fed ster oe ait =. a ait er. uo ae * cs m ar eM acer wg pea > “ae fe betes A ead 2. os ton ate a Mia leg 4 FLOUR. Subscribed Capital, $9,733,332.00 Paid up Capital, - Street ; London, 61 Threadneedle Street. THE a ” ° © NE ~ HX AMINER. VOL, 6 THE Daity EXAMINER ied every Evening. JFPICE: +, CORNER OF WATER ‘ GEORGE STREETS, tetown, P. E. 1 Kates oF SUBSCRIPTION : {s Publis} INGS’ BUILDIN AND GREA Charic Six Months, - - : $2 50 Three Months, - . . 1 26 One Month, . ° o G 50 ‘me Week, . ; : 0 12 = Advertisiny: at most raoderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- erly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- W. L. COTTON, a Manager. — ec ance = pee atte ean ner ggremenelpciaemalan BOOK BINDIN ERSONS having volumes ef Magazines MITCHELL, Otfiee Sup’t ——e he Ww. and fyles of Newspapers, er Books of any description which they might wish to have bound at reasonable rates, will please leave their orders with the subscriber, or at Harvies’ Bookstore. DAVID BETHUNE, Rotchford Square. Bee..15, 1879—tf QUEEN INSURANCE CO'Y, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING, NSURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- ings, Merchandise and Produce. Also, on essels on the stocks. Special rates for isolated residences. Losses settled promptly. GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Prince Edward Island June, 1877—- J. R. FOSTER, Moncton, N. B., REPRERSENTING IN THE MARITIME PROVINCES Ontario, (hicago and Western Millers and Shippers, ee eta, ie Sa MEAL, GRAIN, Seeds and Provisions. pat The followimg are some of the leading brands of Flour for sale wholesale, in car-load- lots only, viz:— ‘‘ Buda,” ‘‘ Alabaster,” ‘‘ White Rose,’’ Warcup’s Superior, ‘‘ Pastry,” *¢ Beaver Mills,’”’ ‘‘ Red XXX,” ‘‘ Amber,” &e., ke. The above choice brands of flour, with many others, can be obtained at all the leading Flour Houses in the Maritime Provinces, Samples of all kinds of Seed Grains, and other goods will be sent to any address on applica ticn free ef charge. Ask for quotations by telegraph in ** Cipher,’ which will be supplied to all cer- respondents on application. Nov. 25, 1879—ly BRITISH AMERICA Assurance Company. FIRE AND MARINE. Cash Capital & Assets . $1,176 491.45, INCORPORATED 1833. —_————- Head Office, - Toronto, Ont. Risks taken on all descriptionsgof Property at lowest rates. PROMPT SETTLEMENT OF LOSSES. HORACE HASZARD, Agent. Office, South Side Queen Square. Jaly 10, 1579. No. 35 Waiter St., Charlottetown. Princa Edward Island Branch ~—OF THK— NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE. AND LIFE. INSURANCE GO. 1,216,666.00 CHIEF O} FICES—Edinburgh, 64 Princess Nine-Tentlis of the Profits of the Life Assur- 2 eee ee ‘ls CHARLOT 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. Losses settled with promptitude and liber- ality. G. W. Debiers, General Agent, Dee, 14, acta a <acudib sncaene> aconsanesearameael gaan TETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD Lally EXanvner 1880. ‘FOR CASH I —_— JOB PRINTING PROMPTLY, NEATLY, AND CHEAPLY DONE. will please do so before com- coming season. Smail 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, Polisical News, Social News, Commercial News. Shipping News, laid before Subscribers, Purchasers, and Borrowers, EVERY EVENING, PRICE 2 CENTS. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: GUAEETTY «2 occ ec ccc ce conf 85 THE DAILY Largely Increased Circulation AND IS AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING MEDIUM a Ta WEEKLY EXAMINER Made up from Tue Darty—a Compen- dium of all the News of the Week. Subscription price only ONE DOLLAR A_ YEAR, IN ADVANCE. Sent to any address in Great Britain or North America, ee em mem Persons having relatives or friends abroad cannot do better than send them THe WEEKLY E> (AMINER. pax A few Advertisements only, received J. W. MITCHELL, | W- b. COTTON, Ottice Sup’t. Manager AdvertisesCheap' WKGE> Persons who have not yet settled last year’s accounts, mencing the business of the Half-Yoarly...cccccccsseee B00 FOR THE HOLIDAYS 2.0Ra. ANY OTHER TIME. W. R. BOREHAM Has on hand, and coming, per steamer N orth ern Light, a large stock of Men’s, W men’s and Children’s Boots, Shoes, Ruwhbers, Over- shoes and Slippers, all styles and prices to suit allages and pockets. Compglong to W. R. BOREHAM, South Side Queen Square. Dec. 23, 1879.—3mostaw WAGLEAN & Mi ATTORNEYS-AT-EAW, Newson’s Building, Opp. Post Office, Charlottetown, P. #, 1. ASA. McLEAN. BD. C. MARTIN, June 18, 1879.