a i ae Ont Se nr eee ce HE CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1887. _ vE Dottars a YEAR, Ni:W SERIES. oa brite Pipi oy een ee) Mi ee ee Pree * This is true Libert y. when Free Born We u, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxriiwss. DAILY EXAMINER. Srinc_e Corres Two Cents VOL. 22.—NO. 32. » ' tn ° Lijec ait Exannner iS iaaue y evening by the Examiner Publishing Oo. From th oerner of Water and Great Goorae 1, Charlottetown, Swhee Yel —RA CRIPTIGN— SIX MOWENG ses eg ee wr eewerweees ee r t 1,25 One BIRGER scccdatocuceccccecccecge 50 tising at moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly. hall-yeariy, 01 yearly advertisements, ation ALMANAC FOR DECEMBER, 1887, MOON'S CHANGES. Last Quarter 7th day, 10h., 58.3m., p.m., N. \\ vlow horizon. ) N oon l4th day, 3h, 9.0m Fi Quarter 22nd day, 2h., 45.7m., a. m., NW below horizon Full Moon 30th day, 4h., 1.8m., a. m., S.W. DAY OF WEE! M . rises|sets | rises | water! len’h m aftr n; morn » Pp. Mm., W est. able GREAT DRY G00 — ee We intend to make extensive premises next spring, and a change i to do this must clear out our Goods, Clothing, Carpets, &c., SALE, erations in our entire stock of Dry &c fae dispose of this immense stock within so short a time, it must be sold at a sacrifice, and we shall. there- fore, give discounts varying from 2O0up to 80 per cent. The stock consists ( of Seasonable and Fashion- Gwoods, which are all marked in plain figures, and at prices that are well known to be the lowest in the D Sun !Sun Moon: High sos Market. This Sale will be for CASH ONLY. im} i ] Thursday 7 234 5 23/10 59'8 4) 2 Friday 9 6 13)11 36) 39 33 lay 31 Viaft 13) 38 $/ Sunday 32 9 8 ll] 0 52) 37 5 Monday 33 9} 9 18) 1 36) 36 §, Tuesday 34 8/10 25) 2 24) 33 7; Wednesday 35 Sli 33} 318) 31 8' Thursday 36 S'morn | 429) 30 9fF riday 37 8, 0 51) 5 49) 29 10)Saturday 38 SS Gi7. &: fs 1]/Sunday 39 8 320/811] 27 12); Mor y 10 8 4 36; 9 3] 24 13) Tuesday i] 8: 5 6119 63 & 14 Wednesday 12 8 7 2/10 34] 26 15) Thursday 5 9| 8 711 19] 2 16 fri lay i4 9| 9 Gimorn| 20 17 Sat irday i4 9' 9 53) O 2) 25 [8 Sunday 45 10/10 33) 0 43) 24 i9, Monday 46 10}\11 Z| 1 24) 24 20| Tuesday 46 10j11 36] 2 7| 24 21) Wednesday +7 lliaft 1) 2 51 25 22) Thursday i) 12| O 26) 3 44; 25 23) Friday iS 13. 0 49) 4 44) 25 24/Satarday iS 1i3' 11215 50| & 25' Sunday 48 14; 1 32) 6 545 =26 26 Monday U i656: 2 7i7 S&S 26 27\T resday 4 15: 2 401 8 36) 27 283i W ednesday 19 16, 3 19} 9 20} 27 29\Thursday $9 16, 4 6110 | 28 30) Frid Ly 49 17; 5 0110 40) 25 31 'Satureny 7 4914 «617; 6 TIT Wwe ae" Cc. C CARLION, AUCTIONEER, AND Commission Merchatn, SOURIS, P E. L. ~ BB’ OC 5 8-0-8-T'-O-N WINTER AR —_ er THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE ifTERNATIONAL §.S. CO. Leave St. Joha for Boston, via Eastport and Port | Monday, and Thursday at 5.00 a. m | tinea | i I harlottetown to Boston, $6,50, 2nd ‘ class; @ v2 433. ; | For t « ana other information apply to ' : F. W. HALES, ; P. BE. L Steam Nav. T yur nearest ‘Ticket Agent, No [2, 887 and wie lan i, every pt 8 ——iChe aii are | INGEMENT i'Ch’town, Dec. 5, 1887. NEW STORE. Co. opene as “the Seven Cent Store,” HARRIS&SSTHWART SUCCESSORS TO GEO. DAVIES & CO, Ch’town, Noy. 18, 1887. — ——$ $$$ _ —————————— ew Sh BUT NS Be Not Deceived, COME TO THE STORE WH#RE THER BiG BARGALNS ARE. SUITS, ee ae} a OVERCOATS, SULTS, OVERCOATS, SUITS. —-——_ 0 ——_—- OVERCOATS, SUITS, OVERCOATS., L. EK. PROWSE keeps the Largest, Best and apest Clothing on P. E. Island. Come and see for yourselves. L FE PROWSE: 20: SIGN OF THE BIG HAT, 74 QUEEN STREET. CW GOODS. QIEEW Ag & GATES beg to inform their friends, and all \S who will favor them with their patronage, that they have —— ‘good value for your money as any house in the trade. L, ARTHUR & CO., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, » KEA EIVERS OF Mackerel, Butter, Cheese EGGS | Poultry, Potatoes, Fruit & | Vegetables. 