NIN AE AONE A A EEL A ll PPS ACT CAH IE iments mame ~ ere RRC I se TE TO | ‘ ARs A YRAR, ~NEW SERIES. CL ERMS Five Dou “* This ts true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.’’— EURIPIDES. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUE! . SINGLE Coprzus Two CENTS. em = = = _ SDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1 1883, fun Dau EXAMINER HALIFAX & LONDON. is issued every evening, by The Examiner Publishing Co. From their office, corner of Great George Streets, Char!gttetown, Prince Edward Island. Raves of SUBSCRUP ION - Six Months, ° ; $ Three Une Month, . : : ( Water au i 2 50 Months, - ° l 25 50 = Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for ments, on application. > monthly, | quarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- —>— — — ALMANAC FOR NOVEMBER, 1883. MOON 8 CHANGES, First Quarter, 7th day, 7h. 51.9m., a. m, Fall Moon, 14th day, 2h. 24.8m., p. m. Last quarter 2ist day, 3h. 31.1m.,, a. m. New Moon : 2% h day, 2h, 41.7m., p. m. Sun (Sun 'Mo on | \High | . DAY OF WEEK . gh 2 ib m ih m morniaft’n 6 47 4 40; 8 511 30) i! Thursday 2) Friday 48 sa 9 O'morn 3! Saturday 50 9 53) 0 6 4 Sunday , Sli) 36,10 41) 0 41/10 04) 5, Monday 53} 34jL1 25, 1 19) 6) Tuesday 54, 33jaft 3) 2 1 7|Wednesday | 55; 32) 0 39) 2 50) 8| Thursday 571 Bij 1 li! 3 49) 9| Friday | 59, 20! 1 49) 5 3 10| Saturday 7G 22 13| 6 21 tlSunday | 27 244 7 23, 9 46 12! Monday 3} 26, 3 19) 8 33 13, Tuesday | 5) 2413 5s) 9 24) 14) W ed nesday 6) 23! 4 44110 12 15, Thursday 7| 22, 5 36.10 57) 16 Friday | 9 22) 6 36|n1 42) 17 Satarday 10} 20| 7 39 Me 2s| 18| Sunday | 12) is 8 45| 1 12’ 9 30 19| Monday | 13 = 53! 1 59) 20' Taesday 14} 17/10 53) 2 4]| 21) Wednesday 16} 16) morn} 3 44) go\Thursdsy ' 17] 16] 0 1) 4 49) 23| Friday 19) 15) 1 2) 5 58} 24'Saturday 20 237.1 25! Sunday | 21] 33) 3 3) 7 571 9:15 26| Monday | 23; 13) 4 2: 8 40 27/Tuesday 24| 12] 4 56! 9 20) 23) Wednesday 25' 12; 5 59 9 51, 29Thursday 26 11| 6 5510 34) aymene 23 "7 7 1911 - Day 8) rises sets | rises | water | len’, Prince Hdward Island RAILWAY. TIME TABLE NO. 20. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. to take effect on the 24th May, 1868, TRAINS 0 UTWARD. (READ DOWN.) STATIONS, | EXPRESS. | MIXED. MIXED, Ch’town ..|Dp 6.45am|Dp 9.20 am/ Dp 4.15pm Royalty Jc’ ** 7.00 ** | ** 9.55 “| * oe “ HN Wilesh’e: “ 7.35 “ “10.50 * “6.2 unter R’r| ‘* 7.45 “ , “11.06 “| * 5.40 * n Headetbe'e “e 8.10 oe 11.46 “e * 6.16 * Co’ty Line,} “* 8.15 “| “11.56 mt $+ 6.20 * reetown ' * 8.26 ** | *12.12pm; * 6.45 * Keusingt’n * 8.40 * Pig 4 | ** 7.08 * . : Ss 66 D ‘ “ ai ee Summ’ side jy" 9.95 “ Dp. 45 «* iv 7.45 Miscouche - O40 * \: * 2.08 **| Wellingt’n| ** 9.59 “| “* 2.37 “ Port Hill../ “10.28 “| ‘* 3.22 «| O'Leary...} *11.20 «| ** 4.53 ** Bloomfield | 11.38 ‘| ** 5.20 “ Albertea,. ‘‘12.03pm! ‘ 6.20 “| Tignieb... Arl2,40 ** 1Ar7 7.20 Ch'town .. Dp4. 00pm Dp 7.00am Royalty Jol * 4.15 “| * 7,23 * WEE vee ce | 4.97 wf 7a) a Bedford...! ‘* 4.40 “ “6g *| Mt. Stew’s| ‘* 5.15 “| ** 9.00 ** Morell....| ‘* 5.44 “| ** 9.45 °*| St. Peter's, | wee “re Bear River! “ 6.39 “| “11.11 ‘| Souris ... jAr7.10 “ jAr12.00 m | Cardigan..| * 6.11 “| “10.33 “ Jeorget’n..|Ar 6.30 ‘ |Arlt.00 * TRAINS INWARD. Mt Btew’ "t Dp 5. 15pm ‘Dp 9. 3 —_— —_- ——— (READ CP.) STATIONS, | EXP RE MIXED, MIXED, Sh’town ..| Ar 8.00 pm| Ar 3. 45 pm|Arl0. 15am Royalty Se Dp i. 45 “| Dp3.21 “ \Dp 9 55 * N Wiltsh’e 757 e195 “* ~ See * Hanter R’r| “* 7.00 * ; ** 2.08 ‘| ** 8.48 °° Bradalba’e | * 6.36 “| “* 1.27 “ | “ 8,10 * Co’ty Line. *“* amo “T? 1.17 * ! “a. a Freetown..| “ 6.19 ** 1 ** 1.0L “| “7°42 e Kensingt’n| “ 6,04 “| “12.37 “|; “ 7.20 ° * 540 * #*19.00 “ “545 dumm’ side Ard. 15 ‘* | Arti. 30am PSR Miscouche Dp§.00 ‘* |Dp 11.04*° Wellingt’n| * 4.42 ‘| “10.55 “* Port Hill..| ‘* 4.13 **! “* 9.43 “* 0’ Lear ‘3,22 | ** 8.20 “ ico kcia ++ 2.06 f* | ff 7.64 * Alberton ,.: (2.38 |“ 7.16 “ Tignish .. .| ** 2.00 #7 ** 6.00 ™ ‘die Oh’town ..