F VOL. 4. THe Datty EXAMINER: {s Published every Evening. OFFICE : INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. L KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Montha, $2 50 Three Months, 1 25 (me Month, 0 50 One Week, : . 0 12 _—_ — e@ Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- -orly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- cation. W. L. COTTON, Manager. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. II. Winter Arrangement. ON AND AFTER MONDAY, DECEMBER 30th, 1878, Trains Going West. [4 W. MITCHELL, Office Sup’t STATIONS. No. L. | No. 3 a as __| Express. | Mixed. Georgetown Dp 8.10 am} Cardigan “ae ’ ar 9.55 * M.Stew’t Jun dp10.05 Royalty Jun. "se Ch’to 11.40 «| ee dp arte 3.30 pm Royalty Juan. ~Geae" +? oo * N. Wiltshire “Gis *e* 40 * Hunter River "ta" 1 “aa” Breadalbane “ee sO County Line ae 1. a Kensington “11.00 ** | ** 6.30 * pat id lar 11.30 “ jar 7.00 “ Summerside dp 2.40 pm We . «é 3.32 sé Port Hill “a. * O'Leary sé re sé . ar i sé Alberton dp 6.40 * Tignish jar 7.25 “* Trains Going East. STATIONS, No.2 | No.4 Express. | Mixed. ‘Tigm Dp 7.00am albepe “* 7.45 ‘* oO’ “sé 8.47 se Port Hi 88 “ Wellington **10. 4é ar 11.40 ‘ Summerside dp 2.30pm) Dp 8.45 am Kensington a6 3.00 oe se 9.15 ay County Line “6 3.40 ‘sé | ss 9,57 “sé Breadalbane ** 3.50 ** | £10.08 * Hunter River ** 4.23 ** | *'10.47 ** N. Wiltshire 4.45 * | 11.02 * Royalty Jun. © 5.40 “* | “11.55 * h ar 6.00 ‘* jar12.15 pm Ch town } dp 2.55 * Reyalty Jun. “3.15 * Mt. Stewart ae & Stew dp 4.40 “ Cardigan ** 6.00 “ Georgetown lar 6.25 * ~~ SOURIS BRANCH. Going West. Going East. ia NOS No.6 STATIONS. | Mixed. | STATIONS. Mixed. nS EE ese ae ie Souris Dp 7.00)|/MtS tw’tJnc| Dp 4.40 Harmony ** 7.23!) Morell * "6.99 St. Peters ‘* §,42/|St. Peters | “ 5.54 Morell ‘* 9.13|| Harmony T= Mt S’tw’tJnc| ar 9.55(|Souris ar 7.35 WM. McKECHNIE, C. J. BRYDGES, Supt. P. B. I. B. Gen. Sup. Gov. Railways Ch'town, Dec. 27, 1878. : ‘ p ne arh pres kca sp 8) ap 61 GRAY’S SPECIFIC MEDICINE Trape Mark. The Great TRADE MARK. mm, English Kcem- Y, an unfail- f ing cure for Sem- inal Weakness, Spermatorrahe a, A Impotency, and Sa ™ all diseases that : Before Taking follow as a se- After Taking, quence of self-abuse; as loss of -Memory, Uni- versa! Lassitude, Pain in the Back, Dimness of Vision, Premature Old Age, and many other Diseases that lead to Insanity or Con- sumption. te. Full particulars in our pam- phlet, which we desire to send free by mail to s a wa The Specific Medicine is me y all druggfsts at $! per , or six pack- ages for Sonor will be" panei ra by ial, on receipt of the money, by addressing The Gray Medicine Co., indsor, Ont., Canada. &@ Sold in Charlottetown by all Drugists, and by all wholesale and retail Druggists in the United States and Canada. January 24, 1879. MPLOYMENT.—In every village and 4 township of P. E. Island not yet ocdu- pied, one active, intelligent Lady or Gentle- man can obtain a most respectable and yt protitable engagement. Address, with f particuiars, D. DOWNIE & CO., Box 1964, Montreal SS Ss CHARLOTTETOWN, — on MAIL NOTICE. AA AILS will be closed daily (Sundays ex- 4 cepted) at this Office,at 10 o'clock, p.m., and forwarded by steamer to Pictou. (Pre- paid matter posted up to 4.30 a. m., will be forwarded by same boat.) The mails for Great Britain, by Canadian Packet sailing from Halifax on Saturdays, will be closed on Thursdays, at 10 o'clock, p. m. Mails for all places West of Charlottetown receiving Mails by Railway Train or Postal Car, will 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, } April 26, 1879. \ A, i. THOMPSON & CO., NEW CLASCOW, NOVA SCOTIA, WHOLESALE MANUFACTURERS OF Plain and Japanned Tinware, Coal Hods, Tubular Lanterns, Perfection Oil Tanks, &e., &e. ‘DY long experience in the business, and using the most approved machinery, we are able to supply goods in our line at Lower Prices than the same quahty can be had for elsewhere. Freight prepaid to Charlottetown. VERY LOW to merchants and traders. Please send for price list before ordering elsewhere. New Glasgow, N. 8., April 17, 1879—1lm ” TO THE SICK. DR. D. MacRAE, ORMERLY SURGEON and PHYSICIAN in the United States Army, late of St. Louis, Mo., respectfully announces to the cit- izens of Charlottetown aud Prince Edward Island that he will be at the ‘ Rocklin House,” in Charlottetown, every Turspay and Fripay throughout the year, where those who are suffering with any form of disease can call and receive medical advice and treatment; especially persons suffering from diseases and deformities of the eyes, deafness and ulcera- tions of the ears, catarrh, asthma, consump- tion, diseases of the heart, liver, stomach, kidneys, rheumatism, paralysis, scrofula, malignant ulcerations, tumors, piles, fistula; cancer cured without the use of the knife. Particular attention given to diseases peculiar to females. All forms of fevers, diptheria and other malignant diseases successfully treated and cured by him. ; Prominent Office, HonrER River Srarion, Prince Edward Island. DUNCAN MacRAE, M. D. April 18, 1879.—d&w ly COMMERCIAL | Union Assurance Company, OF LONDON, ENGLAND, CAPITAL - - $12,500,000. NSURANCE effected against Fire on all descriptions of Property throughout the Island. ea Low rates aud promrr settlement of losses. HORACE HASZARD, Agent for P. KE. Island. Ch’town, Dee, 20, 1878— £. G. HUNTER, Italian and American Marble, Monuments, Tablets, Headstones, MANTLES, CENTRE TABLE Tops, Bureau AND ComMopE Tors, WasH Bowt Sriass, &c., &c. Prices Prices to suit, and satisfaction guaranteed. a@ Designs furnished on application. Corner Hillsborough and Kent Streets, Char lottetown. November 6, 1878. QUEEN INSURANCE cO’Y, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING. NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Builid- ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vessels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island June, 1877— WAGSTAFF'S HOTEL. i Subscriber having fitted up the Hotel 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. PRINCE EDWARD ! MORTCACE SALE. To be sold, by Public Auction, at the Court | House in Summerside, in Prince County, on Tuesday, the Eighteenth day of February next, at the hour of one o'clock, in the afternoon, under a Power of Sale in an Indenture of Mortgage, | dated the fifth day of October, 1878, made between William Thomas Mill, of the one part, and John Brecken, Frederick De St. Croix Brecken, and Robert Robinson Hodgson, trustees, of the other part, — 1 All that tract, pieceor parcel of land, situ « ate on Lot Eighteen, and bounded and described as follows : Commencing at a stake tixed on the shore of Indian River; thence b a line running south twenty degrees west until it meets the boundary line dividing Lots or Townships Numbers eighteen and nineteen; thence running due east on said division line for the distance of thirty-two chains; thence by a line running north twenty degrees east until it reaches Indian River, aforesaid; thence following the course of the River to the place of commencement, making and including fifty- six (56) acres of land be the same, a little more er less, in Prince County, aforesaid. 2. Also, all that other tract, piece or parcel of Land, situate on Lot or Township Twenty- five, in Prince County, aforesaid, and bounded and described as follows, that is to say : Com- mencing at a stake fixed on William Mc- Murdy’s eastern boundary line at the south. east corner of Joshua Harding’s Lot; from thence running south for the distance of forty. four chains; thence east eleven chains and fifty links; thence north forty-four chains; thence west eleven chains and fifty links, to the afore- said stake or place of commencement, making and including fifty (50) acres of land, a little more or less, being the southern moiety of one hundred acres of land; and being bounded on the north by the northern moiety thereof, known as Joshua Harding’s lot; on the east by ——(Gay’s land, onthe south by Keefe's land, and on the west by the said William MacMurdy’s land. 3. Also, all that other tract, piece or parcel of land, situate on Lot or Township Number Nineteen, bounded and described as follows, that is to say : ee ata square stake fixed in the south-west angle of land in the oc- cup ation of Peter Gillis; thence running north six degrees and forty-five minutes, east four- teen chains and two links to division line be- tween Lots Nineteen and Eighteen; thence along said line westwardly twenty-six chains and sixty-nine links to the entrance of Barbara Weit River; thence along the course of the said river to the place of