I AN tae ANC a RE ee ee fi ating LE dit. = Lmaai 4 eee < — ’ . Bee a ATT tre A oS FE Tho Maple. All hail to the broad leafed maple, With its fair and changeful diess A type of your youthfnl country In its pride and loveliness ; Whether in Spring or Sumner, Or in the dreary Fall, 'Mid Nature's forest children, She’s fairest of them all. Down sanny slopes and valieys, fler graceful form is seen, Her wide umbrageous branches The sun-burnt reapers screen. ’Mid dark-browed firs and cedars, Her livelier colors shine, _ Lixe the dawn of a brigater fatare On the settlers of pi: 3 OF PRue, she crowns the pleasaut hill-top, Whisper son breezy downs, And casts refreshing shadows O’er the streets of our busy towns; She gladdens the aching eye-ball, Shelters the weary head, And scatters her crimson glories On the graves of the silent dead. \When the winter frosts are yielding To the sun’s returning sway, And merry groups are speeding To sugar-woods away. — The sweet and welling juices Which forms their welcome spoil, Tell of the teeming plenty Which here waits harvest toil. When sweet-voiced Spring, soft breathing Breaks Nature’s icy sleep, And the forest boughs are swaying Like the green waves of the deep ; In her fairand budding beauty, A fitting emblem she Of this our land of promise Of hope, of liberty. Droop silently and fall Like drops of life-blood welling From a warrior brave and tall, They tell how fast and freely Would her children’s blood be shed, ’Ere the soil of our faith and freedom Should echo a foeman’s tread. <> © 4a- Scientific and Curicus. The cost of the proposed canal across the Isthmus of Darien is estimated at $53,000,000, but wise mon consider it well to count the actual cost at double the estimate. The subject of fire-damp in mines and | other kindred questions are to be sub- mitted to a royal commission in Eng- Jand, of which Messrs. Warrington, Smyth, F. A. Abel and Prof. Tyndall are the principal members. Recent investigations appear to prove | that at one time the Sea of Azov was in direct communication with the Caspian. Some of the proofs of this aro the oc eurrence of cockle and other marine shellsin the sands intermediate between the two seas. ‘Prof. Daniel Wilson is of the opinion that there is a very liberal infusion of Indian blood in the French Canadian. In the neighborhood of Quebec and Quebec and Montreal and in the Ottawa Valley, there is, he believes, hardly a family descended from the original settlers that has not some traces of In- dian blood. According to the statisties of Prof. Newman Spallart, the capital invested in all tho railroads of the world exceeds $15,500,000,009, their roads require 62,000 locomotives, 112,000 carriages, and 1 500,000 goods trucks. Annually 1,600,000,000 tons of mer- chandise and 1,500,000,000 passengers are conveyed by these means of transit. In the course of some curious exper- iments made by Prof. Charcotin Paris, & patient was thrown into a state of catalepsy by looking steadily at the electric light. To produce a state of lethargy orsomnambulism on onesideat the same time, it is said to be sufficient to close the corresponding oye, or to cut off the light with axscreen. The two estates of catalepsy and lethargy fre then co-existent on both sides of the body. M. Dode proposes the following plan to protect iron from rust : He coats the surfuce with a thin film of borate of lead, in which some oxide of copper has been dissolved, and some scales of precipitated platinum held in suspen- sion, by means of a brush or bath. He then heats the composition until it is fused. The result is a thin, glassy coating, which wil! withstand the action of sewer-gasses, dilute acids, or alkalies and the heat of a kitehen fire. It is asserted that from the summit of Mount Etna the circle of vision has the enormous radius of 150.7 miles. The habitable zono of the mountein is very fertile and sustains a dense population 1,424 to the square mile. Rodwell a#ays the