| es ge ! | Georgetown Going Wes - Souris Dp ea ch wae ee VOR Tue Datry is Published every Evening. OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STRERTS, Charlottetown, P. E. 1. Kates OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, . . $2 50 Vhree Months, : : 1 25 (me Mouth, 0 50 One Week, 0 12 a@ Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- cation. W. L. COTTON, J. W. MITCHELL, Manager. Office Sup’t, * ES ae aE —— A CC Cte PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 11. Winter Arrangement. ON AND AFTER MONDAY, DECEMBER 30th, 1878. Trains Going West. THE iSXAMINER see ~-$OURIS BRANCH. _ — - P Nos L No.6 STATIONS. Mixed. {|STATIONS.| Mixed. IL eee - 2 = ~— 4 Harmony | “ i M.| i P.M 00) Mts tw'tJne|Dp 4.40 23 STATIONS. No. 1. No. 3 - a Express. ; Mixed. — Georgetown Dp 8.10 am; Cardigan a = = , ar 9.55 ‘‘ M.Stew’t Jun dp10.05 “ Royalty Jun. caaen - Ch'town dp 8.00 am| Dp 3.30 pm Royalty Jun. “* 8.20 “* | * 3,50 : N. Wiltshire “oie ‘7 * 4.45 ‘ ane are nan os | St re es Breadal ne ee . Ss sé «“eé 5. «é Conny Line + faioo « | « 630 = ington ; . a larl1.30 ‘* jar 7.00 ‘ Summerside dp 2.40 pm Wellington " 3.32 ee Port Hill “4.16 “ O’ Leary * oa - ar a ae Alberton dp 5.40 ‘6 Tignish jar 7.25 “¢ Trains Going East, STATIONS. No. 2 No. 4 Express. } Mixed. Tignish Dp 7.00 ain Alberton « * ee O’ Leary ee E i ee Port Hill **10.05 i Wellington oe = ; ar ll. Summerside dp 2.30pm) Dp 8.45 am Kensington 46 3.00 “sé 7 W15 “e “Gonmtyrtine YBa 8 n ; . Hunter River - 4m * “10.47 i. N. Wiltshire ae a “s nae alty Jun. s¢ & oo 1.009155 ¢ er ar 6.00 ** jarl2.15 pm Ch town } dp 2.55 « Royalty Jun. i oo ” ar 4. Mt. Stewart dp 4.40 * €ardi 6 6.00 sé 0 ar 6.25 “| Going East. Morell “ 5.22 St: Peters | ‘* 8.42:)St. Peters | “ 5.54 Morell - ‘© 9, 13}} Harmony Ors eon Mt S'tw’t Inc} ar 9.55{|Soaris ©. J. BRYDGES, WM. McKECHNIE, Gen. Stip. Gov. Raihoays Supt. P. EB. 1. R. Ch’town, Dec. 27, 1878. : p ne arh pres kea sp sj ap 61 MAIL NOTICE. ALLS to be forwarded via Cape Traverse N will be closed at this Othice daily—Sun- days excepted—at 8 o'clock p. m. The mail for Great Britain, by Canadian Packet sailing from Halifax on Saturdays, will be closed here on Wednesdays at 8 o'clock, m. P the mail for Great Britain via New York will be closed on Thursdays at 8 o'clock, p. m, Mails for all ‘West of Charlottetown receiving Mails by Railway Train or Postal Car, wilt be closed daily at 7 o'clock a. m. | Mails for Georgetown and Souris East, also for all places on the route to those points, will be closed daily at 2 o'clock, p. m. Post Office open from 8, a. m., till 8, p. m. A. A. MACDONALD, Postmaster. Post Office, Charlottetown, 20th Feb., 1879. DR. CREAMER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Kent Street, Charlottetown, (Three doors from Dr. Johnson’s). ENTRANCE BY SIDE DOOR. @ | Oct. 15--3m ar 7.30 _ = ry — tne Penciee . EN re cae en aR — Se ret Be ea Oe ee CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLA Hauer Ue Lins se JOB PRINTING PROMPTLY DONE IN GO000 STYLE AND AT LOW PRICES! THE DAILY EXAMINER Local News, Foreign News, Political News, Social News, Commercial News, Shipping News, laid before Subscribers, Purchasers, and Borrowers, EVERY EVENING, PRICE 2 CENTS. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Qmarterly ...seeecccceee ooph a0 Half-Yearly...2scceeececee B00 THE DAILY HAS A Largely Inereased Circulation AND IS AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING MEDIUM THe. WEEKLY EXAMINER Made up from Taz Datty—a Compen- dium of all the News of the Week. Subscription price only One Dollar a Year! IN ADVANCE, Sent to any address in Great Britain or North America, Persons having relatives or friends abroad cannot do better than send them Tne Werxty Examiner. sar A few Advertisements only, received J. W. MITCHELL, | W. L. COTTON, Utica Sup Manager. Potlow the reasoning and behold the fright- * eaten Bee St ren ee