Ln i: A INTIME 0 o. a ee VOL 6. — Tue Vatty EHEXAMINER {s l’ublished every Evening. OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STRERTS, Charlottetown, P. E. L Kates OF SuPSCRIPTION : Six Months, - . Three Months, - - One Menth, : - Ine Week, : - $ oorre BSss a “ a@ Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- erly, or half-yearly advertisements, on appli- cation. W. L. COTTON, J. W. MITCHELL, Manager. Office Sup’t Prince Edward Island RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 13. Winter Arrangement, TO COME INTO FORCE TUESDAY, December 2nd, 1879, ___ TRAINS GOING WEST. ee Nos. 1 & 3 No. 5, STATIONS. Mixed. Mixed, Georgetown ..... Dp 8.20 a. m. Cardigan.........} **8.46 “ Mt Stew’t.J une... Dp oy “ Royalty Jnnetion’ ‘* 11.27 * Ar 11.50 a.m. Charlottetown. ee Dp 8.00 am Dp 3.00 pm Royalty Junction; ** 8.22 “* | ** 3.23 * North Wiltshire..| ** 9.14 ‘* | ‘* 4.15 * Hunter River....{ °° 9.30 “* | ** 430 * Kreadalbane..... 10.07 “* “oe * County Line,....| ‘£10.17 “ mye“ Kensington ...... "le. a s side Ar 11,30a m/Ar 6.30 pm uUmmer: Ceoeeesr Dp 1.30 P m Weilington.:.. :| “ 219 * Port eM... ... ‘© 3.00 * PUA s sss v0 *« OR? Albesten:: 35°55: (o--8F-*¢ Tignish ,,..4.+.. P™%6.10 ** TRAINS GOING EAST. . Nos. 2 and 4, No. 6, Stations, Mixed. Mixed. Tignish.......g% Dp 6.30-am Alberton... .&. 7.25 ** | O’Leary......-.- Port HM 2. uses: * D646 f; Wellington ......| ‘* 10.22 “ ’ psid Ar 11.10 am S’mm’rsi D.. oder a Dp 2.30 p m|Dp 7.30 am Kensington ...... ee Se County»Line.. ..} ‘* 3.43 “* “ 6.28 ¢ Breedalbane..... 1 7 2.53 _** smo Hunter River....| “ 4.30 * - 2a North Wiltshire..| ‘* 446 ** 1 “* 9.48 ** Royalty Junction’ ** 5,37 “ | ‘10.38 “ Ar 6.00 pm/Ar 11,00 am Charlottetown.... Dp 2.30 pm Royalty Junction; ‘* 2.53 ** ; ae =: to ** Mt. Stw't Junc .. Dp. 4.15.44 Cardigan.......-| ** 5.35 ** Georgetown .....|Ar 6.00 pm SOURIS BRANCH. P'rains Going West. —— — STATIONS. | No. 7, Mixed. Souris ..% 3.9% £EG5 Depart 7.15 a, m. 2 Harmony.......-++-- - 7.37 i Gt. Peter @ ..ccee acs o 855 ‘ Mevdlh.. +s <cnceseves “4 9.334 Mt. Stewart Junction.! Arrive 10.10 a. m. ~~ 'rnins Going East. No. 8, Mixed. eee Depart 4.15 p. m. a STATIONS. Mt. Stewart Junction. Mester. 4 8s 32%. 3% — MO, PORES cc ccc+ ees | - ae, Harmosy.. .....0'2:.- . 2 a Arrive 7.10 “ ALEX. MAONAB, ? Sup’t and Engineer, Railway Office, Chtown, Nov. 28, 1879. pat pres h ane sp sj kea pio 61 OPENED THIS DAY, Fancy Wool Breakfast Shawls, Plaine; do do do, Colored Wool Squares, NEW FEATHERS, NEW RATS, NEW FRILLINGS, PLAIN & FANCY VELVETEENS. BEER & SONS. Dec. 3, 1879. MPLOYMENT.—In every village and township of P. E. Island not yet us pied, one active, intelligent Lady or G man ean obtain a most respectable and v profitable engagement. Address, with particulars, dD. DOWNIE & CO., Box 1964, Montreal Tarn Exa Se CHARLOTTETOWN, PRING J.B. Ma Queen Has in stock Thirty Th Winter and Drawers, Cleth TERMS CASH. Queen Strect, Charlottetown, Nov. 18, 187 Kveryone can be suited in Prices, Styles and (Quality. fail to visit this Store when purchasing your requirements. J. B. MACDONALD. E EDWARD ISLAND, FRI BSO,000O. caonald, Street, ousand Dollars worth of Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots & Shoes, &c., The whole of which must be sold during the Fall and Season. SPECIAL ATTENTION IS DIRECTED TO THE BIUCK OF MENS AND BOYS CLOT In Ulsters, Overcoats, Jackets, Pants & Vests, Worsted Suits, Linders NG, and Fur Caps, &c. Don’t our ye BRITISH WAREHOUSE. At prices that New Mantles, Rew Friilings, New Uisters, New Cottons, New Flannels, This is a bona fide sale. selves. W. Charlottetown, October 8, 1879. 