, a, a te. = Btls La al hs a ~ “ Tae Ex = So AMINER. VOL, 2. THE Dairy EXAMINER is Published every Evening. OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER) AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, | Charlottetowy P. E. I. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, $2 50 Three Months, 1 25 } One Month, 0 50 One Week, : ‘ : 0 12 am Advertising at most moderate rates. Gontracts may be made for monthly, quar- térly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli cation. W. L. COTTON, Manager. | v <7 PRINGR EDWARD ISLAND iJ. W. MITCHELL, Office Sup’t. ». RAILWAY. ™. 4 ‘TIME TABLE NO. 8. WINTER ARRARGERERI. To come into force MONDAY, DIC. 24, 1877 Tv RAINS GOING WEST. eee SS te --- | No. 5. | No? STATIONS. ‘Express |Mixed iF Ce aes oes et ee GEORGETOWN Dp. ¢.$ Yardigan ** 9.02 or rt Junction j | Ar. 10. 25 Mount Stewa {| Dp.10.35 Junction ** 11.46 Royalty } P an Ar. 12.1 . 2.40 CHARLOTTETOWN Poa 0) Dp Dp. 9.00 « 925] “ 3.05 10,22). “© 4.02 « 19,40] “* 4.20 « 1E18] * 5.00 “ 11,28] ** 5.10 P. M. Rte Kensington “ 12.07) “ 5. a Ar. 12.45 SUMMERSIDE Dp. 2.00| * 6.20 elli “ 9.45 Falling “ 3.98 O’ Leary “ 4.43 Alberton “ 5.45 Tignish “ 6.35 TRAINS GOING EAST. _ ma: ol vs No.2 | Noa4 STATIONS. Express | Mrxep. aa | ae ey ‘TIGNISH Dp. 8.00 “ALBERTON “* §.55 ' ‘ 9.52 Oban Hall % 1107 li “ 91, fone P.M. A. M. . > \ | Ar. 12.35 SUMMERSIDE Dp. 210\Dp. 8,35 Kensington “« 948} “& 912 County Line ‘“ 3.30) ** 9.50 e “ 3.40) © 10.10 Hunter River *4 4.20 a 10.48 North Wiltshire “© 4.35] ** 10.50 Royalty Junction a iS ‘ 11.56 CHARLOTTETOWN Dp. 2.05] * 12.20 ~Royalty Junction é Be my MT. STEWART June. Dp. 3 50 ‘ardigan “ 5.12 GEORGETOWN. Ar. 5.40 ee © SOURIS BRANOH. Going West. Going East. -« | (No. 5 rq | No. 6 STATION®.| riven, | STATIONS.) yaixep, i ee ee P.M. Souris Dp. 7.30 Mt. St'w’t JelDp. 3.50 Harmony “* 7.55)| Lot 40 ‘¢ 4.26 ’s. | ‘*. 9,10))Morell ‘*. 4,32 Morell “« 9,42/\St. Peter's | “ -5.05 40 ‘« 9.48) Harmony - 6.20 Mt St’w’t Jnc! Ar. 10.25) Souris Ar. 6.45 W. MeKECHNIE Supt. P. EL, Gen. Superintendent ‘ Railway. Govt. Railways. a ml Notices to the Public $ NUPPLIES for the ‘Soup Kitchen” will reach the Committee if left at the Store of Mr,Alex. Horne, Gorner-of Queen and Fi Streets. ; nations of money will be thankfully re- ceived by them throngh Dr. Dodd and Mr. J. WN. B.—Food for the sick carefully prepared by the Committee. Nov, 30, 1877. MOLASSES —AND— SOLE: LEATHER! 7\ PUNCHEONS Porto Rico and Cuba } MOLASSES. SIDES New York SOLE. LEATHER. NJ For sale cheap, at ARCH’D KENNEDY'S. Lower Water Street, Ch’town, March 29—0in CHARLOTTETOWN, THE CORNER OF . ‘Plothes Cleaning Depot, NEWS (Above Mr. D. irgUharson s Store), Queen & DoRCHESTER STREETS. ane nad PRoanaim } Renovating and Repairing Clothes. A R. PATTERSON guarantees that no 1 i matter how badly faded or stained gar- iments may be, be will restore them to their | HY} i | eee ro 1 8 Lawrence Marine Ins, Co, FURNISHES MORE NEWS, FOR LESS MONEY THAN ANY OTHER THE PROVINCE. It Contains Twenty-eight Columns, neasly every one of which is in closely set READING MATTER. CONSIDER OUR TERMS: SENELE COPIES to the 3lst December, 18738—thirteen months—$1.00 in ad- vance, SIX COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $5.30 in advance. TEN COPIES to on address, or addresse. separately, as desired, $9.00 in advanced 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 —GET THE-- HAPEST AND BaST ee ooo c2 The Weekly lixaminer is acknowledged to be ahead of any other paper in the Province in the item of LOCAL NEWS and is always well tilled with Political, Saipping, Commercial and Gensral Information. The debates of the Local Legislature will be earefully and impartially given. Special tele- grams and letters from “Our Own Ottawa Correspondent” wiil contain everything of in- terest transpiring in the Dominion Parlia- ment. A Good Story will be made a specialty. —_——:0°-——— The Daily Examiner Will be sent to any part of the Province, the Dominion, United States or Great Britain on receipt of = $2.50 1.25 For Six Months, - For Three Mionths, - - - - Por @ne Month ----:- 30 ar ADDRISS, W. L. GOTTON, Manager Examiner Printing and ~ Publishing Company. Ch’town, Dec, 6, 1877. PAPER IN JOHN PATTERSON. ~ aeons OF P. E. ISLANR. :0:— Aid ‘ . eiiarnit . ‘J f Ans § SUBSSRIBED CAPITAL . . $128,969.03. DIRECTORS: ARCHIBALD Kennepy, Eso., President; Joun F. Rosrrrsonx, Ese. ; ArtrEmMas. Lorn, Esa.; G. D. Lonaworta, Ese. ; W. §&. Dawson, Esq.; THomas Morris, Esq. ; P. W. HynpMmay, Ese. Risks taken daily at their Office, Exchange Building. BOARD OF FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Secretary. March 25—ly law N INSURANCE €0,Y (QUEEN INSURANCE -60,Y, CGF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIGHS 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— ee BLANK - BILL HEADS, BLANK STATENIENTS, —AND— BUSINESS GAKDS, Furnished promptly and cheaply, to order, at the EXAMINER OFFICE, INGS’ BULLDING, Corner Great George and Water Streets. International Hotel | {FORMERLY RANKIN HOUSE) Corner of Fownal & Sydney Streets, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. 