|Arl0. 00am’ Ar 7 7.00 pm Royalty Je \Dp 945 * Dp6.37 ** A. *O.g3 "Cm * Bedford. ..| ‘* 9.20 sot 066.00 °°) Mt. Stew’t * $55 **) * 6.20 “| Morell.. ~wes *1.% 630 ** St, Peter’ s| oT “it ae | Dear River} fe 7.93 ’ ye > 49 - Souris .. 4 sé 6,50 eZ sé o. 6 ME, Stew't Dp 55 | Dp 5.20pm, “ardigan . 7.49 ‘* a 3.2 27 es | 5.¥6 fe tf 3.00 f Georges oes JAMES COLEMAN, Superintendent, lottetown, May 21, 1583. Retlwey Office, Charlot prow tar tims fr THE STEAMSHIP “JULIET, WILL SAIL POSITIVELY, ON MONDAY, STH NOVEMBER, FROM Hasifax to Havre and London, | - HIS is a splendid opportunity for dire | shipments tv France and England. | The “JULIET” is 240 horse power, and /may be relied on for a rapid passage home, ; She has spacious accommodation, and seven }Separate Compartments for dividing the | cargo, Apples will be placed in the Tween decks | where there is ample ventilation. Please apply before lst of November, as shipment cannot be guaranteed till space is enyaged. THE §. §. “WIDDRINGTON ” WILL SAIL FROM Halifax Direct to London, ABOUT 26TH NOVEMBER. AG ENTS—H. V. Barrett, Annapolis, N. ;W. H. Shanks, Charlottetown, P. E.1.; C Dwyer & Co’y, Pictou, N. 8.; Troop & Son, St. John, N. B. JOSEPH WOOD Secretary, Halifax Steam Nav Co’y HUSTON. NTENMLAN Carroll, 879 tons, Capt. Brown, Worcester, 865 tons, Capt, Blankenship NE of the above FIRST-CLASS STEAM. ERS will leave Charlottetown for Boston THURSDAY seaaitali AT5 P.M. PASSENGERS will find this the Cheapest and most pleasant trip to Boston, Accommo- dations on both steamers are splendid. CARVELL BR0S., AGENTS, Ch’town, May 17, 1883.--pat her sj — —_—_ STEAMER “HEATHER BELLE.” FALL ARRANGEMENT. N and after Tuesday, Oct, 16th, 1883, the ( steamer ‘‘Heather Belle,” will run as follows :— Will leave Orwell Brush Wharf for Charlotte- townevery Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thureday tmornings at seven o'clock, calling at China Point and Halliday’s Wharves. Leaving Charlottetown for Haliday’s, China ‘Pojat gud Orwell Brush Wharf same evenings, at two o’cleck, remaining at Brash Wharf every Tuesday and Wed- nesday nights, and Thursday night return- ing to Charlottetown, arriving about eight o'clock. Every Friday morning, at seven 0 clock, leave Charlottetown for Crapaud ; leaving Crapaud for Charlottetown at eleven o'clock, remaining at Charlottetown same night. Saturday, leave Charlottetown for Crapaud, at nine o'clock, a. m., leaving Crapaud for Charlottetown, about one o'clock, p- m. JOUN HUGHES, Agent. Ch town, Oct. 13, 1883. [2aw wkly pat ne her pres. Im LABRADOR HERRING, BARRELS ak HALF. BARRELS 200 choice Labrador Herring, For sale b F HORACE HASSARD, Nov. 2, BERS, - —Im eod TO LET. ewe eee r. Archibald McNeil!'s Auction Room. Jageive of CAPT. AYLWARD, | sout Ch’tuwn, Ost. 26, ‘83, —2uw Im ‘Merchants’ Bank of Halifar AUCTION SALES, CHARLOTTETOWN AGENCY, —WILL BE— OPENED IST NOVEMBER, 1883, ,on and after which date DEPOSITS OF $5 | AND UPWARDS, will be taken and interest at the rate of ‘Four Per Ceat. Per Annum ALLOWED THEREON. | For further particulars apply to F. H. ARNAUD, Oct. 30, 1883, AGENT. NORWICH AND LONDON ACCIDENT Insurance Association, OF HNGLAND, Rates Prompt settlement of claims, UCHN MACEACHERN, Agent for P. E, Island. Ch town, Oct. 16, 1883. Tnsures against aecidents of all kinds, moderate. CONSIC! (MENTS SOLICITED. R. O’DWYER, Comission and General flerchant FOR SALE OF P, E. 1. PRODUCE. 289, WATER SIREET, Savings Bank werent —ON— MARKET — A T= DAY, ‘Stevenson's Building, Queen street, -" (NEAR THE MARKET), UCTION SALES of Furniture, Farm . Implements, Carriages, Sleighs, etc., promptly attended to on market days at the above central stand for market-day sales. , McNEI LL, Auctioneer. wn,Oct. 15,’83.—eod tf McLEOD, MORSON & HcQUARRIE Barristers & Atwornsjo-at-Law, SOLICITORS, ‘HOTARIES PUBLIC, ETC, OFFICES : 11 Queen Street, gxeform Club Committee Rooms, Opposite Post Office, Charlottetown, P. E, Island, Merchants” Bank of Halifax Building, Sum- merside, P.