Pea — A Pe ee ee —— Che Daily Examiner ay } , | ° . . i examiner rublisning Go. ,ater and . tietown six 82 50 lL 26 0 50 iost moderate rates ade for monthly, r yearly advertise | sent , i ALMARAS ¢ 2 APRIL, 1885. j GES, | Las ar 10 3sUm., & Wm | \ 15 sy, ih, $9m., p. m, 5 iay 5m., p. m. Ff } ; ’m., & m _ Sun iM High |! Da; ul" ts | rises , water) len’ ; mf Lhatth mormin w ' xia 146 23) 8 49/10 41/12 39) 2/1 42} 24] 9 S2iaft 16) 2 Fr 10) «6-H 461 0 52 46 4 Sai ‘ Bi 27,11 3, I 3) 49 } Sunday 37> 29 morn! 214 52 Mi ) 0, 0763 |! 55 | ray ia 7 itieee @ 5 | 3} Vednesday I 3 }49'513;13 2} » Thursd 9 34 2 24) 6 24 5 10 Frida 27! 35) 2 87° 7 2 8} jl Sat ’ é 71 3 FZ, & Fs 12 [2'Sunda - 38 3 06) 9 6 15 13M 9 4 26) 9 47 17 i4\ Ta =U 40 4 57°10 2 20 15) a 18, 42} 530/11 4} 24 16 I $3; © 7Tjll 45 27 | t7 Priday Lo 45) © OOjmorn 30 1S Saturday I $ 40; 0 27 3 5 19 Sanday ll} 47 8 37) 111 56 90' Monday is 9 41'2 1 39 ®| Tuesday S §010 47; 2 59 42 92' Wednesda bl 31 57) 4 11 46 93 Thursday : : LG) 5 37 49 » iv ‘ ] , b 56} ? §2 ws ay 22 i 39 55 25 Sucday $53) 56 4281847) 58 27| Monday 7} 5 33 9 29:14 OF} 23) Tuesday 56; 59; © 35)10 §& 4) 29'W ednesday 547 O; 7 371/10 43! 6} 30 Thursday 4 52/7 2, 8 36111 184 9 i | ' i j (Charlottetown Time. ) GOING West. ai > hea Charlott 5 U2 3 02) Royalty J tion 825 225 x Viltshire. ; ove M9 hunter iver. 932 472 Brada! bane. ..1010 509) County Line .1619 > 19} Freetown ..1035 5634} Kensington we : 10 57 5 AT , arrive Li oo > Sumuerside, Pr. M, / : at . l 47 Miscouche.... .209 Wellinat js Port Huil.. ‘ aoa ae its + ose euneies> « 664i 442 Alberton 5 47 Tiguish. eceoe 6 47 i FROM WEsT. ie. Tignish. 6 47 Alberton.. 7 47 Leary .9 02 Port Hill 10 22 i Wellingt n ; ll 07 Miscouche... ‘ . ne j \ arrive a ee Summerside, P. wm i { depart 202 7 32) Sas 5 sch eeew ss 237 807) Freetown .. .300 $30) County Line . reper he Bradalbane .. ...-327 855! Hunter Kiver.. ...402 9 32) North Wiltshire. oeeneen (2 Ge Royalty Junction .5609 1039 Unarlottetown............. .632 11 Q2} GCING EAST. P.M | Uuarlottetown.......... 2 17} Royalty Junction Bedford . ceeesedass meee 4 17 | eet, 2.8 4 52) > { depart..... a ewennn 4 57} Cardigan... . écheeseeee codenta nuns 6 17) Ns sco onnccusvebeelhs oe 6 42) IIIS... cede vcenebineuleiull 4 57| Morell. ..... eeé. be oecsedeonnee 5 37) St. Peter's... ne eae Bear Ri Dit ioecéesetenedeuesal ees ,ee 57 i Souris bieche ob besc celui 7 42) PROM EAs’. A. M. Souris ve os seen 6 52! Bear River....... -decennssedeet ta St, Peter's... sneened § 26) ee ee 8 57 Mount Stewart ea 37 | reOreetown Suc eeee ca 47 | ITS cs 5 oceeeecoaheheunea 8 12 Mount Stewart RUTEVG, ccosc esse euseee 9 32 Er 9 42) Bedford nel mu Ganetion. .......<ss0csnienu 10 54| Uharlottetown cee ae ce WE SELL Potatoes, | Spiling, Bark, R. ER. Ties, Lumber, Laths, Canned Lobsters, Mae- kerel, Berries, Eggs, Fish ie, Best Prices ail Shipments. Write fully for Quotations, HATHEWAY & CO, General Commission Merchants, 22 Central Whari, Boston. vt ’ . “cmbers of Hoar vi Trade (lor and BROWN’S NEW STORE, 78 MARKET S8UARE I onmsm, mee —~Q-—~— — IM CA ek. 0 AUCTIONEER, Merchant | GENERAL AGENT. Consignments reepectfully solicited. Prompt | Returns Guaranteed. Particular attention given to Auction Sales of Househod Furniture, Real Estate, &c Country Sales of Stock, Crops, Utensils, &c., promptly attended to. Ch'town, April 10, 1885—eod&wkly Farming N HIGGINS ADAM BEDE. CHAPTER XL. ' (Continued. ) Adam had not been shaken in his belief | jipe eyoug that Hetty was innocent of the crime she | woman as the Methodist’s think was charged with, for Mr. Irwine, feeling S. a that the belief in her guilt would be a! send Alick to tell him to « crushing addition to Adam’s load, had kept from him the facts which left no hope in| his own mind, once, and Mr. Irwine, at parting, only said, ‘If the evidence should tell too strongly against her, Adam, we may still hope for a gaid Mrs. Poyeer. |pardon. Her youth and other circum- j | stances will be a plea for her.’ — & CO. beg to announce that on the completion of The Charlottetown Mutual Fire ““<an: and it’s right people should know the above commanding premises—about will open the same with a complete stock of “cout NEW & FASHIONABLE DRY GOODS, 25th April, they | 43|Millinery, &&., selected by Mr. Paton, and now on the way by steamers from London, Liverpool and Glasgow, W. A. WEEKS & CO. Ch’town, April 6, 1885 :0: —>_ »s — 0 - MARCH! ELESING BUT SALE Coods so Fine that we would like to Give All a Ghance! a, ) One and CALI! SHE 3 40) Ch town, Fob Cth. ROYAL GANADIAN INSURARGE CO. WHAT A CLEAN DOLLAR PURCHASE. emcee © ) Seen nonnene GREAT SALE | WILL Remember this Month Closes our CG. ROBERTSON. 1ORksh ————e eo PIRE:. Insurance Company. pared to accept good Fire Kisks at Mod- erate rates. Hon, Thomas ‘V, Dodd, President, DIRECTORS : /Geo. R. Beer, Esq., Fred’k Perkins Esq , | Benj. Heartz, Esq., JAMES M. SUTHERLAND, ] Sec’y and Treas. | April 7, 1885—12i 2aw D. Farquharson, Esq,, Alex. McKinnon, Eeq., Benj. Hooper, Esq. | 44 QUEEN STREET. W.A. BRENNAN, Book, Job and Oreamental Printer, | Book-Binder, Paper uler, -AND- BLANK-BOOK MANUFACTURER This Month We are selling Our The Printing and Binding machinery and Plant in this Cflice is that of the late | Bremner Brothers. and is well known as one of the most com- i ‘how she was tempted into the wrong way,’ ‘said Adam, with bitter earnestness. ‘ It’s jright they should know it was a fine gentle- (FP HIS Company is now organized and pre- man made love to her, and turned her head | | with notions. You'll remember, sir, you’ve | promised to tell my mother, and Seth, and ‘the people at the Farm, who it was as led |her wrong, else they’ll think harder of her 'than she deserves. You'll be doing her a hurt by sparing him, and 1 hold him the 'guiltiest before God, let her ha’ done what jshe may. !him !’ ‘I think your demand is just, Adam, _. ; said Mr. Irwine, ‘ but when you are calmer |. } you will judge Arthur more mercifully. |say nothing now, only that his punishment }is in other hands than ours.’ Mr. Irwine felt it hard upon him that he should have to tell of Arthur’s sad part in | the story of sin and sorrow—he who cared ifor Arthur with fatherly affecticn—who ‘had cared for him with fatherly pride. But he saw clearly that the secret must be known before long, even apart from Adam’s determination, since it was scarcely to be supposed that Hetty would persist to the end in her obstinate silence. He made up his mind to withhold nothing from the Poysers, but to tell them the worst at once, | for there was no time to rob the tidings of ‘their suddenness. Hetty’s trial must come on at the Lent assizes, and they were to be held at Stoniton the next week. It was scarcely to be hoped that Martin Poyser could escape the pain of being called as a witness, and it was better he should know everything as long beforehand as possible. Before ten o'clock on Thursday morning the home at the Hall Farm was a house of mourning for a misfortune felt to be worse than death. The sense of family dishonor ‘plete printing and binding concerns in the; was too keen, even in the kind-hearted , Lower Provinces. ;no trouble to do the best work at moderate | rates, 44 Queen