a rt N ot iy reas -Five V , , — ae ; os , . “ This is true Liberty, when , a i ; Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”’—Evnirwers. SINGLE Copres Two CEnNTs. oa NEW SERLES r (yg DAILY KXAMINER|McLEQD @& SOLICITORS, NOTARIES PUBLIC, ETE YiN ty g 1ssU! mi org a eae ny rue Exaweys® © : ; ja ert PRIA a % \ \, ATER ypeM THEIR e aNd (FREA i n » Fala wal : cyariottetow?, . U ‘ : ha Moo = dO bey sil M “ . on a three Months 1 26 ky Une M n » E go Advertising at 4 ‘ates hy guotracts may : ‘for ) th r ’ aster, half ¥ wr y I 7 ‘5 saver is : = oss, on ap ication . 4 7 Ss MMANAC FOR FEBRUARY, 1883. weit, z MOONS CH Se Nw Yeon 7th day, of ! : s. ni. : ‘ares first Quarter, lath day, Sh. 42m. p.m. , foi Moon, 24th day, 5h. Om., p ily ee r __ Sun {Sun Moon High Days | an —- rises sets | rises Water len h, | bh m h m/ morn} aft’n i7 30.4 59) 1 47; 4 3S p Thursday 9915 1| 2 46] 6 It 2 Friday = a, 2 al F @ . $ Saturday 981 3:3 44! 7 30) 9 5: Senday 26: 5) 4 37) § 31) 95 i Le ; 21 baad ao 23 76 8 10 7 bad ednesday 2] 9 45°19 48 y y 9 ili 7 i@ill 2 * " 17 12; 7 5ii morn 15} 14; 8 22; 0 810 ) 6 5s Zii 3 31) 9.7 | 5S; 25; 4 48] 9 48 | 56) 80 5 3510 24, | 54) 31) 6 36/10 56 37{11 27 49 36 9 36 aft 30 47; 38/10 36; 1 2 45, 39/11 35) 1 39 40! morn} 2 20 LLIVAN & MAGHEILL, maATTORNEYS - AT- LAW _“Seheitors in Chancery, ~~ ay OFICES— O'Halloran’s @ Money to Loan, jan. 16, '83. 2 SOURIS EAST Dee, Ii, 1882,--Im 3aw wly 3m oa HN MACEACHERN, : (Late of Italian Warehouse) AGENT FOR England, & Lancashire Fire Insurance Company, of England, of London Fire Insurance Co., of England, AS REMOV BD © His Office to his New Building, ea and King Sts,—Up Stairs. B, Dec. 7, '22. bank of Nova Scotia. ESTABLISHED 1832, LL hext, 19th e Deatig unt. adents of the Bank, ing and §eaeral banking business transacted. Mtown, J D. C. CHALMERS, y eune 17, 1882—tf Agent. Tae 1 Insurance Company, 4 OF ENGLAND. PITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. ITAL, PIPTE Ce effected --* Fates, pmtitably. DESBRISAY & ANGUS, South Side Side Queen S roma, Seve 15, 1882, quare, PaTSICL |FOR SaLE. | Lea's Sash and Door Factory, i 12} 17) 9 27) 1 31) “ol pas above | ‘ “" " > ). 24; 1 27, 7 20:10 36 9 | January, 1853. sued for then, without further notice, piesand Door vector omownmerss The “Dominion Satety Fund Life Association MTARIES PUBLIC, &c., pW. Sctuvay, Q. C. | Cazsree B. Macyert, | i@—" Royal Oak Hotel,” l Fire Insurance Company, of 54, Holbern-viaduct, E.C., London, Aug. 8,’79 Revort on the Loans Hieutanp WHISKRY: “pCapital . . $1,000,000 ai «+ « 325,000 4 sity » Agency of this Bank will be opened on inst., in the building a by the Bank of Prince Edward t the mavagement of the under-(r HE business heretofore carried on by the Sits will be received on interest, and under the style and firm of Hickey & Srrw- ant, Tobacco Manufacturers, wisl be con- tinued by the subscriber under the samé style, Granted on the various Agencies and other Exchange bought and gUSURANCE OFFICE, duce dyspepsia by destroying the coatings of | iashire Insurance Company EN MILLION DOLLARS on all kinds of property Losses settled promptly General Agents, CHARLOTLETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1883 AORS Barristers & Atiorneys-at-Law t-Law, I) OFFICES : . 7: abot Ke ior! Xl Committe e Rooms. Upposite Post Mice > a Uiice, Charlottetown, Pr. i Island | Mere} ts Ban] f Hal Lb t nant bank Of Phaiitax Duilding, Sum- merside, P. E. Island. MONEY ‘ 1 1U, Ei LO LOAN, on good Security, at mouerate interest ‘ -| Nery ] NEL CLEOD, W. A. O. Morson “he : Nov. 24, ’82 pres her DR. WARBURTON, Rr Gin” ONY Sub (© INBURGH.) 2 Office in Old City Hots l, corner of Great veorge and Dorchester Streets, opposite the Catholic ¢ hape]. Entrance on Great George Street—night bell. : Ch town, Novy, i4, 82 — JM me SAWING & PLANING MILL, Is now offered for sale. property will be sold to suit! purchasers, as it now standa, or buildings ani! Jand will be sold separate from machin- ery. a FURNITURE. Opposite Post Office, VOL. 12.