1. i Private and permanent Boarders can be ac commodated on very moderate terms, during the winter season, at the International. D. MCISAAG, Proprietor. Dec. 19, 1877 - 2m PAINTING! WNHE Subscriber takes this opportunity of thanking the Public for the liberal patron- rage he has received during the five years he has been in. business, and solicits a continuance of the same. He is now prepared to exeeute, in a very superior manner, Eigouse, Sign, and Car- riage Painting. Paper Hanging, &c. 8% Special attention is given by him to Wuirentne, CoLtorinc and the DrcoratTine of CEILING’, WALLS, ete. On hand and made te oréer— EVERY DESCRIPTION GF SARRIAGES. a= Carriage Repairing promptiy attended tc. “ea Prices to suit the times. P. H. TRAENGR, 68 Kent St., opp. Rocklin House. April 2—-3m eod ; CABINET WAKER. Cor. Kent and Prince Streeis, . Charlottetown. HE SUBSCRIBER, in returning th...... to his customers and the public genevaily 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 Houschold, Office, Church and Schoo! Furniture, made from well-selected an‘ seasoned stock; at short notice. Special attention paid to Cutting, Making and Laying Carpets. . s@ Repairing neatly done, at short netice 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 it my Show Room, JAMES HOBBS. Corner Kent and Prince Streets, Ch’town, Feb, 23, 1878. 3m-2aw PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUE = = gg BY TELEGRAPH. | THE SITUATION. ' i Voli thie Daily / -atriot. LONDON, April 8. All the Calcutta imilitary furloughs have been stopped. The Government declare that this is merely a precautionery measure, and that no expedition whatever is contemplated. r > . _ The Bengal cavalry can however furnish ten thousand men without the slightest detriment to the service. These men are inifinitely su- perior to Cossacks, in training, equipment and organization. St. Perzrssvra, April S. ft is said that very important letters have peen received here by the Government from Berlin, suggesting that concessions be made in order to avoid a European War. _it is now pretty certain that Germany is abandoning her purely passive attitude. Russia has not asked for Germany’s good offices ; yet she will gladly accept them. Several divisions of the army in Turkey have started for home, _ Austria has given the Porte the most posi- tive assurance that She will oppose any effort to enforce the San Stefano treaty. ry ° , ¥ The Russians are desperately urging the Sul- tan to surrender his iron-clad and his position on the Bosphorus, ATueEns, April 8. it is rumored here that England will occupy Creie. LONDON, April 8. ‘The debate in the House of Commons on the answer to the Queen’s proclamation calling out the reserves, expected to determine England’s volicy. ae The Cabinet is opposed to war, but it is not likely to mect the iatest Russian proposals with favor. The withdrawal of the San Stefano treaty or its unconditional surrender to Europe, 1s re- garded as only alternative to war. Correspondence. | wax We da not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions or siutements of correspondents. a . e * To the Editor of the Examiner. Str,—By your summary of the debates in our Local House of Assembly we learn that our representative, William Welsh, Esq., stated that ‘‘No man will ever have the plea- sure or pain of voting for me again.” No reason is given for the hasty resolve of our re- presentative ; and we are left to conjecture the cause of his intended withdrawal from public life. It may be that he alone of all the members on the Government side is conscious of the extreme bungling of last year’s legisla- tion and censiders it useless to again seek the suffrages of his present constituents. Or, it is just possible he may think that this con- stituency has been honored long enough by the representation of William Welsh, Esq As Mr. Welsh