eo _— Che Gail Examiner eon CHA R od dre a ea, —— oe SSR om enemas disease aad va -z Z‘ais is ; " . ; at Sis true Liberty, when #ree-born Men, having to advise the Pablic, may spea LOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, DECEMB tO THE TRADE. ee ee FALL sTocK, 1884. | o---—- Received and to Arrive Shortly : very evening, by Potatoes, ae om Sew rhe Ex Publishing Co. spiling, Bark rt er o Water and i > 2 me Ch ae ik. it. 2 | wron: | Lumber, Sis ve OV ' nae | | iz; Laths, Canned Lobsters, Mac- v 50 @ Advert t inest moderate rates, Kerel, Berrivs, Pges, Qontracts may be made for monthly, | PSs oy aacter!) valf yearly or yearly advertise. | a ish BC. mints, on 4 ication Best Prices for all Shipments. —< a {ANG ES. Full Moon, 2nd day, ‘ Last Quarter th New Noon I7th day, 9h, ¥iret Qu oth day, Yn. 5.7m., a. m, New Moon, Ist Jan., 18%5. paca vl 4 ii AY ses : ae om ‘ ied sun San Moon|High ! Days a bes of Board of Nrade, Corn and yak ' rises |sets | rises ‘water |len’b. Mechanics Exchange. ia.h te Sees Ch’town, Nov. 19, 1884. ii Mouday 7 9314 10; 3 47 9 Sr 8 4e| Ct a ah?” Seti elie ot Bei nee * ‘ «> ray ™ ; y 7] J ' ; 2 kueslay 30, 10) 4 39,10 12! 40 hi. Wi ’ y INNG: OUBE, 3 We pesday St) 9: 5 39110 5S 39 4:Thersday 32 9 6 46/11 441 37 i; —_" a 5, Fri 33 9 7 56 aft 29 36 2 § oe gixata 34 9! OD 6 A a4) 84 a ji anday 39 $10 i171 2 WW 33 . + — 3 ies 3,3 si oa ® 50 25 Pianos Tuned, Re-wired and Regulated. 9 Tuesday 37 3 moru} 3 50 al ' ‘ te: | 10} ‘Ved sday 38 S 0 20 4 59 2) ‘ GURCH ORGANS Thur ad \ 49 Ss 271 . 9 Oo ° __ r * P -_ aie i o a ~ Voiced, Tuned, and Regulated with Care. 2 rriia -~* é ’ * ‘ ]3 Saturday 41 $'3 3% 810). 27 , : cro) >). = { « t4 Sunday 42 8} 4 33 8 54; 3926 rT ORGANS 15 Monday 43 9 5 31) 9 34) - 26 16 Tuesday tt 9 62510 18) 25 Tuned, Re-toned and Repaired. i vy ednesday 44 ” 7 16 1e 47' 25 i? } : . 13 Thureday : 45° 10:8 711 95 25 Having nearly twenty years’ experience i9\Friday 4 «10'8 4511 =| 24 with the construction of Eoglish, American &) ; ’ ors ~ ’ »: 99 Saturday 171 10! 9 22 mate 24 and German Pianos, and under the patronage i iadas 47 11, 9 5a! O BL. 24 of Governmens House, the Convent and the e8iMoxnday 47. 1110 2711 6 24 leading musical families on the Island, feels 7 3 . ee ; - sure P ors ory r ivers: ao “bie SsiTaesday (7 1110 56) 1 44! 24 . of giving universal satisfaction, 24 Wednesday 47: i211 2 SS 5 Mr. V. will engage professionally for publ'e eubesday ‘ “ od @ ¢ ' iv Lance ee i § eadan 48. 1311 53) 3 15 25 or priv ate eoucerts the coming season. 35 oo 49° 14 aft 23) 4 9! O35 |. fil .« —U, P, f letcher’s Music Store. #7 Saturday | 49° 15 059) 5 37 26 Ch’town, Oct. 25 18*4. °o " ” ‘ = a~! . rw vy piped et a te ee ee ee ee eee 23 Sunday 49 iS i 37, 6 &7 26 99! Monday w ic 22/8 7 27 GONSIGRMENTS SOLICITED. 30 Tue lay 49 17| 3 7} 9 4 27 Sl; Wednesday 7 50'* 19 419, 9 58. 8 28) 47.2m., a. m. h. 18.0m., a. m. ‘= i7.0m., a. m. ;LMAKAC FOR DECEMBER, t8@4, THE RAILWAY TIME TABLE, if Aarlotteto on Time.) GOING WEST. a yee : Charl eo 4 as naan 9 12 Haater River ec éennacd a. ee P. M.? Rensington ...............842 1222 ) arrive......907 1257 Summerside, { depart...... 927 232 Port Hill i ie Dees oka 10930 415 IT ae See nee 12056 = 6 57 itsssesedenaentaret <2 7a FROM WEST. yr M, A. Mi, ED winiw owes wee eo MR is ed Jee ou ed 20 71857 Port Hiil. 5 ke Pas bade 415 1025 i oe. Pansies... 4887 18G7 mammersile, | aonert.....,642 122 ON ee eee ‘ce :6 Sha Haater itiver iin 4 0 3 % Searlottetown .........4-- 802 507 GCING EAST. P. M. tow... cus calien 417 Stans ge OOO hens ic ones aeigaatagiage oh Pi 5 27 St. Peter’s cuce we oneteaesa 6 17 MN. oc: Fabs cemeeuibabicene 7 22 Meee Ntowart.. .wctieas dee’ so vg DN, . «oss once sla 6 29 Georgetown Ccoeeeseoerde aera nes 6 47 PROM EASY. A. M. Souris... .-6 47 St. Peter s twit 7 52 ) eee i i is 8 42 Mount Stewart, \ depart........ 8 47 nib Gd Ae 9 52 Georgetown Oveccebisoves beeveen 7 27 IN . vcccccse cbs dueouuel 7 45 Mount Stewart..... 