Tuk Dairy EXAMINe} FEBRUARY 28, 1883. ) < . Jenkins vs. Brecken. Ine result made known yesterday was what everyone expected. After a long, wad intensely disagreeable struggle with his colleague, Mr. Brecken takes the seat to which he was duly elected by majority of the electors of Queen's County; and, having been rebuked by the Speaker of the Commons, and cen- sured by the Supreme Court of Canada, and made the ill fame of the uotorious throughout the Dominion, Dr. Jenkins returns to private life. Whiat his feelings may be, we know not; but we know that ours are those of deep regret that, in spite of warning and of protest. Dr. Jenkins adopted the course he did. For demanding the recount, he could not be blamed; for the returns were sufficiently opinea that a careful inspeetion of the ballots might show that he, and not Mr. Brecken, was rightfully elected. But for contending for a seat oO case ciose gained only by the distranchisement of hundred voters, and for taking a seat on the strength of an appeal nearly seven made on the ground that the election was'| tHegal and void—there can be no excuse an po extenuation. We may, of course, acquit Dr. Jeukius of wilfully doing that which he knew to be wrong and disgrace- fal; but we can only do so by assuming that Morals fit to bea Parliament. It is pleasing to know that iby po way whatever does his miscondnet reflect upen his party. In appealing to Ottawa and in taking his seat, Dr. is he Jenkins rap counter to the moral sense | of the whole community and, as an ex- ponent of the views of his party, Tue EXAMINER protested vigorously agninst his action. The result is not so much a triumph of Mr. Brecken over Dr. Jevkius as of right over wrong; and as such lesson for all politicians. —_—_—_———_——- - —- -2- Dee oe -— y of Prince Edward Isiand. The Geolog MR. BAIN'S LECTURE, = ae M Francis Bain’s lecture, on ihe “Geology of Prince Edward Island,” last evening in the Y. M. C. A. Hall, gave un- bounded satisfaction to the audience assem- bled. The many eloquent and poetic pas sages of the lecture were frequentiy ap- | plauded, and as we assured our readers a few days since, would certainly be the case, it was interesting, and not a dry record of a supposed to be dry subject. Not only in the icture, but by his replies to Mr. Charles Palmer, who asked some perti- nent questions, Mr. Bain showed that he was fully conversant with the whole subject; and he also showed that, by his detailed geological descriptions of the strata and formations of tne Island and its immediate vicinity, he has a firm graspon the whole geological science. His lecture is the result of actual! observations, research and study on his part, and not made up of science and theories derived from books or teachers. His diagrams of restored plants, and a te- rocious animal of the reptile tribe or species, | which once flourished on our Island, were | very artistic and interesting ; and his de- | scriptions of the fossil remains, from which | these restorations were constructed, enter- taining to a degree. We must be permit- ted to say here, that Mr. Bain’s talking ap- paratus was altogether unimpaired after his pronunciation of the formidable names of the animals, plants, etc., and is an illustra- | tion of what constant application and prac- tice will accomplish. should begin with the easy names, and in the end will become able to grapple with the | real jaw-breakers. Mr. Bain has permitted us to make a few extracts from his lecture, which opened as follows : Second only to Astronomy, in the gran- deur of the subjects with which it deals, stands the science of Geology. Astronomy leads us into the blue depths of space and reveals the magnitude of the material uni- verse; Geology fathoms the abyss of time, and by its hght displays in lustrous pic- tures the intinitely majestic panorama of the world’s history from the beyinning of its existence down to the present. The clearer light of recorded history leads us| back a thousand years, across the well: | marked sands of time, till it is lost in the} obscure infancy of the human race; but be- | yond rolls the ocean of the past eternity, its | surging billows