6s alin ita Sinai, ane ea attic iia ot WA? tis tera, ne ee Se ee et —— - ———— VOL. 3. Sete y N Tr ALE TAT THe DAILY EXAMINER Is Published every Evening. OFFICE: {NGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. 1. KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : ' Six*Months, &2 50 Three Months, - ; s 1 25 One Month, 0 50 One Week, 0 12 gw Advertising at most moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- cation. w. L. COTTON, Manager. | PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO, 9. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT | _ MONDAY, APRIL 29th, 1878, | J. W. MITCHELL, Otlice Sup’t. Trains Going West. STATIONS. | No. 1 | No. 3 | No 5 | Express. |; Mixed. (Mixed Georgetown | Dp 4.00 pm| Dp 7.30 am} Cardigan 1S £260. %¢ 1 7 50 * | ar 5.25 | | * idp 0.30 **_; | “lar 9.20 “| | “10.45 “ | M.Stew’t Jun | Royalty Jun. “6.92 “ | P.M, wy jar 6.50 “ jarll.05 “ vag ote ldp 6.25 amjdp11.35 ‘ jdp5.25 Royalty Jun. | * 6.43 “| “11.55 “ | “5.45 N. Wiltshire | “ 7.18 “ | “12.50 pm! ‘6.42 Hunter River | ‘ 7.30 “| “ 1.07 ‘ | ‘7.00 Breadalbane se 7.58 ee as 1.47 sé $¢73o County Line | * 8.05 “| “ 1.57 * | «7.48 Kensington mae Sa 228 * |. Ga " id ar 9.00 “ jar 3.15 “ |ar 9.00 Summerside 1/45, 9.15 “ |dp 3.45 “ Wellington “952 «| 4.40 « Port Hill van es..**.5 SF a " O'Leary wae. i **é6n * Alberton ‘39.60 % 1 “4 OOO. °° Tignish ar 12.40 pmiar 8.50 ** Trains Going East. STATIONS. No. 2 No.4 | No. 6 Express. | Mixed. | mixed} igni , 3 Dp 6.30 am ap tare ve Alberton al dp i 50 i 0’ Leary “fis “i aS Port Hill “44.7 |i Sea Wellington * 46 © 'T 752.10 . ar 5.15 ** \ar12.05pm! A. M. Summerside { /4, 5.30 “ \dpl2.40 ‘ps. 30 K ° n ‘e 5.55 “é sé 7 a7 sé oe 7. ij Cobity Line «6.93 | 1.57 © | “7.46 Breadalbane “Ome « }267,* “7.58 Hunter River | ‘“ 7.00 “‘ | “ 2.48 “ | “8.35 N. Wiltshire “oe Si ae :. anes {jar 4.00 “* | “9.45 Royalty Jun. | “ 7.47 ‘( ;dp410 * arl005 , ar 8.05 ‘* jar 4.30 “ Chitown dp 8.05 am) dp oe ” efiar 4 7 Royalty Jun. ‘* $.23 dp 4.10 “ Q ar 9.20 “ ,ar 5.25 “ Mt. Stewart | oe 9.40 ‘* |dp < “a Cardigan 10.43 ** | * 7.06 © Georgetown jarll.05 ‘ jar 7.35 “ a SOURIS BRANCH. Trains Going West. STATIONS. | No7 Mixed. | No. 9 Mixed. Souris Dp 3.1é,.a | Dp 6.30 a.m. Harmony ae |. a St. Peter's ree ** 8.07 Z Morell A “ 6.40 M. Stew’t Jun.jA. 5.25 “ jAr 9.20 “ Train - Geing East. No. 10 Mixed. STATIONS. s o. 8 Express. MStewart Jun! Dp 9.30 am. | Dp 5.39 p.m Morell “908 1 8 615 S SteReter’s ages | | “6.47 “ arm ony $31.28 “ “8.02 * - | ar11.40 “.| Ar 8.25 “ WM. McK ECHNIE, CG. J. BRYDGES, P Supt. P. BE. I. R. Gen. Sup. Gov. Railways. Ch’'town, April 20, 1878— DR. WILLIAM GRAY’S SPECIFIC MEDICINE. The Great English Rem- ee in hon > of Visi ae we > ead to rae acta bu? Grave. a ce, $1 ix packages for $5, by mail free of ete a parser corrupt ah wi ery WM. GRAY 4 CO., Windsor, Outarie, Canada. s#-Seld in Charlottetown by W. Re W son, Dr. Dodd, C. D. Rankin, P. G. Frase at Apothecaries Hall,}and by all Druggist FOR FARMERS 7 BAGS GUANO —the best fertilizer (). known. For sale cheap. se sal CARVELL BROS. Gh’town, May 15—pat 2aw ar 3w UY THE DAILY BXAMINGE. for the latest news—local and telegraphic ee ee eeeetes, WAGSTAFF’S HOTEL, i. re < i ; . f VHE | ubseriber having fitted up the Hotel lormerly known as THE RANKIN HOUSE. in first class style, is now ] repared to give r i comfortable ac ’ ommodation to Permanent and Transient Boarders, O Boa er site Weessem aan every atten May 25, 1878. WM. WAGSTAFF, >: ch sieves om ee a Starch Manufacturing Ob., CAPITAL . . $25,000, fin Shares of 325.00 each. PENIS 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 Eros., untill the Di- rectors and Oificers of the Company are ap- pointed, April 16, 1S78— PAINTING! TENHE Subseriber takes this opportunity of thanking the Public fer 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, Bouse, Sign, and Car- riage Painting, Paper Hanging, &e. s@ Special attention is given by him to Waurreninc, CoLorrine and the Decoratine of CEILINGS, WALLS, ete. On hand and made te order— EVERY DESCRIPTION OF CARRIAGES, && Carriage Repairing promptly attended to. “a PRIGES TO SUIT THE TIMES. P, H. TRAINOR, 8% Kent St., opp. Rocklin House. April 2—3m eod - JAMES HOBBS, GABINET MAKER, Cor. Kent and Prince Streets, Charlottetown. oo 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 and Laying Carpets. : sax’ 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. St. Lawrence Marine Ins, Co, OF P. E. ISLAND. 