— ~ —— —— S Fa Pi - ee ell —— This is true Liberty, when eebins Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free,”’—EvniPipEs, Srncie Copies Two Cents, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY. MAY 26, 1885, VOL. 17.---NO, 4. LONDON HOUSE. rp a Spring Upening! New Goods! ee nn) ns Perkins & Sterns Are now showing Mr. Sterns’ recent purchases in Great Britain Spring and Summer Novelties in Staple and Fancy DRY GOODS, and United States of | | Millinery Department well stocked with newest Hats Bon. nets ; Shapes, «than liver, chasing. Ch’town, May 9, 1885. NEW STORE ! We are now AND GENTS’ Feathers, Miowers and all the new millinery material. 8 | English and French Millinery, Stock of general Dry Goods very complete and prices Lower Every buyer should inspect our stock before —pur- PERKINS & STERNS. NEW GOODS and Canadian “ee STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODS FURNISHINCS. We solicit a share of Public Patronage. STANLEY BROS. Brown’s Block, Charlottetown, May 2, 1885. a a A FINE ASSORTMENT OF Men’s Felt Hats For Sale Cheap at the April 4, iar ‘Sprace Flog rig and § aud Sheathing, &e. AVING been hdesdihed by Messrs, Prim- rose Brothers, of Pictou, agent for the > sale of their well known Grooved and Tongued SPRUCE FLOORING and} - SAEATHING. I HAVE NOW, and will} 7 continue to have on hand a stock of the same, | WELL DRIED and SEASONED, which I | ‘have no hesitation in recommending as the | best in the market. Messrs. Primrose Brothers are also pre- | pared to execute promptly orders left with me for any description of Spruce Scantling, Boards, Laths, &c. For further particulars apply at my resi- | dence, Prince Street. THOMAS ALLEY April Hl, 1885 %aw ImAwhkly WE SELL ‘Potatoes, ) ARS A YAR ees ees . : ‘Y es \ VY NEW SERLES ~> 1 —— ' ~~ : a4 et The Daily E raminer 0,,} rhe | [ ishing Go. | Water and ul ttetown, i Island $2 50 l 25 0 50 lerate rates : nade for monthly, ~ r yearly advertize LLL LLL LOL LLL LLL LLL EI A WAU rus MAY, S35. ’ YaRrs .< oli a. m ¥ Lih, 5 a. m sy, ih. 33m., a. m, Fr . Ls ; m™m Sun 'Moon|High ! Days rises | water |len’h. in aftn ;morn.h m 7, oe 7 il 5414 : t} 110 Vaft 29) : Gill Tie dl ‘ 7 7 At 8, 1 48 ; 45 Simorn; 2 28) al 0231317} 25] : i a €& 28 | l 27: & 30 3 i i >| 6 BS a . s l4 25° 7 43 | ’ ] 4 54 5 45) 39 j l 25; 9 21° 4) ; ! Is 4 0/10 5 44) ig 4 49°10 47 47 | 15) Friday 32 19, & 90,11 3) 49 | iG Saturday 3] 21; 6 24imorn 50} {7 Sunday 0. 92! 7 27]; 0 15 52} ts Monday 2yY 24° 5 36 1 5S | 19) Tuesday 28' 25 9 46) 1 51 87 | 90 Wednesday | 26, 2610 57'244' 659 21 Thursday 25 matt 713 49.15 O | Friday su Lee 8 4 5 | 23/Saturday 23, 30 2 2 G 21 5 24' Sanday 22 7 Me | 7 25 Monday 22} 3i' 4 27) $ 2ii 9 | 26; Tuesday 2 32, 52919 4 11] 27) Wedn 20° 33) 6 22, 9 44) 13} 23) Thursday 20; 34: 7 24110 22) 15] 29 Friday 19 > & 16/10 57! 16 | aU Saturday is 1 3i11 33 18 tijsuaday 4 18:7 37| 9 tO, aft 8/15 19 NOTI ~ la this month the mornings increase 42 minutes; the afternoons 43 minutes, trlottetor Time. ) . A. M. P. M ariu 7 ea sy ae 5 02 oe 02 Royalty Jun 825 225 Oe a ace 917 417 Haater Riv: 932 432 I... nhc ckboudbesen Cte i010 509 County line 10 19 519 a iis | ce eta den | 1035 534! CS .. . obccceseutsu bl 1057 557 ' 1132 623 Sum . P, M. Cn PRES 1 47 ons. wiheb aeons ee 2 09 Wellin, | ios o cae Port H stnne docden ee i cacé tau 442 Albert 5 47 Th « dpxéteakme ce souenveau 6 47 FROM W i a 6 oo cdé% comes ..6 47 Alb ‘ Eee ccceecsseoceseerseeseeses Z 47 ET sno bd pie cceene eke cdinael 9 02 10 22 ee 11 07 i ei ee 11 34 | BETIVE .. eee eeees il 57 A. M, | Summme P. M ' ( dedtt...cccacuaub 202 7: > Aensington. ntneees cake cr SAG 0.00 cocecepe tases an ae 300 8 30) IE « tos aned.4¢eanueneee 317 8 45) Bradalb 327 § 55 | NGS... 10s ce checcuane bill 402 932 North Wiitshire. inks 0 bee 9 47| Royalty Juuction................509 1039 VUharlotte De. .cccccesnnee name 6 32 11 02 GOING EAST, Pp. M Charlottetown . bo devanen tae 17) Royalty PUREE; . i <0 6 atienin oo courant 3 40 | vi ccccccecccacdiceds » cisntnserel 417) Mount Stev art, \ AFTIVE... 2... e eee 4 52 ( depart...ccsccccces 4 57 SND: 6... cv cc cdivsedadceduuinieelee 6 17} eorgetow .6 42 OWATS ous us ve vic 6 cede swans 457 SIND din 4:5 0-001 Reem Meee 5 37 eee er 6 08 Dea 6 57 SN dsa.o 6 de 6éc ce tpeiiesd Ul is Cana 7 42 # Re A. M. Sou oe 0006666666 6 52 | bear | Tee soeeccoecdocoosceese esses eee é 7 37 ey nitnadiiiine a ae SUE. -¢s..-co coi a 8 51 Mor naai®.', « lawns maatiea ae aan 9 37 | Ce Ee ERY rr > 7 47 | UE aos ccccdévebueceetobeeeneenne $12 ro nt 4 4 } Q@FTIVE, .coc cece cece 9 32) —— eaepane .