AERIS BE Seige: XR LAAR Ee @ : Ca ie on i: . - ae 2 ‘4 wi or a a e x ae ag / £ er% oi ke queue ot anpeet - Sea ent THE et aarp tea one x —_ = ~ EXAMINER \ eae eteoces onapane —_ . a VOL. 2) CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. ee en MONDAY, APRIL 15, 1878. NO. 274 Tur Dawuy ExAMINER Is Published every Evening. OFFICE: {NGS BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. L. KaTEs OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, $2 50 Three Months, l 25 One Month, : . One Week, gm Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli eation. W. L. COTTON, Manager. | | J. W. MITCHELL, Office Sup’t. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 8. WINTER ARRANGEMENT. ‘Te eome into force MONDAY, DEC. 24, 1877 TRAINS GOING WEST. oo No. 5. No?7 STATIONS. | Express |Mixed , ee a GEORGETOWN Dp. fi Caner con ) | Ar ass Mount Stewart Janetion Dp.10.35 ction “11.46 | Reyey vee -a } tem, Ar. 12.10 . 2.40 CHARLOTTETOWN _= Dp Dp. 9.00 on cti “es 9,25 se i aan’ aahiog ‘6 10.22) ** 4.02 Hanter River o 10.40 . 4.20 Bradalbane “11.181 “ 5.00 County Line 11,28] * 5.10 P. M. a . . t 4é 12.07 < éb. . Ar. 12.45 SUMMERSIDE Dp. 2.00| “* 6.20 Welli “ 245 Port Hill “« 223 . O'Leary © 4.43 Alberton “ 6§.45 Tignish ** 6.35 ~~ SPRAINS GOING EAST. No. 2 No. 4 STATIONS. l EXPRESS MIXxeEp. : : oa”. TIGNISH Dp. 8.00 ALBERTON “+ 8.56 0’ | * 9,52 oe, [aS ‘ i « p on P. M. A.M. : ‘Ar. 12.35 ' SUMMERSIDE Dp. 2 10|Dp. 8,35 Kensingtoa i * 248) * 9<.12 County Line ; * 330) ** 9.50 bane | 3.40) * 10.10 Hanter River i * 2m 10.48 North Wiltshire “« 435 . 10.50 Royalty Junction a ars 11.56 CHARLOTTETOWN Dp. 2.05] “ 12.20 Royalty Junction is wes MT. STEWART June. Dp. 3.50 Captions | * §.12 GEORGETOWN. Ar. 5.40 SOURIS BRANCH. Going West. Going East. ~ , ~ No. 5 + No. 6 STATIONS. | yyixep, (BTATIONS.| siren, ee | ee, Souris Dp. 190 Mt. St’w’t JciDp. 3.50 Harmony ** 7.55/|Lot 40 | “4.26 St. Peter's *« 9. 10)| Morell “+ 422 Morell ** 9,42)\St. Peter’s ‘* §.065 Lot 40 = 9.48) Harmony . a Mt St’w’t Jnc! Ar. 10.25)/Souris Ar. Cc. J. BRYDGES, W. McKECHNIE Gen. Superintendent Supt. P. E. L, Govt. Railways. Railway. Notice to the Public | UPPLIES for the ‘Soup Kitchen” will SS reach the Committee if left at the Store | i | } i j ef Mr. Alex. Horne, Corner of Queen and Fitzroy Streets. Donations of money will be thankfully re- | eeived by them through Dr. Dodd and Mr. J. | rk, ci aN B.—Food for the sick carefully prepared W by the Committee. Nov. 30, 1877. _~- eee + MOLASSE —AND— SOLE LEATHER! 6 PUNCHEONS Porto Rico and Cuba MOLASSES. 50 SIDES New York SOLE LEATHER. For sale cheap, at ARCH’D KENNEDY'S. ee ree 18°78. “TEL EG Amat FURNISHES MORE NEWS, FOR LESS MONEY THAN ANY OTHER PAPER IN THE PROVINCE. It Contains Twenty-eight Columns, nearly every one of which is in closely set READING MATTER. CONSIDER QUR TERMS: SINGLE COPIES to the 3lst December, 18738—thirteen months—$1.00 in ad- vance. SIX COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $5.50 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 —GEtT THE-- HAPEST AND BRST - ——-——- c2 The Weekly Bxaminer 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 earefully and impartially given. Special tele- grams and letters from ‘‘Our Own Ottawa Correspondent” will contain everything of in- terest transpiring in the Dominion Parlia- ment. Clothes Cleaning Depot, (Above Mr. D. Farquharson’s Store), CORNER OF QuzEN & DorcrestErR Streets. | ‘Renovating and Repairing Clothes, AAR. N matter how badly faded or stained gar- ments may be, he will restore them to their original color. JOHN PATTERSON. Feb. 9 OFf P. E. ISLAND. ~<303- SUBSCRIBED CAPITAL . . $120,090.09. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: ARCHIBALD KENNEDY, Esq., President ; Jonn ¥, Ropertson, Ese. ; ArTEMAS Lorp, Ese. ; G. D. Lonaworta, Ese.; W. E. Dawson, Esq.; THomas Morris, Esa. ; P. W. Hynpman, Esa. Risks taken daily at their Office, Exchange Building. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Secretary. March 25—ly law PAINTING! FEXHE Subscriber takes this opportunity of . thanking the Public for the liberal patron- age he has received during the five years he has been in business, and solicits a continuance of the same. He is now prepared to execute, in a very superior manner, House, Sign, and Car- riage Painting, Paper Hanging, &c. a@ Special attention is given by him to WHITENING, COLORING and the Decoratina of CEILINGS, WALLS, ete. On hand and made to order— EVERY DESCRIPTION OF CARRIAGES. s® Carriage Repairing promptly attended to. “* - Prices to suit the times. P. H. TRAINOR, 68 Kent St., opp. Rocklin House. April 2—3m eod - JAMES HOBBS, CABINET MAKER. Cor. Kent and Prince Streets, Charlottetown. E SUBSCRIBER, in returning thanks to his customers and the public generally for past favors, would take this method to so licit a further continuance of their patronage. 