oo Kaminer. VEW SERIES CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1885, ~—-* VOL. 17.-—-NO. LL The Daily Examiner js issued every evening, by The Bxaminer Publishing from their otlice, Oo. vorner of Water and (reat George Stree ts, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Rares oF SUBSCRIPTION ; Siz Months, - - - $2 50 Three Months, : - 1 25 ne Month, 0 50 gar Advertising at in st moderate rates, Contracts may made tor monthly, } yarteriy, ments, ou application. half-yearly or yearly advertire- fig RAILWAY TMS TABLE For the convenience of the travelling ? jowing table of , trains on the r. ing to local time :- ublie, we have carefully arranged the fol- ' ’ . . arrival and departure of E. Island Railway, accord- THE “REAUME” PLOW. Going West. A. M. A, M, We Charlottetown .... -- 647 912 402 Royalty Junction .. ; v2 9 47 4 22 North Wiltshire.......----4 7 10 89 5 09 Hanter River .......----- 747 1056 6&2 Bradalbane....... - lcd ae. Co ee County Line.....-. seecsect En Sha 2 pe ee $29 1159 622 P M. Kensington. ....-.---- 5 42 222 6 42 4 { arrive.......9 07 [aur 2am Summerside, ( depart......9 27 «237 Miscouche,.....----- eS ee Wellington... ....+--++++: 1001 329 SE ci sgccccdcce AOSO OFF PRbeccsccdsss cee kk Se Oa RE neces ae Tignish........-0-++++-- igs *7 = From West. mh & Mh, BD Gio sec es .000+0 207 647 ME eéccsoes ae 245 7 57 OPlaaty.......ceeeeee eee B29 FUR SN i icccce occde su ae ae ae Wellingtoa..........-....449 1116 NE errr Te arrive...... 622 1207 Summerside, a. 6 FT depart... <8 42 112 657 Kensington ............+. 607 149 729) ec oeeceeee >. le es ae County Line...........++-- 632 227 803) 4 ee cme 32 8 a ii os diieces TOR 228 ~<t0a ITE 712 2 Se Royalty Junction.......... 747 432 947 Chariottetown............ 802 4652 1007 Going East. As: a I occ ecceies toe hee Bedford..... ee. --804 457 , S8r8ViccccccmGan “ee Mears Stewart, 1 dopert sotdeell 857 527] CE Dns. wks ceccoees 942 556 Es Sdecccccckacceccalae Oar ccc cccacneet 1107 652) i ne dnceaens 1157 .7 92] oa eu eus 902 532 he ER 1015 «4625; No ose cc ceces oil 1037 642 From East. i Oe et Snip cde: can-epesshoe eel am Ue) ET, nn. cc eod has 70 hoo ods ccnccccccecececun Gm Tn SG. 6S ost cadecced clean 814 427 iii MRI « :hbde 842 517 Mount Stewart, depart........847 537 Bedford a ee 912 614 ee... tie idinci eed 926 635 Unarlottetown bbdsea sine cocwieets 952 712 i titccacescccen saute 732 33] a 749 400 5 12 ia ea 8 42 L. ARTHUR & CO, GENERAL lommission Merchants, 12) ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MAS .. Eggs and Produce a Specialty. Jaly 15 dly wkly teense —— lisheod, Morson & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS —AND— | | | ATTORWEYS- AT-LAW. Ofice in Brown's Block, Queen Square (UP STAIRS) OWtown, Fal 12. [Ren WE SELL Potatoes, Spiling, Bark, R. R. Ties, Lumber, Laths, Canned Lobsiers, Mac- kere, berries, Eggs, Fish hie. Best Prices for all Si for Quotations, HATHEWAY & CO, Genera] Commisgion Merchants, lipments, Write fally a2 Central Wharf, Kesten. Members Ml rs of Board of Trade Corn and ; change. OWtown Nor io. 184, i ' of the 0 c ~y ~ ' «© rn as . +) Ar OO ¢ a wih + ¢ 3 3 — ° & vy = oo, ae 2 _ — 2. ~ ® ot Vv O ta Ay O = YU yo vo ot 2 Ma Le e a= ao —— - 3 ~ — ~ . — - & 2 = © ww ae w -” ~ © oO ov ~ = C) “a OQ, wn oe . — F 6 , =z a & c — ee 2 = oS ~ @ ‘ q — re © © so oe P ve ae ce 2 oan por 5.2 2 Sm 2. NH SS 2 we Y — ees Vs. Ss Se — o = - Bo ee i —— Cy ; . — — . “a Soe v cd oS <= 4 Zh ‘e ne | ag — ad ‘ é _ - c ~— Sus M Sant U oe ud he bottom 1 i t dividins into St. John, New Brunswick. Jointer or Skim-plow, is General Agents for the Maritime Provinces; or by their Local Agents in every County. the Ete.. {) LnUre, . Island; Stewart & Farquharson, Managers of our Branch Warehouse, Charlottetown ; x M completely buried; and by oughly pulverize the soil. Weed ummerside, General Travelling Agent for P. dth of == FOR SA BURDITT & CO. Remov- Coulter as well as Skim- same wl “REAUME” draws lighter than any other patent