gigantic chesnut tre: are no myths, but sober realities. He asserts that the diameter of the trunk of one of them is twenty-five feet, and that a ublic road passes through the much ecayed trank of the lar,est, the Cas- taana di Cento Cavalli. M: Bohn has invented a new light lamp, described in a recent number of * Nature,” Which indicates the hour by the combustion of the oil. From the oil reservoir rise two vertical glass tubes ; one contains oil and is graduat- ed for the hours; the other containing the wick, saturated with oil, and giving the light. The construction is such anal NV. TT a eT Ae a i } i ’ assenger | ~ ~ eee _ nana ann — - = |tlat one hour is réquired to consume ithe quantity of oil between the gradu, lations ef the first mentioned tube. reflector placed under the flame, at ithe side, throw a laminous beam lacross-the graduate tabe. During ithe night, ‘one - cin thus see at lwhat height the oil stands in the tube, rend read the corresponding hour | Prof. Grant in the Popular Science Monthly, relates a case of “‘sus- \nended animation.” He ys that an | Egyptian desert snail was received at the ish Musuem on March 25, 1846. » alive, las it had withdrawn into its shell, and ithe speciman was accordingly cummed, A \ Allen. a°d% mes y — : tthe Brit if } . aad > t iThe animal was not known to bs imouth downward, on to a tablet, duly ‘labeled and dated, and left to its fate. fnstead of starving this contented gas- | ropod simply went to sleep ina quiet ry, and never woke up again for four yen The tablet was then placed in tepid water, and the shell loosened, *1 te Vv: years, when the dormant snail suddenly re- isusitated himself, began walking about ithe basin, and finally sat for his por- | trait, which may be seen of life-size In Woodward's “Manual of the Molusea.”’ | Now, during those four years the snail ‘had never eaten a mouthfal of any food 'yet he was quite well and flourishing | at theend of the period as he had been at its beginning. ranean genera etaa eae _ —— — Looking Glasses and Mirrors. .ttr ony Tor And when her leaves, all crimson, i fr EW STYLES—Cheap. | April 1, 1879—3m JOHN NEWSON. Picture Frames & Moulding. L& the Modern Patterns — Cheapest— LA Best Workmanship—Promptly delivered. JOHN NEWSON. April 1, I879—3m IRON BEDSTEABS. SUNGLE & DOUBLE—Best kinds—Cheap. W JOHN NEWSON. April 1, 1879—3m UPHOLSTERY WORK. ¥y ODERN STYLES—Best Finish—Cheap- 1Vi est—Promptly delivered. JOHN NEWSON. April, 1, 1879—3m 100 PARLOR & DRAWING-ROOM SUITES, in raw Silk Poil, Silk Cota- line, Silk Repp and Hair Cloth-—Styles un- rivalled—Stock large—Prices at cost. 15 BEDROOM or CHAMBER SUITES ; —Every variety of design and price— Never before so cheap. JOHN NEWSON, April 1, 1879—3m ~ FURNITURE REPAIRED — ND RE-PAINTED- Chairs Re-Caned— £& Looking-Glass Frames Refittec, and all kinds of Machine Work done with satisfaction and prom ptness, at JOHN NEWSON’S. April 1, 1879—Sm CHILDREN’S CARRIAGES, oe: at os April 1, 1879 —3m JOHN NEWSON’S. FURNITURE. See STOCK --Greatest Variety -~ Best Quality—Cheapest in every grade. Call and examine. JOHN NEWSON. April 1, 1879—3m a 6 eee Bedding, Hatrasses & Pillows: EST MATERIAL—Hair, Flock, Excel- sior, Straw. JOHN NEWSON. April 1, 1879—3m H.W. Vinnicombe, Resident Piano Tuner & Regulator, H’S adopted the Dollar system of Tuning —six visits a year, at one dollar per visit. This system is much more economical and satisfactory than any other, as the cost is less, and the instrument is kept constantly in tune and repair. ; Island once a year, or oftner if desired. Pianos tuned by Hamilton’s system of even Jan. 6, 1879— —_* Or— DRY GODS, CLOTHING, HAC. A A visit will be made to all parts of the , temperament. a Orders may be left at Mr. Fletcher’s Music Store, or at Bremner Bros., Queen Street. AT LOT 48. NHE Farm and Villa of Mount Roseland, situated near Kinloch, Lot 48, is offered for sale, by private bargain. The Property consists of 100 acres of land —64 acres a high