— VEW SERBS. | a & ALY EXAMINER ‘ I ‘ ry) . 7 . ’ a oe wae oe we | bas on { 1o PAA L UD USA De 10. r off { Water and ea ear SG O¢¥, iatotietown, ’ : i aa i ‘ 5 ‘ rion : eZ 50 thor 3 2a yLUOMLA, ? . Vv bO @- Advertising a st moderate rates, Jontracts maybe made for monthly, piartdriy, halt Yearly or yeariy acvertise- ment, OD ap} ALMANAC FUR FEBRUARY, 1884. First Quarter, 4th day; Lin 44.7m., a. m. a. i } | i | i | Dp. A. BRUCE, | ¥ail Moon, llth day, Oh. 35.4m., a. m. Last quarter 18th day, ]'h. 0.2m., p. m. New Moow 26th day, 2h, 22 5m., p. m. ure in ‘San ‘Me@on)High | Days + | oY rises set rises water len’h, | : hm mornimorp, hm i Friday 7 28/4 59) 9 24; 1 O} 9 29 2' Saturday ' 27'5 Ol 9 4) 1 42 $I >’ Sunday 26 3.10 30! 2 t Monday 244, 51k 10/329, 87 5: Tuesday , 611 56; 443’ 40 6, Wed nesday 21; § ait 48) 6 17} ~ 43 7/Thursday | 19) 9 2 475 9°99} ¥ 47 §/| Friday 1S’ 10; 2 52) 8 59 50 9 Saturday , 17] 12) 3 58] 929, : & .0) Sunday | 16) 13) 5 6/10 13; 54 11| Monday } # 15) 6 13.10 57) 57 12) Tuesday | Y2) 1657 6fl1 2710 1 13 Weduesday | 22). 18) 8 22/aét 0 + 14. Thursday | 9) 19) 9 24) O 34! 7 15 Friday | 8 22'io 1sf 1 9{ 10 16 Setardeg 7 a0) 25 = . 17 Suan 24) morn; 27) 18 Monday | Sh 25,0233 . 29 19| Tuesday 2 “277 Y°2ore ws 83 20|\ Wednesday | 0, 28! 2 13) 5 22) 26 21 Thursday '@ 53} 29 3 5646! 29 22) Friday ) 67] 31, 3 51) 7 51! «82 23| Saturday 55) 32) 4 35) 844, 35 24|Sunday 54, 34) 5 13; 9 28, 38 £5)Moaday b2| * 5 49 1 J 42 26, Tuesda + 36, 6 £2110 47) = 45 27| Wednesday | 48] 27] 653/11 21| 48 28| Thursday | 47). 39| 7 25lmorn 51 29\Friday | 45!) 4117 67}0 41 55 HeLeod. Morson & MeQuarrie, BARRISTERS -~— AND— ATTORNEYS - AT -LAW. Office in Old Bank, ‘UP STAIRS). Ch’town, Feb. 21, 1854. DR. MACKAY, Physician and Surgeon OFFICE: ROCKLIN HOUSE, Kent Street, Charlottetown, P. &. I. Feb. 16, 1883-—3aw ti MONCTON Sash and Door Factory. \ Rk. P. LEA, in returning thanks to the a public for the liberal patronage extended to hig while in business in Charlottetown, begs Terns to inform his old customers and the public generally, that be, in company with Mr. Wilham Rogers, has appointed Messrs. B. Williams & Co, Lamber and Coal Dealers, Pownal Wharf, Charlottetown, our agents, who will keep onan on hand a full supply of Monid- ings, Window Sashes, Doors, etc.. at LOWEST CASH PRICES, All orders entrusted to them will receive prompt attention. LEA & ROGERS, Moncton, N. B, Sept. 5, 1882.—2aw wly SHIP AND HOUSE BUILDERS, Will find every requisite for the trade at DUCHEMIN’s STEAM FACTORY, Beer’s Wharf, Always on hand, a complete stock of Ship’s Blocks, Deadeyes, Steering Wheels. =f LB0— Mouldings, in great variety, Cornice, Base Panel, Door and Window Finish, Spouting, Conductor and Handrail, Newel Posts, Balus. ters and every description of Turning. Fret, Circular and Jig Sawing, Planing and Moulding turned ont neatly and with des- patch. Satisfaction guaranteed. Don’t forget the place, Beer's Wharf mear McMillan’s Coal Depot. Albert Duchemin. Ch’town, Jan, 2, 1884, —wkly Gi, i i i | — ilaily ‘* This is true Liberty, when Free-hora Menu, having to advise the Public, may speak free,” —Evkipipgs, VHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1884, A. BRUCE, MERCHANT TAILOR, S OVER-STOCKED with the tollowing GOODS, and offers them ata REDUCTION OF TWENTY PER CENT, Gents’ Woollen Underwear, Flannel Shirts, Fur Laps, Kid Mits, Sleigh Robes. @VERCOATINGS, WHICH: YOU CAN HAVE | | MADE 'TO YOUR MEASURE Cheaper Than Imported Ready Made. | Dec. 20, 1883.