——_— se geass FIVE DOLLARS A YEW SERLES >. RAT fee “ This is true wp Advertising at most wi may De made f MOON S CHANGES, in 9th day, Oh. ; Quarter, 15th day, $a } in, 93rd day, lh. 52m » Pp. ISm, a. ie er Qnd day, i} i3m., Se ester Sist day, th. Sm., p. m mm. p.m ma, xlerate rates, r monthly, tery, half-yearly or yearly advertise- penis, 08 application. ALMANAC FOR MARCH, 1883. a. m, i. Street, Charlottetown. “@ Money to Loan, dan. 16, '83. Dee, 11, 1882,--Im 3aw wly 3m OFFICES: AGENT FOR Royal Fire Insurance Company, of : England, (Late of lialian Warehouse) SILLIVAN & MACNEILL, AITORNEYS - AT- LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, | OPFICES—O'Halloran's Building, Great &e. FW. Scuuvay, Q. C. | Corser B. Macnemt DR. McLEAN, SOURIS EAST, ‘f Mite—" Royal Oak Hotel.” McLEOD & MORSON barristers & Attorneys-at-Law, WLICTIRS, NOTARIES PUBLIC, ETC. Club Committee Rooms, Opposite Post » Charlottetown, P. E. Island, ’ Bank of Halifax Building, Sam- W. A. O. Morsoy. merside, P. E. Island. MONEY 70 Lo. AN, on good security, at interest. Sin. MeLzop Nov. 24, ‘92. ~pres ber te BE "den & Lancashire Fire Insurance Company, of England, ; 1 of Lonton Fire Insurance Co., } of England, 1) =4S REMOVED § His Office to his New Buildiog, B® "Quen and King Sts,—Up Stairs. Fa Chitown, Dec. 7, 82. 4 Bank of Nova Scotia. + BueaTABLisHED 1832, —_—_—= 4 Paid up Capitai . . re Resery, eFund .. usin bos Z Cd ‘ $1,000,000 . 325,000 Rey of this Bank will be opened on sew, 19th inst., in the building teri by the Bank of Prince Edward ! “Se the management of the under- i © cerren will be received on intereat, and acount. Drafts 8° ted on the various Agencies and ents of the Bank. it aed Rand other Exchange bought and Seueral pone ae transacted. Wow, J _D. C, CHALMERS, tae 17, 1952-44 Agent. CHARLOTTETOWN peiann RLOTTELOWN, PRINGE BOTARD LAND, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 14, 1883, - a a ily Esaminet. tien ery iat! J, when Fre eae Men, havin, tc 2@Vise the Public, may speak free.” —Evxrrwxs. Sineie Corres Two Cents. DAILY HKXAMINER DR. MACLEOD 1s ISSUED RVERY RVENINO, jy rH Bxaminex Pusiisuine Company, oon Orrick, ¢ NER OF WATER ine res on Removed his Office garlettetown, | z Island. Ta HIS RESIDENCE, RaTES OF SUBSCRIPTION NRX? DS is an $2 30 | U8 0 SION CRURGH, — e 1 20 Seuth Side . : dae Month, "i Ch'town, un . es. peo. Im eod shaticadhd iNSURANGE OFFICE Jueen lasurance Company, OF ENGLAND. rEN MILLION DOLLARS | CAPITAL. — Sun ‘Sun Moon} Hig Days CAPIT siete : GRO MR vices sets | rises Water cr Tewh, ABETAL, FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS | ; bh mjh m/ morn! aft’n Insurance eifected on ali kinds of property | Wfiurday (6 43.5 42) 0 34. 3 10 at current rates. Losses pettled promptly tinlay 41! 43) 1 29! 4.15 ‘nd equitably. Bie, | 10) 45) 224) 5 37 1 DESBRISAY & ANGUS, 38; 46 3 13! 6 57 ol os | Gen sG' 4713 58: 8 6! Oflice—South Side Queen Square, ma Agents 34, 49, 4 37/ 8 5S Ch’town, Sept: 18, 1882, 32) 50; 5 13] 9 44 30; 52) 5 46'10 29 NO 28 54,6 1811 8 OPENED | 26 55) 6 50/11 50/11 15 26 56) 7 3 24] mora) NEW 23| 5718 2) 0 3) 21} 58| 8 44) 1 15 ih (| | 1996 0.932% 2 4! ining all Coffee Rooms, } 15, 3.11 22) 421) North Side of 13; 4 aft 23| 5 34 12 02 0 l a | at} 5) 1 26 53 | v0 Que bl Square, | 9 7} 2 26' 7 54! q $ 328) 9 2) OPPOSITE THE LAW COURTS. | 5 9 4 28192 bos! 1115 2519 au i 1} 12) G 28,10 29 ‘h? D. MAY. 559! 13! 7 20111 Ol12 a6} Ch’town, Dec: 12, 1¢82,—3m 57, 15) 8 28/11 32! ae Seen tS |} 55| 16) 9 27laft 4 THE STAR! 53} 17)10 26] © 37 | t | S51] 1921 22) 2 24 a | 49). 