington “ Royalty Jun. | “ aa “12. “* . ar 5.15 ** jar 12.05 pm] a. M. Summerside | (7, 5.30 ‘ |dpl2.40 “ |dp6.30 Kensington ae eT mae 1 eee County Line ah | St Bgl * Ba ba 5 Breadalbane “ie 7. eee) Hunter River | ‘ 7.00 “ | ‘* 2.48 “* | “8.35 N. Wiltaiiire [*' 7.12 “| “* 3.05 “ e ’ ar 35. Oh'tows dp 8.05 am|dp 3.40 “ Royalty Jun. | ‘‘ 8.23 ‘ oe c on Cardigan Georgetown —_jarll.05 “* jar SOURIS BRANCH. Trains Going West. pee = ie ~ STATIONS. | No7 Mixed. | No. 9 Mixed. Souris Dp 3.15; a | Dp 6.30a.m, Harmony oa "a St. Peter's 428. “i © Morell oa S658. * M. Stew’t Jun.jA 6.25 * |Ar 9.20 ‘* Train Going East. STATIONS. |No. 8 Express. |No. 10 Mixed. M. Stewart Jun} Dp 9.30 am Dp 5.35 p.m Morell a. * ~ Gre«' St. Peter's $410.25 ....** ‘$6.47 ** Harmony “31.23 ._.“ "i-en * Souris Aril.40 ** | Ar 8.25 . * C, J. BRYDGES, Gen. Sup. Gov. Railways, Ch’town, April 20, 1878— QUEEN INSURANCE 60,Y, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING. NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences, Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island June, 1877— CARD. ISS ROBERTS (formerly pupil of Mr. R. Watson, Royal Academy of Music), begs to inform the ladies of Charlottetown that she would be happy to receive pupils for instruction in Music at her residence, head of Pownal Street. Reference as to capability may be made to Mrs. Bayfield or to Mrs. Pennee, of this City. WM. McKECHNIE, Supt. P. BE. I. R. TEN COPIES to one address, or addressed 5 ‘de lee Aa FURNISHES MORE NEWS, FOR LESS MONEY THAN ANY OTHER PAPER IN THE PROVINCE. It Contains Twenty-eight Columns, nearly every one of which is in closely set READING MATTER, CONSIDER OUR TERMS SINGLE COPIES to the 3ist December, 1878—thirteen months—$1.00 in ad- vance. SIX COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $5.50 in advance. separately, as desired, $9.00 in advance. FIFTEEN COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as required, $13.50 in advance. TWENTY COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired. $17.00. IN DULL TIMES —GEf THE— CHEAPEST AND BEST The Weekly Hxaminer is acknowledged to be ahead of any other paper in the Province in the item of LOCAL NEWS and is always well filled with Political, Shipping, Commercial and General Information. The debates of the Local Legislature will be carefully and impartially given. Special tele- rams and letters from ‘‘Our Own Ottawa Sirsespomdent” will contain everything of in- terest transpiring in the Dominion Parlia- ment, A Good Story will be made a specialty. a0 The Daily Examiner : Wi. be sent to any part of the Province, the Dominion, United States or Great Britain on receipt of For Six Months, - - - - - $2.50 For Three Months, - - - - 1.25 For One Month, - - - =: - 50 ame ADDRESS, W. L. COTTON, Manager Examiner Printing and Publishing Company. Chtown, Dec, 6, 1877. Charlottetown, June 21, 1878—cod DR. CLEMENT, URGEON DENTIST, EGS to inform the citizens of Charlotte- town and vicinity that he has opened an office next door to the Reform Club (rooms formerly occupied by Dr. Caldwell), for the practice of Dentistry. He has adopted the following Scale of Charges, to suit the times, and to put Dentistry within the reach of all :— For a full upper or lower Sett of ‘Teeth, $10 00 For partial Setts—each tooth, . . . 1 00 wor Gold. Fillings, .. 6:0: 63 heed ick ® For Amalgam and all composition fillings, 50 ALL WORX GUARANTEED FIRST-CLASS. In inserting Artificial Teeth, the Best Ma- terial only is used, and a perfect fit warranted in all cases, or no pay. Ch'town, July 6, 1878—pat 3aw ar pres. DR. H. A. PARKER, SURGEON BENTIST, (LATE OF OTTAWA). OFFICE . . OVER APGTHECARIES’ HALL, Office Hours: 9a. m. to 6 p. m. Ch’town, June 3, 1878—2aw WAGSTARY'S HOTEL, NHE Subscriber having fittel up.the Hotel formerly known as 7 rr v THE RANKIN HOUSE, in first-class style, is now prepared to give comfortable accommodation to Permanent and Transient Boarders. Tourists and others will receive every atten tion at the Wagstaff’s Hotel. WM. WAGSTAFF. May 25, 1878. eer ees ee every village and township of P. E. Island not yet occu- pied, ONE Acrive, intelligent Lady or Gentle- man can obtain a most respectable and very profitable engagement. Address, with full particulars, D. DOWNIE & CO., 30x 1964, Montreal. May 25, 1375— ie Starch Manufacturing OCo., CAPITAL . . $25,000, In Shares of $25.00 each, ryPXELsS COMPANY has been Incorporated by Act of Parliament during the