TERMS « DoLLARs a YRAR, Sahin ee ec oe This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”’—Evriripxs, cacti as ns SS OE BA! INET EI ALI ALOT I OEE ey tt -- ~ a SINGLE Copizs Two Cents. NEW SERIES. Che aly Examiner very evel yy by Cyomingr Publishi [he Exeminer Publishing Go. From their offive, corne Water and G rge Streets, Charlottetown, lward Island. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION Six Montha, ° ° - es 50 bh hts, " : ] 25 ine Month, . : . 0 50 ee A lyert sirigy AL ay be most moderate races made or ‘ I >, < uI ly 4 r ; cea . monthly, rly advert Contract quarterly, ments, on appicaticn, "ALMANAC FOR MAY, 1885. CHANGES, MOONS Last Quarter 7th day, 4h. 3lm., a. m, New Moon I4th day, lih, 5m., a. m, First Quarter, 2Zlst day, Lh. 33m., a. m, Full Moon, 25th day, 4h. 18m., p. m. Day 9 ry Sun ‘San | Moon High rises ; water jlen’‘h, r OF WEEK - rises |sets h mh mjaft’n morn,h m | muna I Fritay 6 507 3) 9 8011 54:14 12! Qisaturday | 49 4/10 20/aft29) 15 3. Sunday is ou ass 18) { Monday 47) 71! 82. 1 43} 20 5 Tuesday) #5 S morn} 2 28) 93 § Wednesday 44, 9: 0 231317] 25 7/ Thursday 43; 10} 1 1' 419’ Qs 3) Friday di) 22! 27; 5 30, 31 | 4 Saturday 3u 13 ] 3} fa) 25) 34 j0 Sunday | @5 14) 2 95° 7 43! ag tl Monday | J iG} 2 54 8 45) 3Y 2 Tuesday | 30 17; 3 25) 9°21 41 13 Wednesday #4, 18 42° O]10" 6; 44 i4| Thursday 33 19 4 49°10 47) 47 15 Friday ; 32 19, 5 29,11 3st; 49 16 Saturday 3l; 21) 6 24/morn | 59 i7 syoday | 3Q, 92t 7 27) 0 15 52 | 3) Manday 29, 24' 83611 4 65! ig Tuesday 23) 25 9 46) 1 Sli 57 | 20 Wednesday 26, 26:10. 57' 2 44/ 59] 2], Thursday } 25, Waft 7, 34915 0; 22) F riday |} 2) 299 113415 4 3 23) Saturday 2 390 2 20; 6 21) 5) 24 Sunday 22 3t. 3 25, 7 27} 7 | 95 Monday 22; 3i' 4 27) § 2)) 9} 2% Tuesday 21, 32 52059 4 il 27| Wednesday 20° 33) 6 22 9 44 3 25) !hursday 20; 34) 7 26/1 23 15 | 2y Brilay Ty 35, 8 16)10 57' = 16} gi Sitarday | 18/ 36) 9 3lit 33' 1a} 4j/Sauday i4 18'7 37} 9 46/aft 8/15 19 HB RAILWAY TIME TABLE. (Charlottetown Time. ) CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, MAY 16, 1885, Uuuvitigaee and Esonomy ys. Inconvenience aud Hxpanse, THE PAYENT TELESCOPIC OVEN 4 = = ' ' = = £ as | c= i. = £ 8 oe ~ ~ 4 7 » =. - £ z Do = ~ ~~ ~ ese = s S @ = : ~~ = = cub ~~ ~» = “a 8 a = — ~s _ = ~ via fs ak‘ ”*= a he G ‘e:¢ oot . > . a > a z ° = = = OD CH = me aa AHEAD OF ALL GOMPETITORS. :0i— HIS Patent Oven is put on all my Elevated Oven Cooking Stoves, such as the Ster Niagara, Waterloo, &. Is Easily Cleaned, by simply drawing the end and lining frem the oven, brushing out the soot and replacing them again—thoroughly cleaning or inserting a new lining .in five minutes time. ; * The thousands using this Oven admit it to be worth at least Ten Dollars more than Stoves with the ordinary oven. Atthe same time please keep in view the fact that it costs the trade or retail purchaser no more than the same gtoye without this valuable improvement When buylyg, ask for FAWCETY’S PATENT TELESCOPIC OVEN. If yorr dealer has none og hand, have him send, or send your erder 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 liag several New and Handsome Patterns this season which, with my former | caren of one hundred different styles and sigs of Cooking, Parlor, Ottice and Hall ves. Also— Farmers’ Boilers, Rollow-waro, Ploughs, &c., comprises the largest and best 4syortment made in the Maritime Provinces. er Customers will find my Terms Liberal and, regarding prices. I will not be under- solid, CHARLES FAWCETY., SACKVILLE FOUNDRY, SACKVILLE, N. B. April 25th, 1885—6mos USE DIAMOND POTASH. GOING WEST. AM. P.M Charlottetown. 802 202) Ray vity Juiiction ieee occ Wiltshire. ore coo 6 46 i 9 32 4 32 Hradalhane. . . wviitveis 1010 509 (ogaty Line.. O19 519 Freetown . conksetonni daa 1035 534 is. 22ccceseepenedssne 1057 5 57 ROVE tees oben ima +a Summerside, < P. M. depart . beoadenae EEG Bs. .209 CN 2 37 Port Hull. uaeigs kl hoe ue ee RIE, RC VRE 442 Alberton Se ry a Ee ae 547 Tn: 6 bn ccs ue. kM ..6 47 POM WEsT A. Mf Tigatsh. : one emede 6 47 Ss Shi ccdcececcceect tel 7 47 EE liken cdneubbhocra vee bee 9 02 RN se OS, 0d et 11 07 os os « caaacs a 11 34 3 | arrive .. sicoenn ae + & Summerside, < P, M. S deme. i ed 202 732 MIEN. 6 oc danscccccedocdclean ) Oa | rt Dh de e.e deb ves toeemss ..3 00 8 30 PDD 28 cctcciscccccectécmane wa SR. i oo cocebebns coe ee Huater CO é i'n 66 608K STOLE 402 932 DOMnn. .. . vnc nbechccact 417 947 uy SubOtlon....... oi... ecces 509 1039 nh... oc Welke Pocuut 532 11 02 GCING EAST, P. M Ne oo} ae AZ eb... ..... « coue dale cca Bedford... ... secs basiinisene’ elude 417 Mount Stewart, $ SPtiVe---++++++> - 4 52 > | Gag ete oy cncces booed. 