Trams :—Five DoLuars a Year, ee es ees ee NEW SERIES. he Daily Exantiner The Examiner Publishing Qo. From their oflice, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION ~ ix m i ouhe vcblie os bunetiide tui $2.50 St Ss bs we ce cnceas ck | 1.25 CRED 0 660.6606 Uhbeicoen da 50 Advertising at moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly. balf-yearly, or yearly advertisements, on application. -—_— —~—— ALMANSC FOR FEBRUSRY, 1886. MOON'S CHANGES, New Moon 3rd day, Llh, 25m, p. m. First Quarter llth day, 10h, 33 7m, p. m. Fall Moon 18th day, 2h, 2 5m, p. m. Last Quarter 25th day, Ob, 58 Sm, p. m. This is true Liberty, when Free-Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free. --Kurtrrots. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1886. | NOW THEN FOR D. A. BRUCE’S | ——OFFER OF-—— CLOTHING & CENTS’ FURNISHINGS | ' C—_—_—_— and sold to us at a big advantage rather than return them. W . ltheee dlothe into e are manufacturing charging only FIVE PER CENT. OVER COST! and from $4.50 to $6 for making and trimming Overcoats ; from $5 to $7 for making and trimming Suits with Good T'rimmings and GOOD WOREMANSHIP. es 8 ad Sun |Sun | Moor High! Dats} | DAY OF WéBR isenjactes | rises [water{len’h i ——- ~— —— | th mh mjmorrjaftn jh m . ! Monday 28 $59) 5 36) 9 25) 9 31) CLOTH, bythe yard or piece, Very Cheap. We have on hand a few Suits and 2) Tues lay 275 1; 611/10 4) 34/Overcoats, made to order, not called for 3) Vednesday 26 3} 650,105; a7 4 Thursday a 4| 7 23/11 1}; 40} ie” |B Siena SELLING AT COST 6} Saturday 21 7} S 2limorn; 46 . 7|3 inday | Is 8} 8 49) 0 15 8649 a &} Wo — os , 9 15) 4°; 51). : — eo to convince you that there is money lost if you don’t purchase from us 9) Cuesday ' 17) 1t) 9 46) 1 23; 54/instead of buying imported clothiag. ALL OUR CLOTHING IS MADE ON THE 10; Wednesday | 16 3:10 11} 2 3} 57|/PREMISES. No $3 Overcoats, . , ne 1! | Thursday 14 | 10 45) 2 4610 1 12| Friday 12; 16/11 22) 3 46) 4 + ° ‘ 13| Xa turday li} 'S8iaft 7} 5 3} 7 Th Cu mS = a1 14) Sanday 9} 19) 0 59; 6 33} 10 © Sto co Oe Oring, 15| Monday s 2112074 3 16 Tuesday 7 938) 3 9) 850) 16/under the management of MR. JAMES McLEOD, leads al! others for Al. work 17|Wednesday | 5) 24) 4 93) 9 43) 19 Prices in this department will be found lower than ever. Our past record is sufficien! IS Thursday | % 26) & 40/10 30) 23) guarantee to secure your future confidence. , , , “| f AY ” ss . 7" t9| Friday 1) 27; & 5711 12) 26 A large portion of our Neckwear has been manufactured to our special order, from 8 12/11 46; 29 20) Satarday 6 59, 28 : 9 24) aft 33; ~ 32 2!) Sanday 5 30 22} Monday 56} 31/10 29) 113) 35 23| Tuesday | 55! 33);11.41) 1 56 358 24\ Wednesday | 52 34|morn| 2 4%} 42 25\thareday | Al} 36) 0 44) 344) 45) 26 Friday | 49) 37] 1 43) 452) 48 27\Saiurday | 47) 38; 237) 611} 51 16 4515 40) 3 26) 7 19/10 55 28 Sunday | ol Ce | ell ———— WARBURTON & SMALLWOOD, NOTICE OF CO-PARTNERSHIP. The undersigned have this day entered into artnership, under the style and firm of Varburton and Smail wood, Barristers, Attoreeys-at-Law, Notaries Public, &e. Office—Cameron Block, Queena Square. A. B, WARBURTON, B.A,., B.C.L. | ©, R. SMALLWOOD, a@ The firm are Agents for the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, which does the largest business of any Life Insurance Company in the world. Dec. 3—law wiy 3 mo L. ARFHUR & CO, GEN HRAL Commission Merchants, 12) ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. --— —_—- Roos and Produce a Specialty. Jaly 15—dly wkly ~BO R- BOSTON, Fall and Winter Arrangement THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL §.S. CO. Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- land, every Monday and Thursday, at 8.00 a. m. Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd elass ; $9.50, lst class. For tickets and other information apply to G. A. SHARP, F. W. HALES, P, E. 1. Ry, P. E. I. Steam Nav. Co., or to your nearest Ticket Agent. Nov. 2, 1885—eod wky CAUTION. BACH PLUG OF THE MYRTLE NAVY s & B. IN BRONZE LETTERS. None Other Genuine. Oct, 20, patterns that will be found the very thing you want. DO.” Pas: ee EE 72 QUEEN STREET. Ch’town, Dec. 3, 1885.—eod wky 2mos Better Value Than Ever |! +0: LO THE WHOTESA'LE iTRADE. 20; UR new samples of BOOTS and SHOES for spring will soon be fout, and we will have the pleasure of calling on our customers in a sbort time. We hope to receive your liberal patronage as heretofore. DORSEY, GOFF & CO, Ch’town, Jan. 26, 1835. ——— eee ee Pe ne Printing and SBook-Binding. Bock-Binding, Frinting. We are better than ever prepared to turn out every descripiton of Book, Mercantiie —AND— Fancy Printing, as Specimens of our work shows, 24 the Pro-|. .. ae ae , vincial Exhibition and executed since, for |! 