nn a Se Tae EXAMINER te * th ee Cheam lle ee a ee a Saas Vy VOL 6 cette sili THE fa Published every /:veuing. OFFICE ; INGSs’ BU LLDING, CORNER OF WATER) DamLy EXAMINER. AND GREAT GEORGE STRE ETS, Charlottetown, P. E. L KaTes OF SUBSCRIPTION: &ix Months, ° ; i $2 Three Months, - . ‘ l Oue Month, a . 0 ‘me Week, ‘ ’ . 0 50 26 50 12 wr Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- erly, or half-yearly advertisements, en appli- gation. Ww, L. COTTON, Manager. J. W. MITCHELL, Office Sup’t Prince Edward Island > RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 13. Winter Arrangement, TO COME INTO FORCE PUESDAY. December 2nd, 1879, "TRAINS GOING ‘WEST. i ' SraTIoNs. Nos. 1 & 3, | No. 5 Mixed. | Mixed. ae: .. Dp $.20 a a Cardigan... | pe a Ar 10.10 **) | Mt Stew't Junc.. lp 10.15 «4 Royalty Junction! * 11. . mes \Ar 11.50a.m.! Charlottetown. . ‘Dp 8.00 am! Dp 3.00 pm Royalty Junction; ‘** 8.2: ‘| ** 3.23 ‘ North Wiltshire. “4 ” °. om 1° aes Hunter River....; ‘‘ 9.30 ‘* | ** 430 “ Breadalbane..... | “0 “ .1 * eam oan Line. .... . 2 — 7 | * es Y enaington...... ** 10.55 ** ** BB :¢ « Ise 11.30 a mia; 6.30 p m ummerside..... | 130 p m| Wellington.... :{ ** 2.19 * Port Hill .......4 “* 3.00 ae ip, OC Leary... 0: ae enone Ang += Mibertom...3....) ‘ 5.17 * | Tigdish........ «6.10 4 TRAINS GOING EAST. Nos. 2 and 4, No. 6, Stations. Mixed. Mixed. es ‘Dp 6.30 am cas veve a 7.25 r | es on a4 a Port- Hall ........} ** &40 “ Wellington ......| ** 10,22 “ v ’ id Ar ll. 10 am Mm raide...... Dp 2.30 p m|Dp 7.30 am Kensington... . . 3.05 | ** $8.05 <¢ County Line.. ..| “ 3.43 | R44 « Breadalbane..... » S85 t¢ ot Bee Hunter River....| ‘* 4.30 “* | “* 9.30 “ North Wiltshire. “446 * = £e@ * Royalty Junction’ -* 5,37 “* | * so : Ar 6.00 pm/Ar 11,00 am Charlottetown... Dp 2.30 pm ‘Royalty Junction| ‘‘ 2.53 ‘ ’ Ar 4.10 “ Mt.Stw’t June .. Dp. 4.15 “ ar "S 635."" Georgetown Ar 6.00 p ra| _ SOURIS BRANCH. | Trains Going West. Srarions. | No. 7, Mixed. i s+engeneihed Depart 7.15 a. m. a: causes c | —— St. Peter’s...... “¢ 855 ** Re saed csc. a 9.98.“ Mt. Stewart Junction. Qettitiemenes, Arrive 10.10 a. m. Trains Going East. a : No. 8, “sone t. Stew ion.) - a Sen] Ee age Harmony,...........) “. 648 “ Soutis.. ds sec’ wees « Arrive 7.10 “ ALEX, MACNAB, Railway Office, Chtown, Neves, 18 —pat pres h ane sp »j kea pio 6i ~ COAL. COAL. BY SALE, Konghan’s Scales, a quantity of ‘angen Coa Voal, at $3.50 per ton. at the Gas Works, and Round al gives a great heat, and being al- mont fuse from sulphur, is suitable for Dec i eaeree stoves. —_ */, 1879—city papers 6i either Valvable Property for Sale, T° BE SOLD, all that a of Town Lot No. Shari’ in the first hundred of Town Lots in taurlottctowns having a front of 67 feet, Dor- Street, and ew. back 80 feet, to- with the buil For f further x & Mc Bot. 18, 1ap9, od Charlottetown. ig n erected. iculars apply to Messrs. nee Ata paste ttle, Sidon Lally. Eaiuer | 18So. ete el Advertises Cheap FOR CASH |! JUB 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. Smali Profiis-Qurck 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, Commereial News. Shipping News, laid before Subseribers, Purchasers, and Berrowers, EVERY EVENING, PRICE 2 CENTS. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Quarterly <¢chuecenes<vsnee Half-Yearly...seeeeseesees 3,00 wee ene THE DAILY HAS A Largely Increased Circulation AND IS AN EXCELLENT ADVERTISING MEDIUM ee —_-— TE sa WEEKLY EXAMINER Made up from Tur Darty—a Compen- dium of all the News of the Week. Subscription price only ONE DOLLAR A IN ADVANCE, Sent to any address in Great Britain or North America, Persons having relatives or friends abroad cannot do better than send them THE WEEKLY EXAMINER. YEAR, pax A few Advertisemen:s only, received J. W. MITCHELL, | W. L. COTTON, Office Sup’t. Manager Sa OH ARLOTTE TOWN PI RINCE E EDWARD ISI AND, WE DNESDAY, PEBRUAT RY TNSURAW ce OY. OF ENGLAND, GUE