457 DNL.» cone-ducetio’s daitansiiie 617 PIII. » «00x sie Tdnecnoanelnnl 6 42 IIR... <.. «ine enithiioehesllanninn 457 —_ MNGAMI. 0d u2 ovinitaiate duke ee 5 37 IN oo» «0 oc nvee dees oa .6 08 SE vc’. cccccccesaccsc ne Chinn 00. seukdueuneoowellnal 7 42 FROM EAsv, a. M. RNY 6... <n cineeivecbeabicieeee 737 St. Poter’s, eevese veces 8 26 Eloreli.... 5 | sdecbe dded vce cee nce means Stewart.............-iicccess*- 9 37 SNES » 0. 000-cceshsuandaeveule 7 47 SE $12 Mount Stewart, } 2° V@----- +--+ eerees 9 32 ’ | depart ceeeee O68 ee I 50 .cccceccnscttin titan 10 17 Royalty wenetiow. .;<.. cc...) eee 10 54 Sein... cocces tu sds ree | By | WE SELL Potatoes, Spiling, Bark, R. KR, Ties, Lumber, laths, Canned Lobsters, Mac- kerel, berries, Eggs, Fish Ete. Bost Prices for all Shipments, Write fully for Quotations, HATHEWAY & CO. General Commission Merchants, 22 Central Wharf, Boston. stuabers of Board of Prade Corn and UNTIL ARRIVAL OF NEW GOODS 1 OFFER THE FOLLOWING GOODS AT A DISCOUNT OF 15 TO 25 PER CENT. BELOW OUR FORMER PRICES: 65 Doz. FELT HATS, 76 Doz White and Colored SHIRTS, $1,700 worth of Ready-made CLOTHING, superior quality (our own make), 80 pieces WORSTED, 172 pieces TWEED, which I offer to make to order, or sell by the yard, at prices that no one can afford to undersell. 1 have secured the services of Mr. James McLeod, Formerly of the firm of C. E. ROBERTSON, who is so favor- ably known for many years #3 1 Master Cutter, a Your Patronage is Respectfaiiv Selicited. _— oo D. A. BRUCE MERCHANT TAILOR, ~T2 Queen Street. Ol’town, April 16, 1885—3mos eod&wkly ROVAL CANADIAN INSURANCE CO. FIRE. $2,000,000 CAPITAL, - HEAD OFFICE—Montreal. HALIFAX BRANCH—J. Scott Mitchell, Agent. v Risks Taken on Mest Faverabie Terms. AGENT FOR PRINOE KROWARD ISLAND: BAYVILLE HOUSE, YITHIN tive wizutes walk of St Peters Station Permanent and Transient Boarders com f rtably accouimodated, JOLIN A. McLAJNE | WERBURTON & CONROY, (BARRIERS & ATRORNBYS-AT-LAW, Notaries Public, &c. Se Pat "yy Mey ! i ' next door to Taylor’s Jewelry Store. Mareh 22, 1885 SULLIVAN & MAGHETLL, ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW Seliciters in Chancery, NOKARIES PUBLIC, &e. w kylm OF FICES—. O'lalloran’s Building, Great eorge Street, Chailottetc .. Ga Money to Loan, W.W.Sutitvay,Q.C, | Cuesrer B. Macneicu January 16, 1885. iicleod, Morson & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS — AN D— ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. (ffice in Brown’s Block, Queen Square (UP STATRS) Ch'tewn, Feb. 12, 1886 JOHN HIGGINS, AUCTIONEER, —AND— GENERAL AGENT. Consignments respectfully solicited. Prompt Returns Guaranteed. Particular attention given to Auction Sales of Househod Furniture, Real Estate, &c, Country Sales of Stock, Crops, Farming Utensils, &c., promptl:: attended to. Ch’town, Aprill0, 1885—eod&wkly THE VIOLIN. RK, VINNICOMSE is aow prepared to take a kimited number of pupils for Violin Instruction by ‘Danclas” conservatory is enabled to form a part of »ne harmonized body, thereby making the tuition a pleasure instead of the old class drudgery. Pupils preferred from 12 to 16 years of age. For terma apply at hie Waetey Ntreot. FOR THE USE OF = RS Dosze.