ew — Che Daily Examiner MARCH 18, 1885. A New Hotel Ir is supposed by some of our citizens hat the movemeut now on hand for a First-Class Hotel is a matter of strict philantroy hy on the part ot its origina tors, aud thatthe almighty dollar enters not into the region of their imagivations, and that most of the subscribers to the stock list investing their mouvey, merely ia a public-spirited manner, that the eity and Island generally may derive a large benefit iodirectly trom a Firat. Class Hotel Now all who wish to see this pleasant little ctty of Charlottetown awake from its century ot dilapidation and sleepiness, aud take its proper rank among the beautiful cities of Canada, must acknow ledge that a First-Class Hotel is a ceces- sity, and, being anecessity, it must, if carried ou in a business-like manuver. become a fiaaucially, both directly and indirectly, to its originators. In Halifax, the Heasleins have made three very snug fortunes by carryiug on s good ho‘el, and now that our Island is beviuniog to attract maoy wealthy travel- fers from the numerous cities of the States aod Canada, scattered south and there seems to be uo enierprisivg hotel manager new are Ssurcess west of u-, reason why some may not make a fortune out of our hotel ia Charlottetown. /grand old man seems to have ‘hit off” the sentiment of En. laud pretty well. : i. estimation of Parliament, had he been | Life less voluble during his first years iu the House of Commois. le wth litbpieiinicaiaainnaiiiaiain Brit'sh Relations with Germany Mr. GLADSTONE in a recent speech de- | clared that he would stand behind no wan in tle value he attached to the iriendship of Germany. But he was tot prepared to admit the statement of some pessimists that the frieudship of any country inthe world was row, or ever) had been necessary to enable England to maintain her position. He thought where Germany's colonizing operations | were bona fide and consistent with the the rights of all parties, Eogland, with due regard to the claims of her own colonisis, Ought to meet Germauy in no) grudging spirit, and should refrain from | discussiog the occupation of this or that spot after the maaner of hucksters, show- ing a disposition to grudge what we are unable to hold ourselves. If Germany became a colonizing power he would say would beeome Eaglaad’s ally and partoer | in the work of eivilizing the world. The) o> ict: ia —Receutly, a number of members of the Commons waited ou the Minister of Marine to urge the passing of a granting the fishipg bounty to 4 vessels and boats ai the same rate as in| | preachiny /probably sixty years old, aud in delicate | ' heal hh: had told me, much }dued than she had been in the days of her | — Sone ’ He remarked that the scene in the ! prison woull make a fine element in a story ; and Ll afterwards be wan to think «f blending this and seme other recollections of my aunt in Wih soitie points it my tather’s early lie and character, Vhe problem of construction that remained make the unhappy girl one of the, chief dramatis persone, and connect her with the hero. At frst | thought of mak- ing the story one of the series of “Scenes,” hut afterwards, when several motives had | induced me to close these with ‘* Janet's) Repentance,” | determined on meking | what we always called in our conversation “My Aunt’s Story” the subject of a long | novel which [ accordingly began to write Oe Story, was to (on the 22ad October, 1857. The character of Dinah grew out of my | rcollestions of my aunt, but Dinah is not | at all ike my aunt, who was a very amali, | black-eyed woman, and (1s | was told, for I never heard her preach) very vehement in her style of preaching. She had left off) when I knew her, being} had become ae my father more yentle and sub- aud she active ministry and bodily strength, when (rod speed to her,aud hoped that she/she could not rest without exhorting and | remonstrating in season and out of season : | shorter periods — ‘@W | Wirksworth,in Derbpshire,and once at my tishi g | father’s last residence, Foleshill (1 was very fond of her, and enjoyed the} ‘few weeks of her stay with me greatly. She | ; was loving and kind to me, and I could talk } ito her abert) my closely inward life, which was shut up from those usually round | ! saw her ouly twice again, for much once at her own home at lie, The character «if Adam and oue or two, 1882 and fixing the amount to be given | incidents connected with him were a i ot ‘to boat and vessel, so that the bouuty | by my father’s carly life; but Adam is not it