i X RAR. i ‘ ee 1) LOT LL SMALL RO ~ a et teat nt tie CHARLOTTETOWN, P TheDailn Examiner JOHN HIGGINS, . ’ = oo &§ srl ; cy Y rhe Examiner Publishing Oo. eile . t ‘ ‘ ttetow! AUCTIONEER, a ‘water aud COMMiIssion Merchant, 4 * : N ae & be IA] SS > a AE: six M 82 5 GENS RAL AGENT. nee | l ) ; mr @ me j ‘ ns tients re j cttui cited. Pre iD Ove M nth VU 50 Returns Cuaranteed ’ _— oar Ad , 1OS8 Dike rate rates, Part enlar attenti n give to uction Sale: Contracts mace for m mthly, | ot H isehod Furniture, Real Estate, &e arte ly na \ i} r ve ariy adaverilre B ountry - ule $ ‘ f Mtoe k, { rope, Farming - Utensils, &e., pr mptly attended to. r pam — Ch'town, April 10, 1885—eod&w] ly , sC FOR APAIL, 1885 enti - ALS 1G FUSS APnil, 1G . | le : ; oe ‘The Charlottetown Mutual Fire , ! WTnns f Neo YON, acter | 10h, 20m., a. t Insurance Company. a i “20t! y im a "| US Company is now organized and pre t : ' } pared to accept vood Fire Kisks at Mod- : Sun ‘San '‘Moon/High |! Days/| erat . ry é VE } ' Ml AY , water | len’h Lion, Thomas *V, Dodd, President. vs th morn; h m | DIRECTORS : } 5 446 23) 8 49,11 41/12 39) » bp . . ! Ai - esta) re a] © alate e l 43| ceo. BR. Beer, Esq. D. Farquharson, Eeq,, a a © °6i10 461 0 521 4g Pred’k Perkins Esq , Alex. McKinnon, Ksq., 3 Friday > 11 38.1311 49 Benj. Heartz, Esy., Benj. Hooper, Eeq. : Saturday . aid it , » = ; ; . 5 Sanday 4, 29 morn) 2 ig = (62 JAMES M, SUTHERLAND, 6 M ‘1D lay : su UG FO » ty vo — . “ec J nd Treas. fuesday 3} 4632; 110'4 2 59} April 7, 1885—12i 2aw 3} Wednesday l Nt 60 6 88 3) Se in j eday -J 2 -4 v 24 vi 1} LRKE RT W CONROY ; : . =z Si 1 28 a 2 Se 2 i} 3 27, 8 22 IZ; PANPIQVRRYG kz MAND Vam '. ~~ 5 slaseig gt Is BARRISTERS & J TTOURNEYS-AT-LAW, ° ; , . 5 $7 17 r - = 07 : 20! 40° 4 57°10 26 20 | Notaries Public, &c. 15 \ Is + 5 30 11 t =4 % 1 ia lo sig 7ili @& 7 . 15, 45! 6 50imorn 30!) next door to Taylor's Jewelry Store. }§ Saturday IS 45° 7 40; O 27 33) March 23, 1885—wky3m 19 su ay ll i 5 34 I ll ob ——— - — $$$ ——$_____.. »;' Monday ts » 41° 2 i rd | } 2} Tues Lay S 50 10 47 2 59 42) go! Wednesday 6) AL NL 57) 41; 46) 23; Thursday t| 63 aft 16) 5 37 AA 24 Friday 2; 5&4 2 18, 6 &6 52) 25 Saturday 0 55 3 22) 7 89 55 | ee 26 Sunday 453; 56 4 28! 8 47 53} ne 4]| Monday 57; 57) 5 33’ 9 29\14 O} : i 23 Tuesday 9; 6 35/10 8} 4) vo’ W ednesday 547 O: 7 27/310 43! 6| ¥ i wD Lburaday 4 52)7 S 36/11 is 4 _ é a j - ' He RAILWAY TIME TABLE. Book; Job and Oreamental Printer, i WAL Lidith LAD is, } _kKin anor Wie —— | Book-Binder, Paper Auier, 4a « Time.) | | Gol VEST cee oe al —-ABD— Cha th ae oe 3 Q2 | : a _ a Sagem SE ES BLANK-BOOK MANUPACPORER.| North Wiltshire. . joe 17] A lj \y a Hant r River. . eee « v 32 4 32] ‘ ‘i ‘ . - ee ie 1010 «5 09 | The Printing and Binding machinery and | Coaaty Line 1619 519) Plant in this Office is that of the late | Freetown 1035 534 Staaten soents a an Bremner Brothers. | aviwe 11 32) «6 23] . oe me 9 “_— “+ oeaePe * ° | and is well known as one of the most com- — i 1 7 |plete printing and binding concerns in the, eepars.. non ’ i Lower Provinces. With such facilities it ig i . o¢ 9 i a ‘ ne }no trouble to do the best work at moderate} W eliinyton «+a O08 | rates } Re cctv neces 3 22 a ‘ O'Leary .4 42 {4 Queen Street, Alberton 5 47 Tignish. 6 47 FROM WEST, A Mh, Tigmsh. 6 47 | | Alberton... — eeececces 7 47 U' Leary .. ae eee } NL ck ois avn scab iseonen 10 22 - ee | Wellington . 11 07 |} ** Honesty, In lustry, and Experience are | ea NAG 1134 | the only true principles of business success aa ee 1157 a.(m, | ta mo“! BS, BONNELL, ( depart...... 202 7 32) " . 5 | Rensington........... coeees oe ° freon... 800 830) Ppagtical Watchmaker, Jeweler County Line .. - we thcwe an 84 | | Bradalbane.. vi bh BOE 55) —AND- EE RS 402 932 North Wilts hire 417 947| INGRAV ER | Royalty Junction . ---++--509 1039 ENGR . Wharlottetown.................