NEW SERIES mm ee 1 ' \ iiNi j if A i - oF uy { i) >. ‘ ALi4 ; FOR JANUARY, i824 i i" i) . . N i i : ‘I len’h. ni i morn Li 1 la 7 | 7a ! 2; WwW in ay ‘) 4 é' .hureda iv } I ' tay 45 ~ 5 Ss atnrausa i} iw } s ou , 7 i ; 7 VI ; y + a is ; 3) Tuesday 27 ys 8 6 £2 9) Wed nesday 36; 37, 1 598. 7 52 10, Tharsday 36} 38 2 57) 8 52 11) Friday 39.4 I 9 44 12’) Saturday 35! 40. 5 ,10 30 9 7 13 Sunday ) 642) 6 1S 11 10 14 Monday | 35) 43) 7 26/11 50 15 Duesday ) 644) 8 29) aft 25 16 Wednesday | 34 46 9 36) | 17 Thursday ; si 47,10 39 1 41 18 Friday t' 4811 40, 2 2! 19 Satarday {9 morn! 3 6 917 20' Sunday 33; 50039: 4 4 21, Monday a2; 52| 1 38,6 9 22) Tuesday 31 63) 2 26 6 21 23) W ednesday 30} 54) 3 32, 7 28 24 Thursday 29| 55) 4 26; 8 35 25' Friday 28 67°°5 1 9 9 26 Saturday 2h 59, 6 Iti 9 5 27 |Sunday 24'5 Ol} 6 41:10 32 28| Monday 23 a et ten 29 ‘Tuesday 22 t 7 5111 46 a0) Wedne slay = 5; 8 morn 31 Thursday io 6 8 Q 22 Merchants’ Bank of Halifax, CHARLOTTETOWN ACENCY, | Savings Bank Depariment, -—WILL BE OPENED IST NOVEMBER, 1883, on and after which date DEPOSITS OF 35 AND UPWARDS, will be taken and . interest at the rate of Four Per Cent, Per Anaun | ALLOWED THEREON, For further particulars apply to F. H. ARNAUD. Oct, 30, 1883 AGENT. SULLIVAN & MAGNEILL, | ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW | Solicitors in Chancery, | NOTARIES PUBLIC, &e.| OFFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown, G4o Money to Loan, W. W. Suttivay, &. C, | Cusseta Jan. 16,'83 B. Macnegi.t LIFE INSURANCE, | ——_—————— Dnited States Life lusurauce Co, CITY OF NEW YORK. ORGANIZED 1850. —— eee New Features, Incontestible Policies, Prompt settlement of Claims Guaranteed. —_— eee Ct ee A ported : [he total existing 250 bris. Choice Superior Ex- “his is true Liberty, when /'ree-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Evxirimes. —— ee — ee Sn a SINGLE Copies Two Cents, —— : 1 : : se . ~ seal t VELL boil as SWwEMir ANTE AYERUE, ARK EI MASS Koos and Produce a Specialty. Ee oOornnantad | higiv als, MERCHANT TAILOR, ' | | CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1884, ARTHUR & CO., GENERAL FS fa. BAR g e OVER-STOCKED with the tollowing GOODS, and offers them ata REDUCTION OF TWENTY PER CERT, AUCTION SALES, |°**"s Woollen Underwear, Flannel Shirts, Fur , ‘ a MARKET DAYS, a A To SeveuseaS Bulldiag, Queen Street, | (NEAR THE MARKET), _—— . TION SALES of Furniture, 4 implements, Carriages, Sleighs, etc., promptly altended to on market days at the} ibove ntrai stand for market-day sales A. MeNEALL, | Auctioneer, | EDWARD T. RUSSEL & C2., | GEN BRAL | (ommission Merchants, | NO. 264 STATE STREET, | BOSTON. Particular attention given to the i i and Produce of all kinds, june 22, 1853.-—6m STANDARL LIK ASSURARGH CO, — sale of T the 57th Annual General Meeting of 4 the Standard Life Assurance Company, heid at Edinburgh on ‘Tuesday, the 24th of April, 1583, the following results for the, year ended 15th November, 1583, were re- 3,038 new proposals for life as- surance were received the year for $ 9,754,085 38 2,561 proposals were accepted, assuring 7,239,048 13 assurances In lo ‘ at loth Novembe r, 1582, arcounted to (Of which $7.753,.0381.15 was reassured with other offices) $6,936,302 91 The claims by death which arose during the year amount ed, including bonus addi- tions, to 2,462,226 59) The anoual revenue amounted at 15th November, 1882, to 4,267,546 00 [The invested funds at same date amounted to 29,503,416 00 Femyg an increase daring the year of 1,062,648 32) JOHN LONGWORTH, Agent for Charlottetown, THOMAS KERR, Inspector of Agencies, Ch'tewn, Angnet 2, 1RR2 J. A. CHIPMAN & GO., IN STORE: tra, 00 * Patent. OFFICE AND WAREROOMS : OPPOSITE RANKIN HOUSE. J. FP. SHALPFORD, AGENT. DR. BENNET | SMALLS attention to “THE FLECTRO CU MAGNETIC CORSET.” exact pattern 68 Apply at residence, Weymouth Street, from Sto 10a. m, and 4 to 6 p. m. A. 1. McPHERSON, Agent, Sept. 25, 1853. —law MONCTON Gash and Door Factory. ft. P. LBA, in returning thanks to the M public for the liberal patronage extended to him while in business in Charlottetown, begs leave to inform his old customers and the public generally, that he, in company with Mr. William Rogers, has appointed Messrs. B. Williams & Co, Lamber and Coal Dealers, Pownal Wharf, Charlottetowa, our agents, who will keep constantly on hand a fall supply of Mould- ngs, Window Sashes, Doors, etc.. at LOWEST CASH PRICES. All orders entrusted to them will receive | ceive prompt attention. prompt attention. LEA & ROGERS, Moncton, N. PF, Sept. 5, 1883.