20;morn; 1 54 A ; 48: 21/017) 2 41 | | 46° 22) 1 513 42 4 Indubitable Evidence, (Condensed) From Doecters Drugzists, Farmers, Merchants Some of the additional home testimony re- (ceived since publication of last pamphlet. GIVING ENTIRE SATISFACTION, Picton, April 20, Gentlemen,—TI find that ycur Pads are giv. ing entire satistuction, and wish you inc: easea sales for so valuable a remedy for disease of the kidneys. J. B. Mowpen, M. D. OF SERVICE TO PATIENTS, Lime Lake, Apri! 22. Gentlemen,—Your Pad bas been of great service to some of my patients already. Jno. Maxwet, M. D. BRIGHT’S DISEASE CONQUERED. Enteiprise, April 13, Gentlemen,—Five years ago 1 fell with a bag of grain, which caused weakaess in my back, sod also brought on an attack of Bright's disease, and which caused me to lose considerable in weight After wearing your Pau for six weeks, I gained 13 pounds, Al] pain and weakness has left me. I would have been yet in the doctor's hands, had it not been for my using your Kidney Pad. Signed, W. Fenwick, Miller, THE ONLY PERMANENT CURE. Tamworth, April 13. Gentlemen,— I was troubled with painful back, and 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, but have worn your Special Pad six weeks. The pain, swelling and inflammation are gone and I am well. Your Pad is the only cure for kidney diseases, J. A. Fraszz, Manf. of Wooden Wares, ALL PRAISE THEM HIGHLY. Tamworth, April 13. Citennnnihe accident 12 years ago wrenched my back. 1 could hardly waik, 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, Enterprise, April !3. Geptlemen,—Your Pad is helping me won- derfully. My complaint is inflammation of the kidneys. Jos. Pigs. Paices—Chiid’s Vad, $1.50. Regular Pad, $2.00, Special Pad for Chronic Diseases, $3.00, Joun Kxicur, sole agent Georgetown. J. A. Gour iz, sole agent-Summerside. Jonn J. Arnsenav ct, Tignish. THE STARR KIDNEY PAD CO. Toronto, ONT. {de 15 wky A CURE GUARANTEED. Magnetic Medicine : = z =, e& = = ‘s Se ie S & Citron ~ Pesitiveiy cures Gaemes in ALL its stages Weak Memory, Loss of Brain Po wer, Sexual Pros- tration, Night Sweats Supermatorrhed, Leucorrhea, Barrenness, Seminal Weakness, and General of Power. It repairs Nervous Waste, Rejuven- ates the Jaded Intellect, Strengthens the Bnfeedled Brain and Restores Surprising Tone and 4 the Ezhausted Generative Organs in either sex. 47 With each order for TWELVE packages, accompanied with five dollars, we will send our Written Guarantee to refund the money i the treatment does not effecta cure. It is the’ Chea and Best Medicine in the Market. sa Fall particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to mail free to any address, ee Mack’s Magnetic Medicine is sold by rug at 5O cts, box, or @ boxes for $8.40, or wi Seo of postage, on receipt of the money, by S. | An English | Veterinary Surgeon. eterinary Surgeon and Chemist, r lel } Tie in this country, says tlat Lancashire Insurance Company See Sart yy a ae ig COR RESPONDENC E. Ww € ro nat hold Wlrdétens J viaponbiile | for the opinions or statements of our correspondents. SS SS | { ; xe Lemar BLOOD, Protection and Free Trade. en en change the bod ithe entire system ln three months. Any per- . heutiier aiid © 1 Pil each im 1 to 12 weelis, niay be restored to sound ous aie a thing bi pos Yaar: dgemrs & Female Complaints those Pills have no . ysielans use tiem j eetice. Sold evcrywhere, or sent by mail for To the Lditor of the Rxaminer. The Patriot has thought proper to reply , to my first article on Protection, avd Free; ° Trade. For :the editor of . that: paper. I: entertain none ether than feelings of es- teem and respeot; but I ‘dislike his policy. L admire the man, but Tabhor his doctrine. I only regret that a man of brains should epet his lot with a party that seeks to array rovines ‘against “Provinee and ‘section against section: ‘Lhuve a statesman whio ig loyal to his country, who glories. in: her .|greatness, and who bends his energies to raise her high enone: the constellations: of natiohs. My opponent denies that the National Policy has conferred. benefits anywhere except upon afew manufacturersand their co-workers. A were. denial, however, is not proof, This age demanda more than assertion. Fact is thebasis of the logic uf the nineteenth century. The editor “of the Patriot professes to believé in ‘the in- telligence of the people. The verdict of a great, free people. is geverally righteous. tt ought to count for something, especially with a man who proclaims his liberalism from the housetops. Well, after a three years’ trial, what was the verdict at the|* Gerera! Election bf 1882? phant return of the Liberal Consetvative Party, and the utter defeat of such dwarfed