Chilled Mould- \ as ; 3 & te . e< 43 3 one ce ~ -— > “= iS ~ 4) = o vv ¢ a v = okes Ba; oS & a es bh ae 5 aoe oC a= a CS -— = ogne kb S ~_o a8 7 he S 3S 2 a re ‘ os YY ce = aw = 4 * Se Cow fe @& : er. 2° fe Som 2 vO —_ “oO ° ey. Re. 25 ae . e. ee 3 ia a a wy a QO. ee - wd QO — -— oe 4 ae - ‘ a’ p oo ‘., Oo — oo - & 8 — ~~! a —_— 0 ~ — aS OE oS s =O r _ oh = A GQ wrt 7 —- Oo oe nm o_O, i a eae 5 —_— = A Oo. vw a VV Nn Q, ee ae om. = 3. Rin — — rc — ~~ ame . —— £22 & oe a ee. o> Doe = v a. thee oe Oe — ws — + ~ ' ie, a © © c qc fn em a 2 - + oe Se fa: as O & 6&6 = B= O T% Sy he 7 ~ oo . = = -_ + -— se 3 & Oo,0 wy WO @ A, ene - } | \ ‘NEW SCOTCH GOODS —_—————- (0° — Now OPENING, jp REor FROM GLASGOW, BOUGHT BY A SCOTCHMAN—MR. PATON — SCOTCH TWEEDS, Famous, SCOTCH SULTINGS, Nobby, SCOTCH TARTANS, Nice, SCOTCH DRESS GOODS, Stylish, SCOTCH SHIRTINGS, Strong, SCOTCH TOWELINGS, Rongh, SCOTCH TABLE LINENS, Genuine, SCOTCH CRASH, Thistles, SCOTCH SHAWLS AND WARPS, Warm, SCOTCH CHEVIOTS, Splendid, SCOTCH WINCEYS, Cheap, OTHER SCOTCH GOODS, Various. Sales not confined to Scotehmen—all are Welcome. Prices Low! Call and see the Goods, P. 8.—Our LONDON GOODS will be ready this week. WEEBS & CO., Market Square and Queen St. Ch’town, Sept. 7th, ’85>—wky CITY HAT STORE. 20+ BE. PROWSE will, during July and August, clear out the balance of his Summer Goods, at prices that must sell them. A job lot of LACE CURTAINS, eagnies price $4.20, now $3.25 ; $5.50 for $4.25 ; $6] ” for $4.75, newest patterns and extra goo quality. A large lot of Dress Goods, Fringes, Laces, Sunshades, Ribbons. Flowers. Feathers, &c., ata Big Discount. - 30; BLACK CASHMERES and MERINORS very cheap. Also, Men's FELT HATS, Ready-Made CLOTHING, &e.--Cheapest in Town, L. E&. PROVWSE, Siga of the Great Big Mat, 74 Queen Street, Oh’town, July 15, 1885. TEs WILL on them, the sight seemed to leave them j|imusn’t leave me a moment. Oh, you . —a convulsion shook him from head to;ecruel woman, you know J daren’t be left foot—he opened his lips to utter the wild) alone.’ ; ery of terror that seemed bursting from} Hepsibah resumed her seat. No one, save himself, knew all the/nis heart, but the sound died away in his} ‘Hepsy,’ whined the deacon, presently dark ways by which Deacon Farbish | throat in an awful, choking gasp. in a piteous voice, ‘do you thivk she is had accumulated the wealth which made} ‘The phost never stirred, nor for one|really here—watching me— waiting to him the richest man in Springfied ; but} momept removed the terrible eyes that) see that | keep my promise ? _ ed Hepsibah Barues, his housekeeper, knew burned into his soul. He gazed upon it,|) ‘Why, of course, deacon, not a doubt (that Mary Lowell’s fortune bad found helpless ; he tried to speak, but for some /of it,’ returned Hepsibah, with calm con- ! i ! | } } i ‘ | its way into his pocket by means 80/moments could utter no sound. At last|viction. ‘I know sbe’s here—I feel her subtle that the orphan girl, who had/},, gasped : presence.’ been left to his guardianship, had no} «Whatis it? Why do you come? What} ‘Ob, Lord!’ groaned Deacon Furbish, redress, and was, iv fact, obliged to state! go you want?’ in a voice of anguish. that the loss of it was eotirely her own! «Justice for my child before it is too! Hepsibah was sorry for him; she was fault, and that her guardian had behaved | jate’ almost tempted to change the subject and nobly. ‘ ‘ Le ‘Yes—yes—you shall. 1 will—I will|try to lighten his spirits, but she feared But Hepsibah was not blinded. This} qo anything.’ to lessen the good effect she had pro- wer the ove particular wickedness of the} The deacon remembered, fearfully,{duced. So she adroitly kept the con- deacon’s in which she took a personal! eyen while he said the words that it was|versation hoveriog amovg the shades, interest, aud she had been at consider-| death to speak with a ghost: and he/|while she was careful not to increase her able pains to inform herself as to the supposed that he must die at once—but | patient's terrified condition. transaction in all its details. he must live to fulfil its commands, that,} Lawyor Pevrose arrived at last, and But although she learned enough to} ,; least, was sure. So he asked wildly :/at a siga from the deacon, Hepsibah, vassure herself that Mary had been! «what must I do? only tell me—any-lafier procuring the necessary writing ‘robbed as surely as if her pocket had | thing—anything !’ " |materials, left the room. She would been picked, she felt that she was power-} «You might koow without bhearing|have preferred to remaiu; but she was jess to right her, and that the intelligence |them, Ezra Farbish ; but my wishes are | obliged to content herself with what she she had procured was a sufficiently un- simple—you must restore my Mary’s had accomplished, and trust to the fright | | | { ; i i | } } j j ' ‘that his affairs were in order, but that he | } ' i | ‘and at Mary for an unsuspecting little gasped forth : answerable fact to bring into a court of| forune, every dollar of it!’ he had received to make the deacou keep law. The wily deacon had a way of} ‘J wiji—I will! O, I repeat of ever|to the strict letter of his promise. burning his ships behind in a mavner!haying defrauded her. What else must| On the next day Deacon Furbish so skilful, that not even the smoke had|y do? Every word shall be obeyed.’ seemed better thaa he had been since his over aeueue epotinns ee ‘I will take care of that—until it is/illness took a dangerous form, and Hep- Mary Lowell remained his ward and| done I will not leave this house. Al-/|sibah was thankful, for, having wrought guest, and always declared that he though you may not see me, I shall be! her purpose, she had some compunctions treated her as a daughter , while Hep-} here. visitings of conscience, and somewhat sibah smiled, and raged in secret at them| The cold, damp perspiration bedewed| feared the result. But the deacon con- both—at the deacon for au old villain,|the deacon’s face, his teeth chattered—he | tinued in the same state for several days. He could not be said to improve in goose. — a ‘| will tell Hepsibah to send for Law-|health, but he certainly grew no worse, Hepsibah loved the girl for. herself. vey Penrose this night—this very hour—| His nurse tended bim with assiduous ut more because she was the daughter] 5) believe me, madam, I will.’ care, and once or twice she caught him of a woman who had been the yood| «], myself, will tell Hepsibah.’ looking at her with singuiar intentness. angel of her own life, having saved the} The figure glided swiftly away, its long Hepsibah quaked within her, but she deacou’s housekeeper from a life of|oarments trailing with a ghostly sound, gaveno sign. In her turn she took to bitterness aud despair worse than death.|joose hair floating around it. watching her patient closely, although That was why the loss of Mary! Deacon Furbish, cold with horror, lay|with more ski than he displayed, but Lowell's fortune and her uncertain future |trembling in the fear of its return; but|she could never quite determine whether were a source of grief to Hepsibah|fepsibah quickened ber steps as she|he saw through the trick she bad played worse than any trouble of her own that glided along the dark hal! and hastened| him. now could overtake her. The thought/intg her own rooms As she softly; But one night ended her anxieties on of it occupied her by day and pursued] cjosed the door behind her she gave a|the all-abso: bing subject. Deacon Fur- her in fantastic shades into her dreams! short, wicked laugh, and said to herself|bish was smitten with paralysis, and was by night. There had been a time when |trjgmphantly : dead before the morning. Hepsibah she had hoped that all might turn out) « Not so bad for au amateur.’ laid him out and prepared him for the well after the deacon’s death ~if ever he| She took up her lamp, stood for a mo-| grave. died! for although he was an old man} ment in front of her looking-glass, and| The deacon had changed his will in there was no sign of such a fortunate surveyed her own ghostly face, powdered} several ways. Mary Lowell’s fortune ending to her perplexities. Even that) as thick as a clown’s at a circus. was returned in full, increased by a large hope died, though the deason didn’t,) «Taw sakes!’ she chuckled. ‘No won-|sum of interest ; and to her never ceasing when she learned that his will was made, | Jer | scared the old hypocrite almost out | surprise, Hepsibah found herself heiress and ail his large fortune left to the|of this world into another. I vow, it|to several thousands. churches and various caarities connected) scares myself to look at me.’ ‘Well, I swan!’ she exclaimed, when waste was in despair for a whil She hastened to rub the powder from she received her pee: all in ten ee a eee eee notes. ‘I couldn’t believe it if idn't and then began revolving in her fertile Po dar Mop henge ves ae a have the money in my hand. He imagination schemes whereby she ' ; actually had some good in him, although might bring Deacon Farbish to his it was so hid away that nothing less ; .. |long ago as a keepsake. She put it tep- marrow-bones,and force him to do justice . : , , tb Mined Powell J derly away, and then put on her own than a ghost could ever have found it : : ; _} out. ‘ In the midst of her fruitless scheming rab ae = Ay tena sermon the deacon fell ill, and his several : . Sai lalla i id co 6 - |it in the fashion habitual with her, and physicians declared his life to be in having satisfied herself that she was pale a danger, and delicately hinted that it devant te¢ the cla cidaia ok bie , ‘hirqall Sr might be well for him to put his affairs “gi 2 re ee P ae ° = rather odd thata Ssinee nevennns in order. Deacen Furbish announced Ps " me ; re fee suc hengdon. Heng “pprwrsaigee yg: re deacon’s, and, trembling, faltering, wild,| Canadian Pecifie Railway ; but the News with every appearance of alarm, rushed | has unexpectedly acknowledged that there : ‘io : up to him. is such a road, and that it is possibly in- his physicians. He was, in truth, hor- $Ob;. what to he??-che-guaped ‘De tended for some purpose. The News says : ribly frightened and much disgusted with as a “et, i fo Om ie The almost unnoted opening of the Cana- providence at the same time. The you wet m6, ceacin » Lore, Ve! dian Pacific Railway from Halifax to the rs ; had such turn—something—all in! Rog ins is neverthe nost deacon was half inclined to retaliate and ; a eT ee re ena Rocky Mountains is nevertbelees a most ; ; : white —stood beside me—said you want-|important event in the history of railway change his will, but as he could not at fy aa ; . ed—Lawyer Penrose—ob, my land!) building on this continent. Among the once determine the exact change to be I’m most scared out of my miserable | trade questions which this new line opens made, aud as he felt rather better next eta ; up for the ecnsideration of the North- day, he concluded to let matters rest as), 7). » west, especially Chicago, ia the effect ; ? aske oa , a” ; they were for the present. Hepsibah the ee eee dabei a) hich it” will have in diverting was his only nurse, and lite as she) oo. opp 7° * |trade from the og — : more loved him, she was a most faithful one,| _ , M soucherly routes. Duluth has already be- ; : : ‘ Mary Lowell’s mother. come an active competiter with Chicago in oat 2 en more: Ran: BARES + desiee:t0-pre~ ‘Lord a’ mercy, deacon, was it she? the grain trade. Now, Port Arthur, north aoe “iP ae could once have almost |, couldn’t tell, you know. It only stayed | of Duluth, and at the western end of Lake wished to shorten. . hi | Superior, comes forward as a competitor of Poor Hepsibah! Had she known| °° moment, and just whispered to me! °"P , one of Mrs Lowell’s own, given to her did not iv the least accept the verdict of ; ae > en n terminus that a thought of changing his will had {that one wanted I should send for Law- a anes lake i the Oar dian Pacific line ever flitted across Deacon Furbish’s! yer Penrose. : stretching from the Pacific to the most mind, she could quickly have gurwested | ‘And so I do, Hepsy. Oh, Lord,! westerly of the great cham of island lakes a ‘a cence tants tee she ‘innkait . have mercy on asinner! So Ido; sendjand waterways) There thus promises to P Re. ‘now; send this moment; but don’t leave | be a notable rivalry between this road just Oue night the deacou seemed to have la alone, if you've a grein of pity !’ completed and those on the American side of. the boundary.” takena slight change for the better, and | 5 oe Hepsibah’s immediate anxiety was a! In all the years she had lived in his = trifle lightened. She stayed by him til}; house, Hepsibah never obeyed her em- d a he fell into a gentle doze, and then she 'Ployer with such cheerful alacrity. Io Like Tweed. . ; : . sda tip-toed about the room in her noiseless 188 than ten minutes a horse was : : : : ls vants ners putting various little thiags to la pots — oe * eee a The | dian Pacific authorities have for some time rights. mis 5 ar tanenenhop Mops. A : | entertained suspicions that they were being Quite suddenly there came to Hepsi- ‘housekeeper then returned to her master) ¥\tinized by their civil engineers and con- bah what she always declared an ivspir- 824 gave him the benefit of her company,| tractors in the section north of Lake ation which she spoke of it in after days. such as it was; but her remarks were! Superior, About a month ago all payments It was a thonght that solved the problem | 2 consoling. The terror-stricken dea-|to contractors were stopped, and a re- 5 which had so long tormented her—the con, with many groans and in short sen- meonernaeans 98 - Aeron pares oe means to make the deacon change his | ‘2Ces that were disjointed between his) @°red. us has just been completed, : it shows that by biunder or fraud the com- will. She turned the flame of the lamp ,°b#ttering teeth, confided to her the) : : : | pany has paid the contractors hundreds of quite low, aud noiselessly stole from the whole interview that had passed between | thousands of dollars in excess of the amount room. in > -aa A Montreal despatch says: The Cana- . . : ‘| * Well, deacon,’ she said aloud, ‘ [| been paid more than $100,000 too much, Deacon Furbish was still sleeping, always knew something dreadful would #24 ancther $50,000, the full aggregating j - : : 00,000. Detectives have been at work although he had once or twice turned happen to youif you undertook to die for seuss’ time, and have discovered. that restlessly, when a figure, all in white, without righting Mary Lowell.’ | eneinoces who ware receiving salaries Of glided into the room and up to his bed-| ‘Who says I ever wronged her, you’ ¢300 a month were wealthy landed proprie- side. Its face was deadly pale, its ha‘r impertinent croaker? growled the dea- tors, and were engaged in extensive build- flowing loose about its shoulders, and its con, for a m>ment roused to defend him- ing pursuits, some of them being worth dark eyes gezed down reproachfully on self on hearing Hepsibah accuse him. _| from $30,000 to $40,000, which had been him. The lamp light was dim and feeble, ‘Oh, pshaw! deacon. It ain’t vo use von aes 7 as yoy — ory but the moon’s beams streamed ia to talk like that tome. 1 know you I om ee ae, oe s through the parted curtains and fell robbed Mrs. Lowell s daughter.’ a ; directly on the spectre, increasing its ‘Get out of ihe room this instant, you. ae ghostly appearance, and on the deacon’s impudent wretch! Do you hear?—get ,. Tus sloop yecht Puritan was sold at pub- 7 ; ‘lic auction at New York on the 23rd inst,, face, which twitched nervouely beneath out!’ for $13,500. Edward Burgess, who de- the fixed gaze bent upon it. Slowly the ‘Certaialy, sir,’ said Hepsibah, rising signed the yacht, was the purchaser. He sick man’s eyes unclosed, but when they to obey, bought the Puritan for a gentleman in met the sad, reproavhful look that rested ‘Sit down, Hepsy—sit dowo! You Boston. ie ae de a 2 €