tide te, Mteth wy aud oy ~ ., On pdety i. ‘7Y and ‘ve Mr i, * tm, DATV es Vemie (When Mt) the ‘ This is trae Lib er. rty, when Free-born Men having to advise the Public, may speak free.”--Evnimrs. Sincie Corres Two CENTs. —-- i esta A ALA LOLOL Por [DAILY | i EE LL ALTA NR Om ec ALMAMAC FOR GCOTOGER, i8é2. trAN rhird Quarter 3rd day, 10h. 5m., p. m.,N.1 Ww hori: 1 New Moon 12th day, lh. 59m, a m., N. , \V i r First Quarter, 19th day, 7h. 42m. a. m., 8. VW Fall Moon, 27th day, th. 5lm., a. m., 3. D Sun |Sun ‘Moon! High M DAY OF WEEK rises sets | rises water | . i Hminm;, aitn ain i Sunday i6: 455 25) 8 37) 1 22111 43) 2| Monday 5} 33) 9 36) 2 12 3. T uesday 7} 3llid BSI 3 5 4; Wednesday ¢ 29 11 36) 4 13 5 Thursday 9, 27\ morn) 5 29) 6' Friday | JO} 25 O 3b) 6 38 ; 7| Saturday ; 92, 24) 1 40) 7 39 8! Sunday i4 2?| 2 40! 3 2di}1 23 9 Monday } LoS 0 , 4 9 1) } 10; Tuesday 16; 18) 4 4 30 ' 1] Wednesday 17 16) 5 40'10 i4 12 Thursday ; 19 141 6 41,10 46) 13. Friday 0 9 7 411i ig 14 Saturday f 21) 10) 8 4h\11 55 ‘ 15 Sanday 23, 9| 9 40\mornjll 02 16. Monday 24) 7:10 36) 0 30 i7 Tuesday | & Sil] 2a' i 9 18| Wednesday | 27 3iaft 14] 1 54 19\ Thursday 28 1} 0 55| 2 44 20 Friday 29 0O' 1 30 3 49 21 |Satarday 3114 53, 2. 3) 5D 5 22)Sunday 33) 56, 2 34° 6 34:10 41 23) Mon lay ot 55) 3 i et 24' Tues Lay 36} 53) 3 35) 8 35 25) Wednesday 37: 652|4 9 9:28 26! Thursday 33) 50; 4 47/10 i 27 i Friday ' 40: 48; 5 31'10 55 25 saturday 41} 46, 6 23\11 39 29\ Sunday ; 43) 45) 7 20'ait 21j10 2) 30} Monday ' 44 44822; 1 4 31/Tuesday 6 46.6 461 9 24 1 49) Ln ARTHUR & CO., General Commission Merchants Particular attention given to the sale of Island produce. 121 Atlantic Avenue & 20 Essex Avenue, BOSTON, MASS. May 27, 1882—wkly INSURANCE OFFICE (ueen Insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. City of London Fire lLusur- ance Company. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. Insurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates. Losses settled promptiy aud equitably. DESBRISAY & ANGUS, (re neral Agents, Otiice—South Side Queen Square. Ch'town, Sept. 15, 1882. Bank of Nova Scotia. ESTABLISHED 1832, $1,002,000 325,000 Paid Up Capitai . . Reserve Fund .. . An Agency of this Bank will be opened on Monday next, i9th iust., in the building lately occupied by the Bank of Prince Edward Island, under the management of the under- signed. Deposits will be received on interest, and on current account. Drafts granted on the various Agencies and correspondents of the Bank. Sterli re aud other Exchange bought and sold, aud yeneral banking busiuess transacted. by. C,. CHALMERS, Ci’town, June 17, 1882—if Agent. W. CG. BISHOP. SEI PPIN Ge —AND— FORWARDING AGENT, Marine Insurance Broker, | ~—AND-— General Commission Agent, BEDFORD ROW, HALIFAX, N. S.| P. O. BOX 1 Parrewias ATTENTION given & the’ TWO DOORS ABOVE APOTHECARIES HALL CORNER Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned | Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks | thereon, Halis, Cargoes, end Freights insured in first-class offices at most favorable rates, Consignments of Produce solicited, and prom pt returns guaranteed, Correspondence solicited afd answered promptly. Nov. 14, 1881—lyr ‘Island. - aS eas me i 7 {\ YEN re | ruy RLOTLETOW N me pres tere ee ee “ PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 882, VOL. 1L-—NO, 120 PL Ee eee mm . s ota . ¥ f 9) ee mc scree W. & A. BROWN & CO. MIAVE JUST OPENED THE FIRST INSTALMENT OF THEIR FALL AND WINTER GOODS! 