2° Highest Style of the Art, and at prices several of the leading business men of the | *2+ will Satisfy All. city, will abundantly testify. —_—— a Our Styles are Original and Tasty, Blank Book Manufacturing, and Call and see our Specimens, Paper Ruling a Specialty. Having lately imported a choice stock of Fine Leathers and other materials for Book- binding purposes, we are prepared with the best facilities to execute ali orders for ‘Binding Magazines, Music, Works of Art, Law Books, Ulustrated Papers, Picturesque Canada, &ec., &e¢., Banks, Merchants and cthers, can get Better Color Work = & —SPBCLALY. Imani a any cece house inthe Trae JOHN COOMBS, iS Queen Street, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E I Dec. 26 —2aw w2m. ; call and examine the largest stock of Household Furniture, &c., &c., ever shown in Charlottetown, and also discover that they _ SAVE MONEY and get Good, Reliable Home-made Goods of andisputed value, fine finish and good honest workmanship BY BUYING staple Furniture, Bedding, Mattresses, Fancy?Goods (for Xmas), Picture Frames and Moulding, Mantle-mirrors{and Mirror-plates, Bagatelle Boards, Handsome Oil Paintings, Framed Chromos, and One Thousand and One other articles, FROM THE P. BE, ISLAND FURNITURE WAREROOMS, MARK WRIGHT & CO. Ch’town, Dec. 3, °85—eod wky ee a ge mn - — dct nts eee houses and lands and equipage ; a business partnership of two stuffed up with the stories of romance and knight errantry, and unfaithfuluess and femiuine angelhood. DR TALMAGE’S bIscouRsé ON ‘‘ nUSBAND| The two after a while have roused up to AND WIFE IN HARMONY AND ovr oF/find that, instead of the paradise. they TUNE.” dreamed of, they have got nothing but a Van Amburgh’s menageric, filled with Last Sanday, fully six thousand persons|tigers and wild cats. Eighty thousand were preseut inside the Tabernacle, and as} divorees in Paris in one year preceded the TABERNACLE SERMON. “The Marriage Ring.” any vainly attempted to enter tha build- | worst revolution that France ever saw. It ing, representing the usual attendance when; Was only tho fitst course in that banquet ev. T, DeWitt Talmage, D. D., is at}of hell; and I tell you what you know as re A . E have on hand one case Cloths, one case Gents’ Furnishings, sent by mistake, SUITS AND OVERCOATS,| rinteresting, and included a perform- n@ on the organ of Thiele’s Concert-Satz .Nq 1, in C minor, by Professor Henry Eyre Browne. The congregation sang the hymn beginning :— “Joy to the world, the Lord is come ! Let earth receive her king~” Dr. Talmage founded his remarks on the subject : “‘ Husband and Wife in Harmony or Uat of Tune,” Amos, ch. 3, v 3; *‘ Can two walk together except they be agreed ?” He said :— No, Amos, they cannot. They will be tripping each other up, or pushing each other down Married life, under such cir- cumstances, will be the sounding of perpe- tual warwhoop. Ia this course of sermons on **The Marriage Ring,” I will to-day speak of the mutual duties of husband and wife, preparatory to discourses on their individual duties. A church withim a church, a republic within a republic, a world within a world, is speiled by four letters—Home! If things goright there, they go right every- where; if things go wrong there, they go wrong everywhere. The door-sill of the dwelling house is the foundation of Church . The musical exercises were exceoi-| Well as I do, that wrong notions on the subject of Christian marriage are the cause at this day of more moral outrage before God and man than any other cause. There are some things that I want to bring before you. I those of‘you who have had homes set up for a great many years; and, then, there are thoss here who have just established their home. They have only been in it a few months ora few years. Then, there themee!ves a home, and it is right that I should speak out upon these themes. My first counsel to you is, have Jesus in your new home, if it be a new home; and let Him who was a guest at Bethany be in your household; let the Divine blessing expectation. Those young people who begin with God, end with Heaven. on your right hand the engagement ring of the Divine affection. If one of you bea read a few verses in the evening time, and then kneel down and commend yourselves I want to tell yon that the destroying angel passes by without touching or entering the door-post sprinkled with biood of the ever- kuow there are. are those who will, after a while, set up for | drop upon your every hope and plan and) Have. Christian, let that one takea Bible and to Him who setteth the solitary in families. | and State. A man never gets higher than/| lasting covenant. Why is it that in some his own garret or lower than his own cel-| families they never get along well? I have lar. la other words, domestic life over-| watched such cases, and come to a conclu- arches and undergirds all other life. The/sion, In the first instance, nothing seemed highest house of Congress