eee ee tena tessa Y ey nent steenen tine tliilineedhdteetitates . . ra ot ee ee Che Daily eee ee a LaMiner. —— DotLARs A YRAR, Thi his is trae Liberty, when Free-boru Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.’’—Evniripzs, SincLe Corres Two Cents. VOL, 17.---NOQ, 10. ADAM BED ae iyi ea Sunday in October this view of the case had become so clear to Adam, ' UHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1885. VEW SERIES, vhs a The Daily Exar wer ‘ , Bx | Publishing _opring Upenine I New fisods I a. eeepc ili : j a ; that he was already on his way to Snowtield; ay Pr CHAPTER LIII. on horseback this time, for his hours were ey ' : recious now, and he he od Jona- wie ol ‘Gientlimed.) p »w, and he had borrowed Jona than Burge’s good nag for the journey. Mrs. Poyser would probably have brought| What keen memories went along the her rejoinder to a farther climax, if every-,T0a4d with him? He had often been to one’s attention had aot at this moment been | Oakbourne and back since that first journey to Snowfield, but beyond Oakburne, the gray stone walls, the broken country, the meager trees, seemed to be telling him From eaelr Great G« » § re tietown, ~~ > - | Ne) RIVIION ;: ane t moderate rates. gar Ad ‘ontracts made ior monthly, | 4 . out a thorn,’ had gradually assumed a he knew so well by heart. But no story i = . yy . . ’ . U ory i8 caaie. ha r yearly advertise} APC NOW showing Mr Sterr > re tre ‘¢eam (rather deafening and complex character. the same to us after ala f time; -s " ™ ® . ms Ci ; pse of time; or anplies - is’ recent put chases mn Great Britain Tim, thinking slightly of David’s voca-|tather, we who read it are no longer the ee = . ~ , lization, was compelled to supercede that | §#me interpreters; and Adam this morning ALMAMAD FOR JUNE, 1885. and United States ol feeble buzz by a spirited commencement of |brought with him new thonghts throngh ae teen Chew? ‘Three Merry Mowers ; but David was not ad ony country—thoughts which gave an W'S CHANG pring a (| 5 . : to be put down so easily, ahd showed him-|#/tered significance to its story of the ans sitiia { Il ummer Ove 168 li Staple and i alley DRY GOODS self capable of a copious crescendo, which | Past. Lae (Juarte rt Ay, sD. oO » Pp i . - E (T'o be eonti a.) et 19 Oh. 36 ® | was rendering it doubtful whether the rose nteneed. New Moom 1-00 y, 1, JUM,, Pp. m. ‘ : ‘ lay. 9h. 36 would not predominate over the mowers er —_ a a th. ba ee | when old Kester, with an enti The Riel Rebelli 27 5m., a. m. cme ; entirely unmoved 6 hiel mepellion. eo ; S ee = "eC Willi and immovable aspect, suddenly set up a eka vsiian —_--- Y pay stenesteniieeaen | VEliimerv > , ’ : ; quavering treble—as if he had been an|_ e London Canadian Gazefte of the 14th i> ses | water ilen’h, ” nery Department well stocked with newest Hats Bon. |iitm, and the time was come for him to inst.. thus exposes tho utter ignorance of h mh maft’n aftn)h m | nets. She BF. as ot te , “ape . go off. the London press, touching the North-west inten |6 177 0180 24 9 HB BL hi pebew Feathers, Fiowers and all the new millinery material.|"*the company at Atick’s end of the table rebellion — ei aeeday Ye 7 ee ; . . sth; took this form of 1 entertainment ver ‘* The articles on the rising which appe was | @ on - ~, sno USH ‘ GO 8 form vocal enter ent very |_ / sing which appear 7 Wednesday : 4 -- - . a 4 Ss and Fi ench Milline: y. much as a matter of course, being free from | in the English press continue, unfortunate- op a dale “ 3 30! 26 | “ musical prejudices ; but Bartle Massey laid ne for the most part to be characterized by a . >| o-oal 4 on om] . , ° down his pipe and put his fingers in his|the same serious inaccurecy to which we ) paturcs 0 t VU 2b) 4 3» o7 s : rp . y pipe Pp a ‘ : 7. we fey? | i lo alsal al St K of general Dry Goods very complete and prices Lower |; sa_sdan, vio id ben leaing ota Py a aapaced eh 3| Monday } 4451 23;7 0, 30/ TH rer ‘ ay ing or : Pe lee | ce ue sitnes - 4, 06 Leela al an iain EKuVver, iver bu el should inspect our stock before Uf’-|in the house, rose and said he must bid|7'imes is possibly on the whole the best ° l . d Ll} . . . fr 16 Wednesday l4) 46) 2 32’ 8 57, 2 chasing good-night. review of the kind which has yet i Thursday 4; 47; 315, 947; 33] . . ‘T’ll go with you, lad, said Bartle; ‘I’lljappeared here. It is, however, dis- }2' Friday |} 14) 47,4 7/10 34) 23 | go with you before my ears are split. ’ figured by two or three misstatements 13 Saturday 14) 47 5 Fill 20! 