ib THe E en RE = wo a Fm X AMINER. em, Caste caannenten tence _ Tw? a THe Dairy EXAMINER is Published every Evening. OFFICE ; INGS’ BULLDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. F. L. KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, : $2 50 Three Months. - 1 2 One Month, 0 50 One Week, 0 13 es Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli | } cation. W. L. COTTON, Manager. | PRINGE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. FIME TABLE NO, 9. SUMMER ARRANCEMENT ! ON AND AFTER MONDAY, APRIL 29th, 1878. — | J. W. MITCHELL, Oitice Sup’t. said - 'Prains Going Wesi. | ! STATIONS. | No, 1 No. 3 No 5 Express. | Mixed. ‘ixe d Georgetown = | Dp 4.00 pm) Dp 7.30 am| Cardigan | * 4.20 « | + 7.59 « ee | jar 6.25.“ jar 9.20 “ | M. Stew tJun | adp.6.35 “* \dp 9.30 * i Réyalty Jun, | 6.32% | 10.45 «| ariel jar 6.50 * lar 11.05 “| P. M Ch town | ldp gas | 1.35 ** 1dpd.25 toyalty Jun. { ** 6.43 “| 11.55 * | “5.45; N. Wiltshire | “ 7.18 “ | “12.50 pm! ‘6.42 Hunter Riveg | ‘‘ 7.30 * “1G “462 Breadal bane sé 7.58 sé “eé 1.47 e «7 38 Gounty Line =e 1 ee | ee Kensington (| “ 8.33 “ “238 “| “SS ae id ar 9.00 ** jar 3.15 “* jar S.00: SeeTFO® | dp 9.15 “ ldp 3.45 “ Wellingtoa ‘9.52 “| “* 440 * Port Hill aL — O’ Leary ane. 1° eee. Alberton | “12,00 “* | “* 8.00 * Tignish ar 12.40 pmiar 8.50 “ | Trains Going East. STATIONS. | No. 2 No.4 | No. 6 Express. | Mixed. | Mixed Tignish | Dp 1.50 pm, Dp 6.30.am Alberton | « ago} jar 7.20 © , ( \dp cs y Q’ “313 * ‘6 57 * Par a “40 * 1 1a Wellington “440 “L410 * iar 5.15 “ ‘ar 12.05 pm! Summerside | Gp 5.30 “ |dpl2.40 “ |dp6.30 K. 2 ; 6 5.55 sé 4 1.17 sé “$7.07 County. Line } se 6,23 sé ‘é ] 57 4s 667 46 . | * 6.32 * 66 3 66 7.58 unter Raver } sé 7.00 “ se ac 8.35 N Wiltshire ‘is 7.12 ‘ec « | «9 59 * ; &é 9 45 Royalty Jua. ‘6 7,47 § ** |arl005 C ar 8.05 ee ‘é Te tows dp 8.03 am Royalty Jem. | 8.28 +} Mt. Stewact Cardigan “40.43 * Georgetown jarll.05 “ SOURIS. BRANCH. Trains Going West. EF oPRSRSRSS =: TIT Sel mm So G9 Po Po > RRERSSSSSSERES —— oe STATIONS. | No7 Mixed. | No. 9 Mixed.) Souris ' Dp3.iipa | Dp 6.30am. Harmony ae * ice “* 68: * St. Peter’s 7am. ' *, Oe; ** Morell 1 458..%..4 > * S88, \Ar 9.20 ‘ M. Stew’'t Jun. | A. B.D 1A Train Going East. ‘STATIONS. [No. 8 Express.|No, 10 Mixed. M. Stewart Jua} Dp 9.30 am. | Dp 5.35 p.m Morell 10.02 * = ore~* Stu -Peter’s 30.25 ** “6.47 “ Harmony 9 “ -m- o.OR «8 Souris |} Arl1.40 “ | Ar 8.25 “* WM. McKECHNIE, Cc. J. BRYDGES, Supt. P. BE. 1. R. Gens Sup, Gov. Railways. Ch'town, April 20, 18738— Loi of Heavy 15-Caret PLAIN GOLD RINGS (assorted sizes and prices) received to-day. w. W. WELLNER. April 15-a§- © DR. WILLIAM GRAY’S SPECIFIC MEDICINE. b. . The Great English Rem- et $5, by mi 8 Bear RPS 0 Winter Olan a ®old in Charlottetown W. R. Wa son, Dr. t €: dD. Rankin, . G. Frase at Apothecaries Hall, and by ail Druggist® anywher, - j me a ARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, 18°78. CI Examiner 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 OUR TERMS: SINGLE COPIES to the 3lst December, 1878—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 iat | nce COPIES to one address, or separately, as required, $13.50 in advance. TWENTY COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $17.00. IN OULL TIMES -—CET THE—~— CHEAPEST AND BRST 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- grams and letters from “‘Our Own Ottawa Correspondent” will contain everything of in- terest transpiring in the Dominion Parlia- ment. A Good Story will be made a specialty. ——:01-—— 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, - - - - 1.25 For O@nc Month, - --- - 50 s@ ADDRESS, W. L. COTTON, Manager Examiner Printing and Publishing Company. Ch’town, Dec, 8, 1877. ’ i ! ' ' ' ' J. 8 BAGNALL, D. 0. 5, | —8&o— T. C. ROBINS, DENTISTS, -Nrwson’s Bortprina, Orrostre Post Orrice, Charlottetown, P. E. i. OFFICE HOURS. . 