A! A \ ea 4) ‘ ; »> ‘ 7 ’F QHPTR SERLEES UAILY IMXAMIN : Ly ly ihe bxaminer Pablishing , Water and 5 etown bri > Kdward loland i N\ De) S } ye OV , «» a «) iodevrate rates, month] Riad ‘ adavertise- ae ALWANAG FOR FEBRUARY, i824. a es —— a Ys) © MERCHANT TAILOR, REDUCTION OF TWENTY PER CENT, Gents’ Woollen Underwear, Flannel Shirts, Fur Caps, Kid Mits, Sleigh Robes. j ly CHARLOTPETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1884, > A. ES FOUL PLAY. (jo. & ei i6cUCHE, By eae ‘Sind: i _— - } CHAPTER LIIT. (Continued. ) This, however, rather interrupted Wy)ie’s trayed him. SINGLE Copies Two CENTS. VOL. 14.---NQ. 78. reflected in the sky, while sailing between as the members of one family ; Ontaric is to Juan Fernandez and Norfolk Isle. cease sitting down here by the broad lake, Arthur only shook his head with a thinking that she is sufficient to herself,and ghastly smile. ‘She is in Heaven,’ said caring nothing for those who are about her, he, ‘andI shall never see her again, not especially the smaller Provinces away by here or hereafter.’ the sea; the smaller Provinces down by Wardlaw senivr was shocked at this the sea are to forget their prejudices against speech, but he made no reply. He these upper Provinces, and are to become pitied his son too much to criticise the ex- better acquainted with them in interest and pressions into which his bitter grief be- social relations; the Province of Quebec Hie was old, and had seen is to come and join hands with the S OV ER-STOCK ED wit} | : design of walking in and chueking the the triumphs of time over all things human peuple of the other Provinces, and we of ' ) 1e y GOOD : = ; f , g ces, ANG Wwe O i = the tollow Ing 5, and offers three thousand peunds into Nancy’s lap. sorrow included. These, however, as yet, the other Provinces are to become better On the contrary, he shoved them down deeper in his pocket, and resolved to see the old gentleman to bed, and then produce his pelf, and fix the wedding-day with Nancy. He came in and found her crying and Penfold making weak efforts to console her. The tea-things were on the table, and Nancy’s cup half emptied. | Wylie came in, and said, ‘Why, what is ~ be! : 7 2. m the matter now?’ Ee nie.) =o 5 w nV He said this mighty cheerfully, as ene pay ney gd sy ag 2 a ; Tan ee who carried the panacea for all ills in his T aN y vwr % ox pocket, and @ medicine peculiarly suited to Jan 'Moom High) Daya! Naney Rouse’s consti'uto-. B , re gh ays | i Naney Rouse’s consti‘uto’. But he had 8\sets | riges | water len’h, | 9 not quite fathomed her yet. .reeg sores a a ‘ : ee ’ : As soon as ever she saw him she wiped I morn, hm , } Th * 1! Friday 7 2814 59! 9 94] 1 0] 9 291 WHICH’ YOU CAN HAVE her eyes, and asked him grimly what he 2' Saturday | 97'5 Ol! 9 54] 1 at 3} wanted there. Wylie stared at the recep- died oi 310 301 2 20] 34) + rave “* Ss * aN 14 tion, but replied stoutly that it was pretty’ } Mon bay 4 5 li 10 3 29 37 | M A DE i O Y Ot R MEASU RE well known by this time what he wanted! pee J 23 6 11 t = rw , in that quarter. 5 sday 2] 8 aft 48} 6 17 3} , ‘Well, then,’ said Nancy, ‘Want will b : | ‘ | ‘ si = aol - oe ‘ % , . ’ > tiny * y) ans Sa - i varediag 19) = b477 39; o heape: Phau Enipei ted Ready Made. your master. Why did you never tell me aes ae =e Ps 52 : 89 = Miss Helen was in that ship? iny sweet 9 Satu p fi ti 3 55) 9 2s oe | . dear mistress as was, that I feel for lik .U) Sune | 16 i3| 5 ) d vo . ‘Be y , . 4 a ts “ a a y ot a ib 7 “ ag a ED. A. BR UC i, | mother. You left her to drown and saved id) Pacodey | a2} 46! 7 16/IR 2 10 1 ec. 20. 1883.—eod wkly 72 Queen Street, Charlottetown yous one great anese re and 13! \Wedaceday i! ta! 8 oalate O 4 ——_ —____ = ee .. ‘drowned she is, poordear. Get out of my t4 Thursday 9! 19, 9 24: 0 34 7 ; Pesnagit mon oO faul N id Wy) 15 Friday 3} 221013} 1 9 10) SATE EP “Tt anan's: vapcfaulty anny ¢eatd Wyle 16 Saturday | oo) 999) 25| 131! 13] CrTER A IN DD > © | earnestly, ‘I didn t know who she was, and 17|Sunday | 5) 24) morn’ 227/16} (I advised her to come with us; but she 15) Monday 3, 25 0 23) 3 14 19} | would go with that parson chap.’ 19 Cuesday 2} 27| 1 201 4 18 23 | ‘What parsonchap? What a liar you be! 20 " ednesday 0, 28 2 13, 5 R2) 26 | She is Wardlaw's sweetheart, and don’t | 2 > araday 6 58) 29 3 5) 646) 29 » care for no parsons. ‘If you didn’t know) a = a | 57 31 : 2 7 rv 7 you was to blame, why didn’t yon tell me a! _ ~ent ay as _ 4 ~ : 44} - ee word ef your own accord? You kep’! 