_Five DoLtuars a Y RAR. rere ee ee ee © This 1s true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Kvuxiriss. SineL_e Copizs Two Cents. NEW SERLES. CHARLOTT TOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1885. VOL. 16,---NO, 88, Eraniuer hing Oo. y eve Che Daily fhe Examiner Publis Water and ot From their office, corel (jreat George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. i t CRIPTION Six Months, $2 50 hree Jiont is, l 25 ne Month, . 0 50 a Advertising at most moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, srierly, half-yearly or yearly advertise- ) ments, ou application. aE ALMANAC FOR MARCH, 1885. ON S CHANGES, 2h. 42m., p. m. lh, 24m., p. m. ay, th. l!m., p. m, Oh. 25m., p. m. ’ Last Quarter 5th Gay, New Moon lth day, First Quarter, 23rd d Full Moon, 30th day, D Sun |Sun Moon|High | Days Mi DAY OF WEES Ji Jes sets | rises | water |len’h. — h mh m aft’n |morn! hm ti Sanday 6 43.5 41) 6 45.10 53/10 18 3) Monday 42) 43) 753,11 30:11 5 3 Tuesday 40 44' § 59 aft 7 4 4) Wednesday 38; 46)10 2; OG 42 s 5, Thursday 36, 47j11 4 1 39 il 6| Friday 34 48 morn; 2 0} 14 7|Saturday 32} SO aft 2) 245) 18 3iSunday 30! 51) O 57' 3 41! 21 4 Monday 29, 53) 1 47| 459, 24 10 Tuesday 977i &4i 223; 6 5; 27 il Wednesday 25; 56| 3 15; 7 13; 3! 12 Tharsday 22, 871352, 810, 35 13 Friday 21} 58 428 855) 38 4 Saturday 19; 59) 4 58) 9 36; 40 15 Sunday 17,6 1) 5 3810 14 44 ig Moaday 15; 215 58/1048) 47 17 Tuesday 13 3; 6 27/11 25) 50 is\ Wednesday tt) 5) 6 59: morn | 34 19 Thursday ee. 6,737; 0 1) 57 20 Friday | 7] 78) 04s © 2] Saturday é| 9 § 55) 1 22) 3 ¢2) Sunday 3} 10, 9 46! 2 10) 7 93; Monday 2, 12/10 44 3:10; 10 24 Tuesday 5 9 13) 11 38, 428) 14 25 Wednesday 57\ +14'aft56 5 57 17 26 [Thursday 56 oi 2 6, 7 ae 20) 27| Friday 64; 1713 16) 8 21] 23 23) Saturday 52) 19, 4 26'9 12) 826 29 Sunday iO’ 19) 5 34: 953, 29 39 Monday 48, 21) 6 40/10 51) 33 31/ Tuesday 5 46 6 22|/ 7 46/11 612 36 THE RAILWAY TIME TABLE, (Charlottetown Time. ) GOING WEST. A. B., PrP. MM. Charlottetown. cotesees 2 Royalty Janction ee North Wiltshire. (<a. ee Hanter River. ee Bradalbase. ee County Line .-1619 519 Freetown 1035 534 MOMOIMATON .. 0... ccccccees AWWS5T 557 \ @FTive.......... Ls 6s Summerside, P. M. (depart . 1 47 Miscouche.... .209 Wellington . 237 Port Hull. 3 22 O'Leary. 4 42 as 5 47 Tiguish. 6 47 FROM WEST. A. M, Tignish 6 47 Alberton... soe eua ee O'Leary bao aoc 9 02 ea a veoed aun 10 22 Wellington ..11 07 Miscouche.... ' one ee ee cc sansucoe is [6t Om Summerside, P. M. ; ( depart...... 202 732 Rensington.......... 237 807 Freetown . .300 830 County Line wer a Bradalbaue .. 42 «8 Hunter hiver oe .4 02 y 32 North Wiltshire. ..417 947 lwyalty Junction 609 1039 Gmetietiotown...........-- 56 32 1102 GCING EAST, = ecu wube eee 317 ee nc cs ma enei 3 40 Bedford ,.... eda aeeceun een eke) 417 Mount Stewart, }) 22TIVE---+-++ee eres 452 ; ™ EGORREE. 0.20 ccc cccues 497 ico ce onsite auee nes sale 617 Georgetown... ... eda de leenbil NR os cc unceicneais eine 457 i ee 5 37 St. Peter's 6 OS INE inv ccccctecececten dul aee 6 57 SN i cipbecee cw concent. a 7 42 FROM EAs’. _ DT Skea cess eveccce nae nme eens eau 6 52 Bear Rives 737 Ep ee 8 26 ic .8 57 Meenas... «5 ume cuiaineeueinae 9 37 OU ad. << acleene oabieae t-kuueuie 7 47 IOP ihn adi senile Ueindls Cmnied dente’ 812 Mouat Pe ee eee 9 32 7 mw wowant, en 9 42 Bedford wend cdekeassnw | 10 17 Koyalty Junction. 10 54 I 1117 McLeod, Morson & MoQuarrie BARRISTERS —AX D— ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW. Office in Brown's Block, Queen Square (UP STAIRS). _Ub’town, Feb. 12, 1885. SULLIVAN & MACNRILL, ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &€e. OF FICES— O'Halleran’s George Street, Charlottetown 6H Money to Loan, January 16. 