-E. Island, MONEY TO°LOAN, on good security, at moderate interest. Neri McLeop. ¥ | W.A, 0. Monson. L McQvuarrik, Nov. 24, '82.Spres her SULLIVAN & MACNEILL, ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &e. OFFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. Gaz” Money to Loan, Ww. W. SuLuvas, Q. C. | Cuzstze B. Meck, Jan. 16, '83, St. John’s, Newfoundland, In connection with the above is Capt. English, who is well kaown in P. E. Island, who will take special charge of all consign- ments, and will also attend to the chartering of vessels for the carrying trade of P. KE. 1,. N. B.—Parties wishing to procure good@. Labrador Herring would do well to consult R. O’Dwyer. Sept. 11, 1883,—3i tawdwkly. LIFE INSURANCE. L. ARTHUR & CO, GHNHRAL Commission Merchants, 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON, MASS. Eggs and Produce a Specialty, April 26, 1883.—wkly ttf United States Life Insnrance Co,j —O¥V THE— OOTY OF NEW YORK. GRGANIZED 1850. —— New Features, Incontestible Policies, Prompt Settlement of Claims Guaranteed. Apply at residence, Weymouth Street, from §to 10 a, m., and 4 to 6 p. m. GEORGE TWEEDY, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, Notary Puabiic, &c. OF FICE—West Side of Queen Street, Char = lottetown, next door to Stevenson’s Tin Shop July 25, 1883. — dy wkly 6m A. H. McPHERSON, Agent. Sept. 25, 1883.—2aw INSURANCE OFFICE, Queen Insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. Lancashire Insurance Company CAPITAL, FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS Insurance effected on all kinds of property at current rates. Losses settled promptly and equitably. : DESBRISAY & ANGUS, General Agents, Office—South Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Sept. 15, 1882. ~ STANDARD» Le ASSURANCE 00, T the 57th Annual Genera! Meeting of * the Stardard Life Assurance Company, beid at Edinburgh on Tuesday, the 24th of April, 1883, the following results for the year eaten 15th November, 1883, were re- ported : 3,035 new w proposals for life as- surance were received the year for $ 9,754,085 38 2,561 proposals were accepted, assuring 7,239,048 13 The total existing assurances in sores at eth Naoyember, 1963, amounte (Of which $7,753, ‘031. 15 was reassured with other ofiices) The claims by death which arose during the year amount- ed, including bonus addi- tions, to $6,936,302 9' 2,462,226 59 FYE Ottices, W ayehousg and Dwelling | situate on Lower {Jueen “trees, ad joining | FRED. W. HYNDMAN, or of} The annual revenue amounted ae lath Nov ember, 1354, vo | [hsv invested funds at same date amounted to | Being an increase 4,267,546 00 29,503,416 00 ‘ving the year of 1,062,648 35 JOHN LONGWORTH, Agent for Charlottetown. THOMA ‘ KERR, Ins of Agencies. Chi'trwi, Kagest a, LIGHT. EDWARD T. RUSSEL & C0., GHNEHERAL Commission Merchants, NO, 284 STATE STREET, BOSTON. Particular attention given to the sale o Fish and Produce of all kinds, June 22, 1883. —6m MONCTON Sash aud Door Factory, M* P. LEA, in ts seinaniod thanks to the public for the liberal patronageextended to him while in business in Charlottetown, begs leave to inform his old customers and the public generally, that he, in company with Mr. William Rogers, has appointed Messrs. B. Williams & Ce, Lumber and Coal Dealers, Pownal Wharf, Charlottetown, our agents, who will keep constantly on band a full supply of Mould- ings, Window Sashes, Doors, etc.. at LOWEST CASH PRICES. All ordeys entrusted to them will receive prompt attention. LEA & ROGERS, | > Moncton, N. LIGHT. ERSONS who may wish to illuminate! their shop windows and stores curing the Xmas and New Year's seasou, should y the McKenzie Rappley Light, now in use at Diamond Tookalare. These burners give double the light that can be obtained from the ordinary burners, consuming the same quan- tity of gas. Orders should be given at the Gas Works early, to ensure their being ob- ‘tained in good season. Focal town, Oct. 23, 1883—1m eod UY THE DAILY EXAMINER, the Cheapest and Newntest puper ™m Or, Sept. 5, 1883.