nail feinii. ) nr ' -1s 1s true Liberty, when Free-vorn Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free,’’—Evxiriprs, — Anant eee E al iaintieMiantnliensdie omen Saceaaatnsnnn/onnanaeastnandeRasianospessdaainanstsaeaeenes SIncLie Corres Two CENTS, CHARLOTTETOW — =e — VOL 14.---NO. 55, —-- ~ oe ’ A A aA + \ air ie : . _ Vi W SERTLES, ; f, ; . b A ay JV i hi LHhe OAL rubdispins Oo. oO \\ ‘ - i ‘ otte vw! i i ind LON s2 50 lL 25 0 50 rat r montnaly y Aavertise n ALia > FOR JANUARY, (884, \ s > b | ay, ~-a I } 2 : Ll 14.6m ’ 20U! "4 LOLS : ; 23th day, lh, 48 7m., a. m. | j ~ Mo Days} AY Sk I ‘a len hn. | | mihm nu mora | Tuesday 7 3814 29, 9 1Simorn | é ’ iu y ; s0) ; i U 42 3! Thursday + 38 Sie 19! 1 20 { Friday — 38] 32/10 48, 2 2 Saturday 3] 33:11 §8i 2 50, 8 55) Sunday 37, 3311 51] 3 52 \ lay 37 34 aft 1S! 5 99 } Si i esday oj a5; 6} 5| 6 &?! oN ines lay | 36 37; 1 591 7 &2 10 Lob ay ov 33; Z vi 8 §2 i 11! Frida 36, 39° 4 1, 9 44 12'satur 35 iO 9:10 30; 9 7 13 Su 35; 42) 6 18'1l 10} 14, Mond 35 43; 7 26:11 50 5 i ia 35 44; 8 29 aft 25 16 i lay i 3k i6 9 36) 1 ; 17 Thursday 4 47,10 39 1 41 18 Friday | 34) 48 11 40; 2 21 19 Saturday 33, 49 morn! 3 6 9 17] 20'Sunday : 3} 50 039, 4 4 21. Monday 32 Lone § 22) Tuesday 3i; 53] 2 36] 6 21) 23| Wednesday 30 D4; 3 32; 7 28) 24 Thursday 29; 55) 4 26) 8 35 25) Friday , 28, S7'S 15' 9 9 206 Saturday | 26’ 59, 6 11) 9 53 87 27 |Sunday 245 Ol) 6 41:10 32 2s Vion lay | 23 2 7 Ls Ll 5 20 Tuesday 22 t 7 S$lill & 30 Wednesday 20 5 § 25 morn 31 Thursday | 19 | § 62102 Merchants’ Bank of Hatifay, CHARLOTTETOWN AGENCY, Bank Depariment, BE— Seah ings -— WILL 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 Annuni ALLOWED THEREON. . For further particulars apply to Oct, 30 a a. ARHAUS.. SULLIVAN & MACHEILL, ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &c. OF FICES— O’Halloran’s Great! George Street, Charlottetown. a Money to Loan, Zuilding, W. W. Sciuvay, Q. C. | Cassrsx B. Macnaitn Jan. 16, '83. GEORGE TWEEDY, | ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, | Notary Pablic, &c. OFFICE—West Side of Queen Street, Char- lottetown, next door to Stevenson's Tin Shop. July 25, 1883 LIFE INSURANCE. Tnited States Life Insarauce Co, dy wkly 6m CITY OF REW YORK. ORGANIZED 1850. New Features, [ncontestible Policies, Prompt Settlement of Claims Guaranteed. Apply at resid: , Veymouth Street, from Sto 10 a, m, and 4 to ® p. m. A. H. MePHERSON, tAgent. Sept 25, 1553. aw EDWARD T. RUSSEL & 00., Commission iferchants, XO, 284 STATE STREET, BOSTON. Particular attention given to the sale of Fieh and Produce of all kimads, Jane 24, S90. —Om JUST REGEIVED, fand ; . © . Flower Stands and ‘LIFE ASSURANCE OO. i | i |The invested funds at same Being | Jnspector of Agencies. L. ARTHUR & CO., GHNHRAT, ‘UOMMIssion Merchants, 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, MARKET) BOSTON, MASS. (nNOSS Hy ro 7 BUCS and Produce a Specialty, ays 1 “," . April 26, 1883.—wkly tt ALL SIZES ENGLISH MARKED LOW. | Largest and best assortment of PICTURE | MOULDING in the city, selling by the foot | rmade up very cheap, 500 LOOKING GLASSKS, every variety | trom 6x to 24x6)), New Plates for oid frames, price, | FANCY GOODS, in every variety, viz seid Brackets, Music Stands, East is, and Canter. | burys, Fire Screens and Tables (combined), | Light Stands, Folding! Chairs and Rocking Chairs, Chess Table and | Ladies’ Work Table (something new), Smok. ers’ Stands, Parlor Easels, etc., etc, very fine BAGETELLE BOARDS, FRAMED CHROMOS, Two MANTLE MIRRURS (new patterns), Upholstering Department, Uncer the management ot MR. DREW, a veteran in the trade, We have jnst received onr Fall and Winter Stock of Goods, comprising forty-five different