« isaved ¢ even by The Daily Examiner saminer Publishing Qo. 3, 9 30.11 54)14 2 nets, Shapes | ' , | & t ANT IET © us : DoLLARS A YRA . vids dete ndidiedl “whew Pree Niah wiik havade to ad jake oe Wabi a Speak oe ee SINGLE Copies Two Crnts, NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1885, VOL. 17.—-NO. 7. dpring Bpenine! New fscds! Pex om and United Spring and Summer Novelties in Stanls than ver. chasing. Ch’town, May 9, 1885. ictmes Are now showing Mr. Sterns’ recent purchases in Great Britain of and Faney DRY GOODS, States tt ncn, Millinery Department well stocked with newest Hats Bon- , Feathers, Fiowers and all the new millinery material. ; English and French Millinery, Stock of general Dry Goods very complete and prices Lower iuvery buyer should inspect our stock before pur- PERKINS & STERNS., ov bs m their office er of Water and creat (ret Streets, a irlottetown, Pria Ldward Island R Airs rF RoPTy y six Mouths, ' #2 50 2 _— Three , s ‘ 69 Month . U 30 or Advertising nost moderate rates, | Cc tracts may be made for monthly, arierly, half-yoarty or yearly advertise. nents, on applicatior = . ALMANAC FOR MAY, i885. MOON S CHANGES, reat Quarter 7th day, 4h. 3lm., a m a Moon }4th day, lh, 5m,, a. m, eat garter, 2ist day, lh. 33m., a, m, pil Moon, 28th day, 4h. 18m., p. m. | — i Sun 'Moon/High ! Days! vos FP WEEK ices i sets | rises ;water | len’h, Ne ~h mh m aft’n morn h m | 1 Friday 6 50 7 9) igturday 40 4) tv =U alt 29) 1S @'Sandsy : il 6! 1 Bl ls 4 Monday +. 7 1' 52, 1 43 2 © Tnesday 45 S morn; 2 28) 93 | gWelnesday | 44) 9/023) 317] 25} 7 Thursday 43, lO} 1 P41 B al Friday at. a2 i 27} 530! 31 9 Saturday JY 13 i oe 6 33) 34 1G Sunday | 33) 14) 2 90'7 43 36 | i! Moacay | 37 16 | 2 & 8 45} 39 12 fweaday | 30] 17; 3 25) 9 21 4i | 13 Wednesday | a4 18 4 0} 10 5 44 4 Thursday 33) 19 4491047) 47 Friday | 32 19. 8 2911 31] 49] 1§ Saturday 31: 21] 6 24|morn 50 | [7 Sunday | @ 7 o7| 0 15 52 | 13 Monday 1, 2 24 8 36; 1 } 55 | Tuesday | 23 25 946/151! 57 my Wednesday | 26, 2610 57' 244) 59| syToureday | 25, 2% aft 7) 34915 0| 22| Friday } 2) 2115 4 3 gleturday | 23 30 220/621) 5] 24 Saaday 22) 3t 3 25 3 27) 7 | 35 Monday 22) 31427; S82il 9 26 Tuesday 2; 32.5209 4 It) q7\Wednesday | 20 33] 6 22, 944) 13) 95(Tharad ay 20! 34, 7 24/10 23] 15 | 29' Frisay 19 35 8 16)10 57! = 16} 30 Saturday Is 36 9 Stil 33 18 31 |Suaday i4 18 7 37| 9 46jaft 8/15 NOTES, Ic this month the mornings increase minutes; the afternoons 43 minutes. 42/ (Charlottetown Time. ) fH8 RAILWAY Tilt TADLE. gO G WEsT. a Bie Charlottetowr.......... ee ee Royalty Junction..............+. $26 225 North Wiltshire. . was 407 , . ids ccccee ovsden 932 432 I, on ko ne eee ee 1010 5609 8 Ee 1019 519 CET "n,n dw ke 0 v’o uele 1035 534 Kensington ceaceeéeeeee bees oun 10 57 5 57 PS Sammerside, P. M. eet os oc cte volt 1 47 Chi «ccene css eee euenes 2 09 Wellington .. -skeere acai ne i bubanmd 6a ul 3 22 LGR Geiscceccce teeueebe 442 i eget De eidlad< so be eds Cwekil 5 47 | EE ee ee rhom WEsT,. A. M, Sh is 6646 cccccece sess 6 47 ER . . ca ccccoteeds 747 O'Leary Reaees secte ‘a allies «| Eas’, oc ccchcckesud 10 22 Re 11 07 Miscouche........ selbbbdieties 1134 gterive ceceastenu 1157 a. M,. Summerside, P. M. { Bepatte s deevcebwe 202 732 quntagien ll tnecse asap ube us 2 37 1 Es occ ccocecnece 0 ST a ie ian: ae ehh occeveceosi: ae go 402 932 > ae Royalty Junction.............+.. 509 1039 ET 1... oe cocnwusre 632 1102 SING EAST, P. M Rosalty Janction............ ++: cine ee —_——..,..... oe ca ae 4 17 | Mount Stewart AFTIVE, se seeceeeeeess + 52 ‘ € depatt.ccocevsceeess 4 57 taniigan.., nad y eaoenaeuinaaee ins ce cenccehhs chad 6 42 — di cece cle ccctee den 4 - MEE ndeccéce cosdecotassn al 53 i... 2... od nee 6 08 ids vcecccddcccwecouna tal 6 57 ECE hnnccccd ceunscetnme 7 42 reo EAsr, A. M. > ea ,ovece bibs 6 52 bear BETES sccccccccecbseuan mena 737 — Tis nun been 6 ecto anunale 8 26 TO cece eee cdeeeeeennte Mouue I, iiuks0evcikns oneul cee 9 37 Dis tikedcc ensdeesodel an 7 = Cardigan evcasescescokanameueis a 81 Mount Stewart, } A°TIVG...-- eee eeeees 9 32 bedford ” depart....+- everennsd 3S Mmlty Jenction...................10 64 INS sin 00 ccd scien ba 1117 =— sland, Morson & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS —AND— ATTORNEYS- AT -LAW. Ufc in Brown's Block, Quesn Square (UP STAIRS) Chitown, Feb. 12, 1205 WARBURTON & CONROY, URRISTERS & ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Notaries Public, &c. fics ig Cameron’s Block, up stairs ; entrance “81 door to Taylor's Jewelry Store. 23, 1ga% ~—wky3m * | i" We are now showing a Complete Stock of English, America and Canadian STAPLE AND FANSY DRY Coons AND CENTS’ FURNISHINGS. We solicit a share of Public Patronage. aTA tite sy BROS: Brown's Block, Charlottetown, May 2, 1885. ISCHARGING at cargo of Pictou Nut Coal. Orders taken for all kinds of Cval at lowest prices, viz : ACADIA, nut and round INTERCOLONIAL, do. VALE, do. ALBION, do. ALBION, slack (blacksmiths). SYDNEY (old mines) round. SYDNEY (Cow Bay) round. ANTHRACITE (Egg and Chestnut sizes.) CAP. JOUN HUGHES, Water Street, Ch'town, May 5, 1835-—-2mo eod her 3mos WE SELL Potatoes, Spilling, Bark, R. R., Ties, Lumber, Laths, Canned Lebsiers, Mac- kerel, Berries, Eggs, Fish ite. Best Prices for all Shipments. for Quotations, HATHEWAY & CQ. General Commission Merchants, 22 Central Wharf, Boston. Membera of Board of Trade- Corn and Mechanica Wxcbange. Ch'town, Now. 19, 1884, ~ SULLIVAN & MAGNBILL, ATTORNEYS -AT- LAW Seliciters in Chancery, JOTARIES PUMLIC, &e. 7 OFFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great Peorge Sircet, Obarlottetos a. b io Lean, cap Money to ' W.W.Suitrvan,Q.C. | O# January 16, 1885. x paOoRLBY for THE WBRELY §& "A MINER, the beet perer o™ the Island Write fully ester B. MACNBILU COAL. COAL. Queen’s Wharf, a} | | the price of paper blinds. ‘AT ADE of i WINBSW SHABES, Patent Window Cloth, for Fifty Cents each, only These shades will last for years and can be cleaned with a sponge as often as desired. with gilt and VIAR Ch’town, To arrive from Boston, next week, a large assortment of OPAQUED HOLLAND WINDOW SHADES, fancy Dados, in latest tints. We are showing a fine stock of Cornice and Pole Pictures, Spring Rollers, Cord, Tassels, Nickel Blind Pulleys, &., &. K WRIGHT & CO. May 1—2wks 3aw wkly 2w Throw your DO NOT money away in buying Shoddy Boots. Come come at once and buy a Good Solid Leather pair of Boots or ‘Shoes for Spring, at a Low Price we are bound in any imported Boot. We want to keep all the money we can on the Island, so to give better value in our make than can be had Therefore, buy from us. DPORSEV. GOFF #2 ON ‘R"Seewe Waren SM 1:2968 =! orost satin(jaction ee eee R. PALMER & We are now manufacturing and will sell at the lowest cash prices; CHARLOTTETOWS SASH AND S0QR FACTORY | Peake’s Ne. 2? Wharf, Co., PROPRIETORS. -Q---- Sashes Doors Window and Door Frames, Architrayves,Spouting and Conductor Mould ings, Bailusters, Newel Posts, Stair Bails, Twists, etc. : ” We are prepared to do al! kinds of Jobbing, ig Planing, Jointing, Merticing, Tenon ing, Jig and Fret Sawing, Turniag, ete, Ail kinds of Gothic W'> ows tor Ohurohes macic at shortest notice. With New ant first-class Mac binery, and the latest appliances, we ran tnenre ty all who ferr oe wetth thote peteromege * 3°3@ cme |property as if it had been his own—throw- ADAM BEDE. Pn aoe CHAPTER LIL (« ‘ontin