and contracted politicians as Cartwright, Hunt, Gordon, Mills and Smith be an answee to the qnestion, Has the victory). of Jast. summer uo lessons for the Patriot ? Does he place himself above the vast electorate of the whole Dominion? Can it be possible that sweeping majorities in all the provinces were wrong, and only the editor of the Patriot right? Vox populi Vox Dei. The question is next asked, Why has not the National Policy benefitted the Island } And then we are, assured that i has not been forthe want of capital, for there are ever a million dollars locked up in the Savings Bank. In the first place, I deny thet there is anything like the business de- pression here that has been represented by the Grit demagogues of the country. In the second place, I assert that were it not for the impetus given to trade by the National Policy, business would be much worse than it is—for the disasters of last year were sufficient to cripple a wealthier country than Prince Edward Island. In the third place, I have to remark that the deposits of farmers money are seldom utilized in building up manufactures. There was some money on deposit in the Savings Bank during the reign of the de- posed McKenzie; but who ever heard of it ‘ eigh ht letter-stamps, ene ee for oirewla I. 8. JOHNSON & CO., BOSTON, MASS. oases many lives sent free by mall. Don't delay a moment. ROUP, ASTHMA, BR -DIPHTHEA Rie ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS. Prevention is better than cure. JOHNSON'S ANOGNE LINIMENT Dane! ea Re, Chronic Rheumatism, Chronie Dinerncea, { Curdyeeniters, Cholera ier bo Reta oe eure n arue information that will save Spine and Lame Back. me Back. Sold everywhere, Seor pamphiet tq I. 8. Jonxsou & Co ly pere lmmensely valuable. No thing on nash will a to 1 pint fi old overs wheevnne ae ns Pedy A like Sheridan's Condition Powders. Dose, 1 paces n- -stamps. J. 3, JoHAsON & Lo., Boseon, 7 ” — a Seas ——— —— F URNITURE, FURNITURE, AT COST. eas 30% Opposit Post Oice, Charlottetown. a sDSTEA DS, Chairs, Tables, wash e Sofas, Lounges, Parlor, and Drawing Room Bedroom Suits, L ooking Glasse 8 andirrors, Window Furniture, Picture Frames and | Picture Mouldings, JOHN NEWSON, Charlottetown, Jan. 2, 1883.—ly ae ote * a — ——— —— CHEAPEST, SFEST. SIMPLEST ‘LIFE I[BURANEE IN TEE WORLD. The Dominion Safty. Fund Life Association OF ST JOHN, N. B. $50,000 Deposit with th Dominion Government. under Gcernment License. —— = Sateen Working jaomme() being taken to establish mauufactures? Life Insurance No one. The amounts owned by single in- An Assessment Company vth a Safety Fund. at ij actual cost. —0 —— Ks Good CanvassersVanted. QONARD MORRIS, General Agent for P. E. Island. dividuals are too small to be invested in that way. Manufactories are usually built and equipped by capitalists, and Savings Banks are not the place to go and find money to invest in enterprizes, although the aimount deposited therein may be a fair criterion of acountry’s prosperity. The editor of the Patriot demands justice for the Island in retarn for the extra taxa- tion she has to pay under the National Policy. Indeed, where is the extra taxation? We challenge the editor to show it. The prosperity which the introduction of the National Policy has brought, has produced a much larger revenue than was produced under bankrupt reign of Cartwright; but our actual taxation is less. Heavier duties are imposed on luxur- ies; but if our ple are poor as Mr. Davies and the Patriot assert, they con- tribute very little to the revenue under that head. The duty on some other articles has been increased ; but these are articles manufactured in our own ceuntry, avd which our merchants can import free of duty. The Patriot used to tell, us before the inauguration of the National Policy, that under that Policy our bread and salt would be taxed. Has the prediction been verified ? Nota bit of it. A more palpable alsehood never was uttered. Every man knows that he pays no more now for a barrel of flour than he did under the pros- perous eraof Mr, McKenzie, But upon the actual necessaries of life, the duties have either been