beginning, containing twenty-nine acres and forty perches, be the same, a little more or less. 4. All that tract, piece or parcel of land situate on Lot or Township Number Eighteen, and bounded and dence as follows, that is to say : Commencing at a stake set on the shore of Richmond Kay in the centre of a road on the line of Lots Kighteen or Nineteen; thence northwardly along said: shore such a distance as shall make fifteen chains and sixty tive links (15 chains and 65 links) at a right anglefrom said division line; thence north eighty-nine degrees east or parallei with the said division line forty-eight chains and fifteen links (43 chains, 15 links) o1 to lands the property of the said Wilham Thomas Mill, thence south twenty degrees west. to said division line to the stake at the place of commencement, containing seventy- eight acres of land. a little more or less, 5. Also all that otier tract, piece or parcel of ijand situate on Lot or Township Number ‘I'wenty-five (25), in Prince county, and bounded and described as follows, that is to say, commencing atastake set in the north boundary line of land in possession of the widow Keiff or Lawrence Malone, being the southeast angle of fifty acres of land the prop erty of William T. Mill, from thence by a line running norti twelve chains and fifty links, thence east nine ehains and fifty-five links or to the east boundary line of land in possession of William Gay, thence south to the first mentioned land, thence westwardly along said land to the stake at the place of commence- ment, containing eleven and nine-tenths acres, a little more or less. 6. Also all that other tract, piece or parce] of land situate on Lot or Township Number Nineteen, in Prince County, bounded as fol- lows, that is to say, commencing at the southeast angle of land in the possession of Neil McDonald, from thence running west along said land twelve chains and twenty links (12 chains, 20 links) or to the southwest angle of said land, and from thence two points running two parallel lines south thirty-one (31) chains or to the south boundary line of plot G containing thirty-seven and one-half (374, acres of land, be the same alittle more or less, together with all buildings and improve ments thereon and appurtenances to the same belonging. For further particulars apply at theoffice of Messrs. Hodgson & McLeod, solicitors, Char- lottetown. Dated the 13th day qf January, A. D18 9, JOHN. BRECKEN, FREDERICK De str. C. BRECKEN., R. R. HODGSON, By E. J. HODGSON, their attorney. Jan. 15—law ts prog The above Sale is hereby postponed till WEDNESDAY, the 2nd day of April next, 1879, then to take place at the honr and place above mentioned. Dated the 17th day of February, A. D., 1879. JOHN BRECKEN, FRED’K De Sr. C. BRECKEN, hk. R. HODGSON, By E. J. HODGSON, their Attoruey. Charlottetown, Feb. 18, 1879. The above sale is hereby further postponed until FRIDAY, the 2nd day of May, then to take place at the hour and place above men- tioned. Datel the 4th day of April, A. D. 1879. JOHN BRECKEN, FREDERICK De Sr. C. BRECKEN, R. R. HODGSON, THE EXAMINER cements SLAND, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, For the Examiner. Beauty in rm : ro i cars. Beauty in tears! It was but a g’ance, That glance, tho’ hurriedly stolen, Revealed to our gaze such a dear little face, With weeping distorted and swollen, Beauty in tears! No knight errants were we, Yet we sternly looked round us for him,— The bloodthirsty Bluebeard, the cause of such grief, We would get our six-shooters in trim ! Gently, ah gently. our chivalric friend, Just think where your rashness is leading; There’s nothing amiss, the dear little goose, sensational trash had been reading. Oft in the spring, o’er the rich glowing West The storm cloud suddenly lowers, Yet the tempest we dread bursts overheard In sunshine and soft April showers. So beauty in tears, when the cause is so slight, Should strive such bursts to restrain, And next time we meet may that beautiful face Be radiant and smiling again. ScoTsMAN, April 29, 1879. Acrostic. D on’t he fondly wish he could A ssessments levy hand o’er hand. V anish tyrants from our midst, I's the cry throughout the land. E nough we know of hungry Grits, So, suddenly, we gave them fits. 7h om «© Canadian Fisheries. AND THE HALIFAX AWARD BALANCE, DR. FORTIN