wed.) Kester was an old bachelor, and reputed to have stockings full of coin, concerning which his master cracked a joke with him every pay night; not a new unseasoned joke, but a good old one, that had been t ied many times before, aud had worn well. ‘Th’ young master’s a merry mop,’ | Kester frequently remarked; for having be- ‘gun his career by frightening away the crows under the last Martin Poyser but jone, he could never cease to account ithe reigning Martin a young master. ‘I am not ashamed of commemorating | old Kester; yeu and I are indebted to the) hard hands of such men—hands that have long ago mingled with the soil they tilled so faithfully, thriftily making the best they could of the earth’s fruits, and receiving the smallest share as their own wages. Then, at the end of the table, opposite his master, there wax Alick, the shepherd and head man, with the ruddy face and broad shoulders, not on the best terms with old Kester, indeed their intercourse was confined to an occasional snarl, for though they probably differed little concerning hedging and ditching and the treatment of ewes, there was a profound difference of opinion between them as to their respective merits. When Tityrus and Melibceus hap- |pen to be on the same farm, they are not {eentimentaily polite to each other. Alick, indeed, was not by any means a honeyed man : his speech had usually something of a snarl in it, and his broad-shouldered aspect something of the bull-dog expres- sicn—‘Don’t you meddle with me, and I won't meddle with you; but he was honest even to the splitting of an oat grain rather than take beyond his acknowledged share, and as ‘close fisted’ with his master’s | ing very small handfuls of damaged barley to the chickens, because a large handful affected his imagination painfully with a sense of profusion. Good-tempered Tim, the wagoner, who loved his horses, had his grudge against Alick in the matter of corn : they rarely spoke to each other, and never locked at each other, even over their dish of cold potatoes; but then, as this was their usual mode of behavior toward all mankind, it would be an uneafe conclusion that they had more than iransient fits of unfriendlineses. The bucolic character of Hayslope, you perceive, was not of that apparently observed in moet districts visited by artists. The mild radiance of a smile was a rare sight on a field-laborers face, and there was seldom any gradation between bovine gravity and a laugh. Nor was every laborer so honest as our friend Altick. At this very table, among Mr. Poyser’s men, there is that big Ben Tholoway, a very powerful thresher, but detected more than once in carrying away his master’s corn in his pockets; an action which, as Ben was not a phils »pher, However, hls master had forgiven him, and Poysers. have enlarged them. on bim, was an injury to his innocence. But now the roast beef was finished and the cloth was drawn, leaving a fair large deal table for the bright drinking-cans, and the foaming brown jugs, and the’ bright brass candle- sticks pleasant to behold. Now, the great ceremony of the evening was to begin-—the harvest song, in which every men must join : he might be in tune, if he liked to be singular, but he must not sit with closed lips. The movement was obliged to be in triple time; the rest was ad lititum. As to the origin of this song—whether it came in its actual state from the brain of a single rhapsodist, or was graduaily per- fected by a school or succession of rhapso- dists, 1 am ignorant. There is a stamp of unity, of individual genius, put upon it, which inclines me to the former hypothesis, though I am not blind to the consideration that this unity may rather have arisen from