built on some of the sites proposed, may be paid to each without reference | ™Y father, any more than Dinah is "I we might have the most beautilully| situated and best arranged hotel in the L, wer Provinces, The Park aud surroundings of the! town are beautiful in summer, and driv- ing, and cricketing, and lawn-tenuis may | be enjoyed by visitors. Boating on our! tine harbor would be delightful in the evenings to persons tired of the heat and buatle of city life, and good facilities for bathing could be had by connecting | Reeky Point by steam ferry with Char lottetown The pleasures in conneetion with a comtortable hotel having baths,verandahs | and lounging places would tempt travel- lers io rest in Charlottetown a while be- fore rushing away to the country hotels| aod over-crowding them as was done last | summer. (on fire i climate of our country. loffer of the United States to negotiate a to the number engaged. At present the | amount is limited to $156,000, to be dis-| tributed pro rata—which involves wail ing till all returns are in apportioument is made. ‘* Sandy : John? John: a wis! Cinada! Ea, mon! | . } 2 ~ a . : ; . ' ; ) i only warm yinc? a’ the time @ was there, ) muraer the 8cehe In the prison being, or an’ that wis when the bhoose next ~Eng. Ex” —IJt isin this way that Englishmen | vet their door wis | _™"em + —The London Telegraph states that) ; the English government has rejected the | couvention with the British West Indies. annt. before the ' elements ] jand their mutual relations. | be the central figure at the last, | The English Government might, indeed, | A few items (estimated) of cost avd! as well have allowed the Uvited States | to annex the West Indies ut once. expenditure will give some idea of what may be doue with the hotel financially | becomes known to the) travelling public. as soon as it Cest of buildings, land and farniture,.$40,000 commas | Memo. of Hotel Receipts and Expenditare | per annum : } RECE’PTS 70 transient guest: for 4 months at | caly The Alliance and Prohibition The Charlottetown branch of the Dom- inion Alliance met on Friday evening. Measures were cousidered which wi!] | atenJeney toensure the better carrying | out of the Canada Temperance Act in this When the law is carried out by first | second and third offences, whea itis fairly f $1.5 , $12.60 a pd, $I a ~ a4 ee ae enforced by, not only the Inspector of ee Se Tee le ee apg | Licenses, but by the Stipendiary M wistrate at $5 per week... eeeccece 5,200 . : 13 _ |} and the police under his control, Jthe illict Total annual receipts..............317,800 eae will very soon cease to exist in our ' midst. : oe The petitions, prayiag for a Prohibitory Salary of manager, clerk, servants apd Liquor Law, are beginuiay t» come in, uM ara stan aa ine onan ' -¥ 4,000 largely signed. The Alliance expect to have warn cost of fans or one person tor : : » ad 5 até 1700 weeks at $2.50 per week 4.250 all petitions in by the last of abis month, Heating and lighting expenses 609 | “hen they will be duly forwarded to the ” a ‘Commons and Senate at Otlawa. Every Total amount expenditure.......... $ 8,850 | ie ae temperonce man aon +o him- Balance of receipts over expenditare..& 8950/5! 30 the meantime, to nave ¢ 16 petition : as largely signed as possible. Extra copies Being twenty twe per cent. ob amount | of the petition can be had on application to expended ~ $40,000 for buildings, land! the Secretary of the Alliance. aud furniture; and deducting eight per cent. for depreciation of buildings and furniture, « balance of fourteen per cent on the amount invested will be returned | a3 profit. iit | The “Patriot” and Winter Com-,; munication. Now that the Government have av nounced a definite policy for the improve- | ment of our means of winter communi-| cation, and the time for representation | aud discussion at this stage is past, the| Patriot is “ griuding out” columus of editorial ou the subject. This is, of | course, pot a matter about which Tue) Examiner should complain; and we! have bat one or two remarks to make| ° . e s «6 ; on the Patriot's manifest uufairness to! our representatives who support and advise the Goverument. The Patriot | would have the public believe that the | credit for bripging the matter to the! notice of the Government apd Parlia- | taeut, and consequently the credit for the | improved policy, is due to Senator Hay-| thorne. ‘This is false and absurd. We! treely give Senator Haythorne all the | credit he deserves—the credit of moving | aud discussing the matter in the Senate. | But we have to thank the Liberal-Con- -ervative members for counteractipg the’ idea impressed upon Parliament by Mr. | D. Davics and others - the idea that the Northern Light had solved the problem | of wivter communication; we have to | thank the Libera!