---NO. 80. . MAKE NEW R fOr BLOOD And will completely chanze the blood in the entire system in three months. ; fon who will tako 1 Piil each night fr Any por- ‘om 1 to 12 weeks, may be reg coy : » may be restored to sound . oy ees thing be possible. Tor curing Female Complaints these Pills have no = : : lysicians use them in their practice. Sold everyw here, or sent by mail for Sht letter-stamps. Send for circular. I. S. JOHNSON & CO., BOSTON MASS P ‘ *s 2%—5 TMAASS, CROUP, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS. . vw OH NSON’S ANODYNE LINIM ENT will instan- taneously relieve these terrible diseases, and will positively cure nine cases out of ten. Information that will save many lives sent free vy mail. Don't delay a moment. JOH NSON’S Prevention is better than cure. (For Internal and Ex- JOHNSON’S ANODYNE LINIMENT (220022 Gheonts Mkeunst nt a e Lungs, Bleeding at the Lungs, Chronic Hoarseness, Hacking Cough, Whooping Cough Spine a Ie aoe C hronie Diarrhea, Chronic Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, Kidney Troubles Diseases of 10 me Back. Soldeverywhere. Send for pamphiet to I. 8. Jounson & Co.., Boston, Mass. An English Veterinary Surgeon and Chemist a RoW traveling in this country, says that most of the Horse and Cattle Powders sold here are worthless trash. He Says that Sheridan 3 Condition Powders are absolutely pure and mensely valuable. Nothing on earth will make her ike Sheridan’ iti : 2 m Gare! 8 18 Jay like Shtridan's Condition Powders. Dose, 1 teasp'n- fui tol Pint food. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail for 8 letter-stamps. I. S. JOusSON & Uv., Bosses, Miss a aaa ee AT COST. —_—— :0:—-—— en EDSTEA DS, Chaira, Tables, Washstands, Sofas. Lounges, Parlor, and Drawing Room Bedroom Suits, Looking Glasses and Mirrors, Window Furniture, Picture Frames and Also, that COMFORTABLE DWELLING Picture Mouldings, HOUSE, situated on Cumberland Street, near | Grafton, For further particulars apply to the owner, ' ‘ | . 51; B& 8 36/11 58,10 57) On the premises, PAUL LEA, | Ch’*town, Jan. 5, 1883. — NOTICE, | | EING abort to make a change in my me be paid ou or before the twentieth | All amounts not paid will be_ Building, Great! 5 oe = ’ Street, Charlottetown. pel OW © PEWN ED NEW | | North Side of Queen Square, OPPOSITE TRE LAW COURTS. } } RD. DBAia TZ .i | Ch’town, Dee: 12, 1*82,—3m | a Been Sis SONG wage ae . > = a 4 . TREY) 4 Pe oe 14? Ao sf : Bs es ia yee Pa ~ ~ lire PERFECTION || Sov PRCPRIETCRS | of WHISKY=<@y|)-> 5 DB OTHERS | nae Se Issieeraacs mcngoneg ye WaTtoD DY. | (vist LLERIES, ARGV LESH, ORNE HIGHLAND WHISKY ANALYYICAL SANITARY INSTITUTION “ We have visited the bottling stores of| Greenlees Brothers, and have selected | from the vats, samples of their Lorne, Highland Whisky, and have subjected } them to careful examination and analysis. | The samples were very fragrant, mellow, and of pleasant flavor, and possessed all the characteristics of pure and well. | matured Scotch Whisky of the first, quality.” ; 1 Aprats Ht, Hassatt, M. D. “Orro Hgunae, F.C. S., FL C.” é nt :-— 4% OWEN CONNOLLY Charlottetown, P. i. 1. Feb. 24, 1882. NOVICE. undersigned and the late A. B. Stewart MICHAEL HICKFY. Ch’town, July 4, 1882—pat tf A POSITIVE Without Medicines. ALLAN’S SOLUBLE MEDICATED BOUGIES. Patented October 16th, 1876. One box No. 1 will cure any case in four days or less. No. 2 will cure the most obstinate case, ne matter of how long standing. , | No nauseous doses or cubebs, copaiba, or | oil of sandalwood, that are certain to pro- Sold by all ——— or | : —— - . 7 t er par. mailed on receipt of price. For fur ticulars send for circular, P, O. Box 1,533. J. 2. ALLAN CO., 83 John street, sel "$2 ise New Vork the stomach, Price $1.50. \UBSCRIBE for the WEEKLY EXAMI-| NER, the Obes published on P. K. and Best N ewspaper Only $1 per year: JOHN NEWSON, ~“CTharjottetown, Jan, 2, 1883.--ly ~ FURNITURE, $50,000 Deposit with the Dominion Government. Dining and Coffee Rooms, McLEAN, | Charlettetown, Dec. 29, 1882.—tf CHEAPEST, SAFEST. SIMPLEST business, it is necessary that all amounts he | a ft | N S U t A N f ft | due IN THE WORLD. OF ST. JOHN, N. B. —0 under Government License. O An Assessment Company witha Safety Fund. Life Insurance at its actual cost. oO nienterendl WS toed Canvassers Wanted. | LEONARD MORRIS, General, Agent for P. E. Island. Summerside, Oct, 28, 1882.