CAPITAL, . . Two MILLIONS STERLING, NSURANCE éltectads 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), Avent for Prince Edward Island June, 1877— FOR TH E HOLIDAYS ANY OTHER TIME. W. R. BOREHAM Has on hand, and coming, per steamer North- ern Light, alarge stock of Men’s, Women’s and Children’s Hoots, Shoes, Rubbers, Over- shoes and Slippers, all styles and prices to suit allages and pockets. Come along to W. R. BOREHAM, South Side Queen Square. ~3imos taw 1879. MAGLEAN & MARTIN, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Newson’s Building, Opp. Post Ofiice, Charlottetown, PLE. I. A, A. MeLEAN., BD. ¢, MARTIN, June 6, 187 9, -— —ex2a w No. 35 Water - St. Charlottetown. d island Branch -——OF THK-—- NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE AND LIFE. \INSURANGE . GO, $9,754,332.00 1 2,666.00 CHIEF OF fICES—Edinburgh, 64 Princess Street ; London, G1 Threadneedle Street. Nine-Tenths of the Profits of the Life Assur- ance Business are divided every Vive Years. The Tables of Rates are moderate. Fire Insurances effected on nearly every deseri ption of Property, at the LOWEST. RATES of Premium. c: Orrespo mding to the nature of the risk. Losske settled with promptitude and liber- ality. : i. W. DEBLOIS, General Agent. 9 Dec. 23, Prings Edward Subseribed Capital, Paid up Cupital, ° 1,2 Dee. i. HOMINY! A ents Per Pound, ee BEER & GOFE'S. Jan. 12, 1880. TO Leg. FEXHE SHOP on Upper Queen Street, occupiec. by Simon W. Crabbe, sion given the Ist June, 1580. ARCWD. WHITE, Ch’town, Dac. 22,1879.— taw Fs pres ne her Im new Posses- #-P or Sale. FEX\HE Land and Dwelling House owned and occupied by William "B. Heartz, situated on Euston st rect, opposite Admiral Bayfield’s dwelling. for further particulars apply to CHARLES HEARTZ, Queen Street. Jan. 5, 1830. Bones. Bones. FEXHE unds ot will pay fifty cents Cash per ewt. for all bones delivered at the Bone Mill, in the Royalty. No quantity less than one ewt. (112 lbs) taken. FRED, W. HYNDMAN, Agent, Ch town, Dive. 1, 1879 To Inventors aud Mechanics ATENTS and how to obtain them, Pamph- et of 60 pages free upon receipt of stamps or postage. - Address G{LMORE, SMITH & C©O., Solicitors of Patents, W: ashington, U0 ‘* UBSCRIBE for the DAILY EXAMINER, ) the Cheapest and mest Newsy Paper Published t1 the Provinces. Omen et sma eae SECOND EDITION THE DAILY E XAMINER. FEBRUARY u 1 1880 Garibaldi has married again. Spurgeon's docior preach for six months, says he must not Gladstone inherited great wealth, but lost much of it in mining speculations, Chinamen cannot understand why Eng- lishinen hate nice littl mice and love tripe. Gladstone made his first speech in Parliament in n 1833, at the age of twenty- three. Senator Wilmot is spoken of as the pro- bable successor of Lieutenant Governor Chandler. The Berlin Zietung has been eonfiscated in consequence of attacks upon the Government for groundless causes, The Mail and Globe both strongly denounce Parnel!, but appeal to the Canadians to aid the distressed 1 Lreland. It is understood that there are sixty private Bills in tuo list for the approaching session of the Dominion Parliament. The Great Council of the Canton of Ap- pensal, Switzerland, has voted the re-estab- lishment of capital punishment. Arrangements are being made for the colo- nization of three hundred English farmers at Turtle Mountain, Maniteba. They are to ar- rive at the end of next month, Goldwin Smith protests against the pro- posed Canadian Academy of Art being lo- cated at the Capital, which he terms “ that Arctic Lumber Village turned into a politi- eal cockpit.” Mr. Scnrziper.