9, A. M., TILL 6, P. M. Nitrous Oxide Gas Administered. April 20—pa 2aw ar her pres ne lm PAINTING! | TENHE 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, Kc. s%° Special attention is given by him to Wuirentne, CoLorine and the Decorating 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, $2 Kent St., opp. Rocklin House. April 2—3m eod P. Ee. LT. Starch Manufacturing Co., CAPITAL . . $25,000, In Shares of $25.00 each. ryNvils 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. Hyndman Bres,, untill the Di- rectors and Officers of the Company are ap- pointed, April 16, 1878-- JAMES HOBBS, | CABINET MAKER, Cor. Kent and Prince Strects. 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. I 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. aw 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 at my Show Room. JAMES HOBBS. Corner Kent and Prince Streets, } Ch’town, Feb. 23, 1878. j BLANK - BILL HBADS, BLANK STATEMENTS, — AND— BUSINESS CARDS, Furnished promptly and cheaply, to order, at the EXAMINER OFFICE, INGS BUILDING, Corner Great George and Water Streets. St Lawrence Marine Ins, Co, OF P. E. ISLAND. :0:———- SUBSCRIBED CAPITAL . . $120,000.09. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: ARCHIBALD Kennepy, Esq., President ; Joun F. Rovertrson, Esq.; ARrTEMAs Lorp, Esg.; G. D. Loneworta, Esq. ; W. E. Dawson, Ese.; THomas Morrts, Eso. ; P. W. HynpMan, Esa. Risks taken daily at their Office, Exchange Building. 3m -Zaw FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Secretary. March 25—ly law NOTICE. YOTICE is hereby given that the Annual General Meeting of the Shareholders of the Charlottetown Gas Light Cemmeny will take place at the Gas Works, on Tuesday the 14th day of May next, at the hour of eleven o’clock in the forenoon, for the pur- pose of electing Directors and the General transacting of business. By order, WM, MURPHY, Sec’y. April 27, 1878-—city papers 2i s}of famine and_ thirst. MONDAY, MAY 13, 1878, a Supplementary Estimates. Mr Cartwright brings down closely-cut regular estimates to give the organs the opportunity of singing his praises, but in the last week of the session submits supple- mentary estimates to the amount of three million dollars! His regular estimates for 1877-78 were $23,378,000 ; his supplemen- tary, brought down on Monday and yester- day, $2,825,000 ; total for 1877-78, $26,- 203,000, For 1878 79 his regular estimates are $23,440,000, which he has just increased by $664,000. What the total expenditure for 1878-79 will amount to before he gets through, remains to be seen. The expendi- ture tabie is now as follows :-- IEEE. castbcal os waineta(caunsdrs scans tine $22,500,000 SINE Sa tehase nae-ene chun ubtesad cone venke 23,316,000 A a TS itl nnn a ts alt 23,713,000 PRET Uilok. <cinetents wcacannsicoranumaibene 24,488, 000 1BIG6-Fin. es © ccbssckvonstioce ec tae 23,587,000 BOTT Devens + +0hb ov scghiinectaaicn ian 26, 203,000 As between the last year of the Macdonald regime and the current year, there is a dif- ference in the expenditure of $3,700,000— a pretty big balance against the Economy Party. — Mail. —-- ee -- Curious Progranme. A Greate Old Folkes’ Concerte will be holden in ye hall of ye Summerfide Reform Club, on ye evening of Wednefday, 15th May. Tiimeist, L. P. Metre. N. B.--Ye price to come in will be 25 centes, but ye children can come in for 15 centes. N. B.— Ye doors will be open at earlie candle lite, and ye found of music will begin at Eight o'clock, if ye men folks get theyre chores done in time.. N. B.—If stormy on Wed- nefday evening, then ye Concerte will come off on ye next evening, if it don’t storm over much. N. B.—Ye names of ye sing- ers can be obtained by ye curious on apph- cation to ye Town Goftippe. N. B.—All ye Men and Women Singers will have theyre beft cloze on. Ye Singers will Sing thefe Pieces. YE FIRSTE PARTE, Doxology. All ye meu and women Singers Sherburne, All ye men and women Singers Invitation, All ye men and women Singers A Worldlie Piece will be spoken, By | of ye men. Majefty, All ye men and women Singers, Russia, All ye men and women Singers. Victory, All ye men awed women Singers. Mount Zion, All ye men and women Singers. Song of ye Old Foiks. All ye men and women Singers. 