pieces of Furniture Coverings, Gimp and | Buttonsto match, Hessions Tickings, Hair} Cloth, imitation of Leather, etc,, etc. In | this d*partment to give satisfaction, as our | stock was purchased in the cheapest markets apd marked accordingly, HAIR MATRASSES, FLOCK do., EX. CELSIOR do. STRAW do. FEATHER BEDS. Every variety of Spring Beds, Dominion Wire Matrasses, best in the market, every bed wa;ranted, price $8.00, We have now on hand (and are manufac- turing daily) @ large and yaried stock of | Household Furniture, comprising many new | and beautiful designs, Particular attention given to ordered work. KILN-DRIED STOCK and BEST WORK- MANSHIP, every time. Venetian Blinds, Inside and Outside Shut. ters, School and Church Furniture, Machine Jobbing, Wood Turning, etc., ete, Prices low. Factory Office and Showrooms, King Square. show Rooms, Queen Street. MARK WRIGHT & 60. Ch'town, Nov. 1883.—3aw Branch 83, STANDARD —_— ----—— T the 57th Annual General Meeting of LA the Standard Life Assurance Company, held 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 7,239,048 13 The total existing assurances in force at 15th November, 1882, amounted to (Of which $7,753,031.15 was reassured with other otfices) The claims by death which arose during the year amount- ed, including bonus addi- tions, to The annual revenue amounted at 15th November, 1882, to $ 9,754,085 38 $6,936,302 91 2,462,226 59 4,267,546 00 date amounted to an increase during the | year of } JOHN LONGWORTH, Agent for Charlottetown, THOMAS KERK, ‘for the Holidays. Tron Badsteads and Cribs, | | | f eenencees i 29,503,416 00 1,062,648 35 N, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, FRIDAY, nn SIGN OF THE ELEPHANT. malades | W W, BOOTS, SHES, SIPPEAS, OVEGHOES & RUBBERS, ‘ever shown by him. | price. LADIES’ AND GENTS’ FINE GOODS, a specialty. | A nice lot of LADIES’ AND GENTS’ FANCY SLIPPERS R. BOREHAM has now on hand the LARGEST AND BEST STOCK OF His motto is a good article at a moderate Try BOREHAM for a pair of GOOD BCOTS. W. R. BORERAM, North Side Queen Square. Ch'town, Dee. 10, 1883. —mo we fr 2m JANUARY. I884. Q Annual Clearance Sale At J. B. MACDONALD’S. ISs4. AM now having my Annual Clearance Sale, and will CLEAR OUT Wool Goods in Scarfs, Clouds, Wool Squares, Heavy Winter Cloths, Winter Dress Stuffs, Ladies Fur Caps and Muffs, Ladies’ Fur Tippets, Ladie»’ Feltand Fur Hats, I JANUARY 25, 1884, nee erent BOM de .: Free es valinan By Charles Reade. CHAPTER XXXVIIL (Continued. ) Of all the changes fate could bring this she had never dreamed of, that she should be robust, and he sosick and in pain. She passed an uneasy, restless night, and long before morning she awoke, for the sixth or seventh time, and she awoke with a misgiving in her mind; and some sound ringing in her ears. She listened and heard nothing; but in a few moments it be- gan again. It was Hazal talking—talking in a man- ner 8o fast, so strange, so loud that it made her blood run cold. It was the voice of Hazel, but not his mind. She drew near, and, io her dismay, found him fever-stricken, and pouring out words with no sequence. She came close to him and tried to soothe him, but he answered her quite at random and went on flinging out the strangest things in strange order. She trembled and waited for a lull, hoping then to soothe him with words and tones of tender pity. ‘Dens and caves! he roared, answering an imaginary detractor. ‘Well, never mind, love shali make that hole in the rock a palace for a queen; for the queen. Here he suddenly changed characters and fancied he was interpreting the discourse of another. ‘He means the Queen of the Fairies,’ said he, patronizingly; then, re- suming his own character with defiance, ‘I say her chamber shall outlive the glories of the Alhambra, as far as the lillies outshone and he seemed to be puzzling hard over something. The result came out in a clear articulate senten¢e that made Helen recoil, and, holding by the mast, cast an indescribable look of wonder and dismay on the speaker. The words that so staggered her were these to the letter. ‘She says she hates reptiles. marries Arthur Wardlaw.”’ Yet she f CHAPTER XXXIX, Tue very name of Arthur Wardlaw startl- ed Helen, and made her realize how com- pletely her thoughts had been occupied with another. But add to that the strange and bitter epigram ! Or was it a mere fortuitous con- course of words ? She was startled, amazed, confounded, puzzled. And, ere she could recover her composure, Hazel was back to his problem again; but no longer with the same energy. He said in a faint and sleepy voice: ‘He maketh the winds His messengers, and flames of fre His ministers. Ah! if 1 could do that! Well, why not? Ican do anything she bids me— ‘Greeculus esuriens ccelum jusseris ibit.’ Aud soon after this doughty declaration he dozed off, and forgot all his troubles for awhile. The sun rose, and still he slept, and Helen watched him with undisguised ten- derness in her face; undisguised now that he could not see it. Ere long she had companions in her care. Ponto came out of his den, and sniffed about the boat; and then began to scratch it, and wimper for his friend. Tommy swam out of the sea, came to the boat, diseovered, Heaven knows how, that his friend wes there, and, in the way of noises, the artificial glories of King Solomon. Oh, | 9:4 everything but speak. The sea-birds mighty Nature, let others rely on the!, ‘ : planter, the gold: beater, ie hile ae followed and fluttered here and there in an { erratic way, with now and then a peck at een Fe hel - “> me to adorn the| ouch other. All animated nature beshed empie of my Beloved. Amen. to be uneasy at this eclipse of their Hazel. (The poor soul thought by the sound of} At last Tommy raised himself quite per- his own words, that it must be a prayer|pendicular, in a vain endeavor to look into he uttered ) the boat, and invented a whine in the And now Helen, with streaming eyes, | minor key, which tells on dogs; it set Ponto Men’s Fur and Cloth Caps, Men’s and Boys’ Ulsters, Overcoats and Reefing Jackets, Alo Kemnants in Cloths, Remnants in Dress Stuffs, Remnants in Prints, and Remnants in Canton Flannels. | These goods must be cleared out and Bargains Extraordinary | will be given. J. B. MACDONALD'S, | Oh’town, Jan. 12, 1884.—2aw wkly, Queen Street. ee —~ 4 —— ee —— D. A. BRUCE, MERCHANT TAILOR, S OVER-STOCKED with the tollowing GOODS, and offers them ata REDUCTION OF TWENTY PER CENT, Gents’ Woollen Underwear, Flannel Shirts, Fur Caps, Kid Mits, Sleigh Robes. 70: OV ERCOATINGS, WHICH: YOU CAN HAVE MADE TO YOUR MEASURE Cheaper Than Imported Ready Made. D. A. BRUCE, Dec. 20, 1883.—eod wkly 72 Queen Street, Charlottetown es — THE EXAMINER JOB PRINTING OFFICE HAS LATELY BEEN REPLENISHED WITH A Large Supply of Printing Types and Material OF THE LATEST INVENTION AND BEST DESCRIPTION, ———— Mh’tewn, Anguat 2, 1882 : or | \ + . * * = < ey -, rr ‘ . = 3 . 4 ee : yi " ae 7 : th ry > t rR i > | . tons A b2 , Pn — . a ey i 7 5 4 | «. Me Mas 7 SE CP “et fy! tatt : * 4) > +. ey Shae ies suas 4 SS be Undy ONE DOLLAR » year | ~UBSCRIBE for the WEEKLY EX4 MIN AND WE ARE NOW PREPARED, ‘Inder the Careful and Skilfal Supervision of Mr. J. W. Mitchell, tried to put in a word, but he stepped off in a moment; he sat upon bis tail, and her with a wild hush! and went off into|delivered a long and most deploratle howl, a series of mysteries whisperings. *Make| ‘Everything loves him,’ thonght Helen. no noise, please, or we shall frieghten her.