7 Mendes | : re af. . im dark. Do you call yourself a man to leave 23"Tuesday | 59! 36 642l1047! 45| FOHN MACPHEE & CO. will, during tho HOLIDAY SEASON, give|™%h00" young lady to shift for herself 7 a7lWedactdew | eal “arte Maler onl , cnnaidl ttiteiian 3 ? She had as good a chance to live as I 27| Wednesday #8; 27| 6 S31 21) 48 special bargains In Sab a ie ie 23|/Thursday 47; 39| 7 25lmorn} 51 ; eS ee een 291 Friday 45 41| - 57, 0 4) 55 Dr C ( K ’ W | ( ( i | Ch } ji Hf ‘ ‘No, she hadn't, you took care o' | TESS C0008, KULL WOOL Goods Mantles, Snawls, Hlannels, HOsery, GLU Ves, &6)vourseis. Weil, since you are so fond of MONCTON Sash and Door Factory. O0-=—___—_—_— CLOTHING. CLOTHING. Men's Overcoats, $3.90, $5.00, $6.50, $7.50, up. Men’s Ulsters, $4,95, $6.25, $7.00, up. Men’s Reefers, $2.95, $3, $3.50, $5, $4.50, $5.50 up. yourself, keep yourself fo yourself, and don’t come here no more. After this, i hate the sight cn ye. You are like the black dog in my eyes, and always will be. Poor, dear Miss Helen! Ah, I cried when she left—my mind misgave me, but little ] thought she would perish in the salt seas, and all for want of a man in the ship. If you had gone out again after in the steam- boat—Mr. Penfold have told me all about had done nothing for Arthur Wardlaw. acquainted with the confreres of the Prov- At the end of six months, his grief was.as ince of Quebec, and, learning to know somber and as deadly as the firat week. them better, are to learn to like them | But one day, as this pale figure in deep better. So, in all ways, whatever can take mourning sat at his table, going listlessly place to bind together the trade interest, and mechanically through the business of the social imrerest, all the interests of the scraping money together for others to different parts of this great Confederation, enjoy, whose hearts, unlike his, might not is the thing which shall draw us together, be in the grave, his father burst in upon keep us together, and make of us a living him, with a telegram in _ his hand, apd and progressive unity in a national or coun- waved it over his head in triumph. ‘She try point of view. Now, one step farther. is found! she is fonnd!’ he roared; ‘read What is the kind of communication which that!’ and he thrust the telegram into his we can have which shall join these hand. Provinces together! Can we have Those hands trembled, and the languid ® water communication which would voice rose into shrieks of astonishment and be sufficient? No, sir; that is im- delight as Arthur read the words, ‘We possible. Outside of the difficulty of have got her aliye and wel]; shall be at having a water communication at any season Charing Cross Hotel at 8 p. m, of the year, for more than one half the {Te: bd: continmak) width of this great continent of ours there is another half of the year when the ice king lays his hand upon that form of com- munication, and. makes it impassible to us. The only form of communication which is adequate, which is continuous, which is uninterrupted and uniform 1s that com- munication which comes from the con- struction and opening and completion of a wee continental line of railway, which shall gather, sir, in one hand the outlyin (Part of the Speech of Mr, Foster, M. P., on Pictivass of the far west, and shall uae Se eee ee The Patriotic Sentimen of Canada, —_+@—_—_ the Debate on the Railway Resolutions) in bonds of { [ CONCLUDED. } INTERCOURSE AND TRAVE AND SOCIAL COM- What are the different methods of grow- ' MUNICATION ing people together and uniting them? If all the different parts of this country we go back and take aslight look at the with every other part. Now, the |history of the world what do we find out whole point of this latter train of these things to be? They are first race and thought, in connection with the other two, language. The people of the same race, is this: I honestly believe that, if all the the people of the same language, separated politicians of 1867 and all the newspapers from others of a different race and a dif- of 1867 had joined themselves to batile ferent language,‘and necessarily thrown in down this idea of the confederation of the upon themselves, are amalgamated, are Provinces, they