-Couservative members | ‘or = represeuting the matter in | “uch A wy 43 to induce the Governmect to take charge of the ice- boat-, to put ov tugs aud other appliances for the promotion of winter commupica- tion. The report of the committee, of which Mr. Hackett was chairman, and the disaster of this year, had, perbaps, more than avythiug else todo with the change of policy in this regard. The Patriots sremmks about Dr. Jeukius are beside the matk. The most euergetic meu have wisely refrained trom speaking a great deal during the first session of their parliamentary career ; and much speaking ia no more a “igh that a member is workiog hard for his constituents, than silence *s that he is doing nothing Some of the best and Most successful represeutatives ip Parlia- LETTERS TO THE EDITUR, How “ ilies tities Written. Came to be AS TOLD BY THE AUTHOR Sin,—The publication of ** Adam Bede,” in the eolumos of the Dairy Exawiner, occurs at a time when the whole literary world ia being moved by the story of the life of the gifted woman who wrote it, and t have made the following extract fr: Cross’s ‘‘ Life of George Etict,’ he ing | : 4 ee tt P'S | wrote here in the old room at Richmond in! that it will lend an additional interest to a work of fiction which is almost unrivalled fer its depth of thought and pathos, withal brightened by wit, humor and fare y. i have|bnt desired ~~ | i a ae | there I nearly finished the second volume } touching | ; i Nothing strikes us more in George Eliot's | as a child of the scenes in which she moved | : ; ; jard the only cases | think in which George | —and in ‘‘ Adam Bede” we have the embodiment of the morning thomshis of a) 1 litle girl brought up in a * Loawshire village, As ‘* David Copperfield us face to face with Dickens’ home life, ro! : , jboth of which he recommended me te ‘+ Adam quiet Bede” lifts the curtain on the lam, sir, Yours obediently, J. Howarp Kyaw. Ottawa, March 12, i885. GEORGE ELIOT S JOURNAL, November 16, 1858. - -Wrote the last woid of *‘Adam Bede” and sent it to Mr. Lang- | ford, Jubilate The germ of “Adam Bede’ was an anecdote told me by my Methodist Aunt | Samuel (the wife of my father’s younger brother)--an ancedote from ber own ox" | perience. We were sitting together one! afternoon during her visit to me at Griff, | probably in 1839, or 1840, when it vccurred tu her to te!l me how she had visited a eon-! demrcd criminal, a very ignorant girl, who | had murdered her child and refused to con- fess; bow the had stayed with her praying | through the night,and how the poorcreatu e | at lest breke out into tears and co: fessed | her in the cart to the place of execution, ed by the ctlicial people about the esol. impression of that afternoon and our talk | throvgh all the intervening years, | ment make few speeches. Mr. Davies would have tuken » hither stant io the till something prompted me to tell it fo! George in December, hegun to write the " Seents of Clerical | life than the quick perception she acquired | doings of the gentle home of Mrs | Cross. j ; Indeed, there is not a single portrait | in Adam Bede—only the suggestions of | experience wrought up into new combin:- When I began to write it, the, only | had determined on, besides | the character of Dinah, were the! character of Adam, his relation ta Arthur! tions, ‘An’ hoo did ye hke Canada, | Donnithorne, and their mutual relations to letty—i. e., to the girl who commits child | s course, the climax towards which I worked. Everything else grew out of the characters Dinah’s ulti- : . }mate relation to Adam was suggested by | wrong ideas respecting the | George, when I had read to him the first | jpart of the first volume; be was so de- | l'ghted with the presentation of Dinah, and so convinced that the reader's interest | would centre in her, that he wanted her to [ accep‘ed | the idea at once, and from the end of the! third chapter worked with it constantly = view. The first volume was written at Rich. | mond, and given to Blackwood in March | He expressed great admiration of its fresh- ness and vividness, but seemed tu hesitate | about putting if in the Magazine, which | was the form of publication he as well as | myself had previously contemplated. He | still wished to have it for the Mazazine, : to know