--632 1 02| Dealer in good time-keeping WATCHES, | SCING EAST P. M? : —— — } ee SOR ee _.317| CLOCKS, Gold and Plated JEM ELRY | at Ne 3 40) in the latest Artistic Designs. | edford 7} > : | ‘ “he a ” ae | Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, &c., Repaired Mount aaa evecsedesaeeen ; 57 {and Westenbed. 36) ) ee ae ee e | . , . Vardigan ypauesene ia 617} 4a Opposite Rocklin House, Kent Street, EE a0 ccccccesce emia oo 42) (h’town, Jan, 28, 1855—tf ee ee 4 57) me aoe el iil eine Morell 5 37 . ‘i os PO evcee* dee eeeeeeeces soe Mm Th a cous) SULLIVAN & MAGHE Bear River... .. 5 odeonde a 6 57 : Souris... .. 7 42 “Th rp az 5 = oo LAW jicnea Do * i‘ mow fs. con! ATTORNEYS - Al — Wi evceccencescaddu Veen 6 52 sear Biver 737 Solicitors in Chancery, St. Peter a, § 2¢ ee. ee 57 . a . _ iatas’* 7° * 730299) cio Saed aene SV AOLARIES PUBLIC, &. G MOWATT... cee cece ence ceeoes 9 37 Cardia Ber oreo age gs sseens .-7 47) OF FICKS— O’Halloran’s Building, Groat vatdigan . eeeece cececenechtast 8 12 George Street, Chariytteto wn. our q 26 - Mouat Stewart, seueroeee Cage +aaw as . _ Gas" Money wo Luan, WONSE. 00s 6 beceasent 2 ‘ Baiford ee ‘3 i : 1017] WwW. W. 8 LUIVAN, Q o 6 (teeewen 1 8g npens EOI, . ... «cs one secdananen MO SE) te. Wells gs: PMNOWE.. ......00veceenecceepes 1117 “i WE SELL Potatoes, Spilling, Bark, R. KR. Ties, Lumber, Laths, Canned Lobsters, Mac- kerel, Berries, Eggs, Fish Ete. for all Shipments, for Quotations, Best Prices Write fully ‘ticLeod, Morson & McQuarrie, HATHEWAY & OO. General Commission Merchants, %2 Central W hart, Boston. aelembers of Board of Trade Corn and ee ics Exchange Ch'town, Noy 19, 18584 ‘is enabled to form a part of one harmonized | BARRISTERS — AND— ATTORNEYS- AT -LAW. Office in Brown’s Block, Queen Square (UP STAIRS). Ch'town, Feb, 12, 1985, THE VIOLIN. — ene ’ kk. VINNICOMBE is now prepared to take a limited number of pupils for Violin Instruction by ‘‘Danclas” conservatory method, which is so complete that each pupil body, thereby making the tuition a pleasure instead of the old class drudgery. Pupils preferred from 12 to 16 years of age. For terms apply at hia residence, Water Street. Se eee, ga eee *® yamine. his is true awit whan Mi. : . a a eee Cee See ee * true Liberty, when Frec-bora Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.’’—EvRiPipEs. SINGLe Corizs Two CrnrTs. INCH EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1885. VOL. 16.---NQ, 121. *PUBIS] “OE *d UO 1ULWLossy ISOG DW Bsaduoyy wWwosaiuy oy L. E. PROWSE, Sign of the BIG HAT, 74 Queen Street. Ch’tewn, March 7, 1885—wkly NVIGYNYS % NVOIUSIAY DOW And, to prove they mean what they say, call and ENQUIRE THE PRICE OF THEIR GOODS. they will give special attention to Repairing and Re-upholster- Large stock of Furniture Covering on hand. | Remember, their facilities are First-class, and they sell, ‘without doubt, the CHEAPEST on P. E, Island. ing Furniture. TO BE CONVINCED THAT WART YOUR TRADE, Ch’town, March 14, 1885 STOP 27 Ottice in Cameron's Block, up stairs ; entrance TC) EXAMINE THIS AD. UNLESS YOU ARE PREPARED QUEEN sTREET. VIARK WRIGHT & CO. For the next sixty days MARCH! Cl tewn CATT ! WHAT A CLEAN DOLLAR WILL Fol, ——— 0: ——— iO All a Chance! PURCHASE. ood GREAT SALE ! CG. ROBERTSON. Gil, 1QQE | Charlottetown, P. E vio OT ASING BUT SALE March I7th, 18$5. This Month we are Selling our Goods so Fine that we would like to Give One and $56 Fo Remember this Month Closes our fi. fth'tows Ch tavern, Feh 4. ane PALMER Penke’s No. 3 Whar, & C0. enn vam O- ——— . PROPRINTORS, We are now manufacturing and will sell at the lowest cash prices; are sug, Turning, etc, Lion > all who favor ne with thoir patronage TRAS othic Windows tor Churches made at shortest notice, snd first-class Machinery, and the latest appliances, we can inenre Sashes Doors Window and Door Frames, Architraves, Spouting and