eee ee ll Ee ** This is ¢ U HARLOTTETOWN, rae Li . , : : ; F igedagensy : -_-—- berty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speax free,.”—Evnirwes. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1883, : SINGLE Sn ER VOL 12.---NO. 102. ee i a AMINED SUMLIVAN & MACHBILL, | jo ms - i A TT 3 ' COMPANY, | & . ‘RK fcy Ri a. ovens AD GRAY $ - AT-LAW | On ,ATER j Wei j . » » } rs " ote all ap GURA a Nelicitors in 4 hancery, | aaclottet ry f a ; ne NOTARIES (9, BLIC, Ac. Ral a OFFICES- O'ffatioran’s Bai a Sa i uv) : s0dhloran’s Br Idi IZ re as M or : ; 9 George Street, ( bArioitetown, thea dt cians . ; etisi te rates. | > We Bcuuivan, Qy Cs | Cussree B. Macneit. | Se sivetisins Pg a HL. | ee rn. Miele Jan. 16,83 . mn 4 tg | y advertia ; . 4 : | Patty, ba! INSU Tih Ammnr | y m applicat | i. AN ‘; ‘ il .! fy pre. an. a 4. 0 LU ih ull i lu - | ee. ; uy i fn oonAl MARSH. i833 rm — ' AIMANAG Fon MaAnul, tas. 3 } Ing . vUeéh Lasuraucs Company, | tOgarter 2ud da OF ENGLAND. aes | | {ee Hoon ath ¢ apy orn | CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS Psst ygarter, *”* . j ’ " 's pul Moo, 238d day. | { te e 'f anpaghin ony 1 ot is ap Sist day, 1 oI., P. Mi tins He parer Bat do mm | pdNGasuire Insurance Company. “eee Sun Sal Ml High Days i ace Dut OF WEES rises set s water len’h, | CAPITAL, FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS s a ' er. h m : MOF ith i lr surance effected on all kinds of ty . os “| . cou i ai RINK property jfierday oF HOF = 4 e )S5 current rates. Losaes settled promptly prtay 4 : i ey very and equitably. ; Namortsy «| (40, 45) 2 + : ail PESBRISAY & ANGUS, seal 38; 4 : - : at é General Agents, Monday nt oy 6] | Oflice—S@uth Side Queen Sqnare ARS es | susseday.; 32) 59) o to) 9 48 ten cog ee | ee 222 NOW OPENED. ia: 3 p a, A Silk 8 ' grmaay = {= i 4 a3 sicanlay 26 6 50}t1 50,1135 |j Sea y c- oo 7 -*) morn i NEW e ‘wemy°. = HS 2 03 ) : " 8 Toes 91} 58; $8 44, 115 iT df ii k j :aesusy *) ' vaway soos 2 4 | UNG ald Ube HOOMS, 5 Toarsua, ij i iV Lo) o 0; fiat ib 311 22) 4 13] , wsutarda 13, 4, aft23 5 34 12 02 ; ‘ide at ey israel 6 a3} North Side of Queen Square, aay 4 A do val wealay 8, 3 28) 9 2 OPPOSITE THE LAW COURTS. Wednesday 5 9 4 235i 9 Zi 3 li] 5 20) 9 57) ‘ Mg ij 12) 6 25.10 29 ‘aia a an MAY. hae) ts] 2 Sok a2 a6 Cer Ber 15, oe di bo 5 25 1k 32 THE Why 55) (16) 9 27\aft 3) i Ss A i 53; 17/10 26) 0 37| | é Weinesday 51 9 tb 22) 1 14; ">, ~ NWeinesday : - cant ak j AT aD } ouaa| |AEDN Airway 43: 21).0 19) 2 41) Niawnlay 46° 22) 1 5 8 42] J : Indubitable kKvidence, DR. ‘ A Le (Condensed) -HAS From Doeocters Druggists, Merchants Farmers, . Removed his Office Some of the additional home testimony re- ceived since publication of last pamphlet. + tLVING EN ES SFACTION, TO HIS RESIDENCE, GIVING 1IR ATISFACTIO)D Wt DOOR 70 210N CHURCH, aes Le pee Gentlemen,—I find that your Pads are giv. ing entire satisfaction, and wish you inci easea South Side Queen Square. Citown, March 6 —Ilm safes for so valuable a remedy for disease ot the kidneys. J. B. Morpes, M. D. OF SERVICE TO PATIENTS, Lime Lake, April 23. Gentlemen —Your Pad has been of great gervice to sume of my patients already. Jno. Maxweut, M.D. BRIGHT’s DISEASE CONQUERED. Enterprise, April 13. Gentlemen,—Five years ago 1 fell with a bag of grain, which caused weakaess in my back, «nd also brought on an attack of Bright’s disease, and which caused me to lose considerable in weight After wearing your Pau for six weeks, 1 gained 13 pounds, All pain and weakness has left me. I would have been yet in the doctor’s hands, had t| not besn for my using your Kidney Pad. Signed, W. Fexwicg, Miller, 1833 eod wkly CARD. | DR. McLEAN, SOURIS EAST. lile—" Royal Oak Hotel.” Dee, 11, 1882, —~}; oa + eoAWw Wily ot - NoLEOD & MORSON larristers & Atvwrneys-at-Law, WUITORS, NOTARIES PUBLIC, ETC, OFFICES: eform Clay Committee Ro Viiee, Charlotte tow n THE ONLY PERMANENT CURE. Tamworth, April 13. Gentlemen, | was troubled with painful back, and @ould pot retain my urinal secre- tion, from painful inflammation of the blad- der, I bave been treated by a dozen physi- cians to no purpose, but have worn your Special Pad six weeks, The pain, swelling and inflammation are gone and | am well, Your Pad is the only cure for kidney