present session, and one-third of the Shares have been taken up by the leading men of Charlottetown. Farmers holding Stock in this Company will have the benefit of the preference in the large purchase of produce which the working of the Company entails. Applications for Shares to be made to Messrs. Hyndman Bros., untill the Di- rectors and Oijlicers of the Company are ap- pointed, April 16, 1878— _ JAMES HOBBS, CABINET MAKER. Cor. Kent and Prince Streets, Charlottetown. — E SUBSCRIBER, in returning thanks to his customers and the public generally for past favors, would take this method to so licit a further continuance of their patronage. I am better prepared than ever to execute any orders that may be entrusted to me. The latest styles of all kinds of Household, Office, Church and School Furniture, made from well-selected and seasoned stock, at short notice. Special attention paid to Cutting, Making and Laying Carpets. ws Repairing neatly done, at short notice I would also invite the attention of Trustees of City and Country Schools to A DESK,one of the Cheapest and Best ever offered here for School purposes. Please call and inspect it at my Show Room. JAMES HOES, Corner Kent and Prince Streets, } Ch’town, Feb. 23, 1875. \ St. Lawrence Marine ins, Co, OF P. E. ISLANS. ot a mc SUBSCRIBED CAPITAL . . $129,009.00. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: ARCHIBALD Kennepy, EsqQ., President ; Joun F. Ropertson, Esg.; ARTEMAs Lorp, Esa. ; G. D. Loseworta, Esqa.; W. E. Dawson, Esq.; THomas Morris, Esa. ; P. W. Hynpmay, Esq. Risks taken daily at their Office, Exchange Building. 3m-2aw FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Secretary. March 25—ly law HARPER’S HiSTORY OF THE MARITIME PROVINCES, COLLINS’ GEOGRAPHY, Chemistry Of Common Things 4 and other School Books just received at THE SCHOOL BOOK DEPOT. HARVIE’S .BOOK-STORE; Correspondence. aa We do not hold ourselves responsible for the statements or opinions of our correspondents, A Grievance. T'o the Editor of the Examiner : Sir,—As you have always used your pen boldly and fearlessly in the advocacy of popular rights aud to put down wrongs and oppression, I feel assured that I need only mention a wrong anda great injustice which is being perpetrated upon a portion of the tenants of Lot 48, to draw your sympathies and enlist yonr pen in onr behalf. When the ‘Land Purchase Act 1875” became law it was reason- ably expected that every tenant on P. E. I. would be made free; that every tenant would have equal rights under it; but you may im- agine our dissapointment and chagrin when I inform you that we, ona portion of this Lot, are still in bondage, and are being sued and writted for rent; and what makes the matter doubly grevious is, that within the last few years our rents, in consequence of cer- tain provisions in our leases, have be- come doubled; and this, with taxes trebled, hard times and bad crops, is dragging us down to the very verge of ruin. We have applied to Beer and McGill, and all we can get is promises—which mean nothing. But, Mr. Editor, I feel it in my very bones and marrow that a day of vengeance is ap- proaching, and the cruel and incompetent pack who unfortunately rules the country will be swept away, as a foul stain upon the politi- cal history of P. E. Island; and | hope, Mr. Editor, you will use your pen to bring about so desirable an end. A Tenant on Lor 48, July 11, 1878. (Will the ‘‘ Presbyterian” and other papers please copy ?) British Federation. The following is the concluding para- graph of an article in the London Spectator on Lord Dufferin’s career in Canada :— “One point of great political importance comes out in the Canadian history of the past five years, and especially in the relation of the Canadian people with Lord Dufferin. The federation of English Colonies does not dimin- ish, but distinctly increases, their loyalty to the Mother State. One would have imagined, reasoning only a priori, that with each step which a colonial people took towards nation- ality, their jealousy of the prestige, and the authority, and the interference of the Mother Country would become deeper, until at last even the appearance of any control, any supe- riority, would be resented as an affront. One would have expected that the desire for a sep- arate foreign policy, for a status apart in the great world, and for careers without a limit, would have been the tirst to be developed in a young and vigorous nationality. So