Feams rs VEW \ . iwi yY ms eer... - j Se he Ne | eet il \ pT . ‘tp wa This is trae Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free,’’—Evriripgs. ED tee 7 — — Prt A= ip Oth na NE CT a a agree = CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1885, SINGLE Corres Two Crnrs. VOL. 16.---NO. 149. ciliata ~ : . : Visage re Che Dain Examiner GAYVILLE HOUSE, rod every evening, by VW I PHS ‘ tive minutes walk of St Peters ne Examiner Publishing Go. ,, Pera2mes* 201 Tramient Borders com heom t Water and | rs ae "t harlottetown, | JORN VM WAIN " Ra rion JOr ne Cex 2 Oe: i ' i t+ { e GC ee Mom: *l 25 as HIGGINS, ine Month U0 50 non a — : st moderate rates. Al ‘ rion as Wh, Cont y nade for monthly, |. . i . or yearly advertive- EC are] partely, hail soocly oF yearly adverts Commission Merchant, iy ’ —= a . AND ALMANAC FOR MAY, 1885. MOON S CHANUES, GENERAL AGENT. Last Quarter 7 ay, 4h. 3lm., a. m. Consignments respectfally solicited. Vr mpt New Moon i4ch d lih, 5m,, a, m. a . ay. Wirst Qaarter, 2ist day, Ih. 33m., a. m, Full Moo 28th day, 4h. 18m., p. m. ill . Sun |Moon/High ! Days M mes Oe we rises sets | rises ater len'h gal : mh maft’'n morn h m i Friday 6 507 9 30 IL 5414 12 Jsaturuay +? tI » Wiatt ZY IS 3 Sunday s eel Gi 1 5| 1s {| Moaday 4; 73! 62 2 43) 20 5 Tuesday 45 Ss morn! 2 28 "3 § Wedaesday +4 9, U 23! 3 La) 25 7iThursday Se ee 23 al Pri F 4h} 123127;590 3g! Taeelies 39 13.266) 638) 34 j0/Seuday 33, 14; 2 2' 7 43) 36 ti, dies bay 37 '0) 2 5+ ° t ou 2 fue LAV jo i7 a 25, 9 21 4\ 13, Wednesday 24 18 4 0/10 5 +i t4! Vhuraday 33; 19 4 49°10 47 47 15, Friday 32 19 5 w9 11 Bi} 4 16 Saturday 3l: 21} 6 24}morn;, 50 [7 Suuday 30 2! 7 271 0 1S 5° is Monday ,; 2 24 «8 36) i i) 54 19' Tuesday + 23) 2% 946 2 SU 47 090 Wedoesday {| 26, 2610 57' 244 59) 2 Toursday | 25, aft 7,3 4915 0 22\F riday |} 2) wli4b 4 3 23|>aturday , 2, 2 2 20; 6 21| 5) 24 Suaday os 21.3 &. 71.47 7 25 Monday 22} 31; 4 27) 8 21 9 25 Tuesday 21; 32 529159 4 il 27| Wedaesday 20 33 6 272 9 44) 130 23) Tharsday 20° 24: 7 26:10 23) 3815 99! Privay i925, & 16/10 57! 16} 30 Saturday is} 36 9 SILL 33, 18] aijSaaday 4 i187 37, 9 40\aft 8/15 19) | ts RAILWAY ti FABLE. (Charlott etown Tne. } | | } ' i | i } i : GOING WEST. be Mens Bete! go eee $02 302 Repelty Junotivu............2+%- 825 325) SRR OT EMG «oi 0+ dewcewecel 7 S 17 | SE PT ee 9 22.- 432 i Sd Bs. oo yo boo be iv1i0 509 PE ee tv S519! ee cece te ccuuueeel. 1035 & 24! as vucacescacegaesl 1057) 5457 arrive.. illd 6233 Semmerside, ¢ P. M. depart... 1 47 Miseouche... : (bbe te 2 09 ER Sa ae | 2 37 Port Hull... > bab o Woden ofall Es. cnc uce du'eu ob deel 442 Alberton . a AE 5 47 re 6 47 PROM WEST, A. M, Se owe ccs wisieasPaaaaa a ey ae 7 47 () Leary. ..9 02 Bort Hil. beret. Cees id 22 ee te eee ll 07 EERE | Gielte &i KPI Maw 18 Ga et. Semamersile, Pp. M. ; oes 202 732 Ramaington...........-...0..- 0042 37 8 07 re Nd cea ntecde eoscm ae 2S Dh, deve cacisce c¥ehoo tua ae itis ine ss ween 402 932 North oe 417 947 Rayalty Junction... .... cee, 1,509 1039 Vharlottetown Sneaks coin eases 5 32 1102 GcING BAST. r. M I. nce, whee eunceecninn 317 tm OGE .., . «- o's o ndte Sealanenee SES Sn ces benbercss dese tterwan 417 Mount Stewart, } A0UIVE+-- +e eee ee eees 452 ‘ : : depar Gere cocenerees 4 57 Th ani neo. > o.c.adaune o@iiatil 617 le RN is Bg AE io 6 42 oe Tis s0c'cede-nniun dati meee 457 Mt nc cc enw ine alpmeces ok ie 5 37 iia RAR EE 6 08 ae 6 57 Saas sno lalaa 7 42 iit te aia a Souris... 