20: As W. & A. BROWN are about makinga change in ‘their ‘Firm they are now selling their Large Stock of FALL & WINTER GOODS, defy competition. New Cloths, hew Tweeds, New Dress Goods, New Clouds, New Veiveieens, And a large line of Woollen Goods, of every description, all of which they intend to close out within the next five months. Come one, come all, and see for your- & A. BROWN. Charlottetown. Prince Rdward Island Branch —OF THK— NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE ‘FIRE AND LIFE. Subscribed Capital, $9,733,332.00, Paid up Capital, - 1,216,666.66' CHIEF 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 deseription of Property, at the LOWEST RATES of Premium. corresponding to the nature of the risk. Lossgs settled with promptitude and liber- ality. G. W. DeBuots, General Agent. Dec. 14. f ’ QUEEN INSURANCE U0Y,, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING, i* SURANCE effected on all kinds of Build- i 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 j ; ! June, 1877— j No. 35 Water St.,| BRITISH AMERICA INSURANCE CO. — Assurance Company, FIRE AND MARINE. ee eee Cash Capital & Assets . $1,176 491.45, INCORPORATED 1833. -_——__-—_—— liead Office, - Toronto, Ont. Risks taken on all descriptions{of Property at lowest rates. PROMPT SETTLEMENT OF LOSSES. HORACE HASZARD, Agent. Office, South Side Queen Square. July 10, 1879. : BRIGKS. BRICKS. UILDERS AND CONTRACTORS take notice that the Charlottetown Brick Company will be prepared to deiiver in JUNE and JULY next at their yard in the Royalty, and in Carlottetown, any number of Brieks up to ONE MILLION, at prices lower than ever before placed in this market. Reserve your orders. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Agent. Ch’town, Dec. 1, 1879— pat 2w HE WEEKLY EXAMINER. — Per sous having relatives or friends abroad, and desiring to keep them informed concerning P. E. Island, cannot do soin a better or cheap. er way than by subscribing to Taz Weex.yr EXAMINER. Sent, postpaid, to any address m Great Britain, the United States, or the Dominion, on receipt of One Dollar. SECOND EDITION Tuk lowest thermometer reading last night was 0.3, or about one-third of a degree above ZOTO. Another lot of Acme Club Skates just re- ceived; a few pairs of Silver-Plated.—W. E. Dawson & Co. Boston is rapidly coming into prominence as a sole-leather market, and now claims to handle 2,200,000 sides per annum. WE understand that a number of our young men intend starting an Amateur Dramatic Club in this town, this winter. —/ournal. DipHTHERIA., —Twenty-five cases of diphth- eria are reported at Rose Bay, Lunenburg Co., N. S. There bave been ten deaths within twenty-one days at that place. CALL and see the Vases that are being sold at half-price. Vases marked $2.60, selling at $1.10, and Toilet Sets and Vases accordingly at the Agricultural Store.—Rozpgerr May, dl3 3i THE cable despatch stating that the cases against the Irish agitators had been aban- doned by the Government, is untrue; the prisoners are out on bail, but have to appear at Dublin for trial. THERE is said to be a rapidly growing feel- ing in Russia that war must be engaged in with some one or other, as a panacea for in- ternal disturbances at present affecting the peace of that country. A REpPorT from the vicinity of Edmonton, Manitobah, says that one farmer there raised this last season, 7,0V0 bushels of wheat, and that another raised 4,000, for all of which a ready loeal market was found: Ficurine still continues near Cabul, and the situation has become very serious for the British forces. Preparations are being made for combined and decisive action against the expected general attack of the enemy. Tur Pustic Works Department. —After this month, the services of all the employes at the-olfice of the Public Work, St. John, are to be dispensed with, except Mr. H. F. Perley, who is to be removed to Ottawa. THE poultry trade of the Ottawa district is assuming large dimensions. Yesterday 12 car loads passed over the Canada Central Rail- way for Boston and New York, and five were forwarded from Perth for the same destina- tion. Donation Visit.—At the Parsonage, Be- deque, on Christmas Eve, it is anticipated that the friends of Rev. E. N. Archibald, will gather for a pleasant re-union and donation. Glad to see any who would like to enjey an evening.