Tu EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1878 VOL. 3. NO. 402 r ‘ r THe Datty EXAMINER Is Published every Evening. OFFICE: INGS’ \ND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. 1. 1. KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : six Months, ‘ . . $2 50 ‘Three Months, . 1 25 ‘me Month, . 0 50 Une Week, 012 —_ — e@ 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. ; PRINGE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 9. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT _ MONDAY, APRIL 29th, 1878, Trains Going West. No. 3 Mixed. No. 5 STATIONS, | He 3 . \Mixed Express. | Georgetown (Dp 4.00 pm Dp7 i. 30 am) Cardigan “-.55 7 * Fae M aan “t Jui i ar 5.25 ar 0.20 - nt ae ‘| ldp.5.35 “ |dp 9.30 “ | toyalty Jun. | ** 6.32 ** | “10.45 “| en. jar 6.50 ** jartl.05 “* jp. Ca tows | dp 6.25 amjdp11.35 ** \tps.2 25 Royalty Jun. | ** 6.43 “* | “11.55 “* | 5.45 N. Wiltshire mee A ee x 50 pm **6.42 ponies Dat | 7.30 «| «1.07 * | 7.00 Breadal bane “7.66 * | 8G]. 7a es Fr | ” — a ae - use sington aS | POSS S* | Meee ea | lar 9,00 “ lar &15 “ lar 9.00 Summerside ‘dp 9.15 “ |dp 3.45 Wellington | ** Goa ** | ©. 40 “* Port Hill | “10:22 a r 5.27 me U’ Leary eae 1s oth 6,54 : Alberton | **12.00 8.00 Tignhish lar 12.40 pmiar $ 8.50 ‘‘ es ‘Trains Going East. No. 6 mixed No. 4 Mixed. STATIONS. | No. 2 Express. Tigmsh (Dp 1.50 pm: Dp 6.30 am i ar » 66 } Alberton | 9.30 ip oe I O Leary ls gag |] $57 « Port Hill “6 “i “ieee Wellington «4.40 | LLIO « ei wrate| \8t 5.15 ‘* jar 12.05 pmj A. M. Summergee | |dp 5.30 “ {dp12.40 “ |dp6.30 Kensington . | * 5.55 “| ** 1.17 “ | 3.07 County Line | “ 6.23 “ |“ 1.57 “ | 7.46 Breadalbane “@s8 “1 267 * | Sie Hunter River | “ 7.00 “ | ‘* 2.48 “* | “8.35 N. Wiltshire 79758“ 1* 2m flee sd \ jar 4.00 ** | £°9.45 \oyalty Jun. | “* 7.47 *( ;dp 4.10 “* jarl005 Ch't | lar 8.05 ‘* jar 4.30 ‘ _— dp 8.05 am|dp 3.40 “ ; on «) jar 4.00 * Royalty Jun. 8.23 dp 4.10 « | | jar 9.20 ** Jar 5.25 “ Mt. Stewart | /4,,9.40 “ ldp 5.45 “ Cardigan 10.43 ** | ** 7.06 ** Georgetown jarll.05 ‘ jar 7.35 ** _ SOURIS BRANCH. ‘Trains Going West. "eis ‘ea } STATIONS. - 7 Mixed. Ma 9 Mixed. ie ‘Op B.1E a | Dp 6. eget Harmony ; tm?’ “*' 6.52 St. Peter's, pe Sg a Morell. — } See? M. Stew’t Jun. lA 5.25 « ar 9.20 . Trains Going East. STATIONS. ae Express. No, 10 Mixed, M. Stewart ; Jun} Dp 9. 30 am. | Dp 5.35 p.m Morell . **10.02 i em St. Betas’ e 440.95. °° | 66 6.47 ‘6 Harmony “21:83 °* “sen “ Arll.40 * Ar 3% ** «, J. BRYDGES, WM. McKECHNIHE, Gen, Sup, Gov. Railways Supt. P. Be 1. BR. Ch’town, April 20, 1875— CAMPAIGN TRACTS Facts for the Electors. SERIES OF EIGHT PAGE TRACTS for general circulation, and having spe- c.abreference to the last five years of (Grit- ie Expenditure and Nouris - Others will follow in the course of the next few weeks, Will be sent by mail, on receipt of pri Consetvative Associations and candidates should secure a supe y at once, & R. WHITE, * THE GAZETTE. , . Montreal. June 6, 1878— ‘ BSCRI BE for the DAILY EX- SN ae | the Cheapest and most newry Paper publish in the Province, BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER | | ¢ ‘ity Hotel Buik ung, oppeaite Roman Catholic | DR. CONROY, Physician and Surgeon. OFFICE Cathedral, Great George Street Charlottetown, 1IS7S8-—3m eod Daniel W. Job & Co. FORMERLY PERKINS & JOB, COMMISSION © MERCHANTS SHIP BROKERS. 9] Nha ti Ntreet Aug. 29, Boston. August 23, 1878—3in CHARLOTTETOWN Young Ladies’ Institution, Hilisborouch Street, ryNuis Institution will re-open on DAY, September 2nd, at 10 a. m. a on application. J. CUNNINGHAM DUNLOP. n, Aug. 27, 1878—6i ree ee eee eee MON Ch’town PROFESSIONAL CARD. ——:0:——— A. A. McLHAN, Barrister and Attorney-at-Law, Opvrostre Post Orrrce, Newson’s BurLpine, South Side Queen Square, CHARLOTTETOWN, - - Aug. 13th, 1875 ~ £, G. HUNTER, [IMPORTER OF Italian and American Marble, Monuments, Tablets, Heads Tomb Tables, &s., &e, Also, Mantles, Centre Table Teps, Bureau and Commode Tops. Wash Bowl Slabs, Bracket Shelves, &c., &¢. Granite, Freestone, and Soapstone Work done in all its branches. PRICES TO SUiT, SATISFASTION GUARANTEED. ga” Lai $ d on application, a&a a $m eod fii ii i shu nifuce Factory, Kent Street, Charietictown. August 7, IS78.