Street, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. March 17th, 1885, SULLIVAN & MAGHEILL, ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, | ROTARIES PUBLEIC, &c. | OF FICHS— O’falloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. €as Loney ic Leno, W. W. Sonnivay, Q (| Creerw Mt aoweme pieee Siesar, 3 qe> McLeod, Morson & MoQuarrie, BARRISTERS —ANLD— ATTORNEYS- AT -LAW. Office in Brown’s Block, Queen Square (UP STAIRS) Ch'town, Fab. 12, I88h WARBURTON & CONROY, BARRISTERS & ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Notaries Public, Ac. scion Office in Cameron’s Block, up stairs ; entrance CAPITAL, x " . . 7 * r $2,000,000 next door to Taylor’s Jewelry Store. o—— Mareh 23, 1885 —wky8m HEAD OFFICE—Moutreai. HALIFAX BRANCH—J. Scott Mitchell, Agent. Risks Faken on Most Favorabic PFerms. o--rr-— AGENT FOR PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND: F. H. ARNAUD, Qharlottetoen, an IRR DO NOT MEROWUANTS RANK OF TTALTFAX come at once and buy a Good Solid Leather pair of Boots or Shoes for Spring, at a Low Price. We want to keep all the money we can on the Island, so we are bound to give better value in our make than can be had in any imported Boot. T herefore, buy from us. co. Throw your money away in buying Shoddy Boots. Come! G.W. GARDINER. BOOK AND J05 PRINTER, & BOOKBINDER, BROWN’S BLOCK, QUEEN SQUARE, Directly over Merchants Bank of Halifax. ——_— Mercantile and General Printing. Low Prices and Satisfaction guaranteed. A call solicited. CEO. W. GARDINER, } . Moot abica Fixe heng Cb town, Nov 10. ARI | DORSEY, GCFF & Ch’town, March 25, 1886. (h'town, March 28, 1835—2weod wkly2i Complete facilities for all descriptions of 55. murder.” With such facilities itis} Martin Poyser the younger, to leave room for any compassion toward Hetty. He and his father were simple-minded. farmers, proud of their untarnished character, proud that they came of a family which had held up its head and paid its way as far back as its name was in the parish register; and Hetty had brought disgrace on them all—disgrace that could never be wiped out. That was the all-conquering feeling in the mind both of father and son —the scorching sense of disgrace, which nevtralized all other sensibility; and Mr. Irwine was strnck with surprise to observe that Mrs. Poyser was less severe than her husband. We are often startled by the severity of mild people on exceptional occasions; the reason is, that mild people are most likely to, be under the yoke of traditional impressions. ‘I’m willing to pay any money as is wanted toward trying to get her off,” said Mertin the younger, when Mr. Irwine was gone, while the old grandfather was crying in the opposite chair, ‘but I’ll not go nigh her, nor ever see her again, by my own will. She’s made our bread bitter to us for all our lives to come, an’ we shall ne’er hold up our heads i’ this parish nor i’ any other. The parson talks o’ folks pityin’ us; it’s poor amends pity'll make us.’ ‘Pity !’ said the grandfather sharply, ‘ | ne'er wanted folk’s pity i’ #my life afore ‘ an’ I mun begin to be looked down on now, an’ me turned seventy-two last St. Thomas’ an’ all th’ under-bearers and pall-bearers as I’n picked for my funeral |are i’ this parish an’ the next to ’t iris It’s o’ no use now * * * IL mum be | ta’en to the grave by strangers.’ ‘Don’t fret so, father, said Mrs. | Poyser, who had spoken’ very little, her hus- being almost overawed by band’s unusual hardness and decision. ‘You'll have your children wi’ you ; and there’s the lads and the little un ’ull grow up in a new parish as well asi’ th’ old un.’ ‘Ah! there’s no staying i’ this country for us now,’ said Mr. Poyser, and the hard tears trickled slowly down his round cheeks. ‘We thought it ‘ud be bad luck if th’ old Squire gave us notice this Lady-day, but I must gi’ notice myself now, an’ see if there can any body be got to come an’ take to the crops as I’n put i’ the ground : for I |wonna stay upo’ that man’s land a day ‘longer nor I'm forced to ’t. An’ me, as thought him such a good, upright young man, as I should be glad when he came to be our landlord. I'll ne’er lift my hat to ’m again, nor sit i’ the same church wi’ ‘im =e a man as has brought shame on ‘respectable folks an’ pretende to be such a friend toevery body * ~*~ * | Poor Adam there a fine friend ‘he’s been t’ Adam, making speeches an’ talking so fine, an’ all the while poisoning the lad’s life, as it’s much if he can stay 1’ this country any more nor we can.’ ‘An’ you t’ ha’ to go into court and own you're akin to her,’ said the old man. | Why, they'll cast it up to the little un as isn’t four ’ear old, some day —they’ll cast it ‘up t’ her as she’d a cousin tried at the ’sizes ‘It'll be their own wickedness, then,’ said Mrs. Poyser, with a sob in her voice. ‘But ‘there’s one above ‘ull take care o’ the innicent child, else it’s but little truth they tell us at church. | to be a mother to ’m.’ | We'd better ha’ sent ‘for Dinah, if we'd There was not any reason Treddle’on for thrusting the whole burden or. Adam at If you spare him, I'll expose | It’ll be harder nor ever ‘to die an’ leave the little uns, an’ nobody ee ¢ e ir 4 <s < f ea j Gh ceniiiinali Ria: “his 1s true Liberty, when Free-borm Men, having to wigeiags the Public, ane aaah lade etait i Seueen Caprese Tere Cums. ‘el! ' VN DN, os , ' y oe ' , el os , by fists r RLES CHARLOTRETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, THURSDAY. APRIL 16, 1885. VOL. 16.---NO, 124. Adam said she’d left no direction where she’d be at Leeds.’ ‘Why, she’d be wi’ that woman as was a friend to her aunt Mary,’ said Mrs. Poyser, comforted a little by this suggestion of husband’s. ‘i’ve often heard Dinah talk of her, but I can’t remember what called her by. But there’s Seth Bede; he's gh to know, for she’s a preaching a deal ‘Pll send to Seth,’ said Mr. Poyser. ‘1’ me, or else to |send us word o’ the woman’s name, an’ thee send off t as we can make out a \ Pale name on, |can’st write aletter ready to as soon direction.’ ‘It’s a poor work writing letters when you want folks to come to you i’ trouble,’ ‘Happen it'll be ever eo ‘long on the road, an’ never reach her at | last.’ | (To be continwed., ) } Fenian Riots j | PRINCE OF WALES ATTACKED BY A MOB— LED BY AN IRISH M. P.—MALLOW AND | CORK TERRORIZED BY PARNELLITES — | BRAVERY OF THE POLICE aie | A scene of great excitement attended the ‘departure of the Prince and Princees of | Wales from Dublin on the 15th inst. for the south of Ireland. On the route to Kings | Bridge Railway Station their Royal High- ness passed Dublin City Hall, where an immense crowd had assembled about the |bnilding to witness the departure of the {royal visitors. Lord Mayor John O'Connor happened to drive past the City Halla few minutes before the Royal carriage appeared The crowd rec gnized him and hissed him savagely. O'Connor at this flew intoa violent passion, but his display of ire only made his enemies more demonstra- tive in their derisive greeting. The Lord Mayor, unable to withstand the storm any longer, stcpped his carriege and mounting the City Hall steps calle for cheers for Parnell. The response was not great, and did not indicate that O’Connor had any great number of sympathizers