— Tue Datty EXAMINER. ~_ SANUARY 6, 1882, Ir is said that the new United States Secretary of State does not approve of Mr. | Blaine’s circular abeut the Panama Canal. Ex-Governor Srymovur, of New York, eet Se enn seneat NT THE DAILY HXAMINER Twelvemonth’s Disasters. i Se Death of Lieut. Col. MeGili td 'r will startle our readers to learn that | Lieut. Colonel McGill departed this life | COUNTED, to-day. He was out walking yesterday ietincioe afternoon, spent some time at the residence of Donald McKinnon, Esq., and returned | ton’s baleful forecastings, the world still is, to his lodgings early in the evening. While! yet the record of the past twelvemonth ‘ . ca ie : on his way thither be felt a little dizzy ;| shows a fearful estalogue of disasters both arrival at the and on his Although, notwithstanding Mother Ship- | has written « letter upon the North-West of Canada, and the protective policy of the United States. He praises the North-West, and declares that in it ** there is a country | owned by England with greater grain and unexpected. stock growing capacity than all the lands | Colonel eit : tol rt vie . on the Baltic, the Black Sea, and the} a second and only surviving a Mediterranean combined.” He points out; 4° aaa re re uM Gil. E 7 of ~ ie te the farmers of the United States that | 0! the late James McGill, Bsq., of Neti ’ Garrel, Kirkmicheel, Dumfriesshire; the Commercial Union of the British ; damica” & +h Parish : ' anc yas aucates ar the 5 E:wpire movement possesses the elements = Mayo ' ot:: Demtsler:« Aeadein of vitality, and that if it succeed they could Me ans his Islan i 1839 ae ae —by imposing a tariff tax of ten or twenty ecame to this wet LS 1ake ee il ; f erou nerchant. i 58, esnts per bushel upon ‘* American” wheat |*® PFospe! 1 caik rf Lal eas ted Hicl : 1: « Y: j S69, he was uappointec igh and other grains, and allowing Canadian | <8*" — eee i : es ™ all 3 aie. Heri oO: eens & nD aha Lat at wheat and other products to enter her ports | hi, . Got & en's ( , fat Mah “ ; : : iiice with credit. i several cars | free, bankrupt the farmers of the American | hy Om Ar ; : ‘ nd Slate ot Oudiea y : > > : ; 2 enresel a | tn “ 14 CIBITICct ¢ ueen North-West. By a like discrimination aa | Be presen + inane ‘ke. chi and other f: .).| County in the General Assembly, and from to beef pork, cheese, and other farui pro- | 1863 till the last election he held a seat in ducts, England could cripple, if not ruin, | 4008 “4! Whe test © ss & . Ini Rh fi: Juco. )the Legisiative Council. He was a strong farmers all over the United States. Jug- | er ee Face eae handle free trade is becoming about as | *4¢vocate of Con ee ee unpopular in England as it was in Canada| ®t one of the famous ‘‘ ninety-four” ; and aT f ee jin the last general election was one of the in 1878. oe ae | Reform candidates for a seat in the Hoise . : -- oe j ‘ Tux ‘following statement shows the popu- | °f Commons Relat: sh iaslalneld lation of the varjous Provinces of Canada| Colone! M-Gill tock a leading port in the ‘ Vv 4 — . | formation of Volunteer Companies, and for Throvghout the | l away has been an} his death was | to be assisted up stairs. night he was ill, and his spirit passec this afternoon. Though he ailing man for several years, McGill was born in aa 42 - , |several years held the rank of Lieut.- — re seers Ley lonel, Ist ¢ m’s County Regiment of Ontario 1 913,469 1,620,851 1,396.09) | Uetonet, 48 dueens County | wagiane Quebec. al. 1 453. 469 1.191.516 1.131.566) lila He was an enthysiagtic Scotchman, Pn nao, . sient. i , ,vu * «sy a h . oe Nova Seotia 449,555 387.800 330 857 | the leading spirit in the games of the N. Brunswick 321,129 285, 594 252,047 | Caledonian Club, and a staunch and prac- P.E. Island 107,781 94,021 80 861 | tical friend of the farmers of Prince Kd- Manitoba. . 49,509 11,953 ..