reduced or removed. Under Free Trade Government there was a con- siderable duty on tea, caffee, &c. Under the present Government, they have been removed. The rich may be more heavily taxed under the existing tariff, but the poor are relieved, and the poor are a majority every where. Nothing less than a subsidy, the Patriot thinks, should satisfy the people of this Island while the National Policy curse remains in force. Who is this editor of the Patriot that dares to speak for the people of the Island? The Island, by their recent verdict, has not regarded it asa ‘* curse.” It was probably a ‘‘ curse” to the editor, as it relegated him to the shades of private life; but the people stood by it. The Island gave a larger vote for the Liberal-Conser- vative Party last summer than it did for the advocates of Free Trade. When you compare the vote polled by Mr. Laird with that recorded for Dr. Jenkins, you get the comparative strength of Free Trade vs. Protection in Queen’s County. It is true that Mr. Davies ran ahead of his ticket ; Lut it was because | he allied himself with the liquor dealers, |and thereby secured their assistance, irres- 'pective of party, that he did so. It is time }enough for the editor of the Patriot to whine cn behalf of the people of P. E. Summerside, Oct, 28, 1882,.—1y TO LET, The BusinesPremises Known 2s ‘83 Queen Street, Lately in the Occupéion of 2. W. Tremaine. The Stock, 1 hand is nov selling at COST and CHARGES, will be cleared off at AUCTEN about the middle of January,| of which due notice will be gien. JAS. DESBRISAY. Charlettetown, Dec. 29, 1882.—if et ene iene THE EXAMINER ‘JOB PRINTING OFFICE tEPLENISHED WITH HAS LATELY BEEN A Large Supply of Printing Types and Material OF THE LATEST INVENTION AND BEST DESCRIPTION, AND WE ARE NOW PREPARED, Under the Careful and Skilful Supervision of tiv. J. W. Mitchell, TO’ PRINT LETTER HEADS, RECEIPTS, BILL HEAPS, BLANK CiEQUES, NOZES OF HAND. POSTERS, votes that they require him to whine. gave the earnings of the Intercoloniai Rail- . : MEDICINE CO,, eacKs MAGN eric MET Don, Canal rm Sold in Coertetieers oe Apothecaries’ Hall Co., toc Pringp Reward tala, amd bY Doser very wher. HAND BILLS, DOBGERS, d&c., Ke... way, instead of the Island Railway. My quuntinaumagmainamnanbantsnaaimamedtedipnandioasd Let the trium- course Island, when the people tell him by their By a mistake of the privter, my letter argument, however, loses none of its force VOL 12, NU, 6, oe increase of Business. Here are the figures that should have been used:— ce __ eS: voeeee SI SL,131, Bee ot BD \cenediowecn 137, 20h; Increase.,....«.- $ 6 136 11 TI When the editor of the Patriot sees en in- _orease in the earnings of our Railway, at {inerease in the deposits at our Savings of the . Bank, an increase ‘in the) etperts o exports of the conntry, @ decrpase im’ the ' nuaber of the penkruphe aud a in the number of people whe Cate our ‘country for a foreign country, it ought to teach hijn that the National Polioy‘is not such a bad policy after all. net hew much the volume of our | trade: pmight be inereased; how numerous and | prosperous -our manufactures might. be- come; how largely onr, railway. system was ecinaine iiself ; how ‘rapidly our ‘western dustriots ‘people; how enormous deficits wete turned into enormous surpluses—it contained no deseons for the modern Grits | find my assertion verified in the Patriot's atticle. Therein the editor, states; ‘‘We > have yet to learn that that. _ Policy has con- ferred benefits anywhere.” Just so. . The average Grit is incapable of enlightenment. Sugar-refinerics at. Halifax an@ Monctoti, cotton factories at St. Johmand Fredericton: shoe and cloth factories onthe Island, teach him nothing. He,is bound:to live in dark. hess and die in his sins, vie hte pe ress sweeps past like a r aval e bearing down fogies and fossils ix its Cavaps Frxst, The Prince of Wales. To the Editor of the Examiner. My Dear S1r,—In your paper last evén-" ing, there is ashort paragraph cf wwo lines - | and a half, which has utterly and complete- ly astounded me. “In deference to public opinion in England, the Prince