& i iii ani he pe ST THE UNAMINER. _—- oe Boe VOL. 3. Toe Dairy EXAMINER Is Published every Evening. OFFICE : INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. I. Rt KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, $2 50 Three Months, 1 25 (ne Month, 0 50 One Week, 012 —_—_- aw Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- cation. W. L. COTTON, | J. W. MITCHELL, Manager. | Office Sup’t. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 9. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT ! ON AND AFTER MONDAY, APRIL 29th, 1978, — = + Trains Going West. No. 3 No. 5 Mixed. ~Mixed STATIONS. No. 1 | Express. | ————$ Georgetown |Dp 4.00pin|Dp 7.30 am Cardigan 1.66 4.20 “se se ‘ye se : ar u.20 °° jar 9.20 “ M.Stew t Jun | dp.5:35 “« |dp 9.30 « | Royalty Jun. | “* 6.32 ‘* | °10.45 Ch’to ar 6.50 ** jarll.05 ‘ |». M. ere dp 6.25 amjdpl1.38 ‘* jdp5.25 Royalty Jun. “6.43 ** | *11.55 ** | 6°5.45 N. Wiltshire “7,18 * | $12.50 pmi ‘6.42 Hunter River | ‘ 7.30 “| “ 1.07 “ | ‘*7.00 Breadilbane | ‘¢ 7.58 “| ‘* 1.47 “ | *7.38 County Line - | ** 8.05 “ | ** 1.57 ** | °°7.48 Kensington $8.33 ** | ‘5 238 “| $8.25 -» | lar 9.00 “ lar 3.15 “ lar 9.00 Summerside | /4p9.15 * |dp 3.45 « Welli ORD * | *§ 2.40 * Port Hill 1Q. 22 -** | 44.56.27 ** 0’ Leary “a5 Bo i Oe * Albetton $12.00 ** |} ** 8.00 * Tignish arl2.40 pmiar §.50 “ , Trains Going East. pl te , 7 STATIONS. f ge 2 | Not |e ‘ ress. ix mixe< Tignish Dp 1.50 pm) Dp 6.30 am Alberton ‘+2: 30,‘ ay Le - p 7.50 ee O’ Leary “i * |" =e * Port Hill ‘6 4.4104 | £410.22 .°* Wellington «440 “| “91.10 * Summerside | a at ante i 30 & ce ° ec ‘ Kensington ? 588 «fe Laz © | 7.07 County Line “ oo cee hot ease Breadalbane “ 6.32 * 9D ‘ 7! Hunter River | “ 7.00 “| ‘* 2.48 “ 1, 835 N. Wiltshire 9¢ 712 84 St S06 -* 8.52 ar 4.00 “ | ‘*9.45 Royalty Jun. | ‘* 7.47 * dp 4.10 ** |arl005 os | lar 8.05 ** lar 4.30 ‘“* Ch’ town dp 8.05 am dp 3.40 * “eg 93 * ar 4.00 * Royalty Jun, eae dp 4.10 “ 9.20 “* ,ar 5.25 ** Mt. Stewart it 9.49 ** a 5.45 “é Bic.. ' 20.43 ‘6 “7 06 * Georgetown jarl}.05 ‘* jar 7.a0.** SOURIS BRANCH. 20, “Trains Going West. lies STATIONS. | No7 Mixed. | No. 9 Mixed. Sons Dp Blépw | Dp 6.30a.m, Harmony *"B.3L, “me ** St. Peter’s cao. “aG@ * Morell oF et M.Stew’t JunJA 5.25 “ jAr 9.20 “ Trains Going East. i _ STATIONS. |No. 8 Express.|No. 10 Mixed. M. Stewart Jun! Dp 9.30 am. | Dp 5.35 p.m Morell **10.02 5 °° ** 6.15 $ St. Peter’s *10.25 ** ‘* 6.47 a Harmony “11.93 | 8.02) Souris Arll.40 “ | Ar 8.25 43. BRYDGES, | WM. McKECHNIE, ‘Mien. Bor Gor Railways Supt. P. BLT. R. Ch’town, April 20, 1878— st Lawrence Marine Ins. Co, OF P. E. ISLAND. ( ——— 10 5- SUBSCRIBED: CAPITAL . . $120,000.00. « BOARD OF DIRECTORS: Axcutpatd Kexnepy, Esq., President ; Jouy F. ‘Ropertson, Esq. ; ArtTemas Lorn, Ese. ; G. D. Lonaworta, Ese; W. E. Dawson, Esq.; THomas Morris, Ese. ; P. W. Hywnpmay, Esq. , Risks taken daily at their Office, Exchange ; Ss FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Secretary. ” March 25—ly law E WEEKLY EXAMINER. — Per- havi eee ends abroad, an-1 to keep them informed con cannot do soin a better or cheap; eS 1 by subscribing to Tre Werkuy ' - Sent, , to any address ‘Great Britain, the Domini inion, u receipt of One Dollar. pited States, or the | po FRANK D. COX, Physician, Surgeon, and Accoucheur. ReEstpDENCE—Great George Street, nearly opposite the Bishop’s Palace. Apothecaries’ Hall. September 16, 1878. —2w DR. CONROY, Physician and Surgeon. OFFICE : City Hotel Building, opposite Roman Catholic Cathedral, Great George Street. Charlottetown, . 29, 1878—3m eod OFFICE Aug Daniel W. Job & (0, ~-FORMERLY— PERKINS & JOB, COMMISSION = MERCHANTS AND SHIP BROKERS. 