| ward Island. Many new and improved BritishColum- | varieties of grain and potatoea were intro- bia and N. W. | duced to the Island by him. Indeed the Territories, 169,000 75,700 34,516) development of our agricuitural interesta jwccupied hig mind to the jast.. Only yes o 927 an ‘ 2 O92Q | ‘ aw 4,350,933 3,670,435 3,206,233 | terday evening he conversed with the Increase in population during the de-| writer on the necessity of improved cade, 680,498, against an increase of 464,- | culture and the introduction _of 1% in the preceding decade. The actual | high-class stock. He possessed an active inctease and percentage of growth in the| mind and a kind heart. His death will be several Provinces during the past ten years | mourned by many friends. : j were as follows :-— OREO TE SS The Civic Elections. Actual Per increase cent. scinsoll Ontario........ -seccense 202,609 18 Tue Civic Elections take place on Wed- Quebec. ......... 166,953 14 |nesday, the 25th inst.. The Mayor and ON Raa 137 he f dade 1: trcetealiibies enti New Brunswiek........... 35,585 a ee err er ee eles Prince Edward Island...... 13,760 iS SRE ETE i a RI Ward 1 Manitoba..... eee 37,556 414 RR age anal ae ee _ De AP <0, Gomme Davey. ee ge aN ate Trz following is a statement of the cus- ENE 5 Fle ora's a Ja oe: 7 toms and excise revenue of Canada for the Ml re ee mor month of Dec. 1831, compared with the} ‘The record of these gentlemen onght to returns for Dec. 1880 : | be a subject of careful consideration by the CUSTOMS. |citizena. So far as finances go, it will pro December, 1881,.......... . $1,349 542| bably be found that the expenditure of & ee ee 1,260,846| the past year has not only been met by —————/the income, but that nearly $3,000 of Increase for Decenber, 1851,...... $35,695 |income have been used in payment for EXCISE. debentures whieh fell due. Had the December, 1881, ....... 055-000: ++ «$565,790 | income tax ” been collected there wou!d “ A aie . 570.845 | have been quite a large surplus to apply to the reduction of the debt due the Union Bank, Regarding the administration Depart- ment, it may be said that a large amount of fairly good work was expended upon ee Decrease for December, 1881,...... $5,065 The following is a similar statement for the last six months of 1880 and 1881: house, he had | to life and property, such, in fact, as few | years have equalled. VIOLENT HURRICANES and cyclones have raged both on sea and land, especially ou the British coast, even since the terrific gales and heavy snow storms of the middle of January, during which many lives were lost. This was fol- lowed on March 7 by a destructive storm which swept over the coast of Aberdeeti shire, wrecking nine vessels and taking one hendred lives. The most deadly storm of the year came in October, during whose course eighty five down, many with all on board. Another i storm nearly equally viclent and destruc- tive passed over the same coasts dur- ing the middle of December. France and the Atlantic, including the eastern coasts of Canada, have not escaped the last storm, causing the loss of the *‘ Bath City” with part of her crew. In China also, a Novem- ber typhoon dest-oyed 2,000 houses, and a storm in the same month took 110 lives in the Mediterranean. On our own lakes and in the United States the effects of these hurricanes have been equally feit. Mis- souri, Lowa, Kansas, and Minnesota were ravaged by them, many lives being lost. In the last State the town ef New Ulm was swept by a cyclone on July 16, thirty per- sons being killed and 100 houses wrecked. On August 27 the same thing eccurred on the coasts of Georgia and South Carolina. AVALANCHES AND LANDSLIPS have been equall; fatal. A snow slide in the Wabsatch Mountains killed eleven men on Jan. 16. An avalanche in February destroyed the Savey village of Brevieres, killing fifteen persens, while a landalip in September killed 240 people and over- whelined thirty houses at Elm, Switzer- land. EARTHQUAKES in divers places have destroyed life and swallowed up villages. On March 5 half of Casamiccioloe, on the Island of Ischia, in the Mediterranean, disappeared. On April 3 one of tle most fatsi ever known devastated the Island of Scio, in the Gre- ‘ian Arehipelago, destroying 45 villages, villing 7,000 persons, injuring 10.000, and rendering 40,000 homelesa. Six months afterwards Chapgeri, in Asiatic Turkey, was similarly visited, eleven persons being killed, FIRES have been unusually fatal. In a New York tenement house on Jannary 4, ten women and