-—ex2aw 7. MARGARET'S HALL, HALYPAX, N. S, € SEMINARY FOR YOUNG “LADIES. The Lord Bishop of Xa Seotia PRINCIPAL: ® The Rev, John Pailfield. TEYNHIS SCHOOL offers, at very moderate cost. the advantages of a comfortable and pleasant home together with a thorough and refined education. The course of Instruction is the same as that of the best Schools in England and is founded upon the University Examinations for Women. Eight young ladies from this School passed the Local Examination of the University of King’s College in June last. This is the only School in Canada that has passed pupils at a University Examination. The number of pupils is limited, rendering 7 School select, and while regi all the educational advantages of a las blic school each pupil. iscemahboiairaadl individual care and oversight which is so important, and which cannot be given ina larye establish- ment. Mr. and Mrs. Padfield are assisted by a staff of four resident governesses, besides visit- ing masters. Parisienne French is taught conversation- ally. There are two resident French Gov- ernesses. References given to parents of pupils. For further particulars address the Prin- cipal. Sept. 19, 1878. A SOUP KITCHEN N connection with the Women’s Temper- ance Union and Benevolent Society, will be opened for the winter if sufiiciently assist- ed by the charitable public. In order to dis- tribute judiciously, only those will be reliev- ed who identify themselves with the Society, which will enable the committee to look par- ticularly into each case. In view of the present pressing demands for help, the friends of the poor are urgently requested to send donations immediately and as regularly as possible, which will be received by Mrs. W. Kennepy, Confectionery. Clothing will likewise be very acceptable. E, McRAE, Secretary of the Women’s Benevolent Society. Dec, 23, 1879. WONDERFUL Improvement in Jacobs’ Litnogram, PATENTED l6th JULY, 1879. FTER a series of experimenis eondueted 4X at great cost and involving much labor, ‘** Jacobs’ Lithogram” has been so completely perfected that it is not alone more durable, but so altered in construction and thickness, that the Patentee of this wonderful labor and time-say- ing apparatus, is enabled to offer ‘‘a guaran- tee” with each Lithogram sold, providing the directions furnished are complied with. Postal Card, Note, Letter, Legal and Folie sizes. Prices respectively $2.50, $5.00, $7.00, $9.00, and $12.00. Special sizes made to order. LIBERAL DISCOUNT TO THE TRADE. Agents wanted throughout the Dominion. Send for cirenlar. J. M. JACOBS, Patentee & Manufacturer. Western House, 557 St. Paul Street, 36 Front St. East, Montreal. Toronto, Ont. Headquarters for the United States : 3 Arch St., Boston. Mass. N. B.—Composition for refilling Tablets furnished at one half the original cost. BREMNER BREOS,, Agents for P. E, I. Eastern House, Oh’town, Oct. 21, 1879. Notice to importers. HE Fast Sailing brigantine Shamrock, classed 7 years Al at English Lloyds, William McPhee, commander, will saill from Glasgow, carrying freight direct to this Port, about the 15th MARCH, next, 1880. For terms, freight, &c., apply to Jamus Keiso, Esg., 134, St. Vincent street, Glas- gow, Scotland, or here to the owner. OWEN CONNOLLY. Ch’town, Dee, 27th, 1879. ~~ ee oo te — 'ARY 12, 1880, —_——,. ee eS ISLAND, MONDAY, JANUARY 12 Sie SECOND £ i SECOND EUIT THe Dainty EXAMINER. iON JANUARY 12 1880 Parnell and Dillon visit Montreal in Feb- ruary. Bismarck has re-opened negotiations with the Vatican. There are a hundred and fifty men lum- bering in the Liscom (Guysborough) woods. The Princess Louise sails for Canada on the 22nd inst. Tho Marquis meets her at Quebec. A Cape Town despatch says the Secretary of the Boer Committees has been arrested for high treason. The Government will offer a reward for the arrest of the murderers of the Mounted Policeman Grayburn. Rumors are current in Rome that Gen- eral Ignatieff is to succeed the present Rus- sian Minister at the Italian Court. Russia is making very extensive increases iv. her military strength, and is suspicously massing large forces on her western fron- tiers, where the fortresses are being armed. Mr. Bouthilier, a Liberal M. P. P., has resigned his seat ia the Political Economy Club, in Montreal, because he discovered that the secret object of it was annex- ation. At the Ontario Government's banquet, last night, speeches severely criticizing the operation of the National Policy were made by Hon. Georgs Brown, Hon. Messrs. Blake, Mowatt, Fraser and others. Of the foreign trade with Servia it has been ascertained that Great Britain has 20 per cent., Austria-Hungary 40, France, Germany and Switzerland 10 each, the re- maining 10 being divided among other countries. Through the construction of a railway from Salonica te Belgrade, via Nisch, England would gain a large part of the trade with Austria, and would divide with her the trade in the Balkan States. Deat’s Boomina.