Or seen ne ee BE ha Fs be pean ae RUS is wget A wo SS a mee “X AM ees Seite CS Mairead Bape tee shag PEGS ae nt Se aa Is = MR. BYRNE'S ADDRESS, Delivered at the Concert Given by the Benevolent Trish Society, im Aid of the Patrick’s Nicht. Yt am requested by our esteemed Presi deut and the Committee of Management to address you this evening. I regret that they had not chosen an abler mind and a'! more gifted tongue for this important duty. | But if I fail in doing justice to the, theme} that I have chosen, it will be butone more’ misery added to lreland’s already too lengthy catalogue. LOVE OF COUNTRY ig a desire implanted in the human heart by | the hand of the creator. Even in un- civilized life the savage exhibits a venera- tion for the soil over which his infancy has wandered. And the recital of the deeds of his forefathers in the songs, legends and ballads of his nation will sometimes cause uncontrollable emotion. At night im the, wigwam an aged chieftain telling the DEEDS OF VALOR performed by some intrepid brave on the | tield of carnage in the day of invasion and | spoilation will cause the savage bosom to heave with. sympathy, and kindle in the untntored soul the fire of unquenchable revenge. When the youthful Ladian is told that the ancient oaks .at which he was ac- customed to gaze from his childhood, were once sprinkled by the blood of the illus- trous warriors of his tribe; that the mountains beneath whose shadews he wooed his dusky mate were the resting places of his FEARLESS ANCESTORS ; that the stream over which he paddles his light canoe once reflected the faces of the great men of his race, a spirit is awakened which nothing can destroy. Even in north- ern countries where ‘nature exhibits. her wildest and most uninteresting side. love of country is as strong as if their hills were clad with the vine, as if their forests sported in eternal green. It was LOVE OF COUNTRY that cansed Moses, the great Hebrew prophet and legislator—the man whom God had selected to lead his chosen people from the land of -bondage—to kill an Egyptian who had smitten an Israelite. The prophet looked this way and that way; his breast filled with indignation ; tears rolled down his cheeks, at the thought of the distressed condition of his countrymen. He raised his powerful arm, and the minion of Pharoah rolled in death upon the’ sand. For lore of country, Judas Maccabees, the soldier priest; gathered the Jewish war- riors and scattere| the ranks of Antiochus under the walls of the sanctuary, made desolate as a wilderness. The same spirit FILLED THE SOUL of Ehud of Israel, when he smote Evlon of Moab, and then, with trumpet-call. from the mountains, cried out, ** Follow after, for the Lord hath delivered your enemies, the Moabites, into your hands.” Jael, the wife of Heber, the Kenite, pierced. the en- emy of her people through the temple, and Deborah, the prophetess, sang a song of triumph ever the glorious event. Whiat spirit animated the bosoms of the gallant Spartans, defending the pass of Thermo- pylae?) What spirit nerved the arm of the fearless Leonidas, when performing the deeds of MILITARY PROWESS that remain to this day as the most exalted example of undying patriotism? Love of the land that bore them. But the most splendid instance recordered in history of a heart yearning with leve for his native land, is that of the illustrious Roman Gen- eral Caius Marins. ‘He was exiled from his country. He could not return to her. One day he sat alone in the sunshine think ing of the time that the Roman’ people elected him to the ‘Consulship, ‘thinking of the time that he came home from the wars with the laure! wreath upon his brow and the trophies of his victories dy his side. Whilst in this reverie, thinking of the INGRATITUDE OF HIS COUNTRYMEN, a messenger arrived from the Praetor com-| manding him.te quit the Province.. For 4 time the old man wassilent. The