1883 Building, Great W.W. SuLLivay, QC. | Cuester RB, Maengite ; FE 20; DECIDED TO MAKE A CHANGE WV OUR BUSINESS | | | } (Oi—_—-— WILL SELL AT COST FOR 40 DAYS. j | t Will Sell Balance of Stock on | hand on April l, by Auction, of which due Notice will be Given ! | —— + | j ! | Payment of all Accounts furnished Slst December is Requested. C. ROBERTSON. Ch’town. Feb. 18th, 1885 JAMES SHAND WILL SELL THE BALANCE OF HIS STOCK OF COMFORTS & BLANKETS Reduction to Clear! A Lot of Ladies’ MANTLES and WOOL G00DS HATE PRICE. Ch’town, Jan. 30, 1885. GRAND SALE OF FURNITURE! COMMENCING EVERY MORNING AT 8 AM. 0 creased our motive power and made several additions to machin- e in better postion than ever before to attend to the wants of AVING lately in ery plant, we ar our customers. Having a large st very large ; ryre we are desirous of keeping our D our goods at the lowest possible price FOR CASH. The public are respectfully invited to examine our stock and ask for prices. Orders by letter promptly attended to. Funeral Furnishing a Speciality. Beau tiful, Good and Best Value in ‘he Prov inces. aff of workmen employed, our monthly output of Furniture is do not intend paying the exorbitant rate of insurance asked, we stock down to a certain limit, and to do this we will sell all MARK WRIGHT & CO. BRUARY 18TH, 1885 TEA scsi OF THE THe GROWTH. ‘CHALLENGE BLEND TEA, | CHOICEST INDIA AND CHINA ° | | 2 THE ABOVE VERY CHOICE BRAND OF INDIA & CHINA TEA (BLEN DED) For family use, forjsale at 50 cents per pouad or 10 pound box for $4.75. aa Give it a Trial, BEER & GOFF. COFFEE. COFFEE. VOID Adalterated You can buy the Imported Coffees ‘Gree, or Whole Roasted Bean, —AND— Fresh Ground Coffee, (Java and other kinds) from BEER AND COFF. 1000 Barrels Flour. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, CHOICE BRANDS | DANUBE takes the lead. MATCHUESS | Popular Brands. GOLDEN STALK MAPLE HILL GOLDEN AGE STRATHROY The above and other CHOICE BRANDS! In stock this date. BEER &« COFF. Choice Patents. Choice Superiors. Hair Vigor restores, with the gloss and freshness of youth, faded or gray hair to a natural, rich brown color, or deep black, as may be desired, By its use light or red hair may be darkened, thin hair thickened, and baldness often, though not always, cured. It checks falling of the hair, and stimu- lates a weak and sickly growth to vigor. It prevents and cures scurf and dandruff, and heals nearly every disease peculiar to the scalp. As a Ladies’ Hair Dressing, the ViGoR is unequalled ; it contains neither oil nor dye, renders the hair soft, glossy, and silken in appearance, and imparts a delicate, agreeable, and lasting perfume. Mr. C. P. BRICHER writes from Kirby, 0. July 3, 1882: “* Last fall my hair commenced falling out, and in a short time I became nearly bald. J used part of a bottle of AYER’S HAIR VIGOR, which stopped the fall- ing of the hair, and started a new growth. i have now a full head of bair growing vigor- ously, aud am convinced that but for the use of your preparation 1 should have been entirely bald.” J. W. BOWEN, proprietor of the McArthur (Ohio) Enquirer, says : “ AYER’S HAIR VIGOR is a most excellent preparation for the hair. l speak of it from my own experience. Its use promotes the epee? of new hair, and makes it glossy soft. The V1GOR is also a sure cure for dandruff. Not within m knowledge has the preparation ever failed to give entire satisfaction.” Mr. ANGUS FAIRBAIRN, leader of the celebrated “ Fairbairn Family” of Scottish Vocalists, writes from Boston, Mass., Feb. 6, 1880: ‘Ever since my hair began to give sil- very evidence of the change which fleeting time procureth, I have used AYER’S Haim Vigor, and so have been able to maintain ap a) rance of youthfulness—s