the course cf the story. At present he saw re hing to prevent its reception in ‘‘ Maga,’’* but he would like to see more. I am uncertain whether his doubts rested solely on Hetty’s relation to Arthur, or whether they were also directed towards the treatment of Methodism by the church. I refused to tell my story beforehand, on the ground that I would not have it judged apart from my treatment, which alone de- termines the moral quality of art; and unti- mately I proposed that the notion of pubdli- cation in Moga should be given up,and that the novel should be published in three a NUR. Wd volumes at Christmas, if possible’ He as- sented. I began the second volume in the second | week of my story at Munich, about the | middle of April. While we were at Munich, | George expreesed his fear that Adaim’s part | Was too passive throughovt the drama, and that it was important for him to be brought into more direct collision with Arthur. | This doubt haunted me, and out of it grew | the scene in the wood between Arthur and} Adam; tle fight came to me as a necessity | one night at the Munich opera, wh«n I was | listenivg to ‘William Tell,” Work was. slow and interrupted at Munich, and when | we left I had only written w the be- j ginning ~~ of the dance on the! Birthday Feast ; but at Dresden. 1 wrote uninterruptedly and with great, enjoyment in the long, quiet mornings, and all, I think, but the last chapter, which ] the first week of September, and thew sent | the MS. off to Blackwood. The opening | of the third volume— Hetty’s journey —was, | | think, written more rapidly than the rest | of the book, and wes left without the | slightest altera‘ion of the first draught. | Throughout the book I have altered little | suggesied more than a verbal alteration, | when Tread the MS. aloud to him, were ” brines | the first scene at the Farm, and the scer in the wood between Arthur and Adam. ‘space out” a little, which } did. When, on October 29, | had written to cst 6 —6hl1lSslCOC ILS a ~ EXTENSIVE BALE tau an, ——— OF —— STAPLE & FANCY ———— 15 | Duifus & Co's. Stock at Public Auction, mente: i ; } _o-, ot . -WILSCN BiG. ‘ At “teveusom’s Building. Quecn Street, commebecing Wednesday, iSth March, ei if o'ciock. & m.and continued the following day, 'Thursday, at the same — fna> deer. 0 FULL and compiete assortment of Duffus & Co's. Dry Goods, comprising gray and white Cottons, stock of | 6. Chorus -*"Grana Ts assorted | | ‘Staples, Blankets, ready-made Clothing, Cloths, Tweeds, Coat-) * ings and Trowserings, Mantles, Gloves, Braces, Hosiery, Under-_ clothing, Dress Goods, House Furnishings, Haberdashery, Small) Wares and Fancy Goods. TAKE FURTHER NOTICK —That this Sale and peremptory. Nothing will be withdrawn. put up must be Sold. is positive Kiverything | Orchestra" Na, s CONGRKE | ET ALL, in TRE eo eS a, } py GOODS. Priday Eveniog, Mareh 20th, PROGKAMME bs Kamh Matty 6-25 5-: veces co ae Orchestral Ctnb, — a zern - _ is “teeta 2. Chorus—-**Lift up your Heads,” from the TE Griitiaitie ead os -+». Hande Mr Karie’s Glee Club 3. Solo aud Quaartette Mighty God”, si ——. -"© Prats the . Exoergcy Miss Bourke anc others. ia —— . minelil 4 String Quartette -‘Andanie ig 43,” Gluck Messrs. Virnicombe, Gordon, Strene . =e au Sharp, 5. Cornet Solo- vai... ‘ vant “Angels Ever Fiicht and oes . Handel Mr Fletcher ne Deum im FF”. .» Pieler Mr. Harle’s Glee Cle} lnat Qrintetic ** Silves lrumpete ae March... . ooaam Wianj os ee Ss solo and Chorus—'‘ 0 7 hou that Tellest . f.om **Messtah”’ Solo 1 y Mra. Roome. , ,* o.. . a Y. Violin Solo—**He Shall Ke ed EHiy Flock.” or “seen... cL ass .. Handel Mr. Vinvicombs, TERMS: All sums under $59, cash; over that amount, 10. Vocal Solo—Hear us, 0 Wather,” Millera approved endorsed notes, six months, or 5 per cent. discount for’ cash. JAMES SHAND. | Ch’:owa, March 16, 1885. ic GHEAP Gf O Pao. Looking for Bargains ought to Co.’s Cheap Store, where goods are sold all the year round prices. During March a number of exvellent Bargains will be offered to all cash customers alike :—7000 yds. Bed Tickings at » to 7cts per yard under u ual prices ; 200 white fringed Coun- _terpanes only $1.10, worth $1.75; 2000 yds, Roller Towellings at oc, 6e, and 7ce.; 1590 yds T ble Linen, beginning at L5e., very cheap; 4000 yds. Cotton Flannels, 4¢. to 6¢. under prices ; | All Grass Cloths and Prints, Cretonnes, &c., at reduced prices ; about 9000 yds. choice Cotton Shirtings from Te. per yard ; black and colored Cashmeres and other Dress Goods at a bar gain, about 000 yards to go cheap, ask to see them; Ladies’ Corsets, at low prices. as they are going up in pr ce, bleached and grey Cottons and Sheetings to offer at the lowest! iy oj prices ever seen, ODS | Miss Bourke. | ae. ‘But ‘Lhou did'st wot Leave his Soul ig Hell,’ from ** Messiah” Hande} UY. cicstrai Club, $$ $$____________ 12. Chorus —‘**The Crusaders --.. Pineuti Mr. Harle’s Glee Club. oo are re ccc tities 113. String Quartette....7... .