is the domestic | to go pleasantly, after a while came devas- circle; the rocking-chair in the nursery is| tation, dumestic disaster, or estrangement. higher than a throne. George Washington| Why? They started wrong. In the other commanded the forces of the United States, | case, although there were hardships and but Mary Washington commanded George. | trials, and som things that had to be ex- Chrysostom’s mother made his pen for him. ! plained, still things went on pleasant until If a man should start out and run seventy |the very last. Why! They started right. years in a straight line, he could not get} My advice to you in your home is, to out from under the shadow of his own’! exorcise to the very last possibility of your mantel-piece. I, therefore, talk to you this! nature the virute of forbearance. Prayers in morning about a matter of infinite and eter-| the household will not make up for every- nal moment when I speak of your home. | thing, Some of the best people in the As individuals we are fragments. God/ world are the hardest to get along with. mekes the race in part, and th n he grad- |There are people who stand up in prayer- ually puts us together. What I lack, y ou meetings and pray lixe augels, who at home make up; what you lack I make up; our’ are uncompromising and cranky. You may deficits and surplusses of character being! not have everything just as you want it, the cog-wheels in the great social mechan-| Sometimes it will be the duty of the hus- ism. One person has the patience ;| band and sometimes of the wife to yield;but another has the courage, another has the! both stand punctiliously on your rights, placidity, another has the enthusiasm; that/and you will have a Waterloo with no which is lacking in one is made up by! Blucher coming up at nightfall to decide another, or snade up by all. Buffaloes in the conflict. herds, grouse iu broods, quail in flocks, the; Never be ashamed to apologizs when you human race in circles. God has most/ haeydone wrong in domestic affairs. Let besatifully arranged this. It is in this | that bea law of your household. The best way that he balances society, this conserva- thing I ever heard of my grandfather, tive and that radical keeping thingseven.’whom I never saw, was this: that Every ship must have its mast, cutwater, once having unrighteously rebuked one of iatrail, ballast. Thank God, then, for) his children, he himself having lost his Princeton and Andover, for the opposites. patience, and, perhaps, having been misin- Ihave no more right to blame a wan for) formed of the child’s doings, found out his being different from me than a driving: | mistake, and in the evening of the same wheei has aright to blame the iron shaft day gathered all his family together, and that holds it to the centre. John Wesley ,gaiq: « Now, I have one éxplanation to balances - Calvin’s Institutes. A cold) make, and one thing to say. Thomas, this thinker gives to Scotland the strong bones morning I rebuked you very unfairly. I of theology; Dr. Guthrie clothes them! gm very sorry for it. Irebaked you in the with a throbbing heart aad warm flesh. | presence of the whole family, and now I The difficulty is that we are not satisiied |g.) your forgiveness in their presence.” It with just the work that God has given us must have taken somg.courage to do that. to do. The water-wheel wants to come|]¢ was right, was it not? Never be iuside the mill and grind the grist, and | ashamed to apologize for domestic inaccu- the hopper wants to go outand dabble in racy. Find out tho points ; what are the the water, Our usefulness and the welfare | weak points, if I may call them so, of your of society depend upon our staying in Just! e5mpanion, and then stand aloof from them. the place that God has put us, or intended J) not carry the fire of your temper too we should oecupy. (near the gunpowder. If the wife be easily For more compactness, and that we may fretted by disorder in the household, let be more useful, we are gathered in still/the husband be careful whore he throws smaller circles in the home group. And his slippers. If the husban? come home there you have the same varieties agai, from the store with his patience all ex- brothers, sisters, husband, and wife; all! hausted, do not let the wife unnecessarily different in temperaments and tastes. It is oyoss his temper; but both stavud up for fortunate that it should be so, If the hus-) your rights, and I will promise the everlast- band be all impulse, the wife must be all) jing sound of the warwhoop. Your life will prudence. If one sister be sanguine in her pe spent in making up, and marriage will temperament, the other must be lympathic.'