matter of coualherabie consequence to ministers, ora- tors, actors, and in fact every one whe lives in the eyes of the public.” Mrs. O. A. Prescott, writing from 18 Elm St., Charlestown, Mass., April 14, 1882, says: “ Two years ago about two-thirds of my hair came off. It thinned very rapidly, and I was fast growing bald. On using AYER’Ss Hair Vicor the fall ped and a new growth , and in about a month my head was completely covered with short hair. It has continued to grow, and is now as as before it fell. I regularly used but one bottle of the Vicor, but now use it occasionally as a dressing.” We have hundreds of similar testimonials to the efficacy of AYER’s Haik Vicor. I8 needs but a trial to convince the most skepti- eal of its value. PREPARED BY Dr. J.C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Charlottetown, Noc. 14, 1884 Sold by all Druggists. A NER, if you want te reach peoples for the least money WORTH TRYING.’ Will Watch. ’Twas one morn when the wind from the Northward blew keenly, While sullenly roar’d the big waves of the main, A famed smuggler, Will Watch, kissed his Sue then serenely, Took helm, and te sea boldly steer’d out again Will had promised his Sue, should this trip be well ended, He'd coil up his hopes and he’d anchor on shore, With his pockets well-lined, why his life should be mended, The laws he had broken he’d never break more. His sea-boat was trim, made her port, took her lading, Then Will steer’d for home, fetched his offing and cried - ‘This night if I’ve luck furls the sails of my trading, In dock I can lay, serve a friend, too, beside.” Will lay to till the night came on darksome and dreary, To crowd every sail then he pressed up each hand, But a signal soon spied —’twas a prospect un- cheery— A — that warned him to bear from the and. ‘* The Philistines are out,” cries Will, ‘ we'll take no heed on’t, ‘* Attacked, whose the man that will flinch from his gun ? ‘* Should my head be blown off, | shall ne’er know the need on't, We'll fight while we can, when we can’t, boys, we'll run. ‘But should I be ped off, ye my mates left behind hae P -" Regard my last words, see them kindly obeyed. Let no stone mark the spot, and my friends do you mind me? Near the beach is the grave where Will Watch would be laid. Poor Will’s yarn was spun out, fora batlet next minute Laid him low on the deck, and he never spoke more. His bold crew fought their brig while a shot remained in her, Then sheer’d and Will’s hulk to his Susan they bore. In the dead of the night his last wish was complied with, ’Mid the tears of his Susan, the prayers of each friend, He was borne to the earth by the crew that he died with, To few known his grave and to few known his end, Near his grave dash the billows, the winds loudly bellow, Yon ash struck by lightning now marks the cold bed, Where Will Watch, the bold smuggler, that famed, lawless fellow, Once fear’d, now forgot, sleeps in peace with the dead. ‘A + ADAM BEDE. siscinaegpis CHAPTER XXVIII. . (Continued. ) Adam sat down, and they remained oppo- site to each other in uneasy silence, while Arthur slowly drank brandy and water, with visibly renovating effect, He began to lie in a more voluntary position, and looked as if he were less overpowered by bodily sensations. Adam was keenly alive to these indications, and as his anxiety about Arthur’s condi ion bean to be al- layed, he felt more «f that impatience which everyone knows who has had his just indig- nation suspended by the physical state of the culprit. Yet there was one thing on his mind to be done before he could recur to remonstrance; it was to confess what had been unjust in his own words. Per- haps he longed ali the more to make a con- fession, that his indignation