vem © 3l'Satarday & ‘ 4 bd a ed Es e i “oe w* \ i B Wedneslay i Terms NEW SERLES. 0 PAL ISNA ’ . yh Lub gar Ad Contra ts quarceri’ ng ms g @* ‘ “4 mens, *) aa ALMANAC FOR MARGH, 18 833. fhind Quart re New first Quarter Poll Moon, -3r Third puarte ois -_ San ‘San iM pay or W het ris sets |r s water rh \ 106.3 vull : |=? j Tharsday 0 450 q Friday 11, 43) 1 29) 4 15 3 Saturday | 40; 45) 2 24) 5 37 11 i 4 Sunday 2 ( | bo7 5 Monda; 44) 6 Tuesday ot 64 vi Wednesday $2; & g! Thursday a Friday 25 jg Saturday 26 ui, Sunday b 2 Mon fay 23) 57 1 Tuesday 21 3 4) Wednesday i96 0 15 Tharsday 17 ; : > Vt Ot wm Wo bs -— - ££ tn >. Gh Lana? a on ~ So 2ty &> - '§ Friday 15 {7 Saturiay 13 ig Sunday | il} 4 19 Monday j ». uesday il S 21 Wednes lay v siTuarulsy 3 B\Friday Li MM Sgparday 4 59! 13 day 4 Monday } eaday | $3 > - ~~ — te t D1 Um Bo tO » im os 7 oii t — 2 Tharsday $0 Friday ,» >) l 5 3 4 MACLEOD Removed his Office TO HIS RESIDENCE, HBX? «DOOR 0 ZION CHURCH, South Side Queen Square. * Ch'town, March 6, McLEOD & MORSON Barristers & Attorneys-at-Law, SOLICITORS, NOTARIES PUBLIC, ETC, OFFICES : Reform Club Committee Rooms, Opposite Post Office, Charlottetown, P. E. Island, SSS DR. 1883. —Im eod wkly Merchants’ Bank of Halifax Building, Sum- merside, P. E. Island. MONEY TO LOAN, on good security, a moderate interest. Nau McLzop. Nov. 24, 's2. —pres her a re Mee CARD. DR. McLEAN, SOURIS EAST. (ice—‘ Royal Oak Hotel.” Dee, il, 1882,- ), Monson. i -Im 3aw wiy 3m JOHN MAGEAGHERN, (Late of Italian Warehouse) AGENT FOR Royal Fire Insurance Company, of England, London & Lancashire Fire Insurance Company, of England, City of London Fire Insurance Co., of England, HAS REMOVED His Office Cor. Queen and King $ts,—Up Stairs. to his New Building, Senieetiiesemnieeneieaeees : eh ee TRCN Een 3g Oeown, Dec. 1,2 2 MIYLSSE SE F ; = = ae < 9 - @ S = Bank of Nova Scotia. . £ $ SSE E - Gir ora My TRADE MARK. > = ESTABLISHED 1832, For Old and Young, male and Female. en Pesitively cures Nervousne bn i Poe | Pai j Weak Memory, Loss of ‘Brain soar hen, ve = d up tapital . 2 Si. 000,009 tration, Nu os St en ts s s uperi rd , a ~ re = ~ _ ; Pr es, Semuide Veakness, G Serve Fund . . . 325,000 - ‘eae , it repair at ameaiind Waste, Re; june en ate 3 the Jad ed Inte lect, Strengts oe n the y oe ot rw j and R , erprising 1° ne and Vigor t yi Ag rene y of this Bank will be opened | on - aaa “ st fine Or gans in ei per = 7 ee res som ‘ ; ouday hext, lich inst., in the building; each order sie oot rae packs ges, nes on mpai nied with five Ktely occ ‘apied by tl B { Prinee Edward } d sain, we will send our : ‘arenes 2 Island k “a by the jank o the money if the treatment « om . wanes re rs the Cheapest aud Heat dicine i he Bares. a Under the management of the under- _ posits will be received on interest, and aeeeent account. " fafts canted on the various Agencies and Tres ndents of the Bank. terling and other Exchange bought and » And geveral bankiug business transacted. D. C. CHALMERS, Agent. 1532~—tf Chitown, Jume 17, 4411s IS true Li ie A eR SA ee berty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, m " “, may speak free,’’—Evunirwes. ™~ aie ~~ a StneLe Corres Two Gants. ; : » ff } ; hi A IVY vii ¥ ‘APITAL, FIFTEEN M ION LAR Insuran © elec 1 On Als I I | ) erty ‘ Losses Di ij Re oe ¥ 57 we PD ye ee ee NGY OPENED iid ebie EW aud-Gotiee Roos, North Sides of Queen Square, OPPOSITE THE LAW COURTS. » @ Sigs "Se ye THE erhi KIDNEY PAD. Hidupitable Lvidenee. Ch’town 2 (Con lensed) From Decters aie Merchanis Parmers. Some of the additional home testimony re- ceived since publication of last pamphlet, GIVING ENTIRE SATISFACTION, Picton, April 20, Gentlemep,—I find that your Pads are giv. ing entire satisfaction, and wish youincreasea sales for so valuabie a ' medy for dissase oi the tineys iB. Mo penx, M. D,. OF SERVICE a PATIENTS, Lime Lake, April 23. Gentiemen,—Your Pad has been of great atients already, Jno. Ma XWELL, M. D. DISEASE CONQUERED, Enterprise, April 13, Gentlemen,—Five years ago I fell with a bag of