—-2aw wly worn by the Princess of Wales, the health- yiving powers of which, especially in female diseases, are very great. Can be had at | FRASER & REDDIN’S. To be worn &s an | ordinary corset and lasting longer and fitting superbly (rimmed with Valencienes lace, Dec 3. 1k83 ees he - allie SHPH GILLOTT S Te Usage ti ALU ag Ny Ly Rg ahs Rees YE are Agents for the P. E. island W Pottery Orders sent to us will re- Jars, Jugs, Bean Pots, Mugs, Flower Pots, Spitoons, Stove Stones, ete., ete., im stodk. BEER & GOFF AGENTS Ch’town, Oct, 26, 83. PR [sland Pottery. Caps, Kid Mits, Sleigh Robes ———— 0? OVERCOATINGS, WHICH’: YOU CAN HAVE | ra MADE TO YOUR MEASURE Cheaper Than Imported Ready Made. D. A ° BR UCE wr a very large banana. * Dec. 20, 1883.—eod wkly ‘good raw, and better baked, as you shall’ pustico a a ; : ' district. the dinner and the dish were both baked — BEER & COFPF'’S. UR TEA is giving splendid satisfaction. Prices, retail ‘ 24cts., 30cts., and 36cts, Prices, wholesale, very low. FIVE POUND TINS, (screw top), excludes the air, pre- serving the flavor and strength of the Tea. Just what is wanted. Halt chests very cheap to the trade. BEER & GOFF. = ee IN HW HRULYL, Wholesale and Retail, Cheap. :0:-———— ON BAND: 230 boxes very choice Valencia and Layer RAISINS, 30 half-boxes choice LAYERS, 8,000 pounds CURRANTS, 200 boxes prime FIGS, 5 cases choice PRUNES, 200 barrels bard WINTER APPLES, No, 1, 20 kegs GRAPES, AND MORE TO ARRIV E. BEER & GOFF. Nov. 14, 1883.—2aw wkly :. ane NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE Fire and Life Insurance Company, OF EDINBURGH AND LONDON, ESTABLISHED IN 1809. Subseribed Capital - - - 9,73 3,332.00 Paid Up Capital - - - - 1,216,666.00 ——-0:0 TRANSACTS EVERY DESCRIPTION OF FIRE, LIFE AND ANNUITY BUSINESS ON THE MOST FAVORABLE TERMS. Settled With Promptitude and Liberality. ~ = 0.0 — FIRE DEPARTMENT. Reserved Funds (Irrespective of Paid up Capital) over - $5,000,000,00 Insurances effected at the Lowest Current Rates. :0: LIFH DEPAHTMENT. Losses Accumulated Funds (irrespective of Paid up Capital) over = - - 0:0-—— OW mae 50; New and Reduced Premiums for the Dominion of Canada, be obtained at the VRINCE EDWARD ISLAND BRANCH, GEORGE W, DeBLOIs, TF tad Wd ded et oe oe By Charles Reade. CHAPTER XXVLI. (Continued, ) While he was thus occupied, Miss Rolles- ton came from the Juogle rediant, carrying vegetable treasures ui her apron. produced some golden apples with reddish leavea ‘There,’ said she; ‘and they smell deli- cious.’ Hazel eyed them keenly. ‘You have not eaten any of them?’ ‘What! by myself ? said Belen. ‘Thank Heaven!’ said Hazel, turning pale. ‘hese are the manchanilla, the poison app e of the Pacific.’ ‘Poison!’ said Helen, alarmed turn. ‘Well, I don’t know that they are poison, but travellers give them a very bad name, The birds never peck at them, and J have read even the leaves falliag into still water have killed the fish. You will not eat any- thing here till you have shown it to me, /will you! said he, imploringly. | ‘No, no,’ said Helen, aud sat down with her hand to her heart a minute; ‘and | was 80 pleased when I found them,’ caid she; ‘they reminded me of home. 1 wonder whether these sre poison, too!’ and she opened her apron wide, and showed him some long yellow pods, with red specks, something or in her ‘Ah' that isa very different affair,’ said the greatest tind we have made yet. The fruit is meat, the wood is thread, and the leaf is shelter and clothes. The fruit is see, and I believe this is the first time together.’ He cleared the now heated hearth, put the meat and fruit on it, then placed his great platter over it, ana heaped fire round Whilst this was going on Helen took him to her bower, and showed him three rusty iron hoops and a piece of rotten wood with arusty nail, and the marks where others had been. ‘There.’ said she; ‘this is all I could find.’ ‘Why, it is a treasure!’ cried he; ‘you will see. | have found something, too.’ He then showed her the vegetable wool and the vegetable hair he had collected, and told her where they grew. She owned they were wonderful imitations, and would do as wel! as the real things; andere they had done comparing notes, the platter and the dinner under it were both baked, Hazel removed the platter or milk-pan, and |served the dinner in it. If Hazel was inventive, Helen was skilful and quick at any kind of woman's work; and the following is the result of the three weeks’ work, under his direction. She had made as follows: 1, Thick mattress, stufied with the vege- table hair and wool as described above, The mattress was only two feet six inches wide, for Helen found that she never turned in bed now. She slept as she had never slept before. plantain leayes sewed together with the thread furnished by the tree itself, and doubled at the edges. ¥. A long shallow net four feet deep— cocoa fibre. and some light but close matting for the roof, aud sume cocoa-nut matting for the But Hazel, instructed by her, had learned to plait, rather clumsily, and he had a hand in the matting. Hazel, in the meantime, heightened his owy mud-banks in the centre, and set up brick fire-places with hearth and ee First she the platter, and light combustibles over it. L The mattress was made with | 3. A great quantity of stout grass rope, | ground, and to go under the mattress, | ~ VOL. 14,--NO, 37. shoot growing out of it, which shoot, being shortened, served forthehandle. By these arts he at last sawagoal to his labors, Animal food, oil, pitch, ink, paper, were still wanting; but fish were abundant, and plantains and coc.annts stored, Above all, Helen's hut was now weather-tight. Stont horizontal bars were let into the trees, end being bonnd to the npriyhts, they matusdly supported each other; smaller horizontal bars at intervals kept the prickly ramparts from beimy driven in by a sudden gost. The canvas walle were removed, and the nails stored in a pigeor-hole, and a stout network substituted, to which huge plain- tain leaves were cunningly fastened with plantain thread, The roof was double; first, that extraordinary mass of spiked leaves which the four treea threw out, then several feet under that the hnoye pieces of matting the pair had made, This wes strengthened by double strips of canvas at the edges and in the centre, and by single strips in other parts. A great many cords and strings made of that wonderfal grass were sewn to the canvas-strengthened edges, and so it was fastened to the trees, and fastened to the horiz ntal bare. When this work drew close to its com- pletion, Hazel could not disguise his satis- faction. But he very soon had the mortification of seeing that she for whom it was ali done did not share his complacency. (To be continned.) ' . New Perth School Examination. | A written examination, conducted by the 72 Queen Street, Charlottetown, Hazel, delighted; ‘these are plaintains, and Principal, Mr. William ©, Weat, was held in the New Perth School on the 26h, 27th, and 28h ult. With the exception of one from Montague Bridge, and another from the pupils cll belong to the The following is their standing in the different branches : Reading, (adv)—-W. D. McIntyre, Ist; |Thos. Kennedy, and A. C. Dewar, 2nd; \John J. Smith, 3rd. Reading, (jun)—Russel G. McLaren, Ist; . A. Cameron, 20d. Writing—W. D. McIntyre, Ist; Mary A. Smith, 2ud. Arithmetic, (adv.)\—W. D. Molntyre,® Thomas Kennedy, and Adeline ©. Dewar, lst; Emma McLean, 2nd; Mary A. Smith, 3rd. Arithmetic, (jun.)—Maggie Shaw, Ist; Lily A. Cameron, 2nd. Grammar, (adv )--W. D. Melntyre, Ist; Emma McLean, 2nd. Grammar, (jun.)—Oliver McNeill, lat ; Lily A. Cameron, 2nd Sesesana: (adv.)—W. D, McIntyre, Ist; Emma McLean, 2nd. Geopraphy, (jan )—R. G. MeLaren, Ist; Lily Cameron, 2nd; Maggie Shaw, 3rd. English History, (adv.)—W. D. Mo- Intyre, lst; Emma MeLean, and Cornelia G. Lane, 2nd, Mary A. Smith, 3rd. English History, (jun.)—Russel OG. McLean, lat; Oliver MoNeill, 2nd; Ger- trode B. Munn, 3rd. Latin—W. D. Melntyre, and H. C. Dewar, Ist; Emma McLean, 2nd; Ella Cain, 3rd. French, (adv) —W. D, McIntyre, Let; A. C. Dewar, 2nd; Emma MeLesn, 3rd. French, (jun.)