32) ‘I'll go round by the Common, and see|which need correction. It is probably 14, Sasaay 14; 45 6 15 morn 34 | PERKIN & STERNS you home, if. you like, Mr. Massey, eaid| Piapot’s followers, we aro told, who are 15; Monday 13, 48. 7 28) 0 6; 25 | s Adam. threatening Battleford. As a matter of lo Tuesday ~— ; 41) 0 50, 35} iss ‘Aye, Aye,’ said Bartle; ‘then we can| fact, this chief and his men are two or three 17|Wedewaday | a =| 366 . pa 38 Ch town, May 9, 1885. have a bit of talk together. 1 never get|hundred miles away. Again, Col. Irvine is —- - ~ > aa 3 a oe ; hold of you now.’ has only 200 men of the mounted police ieee 13; 49 "} 17! 4 Sl onl an ee = = anes | ‘Kh! it’s apity but you'd sit out,’ said| with him at Prince Albert-—not 400 as stat- . a 13, 49 2 O11 & 38. on Martin Poyser. ‘They'll all go soon; for|edin the leading journal. And we may 99) Monday 14} 49 3 221 651 a5 3 the missis niver let’s them stay past ten.’ | further add that the writer apparently con- 93 Tuesday 14 49 4211750) 35 el J But Adam was resolute, so the good-|fuses the massacre of Fort Pitt 24 Wednesday It} 49 5618 8 BRI 25] 5 ‘ nights were said, and the two friends turned ws the aie ane at Fish Oreek. 05 Thursday 5} 49 6 12) 9 21 34 out on their starlight walk together. owever, the Times errors are very venial 26, Friday ’ 15; 49.7 110 1) 34 : ‘There's that poor fool, Vixon, whimper-|in comparison with those of the Dai/y 27 Saturday 15, 49 7 45/10 28) 33 ing for meat home,’ said Bartle. ‘I can|News, for the map of the Northwest 28 Sunday 6 49 S 2511 11, 38 never bring her here with me for fear she|published by the latter journal last week a lay . 9, 9 Lith 46) 32 \ should be struck with Mrs Poyser’s eye, | Was certainly as misleading as any produe- ae ‘ay 4 17,7 49, 9 33 aft 18} 32 Pi ~ : : . ° and the poor bitch might go limping for- tion of the kind could be. The course of | 3 ers: Ve are now showing a Complete Stock of English, American |cver after: go mmping "°°" | the Canadian Pacific Railway was traced’. NOTES. v 1 ‘I’ve never any need to drive Gyp back,’ |most inaccurately, for the line was repre- Sines Goer " . ’ birthd bh and Canadian said Adam, laughing. ‘He always turas | sented as running through Battleford in- era ton 5 ‘ ales birthday on the back of his own heed when he finds out I’m stead of being, as our readers are aware, " Battle of Waterloo r( coming here.’ some 200 miles to the south of that 16th. a si Poe ‘Aye, aye!’ said Bartle. ‘A terrible | point. The boundary marked between woman ! made of needles—made of needles. |the Dominion and the United States In this month th pinates, and the rest twilight. la this month tne morn logs ere is no real aight, the} length of the day being 16 hours and 15 increase 6 minutes and the afternoons 14 minutes Poe TEAMS always on hand LIVERY STABLE, GRAFTON STREET, and delivered at short notice. Telephone connection with all the princi Ba p pal eS ili R , k away, and drew hope rather than|is situated seven miles south of Calais, and p As, aPrh, discouragement from it. She wasjhe alighted safely at Gravelines, on the jOAN F, POWERS, : R.R Tie fearful lest the strength of her feel-|River Aa, near its mouth in the British Ch'town, May 21, '85 on ° ° S ing toward him should hinder her from Channel and about twelve miles east le Canediertannettng hails: mm waiting and listening faithfully for the ulti-j}of Calais. There were numerous fetes, Lu ber, mate guiding voice from within. all of which were attended by | USE DIAMOND POTASH. Hieleod, Morson & MoQuarrie, =n eae aor seat | BARRISTERS ATTORNEYS- AT-LAW. fice in Brown's Block, Queen Square (UP STAIRS) © Joramissi han co oe = General Coramission Merchants, rememberance of Dinah’s confession that |memoration of the centenary. town, Feb 42. 