chijdren were burned to death ; thirteen in a New Hampshire poor house on the 7th; fifteen orphans on February 7 in a Roman Catholic Asylum at Scran- ton, Pa ; 100 persons in the Tialian Opera House, Nice, on March 23 ; eleven persons on October 12 in a Philadelphia factory ; and possibly 700 in the Ring Theatre, Vienna, on the 8th of December. =The Quehee fire in June destroyed 800 houses, entailing a loss of $1,500,000. In the same month a Swiss village in Valais of 300 houses was utterly desiroyed. In Canada ws have seen besides the well-nigh des- truction of Woudstock, N. B., the dis- astrous fires at Woodbridge, Barrie, and elsewhere. D ° oe po s 40 nar | te streets, while the usual provision was vay * — wenes Sipe pela ‘a made against fires, and the police a 0, 362,083 | were quite inadequate to the oo o4, requirements of law and_ order. Increase for 1831,. Ss ee - $1,620,041 tt ia to bs hoped that candidates for the ome eaten vacant positions will be early in the field. July to December, 1880,.......... $2,829,562] The recent lessons of careless and hasty 7 a ISS1,....-..66, 3,073,275 | elections, in overdrawn accounts, broken ose viq| Danks, etc., should not be lost upon Increase for 1881,... ............ $243,713 | citizens In the absence of any great Total increase of customs and excise from July to December, 1881, $1,863,754. -_-——_-—_— ~~» <p> = question to be decided, give us good, care- ful, pendent men of principle, and it is more than probable that the affairs of the corporation will be well and carefully and prudently administered, = Good-Natured | Men. Tue Halifax Chronicle says that, ‘since its organization, through the energy of its executive, results have been achieved and concessions gained from railways, stage lines, etc., etc., by the Maritime Commer- cisl Travellers’ Assuciation, fully demon- strating the wisdom of its furmation. It is abundantly evident that the Maritime Com- mereis! Travellers’ Association did not commence its career of usefulness one day too soon, and that the business of our wholesale houses would have gained mater- ially had it Seen established some years azo. Some one has said that it takes a certain amount of heat to make a bullfrog croak, and it can scarcely be denied that there is a good deal of the bullfrog nature about Halifax merchants. But when they once get waked up they usually croak to some purpose. The merchants of the Upper Provinces have been alive to the vaiue of concerted action, and, through the Commercial Travellers Association of Mon- treal and Toronto, have not only largely controlled the trade of the West, but have been strong competitors and aggressive rivals for the trade of the Maritime Pro- vinces. To meet this rivalry and competi- tion, and to give the fullest play to Mari- time energy and pluck, to combine and systemize common interests of the highest commercial value and importance, the M. CC. T. A. has been formed, and has} banks, savings-banks, life-insurauce com- the best wishes of al! patriotic people | panies, seem to be generally remarkable whose ears are familiar with the voice of | for sunny good nature. They are selected old ocean. to watch the active officers, and their sup- posed watchfulness lends credit to the cor- poration. But millions of dollars are atolen every year without the knowledge of these prominent directors, who probably think it their main duty az gentlemen not The Centenary Magasine eays:—‘‘ It is not so wonderful, after all, that popular elections put this sort of good-uatured men into responsible places. The marvel is that men of business training do the same thing in commercial affairs. They generally select the good fellow for a bank cashier, forexample. Heis agood man to meet the public, he will bring business to the bank. But they do not refiect on the amount of distress it will give their good natured cashier to say bo, when some tot tering business house or some speculating adveuturer seeks an ‘‘accommodation.” Ts accommodate is what the good-natured man likes to do—it is ernel to ask him to refuse the people wha beat like waves against the walls of a moneyed institution. Sooner or later the obliging cashier