Five DoLtars a YEAR, NEW SERIES. ; ‘ UVAILY KXAMINER s issued every evening, by Publishing Go. -) *@ ae ttt _ be ; ” ine MX tiie! Fy eir otlice, corner of Water and Vievrge Sereets, Char'ottetown, iiuce Ldward island, rt ~* AEPTLON ti . #2 50 aot 1 25 viouth,. 0 50 rat wast moderate rates, s ubiy inade for monthiy, half yearly of yeariy advertier- cauou re u. ALmAnAG tun SEPTEMBER, 1884. MOON S CHANGES, Vio n, Btn lay, 6h. 43 3m., a In. Last Naarter (2th day, 4a 4.0.0., a. m. New ma 19ca tay, Su, 24 0m., a m. fir sarter, 27ta day, 6. 5.40, a m. v Sun ‘Sen 'MvonjHign Daye Bu } ‘J rises sets | rises | water |len h nm hm, aft’ moran, hm iM ay 5 256 34] 4 15) 7 33\13 9} 2) Cuesday 27 >| t 5z| 5 27! 5 a WN inusday | 283i fy & 26 9 i2 2 4 Tauarsday | zy} 28 5 55; 9 54/12 59 5 Friaay 30 %6 6 Zailv 3! 56 | 6 Sasurday 32} 24) 6 oylil 7] 52 jiNanday | a ot 7 ae ) 49 | 3) Moada | 34 2 S Sjaft23 to 9) Tuesday } 36) Is; 3 ix] 1 3 42] 10} Wednesday ' 37) 17} 9 29' 1 49) 40) hil Lay 38 Situ 13, 2 42 37 12) Fritay 39 IZ AL 15) 3 52 34 | 13 Saturday fi; L'm vn | 5 18 30 | 14, Sunday $2| 9, 017 © 46 24 15) Monday , 4 to 4 57| 27 | i6 Taesday | 48 5 2 al) 8 49) 2h} 17\ \Weduesday 45, 3} 3 39) 9 34,17 | 18; Thacsday 47! | $ 46 10 ‘sy 14! 19) Fri tay 435 59 5 5210 45 ll 20'Sacurday 60} 57 6 Siti 22) 7 2) Suaday dt] 55 7 59''l 56 4 22! Moa lay 52 53 9 1 morn 0 23) Paes tay 53. 5t1O O YW 30/1) 57 24 Weduesday 54; 49 lu 57 | 5) 35 25 Tharsday 53 47 11 52 1 48! 52 26, Friday | 56, 45 aft4i! 2 27 49 27|Sacucday 55} 431127 311! 45 23|San iay 4.7.81 393 4¢ 42 29! Mo uday |) 39 248 537} 39] 30| Tavsday "| 38,322, 6 51) 36 ' } THe RAILWAY TLE TABLE. a ee ee (Charlottetown Time. } GOING WEST. A, me Bs yr x, CharluitetOWl ..6.csecers 647 912 427 Gee TE. 4040 chen s 747 1005 5647 P. M, Kensington .......0ssecees 842 1222 705 : le, { aftive...... oa tee & 37 Caummeraide, ¢ aenart...... 927 232 '% Put GEE, 4 con cons edeses jy 30) «415 to ccecass neuen 1206 657 Tip ascseidcionaee TH FROM WEsT. P. M. A. M, A. M I ocincdnttcboasens 202 647 eee 6s cccdnesees i 240 7097 weet Me, 6 6 es i eo 415 1025 . arrive...... §:7 1207 Summerside, depart...... 642 122 657 Kensington...............607 2089 7W Bunter ivets.+< cssciet 708 325 $827 Ghariottetewe ccs. cece sens Suz §07 1007 GCING EAST, | a oe Chariottetuwn......... bess. =e Mount stewart, | StS%S-+oo+°e*' 922 837 " 7 > | demart..ceceee §27 YU Pe, Bi cunnccanceccasconvus Gi7 lWU2 P. x Souris. jodctaae saan A. M. eT har meme | seh awk baahees dene 629 luYUzZ Georgetow Diccthoeeens 046606008065 6 47 LU 4) FROM FAsT. A. M. P M, eee og vc oi rence eves waenenases 647 “827 Be POG 6.6 ci et diccesr oer 783 4 ro eens occa «66 Mount Stewart, depart.....-..847 542 UnarinttetewWe. . ca cictccecccvieece $e 727 es LPP TT Pee 727 && OaeG gO in.c'c oo 044 scandens 0 00 mere 745 397 Miauds Meewles, «ooc5s vad cbeess 842 512 L. AKEPAUR & COn GENERAL Commission Me:chants, 121 ATLANTIC AVERUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON. MASSB. Eygs and Produce a Specialty. May 15,1884 wkly tf N. J. CAMPBELL, (Successor to Campbell & Rayden) Auctioneer and Commission Merchant, SHIP BROKER, AND INSURANCE AGENT, COR. OF QUEEN AND WATER STS., Charlottetown, P. E. Island. Importer and Jobber of Cheice Groceries and Spices. General Agent for P. E. Island of the British Kmpire Mutual Life Assurance Com- pany, of London, England ak Special attention given to Auction Sales of Lumber, Coal, Fish, Apples and other Fruit, Real Kstate, Household Furvitare, Bankrupt and other Stocks, and all kinds of Merchan- dise. and ‘ . t ix yited mady, Correspondence ‘Commiss , Will be glad to correspond with Apple (row- ‘| m nuts, Jablets and Headstones, in Italian and aA linge “ This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the P —" ANLNLL. ublic, may speak free,”’—Evnipiprs. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 8, 1884. McLeod, Moron & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Office in Old Bank, (UP STAIRS), Ch’torn, Feb. Zt. tae. Solicitors in Chancery, VOTARIES PUBLIC, &c. OF FICKES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great deorge Street, Charlottetown. Ga” Money to Loan, W. W. Scunurvan, Q. C. | Curstar B. Macwerts | | | } Jan. 16, *R3. W. WHEATLEY, ~ & Soxs, CHARLOTTETOWN, | r, E. Istanp) jon Merchant, 263 BARRINGTON STREET, In. Ala he, Fe. Ss. &# Special attention given to the sale of P. E. Island produce. April 24, 1884. /(?e WHEATLEY WEST & RENDELL, Vommissicn Merchants, St. John’s, Newfoundlaud. Liberal advances Consigniments solicited. made, July 25, 1884.—2aw 4m APPL&S, APPLES, APPLES, CHARLES DONALD & CO., 79 Queen St, London, E. C., ers, Merchants and Shippers, with a view to Autumn and Spring business. They will also give the usual facilities to customers requiring advances. augl ’ CAIRNS’ MARBLE WOKS i ee s . CHARLES CAIRNS, in returning TR M thanks to the public for the liberal pstrunaze extended to him, begs leave to in- form his old customers and the pablic general- ly, that he has taken into partversinp Mr. Maleolm McLean, and that hereafter the business wili be carried on under the title of CAIRNS & CO. Marble & ‘Bione Cutters, They have on havd a fine stock of Monu- Ame ican Marble. ‘hey are of the latest de- sigus, and at prices to suit all, C. CAIRNS. M. McLEAN. Ch’town, June 30, 1854~— pres n e pat s j wp ~ MOUNEK ALLISON WESLEYAN ACADEMY, Sackville, N.- B. fg *HIS well known institution imparts a thor- l ough Kwgii h and Commercial education, aud prepares students for college macriculation and fur the civil service «xaminations. Stu- deuts have the privilege of attending any classes aud jecturcs in the Ovliege for which they may be prepared, without having passed the matriculation examinations. The Aca- demy building is new, commodious, and pro- vided with a:l the accessories of a pleasant home. The next term begins on Thursday, Aug. 28th. For a calendar containing full in- formation as to expenses, etc., apply to THOMPSON L. DAVIs, B. A,, Head Master. augl—4w mwf Sackville, July 28, 1884. MUACEORN Sash and Door iactory. R. P. LEA, in returning thanks to the a public for the liberal pat~.oageextended to him while in business in Charlottetown, begs leave to inform his old customers and tie pablic generally, that he, in - company with Mr. William Rogers, has appointed Messrs. B. Williams & Co, Lumber aud Coal Dealers, Pownal Wharf, Charlottetown, 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, Monvion, N, B. SULLIVAN & Mall, : ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW | TEA, | ' FIRST INSTALMENTS NOW OPENING, or J. B. MACDONALD’S, QUBEN STREET. Mh’town, Sept. 1, 1884.—2aw wkly, PHA. Extra, Prime, Cheap, Strong, Nice, Al, Splendid A Beer & Coff’s for Extra Tea, WHOLESALE. BEER & GOFFPS FOR PRIME TEA, RETAIL. BEER & GOFF’S FOR CHEAP TEA, BEER & GOFFS FOR NICE TEA 5 POUND TINS. BEER & GOFF’S FOR Al TEA, BEER & GOFF'S FOR SPLENDID IE} ANY QUANTITY. WHOLDRSALE & RETAIL. Ch’town, July 9, 1884—2aw 9 ° HA" 1 FRB. CAPITAL, - - - B - = «= $2,000,000 a HEAD OFFICE—Montreal. HALIFAX BRANCH-~ J. Scott Mitchell, Agent. o~= Risks Taken on Most Favora AGZNT FOR PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND: F. H. ARNAUD, Merchants Bank of Halifax bie Terms. Ch’town, Feb, 27, 1884. Attention Ye Who Are In Doubt ce WARK WRIGHTSCO., Because of the excellent facilities they possess, have been able