-—Journal. Tue harbor is nearly full of ice. The ‘St. Lawrence” and ‘Princess of Wales’’ arrived this (Friday) morning, and had some diffi- culty in getting in. ‘The brought all freight remaining at Pictou, together with all mails to date. GerMANY and Austria are to have a uniform tariff and a customs union, They will thas become virtually ene great nation whose in- fluence will be irresistibly powerful on the Danube and Baltic. But as an offset to this customs union of the Germans, who are to be treated also to a Latin union which will com- prehend France, Spain, Italy; Belgium, and and possibly Switzerland. Great Britain will be left out in the cold, of course. Well, let her form a customs union with her own col- onies? These changes are very probably in the not far distant future.—New Times and Reporter. Jusr before the last Ontario eiections 2 placard was issued in the city of Toronto in the interest of Mr. Mowat, promising that, if elected, he would send a million of money in the city in the erection of new Parliament buildings. The issue of this placard was de- nounced as a bribe, and the Globe made great efforts to prove that Mr. Mowat was in no way responsible for it. Whether he was or not, there appears to be no doubt of the fact stated init. The Government have now re- solved to erect these legislative buildings, and have selected the site of the Queen’s Park up- on which to erect them. A million of dollars is the estimate which, judgingby the usual ex- periences in such cases, especially under the present Ontario Government, means that two millions will be expended before they are fin- ished. Good News from England. The wood circulars, just received, and from which we make extracts to-day, disclose a fur- ther gratifying advance in the price of deals. But still later news by cable has lead to a sale of deals here at $9 a thousand, previous sales having barely averaged $6, while some have been sold at the ruinous price of $4.50. Those who were able to hold and yard their deais, and can now ship them, between the advance in lumber and the decline in freights, will make a nice thing of it. Our London corres- pondents, in a letter which we cannot publish to-day, also send us good news, more espe- cially as regards freights. They say : The great advance which we noted in East- ern home freights, last month, has not only been maintained, but a farther noticeable rise has taken place. Eighty shillings to Dundee and eighty-five shillings to London has been aid in Calcutta for ready vessels; 70s. has a paid for teak, 50s. sugar and 60s. hemp from Manilla; 50s. Madras coast to London. This is an enormous advance on the freights Se MINER. DAY, DECEMBER 19, 1879. a ______ a ae NO, 25 The Island’s New Senator. Otrawa, Dec. 16.—J. S. Carvell, of Charlottetown, P. E. L., has been appoint- ed to the Senate in the place of Senator Haviland, who was made Governer, some time ago. —- -4b>oe——__—___——— Death of an Old Politician. Ontario advices announce the death, after a lingering illness, of Mr. Daniel Galbraith, M. P., for North Lanark. He was born in Glasgow in 1813, and came to this country when eight years of age. He represented North Lanark in the Ontario Assembly, from 1867 to 1872, and in the House of Commons from 1872 until his death. At the last Gen- eral Election he was electec| over his Liberal Conservative opponent by 43 majority. The deceased gentleman was one of the most high- ly esteemed members of the House of Com- mons, and his death will be universally re- gretted by both political parties. Great Libera!l-Conservative Ban- quet in Honor of Sir 8S. L. Tilley. Sr. Jonny, N. B., Dec. 17.