—1ly —_;- -- The Business Premises Known as “83 @ueen Street,” Lately in the Occupation of BR. W. Tremaine, The Stock on hand is now selling at COST and GHARGES, will be cleared off at AUCTION about the middie of January, of which due notice will be given. JAS. DESBRISAY. THE EXAMINER JOB PRINTING OFFICE HAS LATELY BEEN REPLENISHED WITH curm 4 Large Supply of Printing Types and Material OF THE LATEST INVENTION AND BEST DESCRIPTION, AND WE ARE NOW PREPARED, | doned it. | Ontario has an undne Working BILL HEADS. BLANK (HQUES, NOTES OF HAND, HAND BILLS, On Short Notice, in Good Style, at Cheap Prices Under the Careful and Skilful Supervision of Mr. J. W. Mitchell, BO PFPRiMs. LETTER HEABS, RECEIPTS, POSTERS, DODGERS, &c., &e., Ministerial Changes. SPEECH BY SIR JOHN. In reply to some remarks of the Hon. Edward Blake, Sir John McDonald said :— I have no objection to diseuss the question inreply to the hon. gentleman, and, if possible, in the same kindly spirit. The hon. gentleman is mistaken when he says that in the formation of the first Adminis- tration in 1876-7 we laid down a cast iron rule. On the contrary. if the hon. gentle man will so far honor me as to look back to the debates, he wil] find that that prin- cipal could not have been laid down, and could not have been carried out. The object of uniting the provinces was to have one great Dominion under which the sectional system could not be carried out. I said, however, that we were forming a new Confederation, that the provinces were strangers to each other, that the members from each province were anxious as to the vosition their province would occupy in the Confederation, and that we thought in forming the first Government we should recognize every province, and so distribute the offices in the Cabinet as to give each province representation, and we did so. We gave Ontario five ministers; Quebec four and the other two. provinces two each— (hear, hear)—but I took also the pre- caution of stating that that kind of ‘thing could not be expected to go on for- ever; that it was requisite in order to start ‘fairly that every province should feel that it was represented in the Cabinet, but that in the future that could not be the case, and Charlottetown that we would be obliged as provinces were ® ‘added to adopt the system which obtains in the United States, where they have only ‘seven Cabinet ministers, one of who is selected from thes New England States, another from the Western States, another from the Southern States, the States being ‘divided into groups, and each group having a representative in the Ministry. We have ;now a good many provinces, and we will) \have a good many more in the lifetime of | |the leader of the Opposition, and with the | changed circumstances of the country, | j with the formation of new provinces, and \the pressure of new interests upon the ‘legislature of the county, there must be continual changes in the Executive to meet) ‘the varyiug developments of this great’ country. That was the principle I’ ‘laid down, and I have never aban- My~hon. friend says that} >reponderance | in the! |Cabinet, or in the offices in the gift of the! | Government. Well, as far as that is con-! cerned, 1 may say the Speaker of the Upper | House (Mr. Macpherson) receives no salary | for acting as a member of the Government. | The amount of business thrown upon the| Government in consequence of the wonder- | ful development of the Northwest was so enormous that I was only too glad to | accept the able assistance of that hon. gen-| tleman in the performance of my duties as Minister of the Interior. He assists me as my personal friend, as a gentleman having) full confidence in me, and as a gentleman} in whom I have full confidence. He has| done yeoman’s service for me and for his| country, bringing a practical business mind | and unwearied exertions and great ability | to the performance of the enormous task of | attending to the various questions which arise with respect to the Northwest, so that Mr. Macpherson has really come to my aid and