that consensus of many miuds which was a condition of primitive thought, foreign to our modern consciousness. Some will per- haps think that they detect in the first quatrain an indication of a lost lite, which later rhapsocists, failing im imaginative vigor, have supplied by the feeble device of iteration; others, however, may rather maintain that this very iteration is an original felicity, to which none but the most prosaic minds can be insensible. The ceremony conuected with the song was a drinking ceremony. (This is perhaps a painful fact, but then, you know, we can not reform our forefathers.) During the first and second quatrain, sung decidely forte, no can was filled. Here’s a health unto our master, The founder of the feast ; Here’s a health unto our master And to our mistress ! And may his doings prosper Whate’er he takes in band For we are all his servants, And are at his command. But now, immediately before the third qustrain or chorus, sung fortissimo, with emphatic raps of the table, which gave the effect of cymbals and drum together, Alick’s can was filled, and he was bound to empty it before the chorus ceased. Then drink, boys, drink ! And see ye do not spill, For if ye do ye shall drink two, For ‘tis our master’s will. When Alick had gone successiully through this teat of steady-handed manliness, it was Omdurman tell you. and the Dervishes send you false reports of everything, and you believe them: they laugh. This fighting and spilling of blood continued tll the sun rode high in ~ sky—red, yet darkened by smoke and ust. entirely genial, merry, broad grinning sort, oo eras spoil; cursing was heard | the turn of old Kester, at his right hand— jand so on, till every man had drunk his \initiatory pint under the stimulus of the ‘chorus. Tom Saft—the rozgue—took care ito spill a little by accident; but Mr, Poy- {ser (too ofticiously, Tom thought,) inter- fered to prevent the exaction of the penalty. (To be continued.) When Khartoum Fell. THE FRIGHTFUL SCENES OF MASSACRE— WOMEN TAKEN AS SLAVES, (From the the London Daily News. ) Two men arrived yesterday whose story throws some fresh light on the capture of Khartoum. They were soldiers in Gordon’s army, taken at the time and sold as slaves, but who ultimately escaped. Their names are Said Abdullah and Jacoob Mahomet. They say : ‘* Men were slain shrieking for mercy, when mercy was not in the hearts of our savage enemies. Women and chiidren were robbed of their jewels of gold and jewels of silver, of their bracelets, neck- laces of precious stones, and carried off to be sold to the Bishareen merchants as slaves. ‘Yes, and white women too—Egyptians and Circassians who wore the burko over their faces, the rabtah and the turbah, and the kurs on their heads-—ladies clad in silk and satin gibbehs and saltahs. Mother and daughter alike were dragged off from their homes of comfort. These were widows, wives and daughters of Egyptian officers, some Of whom had been killed with Hicks Pasha; wives and children of Egyptian merchants formerly rich, owning ships and mills, gardens and shops. These were scld afterward, some for 349 thaleries or more, eome for 250,according to ageand good looks. And the poor black women already slaves, and their children were taken off too. ‘These were sold too, for a hundred, eighty cr seveoty thaleries. ‘Their husbands and masters were slain before their eyes, and yet 1 hear it said there was no massacre at the taking of Khartoum! They lie who say so, and are in league with Mahomet Achmet. You must not believe all that men coming from Mahomet Achmet then There was riot and clamor, hubbub evening prayer. ‘But the Muezzin wii; nut called; neither were any prayers