8 42 P. M. A. M. 6 57 7 30 5 47 10 07 A. M 7 62 8 37 9 O02 10 02 P. M. 12 02) A. M. 9 07 | 10 22 10 47 r. M te bo Sak ~~ . a ee boO=I bos ores Wet OO L. ARTHUR & CO, GHN HRAL Comission Herchants, 121] ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON, MASSB. igos and Produce a Specialty. Mav 1K 1894 crhble tf ee ee SULLIVAN & MAGNE sr L, ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW Seliciters in Chancery, NOW ARIES PUBLIC, &e. OFFICES~— O’Halloran’s Building, Great Sarge Street, Chariottetown. Ga" Money to Loan, W.Y Jan } f 106 . Soutivay, Q. OC. | Cursrex B, Maowmin, Ucheod, Monon & McQuariie, BARRISTERS —~AND— ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Giice in Old Bank. (UP STAIRS). Ci’town, Feb. 21, 1934. for Quotations, HATHEWAY & CO.,| General Commission Merchants, 22 Central Wharf, Boston, R. O’DWYER, Lowission and General Merchant FOR SALE OF P, E. I, PRODUCE, 289 WATER STREET, St. Johns’ Newfoundland. | In connection with the above is Captain English, who is well known in P. E. Island, who will take special charge of all consign- ments, and will also attend to the chartering | of vessels ‘or the carrying trade of P. E. L. | The firm is one of theoldest and most reli- |4ble in Newfoundland Keturns guaranteed | to be prompt and satisfactory. Parties wish- | ing to procure Labradore Herring should send their orders in time “ept..6, 1834.—till 3ist dee. ’84. APPLES, APPLES, APPLES, ‘CHARLES DONALD & CO. | %9 Queen St, London, E. ©., | Will be glad to correspond with Apple Grow- ers, Merchants and Shippers, with a view to Autumn and Spring business. | They will also give the usual facilities to y so ' customers requiring advances, augl | “ | W. WHEATLEY, | i i Wueattry & Soxs, CHARLOTTETOWN, ?, FE. Istanp) fommission lierchant, 269 BARRINGTON STREET, BEI ALI AS, Bea-? Bi sa Special attention given to the sale of P. E. Island produce. * STANDARD Life ASSUBANGH Ob, the 57th Annual General Meeting of ie the Standard Lite Asgurance Company, heid at Kdinburgh on ‘uesday, the 24th of April, 1883, the following results for the year ended 15th November, 1853, were re- ported :— 3,035 new proposals for life as- surance were received the (UF year for $ 9,754,085 38 2,561 proposals were accepted, a assur jng 7,239,048 13 The tota] existi=g assurances in force at 15th November, 1382, amrou nted to (Of which $7, 753,031.15 was reassured with other offi ces) The claims by death which arose during the ycar amount- ed, including bonus addi- tions, to ‘ The annual revenue amounted at 15th November, 1882, to The imvested..funds at e date amounted to 29,503,416 00 Being an increase during ‘the™ year of $6,936,302 91 2,462,226 59 4,267,546 00 1,062,648 35 JOHN LONGWORTH, Agent for Charlettetown. THOMAS FERR, f Inapeetor of Agencies CO tarn, Angact 2, 1892 ¢ DVERTISE in THE DAILY EXAMI. A NER. the Vest advertising medium in the Provinee. Write fully 300 «6©do = (@Gntario APPLES, 106 «do Nova Scotia APPLES, 300 Boxes and half boxes RAISERS, 500 «do 6Cheice FIGS, 108 Casks KEROSENE O72, 125 Boxes CHEESE, 175) «6©do) )=6Bouelss FISH. 1,609 Pounds JAMS and HARMALADE. | 1.260 Barrels FLOUR (choiee.) | 0--— O- . ?Splensid Vatue in hatf-chests and five-pound \ air-tight Tins, Thi WHOLESALE PRICES VERY LOW. . —_————-D- — —-—= BEER & GOFF. November 20, 1884. CoO. i a 2 Gi? : vet Z in i ricianeatiiens eae = eo. * . wees. e @ a lS oo i 2 on - S wR - so * war <n x n SOS = om on 6S £&§ moO mom mH tS Sa stint 2524 O a “ os 4 > Gas as 4 Oo & % in = 22S M a g P+ : _ oe. . % eB, Cp 3 ha ag Bess. ag os Gr UL 1 ee ee, Cs = Yi oe kee -_ t _— = ma 3 2 yaa 8 = Gg -, = 1A] a < = y As a Ma = — < > wn ~ a CE a ge. ey vl RM at y Qo AS — oa: £2 5 im 45 & — eee aha O Bek a. 2 me mm 6S Spe = = tea “alt ' OMN DB oo. ee 284 | 2 amg eis= & = s Bol ¢ t& & s : At je a - > -] ns tia 4c 25, mz Pe Oe bn sO mA BZ a wr bt mm et ite ea) = oe eee" 3 = ee eee ie, = ee Bh acme Di org 2 M Ns . & fl ae ms 2 oa) 2 2 ¢ gs — 2 su 426 8 BS © & _ : wo > a + ig ~~ BS ft 5 = Se80 6 £84 Q@u 4 = x) ye eM o os ~ -— fx ms rm ——4 CO S py et in 2 <i i D >. a = 3 we O < . r — me, | OH vi ae : aa = a am 8:: * 2 hi eS & <a * = A = J a Ee = 2 : : oO oaacneh sam A et ee —— am ———__—_—— CHARLOTTETOWN «SASH AND) =DOGR FACTORY | Peake’s No. 3 Whar, PALMER & CGO. PROPRIETORS. a eer We are now manufacturing and will sell at the lowest cash prices; RR. Sashes Doors Window and Door Frames, Architraves, Spouting and Conductor Mould inge, Baljusters, N. wel Posts, Stair Rails, Twists, etc. We are prep icd to do al] kinds of Jobbing, in Planing, Joiuting, Morticing, Tenon- ing, Jig and Fret sawing, Turning, etc, All kinds of Gothic Windows for Churches made at shortest notice. With new and first-class Machinery, and the latest appliances, we can inanre the utmost ¢.