might have retarded it; united, are forced to make a community in but a generation or two would have themselves and grow up with mutual inter- raised up a new set of politicians, and ests and mutual objects. These, Sir, were planted a new set of newspaper presses the two chief things that united the nation- which would have brought to its develop- ality of the races, which, with a different ment and embodiment that longed-for, lapguage and a different blood, sprung up. wished-for idea of a union of these from the old world, which, witha language Provinces. I believe in the same way that was not spoken by those who bordered that, if all these different influences had upon them, made of the outside world bar- chosen to pit themselves against the at- barians, and united them together in the tainment, against the opening up and bonds of a national life. Sir, there is jaining to these Provinces of the North- N fh. P. LEA, in returning thanks to the pablic Sor the liberal pat Sageextended | 1,,, Caps, Kid Mits and Gloves, Cardigan Jackets, Worsted Tweeds, Under- 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 & Ce, Lamber and Coal Dealers, Pownal Wharf, Sharlottetown, our agents, who will keep constantly on hand a full supply of Mould- ings, Window Sashes, Doors, etc., at LOWEST CASH PRICES. All orders entrusted to them will receive prompt attention. LEA & ROGERS, Moncton, N. B. Sept. 5, 1883.—2aw wly LIFE INSURANCE. Uuited States Life Insnrance Co, CITY OF NEW YORK. ORGANIZED 1850. New Features, Incontestible Policies, Prompt Settlement of Claims Guaranteed. Apply at residence, Weymouth Street, from 8 to 10 a, m, and 4 to 6 p. m. A. i. MePHERSON, Agent. Sept. 25, 1583.—2aw STANDARD ee ." the 57th Annual General Meeting of ‘A the Standard Lite Assurance Company, held at Edinburgh on Tuesday, the 24th of April, 1883, the following results for the year ended 15th November, 1883, were re- ported : . 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 The total existing assurances in force at 15th November, 1882, amounted to (Of which $7,753,031.15 was reassured with other offices) The claims by death which arose during the year amount- ed, incladimg bonus addi- tions, to Taos annual revenue amounted at 15th November, 1882, to $6,936,302 91 2,462,226 59 4,267,546 00 ever shown by him, clothing, Buffalo Robes, Horse Rugs, Small Wares, etc. PARES WARP, CHAS. Cush Buyers can depend on getting REAL BARGAINS in every Department, ‘ WHOLESALE AND KETAIL. JOHN MACPHEE & CO ROBERT ORR’S OLD STAND, Ch’town, Dee. 12, 1883.—2aw wkly pres pat Se ee i —_— — _-—- a SIGN OF THE ELEPHANT. oO 7 R. BOREHAM has now on hand the LARGEST AND \\ » BEST STOCK OF BOOTS. SHOES, SLIPPERS, OVERSHOES & RUBBERS, His motto is a good article at a moderate price. LADIES’ AND GENTS’ FINE GOODS, a specialty. A nice lot of LADIES’ AND GENTS’ FANCY SLIPPERS, for the Holidays. Try BOREHAM for a pair of GOOD BOOTS. W. R. BOREHAM, North Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Dec. 10, 1883. —mo we fr 2m THE EXAMINER JOB PRINTING OFFICE HAS LATELY BEEN REPLENISHED WITH it—I’d bélieve you weren’t so much to blame. But no, lolloping and looking about all day for months. There’s my door, Joe Wylie, I can’t cry comfortable before you as had a hand in drowning of her. You and me is parted forever. I'll die as J am, or I'll marry a man ; which you ain’t one, nor nothing like one. Is he waiting for you to hold the door open, Mr, Penfold! or don’t I speak plain enough? Them as J gave the sack to afore you didn’t want so much telling.’ ‘Well, ’m going,’ said Wylie, sullenly; hen. considerable feeling, ‘this is hard ines. But Nancy was inexorable, and turned him out, with the $3,000 in his pocket. He took the notes out of his pocket, and flung them furiously down in the dirt. Then he did what everybody does under similar circumstances, he picked them up agaii, and pocketed them, along with the other dirt they had gathered. = Next day he went down to the docks,and looked cut for a ship, he soon got one, and signed as second mate. She was to sail in a fortnight. But, before the week was out, the bank- notes had told upon him, that he was no lohger game to go to sea, But the captain he had signed with was a Tartar, and not ta be trifled with. He consulted a know- ing friend, and that friend advised him to disguise himself till the ship