grain, which caused weakaess in my back, snd also brought on an attack of Bright’s disease, and which caused me to lose After wearing your service to some of my | BRIGHT’? considerable in weight Pau for six weeks, I gained 13 pounds. All pain and weakness has left me. I would have been yet inthe doctor’s hands, had it not been for my using — Kidney Pad. Signed, W. Frxwics, Miller, THE ONLY oo Magni ‘T CURE Tamworth, April 13, Gentiemen,—I was troubled with painful back, end could not retain my urinal secre- tion, from painful inflammation of the blad- der. I have been treated by a dozen physi- cians to no purpose, bat have worn your Special Pad six weeks. The pain, swelling and inflammation are goue and | am well, Your Pa: is the only cure for kidney diseases 1, A. Fraser. Manf, of Wooden Wares. ALL PRAISE THEM HIGHLY Tamworth, April 13. Gentlemen,—An accident 12 years ago wrencbed my back. 1 could hardly walk, and never lifted anything’ The Pad purchased from Mr. Jas. Aylsworth has nearly made me as strong as | ever was. I know of several being used, and all praise them highly. Jas. SUMMERS. En eer April 13. Gentlemen, —Your Pad is hel [ping me won- derfully. My complaint is infia mmation of |} the kidne ys. Jos. Pree, Prices—Child’s Pad, $1.50. Regular Pad, $2.00, Special Pad for Chronic Diseases, $3.0 Joun Kxyrenr, sole azent Georgetown. J. A. GouRLiz, sole agent Si ummerside, Joun J. ARSENAULT, Tignish. THE STARR KIDNEY PAD CO’ Teronto, ONT. {de 15 way A CURE GUARANTEED. Magnetic Medicine: g particulars in our pamphlet, a address, degire to mail free toany Mack’s Magnetic gists at SO cts. per box, be mailed free of postage, on Te »cel addreasin MACK’S Sold in Gon nte for very where. ipt of the money, by NETIC MEDICINGE CO,, ere W indser, Cuts, Canada Apothece ries” Hal! Co., jan 189 GL FS Prince Ewer Posts, acd by sll Druggis’s VOL. 12. NO. 106. An E nglis! i Veterinary Surgeor and Chemist n nw traveling in tht! se en oY, says that most it “ se and (Ca wdc ‘Ts sold here re ri ‘8 trash. "He $n hat Sheridan's ondition P Woers are absolutely pure and nsely valual No . perocnacly lun te. ad & on earth wilt make hens lay like Shoridan’s €o: m Powders every W heve, or sent by mail for 8 letter- stamps. L. 8. Jom SON oon. gd ~4 & CO. Bo a, — Bee UBNITURE, FURNITURE ok AT COST. Fost Office, Charlottetown. Opposite Hs Picture EDSTEADS, Chairs, Tables, Wasbstands, Sofas, Lounges, Parlor, and Drawing Room edroom Suits, Looki ug Glasses and Mirrors, Window Furniture, Picture Frames and JOHN NEWSON, Char oltetown, Jan. 2, 1883.—ly CHEAPES®, saPusr. SEMPLE LIFE INSURANCE IN Dee worRcyD. ee ee (ee The Dominion Satety Fund Life Association OF ST. JOHN, N. B. $50,000 Deposit with the Dominion Government. under Government License. oO An Assessment Company with a Safety Fund. Life Insurance at its actual cost. O—- Ke Good Canvassers Wanted. LEONARD MORRIS, General Agent for P. E. Island. Working t Summerside, Oct, 28, 1882,—ly rO LET, The Business Premises Known as ‘83 Queen Btreet, 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 Piedicice is sold by Drug | or @ boxes for $2.00, or will | OF THE LATEST INVENTION AXD BEST DESCRIPTION, | AND WE ARE NOW PREPARED, * Under the Careful and Skilful Supervision of Mr. J. W. Mivehell, TO Pai a Ss LETTER HEADS, RECEIPTS, | NOTES OF HAND, POSTERS, | HAND BILLS, DODGERS, de, Kes On Short Notice, in Good Style, at Cheap Prices.’ BILL BEA® 5, BLikii CHEQUES, 4, i>} ; : Dvn tXT AT ‘ ait | P..* 7 VHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY. MARCH 97 mn ‘ J : } / ] a NSE HUW AKU ISLAND, TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1883 en een acne ; ‘ ‘ om hy y . u ri] oe ; AJ INS. _~ 2 r . ak 2 Fe eos Vat i > PR P Si Bea [ree DAILY EXAMINER. . , ; tm | » o : a -4 4 3 a : iE "1 Te “ " bk ; ra eae ' | _ MARCH 27, 1883, NOniciiars une Ts | a |The Highlands of Prince Edward ~~ s ' “en =A kt a 4% > 4 v0 rUBLIC, &| MAKE NEW RICHY BLOOD, ome s ti son bt oa ohaage the blood in the entire system in three months, Any per. ‘Land of the | heath 1 st y ] i a0 W a - tana OF toe Drown heath aba snagey wood, - realth, if such ~ SE ene es ne — »» May be restored to sound Land of the mountain and the flood. ié ae equal, & thing be possible. For curing Feinxix Complaints these Pills have n gL A b te gts > ' i Physicians use them in their preetlee. Sold everywhere 7 Stretching across Prince Edward Island so AONEILL eight ene letter-qtamps, Send fo vOe Guns Sy enent Soe f ‘om 3onshaw New I di like: for elroular. [. 