91 State Street, - - - - Boston. August 23, 1878—3m PROFESSIONAL CARD. A. A. McLEAN, Barrister and Attorney-at-Law, Newson’s Butitptne, Opposrre Post Orrrce, South Side Queen Square, CHARLOTTETOWN, - - Aug. 13th, 1878—3m eod P. a IMPORTER OF— Italian and American Marble, AND MANUFACTURER OF Monuments, Tablets, Headstones, Tomd Tables, &., &e, Also, “Eanties, Centre Table Tops, Eureau and Commode Tops, tVash Bewl Slabs, Bracket Shelves, &c., &e. Granite, Freestone, and Soapstone York done in allits branches, PRICES TO SUIT, SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. na Designs furnished on aplication. “Sa Next Boor to Mark Butcher's Fur- niture Factory, Kent Street, Charlottetown. August 7, 1878.—3taw General Insurance Office. NIRE and MARINE, LIFE and ACCI- DENT INSURANCE effected. Office, opp. Post Office, South Side. HORACE HASZARD. SURVEYOR OF SHIPPING, OPPOSITE POST OFFICE—SOUTIL SIDE. HORACE HASZARD, Surveyor. Ch’town; Aug. 2— ; _ Tinsmithing, Gasiitting, &e., FANHE Subscriber thankful for past patron- age, would inform his friends and the public generally, that he is still prepared to do all work i his line. TTinsmithing, Gasfitting, and ‘Seneral Jobbing punctuaily attended to. On hand, a lot of Tinware, which will be sold very ee. wholesale and retail. Also wanted, a good steady man to peddle Tinware- GEO. E. MILLNER, Cor. Great George & Fitzroy Sts. Ch’town, May 16— WAGSTAFE'S HOTEL. HE Subscriber having fitted up the Hote formerly known as 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. > m Fz. Starch Manufacturing Co., CAPITAL . . $25,000, In Shares of $25.00 each. S 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. Myndman iSres., untill the Di- rectors and Uifficers of the Company are ap- inted, April 16, 1878— “CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, 13°78. eet Kl) Ea FURNISHES MORE NEWS, FOR LESS MONEY THAN ANY OTHER PAPER IN THE PROVINCE. [t 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 addfesse. separately, as desired, $5.50 in advance TEN COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $9.09 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 —— ee eee TIMES HAPEST AND BRST it SULL The Weekly Examiner 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 orrespondent” will contain everything of in- terest transpiring in the Dominion Parlia- ment. A Good Story will be made a specialty. ——:0:——- The Daily Hxaminer : Will be sent to an part of the Province, the Dominion, United States or Great Britain on receipt of $2.50 Fer Six Months, - - - - 25 For Three Months, - - - - For One Month - ---:- - “ asx ADDRESS, w. L. GOTTON, Manager Examiner Printing and Publishing Company, Chtown, Dec, 1877. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 50) shore, while the goods left on the wharves d{) NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. The Afghanistan Question. Lonpon, Sept. 27. It is reported that an order has been issued for the despatch of 10,000 waterproof sheets and 50,000 blankets to the Indian army. Field stores are also being prepared ‘in large quantities for immediate use. Turkey. wait : Vienna, Sept. 27. | The Politische Correspondenz reports that | the Sultan, in receiving the Austrian am- ‘ bassador, declared that he had personally 'done all that was possible to induce the Al- ibanians and Bosnians to accept the deci- sions of the Congress of Berlin. CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. 27. The British fleet will come up to Con- stantinople on Saturday to salute the Sual- tan before withdrawing to Autaki. It is asserted that Murad Pasha, the Turkish ambassador to England, has inti- mated to the Grand Council that English financial aid might be hoped for. Germany. Berurn, Sept. 27. The parhamentary committee has com- pleted the first reading of the Socialist bill and adopted a clause providing that the tinal court of appeals, for cases arising under the bill, shall consist of four minis- ters of the Federal Council, selected by their colleagues, and five judges from the Supreme Courts of the Empire, or of the individual states ; the Emperor to provide the president and vice-president of the Court. The Emperor