filled with the wondrous | display of Eternal Creative Power. To reveal to our astonished gave the vast succession of beings which has peopled our planet; to restore from their ruins succes- sive creations of beauty that have clothed earth with their loveliness in time’s rosy | dawn; to recreate the mighty pyramid of | life with its apex lost in the dim eternity | of the ‘past, and its base broad laid in the wisdom and beauty of the present animate creation These are some of the grander objects of this science. It presents not to us the stirring thrill of music; and yet here is the infinite music of eternity’s | surging billows. It offers not the charm of | poetry; and yet the beauty of ten thousand | lost creations restore their loveliness at its | call. It affects not the commanding powers of eloquence; and yet every roc ky esearp- ment 18 vocal at its beck, and the hidden | strata of the earth resound with the deep voice of ages proclaiming the of creation The original intention of geclogy was to} investigate the structure of the crust of the | earth, and account for its varied formations; | but the restless human intellect, satisficd wish medioerc attainments, here |the grand avenue opening to the boundless history of the past, soon mounted on fearless wing to sublime Inquiry con- cerming the origin of the globe itself, ghd | the mode of tne introduction of all anitnat- | ed being. j | i | | | } ' i nighty story ' . ° ° , . . . - f must stay here a moment those who have not studis d th science, the e occupy in the Geological Scales, ing the eums of the a, to justify the} count and close} in neither understanding nor in| member of it is a | planet's history. Going backward in time downward in ovr scale—after passing the contines of humar history—a period short indeed compared with the immense duration of any of the logical ages—we enter upon the age of tLe Tertaries, the period of huge mammals. Then follow the ages of the Cretaceous, the Oolitic, and the Triassic perieds, great reptiles were the master creations of the world Then the Permian, which was the declining shadows of the great Carboniferous age, the world’s richest verdure flourished, that laid up the 'vast storesof coal, and during which oar planet, when viewed from one of the neigh- bering writer puts if, must have shown with rays of pale green light. Then tomes the! Devonian when land flora first clothed our | {planet; then the Silurian, the age of Crustaceous and shell-fishes. And going backwards still into the abyss of time we jarrive at the Laurentian age when life first began to exist on our globein the humble form now known as the Hozoon Canadense. Mid-way among these periods, you will observe, our Island formation of the Per- On the one hand are the | the Carboniferous period, dawn of the when worlds of our system, as au eloquent man is situated- | cl shades of ; : o and on the other the Triassic reptilian age. | je | osling gre at hen, turning into a narrow and shallow cove (on St, Peter's Island) we find our- | selves among the grey and drab colored beds so characteristic of the carboniferou formation. They beach, anc examine their contents. They are literally filled with the petrified remains of trees jand plants. Limbs of pine trees, knotted }and branched, sculptured trunks of tree ferns, the fluted shafts of calametes, ornate, sterms of knorria, and other unrecognized planis, lay chizzled in enduring adamant on | the surface of the living rock. We set down on the rugged beach, rever- ently, to consider these monuments of a long past eternity. The ravages of time | have sadly defaced them. Ten thousand i ; L revolutions of nature, have passed over j this spot since first they were placed in (their sea laid bed. Decay had wasted | | their forms ere they were entombed jin tho | | strata; and the petrefactive process | | has often been sadly detective. } |The up-heaving forces have rent their [bed asunder, still further mutilating | them, ond the earthquake’s thundering | | roll has passed this way, shivering it into }a thonsand fragments. But still they live | jfair forms of aborescent beauty, which | |ecrowned the earth with love | early morn, and stfll, through the surges of infinite ages, proclaiming the wisdom and | the power of their Almighty Creator | It needs trained hands, however, to seize | these spoils of the rocky shore. The fish- erman ags his boat over it every day, and }never dreams of the treasure beneath his | |feet. But in this light of science the pine, {tree again waves his dark plume to the breeze; the calamite shoots aloft his lance- like reed, circled with needled foliage; | | st | j } ; j j | c 1 ye. or c DALY Hae | sabre-shaped teeth. | ina reign of terror and blood-shed. armed jaws completed the sanguinary work | stretch out across the | of destruction, l give us a good opportunity to} | behold rolling centuries, filled with the destructive | i | ithe highest development liness in time’s!}- | Permian, sabemtens AMIN: as the world knows nothing about to-day. The drawing will give a better idea of its general appearance than any words can convey. However, if we were required to describe it in language, we would call ita moderats sized alligator, scaled and crested, mounted erect on a powerful pair of posterior limbs, which enabled it te leap with the agility of a frog. Its jaws were short and tremendously powerful, and armed with rows of the most trenchant, Its whole structure evinced an animal of tiger-like strength, agility and ferocity. It belonged to the most perfect family of its order, ata time when reptiles were the master creations of the world. We have no reptiles now living which anything like approach it in perfection of development. |As the lion and the fierce Bengal tiger _dominate the animal creation of to-day, so must this savage Bathiynathus have lorded it over the tribes of that old T riassic world A very Tamer'ane in blood-thirst and cruelty must this reptile have walked forth in the history of the past. Even the scaled crocodiles and megalosaurians must have found their thick armature but poor defense against the onset of this deep jawed monster. Its en- tire length was about ten feet ; and with a bound of sixteen or eighteen feet it leaped upon its prey, bearing it to the ground with its great weight, while the powerful claws prevented its escape, and the sabre- | As we contemplate this scene of (the past, when the world’s rulers were a fierce, cruel, celd-blooded ireptile tribe, without soul or‘sympathy but the brute lust for destruction, we may incl.ned to ask: How could a kind i be | heaven have formed such a world of blood jand strife? But let us turn from this un- } |ment of the present where intelligence and |christian charity hold the foremost place, the progressive creation of God, the subline upward march under his guiding care. Inthe dark past we see the deep shadows of misery that rested _under of mere brute force; but in the present the heavenly lights of peace and joy and love that beam under a Father's fostering care. By the retrospect, we learn to trust Him still further for the future, and to Jean upon that sure word whose promises herald the yet brighter day, when every base passion } will be forever banished in the glorious reign of the Redeemer, the Prince of Peace. Covering up all these rock formations which we have described—Carboniferous, and ‘Triassic, — alike, and wrapping up all our hills in a cluse-fitting garment of clay, the boulder clay consti- tutes the surface formation of our [sland. To a superficial observer, it would appear to be the principal formation. The red banks of our rivers and estuaries are formed of it. The streams which course from our hills open their channels in it alone. And eee acc TION: EG |hallowed past, and in the grand develop- | AR HERRING FOR SALE. —_— ——— or —- 50 half-bris. Large Herring. A. KENNEDY & CO. Head Queen’s Wharf, Feb, 28, ’83. —?j pd A MORTGAGE SALE, NOTICE is hereby given that, under and by virtue of a Power of Sale, contained in an Indenture of Mortgage, bearing date the ninth day of January, in the year of Our Lord ene thousand eight hundred and eighty-two, made between John Glark, Elijah Clark aud Elizabeth Clark, Paulina Clark, Mary Ellen Clark and Eliza Jane Clark, and Mary Ann Clark, wife of the said John Clark, of