is about to retire from the strifes and arduous duties incident to a life of politics, or as he is te yield up the ghost poli- tically, it may not be amiss for an old and life long friend to write his political epitaph, It will not be out of place just here to givea short biographical sketch of his political life, and in domg so I can hardly bring myself to call an old and life-long companion as he has been, Mr. Welsh, and shall therefore fondly and familiarly call him ‘*William.” William and I were born the same year, in Lot 49, and both cherish the hope of being buried in Lot 49, William has already ex- pressed his wish publicy; but this is the first public announcement for myself of our com- mon desire. Together we pursued our boyish sports. ‘Together we \fished trout in Forbes’ mill dai, but while [ steadily applied myself to fishing, William diviied his time between catching a stray trout and making little shingle boats, which he sent out to float upon the mill pond. At Keppock side by side we grubbed turnips. Together we sat upon the stile and watched the white-winged ships as they passed away from Pownal Bay and were lost to view behind Point Prim; and often, while sitting on the same stile, have we looked across the straits and watched the cows graz- ing on the hills of Neva Scotia, But William seems to have a natural fondness for sitting on the stile while I did the grubbing. This habit of looking on while others do the grubbing, is of such long standing that William has not been able to muster force of will to overcome it, even in the House of Assembly. We have never heard of so bad a Bill as the Assessment Act, or so much as an ordinary resolution being framed by him. WILLIAM, AS AN ORATOR, is impassioned, and it might traly be said of him, as of a celebrated English statesman : “That if he stood up to repeatthe Multiplica- tion Table, by the time he got to 10 times 10 make 100, he would be in a towering passion.” The difference between the local statesman and the English one being that, at 12 times 12 ve 144, the local would be about wilted, and ‘at 12 times 13 would stick fast. William’s style of elocution is the’ declamatory. His gestures are of the emphatic kind. He de- spises the effeminate style oi graceful-curves, and adopts the angular.. The particular angle by which he enforces his utterances is neither the right angle nor the oblique ; but, while it approximates the obtuse, I will give him the credit of using one of his own invention, and may be styled the “eft angle.” His method of treating great public questions is pecyhar. Instead of laying down his premises and, by logical deduction and inferences, arriving at a logical couclusion, he entirely ignores all such tedious methods and jumps directly at his conclusion. He seems to have but one idea at a time, which he expresses in i more forcible than elegant, and immediately eol- lapses. Of his public utterances, there is but ‘one which seems to have fastened_upon the memniories of his constituents. It is somewhat SDAY, APRIL 9, 1878 NO. 269. ee addressing us at Lot 49, he said: Gentle- men, I want you to vote for me, because I was born in Lot 49, and I wish you to bury me in Lot 49. Lét my funeral obsequies be plain and simple, I want no funereal pomp; no hearse with capraisoned horses,or plumes fiut- termg in the breeze, but let my body be car- ried upon the shoulders of four stalwart Forty- niners, and laid to rest beneath one of the old willows of Lot 49.” i. — — I — to sleep. Thisis the spot Vhic 1ave jong marked o _ bones in ! r aeaphionead Tired out and Wwearied with the riotous world, Beneath this yew I would be sepalcher’d.” AS A POLITICIAN, Wilham has not made much of a mark. He may be considered a bohemian in politics,never appeamng to care whether denuke not; and, ii elected, thinking that his constituents have done themselves honor by electing him. He boasts of a independence ; but it. is all a de- lusion. His “friend Davies” hauls him through the muck and mire at will. In fact his friend has been a sort of wet nurse to him, as surely supplying him with political food, as a mother does her helpless infant. His political friends give him credit for shrewdness and cunning, but William’s knowledge being limited, his cunning has never benefitted his party, or in- jured his opponents. As a writer OF POLITICAL CABDS, William has never claimed much merit. On one occasion, while entering upon a political campaign, he was told ‘‘a Card was neces- sary.” William