42 CASES, 28 BALES. A lot ef Manchester Goods to follow shortiy. BAKERY.” » te proprietor of this Establishment, owing to the increased demand for his has added new facilities to his Bakery, consisting of the latest and most improved machinery, etc., and is now prepared to supply the trade with ‘ Hard Bread, Plain and Faney Biscuits, &e., AT THE SHORTEST NOTICE, Pe | Charlottetown, Sept. 22, 1882. “CITY STEAM Goods, LOOO lbs. CHOICH CONEHHCTIONERY To arrive per Steamship ‘‘ Miramichi,” from Montreal. Wee Orders by mail promptly executed. J. QUIRK, Prince Street, Charlottetown, P. E. Tslaud DD. A BRUCE, MERCHANT TAILOR, Is now offering Cash Buyers the BEST VALUE that can be had in the market, in Broadcloth, W orsted, Scotch and Canadian ‘l'weed Suits. A magnificent range of GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, a AMERICAN WHITE & COLORED SHIRTS, Collars, Ties, Underclothing, English and American Hats. Uur Keadymade Clothing is Manufactured on the Premises, fashionably cut, well sewed, and having good trimmings, Will be sold as Cheap as Emporied. We invite you to inspect our Goods. ~ D. A. BRUCE, Charlottetown, May 22, ’82. 72 Queen Street SE te ——= a a a For Scotch and English Tweeds or Worsted Suits For Canadian Tweed Suiis, i‘or Overceats of all Descriptions, Sey te is pe) a i} . = 8S, & } i= 53 ' I . a 4 = P — jOHN MACLEOD & £0 J GEN tae ade) OA cot Bd ws eS a UPPER QUEEN STREET, -! & 8, There you wiil find the largest and best assortment of Prices very moderate. Tio best yuaranteed, —ALso— A complete line of Gents’ Furnishings and Ycit Hats, cheap,&ec. Xe. Remember the address, two doors above Ap thecaries Hall Corner Charlottetown, Olt. 11, 188). LEGIT EGA EL &, DETAI WHULCOALE & RETAIL TRADE Neura/gia, Seiatice, Lumbago, Eackache, Soreness of tha Cicst, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Sweil- ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Fest and Ears, and ail other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth equals Sr. Jacons On as a safe, sure, cimple and cheap External Remedy A trial entails but the comparatively trifitng outlay of 50 Cents, and every ove suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proot of its claims, Directions in Eleven Languages, SOLD BY ALL PRUGGISTS AND DEALES IN MEDIOINE, A. VOGELER & CO., Baltimore, Md., U. 8. Ae Tickets to all Points WEST AXD RORTH WEST, ver the EIntercoionial and Grand Tiank Railways. for sale at Post Office at Pictou Landing by D, A. McLEOD, May 2, 18892 INCREASE $10 YOUR CAPITAL. Thos : desiring to make money On sal @t.¢ eciam pivestnieuts in grain, provisi-us and stock ' speculations, can _doso by oper- atiug on our plan. From May ist, 1881, to the present date, on in- vestments of $10.00 to $1,000, cash WHEAT profits have been realized and paid to investcrs amounting to several times tue original invest- ment, stil! leaving the original in- $50 vestiment making money or pay- able on deman Explanatory cir- ectlara and statemeats of fund W STOCKS sent free. Wo want espunsible agents, who will report on crops and introduce the plan. Liberal comuniss'ous ;aid. Address, FLEMMING & MERRIAM, Com- mission Merchants, Major Block, Chicago, il. ae yen ‘ ‘ A POSITIVE CURE Without Medicines, ALLAN’S SOLUBLE MEDICATED BOUGIES, Patented October 15th, 1876. No. 1 will cure ary case in four days or less No. 2 will cure the most obstinate case, no matter of how long standing No nauseous doses or cubebs, copaiba, or oil of sandalwood, that are certain to pro- duce dyspepsia by destrcying the coatings of the stomach, Price $1.50, One box Sold by all draggists, or mailed on receipt of price. For further par ticulars send for circular, P. Q. Box 1,533. J,C. ALLAN CO., 83 John street, sa 1 °82—lyr New York | $500 Re ward ’ E wiil pay the above reward for any case \ of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, ndigestion, Constipation or Cos- tiveness we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely Vegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Sugar Coated. Large boxes, coutaining 30 Pills, 25 cents. For sale by all Praggists. Beware of counterfeits and imitations, The genuine manufactured only by JOHN C. WEST & CO., ‘The Pill Maker,” Chicago and Toronto. Free trial package sent by mail prepaid cn receipt of a 3 cent stamp. Sold by FRASER & REUDIN, and ail Diuggists. augl4—dy & wky ly. A CURE GUARANTEED. Magnetic Medicine! = 2 < & 2. WES 3 Peru Ss = TRADE For Old aud Young, Male and Female. Pesitively cures Nervousness in ALL its stages, Weak Memory, Loss of Brain Power, Sexual