the one partand James Warren Howatt, of the other part, there will be sold by Public Auction, on Tuesday, the seventeenth day of April, A. D, 1853, at twelve o’c ock, noon, at the Court House, in Charlottetown, — A LL that tract, piece or parcel of land, situate, lying and being on the east side ~ Province of Prince Edward Island, bounded and described as follows, that is to say: Com- mencing at a stake set at the north-west angle of land belonging to William C, Lea, Esquire, herdering on the said Tryon River, from ‘thence running eastwardly along the said William C. Lea’s north boundary line of land until it strikes John Lea’s west line of land, thence northwardly along the said John Lea’s west line of land to the south boundary line of land in the possession of Tremain Lea, theuce westwardly along the said Tremain | ea’s south line of land until it strikes the said Tryon K ver, and thence southwardly, follow- ing the various windings of the said River to the place of commencement, and containing ‘one hundred acres (100) of land, be the ame a little more or less. For further particulars apply at the office of {cLeod & Morson, or to JAMES WARREN HOWATT, Mortgagee. |e = b. 28, Taluable Block Ke 1§83.—6i law wed of Land. “H*O be sold by AUCTION, on MONDAY i NEXT, Sth March, immediately after the sale of Peter Stewart's Stock, East River, | fifty-two acres of land, part of the Binstead Farm, measuring three chains and tifty links on the St. Peter's Road, and extending to the Hillsborough River. Terms at sale. WILLIAM DODD, Ch’town, Feb, 27, ’83. Auctioneer. BAZAAR. inittee intend holding a Bazaaron July 10th, 1883,ip aid of the City Hospital,and con- tributions will be amen ae FEBRUARY of ‘I'ryon River, of Lot or Township Number | Twenty eight (28). in Prince County, in the | fF\HE Members of the Ladies’ Hospital Cum- The young student ) gS ; : 7 ‘ ag | Ady y ; ; lone 1a) | Of all this wealth of animal life, we have | r Adown enc ik ae Pa pe aman log : ° . . e ‘rents ne ag " yet found but few remains in our own | *°TeHt . mompuss, Chat. Reard: 6 mighty:| iol f} i ( ion, a . . Voice j Triassic beds. A few corals anc srinites | 7 ‘ : y ; rals and eneri v1. And stopped at once amidst the maddest | and the single jaw of a dinasurous reptile | +} plunge : are its only relics yet discovered never | ave; but seetng | j ndicated, have all been found about Cape | sun Turner. The species are all different from| Clothe you with rainbows ? Who with living | _ | those of the Permian. flowers HEREBY notify all! paities to come and | ie of New London, while digging a well on his | position which these formations | animal- to explain to| own farm. I have the pleasure of present- | We ae elias rour soft, and soul-like | Charlototegn, Feb. 23, #3. —3i wkly 3i pd geviogical |ing the accompanying restoration of this | alate ees es OB PRINTING of dadiaitetie, ar ¢ oa. te nt € sane ws ; saa 2 every ‘sc = as far as we know, the firstever! And they too have a voice, yo piles of | executed with Neatness oad Des teh , Fepresen’®: offered to the world. It was 4 reptile of s20W, fat the EXAMINER JoB PRINTING pest eternity of cur ‘altogether untgue and pevoliar type, such And iu cher perilyce fall shall thoader Gud | ROOMS, vor. Water and Groat Ge | the tree-fern spreads out to the sky an the cuttings for our roads and railways 'umbrage of gausy frondage, unsurpassec |@Xpose no other fi rination. Its depth for delicate beauty by any woven fabric of | Varies from three to thirty feet. _ It consists art; while underneath grows a thicket of | of debris of the rocks which it overlies. | lesser ferns and plants, with dense crowds | t is always red in color, except on the few thankfully received by tho following ladies. Mrs. Pope, President ; «Mason, Treasurer ; | Mrs. Connolly, Miss Hens'ey, yf hirsute birstlin g knorria. |patches of the Carboniferous, where it| ‘«, Caven, ‘« M. Macleod, P ; : P ’ } ey more or less of a brown or grey] « D. Reddin, Mrs. C. C. Gardiner, | That part of the lecture speaking of the ios ae ee re wong oe clay, | « Beaton, ” Bagnall, | existence of coal under our Island, was of | a eae - nein . ae en - Byltiven, ‘ J. Peake, | particular interest. In his diagrams, Mr. e + « M, Biake, : R. Peake, Bain showed the upper and lower coal} [ts whole structure bears ample evidence | ** Hobkirk, “ Strickland, seams which come to the surface at New | of s'upendous ice agency in its formation. As| “ L, H. Davies, Miss K. Wright, |Glasgow, N. S. The great coal seam, | we come from a survey of the tropigal acenes George Davies, “ Mz. Palmer, | which is 30 to 40 feet thick at New Glasgow | Of the Trias, to consideration of this off- J. Longworth, Mrs. Hughes, passes under the Gulf right under our spring of the berg and the glacier, we realize} “ Pore pees. Island. It is 4,000 feet under Governor’s| tle stipendous climaict change which this | MiS. MALCOLM MACLEOD, Island ; but the upper coal formations | Patt of the world must have been subject Secretary {comes up within 1,000 to 500 feet of the to, . of Governor’s Island; and the| Three features of this formation are | greatest thickness of this deposit is not|Worthy of notice, as representing the dis- | more than three feet. The lecturer showed | tinct periods in its history. There is first, that tke coal formations lie within 300 to| the mass of clay proper, which was formed /400 feet of the surface in the extreme | When the sea was propressing in an upward |western part of the Island, and advised|™arch over the surface of the land. Ice borings to test the matter, as the expense | floe and glacier then wrought hand-in-hand with the restless wave, in trituring the .| Surface of the rock and laying down this anomalous deposit ; second, there are the Ch’town, Jan, 31, ’83.—law wed NOTICE. FLAMING este com AVING received from L. W. Harris, the agency for the celebrated Cooley Creamer Can, manufactured by him, I will be in a posilion, when the spripg opens. to supply my customers with any number ree | surface }could not be great. ; ' »° . . It is impossible for us to give our readers | : " . . . t | by extracts, or by synopsis, the real geo- ae d ‘ a a — pene j woree, } : . nities “ . »12 é ’ yenite, Oo e eisite, anc _An . » ¥ - = em oe Ag the lecture. It _—_ . | quartzite a. tenth mundi ‘ities D. MACEACHERN & CO. taken asa whole, in connection with the ee : Pe i ; trocery, F ’ 7 (which are scattered over the surface Diamond Grocery, Feb. 5, '83. | diagrams to get a fair grasp of it, and we +} & a nts P s . of the country, more abundantly in the ee ee therefore content ourselves with some of ientdin-meate Windia on b a 3 : : : : -| west arts. 28e Wwe g ¢ | Mr. Bains graphic piesures. In speaking - | floes aad Rimes ious. thai ars | the period of the deposition of the Triassic hills of Mote tania Sel teak P k , | formation he said : 4 ele d 9g 4 oe GBSWiCk anc Labrador, when the sea had attained its greatest elevation, and stood deep over plain and hill-top. Third, there are the | Lok if ane See our Stock glacial morains. These were formed after | the land had emerged from the overflowing | horeal sea, and ere yet the intense cold of } jthe period had relaxed. It was a time; when the whole surface was covered with | perrenial snows and vast sheets of creeping | land ice As I have elsewhere said, Prince Edward Island must at that time, have presented | | It was a land of reptiles. Scaly moneters plowed the green deep, or sported like the | dolphins, on the surface of the bright blue | bays. Monster Dinasurous, taking |the place of mammals of to day, stalked }@bout the land in conscious pride of sov- }ereignity, or reposed under the shade of palm or fern tree. Giant toads, such as the world had never seen before or since, haun ted its swamps and lurked invidious in its thickets ; while numbers of lesser forms appeared everywhere, enjoying the bound- _OF— At Very New Wall Papers, New Floor Oilcloths, \ew Linoleums, (Heavy and Fine Makes, e much the same appearance as the coast of hh less luxury of warmth and verdure. Mam- Greenland does ee Chas Pe was Low Oy hite Cottons, malian tribes just began to be. A few in- : me ; . : crowded with vast floes of ice, wh y ‘ Le : ferior forms held a subordinate place under ee ee Prices, She clings, disappeared in the fairest summer’s day. | ~: « ° > ' Ty} = | ki ‘ts li ef } Giant bergs with their flashing towers and | fn os 28k Oo g oe See 3S. eee res. He tine Of fam | asare caverns,careened through our seas, res- | aeethe ai oR, % She great bay on the plendent in the light of July sun. The crash- northern shore. Its deep voice is sounding, | *,. , . : atin as it labors on the soil of nas tearing down a oe yey My ee ses, fearing bergs, the reverbration of deep ice caves, | Seen ol at ha ag . ‘ a vat Oy in bh nyese, ee ae oe j and the cannon like report of severing coast | Tr ‘ LOPIZONTE "1assic ara. : 5 | ; 2 ag a 1 aa _ ‘ike a oten i : k | glaciers, never ceased except when every | sve . > metli yr ilg i 2 > rt . ‘ Pete ct ey ent Guanes the dark | sound was hushed in the depthjof the Arctic hill-tops, and spreads the tinted shadows on | a eo | winter. the silvery baya, and veils in the domain of reptile life. Cotton Flannels, 0 Pillow Cottons, make Towels, Bed Tickings, room Table Linens, orsets, 7 TOY Dress Goods, Stock. Winceys, } io eb Ace eee ca Papaacto nied It was the time of nature's direct disola- | Mie riches diesal bnsee, “thant PP ls a and itneeds the inspiration of the a es ee eee. ee pemey CORRE, | poet to see any beauty, or joy, or praise in From their lodges the summit of the great | such a scene. Colridge’s grand hymn inthe araucares ? "ees } -]i sd, |; . - : wraucarean pine trees, the long limbed, | icg clad vale of Chamouni is appropriate ' } i j j ; eS Soot ‘ 23, 1883. 1 IN| @TOPE Wikow an Wien IN STORE, Wiekiow and King | | i aati. LECTURE will be deli ‘*Kent Mills,” (Patent Roller), £ REV. DP McDONATL Nee , > y on t > ad > + EY. ° ag LD, \ — | acai? cue — the Catholic Literary Union, ia i ‘ K. D. CORNMEAL. ST, PATRICK'S ay ( Granulated, U, oaras Confectioners’, —ON— SUGAR j Bright Refined, Wednesday Fen “a, Yellow “ Vp oe Rice, Layer Raisins, Beans, Split Peas. | C nesday Ven g, 28th i MOLASSES, choice Demeraraand Trinidad. SUBJECT. a Americar, (Dom test) | ‘a KEROSENE ! Pratt’s Astral Oil, iu casks, ‘¢ 5-yal. pat. tins, | Among the Mountaing of | | aud Kill - SOLE LEATHER, Logan's No.1 and No.2. arey, Sem, Matches, Wrapping Paper, Paper Bags, | 4S, a psaaae 10 cents ; Keserved Seay, etc., ete. "4 i Tickets for sale at Fraser & tr yo 7 rh | Store, Apothecarics’ Hall, . ; | WHOLESALE. gir Anterent sd Diam Sg | FENTOR T. NEWBERY. | Doors open a+ 7.30, to commence ste IS | Ch’towp, Feb. 26, ’83. | JOHN : Pag: 4:9) [4i wly 2i wly pat 2i her 2i | an & McINNIs, By meteainaesaa eaie oe i oe LE Feb. 21, 1853.—we fr sat ty , SEIZU ‘"LONLON Hot Gn Fhursday, the ist day of B, ‘ . f ‘ March next, Cur Buyer Having Gone to Engl Mew AT 2 O'CLUCK, P. M., AT THE T+ PURCHASE oUR i y i ° Customs Warehouse, Bir ‘4 r * a Georgetown, SPRING HI rne ant the under-mentioned Goods will be sold, for UU, an infraction of the Revenue Law, ie In order to make room for them, | Ey SEIZED / we will sell a )3 casks Kerosene Oj], a" § cans do. (in 4 cases), i 1 dozen T weed Caps . ; 15} do. Felt Hats, } (in onan CH FAP FOR ¢ ANH easy: 5 half-chests Tea. ' fe Also the following, unless previous] y entered Our surplus of Stock in hand, not p and duty paid. | tocarry over to auoter ae Bi GOODS UNCLAIMED, CONSI@\ 3B. ae dt 6 Egg Cases, Patrick Kelly, | meus ee 2 Parcels Pictures, Wm. Shore. ‘iy Me CHAS. OWES, Household Goods } Sub-Collector. Y | Customs, Georgetown, \ February, 12, 1883, aa Feb, 16—wkly i. dy 27 & 28 OF ALL DESCRIPT ; } Notice of Removal. ol N <i | Carpets, Oil Cloths, Damask and , os tains, Table Linen, Towels, To 5 hig etc., etc. Ti I On Monday, Fe bruary 26th, Large Stock of Grey and White Golme a Sheetings and Shirtings, {beat i : 1 wili remove my business to the English and leading Dominion Milly Rex | Black Cashmetes, Cords, Lustres Omp INES v v STORE, . And, at this Stock-taking time, E i all Departments, at tempting prica qaev™ (ne Boor North of my present = 4 large and unexceptionable Stock of 4 \ Stand, in English and Canadian, with a Trimmi t the lowest prices) | Where I sball be pleased to see all my old ee customers, and as Many new ones as may favor me with their patronage. GEGRGE CARTER, Suits and Single (urments made to wi on the previ'ses, in the best style th ’ Upper Great George Street. A (Choige Asso. tment : Ch’town, Feb. 2a, 1883.