oe Taos Daity IXaMINER fa Published every Evening. OFFICE; mas’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREA! GEORGE STRERTS, Charlottetown, P. KE. L KavES oF SURSCRIP RIOR : Six Months, . $2 50 Three Months, 1 @& One Month, Qo #0 Ine Week, 612 oe a@ Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- erly, or half-yearly advertisements, en appli- gation. W. L. COTTON, {| J. W. MITCHELL, Manager, ! Offige Sup’t EE. ee Prince Edward Island RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 13. Winter Arrangemeat, , TO COME INTO FORCE TUESDAY, December 3nd, 1879, ; | Nos. 1 & 3, No. 5, Sratiens. | Mixed. Mixed. Georgetown ..... Dp 8.20 a. m. Cardigan.........) “$46 “ 1 Mt Stew’t Junc... Dp to co “ Reyalty Jnnctien' ‘11.27 “* }Ar 11.50a.m. Charlottetown. ‘Dp $.00am\Dp 8.00pm Reyalty Junction; ‘‘ 8.22 * | a Nerth Wiltshire..| ** 9.14 “* | ‘* 416 * Hunter River....; ‘* 9.80 ‘* | ** 430 * Breadalbane. .. ‘ “eee. | GS “ Ceunty Lime..:..} “10.17 “ | * 6.18 * Kensington.... | - * Date * me & ‘di Ar 11.30 m\Ar 6.20 pm ummerside... Pe 1.30 p.m Wellington..:. :| * 2.19 ** | Pert Tilt evbes aE eo a O'Leary........ 6 Ae Se . Alberton.) | EIT WD cs ddace re. 64 TRAINS GOING EAST. s . \Nos. 2 and 4, Ne. 6, Sratios. |" "Mixed. Mixed. Tignish..........\Dp 6.30am Alberton... ....| “* 7.25% | EE, ree | a“. i SEER, wacces sh Wellington ......| ‘* 10.22 “ wrt Arll.l0 am S'mm'rside....--/) 2930p m|Dp 7.30am Kensington......| “* 3.05 “* | ‘* 8.05 ‘ County Line.. ..| ‘* 3.43 “‘ ~_e Breedalbane.....; ‘' 3.63 ** | ** 8.54 “ Hunter River....{ ** 430 “* {| ** 9.30 “ Nerth Wiltshire..; ‘' 4.46 ‘‘ o¢ ge 4° Reyalty Junction' ** 5,37 “ | ‘* 10.38 “ Charlottctow Ar 6.00 pm/Ar 11,00 am arlottetown..../fy, 2.30 pm Reyalty Junetion; ‘‘ 2.53 “ Mt. Stw't June le y ~ a or Geoliosn.....- +21. eae Geercetown.....|Ar 6.00 pim| VS a SOURIS BRANCH. ¥rains Going West. STATIONS | No. 7, Mixed. iea?,.°2.... aa Depart 7.15 a. m. a NS PR oo ” a oT me PUere Ts... k 8 $ 8.55 r eg, pbb << 9.28 * Mt. Stewart Junction. | Arrive 10.10 a, m. 'Frains Going East. SLATIONS. | No. 8, Mixed. Mt. Stewart Junction. | Depart 4.16 p. m. is nocd cura — Oe Peter's... 05.00 "sae NE ae h- ovens . a Se si sect. cate cs Arrive 7.10 ‘* ALEX. MACNAB, Sup’t and Engineer. Railway Offices, Chtown, Nov. 28, 1879. —pat pres h ane sp sj kea pio 61 VALUABLE PROPERTY BOF. SATB, HE Subscriber offers for Sale ali that Valuable Property situated on cerner of Grafton and West streets, and cowprisin Town Lots Nos. 15 and 16 in the thi hundred of Town Lats in Charlottetown. Also, that Property on Kent Street, consisting *f Tewn Lots Nos 67 and one-half of 66, also m the third hundred. This property is a most desirable one for private residences, and Will be sold lew. If not disposed of by private wale, it will be offered at Auction about June Ist, next. Offers for part of the eee will received. Fer further partieulars opply te essrs. Davies & SUTHERLAND, or to the subscriber. F. MITCHELL, saereeemetns ses aA CHARLOTTE Oh’town, Feb. 10, 1980-—Saw a iD ne Sees semanas IY TAU 18s8o. Advertises Cheap FOR CASH |! JOB PRINTING PROMPTLY, NEATLY, AND CHEAPLY DONE. Ws Persons who have not yet settled last year’s accounts, will please do so before com. mencing the business of the coming season. aie Small Profits--Quick Returns, IS OUR MOTTO. Warned by the past, we intend to deal closer to the cash system than ever heretofore. THE DAILY EXAMINER Local News, Foreign News, Political News, Social News, ‘ommercial News. Shipping News, laid before Subscribers, Purchasers, and Borrowers, EVERY EVENING, PRICE 2 CENTS. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Quarterly .-.-seeececeees ofl. 2d PATER oc ccc ceccccces 2D THE DAILY HAS A Largely Increased Circulation AND If AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING MEDIUM A TOD THE WEEKLY EXAMINER Made up from Tur Daity—a Compen- dium of all the News of the Week. Subscription price only ONE DOLLAR A_ YEAR, IN ADVANCE. Bent to any address in Great Britain or North America. a Persons having relatives or friends abroad eannot do better than send them Tur Weexty ExaMINER. sar A few Advertisements only, received J. W. MITCHELL, | W. L. COTTON, Lt ett A ca ah A ae oe Charlottetown Church Directory. St. Pauy’s (Cuurcn or ENGLAND) — Queen Square— Morning and Evening Service every Sunday at !l a. m. and] p.m Sunday School at 24 p. m. Rev. David FitzGerald, Rector; ion: Alfred Osborne Curate. St, Psrer’s, (CourcH or ENGLAND)—Rochford Square. --Sunday Services—8 a.m., 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Daily Services—Matins—9 a. m. Evensong—5 p.m., except Friday evenings, at 7.30. p.m. Rev. George W. Hodgson, Priest Incumbent, Rey. R. D. Bambrick Assistant Curate. Dunstan's CarHrprat, — Low Mass every Sunday at 8a.m. High Mass at 10. a.m.; Vespers at 3 p. m. Mass at 7. 