messen- ger, becoming impatient, asked ‘what sre- ply he would make the Praétor. The old general, the man who had- saved Rome, spoke aud said, *f Tell him that you saw Caius Marius sitting an exile among the ruins of Carthage.” . Wiliam Tell wander- img over his mative -mouniains with the wrongs of his ¢ountry so vividly fixed in his mind that, in the fuli tide» of ‘his patri- otic heart, he resolved that the land should be free fraar end to end. Free as the eagles are-—fvee, as the breeze that fans the moun- tain crags. . He told the tyrant of Uri that he had no vespect for the cap upon the pole at Atorf, that if the arrow but teuched. a single hair of the head of his darling boy another would sink deep into THE MONSTERS HEART. Hofer, the Tyrolese patriot, when he saw the foot of the conqueror on the neck of his country, roused'the peasantry of lis native land: and compelled the aggressor to restore the Austrian rule under which they lived. The cold and empty teachings of phil- osophy assert that any nation that has lost its independence deserves to be oppressed. This is nothing but varnished sophistry. ND, THURSDAY , 9 es i — re a ae + ee tyrant of the north, who has taken from her the Crown of Sobieski and the BANNER OF THE CROSS r “a : ° ° | Poor, on St. under which were led embattled hosts} conld not destroy against the cruel and merciless Turks, should be forever in chains. . Whose heart does not swell when Poland raises her arm to strike down the oppressor and win back the ancient glories of Sarmatia ? ~ No heart but the heart of a slave van behold or think of such things without sending up a prayer to the God of battles for suceess upon the *olish arms. Glorious, gallant Poland, fighting for her ancient honor, fighting for that national liberty which is the birth- rigit of every nation, fighting for that proud position which she once held amongst the KINGDOMS OF THE EARTH, may the spirit of freedom rest upun her banners ; may the arms of her warriors be clothed with thunder in the day of desola- tion and bluod! What a melancholy task is his who seeks for, the records of Poland on the historical tablet for the last fifty years! The nation that once carried its conguests as far.as Dacia, made the Dvian tremble, and chased. the flying Spahi be- yond the Danube ; the king who once pa- ternally planned his country’s weal ; the nebles who once, at the signal of foreign invasion, appeared clad in brass and steel ; the ‘peasant, who bared his brawny breast and stood in the last ramparts of his conn- try-—where are their names recorded | ‘*Whata prond moment was that which promised to be so propitious when the hopes of the country were, after a long interval of death like silence, awakened — but awakened to slumber again perhaps in eter- nal sleep. THE GIANT WARRIOR OF CORSICA spread before the Poles a golden vision—he inoeked Poland with the name of Jiberty. At the head of his myriad men of war, he said to the Polish mother : ‘ That son who is in the cradle shall be free--Puland shall be free.” ‘* Greece, but living Greece no more,” “roused from the lethargy of slavery to the activity of freedom, called back the spirit that slninbered af Marathon.” The lovers of Grecian elognence, learning and song wept with joy when it became known that rely upon foreign assistance, but to rouse in themselves the invincible COURAGE OF THEIR FATHERS. The sword of Byron leaped from the seab- bard, and the author of the ‘‘Isles of Greece” Phalanx, composed of the countrymen of Achilles. : The student knows that no nation on the face of the globe has a grander history than [reland. Lt him go back upon the high- ways of the past, and he will find that, be- fore Greece emerged from a state of bar- barism, before Romulus’ laid the fonndation of Imperial Rome, before the Saxon had holes and caverns of the earth, PEROGsS COUNTRY. of her ancient greatness. vr, at least, in a revolutionary