\isfaction to all who favor us with their patronage Ob'town, June 7, 1884—whly ly Large stock Sugar, Holasses, Biscuits, Confectionery, &c. & 1ree.’’—EvuRrPrimpgs, ih 2, 1884, ome ADAM BED. CHAPTER V. (Continued ) Nevertheless, to speak paradoxically, the existence of insignificant people has very important consequences in the world. It can be shown to alfect the price of bread and the rate of wages, to call forth many | tne sefish, and many heroisms from the sympathetic, and in |other ways to play no small part in the |tragedy of life. And if that handsome, | generous-blooded clergyman, the Rev. Ad- olphus Irwine, had not had these two hopelessiy-maiden sisters, his lot would j}have been shaped quite diferently ; he would very likely have taken a comely wife in his youth, and now, when his hair was getting gray under the powder, would have had tall sons and bloonung daughters— such possessions, in short, as men com- menly think will repay them for all the labor they take under the sun. As it was ; —having with all his three livings no more than seven hundred a year, and seeing no evil tempers from ' jective, in such lady-like ease as ‘of providing for a family of his own—he | remained, you see, at the age of eight-and-| forty, a bachelor, not making any merit of that renunciation, but saying, laughingly, if any one alluded to it, that he made it an excuse for many indulgences which a wife would never have allowed him. And per- haps he was the only person in the world who did snot think his sisters un- interesting and superfluous; for his was one of those large-hearted, sweet- blooded natures that never know a narrow ora grudging thonght—epicurean if you wili—with no enthusiasm, no self-scourg- ing sense of duty; but yet, as you have seen of a sufficiently subtle moral fibre to have an unwearying tenderness for obscure apd monotonous suffering, It was his large-hearted indulgence that made him | ignore his mother’s hardness towards his! daughters, which was the more striking! from its contrast with her doting fondness toward himself; he held it no virtue to frown at irremediable faults. See the difference between the impression 'aman makes on you when you walk by his side in femiliar talk, or look at him in his home, and the figure he makes when seen from a lofiy historical level, or even in the eyes of a critical neighbor who thinks of him asan embodied system or opinion rather than as a man. Mr. Roe, the ‘traveling preacher,’ stationed at Treddleston, had included Mr. Irwine in a general statement concerning the church clergy in the surrounding dis- trict, whom he described as men given up to the flesh and the pride of life; hunting, and shooting, and adorning their own houses; asking what shall we eat, and what shall we ¢rink, and wherewithal shall we be clothed !—eareless of dispensing the bread of life .to their flocks, preaching at best but a carnal and sonl benumbing morality, and trafficking in the souls of men by receiving money for discharging the pastoral office in parishes where they did not so much as look on the faces of the people more than once a year. The ecclesiastical historian, too, looking into parliamentary reports of that period find honorable members zealous for the ;Chureh, and untainted with any sympathy \for the ‘tribe of canting Methodists,’ mak- ling statements scarcely less melancholy lthan thatof Mr. Ree. And it is impossi- ble for me to say Mr, Irwine was altogether belied by the generic classification assigned him. He really had no very lofty aims, no theological enthusiasm; if I were closely questioned IL should be obliged to confess that he felt no serious alarms about the souls of his parishioners, and would have thought it a mere Joss of time to