Fros- tration, Night Sweats Supermatorrhea, Leucorrhea, Barrenness, Seminal Weakness, and General Lose of Power. it repat.a Nervous Waste, Kejuven- ates the Jaded Intellect, Strengthens the Enjeebied Brain and Restores Surprising Tone and Vigor to the Exhausted Generative Organs in either sex. 42 With each order for TWELVE packages, accompanied with five dollars, we will send our Written Guarantee to refund | the money if the treatment does not effecta cure. Jt is ithe Cheapest ama Best Medicine in the Market, \gar ¥uli particulars in our pempblet, which we Cloths in the | desire to mail free toany address, Much?s Magnetic Nediciue is solid by Drug- t 7a ‘ 3} In : : 2 ne ; oe WOrKMansn?; iil per sect ft | gists at 40 cts. per box, or 6 boxes for $2.30, or will | be mailed free of postage, on receipt of the money, by | addressing MACK’S MAGNETIC MEDICINE CO,, Windsor, Ont., Canada Sold in Charlottetown by Apothecar' es’ | Prinve Edward OCTOBER 10, 1882, A Tourist’s Ramble. INTERESTING DESCRIPTION OF ANNAPOLIS ~-—- COMPARISONS ON THE FAKMING INDUSTRY |many of them the refuse of nurseries, and | others of varieties altogether unsuitable to jour soil and climate. It is quite true that } we cannot raise in this Island some of the | Varieties snited for Annapolis. But many | hardy varieties, which are highly prized in | the markets, could be raised in this Prov- ince, if the same skill and perseverance | were applied to their cultivation as in Nova | Scotia. if ten or twelve acres on each of —FRUIT GROWING — INTERESTING ZO AGEI-| our farms were planted with well-selected CULTURISTS. Two years before the establishment of ;apple trees, and skilfully vared for, the value of our farms would be greatly in- ;creased and our farmers advanced in the the first English settlement in America,and | scale of independence. fifteen years before the landing of the pil- 'grims at Plymouth Rock,the French,under ‘colony Port Royal, now known as Anna-| De Mouts, established themselves at the head of Annapolis Basin, and named their polis. Nine years after its settlement Port Royal was attacked and taken by an English expedition, from Jamestown, Vir- ginia, and continued, until the capture of Quebec by the English in 1759, to be a battleground for the forces of France and England. The visitor to Anna- polis and Horton must cver feel his interest in these places intensified, when be remem- bers that it was at Annapolis that the Eng- lish and French first crossed swords for the possession of North America, and that Horton witnessed one of the closing scenes of that great struggle, viz., the expulsion of the Acadians in 1755. The remains of the old fortification at Port Royal are stil sufti- ciently imposing to impress a visiter with the strength of the place. It is now more tury and a _ quarter hostile shot was fired in the valley of Annapolis. The ‘‘ brain-spattering, wind- pipe-splitting science of war” has given place to a noble emulation in practising the genile arts of peace: and a tour from Wind- sor to Annapolis demonstrates the truth of Milton’s words, — ‘* Peace hath her victories, not less re- nowned than war.” Sheltered by the North Mountain which stretches from Blomidon, at the Basin of Minas, to Digby Neck, and bounded on the south by a corresponding ridge, called the South Mountain is a majestic valley, which forms probably one of the finest apple grow- ing countries in the world. Ina large bog not far from Berwick, two rivers have their sources. The Cornwallis which runs east- ward and empties into the Easin of Minas, and the Annapolis, which meanders in an opposite direction, watering the valley of Annapolis, and emptying into the Basin of the same name. Through the centre of this valley, liee the track of the Windsor and Annapolis Railway, and from the car win- than a cen- since the last dows the eye of the passenger fairly revels ‘ in the beauties of thecountry. Rich dyked lands by the side of the river, covered with cattle ; uplands on both sides of the river to the foot