70: SUBSERIZED CAPITAL . . $120,000.00. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: ArcHIBALD Kennepy, Esa., President ; JoHN F. Rosrerison, Esqg.; ARTEMAS LorpD, Ese.; G. D. Lonaworta, Esq.; W. E. Dawson, Esq.; Tuomas Morris, Esa. ; P. W. Hyxpman, Esq. Risks taken daily at their Office, Exchange Building. hin FRED. W. HYNDMAN, QS a+ Secretary. March 25—ly law BLANK - BILL = HRADS, BLANK STATEMENTS, —AND— BUSINESS CARDS, Furnished promptly and cheaply, to order, at the EXAMINR OFFICE, INGS’ BUILDING, Corner Great George and Water Streets. QUEEN INSURANCE 00, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING. NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- 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— Cutting, Making — 3m -2aw , Se te CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, - $373 ‘DEL; Ky ENA 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, LONSIDER QUR TERMS: SINGLE COPIES tothe 3ist December, 1878—thirteen months —$1,.00 in ad- vance, SIX COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $5.5 in advance. TEN COPIES to on address, or addressed separately, as desired, $9,0@ in advance, FIFTEEN COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as required, $13.30 in advance. TWENTY COPIES to one address, or addressed separately, as desired, $17.00, IN ULL TIMES THE— MAPEST AND BEST —G Ei The Weekly Examiner is acknowledged to be ahead of any other paper in the Province. in the item of LOGAL 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 aud letters from ‘Our Own Ottawa Correspondent” wiil contain everything of in- terest transpiring in the Dominion Parlia- ment, A Good Story will be made a specialty. — 0: - The Daily Uxaminer Will be sent to an rt of the Province, the Dominion, United States or Great Britain on receipt of - $2.50 1.25 200 For Six Montiis, - - - - For Three Months, - - - - For One Monih, - +--+: - ae ADDRESS, W. L. GOTTON, Manager Examiner Printing and Publishing Company. Ch’town, Dee, 6, 1877, oe MONDAY, JUNE 10, The Russian Cruisers, The following is a translation of the pro- clamation issued by the Mescow Cruiser Comimittee, and which is now being dis- persed, says the London Globe, all over Russia. The document has been revised by the Czarovitch himself, and has, therefore, the character of a Russian State paper :— APPEAL FOR SUBSCRIPTION IN AID OF ACQUISITION OF SHIPS FOR THE VOLUNTEER FLEET. THE The Lord has sent Russia another trial. An implacable foe threatens us with war, fellow countrymen! Are we to bear pa- tiently the wresting from us of the fruits of victory |! Are we again to have to liberate our brothers! Onur foe is strong on the sea. The number and might of his marine resources greatly exceed our own. But there is a way of striking him a blow on his sea path which he may sensibly feel. Who does not know that the interests of our foe lie in his profit and gains? He owns a mighty marine fleet. Thirty thousand ves- sels plough the seas for him. Here, then, is the way to strike him a blow. At that moment when the enemy closes our seas, and, as in the Crimean war time, burns and robs our undefended villages along the coast at that moinent let us carry the misery of war into the midst of his marine. For this purpose.we must have swift and powerful vessels that may present themselves sud- denly and with terror upon the sea paths of our foe. The last war éovered with glory our seamen, fighting with fragile vessels against the terrible ironclads, and issuing victorious from such an unequal combat. Give them regular sea ships, send them to the ocean to cruise among the enemy’s mer- chant fleet, and our enemy will be roiled up in his self-presumption. Children of the Russian soil! ye have risen as one man each time that danger has threatened our holy nrother, Russia. Answer to her call this time with united will and with every means create a fleet that will again show to the world the