-9 42) Dedlori bcébsedevncsell 10 17 | Eevtity Junction. . ...é:sckccussiioeual 10 54 Unarlott iv t+ ceukie eee 1117 Mal, Mb Lf Mors rson nh MeQuarrie, | oe RS ATTOR AEYS -AT-LAW. | | Brown's Block, Queen Square) IP STAIRS) WARBURTON & CONROY, BARRISTERS & ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, i Oo Ww & Votaries Public, &c. One = ' ; : . fice in n’s block, up stairs ; entrance next door to Taylor's Jewelry Store, ‘ March 22 1885 wkylm Spilling, Bark, R. R. Ties, Lumber, ‘Laths, Canned Lobsters, Mac- kerel, Berries, Eggs, Fish Kite. Best Prices for sli Shipments, for Quotations, | HATHEWAY & CO., General Commission Merchants, 22 Central Wharf, Boston. Members cf Board of Trade and Mechanics Exchange. Ch’town, Nov. 19, 1984, Write fully Corn showing a Complete Stock of English, American USE DIAMOND POTASH, Convenience and Hconomy vs. Inccnvenience and Expense. 70: THE PATENT TELESCOPIC OVEN Stoves. This Cnt represents the “Star” Cooking Stove, with even and end-lning drawn Niagara, Waterloo, &c. out, as in the act of clean- ing, or replacing a new lin- ing. IS STILL AHEAD OF ALL COMPETITORS. HIS Patent Oven is put on all my Elevated Oven Cooking Stoves, such as the Star Is Easily Cleaned, by simply drawing the end and lining from 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 When buying, ask for FAWCETT’S PATENT TELESCOPIC OVEN. 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 stove without this valuable im provement, If your dealer bas 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. ee BEDE. CHAPTER LI. (Continued. ) ‘Then, Dinah,’ said Adam at last, ‘how can there be anything contrary to what's | right ia our belonging to one another, and spending our lives together? Who put this great love into our hearts? Can any thing be holier than that? For we can ask God to be with us continually, and we'll help one another in everything as is good. Il’d never think o’ putting myself between you and God, saying you oughtn’t to do this, and you oughtn’t to do that. You'd follow your conscience as much as you do now,’ ‘Yes, Adam,’ Dinah said, ‘I know wmar- riage is a holy state for those who are truly called to it, and have no other drawing; but from my childhood upward, 1 have been led toward another path; all my peace and my joy have come from having no life of my own, no wants, no wish for myself, and living only i in Gou and those of his creatures whose sorrows and joys he has given me to know, Those have been very blessed years jto me, and I feel that, if I was to listen to my voice that would draw me aside from that path, I should be turning my back on the light that has shone on me, and dark- ness and doubt would take hold of me. We could not bless each other, Adam, if there were doubts in my soul, andif I yearned, when it was too late, after that better part which had once been given me and I had put away from me.’ ‘ But if a new feeling has come into your mind, Dinah, and if you love me so as to Iam adding several New and Handsome Patterns this season which, with my former variety of one hundred different styles and sizes of Cooking, Parlor, Also—Farmers’ Boilers, Hollow-ware, Ploughs, &c., best assortment made in the Maritime Provinces. Otlice and Hal] comprises the largest and gee Customers will find my Terms Liberal and, regarding prices, I will not be under- CHARLES FAWCETT, SACKVILLE FOUNDRY, SACKVILLE, N. B. sold, April 25th, 1885— mos be willing to be nearer to me than to other people, isn’t that a sign that it’s right for you tochange your life? Doesn’t the love make it right when nothing else would ?’ ‘Adam, my mind is full of questionings ,|about that; for now, since you tell of your strong love toward me, what was clear to me has become dark again. I felt before that my heart was too strongly drawn toward you, and that your heart was not as mine; and the thought of you had taken hold of me, so that my soul had lost its freedom, and was becoming enslaved to an earthly affection, which made me anxious and careful about what should befall my- self. For in all other affection I had been content with any small return, or with none; but my heart was beginning to hun- ger after an equal love from you. And I had no doubt that I must wrestle against tha‘ asa great temptation; and the command was clear that I must yo away.’ ‘But now, dear, dear Dinah, now you know I love you better than you love me— it’s al] different now, You won’t think o’ going: you'll stay and be my dear wife, and I shall thank God for giving me life as I never thanked him before.’ ‘ Adam, it’s hard for me to turn a deaf ear—you know it’s hard; but a great fear is upon me. It seems to me as if you were stretching out your arms to me, and beck- oning me to come and take my ease, and live for my own delight, and Jesus,the Man of Sorrows, was standing toward me, point- ing to the sinful, and suffering, and afflict- ed. I have seen that again and again when I have been sitting in stillness and dark- ness, and great terror has come upon me lest I should become hard, and a lover of self, and no more bear willingly the Re- deemer’s cross.’ Dinah had closed her eyes, and a faint shudder went through her. ‘Adam,’ she went on, ‘you wouldn’t desire that we should seek a good through any unfaith- fulness to the light that is in us; you wouldn’t believe that could bea good. We are of the one mind in that.’ ‘Yes, Dinah,’ said Adam, sadly, ‘I'll never be the man t’ urge you against your conscience. But I can’t give up the hope that you may come to see different. 1 don’t believe your loving me could shut up your heart; it’s only adding to what you've been before, not taking away from it; for it seems to me it’s the same with love and happiness as with sorrow—the more we know of it the better we can feel what other people's lives are or might be, and so we shall only be more tend.r to ’em and wishful to help ’em. The more knowledge a man has the better he’ll do’s work; and feeling’s a sort o knowledge.’ Dinah was silent ; her eyes were fixed in contemplation of something visible only to herself. Adam went on presently with his pleading : ‘And you can do almost as you do now. I won't ask you to goto church with me of a Sunday, you shall go where you like among the ; eople,and teach ’em, for though Llike church best, I don’t put my soul above yours, as if my words was better for you t’ follow than your own conscience, And you can help the sick just as much, and you'll have more means o' making ‘em a bit comfortable; and you'll be among all your own friends as love you, and can help ‘em, and be a blessng to ‘em, till their dyingday. Surely, Dinah, you'd be a near to God as if you were living lonely and away from me.’ Dinah made no answer for some time. Adam was still holding her hands,and look- ing at her with almost tremb'ing anxiety, when she turned her grave looking eyes on his, and said in a rather sad voice : ‘Adam, there is truth in what you say, and there’s many of God’s servants who have greater strength than I have, and find their hearts enlarged by the cares of hus- band and kindred. But ! have not faith that it would be so with me, for since my affections have been set above measure on you, I have had less peace and joy in God; I have felt as it were a division in my heart. And think how it is with me, Adam; that life I have led is a like land. I have trodden ia blessedness since my childhood ; and if I long for a moment to follow the voice which calls me to another land that I knew not, I can not but fear that my soul might hereafter yearn ®for that early blessedness which I had forsaken; and where doubt enters, there is not per- fect love. I must wait for clearer guid- ance; | must go from you, and ve must submit ourselves to the Divine will. We jare sometimes required to lay our natural, lawful affections on the altar.’ Adam dared not plead again, for Dinah’s was not the voice of caprice or insincerity. | Bat it was very hard for him; his eyes got dim as he looked at her. ‘But you may come to feel satisfied : to feel that you may come to me again, and we may never part, Dinah ?’ ‘We must submit ourselves, Adam. With time ovr duty will be made clear. It may be, when [ have entered on my former life, I shall find all these new thoughts and wishes vanish, and become as things that were not. Then I shall know that my call- ing is not toward marriage. But we must wait.” ‘Dinah,’ said Adam, mournfully, ‘you can’t love me so well as I love you, else you’d have no doubts, But it’s natural you should’t, for ’m not so good as you. I can’t doubt it’s right for me to love the best thing God's ever given me to know.’ ‘Nay, Adam; it seems to me that my love for you is not weak; for my heart waits on your words and looks, almost as a little child waits on the®help and _ tender- ness of the strong on whom it depends, If the thought of you took slight hold of me, I should not fear that it would be an idol in the temple. But you will strengthen me— you will not hinder me in seeking to obey to the uttermost.’ (To be continued.) What is Treason ? The rebellion in the Northwest, and especially the capture of the rebel chief and the expectation that he will be put upon his trial for treason, may eventually lead some to ask the above question. In general terms it may be said that treason is acrime against the sovereign or govern- ment of a nation. The United States con- stitution defines the crime to ‘‘consist in levying war against the United States, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort.” The offence is a capital une, and the punishment is death. No one can be convicted of treason in the States except on his own confession, or the testimony of two or more witnesses. In the British dominions treason is the highest crime known to the law, and is defined in five forms, a concise statement of which we quote : 1. When aman compasses or imagines the death of the king, queen, or of their oldest son and heir. The phrase ‘‘ com- passing or imagining the death,” etc,, has been taken to mean the mere purpose or design as distinguished from the carrying of such design into effect, but the purpose can only be proved by some overt acts, such as providing weapons or ammunition for the purpose of killing the king, assembling and consulting on the means to kill the king, etc. The law has, however, been strained to include a sermon unpreached on which Peachum was convicted, and a paper found in a closet which convicted Algernon Sid- ney, though merely speculative in its character. 2. Another form of treason is the violat- ing of the King’s companion (i. e., his wife) or his eldest daughter, or of the wife of the King’s eldest sun and heir. 3. Another form is that of levying war against the king in his realms, either by taking arms to dethrone the king, or under pretence to reform religion or the law ; by resisting the king’s forces; by joining an armed insurrection. 4. It is also treason to adhere to the king’s enemies in the realm by giving aid and comfort, as by sending intelligence or provisions, or selling arms. 5. Lastly,it is treason to slay the chancel- lor, or treasurer, or the king's justices of the bench, or in assize, while in their place administering justice. Despite Riel’s pretended leyalty to the British government, there can be no doubt that, if he is a British subject, his offence comes within the third and fourth defini- tions of treason above given. R. K, Brac E will give twentindive dollars to any one that will prove to him that a drop of milk has ever been spoiled by Plaster of Paris, Putty, or any Rubber Bushing, in any Creamer that he has ever sold. He does not use Rubber Bushing, as Plaster of Paris or Putty is much safer. He does not run other Creamers down, rather tell the good points in his own. It is time enough for others to write poetry and blow about their goods when they have stood the test for four years, One ef his friends has gone out of his way to make a faise impression about his Creamers, at the same time they have had to get anew style every year, as they could not go to the country the second year with the same. Let others take warning as they may fare no better. The day has come when foreign markets must have ‘“‘gilt edge butter,” and to make it R. K. Brace has the only reliable craamer for the purpose. Don’t be deceived, but get the best. They are the cheapest; he has been selling them for four years, and will give any person a new one that will show him a can that,with fair play, is worn out. He guaranteed them for one year, but now the look as though they would last ten. The reason is this, he is determined to have the best tin and give the best value to his customers. >> ‘* First-Class Goods,” In which merit is at once recogr‘zed, are now, and always have been, imitated, espe- cially the manufactured article. After years of labor, and the expenditure of a fortune, in perfecting and placing before the public that which people sppreciate and demand, some one who never had an original idea offers a counterfeit or substi- tute to compete with the genuine. Curtis Davis & Co., makers of the ‘* Welcome Soap,” find the above true in their case at least, the excellence of whose productions are everywhere acknowledged as the ‘‘stend- ard” of quality, being imitated in every way that competition can suggest. But in the use of their goods, the consumer re- alizes the full benefit of value received. prover aperenenelip“llir-manap = A G aie a ee te A Ey mane OA Re A OEE See ee a, neo ee we og tne tny bil neg nm Vi