30a. m. throughout the week. Rev. A, McGilvray, Rev. Dr. Chaisson, Pastors. Fins: Meruopist Cuurcu—Prince Street — Service and Sermon every Sunday at 10.30 a. m. and 6.30 p.m. Sunday School at 2 » m. Week Day Servicea+Tuesday and chursdays at 7.30 p. m., Rev, H. P Cowperthwaite, A, M., Pastor. Sroo«D MrerHopist CHURCH—Prince Street, — Service and Sermonevery Sunday at 10.30 #. m. and 6.30 p.m. Sunday School at 2 p.m. Week day service on Wednesday evening. Rev. Geo. M. Campbell, Pastor Sr. James’ Caurce (PRespyrERIAN)—Pownal Street.—Nervice and Sermon every Sun- day atlla.m. and 64p. m. Sabbath School and yeung men’s Bible class, con- lucted by Mr. Harper, at 2:30 p.m. Weekly Service in the Lecture Hall on Wednesday evenings, at 7:45 p.m, Rev. Aenneth McLennan, Pastor. Zion CHurcH ( PRESBYTERIAN )—Richmond Street.—Service and Sermon every Sun day at ll a. m. and6$p.m. Sunday School at 24 p.m. Rev. Jobn McL. Mce- 'eod, Pastor. Pres BYTERIAN Cuurncn—Prince Street.— Rev. Ur. Murray, Pastor—Hours of Service, 1} o’clock, a. m., 6.30 p.m, Sunday Schoo! st 2.30 p. m. Baprisr Caurcu—cor. Prince and Fitzroy ats —Services and Sermon every Sunday at il a.m. and 6.30 o'clock p. m; Sun- day School at 2.30 p.m. Week day ser- vices—Monday at 7.30 p. m.; and Friday %tSp.m. Rev. H. Foshay, Minister. BIBLE CHRISTIANS—Prince. Street.—Service snd Sermon every Sunday morning at 10.30 a m. and 6.30 p.m. Sunday School at 2 p.m. Rev. John Harris, Minister. PRAYER Mesrine in Y. M. C. A. every Sun- day afternoon at 4 o'clock, Discretes or Curist meet in New Church House, every Sunday at 10.30 a. m. and 6.30 p.m. Elders presiding. Fire, Marine. ~ Eife. HORACE HASZARD, General Insurance Agent, REPRESENTING Commercial Union Fire Assuranee Gompany, of London, England ; Capi- tal £2,500,000 stg. British-America Fire Assurance Company, of Toronte, Ont.; Capital (paid up in full), $500,000.00. Sun Mutual Life and Accident In- surance Company, of Montreal. MARINE INSURANCE ALSO EFFCTED, Office, South Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Feb. 17, 1880—1m eod QUEEN INSURANCE CO'Y, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING. eae effected on all kinds of Build- ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on Vewels on the stocks. : “pecial rates for isolated resicences, Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island -une, 1877-— No. 35 Water St.. Charlottetown. Prince Rdward Island Branch —OF THK-— {ORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE. INSURANGE GO. Subscribed Capital, $9,733,332.60 Paid up Capital, - 1,216,666.00 OHIEF OFFICES—Edinburgh, 64 Princess Street ; London, 61 Threadneedle Street. Nine-Tenths of the Profits of the Life Assur- ance Business are divided every Five Years. The Tables of Rates are moderate. Fire Insurances effected on nearly every description of Property, at the LOWEST RATES ef Premium. corresponding to the nature of the risk. Lossgs settled with promptitude and liber- ality. : G. W. DEBLOISs, General Agent. Dee. 14. For Sale! FIRST-CLASS ** King Bird Celt,” three years old. Apply at Examinzr Office Sup’t, Menager | Ot Bee, if 1& aw Jaw On ne a TOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, MARCH 6, Sa er -- A cramnannnemant rea nace LEG i... ere OND EDITION Darity EXAMINER. MARCH 6, 1880. THE —— + NOTES FROM THE CAPITAL. THE COMMONS. —-- nt re A ES cam [a SATISFACTORY RETURN. The Minister of Finance has tabled a re- turn which shows that the actual expendi- ture of the Government in 1878-9, as cem- pared with the Estimate, was — The Estimates amount to... $41,553,595 The Expenditures amount te... 38,291,862 The amount within the Esti- RS idan c's Gir ke cd, $3,261,733 This is ‘‘ proof positive” bearing testi- mony to the economy of the present Gey- ernment, in its first year’s, management of public affairs, DRAWBACKS. The total amount of draw-back allowed in 1879 on goods manufactured in Canada