worth of the Russian people when they stand on guard for the honor of their country. But there is no time to be lost. We must act quickly. Dost thou want peace,- prepare for war. et 0 pee A Great Institution. The Bank of Montreal leid its annual meeting in Montreal on Monday last. The report made on the occasion by the direct- ors was, under the circumstances, an ex- tremely favorable one. It shewed that the Bank’s profits for the year ended April 30th, 1878, after deducting charges of manage- ment and making fuil provision for all bad and doubtful debts, were no less than $1,430,903. It began the year with a bal- ance of Profit and Loss of $199,081. It closed the year with a balance of-$190,177, after paying meanwhile in dividends $1,439,- 808—the rate being 12 per cent. per an- num. Necessarily the bank did less business last year- The decrease in loans was well on to $3,000,000 ; yet the net profits were $242,000 in excess of those of the previous year. The General Manager, however, cau- tioned shareholders against cherishing high expectations in the immediate future. Money was plentiful. There was competi- tion with both British and American capi- tal, and he could promise a continuance of 12 per cent. dividends. Monied institutions, large as well as lit- tle, cannot but feel the severe pressure of the times. But the manner in which this great institution is weathering the storm of commercial disaster, which meets it at a hundred points, is gratifying to witness. neon —irpertting Diptheria is shewing its fearful malignity in some families in Halifax. One of the most distressmmg cases we have heard of is that of Mr. John Downey, in Wellington Street. Two children died a week or so ago, Lily Rozel, aged 7 years and 11 months, on the 24th ult., and on the 29th, Florence, aged 3 years; and on Monday last, June 3rd, two more—Bessie May, aged 12 years, and Mary Ann, aged 10 years—were taken away almost at the same time. Two others are lying in a very pre- carious state. The hearts of the parents have thus been fearfully taxed.—Christian Messenger. —tse Medical research is not without diflicul- ties and danger of its own, as the body- snatching case at Cincinnati snows. The Hon. Jno. Harrison was buried in the family vault on one day and discovered in the dissecting rooms of Ohio Medical Col- lege by the son on the next. The incident must have been a tolerably startling one to son, who believed his father’s body to be 1878, NO, 318; ee Miscellaneous News. _Mr. J. Peters’ King George won the Queen’s Plate at London. io ait ue Nine lawyers and nine insurance men are to play a game of base ball in Chicago. A monument to the late President John- son was unveiled at Knoxville, Tenn., last week. Edison is perfecting an ear trumpet with- out wires, enabling one to hear conversation from a distance of a mile. The English Government prefer female telegraph operators, because they always wait for the last word of news. The 26th Annual Convention of the In- ternational Typographical Union opened at Detroit, Mich., on the 32 insi. The Courier-Journal states that when Judge Hilton owned a farin he used to try to run his hen coops with hens alone. Sir Frederick Graham came out from England on purpose to fish the Restivouche, He and Hon. Col. Letellier weve at Camp- dellton on Saturday. A good story is told of a tom-cat that was in Paris during the siege of 1870. The an- imal has a good memory. Whenever it hears artillery firing it collects morsels of bread and meat and retires to the cellar for safety. The men employed in the Departmental building, Quebec, struck on the 3rd inst., because the contractor reduced their wages from 60c. to 50c., and" have appealed to Mr, Premier Joly. In Montreal the other day Jos. Bouidon took four young robins out of a nest, and was fined $5 and costs for doing so, under the local law which protects insectivorous birds. The assassins of the Japanese Minister Okubo sent a letter to the newspaper, de- fending their act on the ground that their victim was tyrannical. The body was body was shockingly mutilated. A London special to a Berlin paper states that the London detectives on Saturday in- formed the British Government that