-—3taw Coneral Insuranes Office. eee and MARINE, LIFE and ACCI- DENT INSURANCE effected. Office, opp. Post Office, South Side. HORACE TLASZARD. ’ SURVEYOR OF SHIPPING, OPPOSTTE POST OFFIC SOUTH SIDE, HORACE “TASZARD, Surveyor. Ch’town; Aug. 2 rR (4 _ Uasiitting, ue, XHE Subseriber ‘thankful for past patron. age, would inform his friends and the public generaily, that he is still prepare ul to do all work in his line. ‘PTinsmithing, Gasfitting, ani General Jobbing punctuaily attended to. On hand, a lot of Tinware, which will be sold very cheap, wholesale and retail. Also wanted, a good steady man to peddle Tinware- GEO. E. MILLNER, Cor. Great (reorge & Fitzrey Sta. Ch’town. May i WAGSTATF'S HOTEL. FENHE Subscriber ia titted up the Hote formerly known as THE RANKIN HOUSE, in first class style, is now prepared to give comfortable accommodation tu Permanent and Transient Boarders. Tourists and others will receive every atten- tion at the Waestaff’s Hotel. WM. WAGSTAFF. May 235, ‘187 8. oe. Starch Manufacturing Co.. CAPITAL . . $25,000, In Shares of $25.00 each. by Act of Parliament during the present session, and one-third of the Shares have been taken up by the leading men of Charlottetown. Far.ners holding Stock in this Company will have the benefit of the preference in the large purch we of produce which the working of the Company entails. Applications for Shares to be made to Messrs. Hyndman ibros., untill the Di- rectors and Utticers of the Company are ap- pointed, April 16, 1878— Next Beor to Mark Butcher's Fur- VHIS COMPANY has been Incorporated | AT ee | “Nothing iy ee PURNISHES MORE NEWS, FOR LESS MONEY THAN ANY OTHER THE PI PAPER IN tOVINCE, It Gontains Twenty-eight Columns, nearly every one of which is in closely set KEADING MATTER, CONSIDER GUR TERMS SINGLE COPIES to the 3lst December, Is78—thirteen nionths —$1,090 im ad- vance. SIX COPIES to one address, or addresse. separately, as desired, $5.30 in advance TEN COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $9.00 in advance. FIFTEEN COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as required, $13.30 in advance. TWENTY COPIES to one address, or adilressed separately, as desired, $17.00 IN DULL TIMES ih tHE CHHAPRST AND Bhst The Weekly xaminer is acknowledged to be ahead of any other paper in the Province in the item «i LOCAL NEWS and is aiways well filled with Political, Shipping, Commercial and General Information, The debates of the Local Legislature will be carefully and impartially given. Special tele- grams and letters from “Our Own Ottawa Correspondent” will coutain 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 For Six Months, - - - - $2.50) For Three Months, - - - - on For One Month - - - = - ‘50 ae ADDRESS, W. L. COTTON, Manager Examiner: Printing os Publishing Company, Chtown, Dec, 1877. KN) Ee x The Electric Light of Paris. scems to have delighted ‘the scientific visitors to Paris more ‘than the progress made in electric il- ‘lumination. Mr. FL I. Pope, in des- cribing his impressions in the Journal of the Telegraph, says: “When in the ‘ourse of my tirstevening’s stroll along ‘the boulevards of Paris, 1 came sud- denly upon the d: azzling spectacle of the electric lamps w hic ‘h encircle the ‘Place del’ Opera and extend for halfa mile alone the Avenne de |'Opera to ithe Palais Royal, I was struck with surprise and admiration. The etiect Was surpassingly beautiful. There are rat the present time some 300 electric lamps nightly in suecesstul operation, jiiluminating the boulevards, gardens and public buildings of Paris, and ar- rangements for lighting all the prinei- pal boulevards and plac es are now in progress. The magneto-clectric ap- paratus employed is a gramme ma- chine arranged for producing alternate eurrents. ‘he candle employ ed is the double carbon construction ot Jabloch- kotf. Owing to the peculiar arrange- ment of the alternating machine it is possible to divide the currents so as to furnish sufficient electricity to sixteen or more separate candies, That this system, in a scientific