RWS Five DoLLAks a YRAR, ‘‘ This is true Liberty, when Free-borm Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxirives. SUVGLE Corres Two CENTS. NEW SERIES CHAREOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY. JANUARY 12, 1885, VOL. 16.---NO. 44. Che Daily Examiner lieLea s issued every evening, by (he bxaminer Publishing Go. re (rreat (ee om tneir < r itice, corner ot Stveets, Clhar'ottetown, Prince Edward Isiand. Ra } Months saree ywonth, Contracts may be made ES Months, fo OF SUBSUORIPTION : Water and $2 50 25 i “e 0 50 Aclvertising at most moderate rates. r | i monthly, | juarterly, half-yearly or yearly adveritige- | ments, on application. — a ee ee ALMANAC FOR JANUARY, (885. MOON S CHANGES, Last Quarter 7th day, llh. 24m., p. m. New Moon I6th day, 4h, 24m., a. m. First Quarter, 23rd day, 9h. 14m., p. m, Full Moon, 30th day, Oh. 7m., noon. i M } DAY OF WEEK Sun ‘Sun !Moon|High ! Days . i ’ rises |sets | rises | water |len’h. h mh m aft’n morn; h m i) Thursday 7 50,4 19) 5 38.10 44) 8 29 2| Friday | 50| 20} 6 47)11 30} 30 2. Saturday 50; 2118 Jiafti3 31 4 Sunday 50; 22 9 12} 054) 32| 5 Monday | 49) 22/10 30 137! 33) 6, Tuesday | 49) 23/11 27) 222! 35 7| Wednesday | 43! 5!morn 3 il 37 3iPhursday | 48 26) 0 301 410| 38 9 Friday | 43' 28} 136 520; 40 10 Saturday | 47| 29, 2 30| 6 30; 42 1} !Sunday 46 30, 3:27! 7 34] 44 12' Monday 46, 31' 418 8 26' 45 3 Tuesday ' 461 33,512 910; 47 14| Wednesday | 45! 34/559) 949! 49 15,Thureday | 45 35| 6 42/10 27| 51 16 Friday 44) 37 7 20111 2 5 17 Saturday 45) 39 7 55 11 35 55 18 Sunday + 47} 40/8 26 morn} 58 19; Moaday 42; 41, 8 56,010) 9 1 20' Tuesday 41; 42 9 274) O 43 4 21 Wednesday 40; 44: 9 52 119 6 22 Thursday | 39) 45/10 21) 1 59) 8 23 Friday 38: 4610 53) 2 45) ll Q4'Sacurday | 37) 45/11 29! 3.45; 13 25 Sunday 33 49'att 6 400; 16; 26 Monday 35, 50, 1 1,6 20' 17 27 Tuesday 34' 5§2' 1 54) 7 49 19 23|Weduesday | 33, 5413 7'8 51) 21 29 Thursday 32; 55, 4 21; 9 44! 23 30) F riday 31; 57) 5 52)10 31) 926 3liSaturday (7 29 4 58’ 6 46/11 14) 9 29 THR RAILWAY TIME TABLE, (Charlottetown Time. ) GOING WEST. ih. 2, Ce, sca: calesennenne 802. 302 Royalty Junction........... a ee EE PEM iewivccic ss ebess Sir @v7 ee TN ci sc douse wells 932 432 Bradalbane. . . vwaus Ms aud 1010 509 County Lime...........- 1019 519 a ceeede eee 1035 534 Roemsingtem «oo cccccccccceesses 1057 547 Rs ow es os Ze 6H Summerside, < P. M. (depart . 147 Miscouche.... . a oO aes 209 Wellington . 2 37 eet A i ih sha 6 di wh oe CPUS . oo nos coe cheeses nn ee 442 e.g dv cdcckd canes 047 BU. i octet voesgewnrns O47 FROM WEST. A. M, Tiguish. enews 6s 606s 6h OEY 6 ees 6 47 Mi a cous deo ce eben es 7 47 UNE oc ancecesssueeeanene*s 9 02 re eee eae 10 22 WIND oo iis oo ob He ste : Tse 11 07 Miscouche...... Clit dedeceed 11 34 meee. 66 60 4. 00 1157 a. M. Summerside, P. M. Gapart.sccccess 208 7232 Kensington.......... 237 807 csc eh race ree ..300 830 CHOUIEY TARO oo ces cceccescerees: 317 845 in cas os eds tas ee 327 8855 Batted Mare, . coc cece coeds s cs 402 932 pe ne re 417 947 Royalty Junction........... ...5609 1039 CORSIOORREOWR, co cece ecseceeess 56 32 1102 GCING EAST. P. M. Cheaslattetowe on... ccccccccennesecceeets 317 Royalty Junction ..8 40 Saas... :...... 4 4 Mount Stewart, } arrive 7000000074 BI Cardigan. ee re ve Georgetowt.. oi. cccvccccccesvcccsscers 6 42 Mamet BtAWAls..ccccccccve osccccescess 457 EEE OE Ee ae 5 37 St Peter's bc oee ee ee 6b bee a Oe & OOOH 8 C9468 6 08 Meee TREO, a's soc nc eee dS SeNs Se 6 57 ON io os bos onb% cece te es 7 42 FROM EAST. A. M GOOG. ccc ccccceccenbauue ean aees sete 6 52 Dene Bice oo. c cecncecdvonsned 8 eee 64es 737 OR, DOGO icc cc cyv ros se codes seesees tees 8 26 BOOT ci cc coeac Elbe er 8 57 Mount Bteowar®.:s ccsieices sie deve ov cees 9 37 Georg POR «cc cceeeeeeeeeeese 40 6 ON4 7 47 Cardiga®.... cccccaccascscoveeeseseress 8 12 M — . BPTIVE. «0 cose sssces 9 32 ouns: Shewaes, | depart......-.-.