142, 144 Commercial Street, | BOSTON, MASS. os ye MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, | BROKERS | AND— Commission Merchants, HALIFAX: l Jec, Z HOT WATER HEATING APPARAT Uonsig of Island produce will receive prompt attention. Ret Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier I _ : : Scotia, Halifax ; George Ma Bank of Nova Scotia { ; WARREN & JONES, feiay + ~ ’ “ fLA MERCHANTS, 71 Bast Cu 9 & 14 Minctne LANE, 1s | ON DON, ENGLAND. & R ve presented in Canada by MoRRISON Halifax Oct. 24, 1837 —1mo Mr SGRAVE, character of the work which the performing, ; thorough and efficient. by calling ary day at the private resic We import direct, and pay cash, and as our expenses are ight, we are in a position to do as we say, FLOUR, Choice Brands. TEA, Very Choice. SUGAR, All Qualities. BEST AMERICAN KEROSENE OIL, Very — 0 d a New Grocery Store, in the premises formerly known where they are prepared to give as Cheap; ‘alarge assortment of General Groceries which we will Sell ‘Very Low. ) Give us a call and see if we do not mean what we say. Goods delivered to any part of the city. J. STEWART, A. GATES. 9 1887—tu th fri sat ee A. HERMANS & SON RE now prey and most approv ed plans, is a sufficient guarantee that the Heating *arties anxious to inspect the Hea : . Parties : lence of the firm, on Bayfield Street. Coils, etc., man'ifactured on the premises as required. A. HERMANS & SU soilers on hand. Charlottetown, November 30, 1887.-— y N. &% v ared to enter on contracts for putting up in Dwellings, etc., on the newest ero the HOT WATER APPARATUS for Heating. The firm of A. HERMANS & SON has been in the habit of | Works set up by them will be | ting Process, as built by A. Hermans & Son, can do so | IMPORTANT NOTICE. ot the petition to annul the Scott Act has been defeated, I take this means of in- forming the trade and the public generally, that I have beeu appointed agent for the Is- land for James Roue, of Halifax, manufacturer ofj all kinds of temperate drinks, and that l have in stock a large assortment of the above goods which I will supply at factory prices. The goods manufactured by Mr. Roue are admitted to be far superior to any other manu- factured in the Provinces. Goods supplied immediately on receipt of order. OYSTERS A SPECIALTY. Sold by the barrel, quart or half shell at tae OLD LONDON HOUSE. JOHN JOY Proprietor. Water Street, 17th Dec., 1887, 2 aw 2w LEsss. JUST ISSUED, CHAPPELLE'S PL. Alla «FOR 1888. tt is the Par Excellence of Annuals, | | } ' } Everybody Should Have One. ‘"§ PACH. 15 CENTS For Sale by Dealers throughout the island, also ‘on Regular Passenger Trains. THEO. L. CHAPPELLE, DIAMOND BOOKSTORE. Ch’tewn, P. E. 1., Dec. 12. 1887.—4i eod pat her sj | BOOKS! BOOKS! At the Bible Depository. | JUST ARRIVED.—Boys’ and Girls’ Own Child’s Companion. Our Darlings, Quiver, and |alot of other Magazines and handsome Books, | suitable for Xmas; also Xmas Cards in great variety, a!l very cheap. Bibles and Testaments always on hand. j M. F, ELLIS, Upper Queen Street, Dec, 1, 1887—eod j } | dur business, and. Birth of the New Year. The bells of the city ringing, Their clappers are joyously swinging, And they strike sweet notes From their iron throats, Their weicome tidings bringing. A solemn thing is the birth Of a year untried, unknown ; What a myriad startling things May arise from zone to zone ! | And the earth, now once more peaceful, May bristle again with steel, And the halcyon calm of rest Be burst by the thunder-peal ; And the friends that now are left us, Though few, may fewer grow, And silence fall over the infant, And over the locks of snow. | We know not, but ‘tis solemn, This birth of an infant year, And we know not whether to smile, Or whether to drop a tear. But here the bells are ringing, And laugh our fears to scorn, And we will be up and doing Upon the untried morn ; With a fostering God above us, To guide us on our way, Through weal and woe to love us, So ail hail to the New Year's Day! James ORTON, LC me en ee By Sir Walter Scott. CHAPTER XXIII. (Continued ) ‘*Sister,” said she, “‘I thought we had agreed but last night, that happen to us what might, we would at least love each other.”’ ‘“‘Much may happen betwixt night and morning,” answered Minna, in words rather wrenched from her by her situation than flowing forth the voluntary interpreters of her thoughts.” ‘*Much may indeed have happened in a night so stormy,” answered Brenda; ‘‘ for see where the very wall around Euphane’s plant- a-cruive has been blown down; but neither wind, nor rain, nor naught else, can cool our affection, Minna.” “But that may chance,” replied Minna, ‘*which may convert it into——” The rest of the sentence she muttered in a tone so indistinct, that it could not be appre- hended, while, at the same time, she washed the blood-stains from her feet and left ankle. Brenda, who still remained locking on at some distance, endeavored in vain to assume some tone which might re-establish kindness and confidence betwixt them. ** You were right,” she said, ‘‘ Minna, to suffer no one to help you to dress so simple a rs where I do, it is scarce visi e. ** The most cruel wounds,” replied Minna, ‘‘are those which make no outward show. Are you sure you see it at all?” “Oh, yes!” replied Brenda, framing her answer as she thought would best please her sister; ‘‘I see a very slight scratch; nay, now you draw on the stocking, I can see nothing.” **You do indeed see nothing,” answered Minna, somewhat wildly; ‘‘ but the time will soon come that all—ay, all—-will be seen and known.” So saying, she hastily completed her dress and led the way to breakfast, where she as- sumed her place amongst the guests; but with a countenance so pale and haggard, and man- ners and speech so altered ee so bewildered, that it excited the attention of the whole com- pany, andthe utmost anxiety on the part of her tather, Magnus Troil. Many and various were the conjectures of the guests, concerning a distemperature which seemed rather mental than corporal. Some hinted that the maiden had been struck with an evil eye, and something they muttered about Norna of the Fitful-head; some taiked of the departure of Captain Cleveland, and murmured, *‘ it was a shame for a young lady to take on so after a landlouper, of whom no one knew anything ;” and this contemptous epithet, was so particu lar bestowed on the Captain by Mistress Baby Yellowley, while she was in the act of wrap- ping round her old skinny neck the very handsome owerlay (as she called it)wherewith the said captain had presented her. The old Lady Glowrowrum had a system of her own, which she hinted to Mistress Yellowley, after thanking God that her own connection with the Burgh-Westra family was by the lass’s mother, who was a canny Scotswoman, like herself. ‘For, as to these Troils, you see, Dame Yellowley, for high as they hold their heads they say that ken,” (winking sagaciously) ‘‘that there is a bee in their bonnet; —that Norna, as they cail her, for it’s not her right name neither, is at whiles far beside her right mind—and they that ken the cause, say the Fowd was some gate or other linked in with it; for he will never hear an ill word of her. But I was in Scotland then, or I might have kend the real cause, as weel as other folk. At ony rate, there is a kind of wildness in the blood. Ye ken very weel daft folks dinna bide to be contradicted; and I'll say that: or the Fowd—he likes to be contradict<d as ill as ony man in Zetland. But it shall never be