has given the country| the benefit of his gratuitous services as a | member of the Cabinet. (Applause.) The hon. gentleman also spoke about Mr. Smith enteving the Cabinet, and says regarding his presence there without portfolio, that either I was wrong when I objected to the hon. gentleman’s (Mr. Blake’s) presence in the Cabinet without portfolio, orl am wrong now. Iam not wrong in either instance. Mr. Frank Smith has been summoned to the Cabinet Without portfolio, and 1 am very glad to get his assistance and advice. But he stands in quite a different position to my hon. friend opposite. The hon. gentleman opposite was the power behind the throne, Hewas the king. He was like the centurian—(laughter)—he was the man in authority. (Hear, hear). He said to one man, “Go, and he goeth; and to another, come and he cometh.” He was really the Prime Minister, but without responsibility of any kind, just as he was Prime Minister in Ontario, without a portifolio and without responsibility, hav- ing the power and the authority and the main direction which his great ability and his intellectual superiority, since acknowl] edged by his selection to the important position he now holds, entitle him to, He was really goveruing the party, and he ought to have taken the position of trust. He ought to have assumed the re- sponsibility for his deeds, and he should not have placed himself in a position to say— as we have heard him say with respect to certain measures-- Oh, that was not my measure, I was not a responsible Minister at the time it was passed. (Hear, hear.) It was a repetition of the old story of the Shepherd and Trincolo, where the Shepherd says :—‘ You shall be king, and I will be viceroy over thee.”’ (Laughter.) The hon. gentleman was the viceroy, but in the position he oceupied he violated the con- stitutional principles, that power and res- ponsibility go togethor. Hon. Frank Smith is an admirable business man, an excellent member of the Cabinet, and a repre- sentative man too. He represents the Irish Roman Catholics, and, mind you, he draws nosalary. He is not fattening at the public crib any more than my hon. friend was. My hon. friend (Mr. Blake) whatever his political faults may be, is not the man to throw himself into a public office for the sake of any emclument which may arise from it—(Opposition cheers)—and it is only just that I should say so of my hon. friend ; but strange to say the hon. genile- man has actually gone out of his way to vindicate me in the eyes of Ontario ‘by his attack upon me on this ground. ! } As he insinuates that Ontario has more than its fair share of representation -lin the Cabinet, he vindicated me. lieutenant, Mr. Mowat, and his second lieutenant, Mr. Fraser, and his third lieutenant, Mr. Hardy, have been running over the country charging that I am sold to Lower Canada, and that I am under French domination. At this moment I dare say his friends of the Ontario administration, on a8 many stumps as they can cover with their two feet (laughter)—arg’ fmploring the people of Ontario not to support Mr. Meredith, because he is the slave «f John A., while John A. is the jsla¥e of the Frenchmen to whom Ontario is. sold. (Appiause.) Now, Mr. Speaker, I think I lave made my explanations. I think the country will admit that I have not sacrificed the constitution, that [ have not done in- justice to any province by asking Mr. Macpherson and Mr. Smith to help mé, without salary. I do not think I have wounded the amour propre of my friends in Lower Canada, and I may state, as I lave always done, that I shall continue (Applause.) Why his first the endeavor to have at the head of affairs as good a Government as I can. [ admit, and everybody ‘must edmit, and the hon. gentleman, if to the misfortune of this country he. should take my place, will be obliged to admit, that to carry out the policy must be one of having every great interest represented in the Cabinet, so that. no section, whether it be in the Maritime Provinces or the North- West, or on the .Pacific coast, shall be neglected. it is the same in. England. There no Government would last-if Ireland and Scotland had not