and exported was $7,029. With {the ex ception of $462 on material nsed for ship- building and $275 on eats made into oat- meal, this was on tin used for canning fish in the Maritime Previnces and British Columbia. NEW STEAMSHIP LIN, Notice has been given by Mr. King, M. P., for St. John, of an address to the Gov- ernor General for correspondence with the Government relative to subsidizing a line of steamers to ply between St. John and Liverpool, for the purpese of promoting trade in cattle and farm produce between the Province of New Brunawick and Great Britain, 2s. -- Vera Sassulitch. ————— Few things which of late have occurred in Russia, where stirring events succeed one another with startling rapidity,. created so great a sensation as the Vera Sassulitch episode. The woman was born in 1850, and at seventeen years of age felt the justice— or suspicion—with which the ‘‘Empire of Discontent” is swayed. She was the school friend of the sister of Netchaieff, the cen- spirater whom Switzerland refused to ex- tradite. Miss Netchaieff was threwn into prison fer the offence of being her brother’s sister, and Vera Sassulitch was likewise im- prisoned for a the friend of, the con- spirators sister. For nine years she was a prisoner, and as such was subjected te brutal indignities. In 1876 she was liberated. A little overa year later all liberal-minded people in Ruasia were shocked by the brutality of General Tre- pog, whe had ordered the severe punish- ment of a political prisoner. Pogolin- hoff, who was guilty of the grievous offense of net having uncovered in Tepefi’s august presence. Vera Sassulitch, it is said, had never heard of Bogolinhoff, but she felt that by attracting attention te Trepoff she might end his tyrannies. Accordingly she sought an interview and shot him in the side. The wound was not fatal, but the woman was tried for her life. The jury embraced six members of the civil service, two merchants, a school in- spector, a nobleman, a student, and an art- ist. The audience of six hundred persons wasa splendid one, admitted by ticket, and was composed of people in high sta- tion. Though the offense was admitted, the sympathy of the audience and the gen- eral public was so great that she was ac- qitted. The audience greeted the verdict with cheers, and there was an attempt at a Nihilist demonstration, but the police in- terfered, and promptly killed several per- sons, Vera’s brother-in-law fired on the police, and then blew out his own brains. The woman escaped, and severe] months later was at a banquet in Geneva, where, si‘ting at Henri Rochfort’s right hand, she made so violent a speech that the Swiss autherities politely asked her to move on. From then until now her movements have not been a matter of public record.—N, Y. World. -_——— —-~+- > Tux Londen “‘ Spectator” says: ‘‘ Tuters and governesses have all caught up a sys- tem from the prefessional writing masters, and the professional writing masters are all dominated by two ideas, which are radi- eally false. They all think that ‘ copper plate writing,’ the special hand of writing masters and bank clerks, is good writing, which it is not, being devoid of character, far too regular in form, and from the mul- tiplicity of fine upstrekes not easy to read ; and they all believe that certain mechanical motions, if carefully taught, will produce clear writing. They will not, and they do not.” TsE congregation of Earltown have agreed to call the Rev. Wm. Grant, of West River, P. E. I, to be their minister.— Eastern Chronicle. Exper D. CrawrorpD is expected to preach in the Ubristian Meeting House, Upper (treat George Street, on Sunday evening,#7th inst., at 6 0’elock. All are invited. _ ] poe eo nee en a a _— NO. 90 880, Correspondence, neem O—naasrcatatemramgillingme ccs B® We donot hold ourselves responsible for the statements or opinions of our correspondents A Warning—Rascals Abroad. T'o the Editor of the Examiner. Sirn,—On the night of the 3rd March last two masked men entered my house at Crapaud, in the middle of the night, through the windew, forced the keys from me, and stole from my drawer a draft that I had re- ceived from my husband in Colorade for $50, payable to me or order, and about twenty dollars in cash. : I hereby give notice of the matter, in order thatthe Danks and the public may be cau- tioned about said draft, that the guilty