1 am better prepared than ever to execute any orders that may be entrusted to me. The latest styles of all kinds of Household, Office, Church and School Furniture, made from well-selected and seasoned stock, at short notice. Special attention paid to Cutting, Making and Laying Carpets. sw Repairing neatly done, at short notice 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 i my Show Room. JAMES HOBBS. Corner Kent and Prince Streets, } Ch’town, Feb. 23, 1878. } 3m-Zaw ee ee AUCTION ! 0:—~- MORTGAGE SALE. To be Sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, on Tues- day, the Fourth day of June next, A. D. 1878, at the hour of Twelve o'clock, noon, at the new Law Court House, in Summerside, in Prince County, in Prince Edward Island, under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained in an Indenture of Mortgage, bearing date the Eighth day of February, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Seventy, and made between James Ludlow Holman, late of Summerside, in Prince County, in the said Island, and Ada L. Holman, his wife, of the one part, and Jane Dover, late of A Goed Story will be made a specialty. | Keswick, in the County of Cumberland, —:0:-— The Daily xaminer ill be sent to any part of the Province, the Dominion, United States or Great Britain on receipt of - $2.50 1.235 30 ' For Six Mienihs, - - For Three Months, - - - - For One Month, - +: - ° a” ADDRESS, W. L. COTTON, Manager Examiner Printing and Publishing Company. Lower Water Beet, Ch’'town, March 29—8in’ Ga'tows, Dec, 6, 1877, in England, of the other part, — LL that Tract, Piece or Parcel of Land situate, lying and being in Township Number Seventeen, in the Parish of eel in Prince County aforesaid, bounded as fol- lows, thatis to say : Commencing at a sto’.» fixed in the Bank of Bedeque Bay, in the cer: of the road leading from the Main Road to said Bay, and running from thence north until it strikes the Main Road aforesaid ; thence west along said road until it strikes Alexander Kennedy’s east line ; thence south along said line to Bedeque Bay ; thence eastwardly along said Bay to the place of commencement, con- taining Twenty-four Acres, a little more or less, together with all Buildings, Rights, Members and Appurtenances thereto belong- ing or in anywise appertaining. ‘or further particulars apply to Messrs, Hodgson & McLeod, Solicitors, Charlottetown. Dated this Twenty-ninth day of March, 1878. HODGSON & McLEOD, Attorneys for Executor and Administrators of Mortgagee. April 4—wkly t sale ‘TSE Bx to Fe eg ating cove is at PATTERSON guarantees that no | A TT ri NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. THE SITUATION. (From the Daily Patriot. April 8.) Lonpon, April 13. A Vienna correspondent asserts that Rus- sia has sent large quantities of torpedoes to the mouth of the Danube, in order that she may be prepared to block the stream again, The Pera correspondent of the Daily Telegraph sends several important reports of which the following is the substance : ‘* The Russians have been discovered building roads in the direction of Bayadere, they have also been concentrating large forces of horses, foot and artillery in the adjacent villages. He also reports that the Russians have summoned the Turks to eva cuate Shumla and Varna immediately.’ The thirty-fifth annual race between Oxford and Cambridge took place this morn- ing on the Thames over the usual course from Putney to Multake, a distance of four miles. The result was an easy vic- tory for Oxford. This makes, in thirty-five contests eighteen victories for Oxford, six- teen for Cambridge, and one, that of last year, a dead heat. The “Northern Light.” Iv is said that the Northern Light is to be abandoned by the Government. The pros- pective profits of certain master Grit ship carpenters will not—if the report prove cor- rect—be realized. This is matter for re- gret. Apropos of the Northern Light the Moncton Times contains the fi lowing i— ‘* Usually, announcements in reference to changes in the administrative policy of the Dominion Government have been made by Do- minion Ministers in the Dominion Parliament. But under Grit