of the mountains, appearing like continuous orchards; charming villages each ‘‘almost answeringGoldsmith’s description of Auvbarn, Loveliest village of the plain,” are the principal characteristics of this favored land. The fruit crop is said to be below the average this year, but to the eye of a stranger tue yield appears to be large, and the quality of the fruit could scarcely be beaten. The upland of Annapolis County is not so good for general tillage as that of the neighboring Couuty of King’s, but it is peculiarly adapted for appies. In many parts of the Annapolis valley the land is very rocky, but wherever sufficient soil can be obsained to planta tree the reeult is not a matter of doubt. In fertility it is difficult to make a comparison between Annapolis and Prince Edward Island. The wealth of the Annapolis farmer mainly con- sists in his orchards and his cattle. In P. E. Island we depend on cereals, roots, and cattle. In grazing our best farming dis- tricts are abreast of the garden of Nova Scotia, notwithstanding iis alluvial lands and in the production of roots, and more particularly of grain, we leave the Nova Scotians almost as far be- hind as they do us in the cultivation of spples. The field culture in Western Nova Seotia and indeed all over thea Province see ns to be very unsystematic. They appear ‘o be even slower than ourselvez in the ceneral adoption of improved breeds of horned cattle. They do not appear to keep many sheep, and those they have are in ferior. ln horses they are almost a quar- ter of a century behind us. But their magnificent orchards cover a multitude of shortcomings and supp!y an almost never failing sourse of wealth. The farmer who s lis from 1000 to 1500 barrels of apples an uiually can scarcely be blawed if he feels aimost as independent as the “lily of the field,” and treats delving and spinning as among the lost arts. There doves not how- ever, appear tobe any reason why mixed husbandr,) carried on in the most approved manner zhould not be the rule in Annapolis and Kings On the other hand a visit to this famed fruit growing country has confirmed an opinion the writer has long entertained tat apple cuiture can be carried on in Prince Edward Island with success. It is quite customary to atcribute the lack of success in fruit culture in the Island to alleged inherent defects in the soil and climate. The orchard of Mr. is. E. Wright, in Charlottetown Royalty is of itself sufficient to show that an unsuitabie soil or climate is not the cause of our failure to raise epples as astaple. What Mr. Wright has done others might do by the exerise of ths A Tourist, 7 TE © i oe Another Land Question. } } | Mr. Milnes Gaskell has been drawing a very dark picture of Enugland’s future agricultural prospects. He thinks that English agriculturists have nothing but | grim penury and pauperism staring ‘them in the face. Perhaps the real | cause of the trouble is the expensive domestic living of those who enrich themselves from the land. Too many are living on the laud in England. The country squire loves to luxuriste in the best of social clover; loves to uttend some part of the London season; must have his retirement and leisure; and now he is forced to face the inevitable, and work hard to sustain his supremacy. Here is what the Spectator says :— ‘‘ All that will certainly depart is that effortless and serene ascendancy which the squire has hitherto enjoyed, but that, though we fully admit what an enjoyment it was, is departing from every class every- where. The Church even has to work, in order to be. That is not a very hard fate, certainly a very different fate from that door: of hatred, humiliated, and maligned pauperiem which Mr. Milnes Gaskell pre- =e for the Country Gentleman of Eng- and. The English squire must settle down to work like his trans-Atlantic Cousins, and then there will be no bother about Land Questions. . poihipnmvenigillat litical A New Proof that the Earth is Round. A new proof of the globular form of the earth has been produced