6 52 SI en. «+ <sipes ohinendehaann . Ns vss0as deena vcedenaaaae 8 26 ia sn wy 5 duudicnen ee 8 57 Mount ERS: is dick ae 9 37 IN 0 -- ov'u ooo ana eect SRE 7 47 SIDDL .s &ti oc asec cdeoanc ne 812 Mount Stowart, ) A°TIVE..-0---ceceeees 9 32 Bedford . denaabhhteidlsc: le Inacticon................. 2064 vharlottetown neue + co eewusiiees dc uae 1117 WE SELL Potatoes, Spiling, Bark, K. R. Ties, Lumber, Laths, Canned Lobsters, Mae- kerel, Berries, Eggs, Fish Ete. Beat Prices for all Shipments, Write fully for Quotations, HATHEWAY & O0., ' . . General C Cuimission Merchants, %2 Central Whart, Roston. yc Hleatbers of Board of Trade Corn and Schauies Exchange. ATT ; NOTARiRS THE VIOLIN. ! Returns ( snatranteed. Partionlar atte: ot Lieusehod P iPuicere, Real lis‘ ate, Wwe _Uountry Sates f NStox k, ( veniils, ac mpi 5 Ch’town, April f0, 18S% ion gives to Auctien Sales (Crops, arming 9 it attended to. eod&whly BARRISTERS & ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Notaries Public, &e. 3 » Up ste Jewelry Store Uthce iu Cameron’s bl ira ; entrance ’ or to ISSS next cd sylor’ ‘ , vinrel OR Du Aili! it ty f MAINTE ET iti & MAGA MEDD, ORNEYS - AT-LAW Selicitors in Chancery, PUMLAC, A&c. .¢ 6 OF FICES— O’'Halloran’s Building, Great Feo'ge ; st. Obarlottetos a fe eer OM | W,W.ScLivan,Q ©. | Crrester B. Macnrice! 1885. » £490 January 16 ene ee ia uieheod, Morson & MeQuarrie, BARRISTERS AND ATTORNEYS- AT-LAW. Uffice in Brown's Block, Qnaen Square (OP STAgRe Ob'town, Bet §2, IRRS } j Q o N R, VINNICOMBE is new propared te take a liumitcod number of pupils for Violin lostruction by “*Danclas” ounservatory method, which is se complete that each pupil is enabled to form a part of one harmonized body, thereby making the tuition a pleasure instead of the old class drudgery. Pupila preferred from 12 to 16 years of age, For terme epply at hie " ‘oy Apnct _i sae< a} 77, aire STEAMER “HEATHER BELLE,” SUMMER ARRANCEMENT. | N and after Touesday, May 5th, the new steamer ‘‘Heather Belle,” Hugh Mc- Leap, master, will run as follows : Every Tuesday morning, at 4 o'clock, will icave Charlottetown for Orwell Brush Wharf, leaving Orwell Brush Wharf at 7 a m. for Charlottetown, calling at China Point and Halliday’s Wharves ; leaving Charlottetown at 3p. m. for Halliday’s, China Point and Brush Wharves, where she will remain over night. Wednesday will leave Brush Wharf for Char: lottetown at 7 a. m., calling at China Point and Halliday’s Wharves ; leaving Charlotietown at 3 p.m. to return, re- maining at Brush Wharf over night. Thursday will leave Brush Wharf for Char- lottetown at 7 a. m, calling at “hina Point and Halliday’s Wharves ; leaving Cherlottetown at 3 p. m. to return ; leav- ing Brash Wharf about 6 p. m, for Char- lottetowr. Friday, will leave Charlottetown for Crapaud at 4 a. m.; leaving Crapaud at 7 a. m for Charlottetown, leaying Charlottetown. at 3 p. m. for Crapaud, remaining over night Saturday, will leave Crapaud at 7 a. m. for Charlottetown ; leaving Ubarlottetown at 130 p. m for Crapaud, and returning to Charlottetown from Crapand same day, FARES : Cabin, to and from Orwell auc Wharves, 30 cents ; deck, 20 cents Cabin, to and from Crepand, 40 cents; deck, 30 cents. Excursion Return Tickets will be issued from Charlottetowa te Orwell every Thars- day Evenicg at one first-class fare. Also, Excursion Return Tickets will be issued every Saturday to Crapaud at one tirst-class fare. JOHN HUGRES, Agent. Ch'town, P. E. 1, May 5, 1885. 