and practical view, is literally a brilliant success is sufficiently evident to any one who like myself has carefully watche] its oper- ation night after night in the streets and public places of Paris. The qual- ity of the light is pure, soft and white, one general effect being not unlike that an unusually pow erful moonlight, a differs from the latter in the absence of the heavy black shadows. These are avoided partly by placing the can- dies in globes of opal glass, and partly by placing the lamps at a considerable elevation above the ground, perhaps twenty feetor more. That the system is equally successful in an economical point of view, in some of its applica- tions at least would. seem to admit of very little deubt. Itis possibly prem- ature to assert that it is destined speed- ily to supersede the employment of gas for all purposes of public and general Hlumination on a large seale, vet it must be said that such a result seems to me exceedingly probable.” Profes- sor Silliman is equally enthusiastic over the magic effect of the illumination, but differs from Mr. Pope in believing that the clectric light will not displace gas for domesti¢e use or for common street lichts. om - Ona the arrival of a train at Hamil- ton, Ontario, last Wednesday a man was found stowed away on the trucks of a sleeping car, in which dangerous pos- ition he had rode from London, a dis- tance of 85 miles. He said his name was Lennox, and that he was on his way to Buffalo, N. Y., where a telegram had informed him his wife was lying at the point of death, and being deter- mined to get to her, had adopted this means, not haviog money to pay his fare. A seareh ot his person showed ‘that he had but six cents. The slight- lest change ot position on his part or the least obstruction on the track wonld have killed the poor fellow. lor the last few Years the hog r chol- era has raged in Central Hlinois incess- antly, m making a loss to the farmers and others of $200,000, A few days since a peculiar kind of beetle appeared in great numbers in DeWitt county, which the hogs devour with a voracious appetite. Most cholera hogs are get- ting well from eating them. The peo- ple consider them a God-send. What they are and where they came trom is a mystery. They are fast spreading over the ccuntry. ‘The farmers are in hopes that they will effectually subdue the dreaded disease. _—— — ——-& @£Deo a ¢ VoyrAGE AROUND THE WorLD.—More fortune than the Woodruiff project the French scientific and educational expe- dition has actually sailed in the Juno ‘from Marsailles on an eighteen months 'tour round the world. The Juno is an | English-built steamer of 1,150 tons and 580 horse-power, carries twenty |passengers, two passengers, two re- | porters, a number of professors and the necessary officials, and is admirably fitted up both for pleasure and scien- tifie purposes, viel en —_ ten iim CELEBRATED ANOTHER supPLY of the witness WATCHES, in 2, 2! The Seductiveness of Interest. The seductiveness—one might almost say the fascination—of interest got or to be got from imoney is very remarkable. Ordinar- ily, people who have not had money at in- terest care very little about it, indeed, never think of it. But after they have had inter- est —have familiarized themselves with the fact that money is worth something—they very rarely forget it, or fail to act upon it. Capitalists, whether big or little, almost never allow any amount ef money, however small, to lie idle. They invest and rein- vest as fast as they get anything, and rich men in business are on this account quite as likely, if not wore likely, to be short of cash as men of ordinary means. It is this habit of wind, doubtless, which, among other things, makes men of capital more unwil- ling to part with any portion of it than men without capital are to let what they may chance to have on hand slip through their fingers. The former mentally cal- culate the interest of every amount; the latter merely consider the sum itself. Large capitalists often feel poor, not from any losses they have sustained, but from their inability to invest surplus funds in such stocks or property