rule allthisis changed. Yester- day a very important announcement of the in- tentions of the Dominion Government was made in the New Brunswick Assembly in ad vance of any intimation in the Deminion Par- liament. With authority, no doubt, Mr. E. J. Smith, brother of the Minister of Marine, announced in the Assembly that the steamer ‘** Northern Light” having proved a failure as winter boat, would be withdrawn from that service. He further announced that the Do- minion Government would have “some row. bvats built at Cape ‘Lormentme and put on be- tween the Capes (there are ice boats plying there now), and he had ‘‘ no doubt” the Do- minion Government would help. to build a railway to connect with these row boats.——This is very important news;and its value is en- hanced by the fact that itis published in ad- vance of official announcement in the House of Commons.—1t was made known in connece- tion with the passages of a Bill for the con- struction of what is called the Cape Tormen- tine Railway, in which, for the first time the Smithsare taking an interest, General Elec- tions being now near at hand.” » *__>ee + Communication With P. BE. Island. In the Commons, on the Ist inst. — Mr. Pope (Queen’s) asked whether it was the intention of the Government to take any step this season towards the construction of a railway from the Intercolonial railway near Aulae to Cape Tormentine in New Brunswick, and from Cape Traverse to the main line of railroad in Prince Edward Island, for the pur- pose of plaeing the Island in continuous com- munication in winter with the Intercolonial railway system of the Dominion, as required by the terms under which the Province of Prince Edward consented to become a part of the Dominion of Canada. Mr. Mackenzie—I must ask the hon. gentle. man to expunge the latter part of the para- graph, because one can scarcely admit any argument in a question. In reply, | may say that as a matter of faet, after all that has been said or written about the success or non-sue cess of the steamer making communication, that the whole subject is under the considera- tion of the Government, witha view to the adoption of the best means possible under the circumstances to effect the communication. Any more I can hardly say at present. It would seem that the Premier of Canada did not feei justitied in making in Parliament the announcement which Mr, E. J. Smith made, on behalf of the Assembly of New Brunswick. He did not an nounce that the ‘‘Northern Light” had been abandoned as a failure. Nor did he intimate that the Dominion Government would aid the | construction of a railway to Cape Tormentine. He said nothing aboutthe intention ofthe Goy- ernment to build row beats at Cape Tormen- tine, orof it being the policy of the Govern- ment to substitute row boats for the ‘Northern Light.” to enquire how it happens that information which the .|laying before Parhament,is freely published through the Legislature of New Brunswick ?— Moncton Time: —— EP ie — A neat story came outin a recent con versation of a well-known member of the ! Massachusetts bar. he was very expert at kicking football, and one night he dreamed he was again in the | fresh vigor of youth, engaged in his favorite sport. Suddenly waking from the dream, he found the bed-clothes in the middle of | the floor, and his wife upon them, weeping as if her heart would break, and crying, “Q, that I should come to this! oh, how could you ! how could you?” It gradually dawned upon the eminent legal gentleman that he had unconsciously used his wife for ; football, but it required some of the most powerful pleadings to win his case and ob- tain a verdict of acquittal from her, } pelled, from his extraor: Government, in the | Under the circumstances it is proper | Premier does not feel justified in | In his vouthful days | The Largest Man in England. The Newcastle-on-Tyne correspondent of the Lancet sends some strange particulars as to Mr. William Campbell, landlord of the “Duke of Wellington,” in his town. Campbell boasts of being the largest subject in Her Majesty’s realm, standing six feet four inches in height, and weighing over fifty-two stone. He meas- ures around the shoulders ninety-six inches; round the waist eighty-five inches, and round the calf of the leg thirty-five inches. He was born in Glasgow in 1856, and has not quite at- tained his twenty-second year; was one of a family of seven children, none of whom beside himself are of more than ordinary proportions. His father was of average