3m law pat law pres her 3m CHEESE, CHEESE, 100 Boxes--WHOLESALE & RETALL, WARBURTON & CONROY, [USE DIAM Convenience and Beonomy vs. Inconvenience and Expense Peep te Bs # ery — represeris the ven and end-lning drawn This (ut ‘ Star’ Cecking Stove, with out, as in the act of eiean ng, or replacing a new lin- ng. a ALL COMPE 70 i— = 1S STILL AHEAD OF TITORS. YHIS Patent Oven is put on all my Elevated Oven Cooking Stoves, such as the Star | Niagara, Waterloo, &c. Is "“asily Cleaned, by simply drawing the end and lining from the oven, brushing out the root and replacing them again—thoroughly cleaning or | inserting a new lining in five minutes time, | The thousands using this Oven admit it to be worth at least Ten Dollars more than Stoves with the ordinary oven, Atthe same time please keep in view the fict that it costs the trade or retail purchsser no more than the same stove without this valuable im provement, When buying, ask for PFAWCETT'S PATENT TELESCOPIC OVEN. If your dealer bas none on hand, have him send, or send your order direct to the Sackville Foundry, No other Foundry in the lominion of Canada is able to offer this undonbted advantage, as | am the Inventor, Sole Manufacturer and Patentee. Tam adling several New and Handsome Patterns this season which, with my former _ variety of one handred different slyles and sizes of Cooking, Parlor, Otfice and Hall | Stoves. | best assortment made in the Marilime Provinces. gay Customers will find my Terms Liberal and, regarding prices, I will not be under- ' sold CHARLES FAWCETY. SACKVILLE FOUNDRY, SACKVILLE, N. B, UND POTASH. OS Ge UNTIL ARRIVA I OFFER THE FOLLOWING GOODS AT A DISCOUNT OF 15 TO 25 PER CENT. BELOW OUR FORMER PRICES: April 25th, 1885—6mos 65 Doz. FELT HATS, ° 76 Doz White and Colored SHIRTS, $1,700 worth of Ready-made CLOTHING, superior quality (our own make), 80 pieces WORSTED, 172 pieces TWEED, which I offer to make to order, or sell by the yard, at prices that no one can afford to underseli. a | have secured the services of ' Wr. James McLeod, Formerly of the firm of C. EK. ROBERTSON,. who is so tavor- ably known for many years 8 a Master Cutter, Your Patronage is Respectfally Solicited. D. A. BRUCE MERCHANT TAILOR, 72 Queen Street. Ch'town, April 16, 1885—5mos eod&wkly ROYAL CANADIAN INSURANCE GO. YL Fb:. o CAPITAL, er $2,000,000 eo -—— HEAD OFFICE—Montreai. HALIFAX BRANCH--J. Scott Miteheli, Agent. AGENT FOR PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND: F HH. ARNAUD, Chitown, Nov. 19, 1894. BEER & GOFF S, Te aM ke ies am ES a a i a Ch'town, Jan, teas PATENT TELESCOPIC OVEN Aiso—Farmers’ Boilers. Hollow-ware, Pioughs, &c., comprises the largest and L OF NEW COODS Risks Taken on Most Favorable Terms. MERCHANTS BANK OF HALIFAX & Uo. ADAM BEDE. CHAPTER L. (Continued,) Adam remembered now that Seth had come heme much depressed on Sunday evening, a circumstance which bad been very unusual with him of late, for the happiress he had in seeing Dinah every week seemed long to have outweighed the pain of knowing she would never marry him ‘This evening he had his habitual air of dreamy benignant cententment, until he came quite close to Dinah, ard saw the traces of tears on her delicate eyélids and eyelashes, He gave one rapid glance at his brother; but Adam was evidently quite outside the current of emotion that had shaken Dinah; he wore his every-day look of unexpeciant calm. Seth tried not to let Dinah see that he had noticed her face, | and only sai3, ‘Vm thankful you’re come Dinab, for inother’s been hungering after the sight of ‘you all day. She began to talk of you the first thing in the morning.’ When they entered the cottage, Lisbeth was seated in ber arm-chair, too tired with setting out the evening meal, a task she always performed a long time beforehand, to go and meet them at the door as usual when she heard the approach- ing footsteps ‘Coom, child, thee’t coom at last,’ she said, when Dinah went toward her. ‘What dost thou mane by lavin’ me a week, an’ ne’er comnin’ a-nigh me!’ ‘Dear friend,’ said Dinah, taking her hand, ‘you’re not well. sooner, I’d have come.’ ‘An’ how’s thee t’ know if thee dosna come !/’ Th’ lads o’ny know what I \'em; as long as ye can stir hand and foot the ‘men think ye’re hearty. But I'm none so | bad, ony a bit of cold sets me achin.’ An’ ‘th’ lads tease me so t’ ha’ sombody wi’ me (t’dothe wok—they make me ache wuss | wi’ talkin’. If thee’dst come and stay wi’ |me, they’d let me alone. The Poysers canna want thee so bad as Ido. But take , thy bonnet off, an’ let me look at thee.’ | Dinah was moving away, but Lisbeth held her fast. while she was taking off her bonnet, and look at her face, as one looks into a newly-gathered snow-drop, to renew the old impressions of purity and great- ness, ‘What’s the matter wi’ Lisbeth in astonishment; a-crying.’ It’s only a grief that'll pass away,’ said ‘Dinah, who did not wish jrst now to call \forth Lisbeth’s remonstrances by disclosing ,her intention to leave Hayslope. ‘You thee?’ said ‘thee’st been ishall know about it shortly—weil talk of it te-night, I shall stay with you to-night.’ Lisbeth was pacified by this prospect ; and she had the whole evening to talk with Dinah alone ; for there was a new room in the cottage, you remember, built nearly two years ago, in the expectation of a new If l’d known it teil | LEYTERS TO THE EDITOR, > Sirn,—Mr. Tweedy, in Tue Examine: of Monday last, had a letter in answer to mine of the 5th inst., the chief object of which was certainly to mistify the uninitiated, and keep them, if possible, ignorant of the fact that a horse foaled before 1881 can be registered iu the Shire Horse Stud Bo if either his sire or his dam's sire a registered horse. For information on this matter I would refer hit to vol. 4, page 24 Flanders Majer (2784), breeder Flanders Shrewsbury, sire Farmer's Glory (not regis- tered and without pedigree), dam’s sire Sampson (1955) =It will be plainly seen by this that the only «qualification Flanders Major has to entry is that his dam is by a registered horse. 1 think it will take all the legal acumen Mr. Tweedy possesees to wriggle out of this. Mr. Tweedy sys in his first letter that Oak’s Heart is a pure Shire, and not a mongrel. I will direct Mr. Tweedy’s attention in the ist volume (of the Shire Stud Book, page 11. to the \following: ‘‘ The Shire horse of the pre- ‘sent day undoubted'y and unfortunately ‘is one of mixed and impure breed ; there /exist very few, if any, whose genealogy on both dam's and sire’s side can be traced for even four generations.’ This quotation is taken from avery able essay, written by Professor Reynolds, M. R. C. V. 8, on the ‘* History of the English Cart Horse,” at the solicitation of the Shire Horse Com- mittee in 1880, for insertion in the Ist vel. of the Shire Stud Book, which Mr Tweedy |pins his faith to. Breeders will bear in mind that it takes seven crosses on the dam’s side, that is: it must be shown that she, her dam, and five grand dams must be } a, by 18 { | \from pure-bred Shire stallions, before she i (the mare) can be called pure-bred. Now, I will defy Mr. Tweedy to show, throvgh- out the six volumes of the Shire Sind Books, in which Oak’s Heart is entered, that his dam: (Oak’s Heart’s) has two crosses of pure Shire blood. Mr. Tweedy says in his last letter that I try to make out that a cross between the Clydes and Shires are superior to either of those breeds. 