—Bessie M. Stevenson, ‘1st; Minnie Cain, 2nd; Coraelia G, Lane, 3rd. Gireek—W. D. Melntyre. Geometry, (adv )—W. D. Melntyre, Ist; |/Emma McLean, 2nd. Geometry, (jun) Laura Kaneen, let; Bessie M. Stevenson, 2ud; Thos. Kennedy, 3rd. Algebra, (adv)—-W, D. Melntyre, Lat; Emma McLean, 2nd; Laura Kaneen, 3rd. Belfast Notes. it is gratifying to know that the people of Belfast have the cause of temperance at / $12,000,000, 00 Nine-tenths of the whole Profits of the Life Branch belong to the Assured Profits of previous Quinquennium divided among Policy Holders, $1,158,500,00 Copies of the Annual Report, Prospectuses, and every information, may No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. one on each side, and now did all the cook-j heart, from the fact that the Temperance ing, for he found the smoke from the wood | Society organized by Col. J. J. Hickman made Miss Rolleston cough. He alsu made | last September, is rapidly progressing. We a number of pigeon holes in his mud walls, should feel grateful to Judge Alley for his and lined them with clay. One of these he courtesy in giving the Court House at dried with fire, and made a pottery door to! Eldon, in which the temperance meetings it, and there kept the lucifer box. He/|are held, wade a vast number of bricks, but did noth-: Wow that the Eldon Public Hall is com- ing with them. After several failures he/ pleted, for which the people of this com- made two large pots, and two great pans, | munity should feel proud. we are informed and they would all four bear fire under, that a Committee has been »ppointed to them, and in the pans he boiled sea water have a series of lectares therein this winter, till it al] evaporated and left hima sediment! and no doubt they will begin with that of salt This was a great addition to their popular lecturer Prof. J. H. Fletcher, food, and he managed also to put by a little;; a. Rey Mr. Reddin, Baptist Minister but it was a slow process. lof this community, whose sermons are _ He made a huge pair of bellows, with o highly appreciated by all denominations, little assistance from Miss Rolleston; the , presented with a sum of money the spout was a sago stick, with the pith drawn) |.) day as @ small token of our esteem out, and the substitute for leather was the oe tiles skin of a huge eel he found stranded at the 7 east point. ples got his bellows and fixed them Belfast, Dec. S8th, 1888, to a post he drove into the ground, he took Nevurer, for his anvila huge flint stone, and asmaller The Horsford Almenac and Cook one for a hammer; heated his old iron to a Book. of trouble into straight lengths, and at Gpemical Works, Providence, R. I. last with a portion of it produced a long) he than the other. This, by repeated experi. ' ; ; ments of heating and immersing in water | of Prayer in this City. to saw he blew his embers to a white heat, heated his original saw red-hot, and s00n byterian Church. ; 8th—Brick Methodist island. Ifhe wanted to cut down a tree in Church. ae the jungle, he put the bellows and a pot of Wednesday, Jan. 9th—Bible Christian lighting the fire under the tree soonhad it Thursday, Jan. 10th—Prince Street down. He made his pick-axe in half an Baptist Church. He found a young tree growing on a rock,| palian and St. James’ Presbyterian Church. or at least on soil so shallow that the root) Saturday, Jan. 12th—Young Men's to the stem. He got this tree up, shortened) Each meeting to commence at 7 50 p. m. the stem, shaped the root, shod the point' A collection will be taken up at the close tool, and a thick stake baked at the point,) A large attendance is expected and de- opened the ground to receive twelve stout sired. dec 27 Si dons mallet, made upon what might be! Tuar distressing disease, the Piles, is speed- called compendious or Hazelian method ; it. ily relieved aud gured by Ayer’s Pills. March 16, 1882--eod GENERAL AGENT, white heat, and hammered it with a world jsited free on a plication to the Rumford saw without teeth, but one side eye Order of Meetings for the Week he at last annealed; and when he wan | Monday, January 7th, 1884—Zion Pres- sawed through the oleaginous woods of that; Tuesday, Jan. embers on his cart with other fuel, and Church and peer Methodist Church. hour,but with his eye rather than hishands,| Friday, Jan. 11th—st. Paul's Episco- was half above ground and at right angles Christian Asssociation, with old iron, and with this primitive of each service on behalf of the poor. uprights, and drove them with manne -_———_-——— was a section of a hard tree, with a thick dwo3l wilyiw