8. JOMNSON & Co., , BOSTON, MASS rom bonshaw to New Lon os ike a lm CROU! ———-- : rugged transverse crest on its gently un- ! wa OUP. ASTHMA, ~ BRONCHITIS. dulating surface, is a ridge of st teep and i} eee a ARODINE LINIMENT wil instar. hilly country, composed of a firmer stratom WOUIDA bin ads ; se terrible diseases, and will positively 7} ; . ° LiyWuU Li At UL VU 4 AUS ate bees eee soe of ten. Information that will save of the gereral sandstone formation of the ¢ teresal JOHNSO Pusdiision eee ite Don't delay a moment. q slan ea The p eneee al streams Of ey $ Joun rise i t fac 9 tte ie N’S ANODYNE LINIRIENT (2rserne! ont ze. y Five in the contre of this district, i] pon ; pani A im Wt d, ny Mhroute Rimerastan Sore Lutes, Bleeding at the Lungs, Chronic ee Riattenes, Hacking Cough, Whee, ait —— rolling off their silver threads to join the ul A i i aterm, Chronis Diarrhoea, Chronic D ; > Gulf at both the t) Spine and Lame Back. $. yasttery lera Morbus, Kidney Troubles, Diseases of SY 20 1@ northern and southern a Nj : eT a old wren ywaeee, Send fer pamphlet to. to I. 8. Jounsox & Co., Boston, Mass. coasts. Perhaps the most rugged and picturesque ‘ RS. part of this district is that stretching from Bonshaw to the north end of Lot 30. None of the hills attain four hundred feet in height ; but their boldly rounded forms, the dee ep, wooded ravines that stretched between them, the foaming streams and the grand remnants of the’ forest cloak, Wrapping ever their summits, make many a noble picture of wild and striking beauty —bordering on the grand, On the summit of Stewart’s hill, in Bon- shaw, we can stand and watch the shining Elliot roll its winding silver path-way for a great part of its ten miles of course, till it loses itself in the waters of the harbor. And twenty miles away we can see the gleam of the Hillsborough Bay, flashing by the faint blue hills of Belfast. Then turn- ing to the south, just beyond the bold shore range of hills, spreads the blue ma- jestic of ‘the sea, sparkling and gleaming ‘neath the glory of the summer sky. We have been among those hills in the. early morniug when the mist wreaths filled every valley, and the hill- tops a’one protruding through the silvery mantle shone like amethy sts in the glow of the rising sun. How beautiful the hills are by moonlight, their great outlines a billowy ssa of sha- dows ‘neath the mystic light of the goiden galaxies ! Take the River Road from Strathalbyn to Bonshaw, and it will lead you into the very heart of the beauties of this rough country. The tumbling stream is by your side, roaring through the forest or gliding ameng its alders. At times it spreads out into the shining bosom of a mil}-pomd, buried, like a living gem, among the forest shadows, Here is the spot for trout. A Scotch boy will fill his basket at one of those crystal tarus before the first breeze stirs the dew from the grasses. The hills are every- where, crowding their steep fronts on the river and throwing it out of its course, then opening out to leave a broader valley filled witlr partly cleared farms—the gentle home of industry embattled in the wild grandeurs of nature. The river sweeps through with its bottom of flowering alders. A rare spot for the naturalist these bottoms! Lovely amber shelled Suceinnia, glossy Velutina, and the diminutive glitter- ing spire of the Zua are in grand abundance, There are plants ‘too. Crimson-wanded cornells bow their foliage into the stream. Sanguinaria and Sarracennia, with its pitcher leaves, are here; and wild pro- fusion