William, in a written reply thanking the Reichstag for its address of sympathy, says: ‘* The gravity of the time is clear to all. We must, each according to his power, strive to arrest the dangers threatening the safety of the State. The bill submitted to the Reichstag is intended to serve this end. My firm trust accom- panies the labors of the Reichstag.” Austria. Lonpon, Sept. 27. The following despatch is interesting, taken in connexion with the Ttalian agita- tion for the acquisition “ot sontheastern Tyrol. InnspRUCK, Sept. 27. Emperor Francis Joseph in receiving a deputation from the Tyrol district, ex- pressed satisfaction with the conditions of the defences of the country, adding that the performances of the Tyrolese riflemen who could encounter any enemy, had con- vinced him that the Tyrol was worth a good defence. Bosnia. Lonvon, Sept. 27. A Vienna despatch says the approach of bad weather and the fact that large bodies of insurgents are retiring towards Novi- Bazar, cause the Austrians to entertain grave apprehensions. Personals. BEx in, Sept. 27. Dr. August Heinerich, the well-known German geographer, who yesterday suffered a stroke of appoplexy, 1s dead. Financial and Commercial. Lonpon, Sept. 28. The Times says the German Goverment sold $500,000 worth of silver here yester- day, at the rate of 517 per ounce. This, and the determination of the Council of India to offer an increased amount of their bills hereafter, rendered the silver market uneasy at the close; and while all sales were 51? per ounce, holders present pre- tentions are more clearly expressed by 512 per ounce. ; : A Berlin special says Prussia intends to issue a loan to cover the deficit in the budget. The strike against the reduction of wages in the colored cotton factories at Redcliffe, Pilkington, and Answorth, has ended ina compromise. —— | o—__ -—_—_—-—— A Hurricane in the West Indies. SEVERAL TOWNS DEMOLISHED—SHIPPING AND MERCHANDISE DESTROYED—PARTIAL DESTRUCTION OF THE COCOA CROP. Mails arriving from San Domingo and Hayti bring information of a terrific hurri- cane which occurred between September 3 and 5. At Port au-Prince, Hayti, many of the government works in course of von- struction haye been entirely destroyed. The hurricane is reported to have traversed the island, the southern coast having sufferéd the most. At Jacmel the high sea broke up and destroyed all the sinall vessels that were at anchor and the warehouse on were washed away, including 500,000 pounds of logwood belonging to various owners. On the other side of the town the rise in the river swept away several houses. The destruction of wharves and other prop- erty cannot be repaired in less than three months. The loss, aside from the destruc- tion of the wharves, is estimated at about “png «alas oma, destroyed the entire coffee and cocoa crops. Five vessels riding at anchor were driven ashore. Among these were the Domnican frigate Ozama. barque Helen and the ship Serpent. At Aux Cayes, the violence of the wind was so great that in less than three hours 434 houses were entirely destroyed, the oc- cupants being driven into the street, desti- tute of house or shelter. The powder magazine, Court House and other public buildings were demolished. During the height of the tempest, a large number of persons were killed and wounded. In the outskirts of the town and on the road lead- ing to the interior, trees were torn up by the roots and were carried great distances by the hurricane, blocking the roads in their fall. The town of Aquin is nearly destroyed, 186 houses having been swept away. The tuwn of Cavaillon has nearly disappeared. Only four houses are left standing, and a large number of lives is reported lost. The town was one of the most thriving and prosperous on the island. The sea rushed over the town of St. Louis, inundatiug the market place, and swept nearly everything away, burying men, women and children in its course. La