condition, when her own liberty-loving children could walk in the air of freedom over her own or the breast of the invader. the DAY OF HER PRIDE kings ruled a brave, generous, noble peo- passed to the Nocman or, Saxon.» Ireland, able -cliarm ‘and fascination’ in thy © very name. ‘The mind loves to diel! upon asso- ciations that call up memories of the time when the uncNained spirit of liberty pro: duced pee aie al _ POETS, SALNTSy-ORATORS. AND ‘WABRIORS. The majestic sublimity of thy hdary moun- tains; the syl¥ ‘ sanctity, secluded ‘groves, the plaeid surface of thy winding rivers fillthe mind with thoughts of the beatae and the grand. The round towers, the hill of Tara, the plains of Clontari—where Brian smete the Dane—are maguificent images Gi eternal grandeur and power. It was on Tara’ssold bill, before the hall ereeted for the réception uf the monarchs of Erin, that St. Patrick tirst preached to the Irish peo- ple the doctrines of Christianity. No mail- clad warriors heralled his coming; no richly decorated walls awaited his pres ence; no soft music stuic upon the breeze to invite the traveller and to proclaim that a great man was about fo begin A MIGHTY WORK. ‘With the odor of sanctity on his head, with the words of truth upon his lips, with that strength which is given to those who or he preached the Gospel-of the Saviour and converted the monarchs of the Gem of the Sea. History tells how that faith has been preserved. ‘The destruction of all thaf men hold dear, the confiscation of their property, the separation of the husband from the wife, ful conclusions to which it will lead. | Poland, in her death, struggles agsinst the- the wife from the husband, the enactment of the penal code, the annihilation of the MARCH 20:4 the Greeks were determined no longer to placed himself at the head of a Phyrrhie ceased to paint his body and to live in the IRELAND WAS AN ENLIGHTENED AND PROS- It would he fruitless for me to attempt to give you to-night even a condensed account Ireland is, by sume, considered a nation for ever at war, Those who so consider her are not accurate- ly acquainted witheher history; there wag a tune.when Ireiand had continnal peace; there was a time when the sound of chains was not heard at her feet; there was a time soil unhindered by the blade of the tyrant This was in and youthful strength. This was when her ple before the crown of the.conqueror had seared her virgin brow; before her scepire heroic; iUlustrious Ireland, how I love te }talk of thy glories. Where is an indescrib- upon the promises of the everliving God, INER. verry \ ) to Ley ‘ ‘ . ee. i ‘ Eee, : ers = ‘ancient landmarks of history, the demoli- | tion of them i STATLEY CATHEDRALS, ; the faith of Erm re- iceived from St...Patrick. For 1,40Q.years 'that faith hag remained white and ancor- rupted throngh disaster and persecution, through the wreck of .empires .and, the change of kingdoms. And, Oh! may it remain fair and unsullied until the cloud- capped towers and the gorgeous palaces _re- ceive the Omnipotent command that mor- tality is no more. Next to the introduction of Christianity® the most memorable. event in Irish History is the invasion of the country by Henry II. of ‘England. But resistance to the invader has been consistent and connected in every age. Their PAITH IS FERVENT in the uliimate triumph of Jreland’s rights against her oppressor. They are not dis- heartened because of the sad heritage of seven centuries of woe. They feel that liberty i miore.thaniseven centuries old. Lnperishable, indestructable,. ity divesp and is a living power potent to arm a nation and to inspire the hero and the martyr to con- quer and to die. This feeling, for some wise purpose, is inherent and inextingrish- able in the Inish race. Creations like the mirage, reproducing the forms and outlines of things which had a being. : SHE PORGETS NOT RER WRONGS. The wanacle irritates, but does mot enslave