1885 22 Central Wharf, Boston, | Sunday afternoon, There is ‘a wonderful oo WARBURTON & CONROY, BARRISTERS & ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, AND— Notaries Public, Ac. Office in © Yihee in Cameron's Block, up stairs ; entrance next door to 7 aylor’s Jewelry Store. Marah 24, j eS ee Tang errus ry - ; ° ATTORNEY vy” A j- LAW L Pictures that are sort of glow dies out; memory gets sadly ling success by trotting out a long-horned . diluted with time, and is not strong enough rne erithout dahon + is aft ki given away with to revive us. Adam was no longer so con- ii Bo ae inidesdlr | soliciiers in { hanes ty; :0: 5a " fident as he had been; he began to fear that “ Bir +-Glas : Goods.” NOQFARIEs PUBLIC. &e. sWelcome Soap? perhaps Dinah’s old life would have too rae Se Te: OF PICKS. orifas , 7 *FIHIS Patent Oven is put on all my Elevated Oven Cooking Stoves, such as the Star They are going very strong a grasp apon her for any new feel- In which merit is at once re cognized, are borg 4 Halloren’s Building, Great Niagara, Waterloo, &c. Is Easily Cleaned, by simply drawing the end and lining ing to triumpb. If she had not felt this, | now, and always have been, imitated, espe- Tr eee Vbariotieion a. from the oven, brushing out the sgot and réplacing them again—thoroughly cleaning or fast, and the Soapis she would surely have written to him tojcially the manufactured article. After ae Mouey to Loen, inserting a new lining in five minutes time. ; give him some comfort; but it appeared|years of labor, and the expenditure of ‘W.Svitivay,Q.C. | Cazsrer B, MACNEILL The thousands using this Oven admit it to be worth at least Ten Dollars more then always welcome iu that she held it right to discourage him. a fortune, in pe rfecting and placing before As Adam's confidence waned, his patience|the public that which people appreciate January 16, 1895 the Charlottetown Mutual Fire 45 whkytm SULLIVAN & MAG N&ILL, Insurance Company. r ray ; yes Company is now organized and pre- t good Fire Kiske at Mod- Pared to acc: p erate rates, Hon, The nas DIR > R. Beer, Esq ta . Perkius bac n}. Neartz, Eeq., JAMES April 7, 1885 — 19; i, . Dodd, President. ECTORS : . Farquharson, Eeq,, Alex. MeKinnon, Esq., Benj. Hooper, Esq. M, SUTHERLAND, Sec'y and Treaa, Qa This Cut represents th “Star” Cooking Steve, with oven and end-lining drawn | costs the trade or retail purchaser no more than im provement, variety 0 Stoves. d best assortment made in the Maritime Provinces. sold, April 25th, 1885—-6mo# When buying, ask for FAWCETT’S PATENT TELESCOPIC OVEN. has none.on hand, have him send, or send your order direct to the Sackville Foundry. No other Foundry in the Dominion of Canada is able to offer this undoubted advantage, as | am the Inventor, Sole Manufacturer and Patentee. { am ad ling several New and Handsome Patterns this season which, with my former f one hundred different styles and sizes of Cooking, Parlor, Office and Hal! Also—Farmers’ Boilers, Hollow-ware, Ploughs, &¢., comprises the largest and Convenience and Keonomy vs, Inconvenience and Kxpense, THE PATENT TELESCOPIC OVEN out, as in the act of clean- ing, or replacing a new lin- | Stoves with the ordinary oven. Atthe same time please keep in view the fact that it the same stove without this valuable If your dealer pes” Customers will find my Terms Liberal and, regarding prices, I will not be under- CHARLES FAWCETT, SACKVILLE FOUNDRY, SACKVILLE, N. B. STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODS AND GENTS’ FURNISHINGS. We solicit a share of Public Patronage. STAN DLEHY BROS. Brown's Block, Charlottetown, May 2, 1885. WE SELL Potatoes, Laths, Canned Lobsters, Mac- kerel, Berries, Eggs, Fish Ste. Best Prices for all Shipments, for Quotations, HATHEWAY & 00, Write fully Members of Board of Trade Corn and Mechanics Exchange. Ch’town, Nov. 19, 1884, Have you got one 02 the beautiful. Panel avery family. THIS OUT and return it to us with 19¢ or 4 3: stamps, and you'll get by return mail a| Golden Box of Goods that will bring you in more money in one month than anything else in America. Your fortune if ou start quick -CITY NOVELTY O0O., armouth, N, 8. mayl R oo. wince ey : Tita agement + - called to the other end of the table, | rot : | }iwhere the lyrism, which had at first ne Mont! | id jonly manifested itself by David’s sotto voce performance of ‘ My love’s a rose with- But I stick to Martin—I shall always stick to Martin. And he likes the needles, God help him! He’sa cushion made on pur pose for ’em.’ ‘But she’s a downright good-natured woman for all that,’ said Adam, ‘and as true as the daylight. She’sa bit cross wi’ the dogs when they offer to come in th’ house, but if they depended on her, she’d take care and have ‘em well fed. If her tongue’s keen, her heart’s tender ; I’ve seen that in times o’ trouble. She’s one o’ those women as are better than their word.’ ‘Well, well,’ said Bartle, ‘I don’t say th’ apple isn’t sound at the core ; but it sets my teeth on edge—it sets my teeth on edge.’ ae CHAPTER LIV. THE MEETING ON THE HILL, Avam understood Dinah’s haste to go ‘I wish I’d asked her to write to me, though,’ he thought. ‘And yet even that might disturb her a bit, perhaps. She wants to be quite quiet in her old way for a while. And I’ve right to be impatient and interrupting her with my wishes. She’s told me what her mind is; and she’s not a woman to say one thing and mean another. Pll wait patiently.’ That was Adam’s wise resolution, and it throve excellently for the first two er three weeks on the nourishment it got from the amount of sustenance in the first few words of love. But toward the middle of October the resolution began to dwindle perceptibly and showed dangerous symptoms of exhaus- tion. The weeks were unusually long; Dinah must surely have had more than enough time to make up her mind. Let a woman say what she will after she has once told a man that she loves him, he is a little too flush sad exalted with that first draught she offers him to care much about the taste ot the second, he treads the earth with a very elastic step as he walks away from her, aud maxes light of all difficulties. But that waned with it, and he thought he must write himself: he must ask Dinah not to leave him in painful doubt longer than was needful. He sat up late one night to write her a letter, but the next morning he burned it, afraid of its effect. It would be worse to have a discouraging answer by letter than from her own lips, for her pre- sence reconciled him to her will. You perceive how it was; Adam was hun- gering for the sight of Dinah; and when ‘that sort of hunger reaches a certain stage, ‘a lover is likely to still it, though he may have to put his future in pawn. But what harm could he do by going to Suowfield? Dinah could not be displeased with him for it; she had not forbidden him to go; she must afresh the atory of that painful past which was equally incorrect, as it was placed along the north of Lakes Superior and Huron, instead of much further to the south, across the lakes, from the mouth cf the Pigeon River to Sarnia. The leading article, based largely upon the information supposed to be conveyed by the map, con- tained statements equally misleading. These errors, we must repeat, «re much to be regretted. They are not merely dis- creditable to English journalism, but they necessarily tend to excite needless appre- hension and anxiety.” — a Balloon Ascension Celebration. Tuesday laei being the one hundredth anniversary of the ballon ascension made by Jeffries and Blanchard, the inhabitants of Guines, France, made a holiday of the centennial, The principal event of the celebration was a balloon ascension made by L’"loste. Guines, whence he ascended, two grandsons of Jeffries, who were the guests of the town. A public pilgrimage was made to the memorial erected to Blan- chard and Jeffries, and a wreath was placed on the column. ‘The chief attraction to visitors was offered by the Guines Museum, where were exhibited many relies of the balloonists. Most of these relics were col- lected in America, and they include the original contract of partnership between Blanchard and Jeffries. The corporation of Guines struck a medal of honor in com The Shorthorn Horse. The Turf, Field and Farm recently, in an editorial notice of a village farm sale, solemnly stated that ‘‘In the catalogue there are 111 horses, seven of which are Percherons and fifteen Shorthorns.’”’ The New York Trivwne says the discovery of the new type of horses has caused un- bounded excitement breeders and others interested iv fine stock ; and calls upen the journal which has exhibited to the bewildered view of its readers the short-horned horse, to follow up its start- among and demand, some one who never had an original idea oilers a counterfeit or subsii- tute to compete with the genuine. Curtis Davis & Co., mekers of the ‘* Welcome | Soap,” find the above true in their case at | least, the excellence of whose productions are everywhere acknowledged as the ‘‘stand- ard” of quality, being imitated in every | way that competition can suggest. sut in ithe use of their goods, the consumer re- lalizes the full benefit of value received. ee - | Among the agricultural items in an American paper is the following : ‘‘ An ordi- nary woman's waist is thirty inches around. An ordinary man’s arm is about thirty inches long. How admirable are thy works, Nature !” }