10. New Jerufalem, All ye men and women Singers. ee S PMR PHrHKS oe ee YE SECOND PARTE. Our Kitchen. Ye old man’s Song. 1, Eafter Anthem, All ye men and women Singers. 2. A Worldlie Piece read from a book, By 1 of ye men. 3. Home Again, All ye men and women Singers. 4. Jerufalem my Glorious Home, All ye men and women Singers. 5. A Worldlie Piece, By 1 of Singers. . Old Folks at Home, Ail ye men and women Singers. . Portland, All ye men and women Singers. . God Save ye Queen, All ye men and women Singers N. B. Pleafe keep this lyfte and bring with you to ye Greate Concerte. N. B. All ye monies wh fhall come in, fall go towards paying for ye Minifter’s furniture. N. B. Unfeeming levitie and fparking will be promptly reftrained by ye fpecial conftables Josfeph and John. N. B. Forafmuche as ye younge women who singe are shamefafte, ye younge men are defired to look awaie from them when thai singe. N. B. Women with younge children may as wel goe in and sit at Naber Muirhead’s his fyre, if so bee thai grow wearje—close bye ye hall. N. BD. All thofe wh are so much bieffed as to have goode lungs and religious training, are ex- pected to stand up and help singe ye last hymme. ye women mnt Ce Pa ee eee Russian March Towards India. (From the N. Y. Journal of Commerce. ) British The threatened advance of Russia toward British India is a bugbear of which much is sure to be made at the present time. English statesmen and writers conjure it up to stimulate the war feeling- of the coun- try. Nothing more surely appeals to British pride and patriotism than an assertion that the India Empire is endangered by Russian ambition and lust of conquest. Authors of recent books—‘*‘The Ride to Khiva” and others—about Central Asia, have contri- buted to the volume of the prejudices and incorrect impressions. Russian journalists have also designedly worked on England’s jealousy and anxiety by boasting of the progress made in Central Asia by the troo of the Czar, and hinting what might done to worry England in that direction if war broke out between the two countries. Having discovered that England is ex- tremely touchy on this score, the Russian editors cannot forbear plagueing her a little. + * ™ * Every step that Russia takes into Cen- tral Asia costs her thousands of lives and million of roubles. It is the chosen home Nothing to eat or drink can be had along hundreds of miles of the desert way. It isa country of wil- derness and mountains, inhospitable and almost impassable. The savage tribes that roam over parts of it are good fighters and have always given the Russians plenty of NO. 295. hard work, gallantly resisting their sucees- sive explorations and military encroach- ments and only yielding to overwhelming force. But the natural obstacles, and not the opposition of the natives, make Russia pause in her advances southward. And the whole cotntry, save that bordering the rivers, would be worth nothing tg her when she got it. Russia has and can have no other object in annexing portions of Cen- tral Africa, or bringing them under her ‘* protection,’ than to keep its turbulent tribes in order. These have always been an annoyance to Russia. They are given to phindering excursionsand used to invade Russia, stealing, burning and murdering, until the Czar determined to erush them out at all haszards. This has been neary done in a series of most expensive expedi- tions, and the Russians are now coma- ratively unmolested. These borders have, from necessity, been pushed further south, until now they are within a few hundred miles of the British-Indian boundary. The expense of this to Russia is enormous. It does not pay her in any sense, except that she now prevents the frontier disturbances to which she was formerly exposed. This she does by forts anda thorough military occupation of the conquered country. The same necessity-—or destiny —may impel her still farther southward. [t may bring her at