diseases, J. A. Fraseax, Manf. of Wooden Wares. ALL PRAISE THEM HIGHLY. Tamworth, April 13. faiccident 12 years ago wrenched my back. 1 cunld hardly walk, and | never lifted anything The Pad purchased from Mr. Jas. Aylsworth bas nearly made me as strong.as 1 ever was. J know ol! several beit@ need, and all praise them highly. Jas. SUMMERS. > oF Enterprise, April |3. “Sep tiemen, —Your Pad is helping me won-| derfully. My complaint is inflammation ot the kidneysy. Jos. Pike Prices—Chill's 50. Regular Pad, ms, Opposite Post , ». B. Island, i s@tiasts Bank of Halifax Building, Sum- island. good security, a% mMerside, P, i MONEY TO LOAN. on rate interest Yin MeLeop, wW.AO Bet, 24, ’39 Dr I - Morson. Gentlemen,-—An - ——— ee Sala —_—— WHN MAGEAGHERN ‘ — j (Late of Tralian Warehouse) AGENT FOR Riyal Fire Lnsurance Company, of bighand, ' Py vad, Sl. r Pad fo london $2.00, Special Chronic Diseases, & Lancashire Fire Insurance $3.00. Company of Lugland, | Joun Kxiar, sole agent Georgetown, ; ' J. A. Gourntie, sole agent Summerside. City of Londeu fire Insurance Ce., Joun J. ARSENAULT, 'Tignish. eretett VHE STARR KIDNEY PAD CO! Has REMOV BD | Toronto, ONT. {de 5 why A CURE GUARANTEED. — His Office to ! w Building, r : . i e = We. Mee and King Ste. —Uo Stairs. | Magnetic Medicine. Neen and King Sts,—Up Stairs. 2°" Rwece: scmmmmmmmenaar Nes Z Chitown, Dec. 7 R2. \¢ - Rm et a ._-——— anceitinmeisnsilincam inital laliliail —| * fog. vs ; ay < c7 , 2 . ank 2 i) = : z= TE ae ; 4 i ines eae : 44 phen | ES che a TRADE MARM. eo le.| ESTABLISHED 1832, For Old and Young, Male and Female. rs Pesitively) cures Nervousness i” ALB, its oe Paid ‘ani " Weak Memory, Loss of Brain Power, 7 ee ane. up Capital . . $1,609,000 tration, N ight Sweats Supermator rr General ton , eo arreniness, Semina eakn ess, ‘ , Tre Fund . . 325,000 <7 ina te repaies Nervous Waste, posses OP oeageergeenzeny | ates , Jaded Intelicet, Streagthens J i Ay Age | yaa ee A Restores Surprising one and e- Mond et will be opened OD Pahausted Generative Organs ™ eithes ae with five | 7 Upied hy the Bank of P oe ne joilars, we will send our Wr Se as te : | beak, of Da oe the money if the treatment does not effect oe Market. be Wiaca zd ’ . . . Oder ¢ ement of the under- the moe) ones bad Bidet Medicine in 1a Full particulars im, oor pamphiet, i i ny address. ; ‘eirved on mterest, an‘ i “a. oe tbaaactie Medicine is wold by Drug, | 1 ej ste 1 30 cts. per box, or 6 boxes for $2.59, o iy us Agencies and be mailed free of postage, 08 receipt of the money, ") ‘% ¥ which 7) ebeite will be rs “irrent account Malts grant.) Tey ond > Vari ay ¢ he, }- Cuts of + Ba) ' addressin . "¢ Y ar : j yee a 1CIN co. by, ag and ot ner ixchange bou ght and MACKH’S M4GN Dee eat, Gaunas | Kederal hankin Hall Co., | , busi ess nsacted. | rag thecaries’ ne she | Sold in Chara by Apothec Ww Db. C, CHALMERS, "We, June 17, 1882—tt Agent. _ , vp ste 1 agen — en ve PARSONS “PILLS MAKE NEW ROH ISLOonD, And will completely change the blood in the entire systcin tn three months. Any per- fou who will take 1 Pill each night from 1 to 12 weeks. may be restored to sound health, if sucha thing bo possible. Fer curing Female ¢ omplaints these Pills have no equal. Physicians use them in their prectice. Sold every wh eight letter-staraps. Send for circular, ¥. S. JOHNSON & ere, or sent by mail for CO., BOSTON. MASS. CROUP, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS. JSOHNSON'S ANODYNE LINIMENT will instan- taneously reiieve these terrible diseases, and will positively cure nine cases out of ten. Information that will save many lives sent free by mai]. Don't delay a moment. Prevention is better than cur>. JOHNSON’S ANODYNE LINIMENT (Sree: . : , ternal Use). CURES Houralgia., Influenza, Sore Lungs, Bleeding at the Langs, Chronic Hoarseness, Hacking Cough, Whooping Cough, ‘ ronic Rheumatism, ( hronic Diarrhea, Chronic Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, Kiduey Troubles, Diseases of the ‘ pine and Lame Back, Sold everywhere. Send fof pamplilet to I. 8. Jounson & Co., Boston, Mass, An English Veterinary Surgeon and Chemist. now traveling in this country, says that most of the Horse anc Cattle Powders sold here are worthless trash. Hle says that Sheridan's Condition Powders are absol a ; luiely pure and mensely valuable. Ne “ on earth will make hens lay like Sheridan’s Condition Powders. Dose. 1 teasp'n- fui to 1 pint food. Soild every where, or seat by mail fer 8 letter-stamps. J. 8S. JonNson & Uo., Bosson, Mass. =F -—- . ——— = FURNITURE AT COST. emmaccacane: Opposite Fost Office, Charlottetown. ee } EDSTEA DS, Chairs, Tabies, Washstands, Sofas, Lounges, Parlor, and Drawing Room J Betroom Suits, Looking Glasses and Mirrers, Window Furniture, Picture Frames and Picture Mouidings, (OHN NEWSON, Charjoitetown, Jan, 2, 1883.