- Mendelashon | ie ” = an i4. \ vocal Solo **Ruthb 4aLbU Nacrmi’, .. Loplitf ' ; go ficst to Weeks & at ab ut the same rates as many shops call their “selling off” | j | | | | i : ° . | frome also, special lines in} jag, bei: Wes Call and see ihe goods, even if you don’t want to buy.’ W. A. WEEKS & CO. Ch’town, Mareh 5, 1885 CLESING SUT SALE WA. BR NAR This Month we are mellinge our Goods so Fine that we would like to Give One and | ' ' } ; } ; ’ i | November the 16 h, and now on the crime. My aunt afterwards went with, novel might interfere with mine and she described to me the great respect | the following inscription ; ‘To my dear, with which this ministry of hers #asregard- | husband, George Hepry Lewes. M.S. of a work which would never have | The story told by my aunt.withgreat fceling, | been written but for the happiness which | affected me deeply, and I never lost the | 218 Jove has conferred on my life,” j the end of the love sceve at the Farm be- ; |tween Adam and Dinah, I sent the MS, to | Blackwood, since the remainder of the. | third volume could not affect the judgment | ion what had gone before. /in warm adimiration, and offered me, on the | He wrote back | part of the firm, £800 for four years’ copy- | right. | accepted the cffer. The last werds | ef the third volume were written and des-| patched on their way to E linburgh, | the last day of the same month, I have written this | slight history of my book, Ilove it very much,and am deeply thankful to have written it, whatever the public may say to | ; /it—a result which is s'il) in darkness, for I) have at present had only four sheets of the! proof. The beck would have been published | | at Christmas, or rather early in December, | | but that Bulwer’s **What will he do with it, ?’ was to be published by Blackwood at! that time, and it was thought that this | The manuscript of ‘‘Adam Bede” bears I give the’ j 1856, when I had Glass Sets, ere slling very cheap at W. P. Colwills, ee : fegether; but 1 believe I never wentioned it *Phe uirkoawe of Blackwood’s Magazine. aaa DixntR Servs, Tea Seta, Chamber Sets, dwidy wky-mchI8 All a Chance! i\Clvtewn, Feb Gth, (RRS CATI! ShEF a ; i i j plete printwwy and bindiuy | Lower Prov inces, ; ne trouble to do the best work at m Mra. Roome, : i ass 115. Vocal Solo—**Pro Peszatis’ irom “Stahat Mater”, Rossini Prof, Caven. 16. Chorus — ‘Worthy is the Larus,” from PN .» +++, Handel Mr. Larie’s Glee Cicb, ‘*God Save the Queen. ’ a UARP, Secretary. (b’towa, March 15, 1885, Adwiuisirators’ Say | AM instructed to Sell. by Loection, Tee. day, blaich Y4th, at 2 weloe :2 i m., nu, the fallow. i tee lute of ihe Law Courts ing part of ti stat Now is the time to buy Cottons, | lama Morphy, Feq , comely: We have about 75,000 yards| 227 Shars Gas Co, Common stock, miom doe tie wa ivyer-Mde Creamery Y ae da First Pr I do Uo. Stock A. McRHALL, th'town, Mareli 18, 18 5 “— Pt. SLR BALM eg N and after this date, untJ further ( netice, Excursion Heturn Tickets will be issued at ove first-class fare from all Stations > this Railway to Cans Traverse, to partie : and returning te “ upwards, gotng of five or g gether. JAMES COLEMAN, ~uperintendent. Reilway Offies, Ch’town, March 15, 8S Gly pat3i esd —— ——_ 44 QUEEN STREET. Bock, Job ard Gr: amental Printer, Paper mviel, AND BLANK-BOOK MANUFACTORSR Th Printing and Binding machinery and Plant in this Cflice is that of the late Bremner Brothers, the most com cupcerns 1 ; With such facilities 1” aud is well known as one ef | rates. WHAT A CLEAN DOLLA WILL PURCHASE. | ' | ee) ee. | } ‘ 44 Queen Street, Charlottetown, P. B Island: March !7th, 18°5. eon etl ENDERS. | eee See Remember this Month Closes our its: “i naan | boarding, shipg!ing, planing, windows, aad trimming eaves, of a building «= A SALE ] | erecte] in Charlottetown for a Skating 1 seen al the '€ffice of Messrs. Poole & Piane and specifications can be Lewis, Charlotte | town, C. ROBERTSON, 2222" : We do -not bied ourselves to accept the jowest cr any Tender. 7 Multart “ Tenders to be addressed to GEORGE MUTTARG P. Kk. BAKER. Sumumenids, March 18, L886 ab pl ae =? ep fe aes i —=— - 4 oO = on