}, to you an unmitigated curse. Cowper Mary and Martha are necessities. There gai ; will be no dinner for Christ if pr be a Martha; there will be no audience for) re . on | Will find occasion to forbear ; . Jesus if there be no Mary. The home or- | And trulethiag every day thet live, ganization is most beautifully constructed. | 7 alte andl eatin aie Eden has gone; the bowers ‘are all broken | P y eee 6 down; the animals that Adam stroked with I advise, also, that you make your chief his hand that morning when they came to, pleasure circle around about that home. It get their mames have since shot forth tusk is unfortunate when it is otherwise. If the and sting, and growled panther at panther, | husband spend the most of his nights away and mid-air iron beaks plunge till with from home, of choice, not of necessity, he clotted wing and eyeless sockets the twain is not the head of the household; he is come whirling down from under the sun in only the cashier. If the wife throw the blood and fire. Eden has gone, but there cares of the household in the servant’s lap, is just one little fragment left. It floated and then spend five nights of the week at ‘*The kindest and the happiest pair down on the river Hiddckel out of Paradise. | Itis the marriage institution. It does not, | at opera or theatre, she may clothe her children with satins and laces and ribbons as at the beginning, take away from man a that would confound a French milliner, but rib. Now it is an addition of ribs. | they are orphans. Oh, it is sad when a child This institution of marriage has been de-| has no one to say its prayers to because famed in our day, and influences are, mother has gone off to the evening enter- abroad trying to turn this earth into a tainment. In India they bring children Turkish harem or a great Salt Lake City.'and throw them to the crocodiles, and it While the pulpits have been comparatively seems very cruel; but the jaws of New York silent, novels—their cheapness only eqjual-|and Brooklyn dissipation are swallowing ed by their nastiness—are trying to edu- down more little children to-day than all cate, have taken upon themselves to the monsters that ever crawled upon the educate, tliis nation in regard to holy mar- banks of the Ganges. riage, which makes or breaks for time and; I have seen the sorrow of a godless eternity. Oh, this is not a mere question, mother on the death ot a child she has of residence or wardrobe! It is a question | neglected. It was not so much grief that charged with gigantic joy or sorrow, with she felt from the fact that she hel heaven or hell, Alas for this new dispen- neglected it. She said: “If 1 had only sation of George Sand’s! Alas for the watched over and cared for the child, I mingling of the nightshades with the mar-| know God would not have taken it.” The riage garlands! Alas for the venom of tears came not: it was a dry, blistering adders spit into the tankards! Alas for | tempest—a scorching simoon of the desert. the white frosts of eternal death that kill When she wrung her hands, it seemed as the orange blossoms! The . Gospel of if she would wring her fingers from their Jesus Christ is to assert what is right and sockets; when she seized her hair, it to assert what is wrong. Attempt has been seemed as if she had, in wild terror, grasped made to take the marriage institution,’ a coiling serpent with her right hand. No which was intended for the happiness and tears! Comrades of the little one came in SINGLE Corres Two CENTS. VOL. 18—-NO. 64, of the child, the shower broke. No tears for her. God gives tears as the summer rain to the parched sou! ; but in all the universe the driest and hottest, the most scorching and consuming thing is a moth- er’s heart if she has neglected her child, when once it is dead. God may forgive her, but she wiil never forgive herself. The memory will sink the eyes deeper into the sockets, and pinch the face, and whiten the hair, and eat up the heart with vultures that will not be satisfied, forever plunging deeper their iron beak. Oh, you wanderers from your home, go back to your duty ! The brightest flowers iu all the earth are those which grow in the garden of a Chris- tian household, clambering over the porch of a Christian home. I advise you also to cultivate sympathy of oceupation. Sir James Mackintosh, one of the the most eminent and elegant men thet ever lived, while standing at the very height of his eminence, said to a great company of scholars, ‘‘My wife mede me.” The wife ought to be the advising partner in every firm. She ought to be interested in all the losses and gains of shop and+ store. She ought to have a right-—she has ‘a right—to know everything. [f a man goes into a business transaction that he dare not tell his wife of, you may depend that he is on the way either to bankreptecy or moral ruin. There may be some things which he does not wish to trouble his wite with; but if he dare not tell her, he is on the road to discomfitere. On the other hand, the husband