OE _ Che Daly Exa ’ -_ he bxami From ¢ ypoat t tetoe ° or 4 Her ol 3, Charl ee et ee WUNET by r Publishing Oo. Water and tletown, vard Island, ia ? Santi Six Months Three Mont Que Mo aw \d Contra warterly, na ents, 8 SP CRIPTIC This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.””—Evrurxs, ‘D ISLAND, TUESDAY. MAY 12, 1885, SO et ee owe JOIN HIGGINS. AUCTIONEER, Commission -AND— Verchant, , $2 50 pa Q oer So | GENERAL AGENT. v 50 | st moderate rates made for y or yearly advertier mouthly, oa ALMAJAS FUR MAY, i885. Consignments re-pectfully storns Guaranteed, . Particular attention cgiyve~ of Househod Furnitere, Neal Msta e, &e. i ( euntry Sales of t'tock, Crops, | Utensils, &c., promptly attended to, | TP to Auction Sales Varmivg | . Ch town, Aprill0, 1885—eod& wkly | BAYVILLE Ha NS CHANGES, USE parter 7 th. 3lm., a. mw ’ ast ’ tart ‘ ; eo? : ’ . ® e av 2 . ee Yoon l4sh day, Ilh, 5m., a. m. +) [THIN five miautes walk of St. Peters est Quarter, Zist day, lh. 33m., a m, : ebation Ful! Moon, 23th day ISm., p m. | Permanent and Transient Bosrders com a : a iy tably accommodat ct, D iin a S loon| High ' Day: : mm SAY OF WEEK) |: asain I ris "s water|len’h i ’ : ss JOHN A. McLAINE. — h mh maft'n morn h m | _ Teter = Rag, Api om. 0 uh 1 Friday 6507 3, 9 30.11 54 14 12) - tate i itu 9 Saturday : ae = 29) 4 i A K Ri TN & CONROY ; 3 suaday % ii oI oi » + Moad 47; 7.11 52 143} 20) NTR q. tijowisy | 47) 7.1" 52,143) 20/ BARRISTERS & APPORNEYS-AT-LAW, 5 Tuesday — o aw e¢ i s’ Wednesday 4 869, O23) 3 17] 3923) y ; 5 5 Notes ies 4 .. 7 N 2 od Notaries Public. &e. jj a hursc ay we . Se eI 4! Friday 41, 12) 1 27) 5 30 31 | Office in Cameron's Block, up stairs ; entrance 9 Saturday 39 «13; 1 56] 6 35) 34 mente deme Yay) oo soldenday 38 4 2 95! 7 43! 36 | 2ext door to Taylor's Jewelry Stor ti Moaday 37 16; 2 54 8 45) 39) Mareh 92. 1885 why8m 12! Cueaday 35] 17; 325) 921" 41/ — ——$$—$_$_$______.___+ a Ww —o. : nia 5 44/:% 1} 3} ' ‘. ‘ 13, Wednesday | “4) 15 4 Oj10 5 44) The Charlotistown Mutual Fire 14 Tharsday 33} 19 4 49°10 47 + 15, Friday 32.19 5 2911 31} 49] Insurance Company. ig saturday 31 ou 6 24)morn | od jj Sanday 3. FH 7 27| 015; 52 a ie : : }3, Moaday 29, 24°83 36,1 jj oa Company is now organized and pre- ln ” 238; 25 9 46! 1 Sil o7 | pared to accept good Fire Kisks at Mod- 19 Tuesday PY S 90' Wedues:lay f 26' 26 10 57'-2 44 5) | erate rates. . ‘ ‘ ox ) — @ ‘ 7 & j 21, Taursday | $9 = ats 4) 3 49115 0} Hon. Thomas *Y, Dodd, President. g2' Friday | 2 29 2145 4 3} 93|Suturday ox 30 2 20) é 21) J DIRECTORS : 24 Sunday 22; Zl 25, 7 2 7 | Geo, R. Beer, Esq., D. Farquharson, Esq,, 25 Monday 22; 31, 4 27) 6 21 9) Fred’k Perkins Eeq , Alex. McKinnon, Eeq., v6 Tpeeday ; 2 g2, 5 29) 9 4) 1l| Benj. Heartz, Eey , Benj. Hooper, Esq. 27| Wedaesday 20 33; 6 272 9 a4 3 Armo «Sf my) oD , gsiThursday | 20° 34 7 24/10 23| 15 JAMES M. SUTHERLAND, 99 Fri'ay iv 25 8 16/10 57 16 ae Ss is “i y and Treas, 4 Saturday is! 369 Sill 33! 18] April 7, 1885—12i 2aw 21 /Suaday '4 18 7 37! 9 46/aft 3/15 19 TH RAILWAY TLitk TABLE, ree eecaeirc . “ . ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW 3 ATTORNEYS -Al (Ch wrlottetown Time. ) ; Salts Stone } an 2 ae wotse wast, aw. rw| Beliciiors in Chancery, Unarlottctown... 2.2... ee eee eee 802 302] wang ec gaeors: 35 BSG Be? : Royalty ‘Sunction.............+0: 825 325) M2 SE RAPHS PEREEE', Ke. Nu... Wiltshire. 917 4 7 OF FC EB O'Meteran’s ding, Greet Hanter River. 932 432) scores 3 t Ubkerletictes a Bradaibare. 1010 50% o : Cousty Liue.. 10 1y 5 19 Gap Money tv Losp, Preetowa . 