grows tired of the everlasting no, and the un- stable borrowers ‘effect an entrance,” as the reporters say of burglars. When the bank fails everybody is astonished—“the cashier was always the best fellow in the work.” They do not refiect that his yood fellowship was actually his disyualification. Directors in financial corporations, such as WasHINeTon advices state that the esti- mates of the cost of the United States Government for the fiscai year ending June 30th, sums up a total of $340,462,507, | an increase of $42,259,785 over the expen- | to give offence to the executive ofticers ef diture of the current year. There is an | their institutions by overmuch watchful tucrease of expenditure estimated for| ness. It is notorious that the bank and every branch of the public service, exeept- | insurance examiners of the State often find ing the Treasury and Post Office depart-|loans cf the most improper kind on the men's. In the former of these a saving of books of life-insurance cempanies and $14,470,000 will be effected by the reduc- |savings- banks. The directors would not tion of principal, and the reduction of | stoop to examine too closely into the ad- interest upon the public debt, while the| ministration of the institution to the sup- Post Office department has been enabled to port of whose credit they have freely lent cut down the expenditure $1,900,000 by | their names. They are good-natured ae- cancellation of the swindling Star Route|cessories to crimea which leave many a contracts. The Navy department esti-| family penniless, ” mates have been augmented more dees | four saiilion dollars, or from $16,124,172 | to $20,327,806, with a view. we presume, to providirg the country with an iron-clad navy and better coast defences. The worst | M feature in the estimates is the enormous| increase in the Interior department expen. diture, which is placed at $112,665,042 in | 1832 3, against $60,186,787 in the current | year This increase has been caused by the Arcears of Pensions Act, an Act which seens destined to cost the country an | enormons sum of money, and to nalhfy all the advantages which otherwise might | gecrue th the people throvigh the reduction | in the pablie debt. Weather Bulletin. Meee Probabilities for the next 24 hours for the arvtime Provinces. Toroyto, January 6—10 a. m. Moderate to fresh winds, fair milder w . . A worn tothe ladies! Lo not exchange your old sewing Mach'ne for a new ore; but fotch it to me and i will repair it and make it as gootl as new or no charge made. —WYLLIAM N, shop on corner of Princé and Grafton treets, Charlottetown, P. BE. 1. nov l tf wy The bush fires of September swept East Michigan and caused tho loss of 309 lives, several villages, and much pro- property in thar State; the. same cause operating equally disastrously in Canada, especially in Muskoka. DEADLY EXPLOSIONS have been common. In the United States five men perished in March in an Evanston (Wyoming) mine, and eleven, in Septem- ber, through a powder explosion at Mar- quette, Michigan. Seventeen men were lost in a Staffordshire (England) colliery, in February; many were killed by powder at Maaaltan, Merico, in Angust, and about forty in an Italian sulphur mine in Novem- ber. The British war steamer ‘' Doterel” was blown up in the Strait of Magellan, April 26, 143 men perishing, and a naph- tha explosion on the ‘‘ Solway,” at Glas- gow, the 16th of November,desiroyed eleven lives. MURDERS AND ASSASSINATIONS have been all to common. Those of the Emperor of Russia and President Garfield exeited the most horror and pity. While the Lefroy business and the slaying of Lieutenant Roper in the barracks at Chat. ham, Engiand, with others at home and in the States, have caused us to sup our fill of horrors, OTHER ACCIDENTS, so called, have ruled heavily. Among these have been the upsetting of a ferry boat, with the drowning of tweive persons, at Elgin, Lil, the coilapse of the excursion steamer ‘* Victoria,” near London, Ont, May 24, 200 people being drowned or suffo- cated; the wreck of the ‘‘Jennie Gilchrist” and the loss of a dozen lives on the Missis- sippi, at Rock Island, October ’27; a casual. ty like that of Elvin, on the Dniester River, aixty-three persons beng drowned; and the fall of several tiers of seats at a Marseilles bull fight, killing twenty-seven people, and wounding 306. There has been only one uausually serous railroad accident—that one being the plunge of a Mexican railroad train with a slender bridge into a frightful chasm, June 24, when 200 persons, mostly soldiers, were killed. But the collision at Charenton, France, September 5, which killed nineteen people, was bad enough, as was that the other day in the tunnel ef the North London Railway at Canonbury. 