+++: 9 42 en ns Shes en pe eo see 10 17 Royalty Junetiom. ....csciecccccceeess 10 54 Chashebtetewtn, . +s cicais noes teueceue 1117 = H.W. VINNICOMBE, PIANO TUNER Pianos Tuned, Re-wired aad Regulated. CHURCH ORGANS Voiced, Tuned, and Regulated with Care, CABINET ORGANS Tuned, Re-toned and Repaired. Having nearly twenty years’ experience with the construction of English, American and German Pianos, and under the patronage of Government House, the Convent and the leading musical families om—theNsland, feels sure of giving universal satisfaction. ~~~ ea Mr. V. will engage professionally for puu. c or private concerts the coming season. Ofilve—C, P. Pletcher’s Masic Store. ‘BAND INSTRUMENTS i, Moron & MeoQuarria, | BARRISTERS —AND— ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Ofice in Old Bak, {UP STAIRS), Ch’town, Feb. 21, SULLIVAN & WAGHEILL, ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &ce. OFFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. gas” Money to Loan, W. W, Scuuurvan, Q. C, | Casstar B. Maomnr, Jan. 16, ’82. WE SELL Potatoes, Spiling, Bark, R. R. Ties, Lumber, Laths, Canned Lebsters, Mac- kerel, Berries, Eggs, Fish Ete. Best Prices for all Shipments. 1584, Write fully for Quotations, HATHEWAY & (CO, General Commission Merchants, 22 Central Whart, Boston. Members of Board of Trade, Mechanics Exchange. Ch’town, Nov. 19, 1884. PHOTOS For the Holiday Season! Corn and ' EWIS’ Photographs are now known as the most Genuire and Artistic productions in the Provinces. Landsec*pe and Portrait Work are made by men who have real practical ability and known renown in their respective lines, «= The public never regret LEWIS, Grafton Street, Ch’town, Island. calling on oe decl0—3w wkly3mos Dr. ‘Toombs, PRYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Mount Stewart. Charlottetown, Oct. 20—lm wkly 6m SURPLUS FOR SALE. SET of Brass Band Instruments, con- sisting as follows, viz. : A One B Flat Baritone Brass, Piston Valve, One E Flat Pocket Cornet, Silver Plated, Piston Valve, Foar B Flat Brass Cornets, Rotary Side Action, Two E Flat Altoes, Brass, Rotary Top Actin, One B Flat Baritone, do do do One E Flat Circular Bass do do do One pair Cymbals, Turkish, The above Instrements can be seen by ap plyiag to Mr, Galbraith in this city, HENRY BEER, Lt. Col. & Pres. Band Committee, Ch’town, Dec. 11, 1884—eod wkly2i STANDARD LIFE ASSURANCE CO. T the 57th Annual General Meeting of A the Standard Lite Assurance Company, heid at Edinburgh on Tuesday, the 24th of April, 1883, the following results for the year ended 15th November, 1883, were re ported ;— 3,038 new proposals for life as- surance were received the year for 2,561 proposals were accepted, assuring The tota] existing assurances in force at 15th November, 18 §2, amou nted to (Of which $7, 753,031.15 was reassured with Other offices) $ 9,754,085 38 7,239,048 13 $6,936,302 91 ‘E'U Fe Clothing & Fur Caps. —0:0— CAPS |: B’U km — OVERCOATS ! OVERCOATS ! em (a 1 CAFS LL who waut Overcoais and ur Caps will do well to call 1 on L. EK. Prowse. as he has the largest and best assortment in town, and his prices are very low. Ladie’s Sacques, Ulsters, Wool Squares, Wool Scarfs, &., on a big discount. Call and see our goods and prices and we will convince you that we mean what we say. L. E. PROWSE, Sign of the BIG HAT, 74 Queen Street. Ch’town, Dee. 27, 1884. DECIDED TSO Sell at Cost. All our Large Stock of FUR AND CLOTH CAPs, WINTER UNDERCLOTHING, KID AND BUCKSKIN MITTS, KID AND BUCKSKIN GLOVES, HEAVY TOP SHIRTS, FLANNEL SHIRTINGS, ULSTERS, OVERCOATS & _ REEFERS. Other Goods at Unprecedented Low Bargains See our Prices before Buying Elsewhere —AND— Be Convinced that we Mean What we Say. D. A. BRUCE, Charlottetown, Dec. 19, 1884. TO THE TRADE. PALI: srocx: {ji -—— 1884. Received and to Arrive Shortly : 1.200 Barrels FLOUR (choice. ) 300 «do Gntario APPLES, 160 do Nova Scotia APPLES, 300 Boxes and half boxes RAESINS, 500 do Choice FiGS, 100 Casks KEROSENE OIL, 125 Boxes CHEESE, 175 . do Boueless FISH, 1,000 Pounds JAMS and MARMALADE. ——— 9) — + ——— Large stock Sugar, M — | The claims by death which arose during the year smount- ed, including bonus addi- tions, to The annual revenue amounted The invested funds at same date amounted to during Me Being an increase year of JOUN LONGWORTH, S KERR, THOMA : f Inspector of Agencics Ch town, Oct. 25 1884. 