Grand Anse was nearly sWept out of existence, and at Jeremie only twenty houses remain standing, and several vessels were driven ashore. At Covail forty houses have been demolished, and the American ship Wardell has been wrecked, the crew being saved by the in- habitants. In the country districts the distress is most appalling, the hurricane having destroyed nearly every plantation ; flourishing towns have been demolished, three fourths of the coffee crop has been destroyed, and extreme suffering is reported among the people. —_—- : The U. S. Labor Question. At his ‘‘Tabernacle,’ in Brooklyn, on Sunday last, Dr. Talmage made the labor question the subject of his ‘‘sermon,” in the course of which he said :— A great many people say, “‘let us try Communism.” I am ready to try it if it is for the best. I can tell this by seeing what Communism has done for other nations Unless our American people find out the true character, the day will come when there will be barricades across our streets, which will run red with the blood of our best citizens. Instead of peng the friend of the working classes, it is their worst foe. The preacher then dwelt at length on the history of Communism in France, from the days of the first revolution in 1792, when ‘‘indiscriminate and wholesale eut-throatery began,” to the last revolution, when the Archbishop of Paris was murdered. Noi until the world’s dissolution, he con- tinued, ‘‘will any imtelligent Roman Catholic be a Communist. I tell you, my friends, that the manifest barrier against the march of Communism in this country to-day is the priesthood of the Roman Catholic Church. There is not a convent or monastery or cathedral on earth, not a person from that of Leo at Rome to the poorest Roman Catholic servant girl in your kitchen, who can ever forget the heart- less heaven-daring massacre of the Arch- bishop of Paris.” COMMUNISM OPPOSED TO THE WELFARE OF LABOR, Communism is anti-marriage, It de clares that marriage cannot be tolerated. It is anti-art. It is anti-religion—it de- sires the substitution of science for faith, of human law for divine. Carl Marx, its chief exponent, sets forth that the possession of property is a crime. Some say that all property should go into the hands of the government for distribution. Do you think the politicians would make a just distri- bution! Would not the politicians at Al- bany and Washington and Harrisburge be likely to distribute it among themselves ? The fact is that Communism proposes to steal what it cant get in any other way. If there is any _ right that God gives to man, it is the right to have what he earns, whether it is a dollar or a hundred dollars or a million. What did Communism do for the working people of Paris’? It .pauperized them What did the little touch of it we had at Pittsburg do? It threw thousands out of employment, imposed taxes the people could not bear, and the heaviest touch came down on the working people. Communism doesn’t want its share. It wants somebody else’s share. In this country we ought to dispute every inch of its progress. Let all our poli- ticians understand that if any party—Re- publican or Democratic or Greenback—shail tamper with Communism it will go down to the bottom of the sea of national contempt and malediction. Communism can never help the working people. > 2: i> ++ _—- on NorsineG like enduring misfortunes stoic lily. The London ‘ Advertiser’ says ‘* having the Government on your side only hampers you.” That all depends on the sort of Government. If you have to call crimes inadvertencies, and try to make jokes out of rank misdemeanor the effect on a religions daily is hampering beyond doubt. a’ eo-- —-— Tux Weexty Examter is the best filled paper published on the Island—-and only ONE DOLLAR a year. CAPES Scupsceiwe for the Werxry Examimer, $60,000 to the town. The hurricane also} Only ONE DOLLAR a year in adyance. z Loew sgn tee . node? oie = ~ee ee ein wha