1035 8 34) w ow.osunivay,Q.C. | Crester B. Macnert ED os ogspep ecsesesens 57 = § 47 F ‘ i Qeul0O.. coos abel i132 622] January 16, 1855. Sammerside, P. M. Reena enero eerie we eT SONS cn co snuseens 1 47 84 i ann Manor j ; Wiofiy { ny ies coccns sacesancdahl 09 SLELBOG, Uore 0H & OYA, TN a nccoe naeee nena l 2 - —_— orl. 3 2 BARRISTERS 0 Leary ES eee oe 42 awe RNG .. oc cones 6 0ebeeue saan —— 4 ek eae ee va |ATTORHEYS-AT-LAW NIACs scvcecesssese De i on FROM WEsT. A. M, GH j o-Rr ‘ SETG «och cdes tacos devess 6 47 -” Ld ’ tm ; , ’ f } yy Pte Sa ee - (fice in Brewn's Block, Queen Square Se cevcse «os ccessneneed 10 22 : (OP STAIRS) SD cietcccaentcen aiaih 11 07 Civtown, Feb 12, 1885 SD whe oc -sscdbacedees: 11 34 sede Lc hncee takin hase RETRO «on ccacnoes 1157 A. M, THE VIOLIN Sumterside, ¢ P. M. . Genet. «509s cones 202 732 . aiaington Ge er ee 237 807 Soe i btdvcce tons benwudt oan 8 30 . a County Line = 8 45! R, VINNICOMBE is now pes to — ae take a limited number of pupils for aie. | 402 9 32) Violin Instruction by ‘“‘Danclas” conservatory a ee 417 947| method, which ie 20 complete that each pupil Tile, ,...... 15 509 1039) is enabled to form % prt of one harmonized Charlottetown eee 532 11 02| body, thereby making the tuition pleasure oe p, m.| instead of the old class drudgery. Uharlottetown 317| Pupils preferred from 12 to 16 years of age. senescgenenes MEE y ih ae Gly Gaueocae Wake SOR. . 0.5 concn gessanteunn 340|_ For terms epyly at h me SUIEIGL. .....ccnuscctnsdhacePeie — Mowat Stewart } STEEVEs+ +e eee cece eres 452 ind ae 6 % ; sig nes ( depart.....cececcoes 4 57 STALLION DUROC. DILL, . 0000s cebennmniiaee ane 617 SI... so scccaseeusestoseot ia 6 42 SE WOES. ccc sccncece ceceseeneeen 457 Morell... ... bcccsece seuneneens ee 5 37 I owas oocunc cana diame 6 08 SE os veo ccc coe cvukuu aie 6 57 ‘ ET ncccccc vce Mapennnnae 742| YMPORTED from France, 1°84, is dark FROM KA. A. M. ] dapple grty, white mans and tail, raising De) 000 o-nc0neencenennnel 6 52] four years uld, with good feet, short lege, big ee ee eee 7 37| bone, heavy body—a horse of great solidity, IIE... oo: cececedehseeeeue 8 26| with fine style and a most excelient stepper. Tn 00. o.00 acoecs assis au 8 57\{s recorded with pedigree in the Percheron Mount SEE? .. cece cendecesentaueenie 937} stud Book of France, Vol, 1, Number 453, RE ie 7 47\ and in American Stud Book, Vol, IV, Num- Cardigan , OP POPE EEE Pe 8 12| per 3768. Mount Stewart )*™ TVG co csvceescseee 9 32 Will stand for the season at Charles a a. pant. .cieninadsoene 9 42) Harvie’s, Grafton Street, excepting when he Belt r pord COecerrcreerreseseeeseses Cee? 10 17 Kocs to Sou-is, which will be every second c CROMGD, ....dcccdeccaveuaane 10 54 | Puesday , going by morning train and re- SNIINTD.,......0.00cecake ooneleel 11.17! maining until Thursdey, returning in after- WE SEL Potatoes, “piling, Bark, kt. RR, Pies, Bema bes’, laths, Canned Lobsters, Mac- kerel, Berries, Eggs, Pisi Ete. Best Prices for all Shipments, Write fully for Quotations, HATHEWAY & CQ. General Commission Merchants, *2 Centrai Wharf, Boston. embers of Board of echaniva Nachaage Sb’'town, Nov, 19, 1984, Trade noon train, beginning April 28th, TERMS :—Fifteen dollars ($'5) for the season, secured by note at time of service, for farther particulars enquire of B HEARTZ, W. &. McKIE, MATTHEW McLEAN & CO, Souris. A. CLOW, Groom. or April 14—tnee wkly 2 mos ——— SEED WHEAT. — ee FOR SALE CHEAP. — E best variety of ‘White Russian” ood Wheat, a splendid yielder, good flour, stiff straw; best for our soil and HIARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWAI eolicited. Prompt | oe i olimate. JOHN NEWSON. Ch' town, Mareh 0, 1Ssn, om DVERUIS® in Titb PALLY EXAMI. NER tha theot aAl-actiaing madiom on Corn and t bhew Colao? ' | WINBEW SHADES, | | Mine of Patent Window Cloth, for Fifty Cents each. only ‘iV the price of paper blinds, These sh wes will last for years and can be cleane! with a sponge as often as desired, | ’ . . . To arrive from Boston, next week, a large assortment of | QOPAQUED HOLLAND WINDOW SHADES, with gilt and fancy Dados, in latest tints. We are showing a fine stock of Cornice and Pole Pictures, Spring Rollers, Cord, ryv . . ‘ . Tassels, Nicke! Blind Pulleys, &c., &. MARK WRIGHT & CO. Ch’town, May 1—2wks 3aw wkly 2w —— —- mee LONDON HOUSE Custom ‘tailoring Department ! 