talk in a doctrinal and awakening mauner to old ‘Fether Taft,’ or even to Chad Cranage the blacksmith. If he had been in the habit of speaking theoretically, he would, perhaps, have said that the only healthy form reli gion could take in such minds was that o! certain dim but strong emo ions, suffusing themselves eos a hallowing = influence over the family otlections and neighborly duties. He thonght the custom of baptism more important than its doctrine, and that the religious benefits the peasants drew from the church where his fathers wor- ehiped and the sacred piece of turf where they lay buried, were but slightly depend- ent on a clear understanding of the Liturgy er the sermon. Clearly, the Rector was| (not what is called in these days an ‘earnest’ | jiman; he was fonder of church history than | jof divinity, and had much more insight | |into men’s characters than interest in their jopirions, he was neither laborions, nor |obviously self-denying, nor very copious in \alms-giving, and his theology, you per- \ceive, was lax. His mental palate, indeed, 'was rather pagan, and found a savoriness _in 4 quotation from Sophocles or Theocritus ithat was quite absent from any text in ‘Isaiah or Amos. Bet if you feed your |young setter on raw flesh, how can you ‘wonder at its retaining a relish for uncook- ‘ed partridge in after life? and Mr. Irwine’s r ecullections of young enthusiasm and ambition were all associated with poctry and ethics that lay aloof from the Bible. | | On the other hand, I must plead, for 1) have an affectionate partiality toward the! Rector’s memory, that he Was not vindic-} 'tive--and some philanthropists*have been so; that he was not intolerant—and there} is a rumor that some theologians have not been altogether free from that blemish ;| that, although he would probably have de-) clined to give up his body to be burned in any public cause, and he was far from bestowing all his goods to feed the poor, he had thet charity which has sometimes been Jacking to very illustrious virtue—he was tender to other men’s failings, and uawilling to impute evil. He was one of those men, and they are not the commonest, of whom We can know the jtion of that most useful SINGLE Corres Two CEnTs. VOL; 16,---NO, 10, —— i|best only by following them away from the ,market-place, the platform, and the pulpit, jentering with them into their own homes, {hearing the voice with which they speak to the young and aged about their own hearth- i stone, and witnessing their thoughful care ifor the every-day wants of everyday com- panions, who take all their kindness as a matter of course, and not asa subject for panegyric, Such men, happily, bave lived in times hen great abnses flourished, and have jsometimes even been the living repre- sentatives oftheabus.s. That is a thought which might comfort us a little uw der the opposite fact—that it is bet'er sometimes not to follow great reformers of abuses beyond the threshold of their homes. But, whatever you. may think of Mr, Irwine now, if you had met him that June afternoon riding on his gray cob, with his dogs running beside him—portly, upright, manly, with a good-natured smile on his tinely-turned lips as he talked to the dasii- ing young companion on the bay mare, you must have felt that, however tl he harmonized with sound theories of the clerical office, he sometimes harmonized extremety well with that peacefal land- way of keeping his: splendid mother and his | scape. sickly sister, not to reckon a second sister, | | who was usually spoken of without any ad-|rupted every now and then by rolling became | masses of cloud, ascending the slope iron heir birth and babit. and at .the a time|the Bro San hane Ohh told eablen end their birth and habit, and at the same time|the Broxon side, where the tail gab'es an See them in the bright sunlight, inter- elms of the Rectory predominate over t'e tiny whitewashed church. They will seoa be in the parish of Hayslope; the gray church-tower and village roofs lie before them tothe left, and further the right, they cam see the chimneys of the Hall Farm. (Fo be on, to contin ed.) A Terrible Operation. A MANS TONGUE CUE