— To move the bow- YE els gently, 2 to 4 Pills; A S thoroughly, 4 to 6 Pills. pi ee Experience will decide the proper dose in each case, For Constipation, or Costiveness, no remedy is so effective as AYER’S PILLs. They insure regular daily action, and re- store the bowels to a healthy condition. For Indigestion, or Dyspepsia, AYER’S PILLS are invaluable, and a sure cure. Heart-burn, Loss of Appetite, Foul Stomach, Flatulency, Dizziness, Head- ache, Numbness, Nausea, are all relieved and cured by AYER’S PILLS. In Liver Complaint, Bitious Disorders, and Jaundice, AYEK’S Priis should be given in doses largo cnough to excite the liver and bowels, and remove constipation. Asacleansing medicine iu the Spring, these PiLLs are unequalled. Worms, caused by a morbid condition of the bowels, are expelled by these PILLs. Eruptions, Skin Diseases, and Piles, the result of Indigestion or Constipation, are cured by the use of AYrR’S PILLS, For Colds, take AyER’s PILLS to open the pores, remove inflammatory secretions, and allay the fever. For Diarrhea and Dysentery, caused by endden cols, indigestible food, etc., AYER’S Prius are the true remedy, “Rheumatism, Gout, Neuralgia, and Sciatica, often result from digestive derange- ment, or colds, and disappear on removing the cause by the use of AYER’S PILLS, Tumors, Dropsy, Kidney Complaints, and other disorde:s caused by debility or obstruction, are cured by AYER’s PILLs, Suppression, and Painful Menstrus tlon, have a safe and ready remedy in AYER’S PILLS. Full directions, in various languages, ac eompany cach } ~ eth tance ickage. TREVARED BY Dr. J.C. Avcr&Co., Lowell, Mass. ; Office in Cameron’s Block, up stairs ; entrance Commission Merchant, method, which ie so complete that each pupil | Saturday Night. | Placing the little hats all in a row, | Ready for church on the morrow, you know; | Washing wee faces and black little fiste, | Getting them ready and fit to be kigs’d; | Putting them into clean garments and white; That is what mothers are doing to-night | Creeping so softly to take a last peep, | After the little ones all are asleep; Anxious to know if the children are warm, | Tucking the blanket round each little form; | Kissing each little face rosy and bright, ; That is what mothers are doing to-night | Kneeling Cown gently beside the white bed, Lowly and meekly she bows down her head, | Praying a3 only a mother can pray, | God guide and keep them from going astray. | cease iii ADAM BEDE. aie caida CHAPTER L, (Continued. ) Let us rather be thankful that our sorrow lives in ys as an indestructible force, only changing its form, as forces do, and pass- ing from pain into sympathy—the one poor word which includes all our best insight and our best love. Not that this transforma- tion of pain into sympathy had completely taken place in Adam yet; there was still a great remn*nt of pain, which he felt would subsist as long as her pain was not a memory, but an existing thing, which he mrst think of as renewed with the light of every morning. But we get accustomed to mental as well as bodily pain, without, for all that, josing our sensibility to it; it be- comes a habit of our lives, and we cease to imagine a condition of perfect ease as possible for us. Desire is chastened into submission; and we are contented with our day when we are able to bear our grief in ailence, and act as if we were not autiering. For it is at such periods that the sense of our lives having visible and invisible relations beyond any of which either our present or prospective self ia the center, grows like a muscle that we are obliged to lean on and exert. That was Adam’s state of mind in this second autumn of his sorrow. His work, as you know, had always been part of his religion, and from very early days he saw clearly that good carpentry was God’s will —was that form of God's will that most immediately concerned him ; but now there was no margin of dreams for him beyond this daylight reality, no holiday time in the working-day world ; no moment iu the dis- tance when duty would take off her iron glove and breastplate, and clasp him gently into rest. He conceived no picture of the future but one made up of hard working days such as he lived through with growing contentment and intensity of interest, every fresh week ; love, he thought, coula never be anything to him but a living memory—a limb lopped off, but not gone from consciousness, He did not know shat the power of loving was all the while gaining new force within him ; that the new sensibilities bought by a deep ex- perience were so many new fibers by which it was impossibie, nay necessary to him, that his nature should intertwine with another. Yet he was aware that common affection and friendship were more precious to him than they used to bo—that he clung more to his mother