2 Lee Conviction, On the 3lst Decomber, at Mill View, before James H. Bourke, J. P., William Bradley was convicted and fined in the sum of twenty-five cenis and costs, for an as- sault upoa John Dogherty. Mill View, January 2, 1882. The Irish National Land League of New York, on Friday, gave a grand ball in aid the fund of $260.000 which the Chicago eonveation deternifned to raise. The Oatario Gover: ment is again invite ing tenders for th. new Parliament build- it gs, to be received up to Thursday, 16th Feoruary. The tenders will be opened while the Legislsture is in segsion, detinite a¢tion ‘will probkbly be taken. Na A OE een : or " ier Wael | 1HE REDE-ROLL OF HORKORS FOR THE YEAR | Singten, on the 27th Dec., by the Re ve — OF GRAcE 18$1—MoTHER sHIPTON pis- ; McKay, Miss Amanda M., youngest daughter | ships went | MARRIE MG, At the residence of the bride’s father, Ken- of k. ‘Tuplin, Esq., to W. D. McKay, et the | Charlottetown \s ocllen Miils. At the English Church, Georgetown, by | Rev. D. H. Hiwd, Edward H. Norton, to Misa Annie W., third daughter of George Suther land, Eey., all of St. Peter's Road. ! At the Manse, Alberton, 25th nit., by Rev. | A. F. Carr, A. M., Archibald Matthews, Al-| bertun, to Augeline Betts, Lot 7. At the residence of the bride’s parents, on | the 27th Dec., by Rev. N. McKay, Mr. W. | David McKay, of Charlottetown, to Miss} Amanda Maria, daughter uf Reuben Tuplia, | Keq , of Kensington. At the Manse, Summerside; on the 28th | Dee., by thesame, Mr, Chatles H. Carruthers, vf Cape T'raver-e, to Miss Anna Dawson, mi | { | iryon. Epa cB. At Brackley Point Read} om Friday Dee 9, i8si, Klizabeth Wisemam, relict of the late Charl.s Stewart, aged 84 yeara. eon BhiP NHWS. Philadelphia, 31, in port sch Parole, Bessett, from P £& Island. New York 30, ar brigt. A McLeod, Mc. Leod, from Maranham. Halifax, Jan. 4th—Cld sch Harriet Torry, Tearney, for Souris. CIVIC. ELECTION BY THE MAYOR. N pursuance of an Act of the General As sembly of this Island, made and passed ia the forty-third year of the reign of Her present Majesty 4Jueem Victoria, imtituled ‘an Act to amend the Act oi the Eighteenth Victoria, Chapter thitty-four, intituled ‘ An Aet to Incorporate the Town of Charlotte town and all Acts amending the same,’ ” Election of a Mayor and One Person to Serve. as a Common Council- man in the City Conncilfor each Ward of said City, Being in all a MAYOR and FIVE COMMON OUNCILMEN, will be held on WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY, | the 25th Day ef January, A. D. 1882, At the se veral places, thatis to say : In Ward No.1, at gr near the Store o Messrs. J. & T.Morcis, corner of Queen and Water Streets. ' In Ward No, 2, at or near the hause of Mr. Thomss Counolly, opposite Mv, R. Heartz’s Varehouse, Sydney Street, betwéen Great Ge >rge and Prince Streets, J. Ward No,. 3, at or near the Market House. In Ward No. 4, at or near the Fire Engine House. fronting on Kent Street, cast, between Weymouth and Cumberland Streets. In Ward No. 5, at or near the House cf Widow Tierney, corner of Euston and Great George Streets. And at the said Election the Poll will be epened at nine o'clock in the ferenoon, and coatinue open unti! five e’clock in the after- noon of the same day. DESCRIPTION OF WARDS. Number Oue sha'l comprise all that part of Charlottetown which hes south of Dorchester Strect, and the parcel of Jand formerly known as the Military Barrack Ground. Number Two shall comprise all that part of Charlottetown which lies south of Richmond Streetisad north of Dorchester Street. Number Three shall comprise all that part of Charlottetown