paid his friend Davies for think- ing It out for him, and when asked why he did not undertake the task himself, —_ ‘* Them’s my sentiments any how,” He has ventured to give his opinion of the important judgments given in the County Courts against the Trustees . of School . Districts, appointed under the present School Act. William has ae his contempt for the painstaking, plodding labors of the Judges who have endeavored to arrive at the proper meaning of the Act, and he considers them a erankey set, because the judgments were against the Government. But, Sir, I am afraid I have trespassed too much on your valuable space, and must close with the fol- lowing epitaph, which his friends undoubt- edly will place over his political tomb: “Here lies William Welsh who never did his consti- tuents any harm, and up to the present time it has never been discovered that he did them any good.” Many, I have no doubt, will say, in pitying strain as they by, ‘‘ Poor Wil- liam, he was not a bad fellow after all.” Yours, &e., Ropgrick Ranpom. Kinross, April 8, 1878. _— 292 _-_-_ ---— Mother’s Influence. To the Editor of the Examiner : Dear Sir,—Of all the developments and teachings of the youth, there is none so essen- tially and absolutely condusive to ee aiiability and a spirit of fair play, as the early training and teachings of a good, sober, honest and intelligent mother. If she only enforces a rigorous distribution of the food, play toys, etc., among her children and makes the posses- sion of the same undisputed, it will ta spirit of economy and integrity in the youth that will expand as time elapses. But sad it is to say that too many parents and guardians of children, instead of *giving those committed to their care a good religious, honest and moral training, teach them avarice, coveteousness and a multitude of mere grievous sins, that will be imperceptibly increasing with their age, so that finally their prodigal and thievish dispositions wil! bring them into wotoriety. This reasoning may appear paradoxical to the superficial observer, but you can rest assured it is exceedingly philosophical. It takes none of any great argumentative power to prove that carelessly taught youths turn out to be full-fledged pilferers. I see daily children un- der the ocular supervision of their parents com- mit petty thefts by which decent, industrious, honest and respectable citizens are robbed of the necessary fuel, to prepare a bite of vic- tuals? And each morning reveals to my vision the ruinous consequences of maternal negligence. _ Yes, I see some of the fair daugh- ‘ters of our land who, instead of staying home ‘at night and getting the necdful for the morn- ing conflagration, spend their time on the street; and then in the morning prowl around my premises, with axe in hand, demolishing packing cases and carrying off them and my kindlings indiscriminately. In conclusion, I wish only to give notice that if these predatory visits -be continued their sex will no longer ward off the strong arm of jurisprudence. Yours truly, © E.°P. B. Souria, March 29, 1878. ~~~ -- ~~ 2 © —_- "| Theve was a negro marriage in te a Alb., a few days ago, and afew minutes r the ceremony had beeu performed, a rejected suitor of the bride threw his arms aroun neck and, in the presence of a number of per- sons, inflicted upon her eight or nine from which she died almost immediately. He then mounted the Court House. steps and pro- claimed, * } done it; hang me, or’ kill me just as you please, only bury me by Liza’s side.” This conundrum is now in circulation:— “What is the difference between a potato and a lemon?’ When the questioned party says they embaha a man 'they fill him up witli matic spices. Now we know .why,. #,.™map, chews cloves—he’s embalming ee 1 Somebody ohce’ said that the best py to got rid of a good’ adwas'.to Tend | five’ sounds. That was when times were easy.» ou can alienate, him now for half a sgxgr- eign. toa ig eNO ; iis ; phi taj (Oise Good clothes make more difference with 2. world’s opinion than’ good“ miuty ‘pedple a willing to admit. Hominid oft ct ysveml The latest dodge of sharpers.is to ‘* veneer! « brick walls with maple. Waar That, must, poetical and patriotic. On one occasion, while make a “sweet job” of bric-a-brac, % While reading a few chapters,in Neel W % "Ce ster’s entertaining novel, we leartied that ety he doesn’t know, the other says: “lian I |. m7 don’t want you to bny any lemons for mé, » %,V and then comes the ‘*ha! ha! ha!” . hf, % ay. 2