far, how- ever, is this from being the case, that federa- tion seems to soothe Colonial susceptibilities. The greatness of a Dominion, as compared with a Colony, satisfies more ambitions than it excites. Ever since the confederation of the Canadas, the Canadian jealousy of Great Britain has perceptibly declined, and the pop- ular feeling for the Viceroy, as the link with the Mother Country, has perceptibly increased, till opinion in Canada contrasts strangeiy with opinion, say, at the Cape. It is impossible to read the history of the recent Ministerial changes in Cape Colony without seeing that the desire to carry on war cheaply was not, as the 7imes imagines, the only motive of Mr. Molteno and his party in desiring that all mili- tary authority should be left to them, and the Queen’s troops withdrawn. There was also a bitter jealousy of British authority—a dislike of the representative of this country, not as Sir Bartle Frere, but asa foreign authority— a wish to go their own way, in indifference to the rights and even to the interests of the whole Empire—feelings which had before come out very strongly in the discussions on Lord Carnarvon’s plan for confederatien. The Gov- ernment was, in fact swayed by a small spirit of localism which blinded its members, not only to the interests of South Africa, but of what was possible under the relation of the Empire to the Colony. They actually asked that the Queen should cease to command her own forces, and the link between the Colony and the British Government be reduced to an empty form. That is the very spirit which federation has charmed away in Canada, and which it would probably charm away in South Africa, for the body of whites support Sir Bartle Frere, and before the dispute arose had expressed their approval of federa- tion. Of course, the temper of the Cana- dians and that of the South Africans is not the same. There is something of the Scotch real-satisfied temper about Canadians, which makes them less susceptible than the South Africans, who have caught from the Dutch something of the bitter suspiciousness and irri- tability natural to men ruled by an alien Gov- ernment; but a minute localism has much to do with it also. The South Africans are never likely to be oppressed, though oppression was tried once, in the matter of the convicts; but they think or fancy they might be, or at least are as irritable as if they did, and consequent- ly regard every act of the Home Government with a distrust which sometimes become per- verse. ‘The people of the Dominion are not afraid of being oppressed, because they know they cannot be, and, consequently, they judge English actions as men judge the actions of friends and comrades, not forgetting their own interests, but not suspicious and not irritable. After all, friendship is strongest between equals, and it is towards equality between Britain and her great off-shoots that the policy of confederatien tends. When it is next tried on @ great scale, we can only hope, but do not expect, that a man with the gifts of Lord Duf- ferin may be the first or second Viceroy.” _-- George Fawcett Rowe, the comedian, who recently visited St. John, announces that he will travel during the next theatrical season with a company which he styles ‘“The Dickens Combination,” and that he will produce only Ch’town, April 8—eod } dramatic versions from the great novels, EXAMINER. THURSDAY, JULY U1, 1878 | —_—— - --— een NO, 344, a Miscellaneous News. Melbourne, Australia, is to exhibitionize in 18890. There were fifteen casesof sunstroke in New York on Saturday. Some enterprising Americans planted the Stars and Stripes on Mont Blanc on Fourth July. Dr. Calkins, aged sixty years, has been an- nounced as insane in Boston because he at- tempted to shoot his wife aged nineteen years. Justice Clifford, of the United States Su- preme Court, celebrated the fiftieth anniver- sary of his marriage at Portland, Me., on the 4th, Mr. Sothern will sail from Liverpool, per ‘‘Adriatic,” ou the 16th, and expects to spend the month of August salmon fishing in Can- ada. Secretary Evarts has instructed the Consul at Tangiers, Morroco, to co-operate with the other Governments in behalf of the oppressed Israelites in the empire of Morocco. Lieut. Albert Grippenberg, one of the Rus- sian officers now stopping in New York, died on Saturday night, aged 33. He was of noble family, and hat attained a high reputation as a naval officer. The Knight