4 z, 2 4 orple fe sf bwin, August %. 148% 2,462,226 59 at 15th November, 1882,°to 4,267,546 00 Agent for Charlottetown. air-tight Tins. 0 TEAS | WHOLESALE PRICES VERY LOW. _——- -)-——— 29,503,416 00 1,062,648 35 November 20, 1884. ADAM BEDE. CHAPTER XVII. IN WHICH THE STORY PAUSES A LIITLE, | | | | | Tas Rector of Broxton is little better I hear one of my lady readers exclaim. ‘How much more edify- ‘ing it would have been if you had made him give Arthur some truly spiritual advice, You might have put into his mouth the most beautiful things—quite as good as reading a sermon.’ Certainly 1 conld, my fair critic, if I were a clever novelist, not «bliged to creep servilely after nature and fact, but able to represent things as they never have been and never will be. Then, of course, my characters will be entirely of my own choosing, and I could select the most unex- ceptionable type of a clergyman, and put my own adinirable opinions into his mouth on all occasions. But you must have per- | ceived long ago that I have no such lofty | vocation, and that I aspire to give no more | than a faithful account of men and things’ as they have mirrored themselves in my. mind. The mirror is doubtless defective ; the outlines will sometimes be disturbed ; the reflection faint or confused; but 1 feel as much bound to tell you, as precisely as I , lean, what that reflection is, as if 1 were in the witness-box narrating my experience | on oath, lthan a pagan !’ were not zealous; indeed, there is reason to believe that the number of zealous clergy- men was small, and it is probable that if one among the small mivority hal owned the livings of Broxton and Hayslope in the year 1799, you would have liked him no! better than you like Mr. Irwine. Ten to one, you would have thought him a taste- | less, indiscreet, methodistical man. It is | so very rarely that facts hit that nice medium required by our own evlightened opinions and refined taste! Perhaps you! with expression of unmistekalle content- ment and good will, * Foh" says my idealistic friend, *what vulgar details | What good is there in taking all these pains to givean exact likeness of old women and clowns’ Whata low phase of life !—what clumsy, ugly people |’ ur, bless us, things may be lovable that are not altogether handsome, 1 hope. 1 am not at all sure that the majority of the human race have not been ugly, and even among these ‘lords of their kind,’ the British, squat figures, ill-shapen nostrils, and dingy complexion, are not startling exceptions. Yet there is a great deal of family love among ue. 1 have a friend or two whose class of features is such that the Apollo curl on the summit of their brows would be decidedly trying; yet, to my cer- tain knowledge, tender hearts have beaten for them, and their winistures— flattering, but still not lovely—are kissed in secret by motherly lips. I have seen many an ex- cellent matron, who could never in her best days have been handsome, and yet she had a packet of yellow love-letters in a private drawer, and sweet children showered kisses on her sallow cheeks. And I believe there have been plenty of young heroes, of mid- dle stature and feeble beards, who have felt quite sure they could never love anything more insignificant than a Diana, and yet have found themselves in middle life hap- pily settled with a wife who waddles. Yes ! thank God; human feeling is like the mighty rivers that bless the earth ; it does Sixty years ago—It is a long time, so no | Bot wait for beauty—it flows with resistless wonder things have changed—al! clergymen | force, and brings beauty with it. (To be continued.) School Examination. The