by two scientifies in Geneva, Messrs. Dufour and Farell. They have called attention to the fact that the image of steamers and the surrounding mountains, when reflected upon the surface of the immense lake, invariably appeared in a diminished state. Hence they conclude that the surface of the lake must be bent in a convex shape, otherwise it conld not produce the same results as a Japanese diminishing mirror er a cenvex lens. Of course this observation is not confined to Lake Geneva, but must be true of all great water-surfaces which are sufficiently still and placid to serve as mirrors. A critic has asked why this phenomenon has not been noticed until recently. Ms M. Da- four aad Farell reply that it has possibly been noticed by private observers, who have not thought of its interest or import- ance asa confirmation of the theory that we are living upon a globe. They add, further, that the diminution of the reflect- ed objects is so slight that it would naturally cscape the notice of the greater number of observers —London Morning Post. oeaumem a < <i ~ ee ee Clues to the Cavendish Burke Assassins. Telegraphic news from London dated October 4, give the following :— The weapons used by the murderers of Lord Frederick Cavendish and Under Secretary Burke were found concealed in the rafters of a stable in the rear of a house belonging toa man who was iecently sen- tenced to penal servitude for int midating Mrs. Kenny, the widow of the man murder- ed in Seville Place, because he was suspect- ed of having given information concerving the murders. It is alleged that Kenny was the driver of the car in which the assassins rode on the night of the murder. The weapons found were four knives, nine inches long, with blades three-quarters of an inch wide. They are quite new end very sharp, and are evidently surgical dis- secting knives. There were discolorations on them, which on chemical analyzation proved to have been made by human blood lt is hoped that the murderers will yet be captured. Meanwhile the authorities ob- serve the strictest secrecy. me a The Great French Remedy, Dr. LeDuec’s Periodical Pills. These Pills are compounded from the purest oa and from those only which are particularly useful for female complaints. They are enclosed in an air tight capsule and then sugar-coated, and by this means made to retain their full strength for years, in any climate, Al! druggists. Tur StaxnKipner pap Co., Toronto, Own. s¢ 23} —eo- Tue “ people’s party” in New York held a ; meeting, in which they advocated “‘a more | general diffusion of wealth and the prevention |of the undue control of the great corporatioas iby monopolists, without iaterfering with or Bahan, wad by OE same skill and perseverance. I will now! checking lawful enterprise.” point out what appears to be the prevail- 26 ing causes of failure in raising orchards in ‘*‘Twe° TY-FOUR YEARS EXPERIENCE,” says P. E. Island, in the hope that my observa-| an eminent physician, convinces me that the ‘ions may have the effect of eliciting opine, only cure for **Nervous Exhaustion” and ions frow others who may have given the, weakuess of the generative orgaur is to repair subject greater attention. In the first piace | the waste by giving Brain and Nerve Fuods, few of our early settlers came from coun- and of ali the remedies f have used, Mack’s iries where fruiticulture was much practised ee omg ge * oe Deneutots eo soeney or understood. Secondly, the edaptability | PO*¥ 9 3 . of our soil for field culture and the general | ne hoe ag = annenaeaaae = 00, lack cf means on the part of our esrly| .r4rcesed to Mack s Magnetic Mediciue Co., settlers, led to the neglect of @ pursuit in| Windsor, Ont., they will forward the goods which success was problematical, and the free by mail, and send their “ written guar- returns long to be waited for. Thirdly, antee” to refund the money, if the treatment Hail Com\the sale to our people, by unprincipled does not effect a cure, See advt, in another agents, at extravagant prices, trees, odlump,