1 will give an authority for thinking so in no less @ person than Mr. W. R. Trotter, who, in writing to the Live Stock Journal, of Lon- don, March 27th of the present year, page 307, says: ‘I have bestowed a good deal of thought and atiention to the breeding of Cart Horses, and can see the defects in both the Shires and Clydesdales, which in my opinion can be best corrected by their amalgemation. 1 do sincerely trust that the day is far distant when the Royal Society wili discontinue a system of breed. ing that has produced the mest perfect agricultural and commercial horse the nine. teenth century has seen.” This same Mr, Trotter received from the Shire Horse Society, in 1880, twenty guineas offered by that Society for the best essay on tho breeding, rearing, feeding and yen- eral management of Uart Horses. ‘his essay is also to be found ina the Ist Vol. of the Stud book in which Mr. ‘inmate ; and here Adam always sat when he had writing to do, or plans to make. | Seth sat there too this evening, for he | knew his mother would like to have Dinah , ali to hereeif. There were two pretty pictures on the two sides of the wall in the cottage. On ‘one side there was the broad-shonldered, i large-featured, hardy old woman, in her blue jacket and buff kerchief, with her dim- eyed anxious looks turned continually on the lily face and the slight form in the black dress that were either moving lightly about in helpful activity, or seated close by the old woman’s arm-chair, holding her withered hand, with eyes lifted toward her io speak a lavguage which Lisbeth under- stocd far better than the Bible or the hymn- book. She would scarcely listen to reading at all to-night. ‘Nay, way, shut the book,’ she said. We mun talk. J want t know what thee wast crying about. Hast got troubles.o’ thy own, like other folks! On the other side of tha wall there was the two brother, so like each other in the midst of their unlikeness; Adam, with knit brows and shaggy hair, and dark vigorous color, absorbed in his ‘figuring; Seth, with large rngged features, the close copy of his 'brother’s, but with thin, wavy brown hair ‘and blue dreamy eyes, as ofter, as not look- | ing vaguely ont of the window instead of at his book, although it was« newly bought book— Wesley's abridgement of Madame Guyon’s Life which was full of wonder and interest ior him, Seth had said to Adam ‘Can I help thee with any thing in here to- night! I don’t want to make a noise in the shop.’ ‘No, lad,’ Adam answered. ‘There’s nothing but what I must do myself. Thee’st got thy new beck to read,’ And often, when Seth was quite uncenseious, Adam, 28 he _ paused after drawing a line with his ruler, locked at his brother with a kind smile dawning in his eycs. He knew ‘th’ lad liked to sit full o’ thoughts he could give no account of ; they’d never come t’ any thing, but they made him happy; and in the last year or so, Adam had been getting more and more indulgent to Seth. It was part of that growing tenderness which came from the sorrew at work within him. For Adam, though you see hiv quite master of himself, working hard and delighting in his wo:k afer his inborn inalienable nature, had not outlived his sorrow—had not