OUT TO AVOID AN AWFUL DPEATH—-A WARNING TO SMOKERS A terrible surgical operation was per- formed at the General Hospital in Toronto on Saturday last, when a man’s tongue wes cut out in orcer to prevent him from dying a painful, if not an «x ruci«ting. death. The victim was a man, apparently about fifty years of age, woo came to the Gmeral Hospital afeways ago to be treated for what he supposed was simply a _ sore tongue. The doctors, after making an examination, found that the man was suffering from a cancer’ which had formed on _ the _ tongue, and the only remedy was immediite amputa- organ. The un- fortunate individual d:cided to submit to the operation rather tha. suffer the torture to which he had been subjected for some time past. When he had g ven the sur- geons the facts with reference to his case, they found that the disease was simply the result of the habit of excessive smoking. The patient had been a smoker. The pipe which he generally smoked was a common clay one, the stem of which had been broken off short, leaving a ragged edge. This sharp edge had, at first, caused simply an ebrasion of the skin, which become painful. The smoker, not dreaming «f the cause or ‘the result of a continuance of the practice, kept on smoking his short clay pipe until after some time his tongue became irritated that it was only with intense pain he could speak, and waa unable to take any solil food, At last the pain became such that he deemed it advisable te visit the General Hospital in order to get relief if possible. Amputation was the only means of relicf. The opera- tion was performed by Dr. Macfarlane in the presence of a large number of students and physicians. Of course the latest scien- tific appliances were used to make the unfortunate man suffer as little as possible He is now doing quite well at the hospital, and although past the middle age will pro bably live some years, but without the power of speech or sense of taste. This is an awful warning to all who have become habitual excessive smokera.— Toronto Globe ——_ —— als <> - + fe Trade with the United States. During the administration of President Cleveland, eays the Monefary Times, Canada will have some relations with tle United States to adjust. Theo Fishery question once More crops up for settlement: and in connection with it some echeme of Reciprocity may find a place. The most natural way, perhaps, would be for the one to become the make-weight of the other It is extremely desirable that the Fishery question should be disposed of onee for all. The time seema to have come when the United States is really desirous of form- ing treaties of commerce not only with Central and South America but also with Canada, and Canada is nov jess anxious for such an arrangement. The ditficnlty will be to agree upon the details. Next year the attempt will probably be made. Revipro- city could wait; it has waited long; but ihe Fishery question requires prompt regu- lation, A money payments, for acess to our shore fisheries, 1s not the natural nor the obvious moce of adjustment. It was accepted before becaure no other was 1B sible. Inthe then temper of the United States, a new reciprocity treaty was an im- possi ility; but this obstacie no longer exists, and the two questions onght to be included in any arrangement that is saade. Mr. Cleveland has the hearty good will of Canadians, whose faith ia his integrity and straightforwardness of purpose is upiversal. + Re Young Men :—Read This. Tux Vorratc Bert Co., of Marshall, Mich., offer to send their celebrated Execrre-Vo.- raic Beit and other Exrecrric PPLIAN CEs on trial for thirty days, to men (young and old) affi.cted with nervous debility, loss of vita ity and manhood, and all kindred trovbles. Also for rheumatism, neuralgia, paralysis, and many other diseases. Complete resto):tion to health, vigor and manhood guarant ed, No mak is incurred, as thirty days’ trial is allowed. Write them at once for illus pamphlet free. a ra a ty r + ; 3 - a resect wet ear — ne ee ee Sener een i fue + nar sr ae SS Sane Se aes meneame 1 1 i nen son me Se G panes nde Sater = ne nc ca at SS aT necaeat jae oy SR - Bus ul / CS WR