A a £ wo ote me se ne ee aily £x miner. “ This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having 1 to ovine the Public, may wpedlk PST RB ed eee perenne tenpaanenaoemag east ataansamnepeengener =a deeeeenenenenneenenanaeeeanenenmeenessaeteev aa eee a Sune_e Copies Two CENTS. NEW SERLES CHA RLOTTE TOWN, PRINC 1E EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1983, VOL. 14. No, 29. THe Dairy Examiner| FOUL PLAY, net neem ite CURRENT NOTES ae G. rH. Hi ASZA rR D, a oot it Eselmusigped:s theart| The ines charecterioe Parnas epcch The Py mary ublishing Co. | Sy, aaa oer effort, stoggered fith the burden f . the sehictiinnilane men tae ee | 1 their office, corner ay (ve rg ~ of Water and ts, Charlottetown, Prince Kdward Island. R ATES OF SI es LX Months, ° » Months, - - » Month, - é BSURLICTIO #- Advertising at most moderate rates. ‘ontracts may be made for monthly, | yiarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- on application. ALMANAG FOR DECEMBER, 883. MOON S CHANGES, First Quarter, 7th day, 7h. 33.5m., a. m. Full Moon, 13th day, lih. 15.8m., p. m. Last quarter 2Ist day, 3h. 55.9m., a. m. New Modén 29th day, 3h, 47 2m., a. m. ee we arene 2am |San Moon} Hig Days M as Oe ris¢ S |sets | rises water len’h. "Bee ak h m h m moruait’n | L Saturday 7 39.4 10; 8 39/11 46) 9 04) 2)Sur way 30; 10) 9 24'moern' 3! Monday 3| 910 5) 0 23 i Tuesday , 32 91041) 1 0 5 Wednesday | 33] 9/11 14] 1 40) 6\Thureday | 34 911 44 225, 7\ Friday | 35 8 aft 14| 3 15) gSaturday | 36, 8} 0 43) 4 42] 8 54 9 Sunday a 8! 1 15! 5 39) 10 Monday 38 aoe ll Tuseday | 39) 8; 2 26' 8 10 12'\\ ed nesday 40) 8, 3 i3' 9 _6 e —— a 7 4 16 R a 4 Friday 2 5 16 3 5 Satlirdiy | 43) 9 6 24/11 28) 8 50 16 Sugday | 43| 91 7 82:aft 12| 17 Monday | 441 10 8 35) 0 51} 18 Tuesday 45, 10; 9 46) 1 32) 19| Vednesday | 45; 1010 54} 2 14) 20' Thursday | 46) 1011 57; 3 0 21 Friday | 46) 11) morn| 3 54 7 Saturday e i rf 53! 3 “ 8 51 23 Sunday j : 52 5) 24 Monday | 48! 13) 2 51) 7 12 25 Tuesday 48' 14 3 50) 8 7 25) Wednesday 48, 15/4 46) 8 52 7h hs « | 9 5 5 4 {t 3 cee | a eee 2 merits = + i core I 8 52 0 Sunday 5 7 So 230 31| Monday |7 49\4 19) 8 44 morn! Merchants’ Bank of Halifay CHARLOTTETOWN ACENCY, Scvings Bank Department, —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 Cent. Per Annum ALLOWED THEREON, For further particulars apply to F. H. ARNAUD, Oct. 30, 1883. AGENT. SULLIVAN & MACNEILL, ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, Ac. OFFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. $4” Money to Loan, W. W. Sctuivax, Q. C, | Cumsrza B. Maonzity. Jan. 16, ’83. “EDWARD T. RUSSEL & C0., GHENHRAL Commission Merchants, NO, 284 STATE STREET, BOSTON. Particular attention given to the sale of Fish and Produce of all kinds. _ sage 22, 1883. —6m L. ARTHUR & CO. GENERAL Hommission Merchants, 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOs LON, MASS. Eges and Produce a Specialty. ae 26, 1883.—-w kly tf (NSUBANGL oy OFFIGL. (Huesn 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. Otfice—South Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Sept. 15, 1882, * QUEEN SQUARE, © PRESENTS FOR CHRISTMAS EVERY ING LW Cl————- Handsome Photograph Albums, in the newest styles, | Ch’town, Dec. 6, 1883.—eod tl dec 25 Great var iety of Autograph Albums, r | : CHAPTER XXV. Tay roved more than a mile, so deep wis the glorious bay; and then their oars struck the ground. But Hazel, beat-hook, propelled the boat gently over the pellucid water, that now seemed too « shallow to float a canve; and at last looked like the mere varnish of that picture, the prismatic sands below; yet still the little | craft glided over it, till it gently grazed the soft sand, and was statiovary. So placidly ended that terrible v oyage. Albums for Xtnas Cards, '™ Mr. Hazel and Miss Rolleston were on Ladies’ and Gents’ Pocket Books, Card Case, Purses, etc., Novelties in Vases, Statuettes, ete., Novelties in Tea Sets, Handsome Cups, Saucers and Plates/ New Books for the Little Ones, New Books for Girits, Rew Books for Boys, New Sten.iard Books for Everyone. | THE POETS, in the newest and cheapest styles of binding. Jet ROIS TIME AE ‘in endless variety, from one cent to five dollars. CARDS, G. H, HASZARD, Queen Square, Near Post Office. 0 smokers’ Tables, showing them, Ch’town, Dec, 17, 1883. and Lemon Peel, Currants, Raisins, etc. Ch’town, Dec, 11, 1883.