felt it slip from him as a temporary burden, and leave him the same man again. Do any of us ! God forbid. would bea poor result of all our anguish and our wrestling, if we won nothing but our old selves at the end of it—if we could return to the same blind loves, the same self-confident blame, the same light thoughts of human suffering, the same frivolous goesip over blighted human lives, the same feeble senss of that Unknown toward which we have sent forth irrepres- sibie cries in our loneliness. It Tweedy has his Shire horse registered. Professor Reynold’s and Mr. Trotter are both Euglishmen (of the highest authority) living in England, and the only way that 1 can account for them holding other views than Mr. Tweedy’s is that men of great minds sometimes differ. Will Mr. Tweedy please inform us how it is that in the classification of horses for the Royal Society’s Show to be held this summer at Preston, that there are separate classes for Suffolk Punch horse», and Clydesdales in- cluding the select, but no separate classes allotted to horses entered in the Shire Stud Book! They have to compete with agri- cultural horses not qualified to compete in the section for pure breds. I shall explain (anticipating that it is not an agreeable question to be answered by Mr. Tweedy.) lt is because the Commiesioners of the Royal Society know right well that it is much more to the interest of the country that improvement of the breeds should take precedence above breeding for imaginary purity. 1 have not in this or in my former letter said a word derogatory to the good specimens of either the so called pure bred Shires or Clydesdales, which are now s0 ex- ceedingly hard to find in either England or Scotland, particularly the former, which has allowed for the last 50 years an ad- mixture of so much extrinsic blood. But from what 1 have seen and the opinions f have read of the most eminent breeders and horse fanciers in both England and Scot- land, | am of the opimiou that when the Shire and Clydesdale are judiciously selected and mated that the offspring is the finest horse that has been produced for draft purposes. Mr. Tweedy is very desirous to know if Barrister could be entered in either the Shire or Old Clydesdale Stud Books. A place for hia in neither of those books has been asked for. His owners wished him to be in more select company, which is found in the select Clydesdale Stud Book of Scotland in which no horse can be registered, though his pedigree be so long as to be lost in the mists of the past, unless he bas individual merits. Mr. Tweedy is also desirous of knowing how much of Barrister I own. I will just remark I am very sorry [ do not own tae whole of him, and that is more than I can say of some other horses. In conclusion | advise Mr. Tweedy when he again makes an attack through the press, to select a subject he is much better posted on, as evidently he is nota horse- man either by nature or education. fHow- ever, from the instructions | have giver him in this and my former communication, I think he wil] conclude that it is a very different thing to make remarks about this and that man’s horse to country men around stable doors, from appearing im print over his own signature. Yours very truly, C. C, GARDINER. (Te be continued. Wales, twelve cases rabhers at Dorsey, Goff, Reseers,—J ust arrived per str, Friucess of} Horsford’s Acid Phosphate. IN NERVOUS DISEASES. ‘ Dr, Henry, New York, says: ‘In nervous Apri 24 diseases, I know of no preparation to equal it.