there was great agitation among the Socialists, and important events were imminent. Five of the ringleaders in the recent out- break at Constantinople have been executed —their trial revealing the fact that the murder of the Sultan, as well as the rein- statement of Murad, was contemplated. While one despatch from Constantinople declares in consequence ef the representa- tions of Mr. Layard,the order banishing the editor of the ‘‘ Levant Herald” has been revoked, another states that the suppression of the paper continues, and that the editor has been forced to quit the city. A plot is believed to exist in Germany to assassinate the Imperial family. ‘Thirty- seven persons have been arrested for speak- ing disrespectfully of the Emperor Wilhelm; one, a printer, has been sentenced to four years’ imprisonment, and another to two years and a half for expressing their regrets that Nobeling’s attempt failed, Aa important combination of railroad in- terests west of the Missouri river is report- ed by which the Union Pacific, Kansas Pacitic, Colorado Central, Denver and Rio Grande, St. Joe and Denver City, Denver City, Denver Pacific, and St. Louis, Kansas City and Northern Railroad Companies will be consolidated and pass substantially under Jay Gould’s control. The Imperial Government have promised to supply the Dominion Government with two hundred copies of the report of the Halifax Fishery Commission, thus saving Canada the expense of printing a very bulky volume. The question now arises whether it will be necessary to translate and print the report in French, which would involve the outlay of $8,000. The Times declares that a more honorable triumph than that achieved by England in securing the discussion ef the whole Treaty of San Stefano has seldom been won by diplomacy or statesmanship. The hasty generalizations and hasty outlines of Gen- eral Ignatieff, it says, will be keenly criti- cized at Congress, and it will prove a very different thing to draw a map of Bulgaria at Sen Stefano in the presence of trembling Pashas, and to justify sucha mup before the most experienced statesman in Europe, The Agence Russe says the presence of the . leading Ministers in Congress and the spirit which animates the Cabinet gives hope that the Eastern question will be dealt with on a broad basis and an understanding be reached which will consolidate the peace of Europe. In consequence of the possibility of Turkey provoking a renewal of hostilities, Russia and England have agreed to keep their forces in their respective position in the neighborhood of Constantinople until quietly resting in the family vault, and it: would be curious to know the reasons for such a daring flight of body-snatching genius. As a rule the subjects are got from | the humbler classes of society, from those who die unfriended and unknown, in_hos- pitals. What desperate resorts surgeons were at one time put to may be shown from the murders that used frequently to take place in London. England, in order to provide the materials the doctors wanted | for the medical colleges. Of course they | took their ‘‘ subjects,” and paid for them , without enqairing too closely where they came from. Of the midnight marauding in graveyards, Dickens gives one of his humor- istic accounts in the exploits of Jerry Crun- cher in ‘* Tale of Two Cities,” who used to go fishing” at the curious. hour of one m | the morning. after the Congress. The Russians are said, however, to have occupied in force Tchorlu, a central position between Constantie nople, Adrianople and Gallipoli. Ministers Bratiana and Cogalniceno are charged with having signed an agreement with Russia for the occupation of a of Roumania, with- out fixing any date for its evacuation. This has given rise to a suspicion that those Min- isters have a leaning towards Russia. Plo- jesti is reported to have been occupied by the Russians on the ground that the Rou- manian army was threatening their commu- nications. Russia has granted an amnesty to the Mohammedan insurgents, and the insurrection is subsiding. Sadyk Pasha late Chief of the Ottoman Ministry, an Catheordori ffendi, Under Secretary for Foreign Affairs, will represent Turkey at | Congress.