—eod wkly 72 Queen Street, Charlottetown GRAND SALE OF DRY GOODS AND CLOTHING. -—!0:—— —— OHN MACPHEE & CO. will, during the HOLIDAY SEASON, give’ special bargains in Dress Goods, Kuit Wool Goods, Wiantles Shawls, Flannels, Hosiery, Gloves, &¢ :0 CLOTHING. CLOTHING. Men’s Overcoats; $3.90, $5.00, $6.50, $7.50, up. Meo 8 Ulsters, $4.95, $6.25, $7.00, up. Men’s Reefers, $2.95, $8, $3.50, $5, $4.50, $5.50 ap. Fur Caps, Kid Mits and Gloves, Cardigan Jackets, Worsted Tweeds, Under- clothing, Buffalo Robes, Horse Rugs, Small Wares, etc. & Aime |OUR, WI Cash Buyers can depend on getting REAL BARGAINS in every Department, : _— WHOLESALE AND KETALL, JOHN MiAGPHEE & CO, ROBERT ORR’S OLD STAND. Ch’town, Dec. 12, 1883.—2aw wkly pres pat — SIN OF THE ELEPHANT. W R. BOREHAM has “now on hand the LARGEST AND! BOOTS, SHOES; SLIPPERS, OVERSHOES & RUBBERS, LADIES’ AND GENTS’ FINE GOODS, a specialty. A nice lot of LADIES’ AND GENTS FANCY SLIPPERS: for the Holidays. Try BOREHAM for a pair of GOOD BOOTS. W. R. BOREHAM, North Side Queen Square. Ch'town, Dec. 10, 1883,—mo we fr 2m THE EXAMINER. HAS LATELY BEEN REPLENISHED WITH A Large Supply of Printing Types and Material OF THE LATEST INVENTION AND BEST DESCRIPTION, AND WE ARE NOW PREPARED, ‘Under the Careful and Bkilful Supervision of Mr. J. W. Mitchell, ¢ TO PRINT JOB PRINTING OFFICE BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, BLANK CHEQUES, RECEIPTS, | NOTES OF HAND. POSTELS, HAND BILLS, vODGERS, &c., Ke, On Short Notice, in Good Siyie, at Cheap Prices. NEW FOR 188 CORSETS. A LARGE. VIBPLAY (F TUE mripeomp anh Om AAA NHWEST. AND BaST GEODS, All Sizes, Just Received. Sent free by post to any address in the country on receipt of price. W. A. WEEKS & GO. DRESS GOODS! NEW “ERINOES, | CORDS, CASHMERES SERGES,: > New Satins, Velvets, PLUSHES —AND— Wedding Millinary & Outfits SUPPLIED AND MADE BY Experienced Hands. W. A. WEEKS & CO. VELVETEENS —-IN ALL— Leading Colors and Black, VERY POPULAR FOR WINTER WEAR, We have a Fine Stock of Nice Goods, W. A. WEEKS & CO, MILLINERY. MANTLES, JACKETS DOLMANS, ETC., MADE TO ORDER. W. A WEEKS & €0, Ch’town, Jan. 22, 1884.—eod wkly. Scholarship Examination. N examination tor the “Daniel Hodgson Scholarship,’ for King’s College, Windsor, will be held in Charlottetown, in June next. Candidates must be natives of and residents in P. E. Island, under 20 years of age, and not already matriculated members of any University. The subjects of examination will be as follows : Homer lliad I, or Xenophin Anab II; Cicero pro lege, Manilia, and Horace Odes I; Latin Composition; The ordinary Rules of Aritmetic; Vulgar and Decimal Fractions; The four Elementary Rules in Algebra; Euclid ‘case, 1 would make him so odiousto the} ‘showed he thought he had said as much or SILKS. FOUL PLAY.| ihe ihl Charles Reade. By _ - CHAPTER LY. (Continued. ) ‘You must not cross-examine counsel,’ said he; ‘but, if it will be any comfort to you, [ll say this much, there was just a) shadow of doubt, and Tollemache certainly | let a chance slip. If I bhad defended your friend, | would have insisted on a postpone: | ment Of the trial until this Arthur Ward-| law’ (locking at his note-book) ‘could be} examined, either in court or otherwise, if| be was really dying. Ishe dead, do you} know?!’ ‘No,’ ‘I thought not. Sick witnesses are often at death’s door; but | never knew one pass the threshold. Ha! ha! The trial onght to have been postponed till he got wel). If a} judge refused me a postponement in such a | jury, that the prisoner would get a verdict} in spite of his teeth.’ ‘Then you think he was badly defended ‘No; that is saying a great deal more than [ could jeetify. But there are counsel who trust too much to their powers of reasoning, and under-rate a chink in the evidence pro or con. Practice, and a few back-fall, cure them of that.’ Mr. Hennessy uttered this general obser- vation with a certain change of tone, which more than his visitor had any right to ex- pect from him; and she therefore left him, repeating her thanks. She went home, pondering on every word he had said, and entered it all in her journal, with the re- mark: ‘How strange! the first doubt of Robert's guilt comes to me from the lawyer who caused him to be found guilty. He calls it the shadow of a doubt.’ That very evening, Mr. Freshfield had the courtesy to send her by messenger the name and address of the solicitor who had defended Robert Penfield—Lovejoy and James, Lincoln’s Inn Fields. She called on them, and sent in her card. She was kept waiting a long time in the outer office, and felt ashamed, and sick at heart, seated amoug young clerks. At last she was ad- mitted, and told Mr. Lovejoy she and her father, General Rolleston, were much interested in a late client of his, Mr. Robert Penfold; and would he be kind enough to let her see the brief for the defense ! ‘Are you a rélation of the Penfolds, madam ! ‘No, sir,’ said Helen, blushing. ‘Hump " said Lovejoy. He touched a hand-bell. ed A cleak appear- SINGLE Corpizs Two CEN Ts, VOL, 14.--NO, 84. The License Commissioners. At a meeting of the Board of License Commissioners for Queen’s County. held in the LawtLibrary, in the Law Courts Build- ing, Charlottetown, on Tuesday, the twenty-sixth day of February, inst., the following commissioners were present :— Judge Alley, first Coimmissioner and chair- man of the board; Henry Longworth, Eeq , Sheriff of Queen’s County, second commis- sioner; John ()uirk. Esq., third commis- sioner. After the board was duly organ- ized, the following resolutions were passed ; Resolved, Tiiat a chief inspector of licenses, who shall be Secretary-Treasurer of the Board, and one additional inspector, be appointed for the license district of Queen’s County, and that such chief inspecter and inspector do hold office until the annual meeting of the board, to be held in the month of March, A. D., 1885. Resolved, That the board do fix the salary of the chief inspector at the sum of five hundred dollars per annum, and that of the inspector at four hundred collars per annum, subject to the appreval of the Governor in Council, Resolved, That each of the said Inspectors be required, before entering on the duties of his office,to give a bond to Her Majesty, with two sureties, to be approved of by the board, conditioned for the due performance of his duties, and the payment over of all sums of money received by him under the previsions of the Liqaor License Act, 1883, and that the bond of the Chief Inspector be taken in the penal sum of one thousand dollare, and that of the Inspector in the penal sum of eight hun- dred dollars. Resolved, That Robert H. Crawford be ap- pointed Chief Inspector of Licenses, and George. A. Hughes, Inspector of Licenses for the License District of Queen’s County. Resolved, That the said Inspectors be each furnished with a copy of the Canada Tem- perance Act, 1878, and of the Liquor License act, 1883, for their guidance, and that the Board direct their epecial attention to the sections of the latter Acts which are herein- after mentioned as defining their pow- ers, duties and privileges under that Act in this License District, name- ly:—Section 6 and _ sub-sections; sub- section 3 of section 10; section 12 and sub-section; sections 19 and 20; section 23 and sub-sections; section 34; section 40 and sub- section; sections 56, 57 and 60 and sub-sections; sub-section 2 of section 79; sections 81, 82 and 87 aud sub-sections; sections 93, 95, 108 sad 104, section 105g; section 118; section 120 (3) and sections 126, 127, 141, 142 and 143. Resolved, That the License Fund of this District be deposited in the Bank of Nova Scotia at Charlottetown to the credit of the Board, to be withdrawn as directed by the 56th section of the Liquor License Act, 1883, Resolved, That the Chief Inspector be instructed to obtain an office for the Board as soon asa suitable place can be procured for that purpose. Resolved, That the Board do hold a meeting ‘Ask Mr. Upton to come to me.’ Mr. Upton, the managing clerk, came in due course,and Mr, Lovejoy asked him ; ‘Who instructed us in the Queen v. Pen- fold ?” ‘It was, Mr. Michael Penfoid, sir.’ Mr. Lovejoy then told Helen that she must just get a line from Mr. Michael Pen- fold, and then the papers should be sub- mitted to her. ‘Yes; but, sir,’ said Helen, ‘Mr. Penfold is in Scotland.’ ‘Well, but you can write to him.’ ‘No, I don’t know in what part of Scot- land he is.’ ‘Then youare not very intimate with him? ‘No, sir; my acquaintance is with Mr. Robert Penfold.’ ‘Have you a line from him? ‘I have no written authority from him ; but will you not take my word that I act by his desire ? ‘My dear madam,’ said the lawyer, ‘we go byrule. There are certain forms to be observed in these things, lam sure your own good sence would tell you it would be cruel and improper of me to submit those papers without an order from Robert or Michael Penfold. Pray consider this as a delay, not a refusal.’ ‘Yes, sir,’ said Helen; ‘but I meet with nothing but delays, and my heart is break- ing under them.’ land LL. In English—Orthography, Writing from Dictation, the Grammatical Structure of the Language, Outline of History of England, and Geueral Geography. The Scholarship is of the annual value of $125, and will be tenable for three years. For further particulars apply to > GEORGE W. HODGSON, Hon’y. Sec’y. Trustees. Jan. 25, 1884.—wly dly oaw lim pat sj. mi Bie nae ea Pad eR ON WU a Uusuaat Stet mot AUR fat 1B dN abe PPP siaiae Endorsed by the French Academy of Med cine for Inflammation ofthe Urinary | ms, caused by Indiscretion or Exposure, | Hotel Diew Hospital, Paris, Treatment. Posi- | Local Treat- | tive cure in one to three days. ment only required. No nauseous doses of | Cupebs or Copaiba, | In FALLIBLE, Hycrentc,CvUrATIvE, PREVEN- sive. Price $1,50, including Bulbe Syringe. | Sold: by all Druggists, or sent free by mail securely sealed, on receipt of price. Deserip- | tive Treatise free on application. AMERICAN | AGENCY “66” MEDICINE CO., Detroit, Mich., and Windsor, Ont. Sold in Charlottetown by May16, The solicitor looked sorry, but would not act irregularly. She went home sighing, and condemned to wait the return of Michae} Penfold. The cab door was opened by a seedy man she fancied she had seen before. Baffled thus, and crippled in every move- ment she made, however slight, in favor of Robert Penfold, she was seduced on the other hand into all the innocent pleasures in the Court Room, in the Law Courts Building, in Charlottetown, on Saturday, the Twenty-ninth Day of March next, at the hour of eleven o'clock, forenoon, for the purpose of taking into consideration all appli- cations for certificates for such licenses as by Liguor License Act, 1883, are authorized to be granted in this License District. esolved, That the foregoing resolutions be promulgated by the Chief Inspector publish- ing them once in Tue Dairy and once in THE Weekly EXAMINER newspaper, Ubar- lottetown, within ten days from the date of this meeting. (Signed) GORGE ALLEY, Chairman. Hgexry LONGWORTH. Jonn QUIRK. R. H. Crawrorp, Chief Inspector. _--- »,D.ee Entertainment at New Dominion, Lot 665. On Wednesday evening the 20th inst., a grand entertainment Was held in the New Dominion Schoolhouse, under the axvspices of the Debating and Literary Institute. It is questionable if the people of New Dominion were ever