sak SA | AAT ™ aif Cpe: INAMINE BLY Sm a CELLET LI _ ayn ——— Ste ee VOL. 6. Hewson, McDougall & Seaman |} EG leave to acknowledge thanks to the public generally for the very liberal pat ronage extended to them since commencing business, and intimate that they have on hand a large ond select stock of materia! for the manufacture of Sleighs, ete. ‘They have re- cently receive photos of all the latest prize sleighs of the Ottawa Exhibition. T’arties re- quiring new sleighs would do well to eall at their factory and examine before ordering elsewhere. They keep on hand and make to order Top Buggies, Phaetons, the famous Dexter Spring Wagons, and carriages of every description. Repairing of all kinds done with neatness and despatch, and warranted to give satisfaction to those who favor them with a call, at prices to suit the times. N. B.—Parties having their Sleighs repaired and painted would do well to leave them at once in order to have them in time for the first snow. s@ Wagons stored at moderate charges. Parties having their wagons repaired and painted in the spring will have them stored free of charge for the winter. Ch’town, Oct 27th, 1879. QUEEN INSURANCE CO’Y, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, . . TWO MILLIONS STERLING, NSURANCE effected 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), Agent for Prince Edward Island June, 1877-— No. 85 Water St. Charlottetown. Prince Edward Island Branch —OF THK— NORTH BAITISH & MERCANTILE FIRE. AND LIFE. INSURANCE CO. Subscribed Capital, $9,733,332.00 Paid up Capital, - 1,216,666.00 CHIEF OF FICES—Edinburgh, 64 Princess Street ; London, 61 Threadneedle Street. Nine-Tentlis 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 of Premium. corresponding to the nature of the risk. Losses settled with promptitude and liber- ality. G. W. DEBLOISs, General Agent. Dec. 14. BRITISH AMERICA Assurance Company. FIRE AND MARINE. Cash Capital & Assets $1,176491.5, INCORPORATED 18353. —— Head Oflice, - Toronto, Ont. Risks taken on all descriptiopsjof Property at lowest rates. PROMPT SETTLEMENT OF LOSSES. HORACE HASZARD, Agent. Office, South Side Queen Square, July 10, 1879. MAIL NOTICE. AILS for Great Britain will be closed at 10 o'clock, p. m., on THURSDAY in each week, to forwarded via Pictou, for Canadian mail, steamers leaving Halifax every Saturday. A mail wil! be closed on Friday, the 21st inst., at 10 r. m., for mail steamers leaving Halifax on Tuesday, the 25th, and supplemen- tary matter will also be forwarded by MON- DAY evening's boat for Pictou. Mails to be forwarded vta steamers to Pictou will be closed after the 22nd inst., on every MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY, and SATURDAY. at 5 o’clock a.m., until close of navigatlon. Mails to be forwarded via Summerside and Shediac will be closed at 5.30 a.m.; also for Summerside direct at 5 p.m., and for George- town, Souris and places on those routes at 6 e’elock a. m., daily. Post Office open from 8, a.m., till 9, p. m. A. A. MACDONALD, , Postmaster. Post Office Charlottetown, Nov. 20th, 1879. MACLEAN & MARTIN, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Newson’s Building, Opp. Post Office, Charlottetown, PLE. I. A, A. McLEAN. D. C. MARTIN, June 18, 1879,--ex2aw ~ OHARL OTTETOWN, PRINCE see wemmemesrtiaie annmneiini Queen Has in stock Thirty Winter SPECIAL ATTENTION | and Drawers, Cloth TERMS CASH. Queen Street, Charlottetown, Nov. 18, 1879. STOCK OF MENS AND BOYS’ * CLOTE In Ulsters, Overceats, Jackets, Panis & Vests, Worsted Suits, Linders Everyone can be suited in Prices, Styles and Quality. fail to visit this Store when purchasing your requirements. J. B. MACDONALDD. BDWAR fmmse. —————30: J.B. Macdonald, Street, y Thousand Dollars worth of Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots & Shoes, &e.,, The whole of which must be sold during the Fall and Season. S DIRECTED TO TiiE i NG, and Fur Caps, &c, Don’t BRITISH WAREHOUSE. Firm, they are now selli New Mantles, New Friilings, New Uisters, New Cottons. New Fiannels, of which they intend to close out This is a bona fide sale. selves. W. Charlottetown, October 8, 1879. RAISINS. 