to reduce the price of all goods manufactured by them, and by buying their raw material in the best markets, for cash, are prepared to give the purchasing public THE BEST VALUE IN THE PROVINCE. liug They are se! asked some time ago in the same establishment. ‘ Mar hy ids. | Rept. B, | 62 —Raw wiy Chri lvbbeiewny May 87, 1804—-dew whkly NEW FALL cooDS! ROYAL GANADIAN INSURANCE CO. Let Experience be Judge,—Comparison and Purse the Jury, from thirty to fifty per cent. below prices within Factory, Gilice and Showroom—King Square, Kent Street, by an affection which could never meet Aftsr Touch of Wedded Hand. ineuiiiaiibtian [ CONCLUDED. } We enter the house. Five minutes later stand on the threshold of my husband’s room. My heart beats nigh to suffocation. How shall 1 bear the sight which is before me! Oh, Heaven! how shall I look upon him, perchance for the last time, and make no sign ? The door opens. The nurse, at a word from Dr. Ormerod, leaves the chamber. He motions to me with his hand, and | | glide into my appointed place. Where I stand isin shadow; so that I am hidden ; but I see the outline of a pros- trate figure; of a face so white, so haggard, that it chills me with agony. ‘Oh, my darling! I ery, humbly,— ‘my darling always, though so false to me! Is it thus we meet at Jast ?’ voice, ‘it is nearly all over. death coming? Tell me.’ ‘You are very weak,’ replies the medical man evasively, e question. You need not. Life has been! too bitter for me to regret its fleeting. | But before I die there is something | wish | to say, that you may repeat it some day to| my wife.’ I start violently in my hiding place, but Doctor Ormerod casts a warning glance in my direction, and I am silent. Is the| secret of his falsehood to be revealed here, and now ? The low This is the story — ‘Years ago, before I met Lenore, my wife, I fell in love with a girl named Constance Fielding. She was very beauti- ful, and she did not disguise th»t she re- turned my passion. I made her an cffer which was accepted. On the very day I held her in my arms, on the very day her lips had sworn love vows to me, I learned she had been for two years the affianced of another, I was nearly mad io that hour. Rushing into her presence, I poured forth in bitter words my rage at her de- ception. ‘She threw herself at my feet, imploring me to listen. **Not one word!’ Icried. ‘Your false- hood has crushed out al] the love I gave you. Had you been my wife before this itrnth became known to me, I would have ‘cast you off as I do now ‘From that moment she faded out of my heart. I had deemed her all purity, all truth; I found that, plighted to one man, she allowed another to press his heart with ‘tender kisses on her perjure? lips. This knowledge made her as dead to me as though I had seen the sods piled over her grave. ‘Three years passed, when J met Lenore. She was al] I had dreamed my first love to be—a pure-hearted loving woman, and she became my wife. ‘Two months I had a brief, entrancing joy with py darling girl—two months of golden love. Then in one hour life’s bliss faded utterly; I was left in darkness— aJone. ‘You know Oakwood, which lies on my grounds! I walked through there one day, ,and encountered the worn shawdow of a /woman | had known. This ghost from my past was Constance. In her attenuated face the large blue eyes glittered feverishly ; the cheeks were bright with the fatal hectic of consumption. ‘‘She burst into bitter tears as we met; then poured forth with incoherent words a story of wild, wasted affection and mad ‘folly. | ‘I married the man to whom you left ‘me,’ she cried; ‘but, Bertram; I never loved any one but you!’ | **Hush! I said, ‘why wrong your woman- hood by telling this to me? You are a wife, ‘I am married. Be sure I did not wed ‘another with any love for you lingering ‘in my heart. You were as though dead to ‘me when I left you that day. Your false- hood killed my love. But my wife is the one joy of my herrt—a priceless treasure | can never cease to value!’ Having thus spoken, I sternly turned away. But she followed me. ‘*Bertram,’ she cried, wildly, ‘don’t torture me with such words. It is the very thought that I am nothing to you, when I might have been all that she, that other woman is, who lies in your arms, and has a right to your caresses, which is kill- ing me. Despairing, intense love for you, has drawn me from my home—from the ‘man I call my husband, to die here at your feet!’ | ‘As she uttered these words her violent emotion seemed to be forcing soul and body asunder. She leaned back against ‘a tree; her lips white—her bosom panting ‘convulsively with every labored breath, ‘I did not touch her. No shadow of past tenderness awoke agaiu in my breast. The pure image of my wife aroxe before ‘me; while beside her stiinless love this ‘woman's shameless avowal of a sinful passion seemed loathsome in my sight. ‘She saw the stern reproach of my eyes. ‘A wild storm of feeling swept across her face, and with a despairing cry, ere I was aware of her purpose, she cast herse’f on my breast, her arms clasped round.me, her lips on mine, ‘I struggled to free myself, but she clung desperately, exerting all her strength; so, for one moment, she lay there upon my heari, while gasping forth the words:— ‘* +I am dying, ch! let me reat here for a ‘little while, where 1 have so longed to be!’ | ‘Then I had ruthlessly put her aside. | ‘] was true to my wife in soul and ‘thought, I swear, as I had vowed to be ‘before the altar; but what man could see ‘such passionate love as this lavished upon him without some feeling of pity arising his heart! | ‘I spoke afew soothing words to her, ‘saying what folly it was to thus destroy her own honor and tarnish her wedded name, { voice continues. ' } 1 ' | | with a return, fhat means you fear to answer my | SINGLE Copies Two CENTS. VOL, 15.--NO, 93. shame passed across her face, and she said :— ‘ ‘Bertram, I should not thus have betrayed myself to you, had I not known that i am dying. Keep my secret for a short time, | pray you. Jn merey to my womanhood, speak not of my folly to your wife till lam dead. She has your love— she has all! I have nothing but my shame; don’t reveal that till I am gone beyond re- proach. It will only be a few weeks at farthest; then you shall be free to tell her my story.’ ‘I solemnly gave her the promise she asked, I thought no one had witnessed our meeting, and I saw by her face that death would soon cancel the pledge. But when on reaching howe I met my wife’s eyes, I knew with certainty that she had seen us just at the fatal moment when Con- stance, half-maddened, had cast herself Into my arms. Could she but have heard | the words that passed, the true meaning of ‘;Doctor,’ faintly says my husband’s' This is surely | ’ i that strange scene, my guilt seemed self- evident. I felt this was so, yet no excuse could I utter; the promise given to Con- stance sealed my lips. In that very hour, with a few bitter words, my wife left me.’ Bertram’s voice sinks almost to a whis- per, but he struggles to add :— Promise me—to—seek—out Leonore — and—tell—her ;’ then solemnly, ‘I think this—is—death ! An awful silence—a faint sigh, and for- getful of all, save that my hushand—my darling—is passing away from me, I am on my knees, with that dear head upheld upon my bosom. Doctor Ormerod utters no word of re- proach. Every moment is precious, aa, with strong restoratives, he labors to bring back the soul almost trembling for its flight upon the parted lips. Some minutes of terrible suspense, then my Bertram opens _ dark eyes calmly upon my agonized ace. Pg seldom kills ; it does no harm to Lim. ‘Leonore, you have heard ?’ he questions. ‘All! Oh, my husband ! forgive me!’ I ery. In one glace, eye to eye, our hearts meet again, never more to be divided, and our wedded hands are reclasped forever. A paper, ‘‘on the probability that a mar- riage entered into at any age will be fruit- ful, and that a marriage which has ‘been childless for several years will subsequently become fruitful,” was read before the British Association, at its recent meeting. The author, Mr. T. B. Sprague, quoted ex- haustive details on the subject, showing that out of 806 persons married under the age of 50 years, 292 marriages had become fruitful in the first year of marriage, 256 in the second year, 72 in the thiid year, 16 in fourth year, 15 in the fifth year, 5 in the sixth year, 5in the seventh year. He had found one instance where the marriage had been fruitful 19 years after marriage. — A Barrington despatch to the Telegraph says :—Bonness and McLaren, the roving Ottawa detectives, have been around here the last few days. They have made four or five seizures on Cape Island, impcsed in two cases fines of $800 each; in another $400. At Argyle, Yarmouth, they seized, it is reported, the books and papers of Captain Wm. McDonald, merchant, and imposed a fine of $8,500. They are still on Cape Island. _——_—--—_ 1p e It appears that for the last 120 years a ship has annually left England for the Mo- ravian mission in the Arctic regions, and that not asingle ship or passenger has been lost by storm, iceberg or wreck. It is cer- tainly a very remarkable fact, and what- ever may be the truth in the case, one does not wonder that the good people who are the friends of the mission should attribute this exemption from disaster io a merciful Providence and the power of prayer. ; ae Leyislators are pretty much the same the world over. During the recent session of the French Assembly the members drank 2,000 quarts of beer, 500 quarts of brandy, and 3,000 quarts of ‘‘miscellaneous”’ drinks. It is a suggestive fact that the de- bates of the Assembly have recently been especially violent and acrimonious. a A very witty newspaper paragraphist recently received a letter requesting him to state what were the principal causes of his wit. The answer was promply returned, It was this ; ‘‘Nine hours of sleep every night, three square meals every day, and a good salary.” —_—___.»6 @-—-—--—= There were five cases of small-pox among the steerage passengers on the steamer Westernland, which arrived in New York from Antwerp on Tuesday. Many of the passengers were vaccinated before they were permitted to leave the vessel. ———————— @ @e Franklin, who made a “‘morality” of every sentiment, in one of his essays, says, ‘Disorder breakfasts with Plenty, dines with Poverty, sups with Misery, and sleeps with Death.” ee ——- At Petersburg, Va., all the cotton factories in the city and vicinity are stopped, throw- ing out a large number of men, women and children, many of whom are actually suffer- ing for the necessaries of life. ——— If Right made Might In eve t, The world would be the better for it. aa A popular actress says:—-‘‘Journalism and the theatrical profession are united by some very tender ties.” The best of which is adver-tise, and there is nothing like it. Six thousand starving Indians at Poplar River agency, Montana, threaten to take | “Grbtiuaity she yew Calmer. A tov of the war path, ‘Trobps bave Veen asked for,