Templars of the Mary Com- mandery, of Philadelphia, left New York on Saturday on a pilgrimage to Europe. This is the second Commandery that has sailed for Europe within a weok. Prof. Lewis Swift, of Rochester, N. Y., has discovered a comet in the Constellation of Hercules, 1t is in the right ascension, about 17 hours, 40 min., duchnation north 18 de- grees. It is large, but faint, and is moving slowly in the south-west. The Manchester Arms Company, of Con. necticut, have sent twenty-nine cargoes of arms, valued at $17,000,000, to Turkey since the outbreak of the war. All of these goods have been delivered promptly and in good condition. “ Doctors in the United States-were busy last week putting eg the bits of boys which had separated from the main stems by ex- plosives on the 4th July. The champion feat was the sewing on of an ear to a boy who had lost that member by a toy cannon bursting. All attempts to put back the eyes and make them aa as ever have failed so far. Bald Mountain, North Coeroliaa, which created such a sensation a year ago, has re- sumed its unaccountable rumblings. Some ex- citement prevails. The crack in the moun- tain has widened about ten feet. Another smaller fissure has also been discovered. It terminates in a large cavern. The whole mountain seems to be hollow. The Commissioner-General of the Land Office, Washington, on Saturday received a telegram from the Registrar and Receiver of the Walla Walla, Washington Territory, Land Office, inquiring:—‘‘Can we close the office te. fight Indians forty miles away?’ The Com- missioner replied: —‘*Yes, but only as long as absolutely necessary.” Eight ocean steamers left New York on Sat: turday full of freight. The oldest freight agent does not remember the time when busi-- ness was more active. A special feature was the shipment of a ee te sigral tower by the agent ofthe Russian Legation, and destin- ed for the use of the Russian Government at St. Petersburg. A gentleman in Washington, who has few if any superiors in acquaintance with Indian af- fairs, expresses the opinion very positively that a general Indian war is an impossibility, except as the result of a policy on the part of the Government, which would drive allthe In- dians into war atthe same time. He say notwithstan lingthe slensash eebiahainetetelioen 3 have been subjected at the handsof the whites, their inter-tsibal antipathies and long standir feuds furnish motives for warring with ea other stronger thanany they have for fighting the United States. Their Excellencies, Lord and Lady Dufferin, arrived at Rimouski at 5p. m. on Saturday. Over 200 citizens were present to meet them. As the train came into the station, their Ex- cellencies were greeted with cheers. The Mayor, M. Louis Gauvreau, presented an ad- dress, to which Lord Dufferin replied. m French, thanking the people for their kind- ness, and spoke of his regret in leaving Can- ada, his second home. Their Excellencies drove through the town, accompanied by the Mayor and Dr. Fiset, M. P., visited the col- lege and convent, and then left for Bic and embarked on board the ‘‘ Druid” for Tadou- sac. Hood used to tell a story ot a hypochondriae who ran in the habit, two or three times a week, of believing himself dying. On a cer- tain occasion he was taken ill with -~ or terrors while riding out in his gig, an pening at the time i see in aoe road ahead x ami ician riding in his carriage in the ene lee etient he applied the whip to his horse to overtake the old Doctor as soon as he possibly could. The Doctor, however, seeing him coming, applied the whip to his own horse, and as he a nag that was considered a ‘‘goer,” they had a close time of it for about three miles. But the hypochondriac, driving a faster horse, finally came alongside the doc- tor, and exclaimed, ‘‘Hang it, doctor, re up —pull up instantly! Iam dying.” h you are,” cried the doctor; ‘‘I never saw any one going so fast.”’ ——- —~—> «+ <b> +e o -—-_ -———_ Youth fades; love droops; the leaves of friendship fall; a mother’s secret hope out- lives them all. We should often have reason to be ashamed of our most brilliant actions if the world could see the motives from which they spring. When the heart goes before, like a iamp, and illumines the pathway, many things are made clear that else lie hidden in ao Happiness, in this world, when it comes, comes incidentally, Make it the object of pursuit, and it leads us a wild-goose chase and is never attained,