—ly FURNITURE, CHEAPEST, SAFEST. SIMPLEST LIFE INSURANCE IN THE WORLD. 0 The Dominion -Satety Fund Life Association OF ST. JOHN, N. B. ——o 950,000 Deposit with the Dominion Government. under Government License. oO An Assessment Company with a Safety Fund. at its actual cost. 0_— Yxse=_ Good Canvassers Wanted. LEONARD MORRIS, General Agent for P. E. Island. Summerside, Oct, 28, 1882.—ly a The Business Premises Known as “83 fueen Street,” Lately in the Occupation of R. W. Tremaine. The Stock on hand is now selling at COST and CHARGES, will be cleared off at AUCTION about the middle of January, of which due notice will be given. JAS. DESBRISAY. Charlettetown, Dec. 29, 1882.—+tf THE EXAMINER JOB PRINTING OFFICE HAS LATELY BEEN REPLENISHED WITH A Large Supply of Printing Types and ‘Material OF THE LATEST INVENTION AXD BEST DESCRIPTION, AND WE ARE NOW PREPARED, Under the Careful and Skilful Supervision of Mr. J, W. Mitchell, To Yaa, = LETTER HEADS, RECEIPTS, POSTERS, BILL HEADS, BLANK €HEQUES, NOTUS OF HAND. HAND BILLS, On Short Notice, in Good Style, at Chegp. Prices. Working Life Insurance! | DODGERS, dc. &e.. CORRESPONDENCE. We da not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions or statements of our correspondents. i Answer to ‘‘ Jacobins.” **) COME TO BURY CXSAR, NOT TO PRAISE HIM.” of Cardigan Bridge. To M i——_—— Sik, —l understand you penned a letter which appeared in the EXaMINER over the signature of ‘‘Jacobins,” accusing me (so it is sad, and generally implied) of bemg the author of a communication sizned “Jasper,” published in the Patriot of the | 8th inst. I am astonished at your presump- tion and impudence in pointing to me as the writer of that communication. Let me te!l you in plain unequivocal English that I had nothing whatever to do with the withorship of the letter signed ‘‘Jasper.” | I know not who “Jasper” is—whether a man or a woman, or another political crank from the east. This I-know: A young man occupying the responsible pcsi tion you do, ought to be better employed than in writing anything which might injure an innocent person, and one in par- ticular who bore you no ill-will and who | pever did you any harin, | You say “‘that this apostate has a dear and near friend who bored Mr. Me- ‘Donald soliciting him to exert his influence to get this friend placed over the heads of ‘old and experienced employees of the P FE. 7. Railway.” Now ii this is meant for meand mine, I tell you straight it is an | utter falsehool. I never asked Mr. Me- Donald to helpa friend of mine to an ap- pointment that he had no right to. At the request of my son I did ask Mr. A. C. McDonald to use his influence to get him a position on the road, and that gentleman ‘very kindly did, | believe, something in | that direction; and it would indeed be very /ungrateful for me to turn around and write ,in the papers to Mr. McDanald’s prejudice las you basely and falsely insinuate | have ; done. For the last ten or eleven months IL have | written no article for any paper. Did you asp re to the rank of a gentleman, one would suppose you might think L[ had _ too | much trouble in my home this past summer | to allow me to have any relish for writing frivolous communications to the papers. In conclusion, you are a young man, and ,as I have said, fill an important place. I | I do not wish to say anything that might |injure you in that position. I have never ‘heard but that you perform the duties of your office to the satisfaction of your superior. Doubtiess you do. Yet you should bear in mind there are other young men who wanta living in this werld as well as you ; and surely it ill become you to write what you must have known would be prejudicial to the interests of another