__whty vi _or- f j - CLEARING-OUT SALE YOR D Tae =~ GROCE R [ki se Teas, in five, ten and fifteen pound i giving g-nerc satistacsion toe GEO. DAVIES &f Charlottetown, Feb. 20, sé. Merchants Bank of P, Bl MUSIC & MUSIC BOOKS, BREMNER BROS. PQEING desirous of clearing out their pres- ent Stock of Music, before the end of March, offer the following unprecedented bar- gains:— de SHEET MUSIC at a discount’ of 80 per skit, cent. FP XHE Annual Meeting of the Sb * BOOSEY S MUSICAL CABINET for 20 cents a number. (Original price 30 and 35 cents, Other Music Books at a discount of from 30 to 50 per cent. No music exchanged. of this Bank will be held at f House, in Charlottetown, on THURS! the lst day of March next, at the o'clock, noon, for the purpose of Directors for the ensuing year, action of such otber business as may before them. ' Proxies for voting must be left with Cashier at least one day previous @ meeting. WM. MeLEA4%, Caabst —aLso— The following FANCY GOODS will be dis- posed of at a discount of 25 per cent: Photograph Frames, Ladies’ Companions, Work Boxes, The above discounts are for CASH ONLY, and on purchases made within six weeks from Writing Desks, Dressing Cases, Easels, etc. Charlottetown, Feb, 21, 1883—till \UBSCRIBE for the WEEKLY ® date. Feb. 24, ’83.—6i. her 2i \) NER, the Cheapest and Best Newspaper published onP. K. Tsland. SPRING, 1883. a For Charlottetown and Summerside, Prince Edward Island, THE CLIPPER BRIGANTINE waders, on broad extended wings are sweep- | Ba heey sieats ing down to the shoals of the Triassic bay, | Ff where the evening tide is uncovering their| ‘‘ Ye ive falls! that from the feeding ground for them. brow ; mountains | W. A.WEEKS & CO., Ch’tewn, Feb, 1883, We con- i Motio1 struct onr picture from what is known of | the remains of other districts of the same | remains of the tribes of plants | Beneat sless torrents! silent cataracts ! Petvacichmpad j Who made you glorious at the gate of | heaven, hthe keen fall moon! Who bade the NOTICE. | | ! | - )OF lovelies blue, spread garlands at your feet? | The jaw of a Dinosaurus reptile referred | 04! let the torrents, like a shout of na- to is that of the Bathignath us borealis, which tions ‘ cas : E wa: found some years ago by Mr. McLeod — . an let the ico plains echo, God ! rod! sing ye meadow streams, with glad - take their Umbrellas left with me the years 1881 and '882. | notice, after which I will 5 | during I give two months ell to pay expenses, SOPHIA TAUDVIN. vrge Streets published m P. ‘ISABELLA’’ Classed Al, 9 yeais, W. KENNEDY, Master, WILL SAIL From Liverpool for Above Ports ON OR ABOUT 25TH MARCH, Taking goods at throngh rates for all Stations on the P. E. Island Railway, For rates of Freight, a ply in Liverp: R.M. C STUMBLES, Foe. 4 [oye te S, Fsq., 4 India Build. WANTS, LOST, FOUND, 4 TERRIER, with black and tnt The dog answers to the name “Grip. dollars reward will be paid for his Apply at Rankin’s Drug Store. Btove E32 OST—On Saturday morning, Fletcher's Music Store and Hil Square, a Meerschaum Pipe, with stem. The finder will be rewarded by the same at Fletcher's Music Store, (feb# OST—On Saturday, the 24th 4 Queen Street, a purse eon of money. The tinder will be leaving it at this oflice \ ) ANTED—$/0 DAILY—Caam / “Our Lost Explorers; 0% Arctic Expedition ™ 50 pages I trations. Sales unprecedented copies with 10. Exclusive territory: 50 cents —Buxer Pus. Co., Prove Ww ED—A Clerk in a General Si of about sixteen years cf 9 reference required. Apply at Tu®4 OFFice. ‘| 0 Learns Dwelling House situated on Prince Street. Peake Bros, & Co. ERE F iu FESEPE., £F: F S P EPI PFEE2 — aed 2 mp LET—Immediate possession & desirable residence, situate 7 5 ings, Water Street, or here ta the owner, R. F. QUIRK. Ch’town, Peb. 22, 8a%—~ay UBSCRIBE for the WEEKLY EXAMI. NER, the Th and Best N ew 2 Irving, 7 Hillsborough Street, Reut low 9% ¥ FE \enant. Apply atthe Merce ee E f.toMr. F. & Meare. A a ‘EY OLET—The Brick House @% Street, at present occupied BF Esquire. — Possessiong. 4 a K Ialand, Only $1 per your Apply W. Dota my ees FEF