a certain nimber of representatives in the Cabinet. There is no cast-iron rule there. Still if a Govern- ment desires to get the support of all sections, each section must be directly or indirectly represented in the Cabinet. That is the princij Je that must prevail. That is the principle which my hon. friend will adopt by-aucd-bye, when he forms a Cabinet though { aw. not ina hurry to see that take place. (Laughter and applause. ) eco + The Canada Pacific. The prospectus of this great corporation presents an array of facts calculated to in- spire confidence in its appeal te the capi- taiists of the world. It stated among other things, — i. That in August, 1883, there will be through communication from Montreal to Winnipeg, by ‘he Company’s own railway except for the length of Lake Superior, over which the Company will operate its own line of steamboats. 2. That the entire lina west of Winnipeg is to be completed in 1885, at which time there will be through communication from the city of NewYork to the Pacifie’ Ocean over the Canadian Pacific Railway via Chicego, St. Pauland Winnipeg and from Montreal tagthe Pacific Ocean by the Com- pany’s owmrmilway, with its connecting line of steamboats on Lake Superior. 3. That the entire railway is to be finish- ed in 1886,\s0 as to make a complete throngh rail connection from Montreal to the Pacific Ceean, within Canadian terri- ory. 4. That bonds to the amount of $25,000, - 000 have been issued, secured by a mortgage on the Land Grant only, and constituting no lien whatever upon the railway or gen- eral franchises of the Company. 5. That these bonds are receivable in payment for lands sold by the Company ; $5,000,000 of them are, and will be, ‘for ten years after the completion of the. main line held by the Dominion Government as security for the performance of the con- tract. 6. That as the sales of 6,452,000 acres have already been sufficient to provide for the redemption of all the bonds, not re- served by the Government, with the ex- ception of less than $2,700,000, the sale of about 1,300,000 additional acress, even at much lower rates will be more than sufficient to extinguish this small balance of ungold — bonds. 7. That after the railway is completed and equipped there will remain nearly 17,- 000,000 acres of excellent land, f:ee from all incumbrances and subject to sale for the benefit of the stockholders, and the Com- pany will also hold $10,000,000 of its own unused capital stock for use in and further improvements or extensions. The stock and bonds of the Company are being sold as fast as can reasonably be ex- pected. — ope —-——— Gurney, the absconding teller of the Durham Bank, Ontario, was recently inter- viewed at Louisville by two Canadian officers, and was induced to disgorge some $11,000. The Mail says if this had been Flemming now, he would have seen the men of law in Halifax first. Presumably in token of their appreciation of Mr. Gurney’s obliging disposition the detectives ‘‘ left him enough to keep him from want till he could secure a situation.” It must have been a considerable sum. It is only a wonder that the officers did not give him a certificate-of good character. The Winnipeg Sun says there are at pres- ent in the Canada Pacific yard about sixty disabled locomotives. About half of them are being repaired. The fighting through snow-drifts causes much of the injury. Many of the disabled engine# are the old Kingston build, but by being properly re- paired may last a couple of years. On the Western division there are only 104 engines altogether, and it must be seen how greatly traffic is interfered with by over half that number being disabled. -~nw- Me. Jacob Bradshaw, of Hampton, N. B., has presented to an organization formed for its management, viz., ‘‘ The New Bruns- wick Baptist Ministers’ Life Aseociation,” $10,000, to be used under certain condi- tions, to aid infirm Baptist ministers, their widows, and children. This makes some $35,000 he has recently presented for differ- ent objects for the benefit of the Baptist denomination in his native province ard ~~ - — has positively! the Telegu mission interest. we ; é 3 ¢ &