The resolution of which Dr. Fortin has given notice in the House of Commons, after quoting the Fishery Clauses of the Washington Treaty, concludes as follows : That there remains a sum of $4,500,000 which has been awarded to the Dominion of Canada, the expenses of the commission to be deducted proportionately from that sum and the $1,000,000 awarded to New- foundland ; That the said sum of $4,500,000 has been acquired by the Dominion of Canada by the giving to the fishermen of the United States the right of fishing, in common with British fishermen, in our municipal waters, over an extent of coast of 3,160 miles, in- habited by a population of over half a mil- lion, who derive their subsistence almost entirely from the sea fisheries ; That the participation of the American fishermen in our sea coast fisheries is knewn to be a great injury to our own fishing population, and that, besides, the American lishermen have injured those fisheries in a marked degree, and even depopulated some well known fishing grounds which formerly were very productive, as has been clearly proved by the testimuny given before the Fishery Commission of 1877, and have con- sequently greatly diminished the products of our fisheries, lessened the chances of our fishermen and threatened the future of our fishing industry ; That if nothing is done, not cnly to stop the destruction of the fish that is taking place on our shores, but to repair the in- jury done, by restoring in some way, as sug- gested by several scientists, the fishing grounds that are now almost unproductive and which were formerly teeming with fish ; That merchants, fishermen and traders from the Dominion as well as from Great Britain have established themselves on our tishing coasts, and have erected thereon costly buildings of all kinds, suitable for the fishing industry, and for the purpose of carrying on the different fisheries which ex- ist on our shores, and have erected such costly establishments, and placed so much capital in the fishing industry, under the belief that the British fisheries would never be given up to foreign fishermen ; That the giving up of the right of fishing in our waters to the American fishermen has injured the trade of our fishermen very much for the present, and their prospects are still worse for the future, if no remedy is adopted ; That it is in the interest of the Dominion that such injury to the fisheries and the fish trade should be repaired to as great an extent as possible ; That the interior of this country was largely benefitted by the Reciprocity Treaty which was in operation from 1854 to 1866, between Canada and the United States,and that treaty was obtained by conceding to the American fishermen the right of fishing on all our sea coasts ; That our fisheries and our fishermen suf- fered considerably in consequence of that concession of vur fisheries to foreign Esher- men ; That during the time the said Recipro- city Treaty was in operation no sum ef money was expended in improvements of any kind on our sea casts for the develop- ment of our fisheries or to help the fisher- men in their arduous labors ; That it is butequitable and just that what comes from the fisheries should return to the fisheries ; That, for the foregoing reasons, it is the opinion of this House that the amount of this award accruing to Canada (after pay- ing expenses) should be made a special fund, and that the interest thereof should be employed in restoring exhausted fishing grounds, and a in every way the sea-fisheries of the Dominion. By E. J. HODGSON, their attorney. eee 1879, NO. 979. ing letter, received by Mr. Fortin from Washington, will be read with interest :— [Copy.] Unirep Srates ComMIssion, Fish aND FISHERIES. Wasuineton, D. ©., April 16, 1879. Dear Doctror,—The experiments I made last winter in the artificial hatching of cod, satisfied me that it is entirely practicable to multiply this species to any desired extent. If I had had the. proper machinery I could readily have hatched out young cod and turned them into the ocean by hundreds, almost thousands of millions. 