treated to such a meri- torious entertainment. The programme consisted of epeeches, dialogues, recitations, readings, songs, etc. All the performers did well in their respective parts and were repeatedly encored. The good people of New Dominion and Long Creek districts must be congratulated upon the success which is attending their efforts to raise the intellectual and moral condition of the community, by such interesting and in- structitve entertainments. The audience appeared, from their frequent and hearty applause, to thoroughly enjoy and appreci- ate what they heard; and it was very noticeable that preference was shown for of the town. Her adventure had tran- spired somehow or other, and all General Rolleston’s acquaintances hunted him up ; and both father and daughter were courted by people of town as lions. A shipwreck- ed beauty is not offered to society every day. Even her own sex raved about her, and about the chain of beautiful pearls she had picked up somehow on her desolate island. She always wore them; they linked her to that sacred purpose she seemed to be forgetting. Her father drew her with him to the vortex, hiding from her that he embarked in it principally for her sake, and she went down the current with him out of filial duty. Thus unfathomable diffi- culties thrust her back from her up- hill task; and the world, with soft but powerful hand, drew her away to it. Arthur brought her a choice ‘ought to be hastened. APOTHEBCARIES HALL CO. | Teetly but firmly toward that end. bouquet, or sent her a choice bouquet, every evening, but otherwise did not intrude much upon her; and though she was sure he would assist her, if she asked him, gratitude and delicacy forbade her to call him aguin to her assistance. She preferred to await the return of Michael Penfold. She had written to him at the office to ‘ell him she had news of his son, and begged him to give her instant notice of his return from Scotland. the songs rather than for the speeches, recitations and dialognes, though the latter were intensely amusing. The members of the Institute must also be congratulated on the success which attended their effort, to give the public an opportunity of hear- ing what the ladies and gentlemen of New Dominion and Long Creek can do. Many expressed the hope that the New Dominion Amateur Troupe would again favor us with another entertainment before the close of the winter. There was abundant en- joyment, and the occasion went off with eclat and enthusiasm. The ladies and gen- tlemen of the Institute, of which Mr. Neil Currie is president, and Mr. John McLean secretary, are entitled to great credit for the labor and expense they incurred in providing for the public entertainment. The exercises were brought to a close by all singing the National Anthem, with grand effect. Lill iil ah talented Tux musical talent of the Duke of Edinburgh was shown during the recent visit of the fleet to Gibraltar, he having played ina concert given in the Theatre in aid of the widow and children of a bandmaster who had belonged to the garrison. The piece His Royal Highness selected was Gonnod’s ‘“‘Ave Marie” for violin, piano and voice, and for an encorehe gave Day after day passed, and he did not) write to her. She began to ehafe, and then Braga’s ‘‘Serenata.” In both he was admirably accompanied by Mrs. Cadwalladar Adams, Miss Manners taking the vocal part, which she to pine. Her father saw and came to @ ,..0 with great expression. ‘Ihe theatre was conclusion thet her marriage with Arthur | crowded with a fashionable audience; amongst (To be continued.) He resolved to act whom were the Cherifaof Wazan and her llittle son, and the result was a substantial ! benefit to the poor widow. ee