—An Ottawa despatch to the Halifax ‘‘ Chronicle” says:—-‘* Mr. Schreiber will shortly leave for the North- west with astatf of engineers, to take charge of that part.of the Canadian Pacific Rail- way between St. Vincent and section 15.” The tones of John Bright's voice, even in conversation, are said to attract and faci- nate. He has been heard by a distinguished literary man to repeat a stanza from Whittier with such expression that it seem ed to the auditor. ‘‘ the finest thing he ever 22 33 Messrs. Allan have purchased a new steamship of 360 feet keel, which is to be called the Hgyptian, and will with their new steamer Buenos Avres, now on her way from River Platte, be ready to take her place in the Allan Line, at the opening of naviga- tion. From the fact that Archduke Albrecht is to represent Austria at the 25th auniver sary of the Czar’s accession to the throne, the German press concludes that a rap- prochement between Austria and Russia is going on. The Archduke is recognized as a friend of Russia. A terrible story comes from Londonderry, New Hampshire, of the murder of Mrs. Dilllingham by her husband’s nephew, whe resided in the family. An investigation shows that the victim was also ravished. She was shot and cheked. The nephew then attempted to kill himself, inflicting a wound in his head, which, however, was not fatal. There is great excitement. The villian is in custody. The Sultan has ten servants whose special duty it is to unfold the carpets for him when he is going to pray ; ten to take care of his pipes ‘and ‘cigarettes ; two to dress his royal hair, and twenty to attend to his most noble clean shirts. There are a multitude of other attendants about the palace ; indeed, it is stated that eight hundred families and about four thousand persons live at his Majesty’s expense. He is an extravagent housekeeper; the annual expenditures of the palace are mentioned as nearly $14,000,- 000. The following practical toast was lately given at a school association dinner : Pll give you a toast, and you'll drink it I know, Both you whose thin tresses are white as the snow, And you whose young hearts it is fair to assume, Like our stocks and our statesmen, are all on the ‘* boom.” Tis our great public schools—may their in- fluence spread Until statesmen use grammar and dunces are dead, Until no one dare say, in this land of the free, ‘* He done ”’ for ‘‘ he did,” for ‘‘ its she.” 2s HOTEL ARRIVALS. or ‘‘it’s her” ROCELIN HOUSE. Feb. 10.—John R. Glever, Kensington ; M Mathesen, Bradalbane; Norman Nicholson, do; Lestock Anderson, St. Peters; James Stephenson, Fredericton; J McCabe, Tryon; W Pound, Malpeque Road. HANOVER HOUSE. Feb. 9.—James McGee, Bay View; Mr Bairnsfather, Summerside; Angus Gregor, New Glasgow. Feb. 10.—H Kenwedy, South port ; Hen: 'y MeGregor, do; Lemuel McLeod, Bradalbane | George Carroll, Lot 11; Mr Har- vey, Summerside ; ;R McInnes, Bay Fortune ; James McInnes, do; Wm. MeDonald, do. H |, 1880 NO. . 69 English Acquisitions in a The Republige Francaise, commenting on the reported cession to England of Agbome and a contemplated cession of Agoona and Popo, charges England with a design of gradually aequiring the whole coast of Guinea and ealls on the French Govern- ment to take precautionary measures in the interest of the French factories, which are really colonies. Like attempts, it saye, on the Slave Coast were defeated in 1870 and 1875, through the ability of the French and the resistance of the natives attached to them. France dees not claim a mono- poly, for Africa istarge and rich enough for all; but she must insist on the status quo, or on. the same ect for her own rights which she shows te those of thers. The Ree publique Francaise, gn the ether hand coné pliments England Frange on the result so far of their joint action in Egypt. | In- stead of killing Egypt and fighting for the spoils, they have rejuvenated her and earn- ed her gratitude. They have thus been clever as well as generous, for in seund politics, asin law, the assassin is not his victim’s heir. How to Get Rid of dadeatiit (The Spectator. ) A poor woman, much given to gossip, but anxious to soar to higher things, is ex- plaining to Miss Hopkins her means for ridding her house of the