Conductor Mould ings, Ballusters, Newel Posts, Stair Rails, Twists, etc. We are prqpared to to all kinds of Jobbing, ig Planing, Joluting, Mortiolng, Tenon ing, Jig and Fret f* All kinds «' With N: stuost satic : mADAM EXDE. CHAPTER XXXIX THE PP DINGS, | AbAM turned his face toward Broxton, and walked with his swiftest stride, look- ing at his watch with the fear that Mr. Irwine might be gone out—hunting, per- haps. The fear and haste together pro- duced a state of strony excitement before he reached the Rectory gate ; and outside it he saw the deep marks of a recent hoof on the gravel. | But the hoofs were turned toward the gate, not away from it ; and though there |was a horse against the stable-door, it was /not Mr. Irwine’s ; it had evidently had a |journey this morning, and must belong to ‘some one who had come on business. Mr. | Irwine was at home, then; but Adam could hardly find breath and calmness to tell, |Carrol that he wanted to speak to the. tector. The double suffering of certain and uncertain sorrow had begun to shake |the strong man. The butler looked at him | wonderingly, as he threw himself on a /bench in the passage and stared absently at , the clock on the opposite wall ; the master |had somebody with him, he said, but heard | | the study door open—the stranger seemed (to be coming out, and as Adam was in a hurry, he would let the master know at) torr | Adam sat looking at the clock; the minute’ jhand was hurrying along the last five; ‘minutes to ten, with a loud, hard, indiffer- | jent tick, and Adam watched the movement | and listened to the sound as if he had some | reason for doing so. In our times of bitter | suffering, there are almost always these’! pauses, when our consciousness is benumbed | to everything but some trival perception or sensation. It is asif semi idiocy came to give us rest from the memory and the dread which refuse to leave us in our sleep. Carrol coming back, recalled Adam to the sense of his burden. He was to go in to the study immediately. ‘I can’t think what that strange person’s come about,’ the butler added, from mere incontinence of remark, as he preceded Adam to the door; ‘he’s gone i’ the dining-room. And master looks unaccountable—as if he was frighten- ed.’ Adam took no notice of the words; he could not care about any other people’s business. But when he entered the study and looked in Mr. Irwine’s face, he felt in an instant that there was a new expression in it, strangely different from the warm friendliness it had always worn for him before. A letter lay open on the table, and Mr. lrwine’s hand was on it; but the strange glance he cast on Adam could not be owing entirely to preoccupation with some dis- agreeable business, for he was looking eager- ly toward toward the door, as if Adam’s entrance was a matter of poignant anxiety to him. ‘You want to speak to me, Adam,’ he said, in that low, constrainedly quiet tone which a man uses when he is determined to suppress agitation, ‘Sit down here.’ He pointed to a chair just opposite to him, at no more than a yard’s distance from his own, and Adam sat down with a sense that this cold manner of Mr. Irwine’s gave an additional unexpected difficulty to his dis. closure. But when Adam had made up his mind toa measure, he was not the man to renounce it for any but imperative seasons. ‘I come to you, sir,’ he said, ‘ as the gentleman I look up to most of anybody. I’ve something very painful to tell you— something as it’ll pain you to hear as well as me to tell, But if I speak o’ the wrong other people have done, you'll see I didr.’t speak till I'd good reason.’ Mr. Irwine nodded slowly, and Adam went on rather tremulously. ‘You was t’ ha married me and Hetty Sorrel, you know, sir, o’ the fifteenth o’ this month. I thought she loved me, and I was th’ happiest man i’ the parish. But a dreadful blow’s come upon me.’ Mr. Irwine started up from his chair, as if involuntarily, but then, determined to control himself, walked to the window and looked out, ‘She’s gone away, sir, and we don’t know where. She said she was going to Snow- field o’ Friday was a fortnight, and | went last Sunday to fetch her back; but sie’d never been there, and she took the coach to Stoniton, and beyond that I can’t trace her. But now I’m going a long journey to look for her, and I can’t trust to anybody but you where I’m going.’ Mr. Irwine came back from the window and sat down. ‘Have you no idea of the reason why she went way ?’ he said. ‘It’s plain enough she didn’t want to marry me, sir,’ said Adam. ‘ She didn’t like it when it cameso near. But that isn’t all I doubt. There’s something else | must tell you, sir. There’s somebody else concerned besides me.’ A gleam of something—it was almost like relief or joy—came across the eager anxiety of Mr. Irwine’s face at that moment. Adam was looking on the ground and paused a little ; the next words were hard to speak. But when he went on, he lifted up his head and looked atraight at Mr. Irwine. He would do the thing he had resolved to do without ‘inching. ‘You know who’s the man I’ve reckoned my greatest friend,’ he said, ‘and used to be proud to think as I should pass my life i’ working for him, and had felt so ever since we were lads—’ Mr. Irwine, as if all self-control had for- saken him, grasped Adam's arm, which lay on the table, and clutching it tightly like a man in pain, said, with pale lips and a low, hurried voice : ‘No, Adam, no; don’t say it for God’s sake !’ Adam, surprised at the violence of Mr. irwine’s feeling, repented at the words that had passed his lips, and sat in distress- ed silence. The grasp on his arm gradual- ly relaxed, and Mr. Irwine threw himself back in his chair, saying, ‘Go on—I must know it.’ ‘That man played with Hetty’s feelings, and behaved to her as he’d no right to do to a girl in her station o' life— made her presents, and used to go and meet her out a walking; | found it out only two days be- fore he went away—found him a-kissing her as they were parting in the Grove, There'd been nothing said between me and Hetty then, though I’d Joved her for a long while, and she knew it. But I reproached him with his wrong actions, and words and blows passed between us; and he said solemnly to me, after that, as it had been all nonsense, and no more than a bit o’ flirting. But Il made him write a letter to tell Hetty he’d meant nothing; for I saw clear enough, sir, by several things as I hadn’t understood at the time, as he’d got hold of her heart, and I thought she'd be- like to go on thinking of him, and never come to love another man as wanted to marry her. And I gave her the letter, and she seemed to bear it all after a while bet- ter than I'd expected avd she behaved kinder and kinder to'me . * * dare say she didn’t know her own feelings then, poor thing, and they came back upon her when it was too late I don’t want to blame her I can’t think as she meant to deceive me. But | was en- couraged to think she loved me, and—you know the rest, sir. But it’s on my mind as he’s been false to me, and ‘ticed her away, and she’s gone to him—and I’m go- ing now to see; for 1 can never go to work again till I know what’s become of her.’ (To be continued.) . ee : > A Revolution in Telegraphy. THE SURPRISING SUPERSEDE THE MORSE SYSTEM, INVENTION TELEPHONE THAT AND MAY THE A new application for electrical science has been wade in Philadelphia that promises to go far towards revolutionizing telegraphy and supplanting the telephone in popular favor. It is nothing less than the discovery of means by which anybody capable of manipulating an ordinary type- writing machine may, with equal ease, rapidity and precision, send and receive messages over a telegraphic wire, Shou'd this invention do all that is claimed for it, and indeed,. that it seems fully capable of, there seems to be no good reason why the places of expert Morse telegraphers may not be filled everywhere by girls, clerks, expressmen, station agents and other non-experts, so at once reducing greatly to the public the cost of telegraphy and increasing facilities by the establish- ment of at least 40,000 new telegraph offices throughout’ the country in places where they have not heretofore been. The dis- tinguishing features of the new system— which takes its name from the inventors, Mr. George M. Hathway and James H. Linville—-are the entirely novel transmitter and receiver employed. These two instru- mehts, ali!:ough put near together here upon a table have between them about a hundred miles of ordinary telegraph wire coiled about the room, through which their connection is made. In point of fact, the transmitter and the receiver are exactly alike, the same machine serving for either use as required. Its front is almost the same asthe keyboard of a calligraph, or type-writer, the letters of the alphabet and the numerals standing up on elevated keys. Back of this is a small wheel lying horizontally, upon the circumference ef which the letters and numerals are in high relief. Behind this is a vertical column, around which blank paper is placed; and by simple mechanical device moved up line by line as desired. The paper almost touches the lettered face of the wheel. A small inking roller, gov- erned by a spring, supplies color to the lettered wheel. Inside the column is a s:nall hammer that strikes the paper against whatever letter may be directly before it, and so print it upon the surface of the p»per. All that seems simple enough. The mystery is below, in the intricate and deli- cate electrical attachments by which variously graduated currents are led over the thirty-eight or forty wires from the keys to the printing apparatus, and at the same time to a connected instrument far away to record both simultaneously and with per- fect accuracy on every key that is struck. The wire connecting the instrument i3 single, but those graduated currents not only pass along it without confusion, but even meet and pass in opposite directions at the same time. This was fully demon- strated in to-day’s tests. The touching of a key instantly produced a letter upon the paper of both instruments and letter after letter followed as rapidly as a skilful type- writer operator could touch the key until many messages had been exchanged. It was observable that the wheel when retro- gression in the order of the alphabet was necessitated, whirled clear back to a fixed point each time, as the wheel of a ‘gold and stock indicator’ instrument does, but it moved with much greater rapidity and so little affected transmission that forty to fifty words per minute were easily sent by a person who was not at all an expert, and recived automatically at the other end of the line without errors. Greater confidence could hardly be shown by capitalists in a new invention than that demonstrated by the company of Philadelphians who control the Hathaway patents. They have issued $2,000,000 of capital stock in 200,000 shares, but no shares are for sale, even at par. They propose all as an investment. The officers are: President, Thomas Cochran, President Guarantee Trust and Safe Deposit company; Vice President; J. H. Linville, C. E.; Treasurer, Thomas T. Butcher; Secretary, Wm. H. Wile, Secretary Southern Maryland R. R. Co. Only territorial rights are to be disposed of. THERE are just two things that is an impos- sibility todc on P, E, Island, and that is to stop people from drinking brandy, and to carry a piece of fine Machinery to Brown’s that he cannot mend or make new, such as Sewing Machines, Guns, etc. Shop on the corner of Prince and Grafton Streets, Ch’town. dec6 —tf.