weight, although he stood six feet two inches; his mother was rather under the average height and weight of woman. Campbell stated that from his birth he was remarkably stout, and that at nine months oki he weighed four stones, at ten years of age he weighed eightcen stones, and he has gone on increasing since then, and it is with diiticulty he keeps at his present weight. He was brought up as a naar, but Was com- Inary size, to give up his occupation. ‘ | seer Disraeli’s Harly Ambition. in a recent biography of Lord Melbourne a story is told of a dinner at Mrs. Norton’s where Disraeli, then the young author of ‘*Vivian Grey,” met the great Minister. The young man had just been defeated in an attempt té get into Parliament. Mel- bourne’s frank and open manner led to a ‘long conversation, in which Mr. Disraeli | mentioned the circumstances of his late dis- comfiture, dwelling on each particular with the emphasis which every young man of ambition since Parliament was invented is sure to lay upon the broken promises and scandalous behaviour of his victorious foes, The Minister was attracted more and more as he listened to the uncommonplace lan- guage and spirit of the youthful politician, and thought to himself he would be well worth saving. Abruptly, but with a certain tone of kindness which took away any air of assumption, he said ‘‘Well, now, tell me —what do you want to be?” The quiet gravity ef the reply took him aback. ‘I want to be Prime Minister.” Melbourne gave a long sigh, and then said very seriously : *‘No chance of that in our time. It is all arranged and settled. Nobody but Lord Grey could, perhaps, have carried the Reform Bill; but he is an old man, and when he gives up he will certainly be succeeded by one who has every requisite for the pesition, in the prime of life and fame, of old blood, high rank, great fortune and — great ability. Once in power, there is noth- ing to prevent him holding office as long as Sir Robert Walpole. Nobody can compete with Stanley. There is noth- ing like him. If you are going into politics and mean to stick to it, I dare say you will do very well, for you have ability and enterprise, and if you are careful how you steer, no doubt you will get into some post at last. But you must put all these foolish notions out of your head ; they won't do atall. Stanley will be the next Prime Minister, you will see.” But the old Min- ister does not see into the future. +<]emP- ‘ THe Miramichi Advance publishes the following, as showing how the fishermen of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia wert, re- spectively, taxed under Mr. Mitchell and Mr. Smith, as Ministers of Marine and Fisheries :— Unde Mr. Mitchell. 1872 1873 1874. Nova Seotia, $166 $159 $123 | New Brunswiek, 942 647 978 Under Mr. Smith. 1875 1876 1877. Nova Scotia, S551 3442 $1,520 New Brunswick, 830 2,030 1,892 it appears froin this statement that while under Mr. Mitchell, the fishermen of New Brunswick paid in three years $2,567, they paid in three years under Mr. Sruth $4,149. Have they received any corresponding ad- vantage under Mr. Smith’s regime for the largely increased taxes? We don’t suppose that even the most ardent admirer of the Mackenzie Government will pretend that they have. On the contrary, they have | been constantly harrassed and their interests disturbed, to the great injury of their oceu- | pation. i —t see D> Tur Ottawa correspondent of a Western organ announces that at the close of the session M. Laflamme is to be elevated to the Supreme Court. He is now awaiting its decision in a case involving not only his seat, but his personal disqualification, for bribery and corrupt practices. M. Le- 'tlamme will do no credit to the Supreme Court. Through all our fierce party strife the Bench of Canada has up to the present been kept free from unworthy men. It is ,an honor to the country ; the noblest, as it is the most sacred, of our institutions. But if M. Leflamme, why not also his colleague Nuntington ? Let the Premier spare us this disgrace. M. Laflamme’s services to |the Party may have been valuable ; but in _the appointment of the judges of the land higher considerations than those of Party should prevail.—Toronto Mail. —— ~<a >>———-——— | The convict choir at Auburn prison isa remarkable musical organization. The organist is sentenced for grand larceny, the first violin, the first tenor and double base ‘are murderers, the second tenor, basso and sopranos are all burglars, and the professog is a forger. 4s . ei. kk