1am now constructing a steamer at a cost of about $50,000, expressly te do this work. The methods devised by my associates are equally available for ail kinds of sea fish, including mackerel, as it was, simply by way of experiment, we planted some eight or ten millions of cod. My report for the year will contain an exhaustive account of the whole business, which | think you will study with much interest. Sincerely yours, (Signed) Spencer F. Barrp, Commissioner. Dr. P. Fortin, House of Commons,Ottawa, Canada. — ———— ee a we Two Brave Boys. That courage is a natural inheritance,and not an acquirement, was never more strik- ingly exemplified that in the case of Admir- al Farragut. When nine or ten years old he was an assistant cabin-boy on board the ship-of-war ‘‘ Essex,” commanded by Cap- tain Porter. Notwithstanding the vigorous discipline which prevailed on such vessels, and the immeasurable social distance be- tween the officers and crew, young Far- ragut, by his courage and vigilance, and unusual ability, soon crossed the boundary line and became popular with the officers. fine young fellow, who had ‘passed an ex- cellent examination, fell into disgrace one day by his inability to go aloft. Capt. Portar had no patience with this weakness, and after a while hit upen a plan which he believed would shame the midshipman into the necessary courage. He ordered the young man to remove his uniform, and in its stead to put on a mongrel suit of blue and black. Then he sent for the boy Farragut, and ordered him to take the dis- carded clothes to the maintop and secure them. ‘Cary,’ said the captain, ‘I want to show you what a plucky boy can do. Now, when you want your uniform, all you have got to do is to go up there and get it.’ Little Farragut made a bundle of the clothes, secured them to his neck and then sprang like a monkey to the desired height. Here he fastened them, and then returned to the deck, amid the enthusiastic exclama- tions of officers and the cheers of the crew, poor Cary included. Several times a day after this the midshipman started for his uniform. Once he got as far as the main- ‘mast, but returned to the deck so pale and exhausted that it was some moments before he ceuld recover himself, A week after this a sharp naval engage- ment proved that Cary’s courage was equal to the emergency. Not once during the hot fight did he blanch or tremble; but, on the contrary, was dangerously cool, cour- ageous and reliable. The next morning Cary found himself the hero of the day. ‘ For goodness’ sake, Cary,’ said the cap- tain, ‘do go aloft and get yourrig! It’s an outrageous shame for a brave fellow like you to go about in this way " ‘ It is impossible, captain,’ said Cary, with a respectful salute. ‘I have done my best.’ Young Farragut steod near when this conversation was going on, and as the mid- shipman finished he said, with his inimit- ably dauntless air :— ‘Let me get it, captain. Cary’s heart is as big as an ox’s, and everybody knows it ; and his arm is as strong as a sledge-ham- mer, and he could lick- a thousand men of his size, and everybody knows that; but his head swims, captain, and he can’t help it, May I go up, sir? ‘Go on, Farragut !’ said the captain; and on the bey went. When he returned to the deck, and pre sented to the midshipman his uniform,Cary’s eyes were full of tears, and Capt. Porter, without a word, walked away to the cabin. —E K., in Youth's Companion. SS > ee Think of a thousand deaths from small- pox in Montreal this year. Yet this is the number for this year, if the rate of increase in the rate of mortality from that loath. some disease, observable during the last two years in Montreal, be maintained. Why Will You Allow a cold to advance in your system and thus encourage more serious maladies such as Pneumonia, Hemorrhages and Lung troubles, when an immediate relief can be so readily attained. Boschee’s German Syrup has gained the largest sale in the world for the cure of Coughs, Colds and the severest Lung Diseases. Itis Dr. Boschee’s famous German prescription, and is pres pared with the greatest care, and no tear need be entertained in administering it to the youngest child, as per directions. The sale of this medicine is unprecedented. Since first introduced there has been a con- stant increasing demand and without a single report of a failure to do its work in any case. Ask your drugyist as to the truth of these remarks. size 75 In connection with the above, the follow- ‘cents. ‘Try it and be convinced. A midshipman by the name of Carey, a~