par- ties may be brenght to justice Other papers please copy, and will confer a favor on a lone woman. Aba R. Rerp, Crapaud, March 4, 1880. Washington Letter. THE PANAMA CANAL—POLITICAL, WasHincton, D. €., March 1, 1880. If they do not look sharp, some ef our shrewd American capitalists may be taken in by the wiles of the men who spring from ‘‘efete Monarchies.” Thus a good many of them seem to take steck in the assumption that the Frenchman who pro- poses to ditch the Isthmus of a Panama is an engineer, and therefore competent to do a great work like that. The fact is DeLesseps is not an engineer atall. He was formeriy in the employ of the French government as Consul or something of that sort, and it was by one of those fortutious circumstances that nobody can account for that he got held of the job te construct the Isthmus Canal. It is probable that this accounts for his zeal for this Panama scheme, which Captain Eades and the best engineers pronounced impracticable. De Lesseps may turn out to be something of ahumbug.. At any rate we have much better talent in America for the carrying eut of American improvements. Mr. Charles Nordoff, one of the leading newspaper autherities here, writes to the New York Herald that the anti-Third- Term Republicans, including George Wil- liam Curtis, will no longer eppose the nem- ination at Chicage of Senator Blaine. Their attitude will be similar to that of the Tam- many men toward Robinson, They will support anybody but Grant; in fact, he thinks Senater Blaine would unite all fac- tiens of the Republican, bring back all the Liberal Republicans and gain over some Democrats. In one respeet his prophesy is coming true almost before his ink is dry. The leading newspapers that opposed Blaine in 1876, are warmly favoring his nomination now, and it was through the anti Third-Term influence that the Illinois convention was postponed until May 19th, which isa great disappointment to Logan, as one of the boomers. By the way, I hear that there is a goed deal of bad bleod developing between the Washburn and Grant men in Illinois, and that they will knife each other. The impression is’ gain- ing ground that the Washburns are for Grant, merely as a stepping stone to some- thing for Washburn. The new three and a half per cent re- funding Bill, whieh is the special order for Tuesday, finds new favor frem the signifi- cant fact, it is discovered that Wm. H. Vanderbilt, the railroad king, is down en the Treasury books fer $30,000,000 four percent. bonds, on which he has made a profit of $1,500,000 by the rise, besides the interest. It is now anticipated that the four per cents will soen be worth 1.10. If this is the case the friends of the 34 per cent. says there is no danger in trying a bend of a lower rate than 4 per cent. cr eee - ee Why Germany is Arming. In the debate which followed the intre- duction of the Army Bill in the Reichstag, Von Moltke said, ‘‘All our neighbors are more er less safe from attacks in the rear and only need to present a front on one side. They have stationed a considerable pertion of their land ferces close to our borders, while our regiments are distri- buted equally over the whole ceuniry. Since the conclusion of the Turk- ish war, Russia has considerably extended her military establishments, and France has doubled her army. Meanwhile we have kept our troops within the proportion of one per cent. of our population. France has an army of 497,000 men, while Germany has only 401,- 000 soldiers. The peace strength of Russia is trice as great as ours. The full term of service in France is 20 years and in Russia 14 years, while in Germany it is enly 12 years. The degree in which our army is behind others can only be made up for by activity. I can only sin- cerely deplore the necessity cempelling us to impese a fresh saerifice on the German nation. We must preserve and uphold peace abroad, even as far as our strength allows ; and we shall perhaps not stand alone in that position. In this there is no threat, but a guarantee of peace, Without forces this end cannot be obtained. Miss Aun H. Brewster writes from Rome that an English visitor to her house asked: ‘* Have you any ugly women in the United States? For surely only beautiful ones come to Europe from your country.” This stery has been told here before. Re mone 4 Ss anager miner aang ee aes Re a i ae a > e ee eee a