young man in the employ—who was your friend and always on the best of terms with you. Yours, &c., Jonun PARKER. Cardigan Bridge, March 17, 1883. Romance in Crime. THE REVELATIONS SUGGESTED BY A DROP OF CANDLE GREASE. But the art of assassination reached its culmination in the recent murder by Count Faella, at Imola, Italy, of the priest Costa. Count Faella was a man of about 45 years of age, of an ancient and noble family, and a highly esteemed officer of artillery in the Itahan army. He owed a debt of about $10,000 to the priest, and, seeing no way of paying it, invited him one snmmer day to breakfast. After coffee and pleasent conrersa‘ion, he led his unsuspecting vic- tim inte the garden, passing throngh the ground floor of the house. Here, long after, the poor priest was found in a well, the mouth of which had been carefully hif?den by India matting and green boughs and a little earth. It was a complete trap, the murdered man being found on his’ knees with his hands raised to defend the head. Heavy stones thrown down had broken his limbs, and a wagon load of rice husks had smothered him. The disappearance of the priest was so mysterious that the utmost vigilance of the detectives was exerted to discover the assassin. But only proof that amounted to certainty was believed, fixing the crime upon Count Faella, thought to be an hoaor- able man and conneeted with many of the wealthiest and most respected families in the place. The thirst for wealth was Ins destruction. He found himself poorer than his relatives and friends, and entered into varions speculations, which, proving un- successful, left him in debt. He borrowed money, forged notes, and finally murdered one of his creditors in the most ferocious and extraordinary manner. Not only did he prepare the well, having an old one which already existed in the same ground-floor room filled up in crder to divert suspicion, but he purchased heavy stones to complete his work when the priest should have fallen in. The detective genius of the Italian police is remarkable. Dar- ing the researches, when as yet no positive evidence had been found, and the police and the men who had dug the new well, and filled up the old one, were searching for Don Costa, a drop of candle grease re- vealed the position of his tomb. The well on a nail over the place the wall below. He found the spot, and, poison, which was administered to escaped the consequences of his deed. —ansl> <I SE --—O— rived in New York om Stmiday. j ; Personal—Gossip. The Earl of Dudley, whose income from his various mines often amounts te more | than $5.000,000, is in a condition border- digging there, the terrible secret of that | duct by several cents per dozen. dark room was discovered. Faella took/| laid eggs are selling in him by | tv 20se per dozen, there some of his relatives, in prison, and so) of protit in bringing one or two st Stone Pasha, for many years of the staff down to 2c. 5 of the army of the Khedive of Egypt, ar- | this market oa the ing on imbecility. Coisiderable amusement is indalged in Mr. Biggar’s expense over the disastrous result of his recent breach of promise suit, for which it is said he has himself to blame, After his trial the other diy, Loomis}itfle Springfield murderer, said :-—** Rum nerved my arm to strike down my friend, David Levitt, as.it has been the inspiration of what has been wicked in my career to the gallows.” Can anybody preach a temper- ance sermon in fewer words or better. ‘* My brodders,” sai a waggish colored man to a crowd, *‘ in all infliction, in all obg your troubles, dar is one place you can al- ways find sympathy.” ‘Whar! whar?’ shonted several, ‘In de dictionary,” he replied, rolling his eyes skyward. The Comtesse de Bandi, a neice of the Counte de Chambord, recently urged ‘her uncle to re-enter Paris on horseback, sur- rounded by Legitimist cavaliere, and wear- ing the white plume of Henry IV, ‘ My niece,” he said, ‘you speak like a hereine ; bat it would never do for the King of France vo be arrested by a policeman and taken to the lock-up.” The iron will of Prince Bismarck, it is said, is rapidly breaking down. Not long ago, according to a report more or less apocryphal, he said with much bitterness: “*If it were not for me, the world would