| With Ponto’s music Hazel awoke, and There—that is her window—no noise,|found her watching him, with tears in her please! I’ve watched and waited for hours,!eyes; he said softly: ‘Miss Rolleston | just to see her sweet, darling shadow on/|here is nothing the matter, I hope Why the blinds, and shall lose it for your small{am I not up getting things for your break- talk? all paradoxes and plattitudes! Excuse | fast ?’ my plain speaking—hush! here it comes,—j} ‘Dear friend,’ said she ‘why you are not her shadow—hush!—how my heart beats. | doing things for me and forgetting yourself It is gone. So now,’ (speaking out),|is because you have been very ill. And I ‘good-night, base world! Do you hear!/am your nurse. No tell me what I shall you liars, thieves and traitors, called the|getgyou. Is there nothing you could world, go and sleep if you can. I shall sleep; | fancy ? because my conscience is clear. False} No; he had no appetite; she was not to accusations’ Who can help them? They/|trouble about him. And then he tried to are the act of others. Read of Job, and|get up; but gave him such a pain in his Paul, and Joan of Arc. No, no, no, no; 1} lions, he was fain to lie down again. So didn’t say read ’em out with those stentor-|then he felt that he had got rheumatic ian lungs. I must be allowed a /ittle|fever. He told her ro; but, seving her sleep; a man that wastes the midnight oil,|sweet anxious face, Legged her not to be yet brushes the early dew. Good-night.’ jalarmed—he knew what to take for it. He turned around and slept for several} Would she be kind enough to go to his hours as he sapposed; but in reality he was|arsenal and fetch some specimens of bark silent for just three seconds. ‘Well,’ said|she would find there, and also the keg of he, ‘and is a gardener a man to be looked|rum? down upon by upstarts} When Adam] She flew at the word, and soon made him delved and Eve spun, where was then thelan infusion of the barks in boiling water; gentleman? Why, where the spade was. |to which the rum was added. Yet I went through the Herald’s College,} His sweet nurse administered this from and not one of our mushroom aristocracy|time to time. The barks used were of the (bloated I object to; they don’t eat half as|cassia-tree, and a wild citron-tree. Cin- much as their footmen) had a spade for ajchona did not exist in this island, unfor- crest. There’s nothing ancient west of the/tunately. Perhaps there was no svil for it Caspian. Well, all the better. For there’s|at a sufficient elevation above the sea. no fool like an old fool. A spade’s 4 , spade fara that, an a that, an a that, ana (To be continued.) that, ana that—anathat! Holloo? Stop that man; he’s gone off on his cork leg, of a that, an a that—and it is my wish to be quiet. Allow me respectfully to observe,’ said he striking off suddenly into an air of |THE I8LAND WHERE PRETTY WOMEN ABE vast politeness, ‘that man requires change. EVERYWHERE SEEN. I’ve done a jolly good day’s work with the spade for this old Buffer, and now the in-} The Channel islands, and particulary tellect claims its turn. The mind retires|Jersay, says a letter from St, Helier’s to above the noisy world to its Acropolis,|the New York T'ribune, possesses much of and there discusses the great problem of|interest for the stranger, but the crowning the day; the Insular Enigma, To be or|glory of Jersey is the beauty of her women. not to be, that is the question, I believe. | For general comeliness they would readily No, it is not. That is fully discussed else-|be awarded a prize in any competition of where. Hum! To diffuse—intelligence—|feminine grace. Rare, creamy complexions