state of cuitivation; the /remainder in wood, hard and soft. The lease is for 999 years, at one shilling per acre. On the premises is alarge New House, 42 feet square, of 2 stories, with large, highly-finished reoms, and verandah in front, commanding a magnificent view of the Bay ard Islands, there are a large Barn and ample stabling, a spring for the cattle and a well in the yard, within two miles of Southport, and, in winter, a 20 minutes drive to city, convenient to sea- manure and ane bathing. A property contain ing so many advantages is not frequently : be found in the nore. = — Terms easy. Apply in Charlottetown to J. MACKIESON. March 27, 187’). ee $e La SPX ~— Farm and Villa for Sale -~ The Whole Stock in Trade OF THE LATE ROBERT OBR, —TO BE— SOLD OFF AT CosST, —CONSISTING IN PART OF-—— ‘Dress Goods, Shawls, Mantles, Millinery, Silks, Velvets, Hosiery, Gloves, Linens, Winceys, Shirtings, Sheetings, Prints, Grey and White Cottons, Hats and Bonnets, Furs, Blankets, Flannels, Pilots, Beavers, Coatings, ‘T'weeds, etc., etc. etc Readymade Clothing Hats, Caps, Linders and Drajvers, Scaris, &¢, — — Cotton Warp, Small Wares, ie, The above Stock must be cleared out from this date, and our Customers, and the public generally, can depend upcu getting Bargains. John McPhee, Administrator. Charlottetown, Feb. 4, 1879. Molasses. Molasses, The subscriber offers for sale low, » Puns. MOLASSES, } NJ 20 Bbls. do \ B. WILSON HIGGS. Ch’town, March 31, 1879.—6in Bright Retailing. VESSELS FOR CHARTER ARTIES requiring vessels of any size to load Potatoes, Grain, Lumber, &c., &c. can be supplied at lowest rates, b F. S. HANFORD & CO., Water Street. 2 Cj5owa, Avril 7, 1579 —3in VAIL NOTICE. AILS to be forwarded via Cape Traverse N will be closed at this Office daily—Sun- days excepted—at 3 o’clock p. m. The mail for Great Britain, by Canadian Packet sailing from Halifax on Saturdays, will be closed here on Wednesdays at 3 o'clock, . mm. The mail for Great Britain via New York will be closed on Thursdays at 3 o'clock, p. m. receiving Mails by Railway Train or Postal Car, will be closed daily at 7 o'clock a. m. Mails for Georgetown and Souris East, also for all places on the route to those points, will be closed daily at 2 o’clock, p. m. Post Office open from 8, a. m., till 8, p. m. A. A. MACDONALD, Postmaster. Post Office, Charlottetown, } April 2, 1879. ‘ COAL 100 and a smaller lot of NUT, at our usual low prices. Wright & MaeGowan, QUEEN’S WHARF Ch town, Feb. 8, 1879--taw for 2m - WANTED. PURCHASER for a small but comfort- able Stock of Household Furniture, Car- pets, Bedding, Crockery and Glassware, and everything required for house-keeping on a ~aee scale. e house in which the above is contained is pleasantly situated, and will be let nable terms. es FR { Mails for all places West of Charlottetown | Tons Round “ACADIA MINES, | . MANUFACTURED BY TOE ‘TFXHE HOUSE and Premises occupied by on rea owner on the Premises, or to ALEXANDER ‘PELE place to get yourPrinting done is at a 0. Bo Brown, Esq. the EXAMINER Printing Room | iuck'sy "gay 0% Chaslottetown, atten meng =i fe ot fi FARM OLD a : —e TOR $A. 'rexoO BE SOLD, by private contract, that valuable FARM ot 50 acres of excellent a7i act le Land, situate No. 20, now in possession of « This well-known Farm is eligibly /Aimeas Brenan. and Mills, and is in a good state of cultivation. f Longworth & Shaw, Solicitors, Ch’town. i F. 8. LONGWORTH. Ch’town, Dec. 23, 1878-— Valuable fresh FOR SALE. rEXUE Charlottetown Cemetery Company are prepared to sell, on very favorable terms, all that portion of their well-known Farm, beautifully situated on the north side of the Back Royalty Road, and extending from the Malpeque Road to near the Railway track, containing about FIFTY ACRES OF EXCEL- LENT LAND. og The premises are all under cultivation, and have thereon a good Dwelling House, large Barn, Stables, and a fine Orchard. A fine ‘Spruce Hedge surrounds a great part of the property. ' Immediate possession will be given. For further particulars, apply to John Ings or H. J. Cundall, Esq’s. 3y order of the Board, ; F. W. HALES, See v. Ch’town, Feb. 20, 1879—dly oaw eee a cme FLOUR! 