in the as- semblage. He thon addreesed the gather- ing and told them they would be sorry for having hissed him. He said he could tele- graph Mr. Parnell, to Cork and to Mellow, an account of what had occurred in Dublin and they would see what the result would be. Soon after this, the Prince and Prin- cess of Wales were driven past the City Hall on their way to the railway station, and they were greeted with tumultuous and prolonged cheers. ALBERT EDWARD LIKES THE COUNTRY. The Prince of Wales, it is stated, has made up his mind to hereafter visit Ireland once every year. At a meeting of the Dublin Municipal Council, Lord Mayor O’Connor, explaining his refusal to attend the reception to the Prince and Princess of Wales at the Indus- trial School, admitted he had not been in- vited. The statement” aroused much in- dignation among the Nationalists in the Council, of which they are a majority Notice was at once given by one of the Nationalist Councilmen of a motion to withhold the municipal grant to the school because of this gratuitous insult to the Lord Mayor and President of the Dublin Municipal Council. Notice was also given that a motion will be made to purchase two green flags to replace the civic flag stolen from the Mansion House. A TERRIBLE RIOT AT MALLOW. There was a terrible row at Mallow Junction, County Cork, on the afternoon of the 13th inst., on the arrival of the Prince and Princess of Wales from Dubhn on their way to visit the Earl of Histowel, at Connamore. A large crowd broke through the police Jines and were driven back at the point of the bayonet. Mesers. O’Brien, Redmond and Harrington, Irish members of Parliament, were in the crowd and were badly mauled. Ever since the riot the Government has monopolized the wires and no further details are obtainable. The news of the disturbance has caused in tense excitement. ANOTHER OUTBREAK IN CORK. John O'Connor, M. P. for Tipperary, made an inflammatory speech on the night of the 13th, at a meeting of the Irish National League of Cork. He urged the men of Cork to rebel against the English Government. The result of this oration was a repetition at Cork of the riot at Mallow. Windows and doors of houses which had been decorated in honor of the Prince of Wales, were smashed and crowds of Irishmen roamed through the s'reets all night cheering O'Connor, O’Brien and Par- nell, and singing ‘‘God save Ireland.” A RUSH AT THE PRINCE. Prior to the arrival of the Prince of Wales at Mallow, a crowd kicked and punched a lot of cockade hats which they raised to symbolize royalty. When the rush was made towards the Prince, it was led by Wm. O’Brien, member of Parlia. ment for Mallow. Some of the rabble were severely injured by the police while repelling this rush, Wm. Redmond, M. P., for Wexford, was noi present as at first reported. The only members of Parliament present were O’Brien, O'Connor and Timothy Harrington. Young Men -—Read This. Tue Voittraic Ber Co., of Marshall, Mich., offer to send their celebrated Evecrro-Vo.raic Ber and other Erecrai AppLIANces on trial for thirty days, to men (young and old) afflicted with nervous de- bility, loss of vitality and manhood, and all kindred troubles. Also for rehumatism, neuralgia, paralysis, and many other dis- eases. Complete restoration to health, vigor and manhood guaranteed. No risk is incurred, as thirty days’ trial is allowed. Write them at once for illustrated pamphlet free Tue balance of our Men’s Felt Hats offered at ahandsome discount previous to arrival of known where she is,’ said Mr. Poyser; ‘but «pring stook.—Gxo. Davies & Co. her = : LE CLT AOI ee