which lies south of Grafton Street and north of Richmond Street. Number Four shall comprise ali that part of Charlotietown which lies south of Fitzroy and north of Grafton Streets. Number Five shall comprise all that part of Charlottetown which lies. North of Fitzrey Street, including the Common of the said Town. : NOMINATION DAY. Act 43 Victoria Cap 15: “‘Srven days before the time of any and every Election fur Mayor or Councillors, the persons or candidates for the office of Mayor or Vouncillor shall give their naines in as such cardidates to thé City Clerk, and the City Clerk shall duly enter the names, residences, and additions of such persons ‘* together with the office and Wards for which they are candidates, and such entry, when mae, shall be deemed somination for such candidates.” ‘There shall be paid by each person so nominated for Mayor, at the same time, a fee of ten dollars, and by each person so nomin- ated as Councillor a fee of five dollars, which sums shall go towards paying the cost of the election.” ‘* No person shall be qualified either for the office of Mayor or Councillor unless such nom- ination be made in manner and at the time aforesaid,” The time appointed for the nomination of candidates shall be from the time of Twelve at noon, until the hour of four o'clock in the afternoon of the day fixed for that purpose. Qualitication of Electors. See Act 43. Vic- toria, cap. 15, sec. 20 and 64. (L. 8.) W.E. DAWSON, Mayor of the City of Charlottetown, WM. B. MORRISON, City Clerk, Mayor’s Office, Charlottetown, } January 6, 18-2. dy pat till 25th. GRARD DIVISION. _ae JANUARY SESSION will be held at NEW GLASGOW, on MONDAY, 23rd," at 103) a.m. Public Meeting at 7.30 p.m. Return Tickets will be issued to Delegates from all Stations on the PE. I. Railway on the 2Ist and 23rd, good to return on the 24th, Pn presgntation of certificate, J. J. CHAPPEEL, Ch’town, Jan. 5, ’82—3i G. Scribe. Valuable Property AT AUCTION. AM instructed by Cuarte: Paturr, Esq , Mortgagee, to sell AT AUCTION, on TUESDAY, the i7th inst., at the Court Honse, in ( barlottetown, at 12 o'clock, noon, all that tract. piece or parcel of land being part of Town Lot No. 81 in the 5th hundre, of Town Lots in Charlottetown aforesaid, sitnate on Euston Street, near Cumberland, © ee iy it act Ly LT el a, * te ten a ne ane a OO a A a en tm 3 TAMIA RS 6.1882. GOMPETITORS MUST THE GREAT MARK DOWN SALE STILL CONTINUES AT OW_ EIN”. CO INGNOT IA Xs. 0 AT HAORTS, BOUT WE CAN'T 82.47 FF! 0:0 - STAND FROM UNDER. OQ ~~ Twill, during the winter months, clear out my Stoci of Cloths, Tweeds, Dress Goods, skirts, Shawls, Sacqtes, Uisters, Emit Wool Goods, Room Paper, Carpets, Fioor Of! Cloths and Readymade Clothing, iG ‘FO 20 PER CERNE. DISCOUNT, LINES IN EVERY DEPARTMENT AT REDUCED PRICES. OWEN CONNOLLY. IN O'TLC Bi Ul. a cone AGT Jan. 4, 1882. \ }HILST thanking my friends and the general public for the very liberal patronage extended to me during the past twelve years, I beg now to intimate that I will HENCEORTH SELL FOR CASH ONLY, and feel confident that T will be enabled (under the eash system) 1 de hereby give Public Notice that an | to sell every description of DRY COODS AND CLOTHING AT A MUCIP LOWER RATE THAN HERETOFORE. IT have now in Steck forty thousand dollars worth of GOOD SEASONABLE GOODS, the whole of which I intend selling at a GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICE, Cash Buyers in Town and Country: will *do well to see the Goods and prices before buying. J.B. MACDONALD. Brennan's Old Stand, Queen Street, January 3, 1852--wkly, pat pres oe oan : —— — a COAL! STILL LEFT, 200 TONS OF WELSH ANTHRAGITE, ‘Clearing-Out Sale — OF — eA OS OS A OE NN EN i i i TI Tea, rooms, Soap, &e. I WILL S¢i.L AT AUCTION, AT THE Queen Street fuction Rooms, — ON = T4\UIS Coal is giving good satisfaction, and is snitabdle alike for Base Burners ag well as all other kinds of Stoves and grates, ana can be especially tecoromended for cleanliness and durability, For sale at McMILLAN’S COAL DEPOT, Ch’town, Jan. 3, '82—eod, wkly 2w Terms easy and made known at sale, , 3% W, D, SrEWART, Jentary 5, '82. Anctiontr. Chitbwn, Det. 21, 91~Tm edd | GRAND HosTDAY