of W ales will not attend the Coronation of the Czar:” And is this the slavery to which the Prince of Wales is called upon to ‘submit. Is public opinion to have power to. prevent the son of the Queen of Fngland from at- tending the Coronation of his closely and doubly connected brother, the. Emperor of Russia! Then we ms indeed say with Shakespeare : “Happy low, lie down ! Uneasy is the head that wears acrown |” But perhaps it oar be that *‘* public opinion in England” deemsét possible that the Emperor may be blown «tp, . dynamnttiz: éd, at his Coronation, and that the Prince of Wales might, if present with his Imperial Majesty, share his fate. There may be some ground for this fear, this “public opinion.” But the proper way to avert danger is pot to run away firma it nor shirk it but to meet it firmly and vo repel it; or, if it must be so, to die in harness, The Prince of Wales should be accompanied by astrong guard of Englishmen, Seetchmen and Irishmen, the Coldstream Guard, the 42nd Regiment, (the noble Black Watch) and the equally noble “ Fighting 88th”— the gallant Connaught Rangers, with the war cry of ‘‘Faug a bealach,” ,who, like ‘a wall of fire,” would surround their Prince and the Emperor also— “Let the might of England flush, to anticipate the scene ! And her van her fleeter rush, o'er the Baltic Sea between ! And then all would end well. I am, my dear sir, Your constant reader, Vicu Duomxvit Naw Orn, March 13, 1883. Mr. Reed's Concert. mee To the Editor of the Examiner. Sir,—‘‘ One of the audience,’ in the Patriot, after three days incubation has succeeded in hatching a few more false- hoods. He denies the spiteful animus of his first letter, and adds to his denial the consummate meanness of trying to palm himself off as one of Mr. Earles friends. But that device is too thin. He cannot conceal the cloven foot, for he says that were he not a friend of that gentleman he ‘* might have continued his criticism for three columns of the paper.” As he could not attack Mr. Earle’s performance (for he would only be laughed at if he denied the latter’s abilities as a musician), and as nearly all the performers at Mr. Reed’s Concert were friends of Mr. Earle, this threat is as thoroughly understood as was his ignoring any reference whatever to some of the best pieces on the programme performed by Mr. Earle’s frends, and writing disparagingly of the efforts of the vocal club of which Mr. Earle is director. As to the delicate (/) thrust at the for- tissimo effects of the violin, perhaps he did state truthfully what he thought. He may be troubled with a morbid acuteness of the acoustic organs, caused by an unhealthy condition of the avriwm sordes, or by a too frequent use of the auriscalpium, or (as he seems to be very fond of putting bis English (/) in italics) perhaps his ears have caught that style and become italic! ears, a sort of natural auria tube, or telephonic ears! If any unfortunate violinist again offends the sensitive folding machines of the psendo-critie by not using a greased bow, or should he only employ the means for deadening sound known to all professionals and amateurs of the art of violin playing outside of the select musical coterie of whose opinions, no doubt, ‘‘ One of the audience” is an honored and authorized exponent, I trust the coup de grace will be administered at once by this musical Jack Spratt. The allusion to the viclin bill was unfortunate, and might with more propriety have been aimed at some of the critic’s friends, who are withholding a cer- tain musical instrument, and other property from the rightful owners. 1 hope you will excnse my too free use of Latin, Mr. Editor; if it is bad (and Iam afraid it is), 1 have the consolation of knowing that it is no worse than a late attempt at musical eriti- cism in the Patrict from “One of the ) by the error. On Short Notice, in Good Style, at Cheap Prices.’ I simply wished to prove » that the earnings of our railway showed an audience.” Yours, etc., 2 ANOTHER OF THE AUDIENCE. I said in my first letter that-it mattered 4 heritage was filling up With a hardy and in- ’ Peee eeeeereenen #}