as they approve. The instance of the wealthy New Yorker who refused to contribute to a worthy charity because he had a quarter of a mil- lion of dollars on deposit in diverse banks without interest sounds like satire; but it is illustrative of his class. Up to a certain extent, within what is known as legal rate, interest is of reciprecal advantage to the borrower and the lender,and isa well regu- lated feature of commercial law. Carried toa high figure, made usurious, interest interest debauches and -demoralizes, as hundreds of men, originally just and un- extortionate, have found. After getting 10 per cent. for some time they want 15; after getting 15 they want 20, until at last the spirit of the pawnbroker entering into them, they are absorbed and controlled by the passion of avarice. Jt is singular, too, how alluring interest is to persons in the humblest circumstances, particularly after they have had the pleas- ure of receiving it. To have a little money working for him, working when he is asieep or at rest—so he is apt to put it—captivates the fancy of the working man, and very naturally because he does not understand it, because it is a mystery, renders the thing more alluring, and increases his satis- faction. He is likely to value two or three dollars which he has gained an interest more than he would twenty or thirty that he has earned by labor. Money earned dignifies him; interest on money puzzles and se luces him.—N. Y. Times. wail -olhikede-c aanlcldied IsnaNpeRS Aproap.—From the Doimeiion Press, published in Oakland, Cal., we learn that Mr. Jonas J. McKinnon, formerly of Melrose, P. E. I., who, for the past ten years, was in the employ of Messrs. Preston & McKinnon, has purchased a large lumber establishment, and is now carrying on a business in that line. We wish Mr. Me- Kinnon possible succes, and hope to be able to chronicle his well doings at some future time. From the same paper we also learn that Mr. Edward Robins, son of John Robins, Esq., of this city, tegether with Mesars. McKinnon, Douglass and Me- Kenzie, ail Islanders, have purchased sugar plantation in the Sandwich Islands, and from all accounts are likely to havea good crop. We feel pleased to make those announcements, and hope to be able to notice more suecésses which we sincerly hope they will meet with.- -Hereld. >> = - ‘Times are hard, money is scarce, busi” ness is dull, retrenchment is a duty—please stop my—-whiskey /-,Oh, no; times are not hard enough for that yet. But there is something that costs me a large amount every year, which I wish to save. Please stop my—tobacco, cigars and snuff? No, no, not these; but [ must retrench some- where, and I believe I can see a way to ef; fect quite a saving in another direction. Ah! [ have it now. My paper costs 84 cents a month; $1.00 a year; I must save that. Please stop my paper. That will carry me through this panic easily. I be- lieve in retrenchment and economy, es- pecially in brains.” * latest ac- The House complete shows 65 tepublicans ; 2 Democrats elected by Re- publicans ; 27 Democrats ; 57 Greenbacks. Thirteen out of the 25 Democr: ratic repre- sentatives were chosen on the straight De- mocratic ticket over both the Republican and Greenback candidates, and will hold the balance of power in the House. The other 14 were chosen by Greenback aid. - -=2_s. - . At Chicago the other day two boys of eleven andnine yearsof age quarrelled about a girl of eight. The nine-year-old lad shot his rival dead. Or the Maine Legislature the counts say : ows Over six hundred bodies have been re- covered from the excursion steamer Princess Alice. Eighty-three unrecognized hodies were huried on Monday. *</_-- Sir Garnet Wolseley has established the rule in Cyprus that the English language shall be employed in all ofticial business. Willis scons The Atlantic and Pacific Telegraph Com- pany has declared a dividend of } per cent., tl @ first it ever made. anne RE Detroit has an “* Apple- -pie ‘street.’ ” and and 3 oz. Silver Cases—warr, anted as usual, at J. F. McKAY’S, North Side Queen Sqnare. ; the uppercrust doesn’t live on it, either. fe wn Sigg pn aac fa ne rs