—The Quebec Chronicle4 contains the following :—‘‘It is reported that one of the largest milling establish- ments in this district has just concluded asale of the whole or a large portion of its manufacture of pine deals for the coming season to a London firm. The prices have not transpired, but are thought tv be in the neighborhood of $104 for first quality, and twe-thirds and one-third for secends and thirds respectively. There is a brisk en- quiry for pine deals in this market, and prices, if not the highest ever touched, are within a fraction of those realized in 1873. Some transactions have also taken place in spruce deals at better figures than for some years back; and altogether the prospects of this trade are very satisfactory. Frencn Duties on Fisu.—The Parlia- mentary committee onthe new French Tariff Bill have had under examination the proposed duties on foreign fish, and have adopted the subjeined rates: Fresh, sea, or river fish, 2f. 50c. per cwt.; for dried, salted, or smoked fish, the Government had proposed to tax cod 24f. per cwt., and all other fish 5f. The committee include steck fish in the tariff for cod, and create an intermediate rate of duty 10f. per cwt. for sardines and anchovies. Fish bined or otherwise preserved in its natural state, charged 5f. in the Government scheme, is raised by the committee to 12f. 50c.; the rate of 1f. 50c. per thousand fresh oysters is adopted, *but that of 5f. per cent. for preserved oysters is raised by the com- mittee to 12f. 50; fresh lobsters are to be taxed 2f. 50c. percwt., preserved 5f.; whale fat, crude 2f. per cwt., pressed 5f., refined 7f. 50c. i oe +o The N.P., and a“ Ruined” Industry. (Toronto Mai.) If there is one question more than an- other regarding which New Brunswickers denounced the Finance Minister, it is the injury inflicted by the new tariff on the ship-building industry. The Opposition press, from St. John to Sarnia, has been howling about deserted ship yards, starving shipwrights and general desolation in that industry. The St. John Telegraph, which led the hunt, tells, however, a very differ- ent story. Its own words carry its strong- est condemnation : ‘‘ During the past year there has been a total increase of 35 vessels of 16,344 tons.” St. John at present owns 739 vessels of an aggregate tonnage of 281,- 178. This is ‘‘ larger than it has veen at any peried in its history,” is the astonish- ing conclusion arrived at by the Telegraph. per teeet Weather Bulletin. Probabilities for the next 24 hours for the Maritime Provinces. Toronto, Jan 12, 10 a, m. Winds’ gradually shiiting towards west and northwest; cloudy, warmer weather, with rain areas, followed by cooler weather. om MINIATURE ALMANAC, TUESDAY...........oJANUARY 12th, 1880 Son Rises......7.46 | Hicn Warer 12.00 am Gon Save: cs... 4.32 | Foi: Moon 27, 6, 0.a m ANotuer Lor of Ruled Note Paper, in five quire packages, at 40 cents per package at the Agricultural Store. Rosert May, j9 3i eod | 30, NO, 43 Nhe Horald on Mr. Parnell. The New York Herald winds up an article on Mr. Parnell’s first meeting with the fol- lowing eminently sensible remarks, which are quite as applicable to Canada as to the United States :— ‘¢ Of course we de not withheld our own opinions on the question at issue. We have no doubt that they are such opinions as the great mass of the’ American people will endorse. There has been a large ex- perience in this country in raising money for objects connected with Ireland. When famine has overtaken that unfortunate™ country, American sympathy has needed but little prompting, and cargoes of food have been sent with ungrudging and pro- fuse generosity, citizens of all classes and all creeds vying with one another in lending a lielping hand to the good work. There have also been large sums of meney raised in this country ostensively for the benefit of Ireland, of which we will not