2 A SPLENDID RANGE OF CLOTHS IN rondcloths, VW orsteods, Meltons, Stiitings & Eight © verceatiregs, feline Work dere with Prempiness and in the arn v “ ee tits ge Be 4 7 Best Styles, at the Lewest Prices. CHEK) JIA V Leese oo Cx). Ch’town, Feh. 6, 1885—--2 aw whkly MARC iz! 30: CLOSING BUT SALE ee, This Month we are Selling our Goods so Fine that we would like to Give Ons and All a Chance! CATIA! Sor WHAT A CLEAN DOLLAR WILL PURCHASE. i Remember this Month Closes GREAT SALE | ©, ROBERTSON. Ch’town, Feb. 6, 1885. our OVAL CANADIAN INSURANCE GO. FIRE CAPIFAL, ee re $2,000,006 HAD OFFICE—Montreal, HALIFAX BRANCH—J, Scott Mitchell, Agent. ——ememn() Risks taken on Most Favorabic ‘i'crins. AGENT FOR PRINCE FPWARD ISLAND: F. tH. ARNAUD, MERCHANTS BANK OF HALIFAX Ch'town, Jan, 1855. SINGLE Corres Two CErTs, VOL. 16.---NQ. 146. Dinah does. I believe ber thoughts are better than our guesses, let°em be what theymay. Ishouldha’ been thankful for | her to stay among us; butifshe thinks well to go, | wouldn’t cross her, or make it hard to her by objecting. We owe her some- thing different to that. ~ ADAM BEDE. CHAPTER XLVIIL (¢ fontinw d.) ‘Its an errand to you brought me, Dinah,’ said Adam, apparently unconscious , that he was holding her hand all the while; mother’s a bit ailing, and she’s set her heart on your coming to stay the night with her, if you'll be sokind. I told her ‘I'd call and ask you as I came from the village. She over-works herself, and I can’t persuade her to have a little girl it? help her. I don’t know what’s to be| Sir,—Inihe Weekly Patriot of the 7th done.’ inet., | notice a communication signed | Adam reieased Dinah’s hand as he ceaced | ‘‘Caledonian,” in which Charles McEachen \speaking, and was expecting on answer, | Esq. and his son are accused of using undue but before she had opened her lips, Mrs. | inflaence +o displace a Mr. McDonald from Poyser said, his position as Station Master at Harmony. ‘Look there now! I told you there were| ‘‘Caledonian,”’ in his letter says: ‘There folks enow't help i’ this parish without|is ome act of Mr. McKachen’s political going farther eff. There’s Mrs. Bede get-| career that won't endear him much to the ting as old and cas’alty as can be, and she people of this vicinity. I allude to his base won’t let any body go a-nigh her hardly,|¢conduect to young John McDonald, who The folks at Snowfield have learned by this} was born amongst us here at Allisary, and time to do better wivuut you nor she can.’ | who, when Station Master at Harmony, ‘1'll put my bonnet on and set off directly, } W#s kind enough to teach this man’s son, if you don’t want anything done first,| but he, viperlike, turned on the hand that aunt,’ said Dinah, folding up her work. warmed it, and used every effort to displace ‘Yes, Ido want something done. I want! bis benefactor.” Now, Sir, as [ was in- you to have your tea, child; i‘’s all ready;| timately accjuainted with young McKacheo, and you'll have a cup, Adam, if y’ arena in| who was over twelve months Agent of the too big a hurry.’ P. E. I. Railway at Cardigan Station, and ‘Yes, I'll have a cup, please; and then} a8 I know that he always acted in an honest Vil walk with Dinah. I’m going straight} straight, forward manner, [ have no hesi- home, for I've got a lot o’ timber valua-| tation in asserting that the charge contain- tions to write out.’ ed in the above quotation is a base ‘Why, Adam, Jad, are you here?’ said|calumny. John A. McEschen was noted Mr. Poyser, entering, warm and coatless, | for the unswerving intogrity of his conduct, with the two black-eyed boys behind him,| and was so highly esteemed by the business sti'l looking as much like him as two smali| men and residents of this place, that on the elephants are like a large one. ‘How is it} eve of his departure he was presented with we've got sight o’ you so long hefore fod-|a flattering