offered up at the mosque on that dark dayin the annals of Khar- toum. The history of those scenes will not be written on its records ; for all scrolls and pepers and books in the archives were destroyed and scattered.” ~-_ — Combining Against England. The European combination against Eng- could hardly be ascribed to absence of mind. |Jand, says a despatch to the New York Times on the 26th inst., is the theme of continued to employ him; for the Tholo-|eyery journal in London—no matter of ways had lived on the Common time out of| what party. Of-course, the ministerial mind, and had always worked for the! papers treat it as illustrating the inherent And on the whole, 1 dare say, | wickedness of the continental powers which society was not much the worse because} hate such truly good men as those’ who con- Ben had not six months of it at the tread-| stitute the British cabinet, while the Turies mill; for his views of depredation were| regard it as the result of the wickedness, narrow, and the House of Correction might | blundering and indecision of the ministere; As it was, Ben ate/ but on the fact of an hostile condition all are his roast beof to night with a serene sense|agreed, It is impossible to say what issue of having stolen nothing but a few peas and|is now uppermost in the public mind, for beans, as see’ for his garden, since the last/on every side looms some complication, harvest supper,and felt warranted in think-| foreign or domestic, which in itself seems ing that Alick’s suspicious eye, forever up-!io overshadow all others. There is for a moment a lull in the vigilance of the watch over the news from Russia but the chief national anxiety is still centered there. It would be nonsense to call this feeling jingo- ism, for it is nowhere stronger than among the liberals in the house and in liberal papers like the Telegraph, or even the News. Of course, there is a large body of Englishmen who are proud of the old motto, ‘A word and a blow, and a blow first,’ and who sigh for the time when, had a Bosphore Egyptian question arisen, the last orders from London would have been to pitch Taillandier into the Nile. Not only are these truculent spirits wrathful, but the great mass of informed men fear that the government has committed a fatal error in the face of a ruthlessenemy. The ominous hitch in the negotiations, the re- sumption of councils of war at St. Peters- burg, and the ugly tone of the Russian papers are enough in themselves to consti- tute a grave crisis, but this crisis is only one of many. —— Summerside Exports. —— — SumMERsIpDE, May 23, Shipped per steamer St. Lawrence, Evans, master, for Point du Chene : 0 I, i i cia np 0:0 06 $204 0 Il OB ccee i Ccciimes 64vmseesee - ¢ 64 bags potatoes............... 4. a Ser 94 00 BT BE... nbins es voccenss 56 09 DN NG: Cates. co00 00. of 28 00 TD CURR sb cdage. cd0e 00 0s 66 00 eS POT iy $561 00 >. Tue Royal Society of Canada met in annual session at Ottawa on the 26th inst. Sterry Hunt delivered the inaugural ad- dress, outlining the topics with which the society might deal with advantage to the country. Dr. Wilson spoke in favor of the study of eutnology of the aborigines of Canada. Dr. Chateau spoke of the interest taken in Canada in France, owing to oper- atiens of the society. Lord Lansdowne spoke on the necessity of forestry to Canada and of the advisability of politicians cultivating science and art. Wa. Brown, Gold and Silver Plater, of auch as spoons, forks, cruet stands, tea setts, watches, and jewelry of every description. Shop on corner of Prince and Grafton Streets, Charlottetown. [ap 18 wky tf antennae enema tenets harass debate wpe epg + ens a ee AO nas Be PNR Nh a cl NE tet teh Be eat