and Seth, and had an unspeakable satisfaction in sight or imegin- ation of any small addition to their happi- ness. The Poysers, too—hardly three or four days passed but he felt the need of see- ing them, and interchariging words and looks of friendliness with them; he would have felt this, probably, even if Dinah had not been with him; but he had only said the simplest truth in telling Dinah that he put her above all other friends in the world. Could any thing be more natural? For in the darkest moments cf memory the thought of her always came as the first rays of returning comfori; the early days of gloom at the Hall Farm had been gradually turned into soft moonlight in her presence; aud in the cottage, too—for she had come at every spare moment to sooth and jcheer poor Lisbeth, who had been ‘Stricken with a fear that subdued even her | querulousness, at the sight of her darling | Adam’s care-worn face. He had become ,used to watching her light, quiet move- inents, her pretty, loving ways to the chil- ‘dren, when he went to the Hall Farm; to ‘listen for her voice asfor recurrent music; to think every'hing she said or did was just ‘right, and could not have been better. In spite of his wisdom he could not find fault with her for her over-indulgence of the chil- dren, who had managed to convert Dinah the preacher, before whom a circle of rough men had trembled a little, into a conve- nient household slave; though Dinah herself was rather ashamed of this weakness, and | had some inward conflict as to her depar- ture from the precepts of Solomon. Yes, there was one thing that might have been ‘better; she might have loved: Seth, and consented to marry him. He felt a little | vexed for bis brother's sake; and he could 1 ot help thinking regretfully how Dinah, as | Seth’s wife, could have made their home as | happy as it could be for them all—how she) was the one being that would have soothed their mother’s last days into peacefulness and reat. ‘lt's wonderful she doesn't lad,’ Adam had said ,to himself, ‘for anybody ‘ud think he was just cut out for her. But her heart's so taken up with other things. She’s one o those women that feel no ‘drawing toward having a husband and children o’ their own. She thinks she should be filled up with her own life then; _and she’s been so used to living on other folks’ cares, she can’t bear the thoughts ,of her heart being shut vp from ‘em. I ;see how it is, well enough. She's cut out , 0 different stuff from most women; I saw that long ago. She’s never easy but when she’s helping somebody, and marriage ’ud love th’ sometimes FH. ARNAUD, M Siechanics Exchange Uh’town, Nov. 1¥, 1884, Ch'town, Jan, 1886. MERCHANTS HANK OF HALIFAX _ NER, the bert edenstintng malinm Se tone DVERTISE in THE DAILY EXAMI. interfere with her ways—that’'s trne. ~~ no right to be contriving and thinking it subject to the ravages of cholera than it has I’ve ‘ud be better if she’d have Seth, as if I was VOL. 16.---NO. 150. wiser than she is—or than God either,who made her what she is, and that’s one 0 th’ greatest blessings I’ve ever had |from his hands, and others besides we | This self-proof had recurred strangely to Adam’s mind, when he gathered from Dinah’s face that he had wounded her by referring te his wish that she had acce pled Seth, and so he had endeavored to put into the atrongest words his coniidence in her decision as right—his resignation {to her going away from them, and ceasing to make part of their life otherwise than by living in their thougbis, if that separation were chosen by herself. He felt sure she knew quite well enough how much he cared to see her continusliy—to talk to her with the silent consciousness of a mutual great remembrance. It was possible she could hear any thing but self-renounc- ing affection and respect in his assurance that he was contented for her to go away; and yet there remained an uneasy feeling in his mind that he had not said quite the right thing—that, somehow, Dinah had not understood him. (T'o he condinned, ) A P. E. Islander’s Sufferings. AFLOAY FOR THREE DAYS IN A DORY OUT FOOD GR WATER, WiITil- Provipence, R. I., May 10.