might be free again; and as he saw the signs of returning ease in Arthur, the words again and again came to his lips and went back, checked by the thought that it would be better to leave everything till to-morrow. As long as they were silent they did not look at each other, aud a foreboding came across Adam that if they began to speak as though they remem- bered the past—if they looked at each other with fuil recognition—they must take fire again. So they sat in silence till the bit of wax candle flickered low in the sock. et; the silence all the while becoming more irksome to Adam. Arthur had just poured out some more brandy and water, and threw one arm behind his head and drew up one leg in an attitude of recovered ease, which was an irresistible temptation to Adam to speak what was on his mind. ‘You begin to feel more yourself again, sir,’ he said, as the candle went out, and they were half hidden from each other in the faint moonlight. ‘Yes ; I don’t feel good for much—very lazy, and not inclined to move: but I’ll go home when I’ve taken this dose.’ There was a slight pause before Adam said : ‘My temper got the better of me, and I said things as wasn’t true. I'd no right to speak as if you’d known you was doing me an injury; you’d no grounds for knowing it; I've always kept what I felt for her as secret as I could.’ He pavsed again before he went on. ‘And perhaps I jndged you too harsh— I’m apt to be harsh ; and you may have acted ont o’ thoughtlessness more than I should ha’ believed was possible for a man with a heart and aconscience. We're not all put together alike, and we may mis- judge one another. God knows, it’s all the joy I could have now, to think the best of you.’ Arthur wanted to go home without say- ing any more—he was too painfilly em- DVERTISE in THE DAILY EXAMI. | barrassed in mind, as wel] as too weak in the most body, to wish for any further explanation to-night. And yet it was a relief to him that Adam reopened the subject in a way the least difficult to answer. Arthur was in the wretched position of an open, gener- ‘ous man, who has committed an error ‘which makes deception seem a necessity. ‘The native impulse tu give the truth in return for truth, to meet trust with frank \confession, must be suppressed, and duty | was become a question of tactics. His deed , Was reacting upon him—was already gov- erning him tyrannously, and forcing bim into a course that jarred with his habitual feelings. The only aim that seemed admis- sible to him now was to deceive Adam to ‘the utmost; to make Adam think better of ‘him than he deserved. And when he heard |the words of honest retraction—when he ‘heard the sad appeal with which Adam ended—he was obliged to rejoice in the re mains of ignorant confidence it implied. He did not answer immediately, for he had to be judicious, and not truthful. ‘Say no more about our anger, Adan,’ he said at last, very languidly, for the labor of speech was unwelcome to him; ‘I | forgive your momentary injustice—it wos ‘quite natural with the exaggerated notions jyou had in your mind. We shall be none the worse friends in future, I hope, because we've fought; you had the best of it, and that was as it should be, for I believe I’ve been most of the wrong of the two. Come, let us shake hands.” Arthur held out his hand, but Adam sat still. ‘I don’t like to say ‘No’ to that sir,’ he said, ‘but I can't shake hands till it's clear what we mean by’t. I was wrong when I spoke as if you'd done me an injury know- ingly, but 1 wasn’t wrong in what | said before, about your behavior t’ Hetty, and I can’t shake hands with ycu as if I held you my friend the same as ever till you've cleared that up better.’ Arthur swallowed his pride and resent- ment as he drew back his hand. He was silent for some moments, and then said, as indifferently as he could, ‘I don’t know what you mean by clearing up, Adam. I’ve told you already that you think too seriously of a little flirtation, But if you are right in supposing there is any danger in it—I'm going away on Satur- day, and there will be an end of it. As for the pain it has given you, I’m heartily sorry for it. 1 can say no more.’ Adam said nothing, but rose from his chair, and stood with his face toward one of the windows, as if looking at the black- ness of the moonlit fir-trees ; but he was in reality conscious of nothing but the conflict within him. it was of no use uow—his resolution not to speak till to-morrow ; he must speak there and then. But it was several minutes before he turned round and stepped near to Arthur, standing and look- ing down on him as he lay. ‘It'll be better for me to speak plain,’ he said, with evident effort, ‘though it’s hard work. You see, sir, this isn’t a trifle to me, whatever it may be to you. I’m none o’ them as can go making love first to one woman, aud then t’ another, and don’t think it much odds which of ’em I take. What I feel for Hetty’s a different sort o love, such as I believe nobody can know much about but them asfeel it, and God as has give itto’em. She's more nor every thing else to me, all but my conscience and my good name. And if it’s true what you’ve been saying all along—and if it’s only been trifling and flirting, as you call it, as "ll be put an end to by your going away—why, then, I’d wait, and hope her heart ‘ud turn to me after all, I'm loath to think you'd speak false to me, and I'll believe your word, however things may look.’ ‘You would be wronging Hetty more than me not to believe it,’ said Arthur, almost violently, starting up from the ot- toman, and moving away. But he threw himself into a chair again directly, saying more feebly, ‘You seem to forget that, in suspecting me, you are casting imputations upon her. i (To be continued.) it is claimed by thoughtful observers in the States that the very reverse process is going on from what eminent German think- ers say is the case in the Fatherland. We are assured that in Germany, good books— books of substance avd force-—are steadily losing ground, and are being supplanted by those of an inferior and pernicious charac- ter. On the other hand, thore who ought to know say that it is quite the reverse in the yreat American Republic. There, we are assured, solid, substantial, really useful books are more ln demand, and the trash have to give way. Gakdul, the point General Buller has reached on his retirement to Korti, con- sists of a basin, enclosed by high rocks of black granite stone. The three reservoirs —wrongly called wells, tor they only con- tain rainwater—are situated atthe north end. The lowest and largest is partly ina cave under the rock, and only four camels can approach to drink atatime. The en- gineers have made another reservoir and set up pumps and troughs, so that the water of the two upper pools can be ‘brought down for use to the ground level. -<“4p? A banquet was given to Victor Hugo on the night of the 25th ult., the eve of his 83rd birthday. Many distinguished per- sons were present. Hugo 1s hale and vigorous, i Mm Noremac, the pedestrian, lately com- pleted the task of walking 5,100 miles in one hundred days, at New York. He was in good condition at the close. —_- The ‘“‘scab” disease is still prevalent among the sheep in Laprairie, Chambly, and other counties in Quebec Province. Cyrus W. Field has sued James Gordon Bennett and A. Oakey Hall, the London agent of the New York Herald, for libel. we Several German and other foreign Social- ists have been expelled from France.