her. For each eneration of Irishmen has protested, according to” the fashion of the times, against the enslavers of their land. lrritation—not enslavement ! Rgaaipnce and revolt followin ‘the regular order of cause and. effect. One is crushed out in blood ; its heroes, in their fall, throw dust tou Heaven. From the dust sprung up their avengers. The peculiarities of the times fashion the resistance into shape. From O’Connor to Silken Thomas, from Silken Thomas to Red Hugh, from Red Hugh to Owen Roe, from Owen Roe to Sarsfield, from Sarsfield to the Volunteers, from the Volunteers to E:amett, from Emmett to O'Connell, from FRQM v'CONNELL TO THE MEN OF FORTY- EIGHT, from the men of forty-eight to Larkin, Allen and O’Brien, the martyrs of, Man- chester, no gap in her history—no genera- tion of men lived and died without further- ing that connected resistance that comes hereditary to the present © generation through the dreary length of seven cen- turies of war and, turmoil. Length cf years,’ ‘blood, tears, defeat, “could not extinguish the traditionary faith in freland’s future nationality. It is the first and earliest lesson taught the Celtic, race. No change of condition effects it. Im the cot of the peasant, in the hut of the pauper, in places and stations where a ray of ¢om- fort cannot penetrate, this faith is taught and nurtured, and even while I speak it has MILLIONS OF BELIEVERS from England to India, from Greeniaid to the Mississippi. In fact, wherever theCelt has a resting place this faith has a believer and a prophet... Two and a half, centuries ago Montjoy, Elizabeth’s. Lieutenant,,de- irvered to his Royal mistress'a land of tar- casses aud ashes. ‘“Trelaid “is now to a very certainty, pacified, ‘» exclaimed * Hliza- beth, . Accordimg. to. Spencer, the, eagle swept fearless over her plains, the wolf howled in the streets of her deserted cities, the ravenous dogs gnawed the bones of ‘her slain. wie THE SHOUT OF ‘TRIUMPH jascended. irom, the sironghold .of. ther enemies at her fall, and great were their re- joicing. Her life was crushed out, she slept the sleep that knew no waking. “So theught her enemies. So. thinking. «the first Charles threatened to confiscate.the whole Province of Connaught.. But, in his time, over forty years had passed awayjand she that’ was thought @ead lived aghin. From the ashes of her sons started up-atm- ed champions, men asked if the prophesy of Ezekiel was not realized, If life was_ not breathed into the whitened bones of” her slain. Then ensued a dessolating ‘and*un relenting war for : TEN YEARS THE CONTESTED LASTED.- A period forever resplendent in Irish ehis- ~| tory. by the signal victory of Beaburl, won by that Great captain, Owen Roe O'Neill. Then Cromwell took up the gage of batfle, }the stearnest and most cruel of? Frelatd’s foes. In two years he completed, asthe thought, the final conquest of Ireland, To use the emphatic and popular language of the day, the Irish were all sent ‘to Hell or Jamaeia,” Her, bravest were then dead at Drougheda, Wexford and Limerick. By every hill-side and. in every ravine, the bones of her sons lay unburied. In the sweltering cane-brakes of Jamacia;in the Tobacco Plantations of Virginia, her living were scattered. . A NEW) RACE | was planted on the soil, and henceforth Ireland was to be easily governed. In two score years after Cromwell’s butcheries {Ireland was again in the field erect as ever, { with front unblanched, led by Sarsfield, one of her bravest sons, who performed presses of.valor at Aughrim, aoa made Limerick as notable to the Celt as Thermopylex to the Greek. ; ‘. WHAT MEANEZTH THIs! Is it that she is fated to suffer, never to win, never to come ‘forth avith «the 1 wreath of the conga emo lL. Nod. . earth cannot suck in the blood shed so pro: fusely for her on a thousand battlefield; it PY +e bd ~ Seal ————————————————————————— SESE ar oan = a ee Seen CLS On tener een 7