ought to be sympathe- 'tie with the wife's occupation. It is no ‘easy thing to keep house. Many a woman ‘that could have endured martyrdom as well as Margaret,the Scotch girl,has actually been |worn out by house management. Thore }are a thousand martyrs of the kitchen. It is very annoying, after the vexations of the day around the stove or the table, or in the |nursery or parlor, to have your husband say, ‘You know nothing about troubles, | you ought to be in the store half an hour.” | Sympathy of occupation! Ifthe husband's | work cover him with ihe soot of the furnace | or the odors of leather or soap factories, let ‘not the wife be easily disgusted at the be- ‘grimed hands er unsavory aroma. Your | gains are ono, syour interests are one, your | losses are one; lay hold of the work of life ‘with both hands. Four hands to fight the | battles; four eyes to watch for the danger; , four shoulders on which to carry the trials. | 1t is a very sad thing when the painter has ,a wife who does not like pictures. It is a very sad thing for a pianist when she has a husband who does not like music, It isa | very sad thing when a wile is not suited unless her husband has what is called a ‘genteel business.’, Sofar as 1 understand a ‘* genteel business,’’ it is something to which a man goes at ten o’clock in the morning, and from which he comes home at two or three o’clock in the afternoon, and gets a large amount of money for doing nothing. That is, I believe, a **gen- teel business’ ; and there has been many a wife who has made the mistake of not being satisfied until the husbaad has given up the tanning of the hides, or the turning of the bannisters, or the building of the walls, and put himself in circles where he has nothing to do but smoke cigars and drink wine, and get himself into habits that upset him, going down in the maelstrom, taking his wife and children with him, There are a good many trains ronning from earth to destruction. They start all the hours of the day, and all the hours of the night. There are the freight trains ; they 'go very slowly and very heavily ; and there are the accommodation trains going on toward destruction, and they stop very often, and let a man get out when he wants to. But genteel idleness is aa. express train: Satan is the stoker, and Death is the engineer ; and though one may come out in front of it, and swing tho red flag of “danger,” or the lantern of God's Word, it makes just one shot into perdition, com- ing down the embankmont with a shout and a wail and «a shriek—crash, crash ! There are two classes of people eure of destruction : first, those who haye nothing to do ; secondly, those who have something to do, but are too lazy or too proud to do it. ; I have one more word of advice to give to those who would havea happy home, and that is, let love preside init. When your behavior in the domestic circle be- comes a mere matter of calculation ; when the caress you give is merely the result of deliberate study of the position you occupy, happiness lies stark dead on the hearth- stone. When the husband’s position as head of the household is maintained by loudness of voice, by strength of arm, by fire of temper, the republic of domestic bliss has become a despotism that neither God nor man will abide, Oh, ye who promised to love each other at the altar, how dare you commit perjury? Let no shadow of suspicion come on your aftec- tion. It is easier to kill that flower than it is to make it live again. The blast from hell that puts out that light, leaves you in the blackness of darkness forever. Here are a man and wife; they agree in nothing else, but they agree they will have ahome. They will have a splendid house, they will have ahome. Architects make the plan, and the mechanics execute it; the house to cost one hundred thousand dollars. It is done. The carpets are spread ; lights are hoisted; curtains are hung; cards of in- vitation sent out, The horses in gold. plated harness prance at the gate; guests come in and take their places; the flute sounds; the dancers go up and down; and with one grand whirl the wealth and the fashion and the mirth of the great town wheel amidst the pictured walls. But this is happiness. Float it on the smoking ‘viands, sound it in the music, whirl it in the dance, cast it on the show of sculpture, sound it up the brilliant stairway, flash it to chandeliers ! Happiness, indeed! Let us | build on the parlor floors a throne to happiness! Let all the guests, when come in, bring their flowers and pearls and diamonds, and throw them on this pyramid, and let it be athrone, and then let happi- levati f the race make it a mere and wept over the coffin ; neighbors came ness the queen, mount the throne, and we Saami saiiaiien — exchange of in, and the moment they saw the still face will stand around, and, all chalices lifted,