100 boxes NEW LAYERS; 100 +“ VALENCIA, CARVELL BROs. Nov, 20, 1879—2aw 2w In Stock and Daily Expested, The + The Largest a Best Stock Fi} Qualities INV BELO PFS. Th S The Cheapest. EI Nicest cap <j Assortment OF ENVELOPES IN P. E. ISLAND, By Quarter, Half and whole Thousands. C. HERBERT HASZARD, 18 Queen Street Nov. 13, 187y—1lm , _ BISCUITS Bi: NICE LOT OF PEEK FREEN;,S celebrated English Biscuits at BEER & GOFPF'S. Nov. 1, 1879. American Kerosene. 250 ‘“* to arrive for winter stock, AND 200 tins, 5 galls & 10 galls each. Highest test and best Oil made. CARVELL BROS, Nov.29, 1879—2aw/2w? 30 bbls. landing to-day, = 70% As W. & A. BROWN are about making a change in their ng their Large Stock of FALL & WINTER GOODS, At prices that defy competition. New Cloths, New Tweeds, New Bress Goods, Rew Clouds, New Velveteens, And a large line of Woellem Goods, of every description, all within the next five months. Come one, come all, and see for your- c& A. BROWN. —$—$$—$ $l 1,000 Ibs. VICIR & KEILER’S CELEBRATED Jams and Marmalade | Nv ARMALADE 22 cents per lb., in bulk ; a7 lb.. tin for $1.85; 1&2 Ib. tins at 25 cents per lb.; 1 ib. crocks, 28 cents. JAM 25 cents per lb. in bulk; 1 Ib. crocks 28 cents. Strawbery, Raspbery,Black & Red Currant, Gooseberry, Green- gage, Damson and Plum Jams,} at BEER & GOFF’S. Nov. 1, 1875. BASKETS! EW STOCK cf over 5Q00Q—cheapest lot yet, at BEER & GOFF'S. Nov. I, 1879. Valuable Property for Sale, r&X\O BE SOLD, all that part of Town Lot No. 74, in the first hundred of Town Lots in Charlottetown; having a front of 67 feet, Dor- chester Street, and running back 80 feet, to- gether with the buildings thereon erected. For further particulars apply to Messrs. Hopeson & McLrop Charlottetown. Sept. 18, 1879. UBSCRIBE for the DAILY EX AMINER the Cheapest and most newsy 4 Paper published the Province. - ua — — - eo D ISLAND, SATURDAY, DECEMBER om es Rm of 2 a>, Pro Re ES ee 3 Pied s ek sabia gai y he wi. 2 nae eo ae il E 2 i oe THE DAILY IXAMINER. DECEMBER 6, 1879. —-——_—_—_-—_—_—_— Sir A. T. Gaur is in Ottawa, and is a guest at Government House. —_—--— semniaiimiabiiaitadii _ A CutcaGo man has discovered a process for making water burn. What next? It Is reported that an English regiment is coming ont with the Princess Louise, and will be stationed at Ottawa. To-nigHT.— Don’t forget the publie temper- ance meeting this evening, in Division Room, Queen Street. Tur members of the New Brunswick and P. E. Island Governments at Ottawa were entertained at Rideau Hall on the evening of the 3rd inst. Her Royal Highness the Princess Louise, it is said, has been enjoying a round of festi- vities at Sandringham, which place sho left November 17th. Sr. JorerH’s ToraL Assrrnence Soctrery meets to-morrow evening to discuss the pro- posed establishment of a Catholie Library and Reading Room. Tue members of St. Patrick’s T. A. & B. Society are requested, by the Spiritual Director, to. meet (in regalia) at St. Patrick’s Hall, to-morrow (Sunday) morning, at half- past nine o’clock, a Tur Newfoundlanders version of Sunday troubles with American fishermen pursuing their calling in an illegal manner has reached Washington. We may be sure it is nota version fitted to sustain the Waslrington claim for more than $100,060 damages. i ncsndhcettilicceacahes A FATAL accident occurred at Welland, Ont., Dee. 3rd, by which Hiram Muniser, a young and promising farmer was killed. It appears he was chopping a tree, and one of the limbs, in falling, struck him on the head killing him almost instantly. A maAN in St. John, N. B., bought two bar- rels potatoes. which were all rotten before he had them aweek. They were calied ‘‘Early Rose” and ‘Blue Nose” but he changed their names to “Goldsmith Maid” and ‘Dexter’ because they were such fast rotters.