semi-annual examination of Hast Royalty School, was held on Monday, 29th ult., in the presence of the Trustees and several heads of families. The examination was condueted chicfly by E. Roach, Esq, and Mr. John McSwain. The children were examined in nearly al] the branches will say, ‘Do improve the facts a little, | taught, and the manner in which they rc- then; make them more accordant with | quitted themselves, was highly satisfactory, those correct views which it is our privilege ; 4nd reflected much credit on their tcacher, to possess. The world is not just what we|Julia Bergan. Thenumber of prizes pre- like; do touch it up with a tasteful pencil, sented by Hon. D. Ferguson and E. Roach, and make believe it is not quite such amix-;Eeq., was thankfully accepted. The ed, entangled affair. Let all people who|parents, pupils, and teacher tender their hold unexceptionable opinions act unex-|thanks to the above named gentlemen, for ceptionably. Let your most faulty charac- itheir kindness in presenting prizes unsolicit- MERCHANT TAILOR. ters always be on the wrong side, and your virtuous ones on the right. Then we shall see at a glance whom we are to condemn, and whom we are to approve. Then we est disturbance of our repressions; we shall hate and despise with that true ruminant relish which beiongs to undoubting con. fidence.’ Bat, my good friend, what will you do then with yeur fellow-parishioner who opposes your husband in the vestry /—with your newly appointed vicar, whese style of preaching you find painfully below that of iis regretted predecessor ’—with the honest servant who worries your soul with her one failing with your neighbor, Mrs. last illness, but has said several ill-natured things about you since your convalescence !—nay, with your excellent ‘husband himself, who has other irritating habits besides that of not wiping his shoes ! ‘These fellow-mortals, every one, must be laccepted as they are; you can neither streighten their noses, nor brighten their wit, nor rectify their dispositions ; and it is ‘these people—ameng whoin your life is | passed—that it is needful you should tol- jerate pity and love ; it is these more or less jugly, stupid, inconsistent people, whose | movements of goodness you should he able | to admire—for whom you should cherish all | possible hopes, all possible patience. And I would not, even if I had the | choice, be the clever novelist who could \cres.te a world so much better than this, in | which we get up in the morning to do our | daily work, that you would be likely to turn 'a harder, colder eye on the dusty streets ;and the common green fields—on the real | breathing men and women, who can be chilled by our indifference or injured | by vour prejudice ; whocan be cheered and (helped onward by your fellow-feeling, your 'forhearance, your ontepoken, brave justice. So Lam content to tell my simple story, |without trying to make things seem better than they were ; reading nothing, indeed, | but falsity, which, in spite of one’s best | effurte, there is reason to dread. False- lhood is so easy, truth so difficult. The pencil is conscious of a delightful facility in drawing a_ griffin — the | longer the claws, and the larger the |wings, the better; but that marvellous ‘facility, which we mistook for genius, is apt ‘to forsaken us when we want to drawa real |unexaggerated lion. Examine your words | well, and you will find that even when you | have no motive to be false,it is a very hard | thing tosay the exact truth, even about your own immediate feelings -much harder than to say something fine about them which is not the exact truth. It is for this rare, precious quality of | pise. shall be able to admire, without the slight- | Green, who was really kind to you in your} trathfulness that I delight in many Duich paintings, which lofty-minded people des-; thoroughly organized, and keep ranches 1 find asource of delicious sympathy | of ‘ed. The following is the prize list :- Reading---Ist., Minnie Prowse; presented by Hon. D. Ferguson. | Arithmetic—Lst., James Chappelle ; prize presented by Hon. D. Ferguson | Grammar—tIst., Herbert Partridge ; bow k ‘presented by Hon. D. Ferguson. | Reading, class 1V—ist., book presented by E. Roach ; Harry Partridge, 2ad., hook presented by E. Roach. Geography—ist , John Andrew, book presented oy E. Rosch. ' Punctuality and General Classwork—Ist., Annie Andrew ; prize presented by teacher. Several other prizes were awarded to de- iserving pupils. Three were also offered, to be competed for at the end of March term. Com. prize _——— —-— abo Temperance. On the 7th inst., J. A. Lawson, G, W. 8. of the Independent Order of Good Tem- plars, organized a Lodge at St. Peter's Harbor, with a charter membership of 35, to he known as ** Phoenix Lodge, No. 19, and to meet alternately at the Harbor and Mount Mary School Houses. The Lodge staris under favorable circumstances, hav ing many of the old members of the Order, with a pleasing representation of boys and girls. The fuliowing are the officers for the present quarter, viz :— W. Chief—Wallace Anderson. W. Vice—Magyie Anderson. Secretary—H D. McEwen. Financial Secretary—Luther Davison. ‘Treasurer— Erasmus C: fin. Marshal— Heury Coffin. Chaplain— Douglas Sterns. Guard— Kimble Coffin. Sentinel— Hammond McEwen. Assistant Secretary—Robt. Davison. Assistant Marshal— B. L. McEwen. Right Supporter— Etta M. Coffin, Left Supporter—Bessie Coffin. P. W. Crief—Stanford McEwen. Lodge Deputy—Harvey McEwen. The Forty Thieves. A WHOLESALE HANGING—OUTLAWRY IN MON- TANA AND NORTHWESTERN CANADA. Maj. Chapleau, Sheriff of the North- west Territories, who is in Ottawa lon business connected with the Dominion Government, seys that the country is infest- ed with horse thieves from Montana, the settlers being completely at their mercy, owing to the small number of men in the command of the mounted police. The American authorities, he says, are largely to blame for not taking more vigorous measures to suppress Montana outlaws. The sheriff says the horse thieves are their own across the border, to olasses. Biscuits, Confectionery, &e. °! Splendid Value in ha*f-chests and five-pound BEER & GOFF. ip these faithful pictures of a monotonous which cattle and stolen horses are driven. homely existence, which has been the fate|The sheriff, some time since, sent men of so many more among my fe.low-mortals|scross the boundary to Miles City, where than a life of pomp or of absolute indigence| they r.covered several horses ibrough the trazic suffering or of woild-stirring; Western Stock Aescciation, who had been actions. I tarn without shrinking, from | forced to form a vigi ance commi:iee to pro- cloud-berne angels, from prophets, sibyls, | tect themselves isuom outiaws 4 year or two and hervie warriors, to an old woman bend- | ago. The Association sent out instructions ing over her flower-pot, or eating hr scli-)to hang every horee thief sanght. Shoerifl tary diuner, while the noouday licht, soft-| Ghepiceu said wha iv Mentema lasi ae wos lened, jerhops, by a screen of leave, fails! informed tuat fcrty thieves bad beew ca; on hr mob-cap, and just touches the! tyred and hanged by the yigi!ance commit rim of her spinning-wheel, and her stone|tee, and he expecied ihat twenty more jug, and all these cheap, common things! would share the same fate. It is the inten- which are the precious necessaries of life to tion of the Governm at © apdeavor to have her; or I turn to that village wedding, kept! horee ard catile stealing made an extra between four brown walls, where an awk-| ditable offence. waid bridegroom opens the dance with a) —— hizh-shouldered, broad-feced bride, while} Cypapest pLace to buy Violins, Accordcous, elderly and middle-aged iriends look on, | Concertinas, Fiutes, Banj-s, Violin Strings, | with very irregular noses and lips, and pro- apd all kit ip ot Bagel foods, ie a Miller bably with quart pols in their bund, But Brothers, he Strect. [décl9 ti