have seen three great wars less, and eighty thou- sand who died in their bloom might have lived, and how many parents, brothers, sisters, widows would have been spared their grief and tears !” In a letter to the London Globe, the Rev. Styleman Herring, vicar of St. Paul's Clerkeowell, who is well known for the in- terest which, for many years, he has taken in the cahse, of emigration to Canada, says that since his return home he bas received an immense number of applications for ad- vice and assistance from persons desirous to find a suitable home in our North-West. Mr. Herring, it may be remembered, was in this country in connexion with emigra- tion interests last fall. Athenzeus affirms that cooks were the first kings of the earth, and Antony gave the cook who arranged his banquet for Cleopatra the present of the city. Modern cooks seem to be in eqnal luck. The chef in Delmonico’s has _ a salay, of $15,000. a year, and William H. Vanderbiltepays hie maitre de gastrononie $7,000. These men are lucky. “We can live without love, we can live with- out books, But where is the man who can live without cooks?” The Society for the Suppression of Vice, in Toronto, is now waging a war agaiust lotteries, About forty cases have been in- stituted, aud on the 12th the first suit was brought on. It was against the Mad for advertizing (two charges) the London lot- tery and the Ottawa lottery. The prose- cution could not fully establish that such a paper as the Mail was published in Toronto, and the cases were postponed for a couple of weeks. The magistrate remarked, ‘‘ It is not likely they will be coneluded before Christinas if the same progress as was made o4 Monday was maintained.’’ County Constable Waite,who is complaintant in the above and other cases, returned from Cananeque, where he served a summons on a Mr.Gamble, wioner of the $5,000 prize in the London Lottery. He had summonses for other persons, among them for Porter, of Ballyduff, winner of the $15,000 prize, but he did not suceed in seeing them. If successful the prosecutors will secure half of the prize money. The curtons hold superstition has on the mind of the Japanese is very we)] ilus- trated by the proceedings taken by a Japanese damsel when her lover proves false to his vows. When the world ia at rest, at two in the morning, the woman rises. She dons a white robe and high sandals or clegs. Her coif is a metal tripod in which are thrust three lighted candles ; around her neck she hangs a mirror, which falls upon her besom ; in her left hand she carries a small straw figure—the effigy of her faithless lover—and in her right she grasps a hammer and nails, with which she fastens the figure to one of the sacred trees that surrevnd the shrine. Then she prays for the death cf the traitor, vowing that, if her petition be heard, she will hereelf pull out the nails which now offeud the god by wounding the mystic tree. Night after night she comes to the shrine, and each night she strikes in two more nails, believing that every nai! will shorten her lover's life; for the god, to save his tree, will surely strike him dead. _—_—<o- + Eccs.—The Montreal Guzette of the 12th advises small importations from the United States, where eggs are not very cheap. It ays:--‘‘The price of eggs in Montreal Suring the past week has been higher than at any other point on this continent, owing to the skirts of our Arctic winter being still upon us, thereby holding the egg crop in abeyance. Therush will be all the greater, however, when the harvest sets in and prices will be considerably mocified from those now ruling. It appears that the high prices in this market have attracted con- signments from the United States. Some digger remembered to have stuck a candle|in the trade complain that these intruders , where he was/are not strictly fresh, being nothing more digging, and a drop of grease had fallen on|than held ice-house stock, and that they ‘are not werth as much as the home pro- As fresh- New York at 20c. is ample margin pall ship- here: bata consignment of any ould flatten out the market like In Toronto the price of eggs 18 in cases. Fresh lots sold in 10th, at We., but lower | prices are expected, ments on magnitude w \@ parcake. Rs, SN ee Meee WONG iinag Sai rampage