address at a complimentary dering-time ? farewell supper, where the most influential ‘leame on an errand for mother,’ said inhabitants of Oardigan Bridge were pre- Adam. ‘She’s got a touch of her old com-|8ent. The men who have to descend to plaint, and she wants Dinah to go and stay] such base tactics in order to prejudice the with her a bit.’ electors of any district, show most clearly, ‘Well, we'll epare her for your mother aj that their case is a helpless one, [am con- little while,’ said Mr. Poyser. ‘But we/Vinced that no unworthy father could have wonna spare her for anybody else, on’y her taught the high and honorable sentiments husband.’ that acuated John A. McEachen. His ‘Husband !’ said Marty, who was at the friends on election day will resent this vun- most prosaic and literal period of the boyish manly attack on a worthy young men, who, mind, ‘why, Dinah hasn’t got a husband ?’ if on the Island, with his gifted pen, would ‘Spare her,’ said Mrs. Poyser, placing a] 8ive | “Caledonian” and his clique, so seed-cake on the table, and then seating|s¢cathing a rebuke that they would not herself to pour out the tea. ‘But we must/*00n forget it. spare her, it seems, and not fora husband} ‘‘Caledonian” should remember that the neither, but for her own megrims. Tommy | advice given in his quotation of Holy Word what ere you doing to your little sister's} not always have the effect intended. doll ? making the child nauchty, when Does he not know that similar words were she’d be good if you'd let her. You shanna] Used by ‘a man of Belial, whose name was bave a morsel o’ cake if you behave so.’ Sheba, the son of Bichri, a Benjaminite,”. Tommy, with true brotherly sympathy, | WLcu instigating a rebellion egainst David, was amuring himself by turning Dolly’s| ivy of Israel, who said: ‘‘Every man to skirt over her bald head, and exhibiling| his tent, O Israel ;” and does not ‘‘Cale- her truncated body to the general scorn— donian”’ also know that when the people of an indignity which eut Totty to the heart. | Israel,” who were misguided enough to ‘What do you think Dinah’s been telling] follow the advice of this man—who must me since dinner-time?’ Mrs. Poyser con-| have been a forefather of **Caledonian”— tinued, looking at her husband. saw the mistake they made, they so re- ‘Eh! Tm a poor "un at guessing,” said pented of their folly, that it is written in Mr, Poyer. 2 Samuel, 20 chap., 22 verse: ‘‘And they ‘ Why she means to go back to Snowfield|cut off the head of Sheba, the son of again, and work i’ the mill, and starve her-| Bichri, and cast it out to Joab?’ I have self, as she used to do, like a creature as|0 doubt that ii, unfortunately, the sug- has got no friends,’ gestion of ‘‘Caledonian” is followed Mr. Poyser did not readily find words to|@t the approaching election, ss it express his unpleasant astonishment; he|W@S 12 days of old, so it will only looked from his wife to Dinah, who} be now, the electors will be 8» dissatisfied had now seated herself beside Totty, as a| With the result of “Caledonian’s advice bulwark against brotherly playfulness, and and the candidate he recommends, that at was busying herself with the children’s tea, | the first subsequent opportunity, they will, If ho had been given to making general] @t least, cut off the political head of the reflections, it would have occurred to him candidate, : that there was certainly a change come| Thanking you for space to refute this over Dinah, for she never used to change| Very erroneous attack on an absent man, color; but, as it was, he merely observed lam, yours respectfully, ; that her face was flushed at that moment. ‘ Grorce F. Owen. Mr. Poyser thought she looked the prettier Cardigan, P. E. Island, May 9, 1885. for it; it was a flush no deeper than the petal of a monthly rose. Perhaps it was because her uncle was looking at her so fixedly, but there is no kuowing; for just then Adam was saving, with quiet surprise: ‘Why, | hoped Dinah would settle among us for life. I thought she’d given up the notion o’ going back to her old country.’ (To be continued.) LEFTERS TO THE EDITOR, A Correction. CURRENT NOTHES. Edison’s mother calls his electric light her son’s shine. There are between fifty and sixty thou- ‘Thought! yis!’ said Mrs. Poyser; | sand works of fiction in existence. ‘and so -wveuld anybody else ha’ - ‘ats in Chi en thought as ‘iad got their right end There exists ag Pela fe ‘ oan nup'ard. But I suppose yon must be a who emigrated there 200 years before the Methodist to kaow what a Methodist ‘ull | Christian era. do. It’s ill guessing what the bats are] A little girl noticing the glittering goll flying after.’ filling of her aunt’s front teeth, exclaimed : ‘Why, what have we done to you, Dinah,|‘‘ Aunt Mary, I wish 1 had copper-toed as you must go away from us? said Mr. | teeth, like yours.” Povser, still pausing over his tea-cup. ‘It’s like breaking your word, welly; for your aunt never had no thought but you'd moke this your home.’ ‘Nay, uncle,’ said Dinah, trying to be quite calm. ‘ When If first came I eaid it was only for a time, as long as 1 could be of any comfort to my aunt.’ Every person who would live well should ‘Well, an’ who said you'd ever left off} get so thoroughly rested once -in. every being a comfort to me?’ said Mrs. Poyser. | twenty-four hours as to feel bright, fresh, ‘If you didna mean to stay wi’ me, you'd] active and strong. Many do not do this, better never ha’ come. Them as ha’fnever| but go on feeling tired, overworked, ill at had a cusbion don’t miss it.’ ease, sick, never being rested from morning ‘ Nay, nay,’ said Mr. Poyser, who object-| to night. No course could be worse. ed to exaggerated views, ‘ Thee mustna say 80; we shoull ha’ been ill off wi’out her Lady-day was a twelvemont’; we mun be thankful for that, whether she stay or no. But I canna think what she mun leave a good home for, to go back mt’ a country where the land, most on’t, isna worth ten shillings an acre, rent and profits.’ ‘Why, that’s just the reason she wants to go, as fur as she can give a reason,’ said Mrs. Poyser. ‘She saysthis country is too| ‘‘l am very fond of baked potatoes,” said comfortable, and there’s too much t’ eat, an’| Mr. Jay Gould the other day. ‘They are folks arenafmiserable enongt. And she’s| about the simplest thing one can eat, and L going next week; I canna turh her, say| find that the simpler my food is the better what Iwill. It’s allays the way wi’ them|for my head. At homeI do not care for meek-faced people; you may’s well pelt a bag| what you call ‘fancy dishes.’ Plain meats o’ feathers as talk to ‘em. But I say itjand vegetables, good bread and butter, isn’t;religion, to be so obstinate—is it now,| good milk, sometimes porridges or grits for Adam ?’ breakfast, satisfy me. As you may suppose, Edwards Pierrepont once wrote to his son -—‘‘ You may be invited to a ball or dinner because you danco or tell a good story ; bat noone since the time of Queen Elizabeth has been made a Cabinet Minister or a Lord Chancellor for such reasons.’ ‘‘May God deliver us from war,” said Admiral Symonds, of the British navy, re- cently. “ideem it my bounden though most painful duty to state that I consider the navy so starved, so weak in numbers, armament, structure, and personnel, that if a war broke out to-morrow 1 do not see how we could avoid the most available dis- aster. ” Adam saw that Dinah was more disturb- ed than he had everssen her by any matter relaiing to herself, and, anxious to relieve her, if possible, he said, looking at her I find my time filled up pretty well with business, and I certainly find that I can get along better when my food is the plain- est of the plain. 1 have never lost my affectionately. ‘Nay, T-can’t find fauls with anything fondness for the country food I used to be accustomed t© in my boyhood.” oe