—aw why FOUL PLAY. nee CHAPTER VI. James Seaton. so narrow and apathetic as your London | | too much in that; but Seaton, a gentleman | ‘and a scholar, eclipsed even colonial clerks. in this, that he omitted no opportunity of | learning the whole business of White & Co., and was also animated by a feverish zeal that now and then provoked laughter from clerks, but was agreeable, as well as sur- prising, to White & Co. Of that zeal his jincurable passion was partly the cause. | Fortunes had been made with great rapidity in Sydney; and Seaton now conceived a wild hope of acquiring one, by some lucky hit, before Wardlaw could return to Helen Rolleston. And yet his common sense said, if | was as rich as Croesus, how could she ever mate with me, a stained man? And yet his burning heart said, don’t listen to reason; listen only to me. Try. And so he worked double tides; and, in virtue of his university education, had no snobbish notions about vever putting bis hand to manual labor; he would lay down his pen at any moment, and bear a hand to lift a chest cr rolla cask, Old White saw him thus multiply himself, and was so pleased that he raised his salary one-third. He neversaw Helen Rolleston, except on Sunday. On that day he went to her church, and sat half behind a pillar, and feasted his eyes and his heart upon her. He lived sparingly, saved money, bought a strip of land by payment of ten pounds deposit, ard sold it in forty hours for one hundred pounds profit, and watched keenly for similar opportunities on a larger scale ; and all for her. Struggling with a moun tain; hoping against reason, and the world. White & Co. were employed to ship a valuable cargo on board two vessels char- tered by Wardlaw & Son; the ‘‘Shannon” and ‘*Proserpine.”’ Both these ships lay in Sydney harbor, and bad taken in the bulk of their cargoes; but the supplement was the cream; for Wardlaw, in person, had warehovsed eighteen cases of gold-dust and ingots, and titty of lead and smelted copper. They were all examined, and branded by Mr. White, who had duplicate keys of the gold cases. But the contents, as a matter of habit and pradence, were not deseribed outside, but were marked ‘‘Proserpine” and “Shannon” respectively: the mate of the ‘*Proserpine,” who was in Wardlaw’s con- fidence, had written instructions to look carefully to the stowage of these cases, and was in and out of the store one afternoon just before clos- ing, and measured the cubic contents of the cases, witha view to stowage in the respective vessels. The Jast time he came he seemed rather the worse for liquor; and Seaton, who accompanied him, having stepped out for a minute for something or other, was rather surprised on his return to find the door closed, and it struck him Mr. Wylie (that was the mate’s name) might be inside; the more so as the door closed very be opened by a key of peculiar construction. Seaton took out his key, opened the door, and called to the mate, but received no re- ply. However, he took the precaution to go around the store, and see whether Wylie, rendered somnolent ®by liquor, might not be lying obliviously among the cases. Wylie, however, was not to be seen/ and Seaton, finding himself alone, did an unwise thing; he came and contemplated Wardlaw’s cases of metal and specie. (Men will go too near the thing which causes their pain. He eyed them with grief and with desire, and could not restrain a sigh at these material proofs of his rival's wealth— the wealth that probably had smoothed his way to General Rolleston’s home, and to his daughter's heart; for wealth can pave the way to hearts, aye, even to hearts that cannot be downright bought. This reverie, no doubt, lasted longer than he thought, for presently he heard the loud rattle of shutters going