—The Conserva- tive banquet at the Royal this evening in honor of Sir 8. L. Tilley, was a grand affair, and continued until an early hour this morn- ing. About one hundred gentlemen sat down to tables loaded with all the delicacies of the season. Among those present were Atty. General Fraser, Hons. Robert Robinson, Robt. Young, George % King, Judge Watters, Judge Palmer, General Warner, John Boyd, Esq., Dr. Tuck, James Harris, Esq., etc. In responee to toasts, speeches were made by the United States Consul, General Warner, John Boyd, Dr. Tuck, C. N. Skinner, and others, Sir Leonard’s speech was received with loud cheering, and was a masterly effort. It was composed of a justification of the National Policy Tariff, and of of his own political career. Sir Leonard leaves for Ottawa to-morrow morning. Addresses will be presented to him at Sussex and Monction. ~ <p - —--- Daring Robbery. at Berwick, N. 8. A FARMER ROBBED OF $1,000, THE HARD EARNINGS OF 20 YEARS. On Thursday the 11th inst., Mr. William Foster, a respectable farmer, who resides about two miles from Berwick, and who had been engaged during the evening in his cellar, his wife and father being in the sitting room, when about returning, dis- covered that a trunk containing his hard earned savings of over twenty years—$950, in bank bills and gold—-a wateh and some clothing, in all over $1,000, had mysteri- ously disappeared. A search areund the preniises revealed the fact that the robbers came in a waggon, drove up the lane a short distance from the house, and left the team, proceeding to the heuse and seeing everything favorable for their plans to sue- ceed, procured a ladder from the barn, by which means they reached the bedroom, forcing up the window and carrying off the trunk, which they evidently thought it bet- ter to open at a more convenient season, as delays might prove dangerous. The trunk has since been found, broken open, and minus cash and watch. The clothing was left ; probably it did not fit. The robbery, for daring and skilfulness in its execution, is only equalled by the Bank of Nova Sco- tia robbery, as it must have been done quite early in the evening, while Mr. F, was in the cellar and the others in the sit- ting room. Amongst the bills taken was an old £5, Nova Scetia currency, Bank of Nova Scotia, which had been in Mr. Fos- ter’s possession for over 20 years, which was the nest egg of the pile. No clue to the robbers so far.—Hzxz. Herald. The Reform ot Turkey. The London Telegraph states that Baker Pasha has started on his mission and will speedily arrive at Aleppo. To what extent his recommendations will be carried out re- mains to be seen. Yet it would be idle to ignore the fact that. alongside his pro- gress through the Provinces runs the parallel fact of Turkey’s increasing and apparently helpless poverty. The appoint- ment of an Asiatic gendarmerie, the reform of administration, and the consti- tution of proper juicial tribunals, together with the the many other chauges which have been pressed upon the Porte, all require money for their realization, and against that indubitable preposition is ranged the utter emptiness of the Ottoman treasury. What steps should be taken to place the Porte ina better position is not so clear as that some- thing must be speedily done to avoid a col- lapse. In the opinion of those who know the country, there is still within its confines an abundance of wealth, if it were only properly collected or husbanded. Yet itis not by the assistance of Greek bankers in Galato and their temporary loans at high rates of inter- est upon fresh mortgages that the Turk- ish Goverament can be righted. Some sweeping measure, which should place such ports as Smyrna, Trebizond, and Salonica, to say nothing of Constanstinople. with its year- ly record off five million tons of shipping, in the hands of European administrators is needed, and this should be energetically pro- posed to the Sultan’s advisers. The experi- ment which has been tried in Egypt, if not adopted in its entirety by Turkey, might with certain modifications be carried out for a time at least, and money would thus be provided for the pressing needs of the Government, Without some such plan reforms may be pro- posed, and inspectors may travel through Asia without any result. With it, and some such changes in the Ottoman Ministry as shall put an end to the intrigues which are daily report- ed from Stamboul, an era of prosperity might of last year; in some cases nearly double.—<?. John Telegraph, yet dawn upon Turkey® argent ne oa 22 Se ee gp en seeyn ere SN NYCRR a ENE HET acetates se 1 rent teen ance na en NN