7. a bbls. “GREENHOLM,” 1) (} 100 bbls, * CAMLACHI z” a” ; r cr 4 a) icV bbls. ‘A NORV At. A eash. consignment for sale at a bargain, for zur ioe », eT o> 4% y > Wright & Wacthowan, Queen s ‘Wharf. lebruary, 8, 1878—taw for 2m — ROPE. Oe eee ae ee ee SHA TONS NIANILLA, at different sizes, Factory Prices. Wricht & HacGowana, Manufacturers Agents, Queen’s Wharf ~taw for 2m 108 Quintals Prime Codfisy CHEAP FOR CASH. Wright & MacGowan, Queen s Wharf February 8, 1878 —-taw for 2m _———- February 18, 878 ‘ ee | - fr= ¥ 4! The Greatast Medical Discovery sinea the Creation of Man, or sinee tho Commencement of the Christian Era. There never has been a time when the heal- ing of so many different diseases has Deen eaused by outward application as the present, It is an undisputed fact that over half of the entire population of the globe resortto the use of ordinary plasters. DR. MELVIN’sS CarsicumM Porous PLASTERS ere acknowledged by all who have used them, to act quicker than any other plaster they ever befere tried, and that one of these plasters will do more real service than a hundred of the ordinary kind. All other plasters are slow of action, and require to be worn continually te effect aeure; but with these it is entirely dif- ferent: the ‘nstant oue is applied the patient will feel its effect. Physiciansiu all ages have thoroughly tested and well know the effect of Capsicum; and it has always been more or less used as a medical agent for an outward application; but it is only of very recent date that its advan- tages in a porous plaster have been discovered. Being, however, convineed of the wonderful cures effected by Dr. MELvVIN’s CApsicun Porous PLAsTERs, and their superiority over all other plasters, they now actually prescribe them, in their practice, for such diseases as rheumatism, pain in the side and back, and all such cases as have required the use of plasters orliniment. After you have tried other plas- ters and liniments, and they have failed, and you want ace~tain cure, ask your druggist for Jk. MELVIN’s CAPSICUM POROUS PLASTER, You can hardly believe yourown convictions of its wonderful effects. Although powerful and quick in its action, you can rely on its safet foi the most delicate person to wear, as it A { free from lead and other poisonous material commonly used in the manufacture ef ordin- ary plasters. One trial is a sufficient guarantee of its merits, and one plaster will e-li hundreds to your friends. Ask your druggist for Dr. MELvrx’s CApst- cum Porous PLAsreEr, and take no other; or, on — of 25 cents for one, $1 for five, or $2 for a dozen, they will be mailed, post paid, to auy address in the United States or Canadas, NOVELTY PLASTER WORKS Lowell, Mass. U.S. A, G. E. MITCHELL, Proprietor, Manufacturers of Plasters and Plaster Compounds W. R. WATSON, Agent December 7 1877 FOR SALE, the Subscriber, at the hal of Queen Street. For further particulars apply to the DONALD McKENZIF, at Graham’s Road, Township situated in the immediate cicinity of Churches, Schools For terms and particulars apply at the office Cee ma old Warm — oe —_—- re Siiencnncnenall Sore iba ~ 73,620 MOR SINGER SEWING MACHINES SOLD EN 1878 ! THAN IN ANY PREVIOUS YEAR, ans In 1870 we sold 127,833 Sewing Machines, ‘61878 ** ** 356,432 soa “ Our sales have increased enormously eve year, through the whole period of * hard times.” We now Sell Three-Quarters of all the Sewing Machines Sold in the World. Waste no Money on ‘cheap’ Counterfeits. g@ Send for handsome Illustrated Price List, ROBERT YOUNG, South Side Queen Square, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. Ch’towa, March 18, 1875—2aw tf ixecntors Notice, r} E undersigned Executors of the Estate of Ralph Brecken Peake, late of Char- lottetown, in the Province