— \Vheel- ing Leader. Mr. LABoucHeEre’s case with the Beefsteak Club is likely to be‘added to the list of English causes celebres. His appeal tothe Master of the Rolls has been succeszfnl, ‘The grounds of it were that the club members could take no official cognizance of newspaper articles ; that two-thirds of those actually present must have voted ayainst him, and that fourteen days—not thirteen—should have been given. A Gane or Rowpiss BRokEN UP BY THE MontTrREAL Po.tce.—A dangerous gang of young rowdies, the foundation of which is apparently a True Blue Lodge, has been broken up by the police. The operations of this gang and its effects were made known in letters to two women in jail which were in- tercepted by the police. he leader, Thomas Harvie, a lad of 16 years, was to day sen- tenced to two months in jail for assault. Si A ‘* Young Liberal Club” has been formed at Halifax. They meet at ‘‘ Hope Hall.” The Halifax Herald has the following :— HOPEFUL EPIGRAM. The young Grits met! their rallying cry ‘*hope all”! Taught by their Mentor—in cold shades —to grope for Sonte future lease of power! Hope Hall! But qa new “Treasury Aaul”—they cannot hope for. They lease To Wuom it May Coyorrn — Animals should be treated kindly, because—l. They are created for the use of man by the Power that created man himself. 2. The humane and kind treatment of all animals under our control is one of the greatest sources of pleas- ure and happiness. it is much more profit- able, pecuniarily, to take good care of and deal kindly with every creature God has given us. 4. Cruel treatment of animals is a sin and a transgression, which will surely be pun- ished sooner or later. seikdiuincigiicgcall CONSIDERABLE anxiety has evidently pre- vailed in England during a few days past in reference to the Queens health. It was re- ported that she was suffering from a severe billious attack. Being in her sixty-first year, any attack of illness of a serious kind 1s re- garded with all the more apprehension on that account. It is quite certain that the English people do not desire an early change of sever- eigns. They have experienced a sense of re lief, no doubt, on learning that the Queen’s illness has been of a trifling kind. Srr Lzoxarp TiLLey will leave Ottawa about the 9th inst., for New Brunswick, stay- ing over a day or two at Quebec to visit the manufacturing establishments of the Ancient Capital. He will remain about three days at St. John, where he will examine a number of those factories which other engagements did not permit of his seeing on his previous visits. He will also spend a day in Frederic- ton. Ve notice by our Fredericton corrres- pondent’s telegram of last evening that the good people of that city are moving in the direction of giving Sir Leonard a reception on his arrival among them, and we have no doubt he will be very cordially received. His St. John constituents will also greet him heartily, as is fit and proper in the case of one of the formost men of the Dominion, holding the most important port-folio in the strongest and ablest Government Canada has ever had. | —Sun, T Suc iceniieaeaneleaiaiedine kaaanirtine secon = vets oudastsnaelenca er eae , i879 AIO, TA ), LObd. Le AE Ste mo = 2 HEC BY ; 3 Sek Cy ws aFG i eas CAN De ee ee, . ; i ; Lae Giobe tals nit } 0a 3 the fole- 1 ili . a : | ? bOowiticy 5)? SClaAL *> Dec. bd: te The 4¢mes COUDTAIDS an ed torial an- nouncement of Sir Alexander Galt’s ap- pointment as Canadian Minist sident in . rom ; fngland, and points out the varions ways i ‘as _ s** ae i : in whicha Canadian Minister at Lendon willbe useful to tke mother country and 1 Canada