—3w = :0 sae All marked at Holiday Prices, ee XMAS PRESENTS. More Useful and Durable than Xmas Cards and other Fancy Goods of same class. NOW ON SALE A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF Music Rack Stands, Canterburys, Easels, ete., Music Siands, Work Vabies, Chess Tables, Flower Stands, Light Stands, Fire Screens, Card Tables, Parlor Easels, Pallets, Japanese Brackets, Clock Shelves, Comb Brackets, Wall Pockets, Fancy Looking Glasses Framed Chromes, Fancy Chairs, Children’s Chairs, Mantle Mirrors, Fancy Inlaid Whatnots, Leather Work, &c. Call Choice Preserves, in 1 and 6-lb. packages, Special Prices to Wholesale Buyers. J. City Steam Bakery, Prince Street. OUR STOCK OF ABOVE GOODS IS THE Largest and Most Varied liver Offered in the City. and inspect. No charge for MARK WRICHT &« CO. FROM NOW — TILL—— XMAS AND NEW YEAR. WH WILL OFFER BISCUITS, CRACKERS, CAKE, CONFECTIONERY, &C., AT LOWER PRICES THAN. EVER, Biscuits from eight cents per 1b. upwards, Retail, A great variety in CONFECTIONERY, comprising Panorama Eggs, Crystal Hats, Return Balls, Flower Pots, Beautiful Hearts, all made of PURE CON FECTIONERY. Also the finest lot of Cossaques and Coraucopias ever shown in the city. Try our Mixed Crackers in 5-\b, paekages, very cheap. Thousands and Nonpariels, for Cake decorating ; Extract of Lemon, Citron QUIRK, ‘shore in a mcment; and it was all they could do notte fall ‘upon the land and kiss ‘it. Néyer had the sea disgorged upon the fairy isle such ghastly spectres. They look- ed, not like people about to die, but that had died, and had been buried, and just come out of their graves to land on that blissfmi’shore. We should have started k with horror; but the birds of that virgin isle merely stepped out of their way, and did not fly. They had landed in paradise. Even Welch yielded to that universal longing men have to embrace the land after perils at sea, and was putting his legs slow- ly over the ginwale, when Hazel came back to. his agsistance. He got ashore, but / was contented totsit down with his eyes on the'dimpled ‘sea and the boat, waiting quietly till the tide should float his friend to his feet again, The sea-birds walked quietly about and minded nim not. Miss Roliestin ascended a green slope slowly, for her limbs were cramped, and was lost to view. Hazel now went up the beach and ‘to ok a more minute survey of the neighbor- hood. The west side of the bay was varied, Half of it presetted the soft character that marked the bay in general, but a portion of it was rocky, though streaked with vege- tation, and this part was intersected by narrow clefts, into which, in some rare tempests and high tides combined, tongues _of the sea had entered, licking the sides of of the gullies smonth; and these occasional visits were marked by the sand and broken shells and other debris the tempestous and encroaching sea had left behind. The true high-water mark was several fe wer than the debris, and was clearly marked. On the land above the cliffs he found a tangled jungle of tropical shrubs, into wbich he did not penetrate, but skirted it, and walking eastward, came out vpon a delicious down or grassy slope, that faced the center of the bay. It was a gentle- man’s lawn of athousand acres, with an extremely gentle slope from the center of the island to the sea. A river ftowing from some distant source ran eastward through this down, but at its verge, and almost encircled it. Hazel traversed the lawn until this river, taking a sudden turn toward the sea, intercepted him at a spot which he immediately fixed on as Helen Rolieston’s future residence. Four stort, thick, umbragecus trees stood close tothe stream on this side, and on the eastern side was a grove of gigantic palm-trees, at whose very ankles the river ran. Indeed, it had -undermined one of these palm-trees, and that giant at this moment, lay all across the stream, leaving a gap through which Hazel’s eye could pierce to a great depth among those grand eolumns; for they stood wide apart, and there was not a vestige of brushwood, jungle, or even grass, below their enormous crowns. He christened the place St Helen’s on the spot. He now dipped his bailer into the stream, and found it pure and tolerably cool. He followed the bend of the stream ; it evaded the slope and took him by its own milder descent to the sands; over these it flowed smooth as glass into the sea. Hazel ran to Welch to tell him all he had discovered, and to give him his first water from the island. He found a roan-colored pigeon, with a purplish neck, perched on the sick man’s foot. The birc: shone like a rainbow, and cocked a saucy eye at Hazel, and flew up into the air a few yards, but it soon appear- ed that fear had little to do with this move- ment; for, after an airy circle or two, he fanned Hazel’s cheek with his fast-flapping wings, and lighted at the very edge of the baler, and was for sipping. ‘Qh, look here, Welch!’ cried Hazel, in an ecstasy of delight. ‘Aye, sir,’ said he. ‘Poor things, they hain’t a found us out yet.’ The talking puzzled the bird, if it did not alarm him, and he flew up to the nearest tree, and, perching there, inspected these noisy bipeds at his leisure. Hagel now laid his hand on Welch's shoulder, and reminded him gently they had a sad duty to perform, which could not be postponed, ‘Right your are, sir,’ said Welch, ‘and very kind of youto let me have my way with him. Poor Sam!’ ‘I have found a place,’ said Hazel, in a low voice. ‘We can take the boat close to it, But where is Miss Rolleston?’ ‘Oh, she is pot far off; she was here just now, and brought me this here little cocoa- nut, and patted me on the back, she did, then again went off on a cruise. Bless her little heart!’ Hazel and Welch then got into the boat, and pushed off without much difficulty, and punted across the bay to one of those clefts we have indicated. It was now nearly high water, and they moored the boat close under the cleft Hazel had selected, Then they both got out and went up to the extremity of the cleft, and there, with the axe and with pieces of wood, they scraped oat a resting-place for Cooper. , This was light work; for it was all stones, shells, fragments of coral, and dried sea- with the’ grave, and deposited it. He was exhausted by the exertion, and had to sit down pant- ing for some time. As soon as he was recovered, he told Welch to stand at the head of the grave, and he stood at the foot, bare-headed, and then, from memory, he repeated tho service of owe church, hardly missing or displacing a word. This was no tame recital; the scene, the circumstances, the very absence of the book, made it tender and solemn. And then Welch repeated those beautiful words after Hazel, and Hazel let him. And how did he repeat them? In euch a hearty, loving tone as become one who was about to fol- low, and all this but a short leave-taking. So uttered, for the living as well as the dead, those immortal words had a strange significance and beauty. And presently a tender, silvery voice came down to mingle with the deep and solemn tones of the male mourners, It was Helen Rolleston. She had. watched most of their movements unseen herself, and now, standing at the edge of the ravine, and looking down on them, uttered a soft but thrilling amen to every prayer. When it was over, and the men prepared to fill in the grave, she spoke to Welch in an under tone, and begged Jeave to pay ber tribute first; and, with this, she detached her apron, and held it out to them. Hazel easily climbed up to her, and found her apron was fullof sweet-smelling bark and aromatic leaves, whose fragrance filled the air. ‘I want you to strew these over his poor reniains, she said. ‘Oh, not common earth? He saved our lives. And his last words were, ‘I love you, Tom.’ .Oh, dear! oh, dear! oh, dear!’ And with that she gave him the apron, and turned her head away to hide her tears. Hazel blessed her, for the thought, which indeed, none but a lady would have had; and Welch atid he, with the tears in their eyes, strewed the spicy leaves first; and soon a ridge of shingle, neatly bound with sea-weed, marked the sailor’s grave. (To be eontinued. ) LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. eons Srr,—The Presbyterian Church or place of worship at St. Peter’a Bay having become dilapidated, a new building has become a necessity; but an unfortunate dispute has arisen over the question as to where should be the site of it. Some, a large majority probably, contest that it should be erected at the very Head of the Bay, and / near the centre of the congregation, while others contend that it should be buiit on the site of the present place of worship. The contention being conducted with con- siderable acrimony and feeling, the