up below; it ws closing up time; he hastily closed and locked the iron shutters, and then went out and ghut the door. He had been gone about two hours, and that part of the street, so noisy in business hours, was hushed in silence, all but an occasional footstep on the flags outside, when something mysterious occurred in the ware- house, now as dark as pitch. At an angle of the wall stood two large cases in a vertical position, with smaller eases lying at their feet; these two cases ¥ h j | Wuire & Co, stumbled on a treasure in! who utide Your colonial clerk 1s not} clerk, whose two objects seemed to be, to| | Tenens one department only, and not to do’ his easily with a spring bolt, but it could only|, VOL, 13,---NQ, 149, | goods were greatly protected by their |weight, and it is impossible to get out of the store without raising an alarm, and be- jing searched. But, not to fall into the error of writers serrate their readers’ curiosity and intelligence, and so deluge them with com- |ments and explanations, we will now simply ivelate what Wylie did, leaving you to gleam motives as this tale advances, His jacket had large pockets, and he took out jof them a bunch of eighteen bright steel i keys, numbered, a set of new screw-drivers, a flask of rum, and two ship bisenits. He unlocked the eighteen cases mat ked ‘‘Proserpine,” ete., and, peering in with his lantern, saw the gold-duét and small ingots packed in parcels, and surrounded by Australian wool of the highest possible quality. It was a luscious sight. He then proceeded to a heavier task; he unscrewed, one after another, eighteen of the cases marked ‘Shannon,” and the eighteen so selected, perhaps by private marks, proved to be packed close and on a different system from the gold, namely, in pigs, or square blocks, three, et in some cases, four to each chest. Now, these two ways of thcking the specie ‘and the baser metal, re&pectively, had the effect of producing a cet} mity of weight in the thirty-sin’@ was inspecting; otherwisee. th wonld have been twice the wei that contained the baser meta] proverbially heavy, but und tests is fo gold as five to twelve, , there- abouts. (To he continued, ) > > Another Great t Waterway. FULFILMENT OF SCRIPTURE, ie And now we have the probability of the utilizing of the great natural ravine of the Vailey of the Jorden, for the creation of a navigable marine highway between the Mediterranean and the Dead Sea. The scientific eminence of the party of geologists and engineers, mostly English, who are already on their way to Palestine (where they wil] make a thorough examination of the proposed undertaking), is a sifficient guarantee of the proposition, A biblical student has been calling at- tention to the ‘‘epparent fultilment in three several ways of THE PROPHET EZEKIEL'S WORDS (chap. xlvii), should the proposed plan of connecting the Mediterranean and Sea be carried ont.” According to this student of the predic- tions of the prophet in question, these three ways of fulfilment are as follows :— 1. Bearing in mind that Jerusalem stands 2400 feet above the Mediterranean, while the Dead Sea lies 1,400 feet below that level, the waters of the Mediterranean would flow far up the Vailey of the Kedron so that, to one coming from Jerusalem east- ward, they woull be first ‘‘ankle deep,” then ‘‘to the knees,” then ‘*to the loins,” then ‘‘a river that I could not pass over.” Zechariah also (xii, 8) foreteils a commu- nication by water from Jerusalem, both to the Dead Sea and Mediterranean, ‘‘in sum- mer and winter alike,”—i. ¢., never fail- ing. 2. The waters of the Dead Sea (v. 8-9) are ‘‘to be healed” and filled with a multi- tude of fish, ‘‘as the fish of the great sea,” —~i. e., the Mediterranean. The mention of Eugedi (v. 10) makes the reference to the Dead Sea certain. 