of Balsams and the ivory petaled Chelone. The road passes over the spur of a hill. Beneath your feet the summits of the forest spread a sea of foliaged domes ; above your head golden-rods and purple willow-herbs are nodding along the steep borders. At every turn there is something new and worth admiring. Here at least you feel ‘* Nature never did betray The heart that loved her.” Rivulets everywhere tumble sparkling from thesv hills, ‘* While ow’re the lin the burnie plays, As through the glen it wymples ” We have to stop and listen to its wild babble, blent with the black bird’s note and the merry laugh of children. We ask a little dark-haired maiden, ‘‘ Whose cottage is just ahead?’ Her simple answer, ‘‘ our ain,” tells of the race that peoples those hills. The High!ander never forgets the mountain scenes of ‘* Caledonia rude and wild.” and in any country of his adoption takes lovingly to the hills. This district is roygh farming land, how- ever, and most of the young people leave as soon as they grow up. How often have we heard at these cottage doors a repetition of Wordsworth’s little maiden’s story— ‘* And where are they, I pray you tell, She answered, ‘‘ Seven are we, And two of us at Conway dwell, And two are gone to sea. We cross the river by the bridge at Emyvale. What a grand volume of crystal water it shoots beneath the arch! The Dunk river is a much larger stream where it leaves the hills; but it has not the crystal purity of this headlong torrent that bounds over clear sands and glittering quartzy pebbles. The road now leaves the va'ley and mounts the hills, sometimes penetrating the forest. We stop to wander among the thick eolumned trunks, and rest beneath the far- spread murmuring shadows. The hills have, toa certain extent, a flora of their We scarce ever find the dwarfed, at ovt the rough hill pastures in his yellow tunic, with mérry twit. He is at home wherever blcoms ‘* The rough burr-thistle spreading wide.” The home of the hawks teo is ‘mong the lonely hill.” We never saw the soaring of the red-tailed buzzard so grandly beautifal as when he wheeled over one of those open valleys, circling higher andstill higher into the blue of the suinmer sky. Autumn on the bills is glorions. Every awell is ablaze with crimsoned maples and saffron leaved birches. The curlew wails by the stream. The partridge drums in the wood. The wood-cock mounts from the coppice ; and the restless fish leap from the bcs m of the glassy pond. The landscape sleeps in the misty, dreamy light of the de- clining year. Don’t leave the hills till after night-fall. Take the road that leads right up a well settled valley. On either hand the cottages are high on the flanks of the hills above you, They are aglow with light, and in the dark- ness blaze, like a second firmament beneath the heavenly constellations. There are braces of ancient glaciers in those hills. We find imperfect morains at their feet, filled with rounded pebbles. And where the rock surface is bared we see it furrowed by scratches always ranning down the slopes. Geologically these hills are hills of denu- dation, worn out of the solid bed of the sandstone rock by the action of the cea and of streams running for ages. There is a deeper story about them, how- ever, which we would like to tell you. Why is it. that such massive beds of sand- stone occurhere, as these hills could be worn out of, and not »in_ other parts of the country? Look at a map of the Lower Provinces. See the great Gepression of the Bay of Fundy separating New Brunswick from Nova Scotia. That depression is part of an immense trough of subsidence extending nerth eaaterly,through the, district of Cum- berland, into the Gulf, and including the eastern and middle sections of our Island, e westerh limit of this trough on Prince FAaward Island is, rouglily, the line be- tween Queen’s and Priece ies, ‘Within this trough of subsidence the earth's crust sank, during the carboniferous and permian periods, well nigh twenty thousand feet ; and deposition went