Presbytery was applied to to advise with them and enable them if possible to reach a harmonious conclusion, and parties were seut-as a deputation supposed as they might be, being strangers to the locality neither to be prepossessed in favor of one arty, nor prejudic:d against another. After a candid and impartial investigation on the part of the deputation, it was agreed ata meeting, with their advice and con- currence, to erect two churehes, one at the Head of the Bay and the other at Morell The conclusion, however, is not acquiesced in by the congregation as a whole. A large party, it is said, insist still upon the church being erected on the old site. We have no wish to interfere, but there is one part of the scheme proposed inad- missable. Before erecting a Lhurch at Morel), the senction of a neighboring con- gregation must be obtained according to ecclesiastical constitutional law. Morell forms the dividing line and the adherents of Mount Stewart congregation who have given it their consideration feel that their interests would be materially injured by it. A church at Morell if built, must be the conjoint property of the two congregations, or its erection must be defined till it can be the seat of an- independent congregation. This part of the scheme being set aside, it seems to us who take a very deep interest in the welfare of St. Peter's Bay congre- gation, that the dispute may be easily, and to the satisfaction of all, adjusted. On the supposition that two churches must be erected, one near Morell, what objection can there be to the adoption of the old church site as the site for one of them since it is clung to with such tenacity by so many. It is not more than four miles from Morell, and not much less from the Head of the Bay. It is plain that the vital interests of the corgregation—of the deno mination of Presbyterians—if christianily demand that the Head of the Bay where a village is: growing up, should be the seat of a church,why should not all concur in that, and take immediate measures for its erec- tion, aud that being dene, then proceed to ut up another and a smaller one on the site of the old church out of its materials with hearty unanimous consent. Then there would be three churches within the bounds which would allow of Divine Service being maintained every Sabbath on one part of the day in the central one, and on every alternate Sabbath in each of the other churches on the other part of the day. J. R. Mount Stewart, Dec. 20, 1883. (Patrivt please copy.) Any housekeeper can prove the honesty of her grocer, or his butter, by melting it. Pere butter melted produces a pure, limpid, olden oil and it retains the butter flavour. Melt oleomargarine, and the oil smells like tallow, and a scum rises to the surface. Butterine is a mixture of dairy butter and fats. Melt that and the butter oil wil! rise to the top. Pour this off, and you will find the fats at the bottom, whitish in color, and giving off a disagreeable smell. For throat and lung difficulties, Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, when seasonably taken, is a [décZ4 lw wkly certain specific. Ue) the English nation. On Sunday last a letter was read in the Basilica, Quebec, from the Archbishep, in- viting all to support the efforts of the Vigilance Association in the war on the liquor traffic. Mere bashfulness without merit is awk- ward; and merit without modesty, insolent. But modest merit has a double claim to acceptance, and generally meets with many patrons as beholders.— Hughes. In San Francisco, where there are many wealthy Chinese merchants, the credit of no class stands higher. Bankers solicit their custom because they are so scrupulously honorable, and their word is, in nine cases out of ten, better worth having than that of the majority of wl ite traders. In a trial in a Chicago court the other day the prosecuting witness was. a China- man,the defendant Irish, hir lawyer a colored man, the policeman who arrested her a German, and the prosecuting attorney an American. Things do get badly nixed sometimes where law and order are suppos- ed to prevail. John Morley, M. P., late editor of the Pall Mall Gazette, epeaking at the New- castle workingmen’s club, advised them, as one who had probably written more leading articles than most men to avoid reading them. His advice was: ‘* Read newe, get information from your own