gossips of the neighborhood, In answer to a remark of Miss Hopkins, that ‘‘ the Bible tells us to be courteous, ard that to turn folks ont of our house, however much in the way they may be, is apt to look rude,” she replied ; ‘*'The first thing I did was te get the brush and dust pan, and lay them handy ’gainst any neighbor comed in. Seon in pops Mrs. Smith. ‘Mrs. Smith,’ says I, ‘yeu won't mind my doing a bit of dustin,’ will yon, while you're talkin’? Of course she couldn't but be agreeable to that. So down ou my knees 1 goes, and begins to dust with all my might. But somehow, it was a& very curieus thing, and the dust allus would gather just under the chair wy neighbor was a sittin’ on. She’d shift and shift, bat ’'d allus be arter her with my old dust pan; and the dust ‘ad get up her nose, and she’d begin to sneeze ever so-— ketcher! ketcher!—-and soon shed say, ‘Well, I think—ketcher—I’ll call in another day, Mrs. Simpson, as I see you are— ketcher—busy.’ And so, in less than a week I had dusted all my neighbors ont of my house. 08 ER 6 ee A Meteor. Last evening, while the people from some of the churches were returving home after the services, they were surprised at the ap- pearance of a very bright light in the east- ern sky. The evening was very dark, and there was a sudden fiash as of the appear- ance of a very bright moon, though the light was of a peculiarshade. The meteor, as it is supposed to have been, was prob- ably what is knewn as the bolis, or fire ball, 2 luminous meteor of great splendor, moving with . considerable velocity at various altitudes and frequently of great magnitude. An authority says that ‘‘many extraerdinary meteors have been seen and recorded, one of the most remarkable being that deseribed by Blagden, in ‘Philosophi- cal Transactions.’ It oecurred on the 18th August, 1783, about 9 p. m., and was visible over a wide extent of Europe, from the north of Ireland to Rome, frequently changing its form and color. It crossed the zenith at Edinburgh, and then ap- peared round and of a greenish color, cast- ing ashade upon the ground of a similar tint; a tail of considerable length attended it. At Greenwich it appeared like two bright balls, followed by a number of others, connected together by a luminous body, and finally terminating in a blaze, tapering toa point; the colors ef the balls were different.—Moncton Times, Feb 9th. —e 44> o-—_ -—-—- -- — Buying and Selling Virgins. The practice of exhibiting young women in public places and selling them to hus- bands is not a custom peculiar to modern civilization, as the careless reader of the historian, Thackeray, might suppose. But the old mode of operations were different. We read, for instance, that in ancient Ba- bylon it was customary to assemble on a certain day all the virgins of a~-marriage- able age. The most beautiful were first put up, and the man who bid the largest sum of money gained possession of her. The second in personal appearance follow- ed, and the bidders gratified themselves with handsome wives according to the depth of their purses. But alas! it seems that there were in Babylon some ladies for whom no money was likely te be offered ; yet these also Were disposed of—so provi- dent were the Babylonians, ‘‘ When all the beautiful virgins,” says the historian, ‘were sold, the crier ordered the most de- formed to stand up, and after he had open- ly demanded who would marry her for a small dowry, she was at last consigned to the man who would be satisfied with the least ; and in this manner the money aris- ing from the sale of the handsome served asa portion to those who were either of disagreeable looks or that had any other imperfection. ” This custom prevailed about five hundred years before our Saviour, and from the standpoint of the ‘‘ imperfect” virgins seems to be not withent commend- able features. ML le PEM LEAL cme ome 3 p So ~ arose \/ ym ee ee » + Ps “22 —