3. As the Jordan descends sixty feet between the Sea of Galilee and the Dead Sea, the level of the former would be raised from 600 to 700 feet, swallowing up Tiberias, and forming a sea northwards over the sites of Capernmaum, Bethssida, Mag- dala, ete., towards Damascus, Mount Hermon, and the Havran (vv. 16, 17). ‘This,’ says the searcher quoted, ‘‘we may well regret, as that Jericho, the fountain of Elisha, and the fords and plain of the Jordan should be buried 800 feet below the waters.” lt appears that in the “Speaker's Bible,” in the Honse of Commone, ‘‘there are many points of interest in the comments upon the 47th chapter of Ezekiel, bearing directly upon this project, never thought of, adds the student quoted, ‘‘when they were written.” The commercial and political advantages of the proposed waterway are considered to be so enormously great, that, if the work is found to be feasible, it is tolerably sure to be carried out, all regrets over the loss of revered names and sites to the contrary not- withstanding. a. NoTWiTHSTANDING that the search for gold were about eight feet high, more or less. Well, behind these cases suddenly flashed | a feeble light, and the next moment two! brown and sinewy hands appeared on the| edyve of one of the cases—the edge nex the wall; little, and the next moment there mouated | on ihe top that in truth resembles both these quadra- peds, viz., a sailor; sailor was the mate of the “ Proserpine {” He descended lightly from the top of case, behind which he had been jammed for hours, and lighted a dark lantern, and went softly groping about the store with it. This was a mysterious act, and would, ee perhaps, have puzzled the proprietors of ithe store even more than it would a | stranger; for a stranger would have said at once thisis burglary, | those acquainted with the place would have known that neither of those crimes was very practicable. This enterprising sailor could not burn down this particular store without roasting himself the firs: toing ap. indeed, he could not burn it down at all, for the roof was flat, and was, in fact, one gigantic iron tank, like the roof of Mr. Goding’a brewery in London, and, by a neat contrivance of American. origip, the ‘whole tank could be turned in one moment to a ahower bath, and drown tion in thay seconds or there- the case vibrated and rocked a | So me of the fields recently if it nota cat, nora menkey, \covered in the early as might have been expected, but an animal fields, though apparently exhausted, eo far as and need we say that|copable of exhausting them, or else arson; but, goviti be rifle the plave; the Fish | has been carried on for thirty years in the colony of New Sovth Wales, new fields or new de) Osits are continually being discovered, some of them in localities which were sup- {posed to have been thorough! y examined, discovered pro) mise to equal in extent and richness any (is days, while the oldest the miner, unaided by capital and skill, is yet contain de- | posits of gold which will yield a rich harvest the ‘to the ski/led miner who shall bring to besr upon them appliances euch as are being suc- | cessfully employed elsewhere, Gold has ‘always been found in association with certain fo mations, and the extent of country ‘oceupied by these is about 0,000 eqnare miles, or nearly one-fourth of the whole area of the colony—a consilerable portion of which has not yet been touched by the pick of the miner. ALL our druggists now heartily endorse the amazing sccess of Mack’s Magnetic Medicine, and recommend it for both serves in all cases of sexual weakness. Sold in Charlottetown by Apothecaries Hall Co. See advertisement in another colump. [ngg2 lw wkly. ——“—> <2. Cavartan Curese, very choice and cheap, also Cape Cod Cranberries, at the Fish Market, Grafton Street. {nov9 3i eod -_=.- Suap, Salmon, Tongnes ond Sounds, Her- ae and Codtish, ie ane oe and «be Ways on han Fuh Marke mo my ~ , -* = car man pre core 3 es ee OE NE TE POSES an — Enos al - a) ame > ne o sianmagfos PS i ? «ae Peeranae Pied - Aiaioine ae Ms as