had sailed. Accordingly, he rigged himself out with a long coat, and.a beard, and spectacles, and hid his sea-slouch as well as he could, and changed his lodgings. Finding he succeed- ed so well, he thought he might as well have the pleasure of looking at Nancy Rouse, if he could not talk to her. So he actually had the hardihood to take the parlor next door; and by this meang he heard her move aboyt her room, and caught a sight of her at work on her little green; and he was shrewd enough to observe she did not sing and whistie as she used te. The dog chuckled at that. His bank-notes wearied him night and day. He wasafraid to put them in a bank; afraid to take them about with him into his haunts; afraid to leave them at home; and out of this his perplexity arose some incidents worth relating in their proper order. Arthur Wardlaw returned to business, but he was achanged man. All zest in the thing was gone. His fraud set him above A Large Supply of Printing Types and Material OF THE LATEST INVENTION AND BEST DESCRIPTION, AND WE ARE NOW PREPARED, Onder the Careful and Skilful Supervision of Mir. J. W. Mitchell, TO PRINT Tae invested funds at same date amounted to Being an increase during the year of 29,503,416 00 1,062,648 35 JOHN LONGWORTH, Agent for Charlottetown. THOMAS KERR, Inspector of Agencies. On'town, August 3, 1588, BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, BLANK CHEQUES, RECEIPTS, | NOTES OF HAND. POSTE Ks, HAND BILLS, ‘On Short Notice, in Good Sty!o, at Cheap Prices. DODGERS, &¢., Ke, paraiso, the world; and that was now enough for him, in whom ambition was dead, and, indeed, nothing left alive in him but deep regrets. He drew in the horns of speculation, and went on in the old safe routine; and ‘to the reckless activity that had jeopard- ized the firm succeded a strange torpidity. He wore black for Helen, and sorrow- ed without hope. He felt he had offended Heaven, and.had met his punishment in Helen’s death. Wardlaw senior retired to Elm-trees, and seldom saw his son. When they did meet, the old man sometimes whispered hope, but the whisper was faint ‘andunheeded. . One day Wardlaw senior came up by express to communicate to Arthur a letter from General Rolleston, writtten at Val- another influence which may unite coun- | tries together—it is the influence of Gov- | ernment. One country grows up with a republican form of Government, another | with a monarchical form of Government. | The very fact that these two exist side by , side, different forms of Government, has a tendency to throw together all who live under the one form of Goverdment, and to throw together all who live under the other form of Government, and ao to make the two nationalities bind closer together in their interests and in mutual relations. There is also, I think, sir, another influence of similarity or one- ness of institution—institution in its broad- est [sense, taking in the benevolent and charitable institutions, taking in the religious institutions, the educatienal institutions, all that we may group under this broad name of the institutions of a people. These, I think are the lTHREE CHIEF INFLUENCES which, in the past, and, to a certain extent, in the present, tend to unite groups of people in the oneness of a national life, in a unity of aim and of interest. Now, Sir, the point of my remarks, in travelling thus far, as it}may seem to some hon. gentlemen, out- side of the record, is this, to show that, in this new country, neither of these three can be considered a factor in making a complete and united nationality of the Dominion of Canada. It cannot, Sir, be race and language, for the country to the south of us has the same blood in its veins, speaks the same language, and it forms no dividing line between the two; and, consequently, it throws neither the one nor the other back to seek a unity and one- ness amongst itself. Neither is there a sufficient difference in Government between ourselver and the country to the south of us. There is, when we come to dig down to the essence of these two forms of Gov- ernment, a fundamental difference which is of the greatest importance, and which I hope, standing here with my present thought and my present feeling, to see per- petrated instead of to see obliterated; but, for the general mass of the people of those two countries, there is no very