on con- temperaneously tothe same extent. Thus this area of great depression has been filled with thick-bedded sttata of rapid deposition consisting in their upper parts of massive sandstene. Where these cap the formation as they do in the parts of Queen’s County which we have been describing, the denud- ing agencies have chiselled them into steep and rugged tracts of billy country. Oatside of the trough of subsidence and westward ofthe line indicated the depres- tion has been but slight. And here few, thin strata have been deposited which, lay- ing in their orignal horizontal. position, form a flat surface of country unvaried by any hills, Thns the texture of every fair landscape has been woven in the loom of ages, by a hand that, from the beginning, marked out each rugged feature and every soft flowing outline. b. England’s wealthient baronet is said to be Sir John Ramsden, of Boram, Yorkshire. His rent roll is computed at $850,000 a year. He owns almost the whole of Huddersfield, the great manufacturing centre. The little bit he doesn’t own was a very Naboth’s vineyard to his father, who, according to popular tradition, once offered to its Quaker owner to cover it with sovereigns if he would sell it. ‘‘Edgewise, friend Rams- den ?” quoth the Quaker ; ‘tin that case it is thine ; otherwise all Huddersfield must still belong to thee and me.” ‘*Edgewise” was rather more than the baronet could swallow. +<<—DP- — Two men were arrested on the 20th, in connection with the Watertown murder case, but beth were discharged. Five thousand dollars reward has been offered by the Watertown authorities. A man was seen by a railroad employee on Sunday morning walking on the track. He said he had a job “to do in Watertowm the previovs Sunday; had -slipped up on it, but would fix it this time. He was about 28 years old, five feet eight inches in height, light complexion, weight 150 pounds, light brown moustache, brown hair, cut close, soft felt hat, grey striped overcoat, grey checkered under suit, pantaloons badly worn. He said he was a watchmaker. _ “or Iridium is a metakwhich on account of its expensiveness and refractory nature is at present of but little use. It is worth about $20 an ounce, and ie used principally for pen points. ‘It is almost as hard as a dia- mond cuts glass freely, makes a fine ne- gative electrode for electric lamps, and from its durability and smoothness fur- nishes a fine bearing surface in delicate instruments. A Mr. Holland has just dis- covered a method of fusing the metal, so that hereafter it can be obtained in solid mass-s, and its usefulnes is likely to in- crease. A Michigan man is said to have disposed of a family. of six or seven daughters in the following way: They were all of marriage- able age, if not more, but none of them got married, although all the young men of the own. spike-flowered Mountain Maple in the|4 woods of our flat lands; but here it is ubiquitous, filling the whole underwood. We also look in vain for the Wood-sorrell. | Here its little shamrock leaves everywhere | t strew the le saf-woven carpet of the forest. Wild Cherries are plentiful along the | |borders of the woods, and their grand! |snowy domes of blossom excel in beauty, in| their season, the much-praised ae white thore that scents the evening gale.’ Birds are scarce here. At least our Their home is the | sweet song birds are more culti- | rich fields and groves of the )vat ed districts. ever, gay and numerous as ever, bounding ' | UPh | married. place were made welcome at the house. The old gentleman finally changed his tactics. He locked the girls up in the er rooms, nailed up the front gate, and ann< uunced that the Grat young maa who came around would be received by a shot- gun. This pad the right effect, for the 'girls were one by one stolen away and Horsford’s Acid i Phosphate PLEASANT TO THE TASTE. De. A. L. Hace, Fair Haven, N. Y., says? We meet ‘‘Goldie,” how-! +*Have prescribed it with marked benefit in indigesticn and urinary troubles.” | 4 f | a 5 ARR II