judgments, independent of the cut and dried leaders.” Mr. Childers, Chancelior of the Ex- chequer, speaking ‘he other day of the pro- posed reduction of the national debt, said ‘hat this reduction was necessary in view of the competition of the kingdom with other nations which were rapidly paying off their debt. It will be seen that the ‘*Tory” Government in Canada and a Liberal Gov- ernment in England may have points of re- semblance. Taylor, the wizard, got a $90 house in Paso del Norte, and then, saying that he would show the assemblage a trick that would open thir eyes, te:md ‘ The Mystic Man, or the Disappearance,” he brought out a large box and said: “I will now shut wyself up in this box ; the trick is to find me.” Five minutes later every- body knew that he had escaped from tie rear with the receipts of the evening, and a coat belonging to an employe of the theatre. The guestion of insanity as a product of sunstroke came up in a New York police trial on Wednesday last when the prisoner's counsel produced the record of the first case of sunstroke. He opened the court bible and from the second book of Kings read of the death of the Shunamite’s sun, recorded in chapter 4, as follows: ‘‘And when the child was grown, it fellon a day, that he went out of his father’s house to the reapers, and said unto his father, My head, my head! And he said to a Jad, Carry him to his mother. And when he had taken him and brought him to his mother, he sat on her knees til] noon, and then died.” The Toronto Globe's special correspond- ent in the fruit region «f Ontario, writing from Grimsby, describes the peach orchards of-Grimsby township, of one of which he says:—‘‘Just below us lies perheps the largest unbroken area of peach orchard to be seen at one glance anywhere on this continent orin the whole world. For a mile and a half it extends along the mountain’s base reaching up its lower slopes, and it stretches half way out to the lake side, and sends here and there broad tands of purplish-biown the whele way to the water. In one mass, untroken eave by the beautiful residences thickly seat- tered along the main road, there are about eight hundred acres, or two hundred thousand trees,” When that consistent apostle of total abstinence, Mr. G. W. Ross, by grace of Mr. Oliver Mowat Minister of Education for Ontario, stumped South Oxford against Mr. Joseph Gibson, a prominent tem- perance man, the Globe and the Grit harpies that.are now at the heels of Sir Leonard Tilley did nct attack him and demand his expulsion from temperance organizations. Not a bit of it. They applauded Mr. Ross and encouraged him in his crusade. We verily believe that if the most depraved drunkard in the province were up for ekc- tion on the Grit side, and if his opponent were a Grand Worthy Patriarch, «1 some- thing of that sort, Mr. G. W. Ross would vote against his temperance friend. At. St. Patrick’s bazaar held last winter in this city there was voting for the most popular flremun, the most popular truck- man and the most popular newspapers. The contests were warm epough, but there was no fighting and no acrimony. In Kingston they do things differently. At a church bazaar in that city a vote was taken to decide the relative popularity of two politicians. li resulted in a riot in which tables were overturned and general con- fusion brought about. A lady fell fainring to the floor, while the clergyman in charge stood horrified and helpless. When the smoke cleared away and the poll closed the result was disputed. One of the ladies who tock money declares that her man is elected, while the other lady is equally certain that the other man got the most votes. The winner was to have a chair, and the trophy was given by the uzpire to one of the can- didates. The other has called in the strong arm of the law and through his council de- mands that the chair be given to him.— Halifax Herald. On which the Montreal Witness remarks: —‘‘Church bazaars that are made the scenes of vulgar political contests, of barefaced gambling and of unmaidenly forwardness, may raise money but they cannot raise the standard of Christian life in a congregation or in the community generally. These are the things by which outsiders judge 4 Christian church and what a pivture they make of it!” Pg a ae en RRR ae om tilt AOS SMES " a nme eg te A ASSN OE TT IT” peerage sss ee ; re Saal S ad a te