—There ar- rived at the central police station in this city about i2 o'clock last night, fc otsore and weary, a weatherbeaten sailor who gave his name as Alexander MelIntyre, and stuted that he was on his way to Pawtucket, but having walked from Fall River he feit unable to proceed further without resting himself. There wasan air cf respectability and honesty about the man, who told the following story of his narrow escape from a terrible fate :— ‘‘My wame is Alexander McIntyre. I am 45 years of age, unmarried, a native of East Point, Prince Ed- ward Island. and have followed the sea for 27 years. On April 2 last { shipped on the new schooner Polar Wave, of Gloucester, Mass., Capt. Jerome Me- Denald, with 14 hands all told. Woe set sail for the Grand Banks and commenced to tish to the southwest of them. LEvery- thing went well till April 24 last. On that day my messmate, Josiah M. Green, of Marblehead, Mass., and myself descended into the dory for the purpose of hauling ihe seins. We were then 197 miles from Beaurame Islands, and 316 miles from Newfoundland shore. The sea and wind were very high, and in spite of all our efforts we were gradually blown further and further from the schooner and soon the wind went down. A heavy fog came up and we lost all sight of our vessel. For several hours we rowed justily in what we thought to be the directiun of our vessel, but owing to the heavy sea we made but little headway, and finally we were compelled to desist. One of the oars was used to steer by, and the boat’s head kept to the wind, There were no nautical instruments, food, or drink in the dory, which was 16 feet long, 5 feet wide, and 3 feet deep. There was in her only a few tubs and a couple cf trawls. For three days and three nights we kept the boat before the wind, suffering intensely from hunger and cold, almost despairing of succor. My companion, reen, who was not a strong man, was utterly broken down, and lay in the bottom of the boat, moaning piteously. Monday afternoon the fog cleared off, and toward night we sighted a large steamer. We made signals to her, which were perceived, and she slowed down and sent a boat to take us off. She proved to be the Alhambra, of the Allan Line, from Liverpool, bound for New York, then in lati- tude 46.2. The utmost care and kind. nees was lavished upon us by the officers. and the seamen of the steamer, and my chum, who became delirious, was tenderly nursed, On arriving at New York Green, was sent to the hospital, where he is still suffering from nervous prestration | shipped on a schooner bound for Fall River and arrived there on Friday after- roon last, and Saturday morning started for Providence, hoping to reach Pawtucket by nightfall.” Mr. Melntyre explained that he had a brother and two sisters residing in Paw- tucket, and it was his intention to visit them. He should then proceed to Glouces- ter to see the owner of the vessel, but he had firmly made up his mind never to go to sea again. The vessel is owned by the Denison heirs, of Gloucester, Mass. <7 Herat’s Defence. Herat could in a very short time be put into fairly good state of defence. Its walls of mud and stone are still in tolerably fair condition; and with little trouble they could be very considerably strengthened, saysa London News correspondent. The Herates, under Eldred Pottinger, kept the Parisians, with their sixty guns (and Russian officers), at bay for nearly 10 months, and beat them off. At the pre- sent time the Afghan garrison of Herat numbers about 9,000 men. As ror the all important point of artillery, there is reason to believe that Herat has a number of guns sufficient to keep at a respectful distance such a small force as Gen. Komaroff could muster at this particular juncture. Behind even the mud walls of Herat half a dozen guns could keep # much stronger force out in the open. It may be added that the modern Herat is the decayed fragment of a once great and prosperous city. Prof. Vambery, who lived in the town for eight weeks—just 20 years ago—estimates the population at 15,000. Other accounts put it at 20,000, and even 30,000. King Humbert and his Queen were rapturously recelved at Naples, whither they went to forcibly open the new water- ‘works. With a pientiful supply of pure ' water, Naples will, nv doubt, be much less been. ie