Gift Enterprise. T « meeting of the Ticket-holders held “kh yesterday in the Atheywuim Hall, tie fol- lowing gentlemen were appointed a Com. mitte, viz.:— Caartes Hearrz, Exq., Pauw Larer, Esq., Lampert Disney, Eeq., Arex, McDoveatn,Esq Joun Hennessy, Esq., and at @ subsequent meeting of the Com- mittee Charles Heariz, Esq., was appointed Tresurer, I then paid into the hands of the Treasurer the cash in my posscesion, By the advice of the Committee, I have postponed the drawing till FR) DAY, the 13th Jannary next, on which day it will take place in Athepeum Hall, Charlottetown, beginning at 10 o'clock, a, m., sharp. : Agents can now make ret rns for tickets THORSDAY, the 12th inst, 50 half-chests TEA (Choice Congou), 100 doz. BROOMS, in 1, 2 and 3 Stalk and Hurl, O. K, and Parlor, 10°) boxes Canada Family SOAP, 25 boxes RATSINS, © 25 boxes STARCH (Blue and White), 25 dos. WHISKS (Plain and Velvet), 5 boxes TOBACCO, and sundry articles suitable for Grocers, Terma—All sums under ¢30 ‘cash; over $40 and under $100, three months; and over $100, six months credit will be given on ap- proved joint notes, > other W. D.. STEWART, Auctioneer, Y. Mi. C. A. TPXHE ANNUAL SALE - OF PAPERS, sold, direct to the Treasurer. AGAZIRES, &c., will take place in} E. H. BABBIT, Parlor, on MONDAY EVE\ING, 9th | Dee. Sk, 1881—wkly 1i pa ary, commencing at 8 o'clock, _- —— gers . ? em "By ‘ F.S. MOOR’, ‘WANTS, LOS#, ROUND, &e. reat, | ha RR = Presd CRACKED FEED. Craked Oats, Wheat Bran, Jan, 5, °82-- Dec, 31, 1881 —pat eod LoL 2 | W ANTED-—Two pushing Canyagsers, ‘¥ those having their own teams preferred ' Apply at office of ‘Ihe Singer \ianufacturing | Company, corner of Queen and Sidney streets, Cracked Barley, Whent Shorts, [iy § 3i pd . See Black Oats. WGITUATION WANTED by country Boy % Y HORACE HASZARD. K as @ general servant or waiter Good recommendatin, Apply at this office, ’ —_— Charlottetown, Dec. 21, ’81—lm eod liy 4 23 ANTED—Parlor and Bedroom, with board, in a private family, good locality, 5 or 10 minutes walk from Post Office. Ap- r WEST INDIA | ply by letter to Lock |)rawer No. 6, General W AREHO Us E. Post Office, Charlottetown, [ja 3 3i pd 20 chests and half-chests Tea, Beaman Pog Pap, greyish color, 20 hhds, and barrels Sugar, with black muzzle. The finder will be 30 puns, Molasscs, rewarded by returning same to J. A, Mooga, 100 barrels Superior Extra Flour, | Upper Prince Sireet. Lis 3 20 boxes Tobacco (flat), — 30 caddies Bright Smcking Tobacco, OST—Last evening, a lady’s head-dréss, 70 boxes Assorted Soaps, 4 The finder wiil otlige by leaving it at this office. [ja 3 25 boxes White and Blue Starch, ANTED IMMEDIATILY—A first 30 boxes Nixey’s Black Lead, 2 O reams Wrapping Paper oie ™_ \ clags Coat maker, at Johu Macleod & {de 27 5i 5 casks W. Soda, 20 boxes T. D. Pipes, 50 cans Kerosene Oil, : oe eee ae 5 casks’ Turpentine, ry-O LE [~The office in the Union Bank 20,000 barrel Bungs, 7 inch, Building lately cccupied by Ed ward Bay- 1,500 Bushels Salt, | field, Esq. The use of a cellar, in which there 300 Pork Barrels, ,are now two tons of ‘oal,to go with same, 500 Asb-Hooped Barrels, | Tetms reasonable, Apply at this office, ' Co's, a aD 50 tins Lard, {de 13 pat 2aw tens Wheat Bran —— tae Wheat on | ANTED—An expericncedClerk, Must 1,000 bushels Oats B be well recommended, Apply, in writ- ” 90 boxes and half-boxes No, 1 Codfish, 198 to Surtivas & Monsoy, Charlottetown. 50 quaintals Codfish, in bulk, [de 12 100 quintals large Hake. - | PING LEToThat desi 100 bris, and hal f-barrels Labrador Herring | . oh. oe aco ean thine 20 cases Preserved ee , taining nine rooms and a convenient "frost 10 cases ee a mem proof cellar and good stable, Rent very low, 10 cases Preserved Herring, | Possession gtven in about one month from 50 boxes Tin, 100 ingots Refined Tin, thie Gate, Apply to Maxe Bevewen. (v0 6 4) pigs Soft Lead, fe f WwW LE?—A_. valuable Business Stand in 5 bers 14 and Uy Copper, ‘tl Souris East, consisting of a Shop, Dwell- 5 tons Assorted lrou, ing House, Warehouse aoe Stable. Possess‘on HORACE HASZARD, | given immediately, if required, For terme Lower doen Stl, ‘apply to i Buxvrry, Brfdyetown, ar : , nb 24 Im Manager, a }