apart from political consitlerations. The Times entirely approves of the appoint- ment on public grounds, and welcomes Sir Aiexander Galt personally.” EUROPEAN, L rs ty n, 4 Thomas Bayley Potter, member of Par liament for Rechdale, who recevily visited the United States, on his reappearance in London has been warmly ¢reeted by his friends. The people of the United States, he thinks, differ in some important points from our own. The men do not, he says, make fortunes there in order to found land- ed families and the consequence is that possessors of large fortunes more eft en de@- vote them to public welfare. The mass of the people are mcre so nd therefore able to work more « innously, if nut harder, than our j : y not appear sanguine as to an immediate ad- vance by the Unite ‘tion of free trade, bat he s ; convinced that the policy of free trade will ultimately pre- vail in the States, i: ly because they are such large exports oi prod ir. Potter speaks enthusiastically of the progress and prospects of the United States and of the solidity of Republican institutions in that country. The Bank of England has boughs ont a New Zealand colonial loan for £25,000,000, 5 per cents at 974 per cer A number of Her Majesty’s ships on the west coast of Africa will shortly be increas- ed in conseguence of prevailin After the debate on the Floquet-Braisson interpellations, and explanations by M, Waddington and M. Ferry, the deputies, in the evening, passed an order of the day favorable to the Government, to the effect Ise TOs utics that the Chamber having heard the explan- ations, and trust to the vigor with which ‘ Y yay nant 11] rar va oll peaartionar the Government will remeve all reactionary oflicials, passes to the order of the day. The Right abstained from voting. The French Government has directed the Goverpor of Senegal, West Africa, .to send an expedition to explore the region between the Upper Senegal and the Niger rivers, and report on the feasibility of constructing a railway there. Heavy snow is failing here amd all over the country. itarwa; ly suspended in some di 7 a terrific storm is blowi i th , and some disasters to 8/11 RUSSIA. N; Dec. 4, The correspodent of the Vises, at Berlin’ discussing the recent attempt on the Czar, says: There can be no coubt we have here a repetition of that crime which has lately become too frequent in Russia, and it ig equally certain to what party the perpetra- tors belong. Committed but a day or se after the Czar, in lenicnecy, had commuted the sentence of death passed ou ithe Nihilist Mirsky, the outrage of Monday night cannot. but imbue the Government with a repentant spirit, aud intensify its resolve to show uo pity to those incapable of compassion. St. Prurerssvns, Dee. 4: It isreported that arrests have been made in Moscow among the railway empleyes. The oatensible cause of t mn of the publication of the St. Petersburg Golos for five months was an obiectionable article in its feuilleton, but it is believed the real reason was the hostile and defiant tone of Golos towards foresign powers, especially Germany. AFGHANISTAN. JABUL, Dec. A Daily News despatch says the Govern- or of Maidon has been killed by Afghan regulars and bushmen. ‘The Governors of Kohistan and Lagar Valley have heen menaced with the same fate CHILI. 7 ‘y T? A telegram has been received here which confirms the previous report of the disaster to Chilian forces at the tnouth of the Lea River, after a sinubborn fight; 1,500 Chilians surrendered to the allies with all their cannon and ammunition. ’ Chilian commander was killed. SOUTH AMERICA. Bvesxos Ayrzus, Dec. 4 The allied Pernvians and Bolivians were defeated at Tarapaca, Peru, by the Chil- ians, who have taken possession of the town. The Chilian squadron has blockaded Arica. The loss is heavy on both sides, sn, pte owe Si ea TE TT a } * ne erecta