from a fixed island—over one hundred|that would put the the bloom on the leagues of water. paech to blush, figures made graceful and ‘It’s astinger. But I can’t complain. |sinewy by bodily toil, with rather strongly I had read Lempriere, and Smith andjcut features, eyes like sloes and lus- Bryant, and mythology in general ; yet I|trous dark hair, the girls met on the streets must go and fall in love with the Sphinix. | of St. Helier’s seem, to the stranger, the Men are so vain. Vanity whispered she| personification of wemanly independence, will set you a light one; why is acobbler|beauty and maidenly reserve. The soft, like a king, for instance{ She is in love|white mists that wrap the island every with you, ye fool, if you are with her.|night from sundown to sunrise give them The harder the riddle the higher the com-|their carnation cheeks. The toil that pliment the Sphinix pays you. That is the| brings with it the active, healthy body is way all sensible men look at it. She is not/due to causes which will enlist on the side the Sphinix ; she is an angel, and I call her|of these women the sympathies of true my Lady Caprice. Hate her for being Cap-|manhood. It is because of the woeful rice! You incorrigible muddle-head.|dearth of men in Jersey that the Why, I love Caprice for being her shadow. | women do all the work. Where you Poor, impotent love that can’t solve a prob-| meet one map in these tortuous streets of lem. The only one she ever set me. I’ve|St. Helier’s you meet ten women. One gone about it like a fool. What is the use\among the green farms this disproportion putting up little bits of telegraphs on the of the sexes is even more painfully apperent. island! Ili make akite a hundred foot She heavy, ungainly carts of the country high, get five miles of rope ready against | roads are, almost without exception, driven the next hurricane ; and then I'll rub it|by women, and handsome women, too. with phosphorus avd fly it. But what can | Groups of cherry-cheeked girls may be seen I fasten it to? No tree would hold it.|in the wayside orchards, some picking Duce! To the island itself, of course. apples from the trees, others straining at And now go to Stantle, Mag, Melton, and|the rude cider presses. The little fields, Copestake for one thousand yards of silk,—| with their luxurious growth of turnips, Money! Money! Money! Money! Well, |cabbages and rutabages, are ail tended by give them a morigage ou the island, and a| women, while the blooming flowers 1a the draft on the galleop. Now stop the pitch | house yards show in their rich variety theevi- Langtry’s Old Home. TO PFPRiNT LETTER HEADS, RECEIPTS, RiLL HEADS, BLANK CHEQUES, NOPLS OF HAND, POSTERS, HAND BILLS, DODGERS, dc., Ke., On Short Notice, in Good Style, at Cheap Prices. fountain, and bore a hole near it; fill fifty 'dence of woman's care and attention. None balloons with gas, inscribe them with the/but women are to be seen in the big latitude and longitude, fly them, and bring | public market of St. Helier’s—woman buy- all the world about our ears. The problem |ing and women selling. What men you is solved. It is solved, and lam destroyed. |sce are either too young or too old and She leaves me; she thinks no more of me. |decrepit-- boys who have not started out in Her heart is in England.”’ \life, or old sea capta’ns who have come Then he muttered for a long time un-|home to end their days, smelling of salt intellivibly; end Helen ventured near, and |cod and fuil of reminiscence of stormy actually laid her hand on his brow to soothe voyages to Buenos Ayres, to Australia, or haa. But suddenly his muttering ceased, the Olina sven oe CaCl tN ON i TE: AT ee , j - eT saan ae a emencneRAENS a ee—ne