last up to the British line itself. What then! She will simply have reached a point where there will be longer need or ex- cuse for going beyond. * * * In whatever way the present Russo-Eng- lish quarrel may be settled, nothing except the resolute armed interference of England herself can in future prevent the gradual annexation of a great part of Central Asia by Russia. The work is bound to go on, and the sooner it is accomplished the better for the subjugated tribes themselves, ond for England, and for all except Russia, which will have the trouble and the vast expense of managing the new provinces, but not sufficient counterbalancing gain. As for the danger of a contest between Russia and pens where their frontiers are coterminous, that is quite imaginary. They could dwell pannelair side by side, as Russia and Germany, Spain and Portugal, the United States and Canada, now do. — A Bigamist’s Career. Orrawa, May 7.—Chief of Police Miles Guest, of Watertown, arrived here yester- day, his object being to induce wife No.2 of Dr. Sharp to proceed to Watertown and give evidence against him on a charge of bigamy. The woman, who is a disreputable character, and known by the name of Han- nah Bate, at first refused, but through the assistance of Detective McVeitty she was induced to leave with Mr. Guest by the St. Lawrence and Ottawa railway this morning. The career of the bigamist is an eventful one from a criminal pomt of view He came to Ottawa ‘several years ago with his first wife, and whilst here was captured by Han- nah’s fascinations. He passed off asa sin- gle man, and subsequently married. her. Shortly after this his first wife died broken- hearted. He lived but a short time with his second wife, when they quarrelled and separated. He then left tor Montreal, where he blackmailed a man and passed a bogus cheque. When things got too hot for him in Montreal, he struck out for fresh fields, putting up at Watertown and hang- ing out his shingle as Dr. Sharp, an emin- ent English physician, who had had great experience in the London, Paris, Vienna, Berlin, Constantinople, Moscow, and St. Petersburg hospitals. Being something of a quack, he sometimes had patients, but the Chief says an investigation showed that an uncommonly large number died. While in the full tide of his prosperity, he met a charming young lady, daughter of a pro- minent citizen of Watertown, wooed and won her, and received the sanction of her parents to a matrimonial union. “They were married, but their cup of bliss soon turned to bitterness, for Hannah Bate soo appeared on the scene, and claimed the eminent English physician as her ,lawful wedded husband, and produced documén- tary evidence in substantiation of her asser- tion. ‘The matter was * investigated, and Sharp was arrested on a charge of bigamy, The Grand Jury brought in a true bill against him, but he managed to coax Han- nah to leave Watertown and come to Cane ada before the trial camr on. —~ - + 22 eo _ TerrisLe Surrertnc at Ses.—intelh- gence from Boothbay, Nova Scotia, has reached Liverp 0] of the arrival there of the crew of the brig ‘* Blanch,” of Digby, N. S., after having suffering great privations. The ‘** Blanch,’ it apes, left P nia for St. Kitts with lhunber, and shortly after sprang a leak. The vessel became water- logged, and access to the provisions was consequently cut off. The vessel remained in this condition for eight days without fall- ing in with any ship, durmg which time the crew could obtain no food, As a_ last re- source, a dog which was on board was kill- ed and ravenously eaten by the starving crew. By this means life was sustained until they were fallen in by the schooner ** Sea Bird,” which took them on board, and landed them at Boothbay. Previous to the rescue, however, the mate left the disabled vessel on a raft, and it is supposed that he perished. The ‘‘ Sea Bird” had en- countered heavy weather, and was partly dismasted. She had also on board the crew of the schooner Kedron.—Liverpoo!l Post, April 24,