perceptible difference of Government ,which should keep the two apart. Neither is any perceptible differ- ence of institution, Our forms of educa- tion, or religious establishments, all those which are grouped under the name of in- stitutions are very much the same, What is it, then, that, in this day, and on this continent, with respect to these two people of which I am speaking, the Canadian people and the people of the United States, can tend to bring us, draw us, and hold us together in bonds of national unity, with a oneness of aim and a oneness of interest. I think I will speak within the knowledge of all when I say that there is only one thing to do it, that is, a continuous, a speedy, and an uninterrupted BOND OF COMMUNICATION between all parts of the country, making distinct member and section of this country easy of access to every other member and section of the country. That is the element that is to bind ustogether. Our merchants are to know each other from British Colum- bia to Cape Breton; our people are to be- In this letter General Rolleston deplored his unsuccessful search, but said jhe was going westward upou the report of a Dutch whaler who had seen an Island come acquainted with each other from the Provinces by$the sea to the Province in the west Territory and the more remote Provinces, they might have hindered and retarded it for a time; but it was in the hearts of the people, and could only be hindered for a_ time it must reach its fruition and have its em- bodiment. Inthe same way, I earvestly and honestly believe that this same idea is as warm and deep and earnest in the hearts of the people, that the confederation of the four Provinces is not complete, that the confederation and joining together of every part of this Dominion is not complete, until the iron bands of the railway, trans-conti- nental and Canadian, shall join every part of this great Dominion together in the bonda of commercial and of social inter- course. Therefore, | was in favor of Con- federation, because it gave us a country; | was in favor of this expansion to the bounds we now have, because it gave us a great and illimitable country, I am in favor and cannot but be in favour, of the speedy and quick and cer- tain constructions of that which is essential- ly necessary to make us a united and so a permanent, a successful, and a progressive people. So much then for these thoughts, these three broad facts which lead up inev- itably to the policy which has been adopted by this party, and which is propounded by the Government which this party has form- ed, which has been initained by them, and in furtherance of which the Resolutions which we at present have before us are be- ing discussed. — Special Notices. Buck Pick:es by the quart, Pickled Cab- bage, Codfish and Hake, cheap, at the Family Grocery.—-R, K. Brace. febl8 You can get steam gauges and Fairbanks’ scales repaired at Brown’s; and warranted to stand the test or no pay. Shop on corner of Prince aud Grafton Streets, Charlottetown, {feb 16 Sevi ine Orr Boots anv SHoxzs.— A discount of 10 per cent. on the present low prices will be given at J. B. Macdonald’s Boot Store. Go there for abargain. [feb 9 wkly her pres Goxp and silver plating of every description done at Brown's, Shop on corner of Prince and Grafton Streets. [feb 16. A.rew. tubs butter for sale by the tub at ghe Family Grocery.—R. K. Brace. [fel4 SxatTixg Boors, the best and cheapest at J. B, MacponaLp’s Boot Store. dec 29 A SPLENDID lot of China, Glass, and Earth- enware, to be sold cheap at CoLwILt's. aug § tf Tue cheapest Ready Made Clothing in town is at J. B. MacDoNALD’s, dec 29 Every part of a gun ora sewing machine made at Brown's shop, on corner of Prince and Grafton Street, Ch’town, [jan26 wkly. Five pound tins Tea just the thing at Brrr & Gorr Meruopist Preacuer’s Prax can be had at George Carter's, Great George Street, cr at G. H, Haszard’s, Queen Square. ‘Istanp Fiovr and Cracked Oats at R. K. BrRAcer’s. ‘dec 27 Winter Goons slaughtered at J. B. Mac- DONALD'S. {jan 12 Ir you want a Fur Gap cheap go to J. B MacpoNaLp’s. dee 29 Drywver Sets, Tea Sets, Chamber Sets, in great varieties and cheap, at CoLWwILLs, wg § tf far Northwest, as long as and wherever they ‘may be formed ; we are to draw together Anoruer large quaututy of Crockery just received and will be suld cheap at Corwin}