of Prince Edward Island, merchant, deceased. hereby notify all persons indebted to the said Estate to make immediate payinent to them; and all persons having any claims against the said Estate are hereby required to render the same to the undersigned, duly attested, within one year from date. Dated this twenty-first day of January A. D., 1879. EDWARD J. HODGSON, GEORGE W. DeBLOIS, THOS. HANDRAHAN, Execntors, Jan. 21, 1879. om rg CATARRE. Constitutional Catarrh © Remedy CURES CATARRH., Hear what a Reverend Gentleman says of the Constitutional Ren.edy. T. J. B. Harpine, Esq., Brockville, Ont. :— Drar Str—It is now two years since your ‘Constitutional Catarrh Remedy’ was intro- duced to me. Ihave waited this ong to see if the cure would remain permanent before do- ing this, my duty, to you, as at first the hap effects seemed to me to be ‘‘too good ae true.” ° I was afflicted in my head for years before I suspected it to be Catarrh. In reading in your Circular I saw my case described in many par- ticulars, ‘The inward ‘‘drop” from the head had become very disagreeable, and a choking sensation often preventing me from lying long, 1 would feel like smothering and be som to sit upin the bed. My health and spirits were seriously affected. When your agent came to Walkertown in August, 1876, I secured three botiles. Before I had used a quarter of the contents of one bottle I found decided re- lief, and when I had used two bottles and a third. I quit taking it, feeling quite cured of that ailment, and have not used any since until of late I have taken some for a cold in my head. A sense of duty to sufferers from that loath- some disease, Catarrh, prompts me to send you this Certificate, unsolicited, with leave to make what use of it yon may see proper. Yours truly, W. TINDALL, Methodist Minister. Port Elgin, Ont., Aug. 24, 1878. Ask for Littleficld’s Constitutional Catarrh Remedy and take no other. T. J. B. Hanpine, Dominion Agent, Brock- ville, Ont. For sale by all Draggists at only one Dollar per bottle. BUY EP. Prince Edward Island. IN CHANCERY. HENRY JONES CUNDALL, dministrator cum Testamen'o annexo of the last Will and Testament of John Hodges Winsloe, deceased, John Hodges Winsloe, Alired Winsloe, Alice Hyndman, formerly Alice Winsloe, and Albert Hyndman, ber busband; Amy Winsloe, by Henry Jones Gundall, her guardian; Isabel Winsloe, by Henry Jones Cundall, her guardian; and Ar. thur Winsloe, by Henry Jones Cunda!', his guardian; Ann Smith, Edwaru Jarvis Hodgson, and Robert Robinson Hodgson, Trustees, under the marriage settlement of the said -Ana Smith and Amelia Evans, and Sydrey Tudcr Evans, her hasvband, complainan‘s, CHARLES GREEN, Defendant. N pursuance of a decree made in this suit by His Honor the Master of the Kio's, bearing date the sixth day of Febru- ary, A. D. 1879, there will be sold by Put. lic Auction, on Wednesday, the twenty- first day of May next ensuing, at the hour vf twelve o’clock, noon, in the Supreme Court House, in Charlottetown, in Queen's Jounty, all that tract, piece, or parcel of land situate and being in Lot or Township Number Twenty-four, in Queen’s County, in the said Istand, bounded as follows, that is to Say :—By a linc commencing ata stake tixed in the southwest side of the New Glasgow Road, in the north angle of land now or lately in the occupation of Donald McDonald, and ranning thence by the ae: netic meridian of the year 1764 south, fifty-eight degrees west, one hundred chaias; thence northwesterly parallel with. the New Glasgow Road aforesaid ten cheiis; thence north fifty-eight degrees east to the said Road; and thence along the Same southeasterly to the place of com- mencement, containing one hondred acres of land, a little more or less, togsther with all the rights, easements, and apput- tenances Lhereto belonging. Dated this tenth day of February, 1879} J. LONGWORTH, Master in Chancery. E, J. HODGSON, - TRY IT. Oh’town, Feb, 3, 1879—2aw Solicitor tor Complainants. ‘ é