undertake to trace the expenditure, but which certainly failed to bring the con- templated relief. The funds raised for the Fenians were wholly contributed by citizens of Irish birth. Nobody knows where the money went; but nobody will undertake to show that it did a particle of good to Ireland. It is not surprising that American experience in raising Irish funds has led our people to discriminate between the noble efforts of charity, which bore abun- dant fruit in teeding the hungry, and the political contributions ir: which the money given was like water spilled upon the sand. Our people will again give generously in proportion to existing necessity for al- leviating the threatening horrors of famine, but they will think twice before sending more money after that which was wasted upon the Fenians. If we are a genereus we are also a practieal people, and have little faith in Quixotic attempts made here to revolutionize a foreign country. ‘‘The land system of Ireland is a Brit- ish, not an American question, It must be ameliorated, if at all, by the action of the British Parliament. It is hardly de- cent for Amcricans to organize a crusade for dictating the legislation of a foreign government. The Irish agitation may or may not be proper enough from an Irish point of view, but it is nota fit thing for . the American people to enlist in. The in- dependence of nations requires that every people shall be left to manage their own domestic affairs without obtrusive foreign interference. We should certainly resent foreign attempts to control our legislation, and the duty of abscinence is reciprocal. ‘There is one way by which we can legiti- mately aid the ambition of Irish peasants to become land -wners. We have abun- dance ef fertile soil awaiting the hands of cultivators—far richer than any in Ireland —which can be bought for a great deal less money. We welcome the suffering Irish to this rich heritage, and will create a fund to defray the expenses of emigration. Those who leave will make better times for those who remain by relieving the Irish labor market of a surplus. This mode of relief for Ireland is both practical and legitimate, and we commend it to the con- sideration of Mr. Parnell.” i > Se — Remarkable Twins. There is at present in Bombay a living ebject that might rightly be classed among the most curious phenomena of nature. At a house in Mazagon may be seen a pair of female twins, separate in every respect but from the breast bone to the lower part of the abdomen, which is closeiy joined. The upper breast bone of each infant is linked into the other, the outer skin cover- ing both trunks. The twins are joined front to front ; shoulders, arms, lower limbs and feet perfectly formed, and development healthy, while the heads are well shaped and the faces really pretty, with beautiful eyes large and bright. The twins are six months and twenty days old, are in perfect health, and measure twenty inches in height, one appearing—but in a very trifling degree—larger than the other. Both have vigorous appetites and take kind- ly to the feeding bottle, are extreme- ly lively, and appeared geod temper- ed. The pulses beat wm unison, they generally fall asleep or keep awake together, and their actions are usually sim- ultaneous, though semetimes ene wouid ery while the other was quietly drawing at the mouthpiece of its bottle. The strangely united pair were born in Dapooli, in the Rutnagherry Collectorate, the father being a Mahommedan and a sea-faring man, while the mother has besides a pretty little daughter of about ten. According to the former’s account, he called in a native doc- tor at Rutnagherry, whose opinion was that there was a connectien internally between the abdomen, so that of whatever waste. ance the one took a portion passed to the other. However that may be, the infants feed separately, each having a bottle to it- self, and draw vigorously at their nonri.h- ments. The same doctor also declared that it would be impossible to separate them without extinguishing life. The twins have up to this time never been ill, and to all appearance are likely te grow up.— Times of India. > o-_———-- Supposep Farat Sranping Arrray.— Two brothers named McDonald became in- volved in a drunken quarrei at River In- habitants, Inverness County, C. B., on New Years’s night, when one stabbed the other in the breast. Our informant says he heard the injured man died of his wound. —Eastern Chronicle.