said that I said ony ill of the house that I am sae nearly connected wi’. Only ye will mind, dame, it is throngh the Sinclairs that we are akin, not through the Troils,—and the Sin- clairs are kend far and wide fora wise gen- eration, dame. But I see there is the stirrup- cup coming round.” ‘‘T wonder,” said Mistress Baby to her brother, as soon as the Cady Glowrowrum turned from her, ‘‘what gars that muckle wife dame, dame, dame, thav gate at me: She might ken the blude of the Clinkscales is as gude as ony Glowrowrum’s among them.” The guests. meanwhile, were fast taking their departure, scarcely noticed by Magnus, who was so mueh engrossed with Minna’s in- disposition, that, contrary to his hospitable wont, he suffered them to go away unsaluted. And thus concluded, amidst anxiety and ill. ness, the festival of St. John, as celebrated on that season at the house of Burgh-Westra; adding another caution to that of the Em- peror of Ethiopia—with bow little security man can reckon upor the days which ,he des- tines to happiness. (To be conti:ned. ) For Sabbath School Teachers and Bible Students—Pelouhit’s Notes or Lessons for 1888; also, Pentecost’s Bible Studies, for sale at G. H. Haszard’s, 2i t s—dec29 Frank MecNeally’s Confession. i j a |HE TELLS A STRANGE STORY-—HIS WANDER- | INGS ON THREE CONTINENTS. Frank McNeally, just previous t parture, gave a Haliiax Chronicle rej tative an interesting account | ments since his sudden disappearance from Saco, Maine, and how he was led to commit His move the crime. Following 1s his story: ‘On the day of the affair 1 returned from dinner to the bank about 12 ociock. Uj to that time lLhad none of thi bonds or money in my possession, nor did I have ithem till 1 started from the bank for the | Kastern railway station in Biddetora, | ‘ . . to which ] pI ceeded direct. It was about three o'clock when J took the bonds tre ithe vauits and left the building. I had idea then of the value of the bonds, ili bo ili i did not examine them till l reached Lon don. It was about four o'clock when J started on the train out of Biddeford station, with a ticket for Portland i as sumed no disguise whatever, and did not have the material for effecting any. My only baggage was a small satchel containing the bonds. At Portland, which I reached half an hour later, I immediately bought a through ticket for Montreal, by the Port- land and Ogdensburg railway, but at St. Johnsburg, Vt., Lleft the train. It was now one o'clock Tuesday morning. I pro- ceeded to a hotel and put up for the night. After breakfast I purchased a new ticket, but left the train at noon at some small place, had dinner and took a ride across the country on a stage coach, which landed me at Cedar Falls, Vt., the same afternoon. At this place I obtained another ticket for a town in Vermont, on the Canadian bor- der, the name of which I cannot recall. 1 got to the border at 3.30 o'clock, and re- mained there till six, when I boarded a Canadian Pacific train for Montreal. My baggage was on the seat alongside me, but was not molested by customs, officers. The repeated changes of my route were not adopted through fear at the time, but merely to elude pursuit. When I left the Portland and Ogdensburg line the first time, the conductor gave me half of a re- turn ticket to Orchard Beach, as he had taken up my own through ticket to Mon- treal. The use of this afterwards probably assisted in throwing off any suspicion. made no further change till Montreal was reached, where without any delay, I took a train for Quebec, where l arrived early on Wednesday morning. I spent all that day and night at the St. Louis Hetel, in Quebee, and on the following day, having purchased an Allan line ticket for Liverpool, went on board the steamer Parisian, which sailed immediately. During all this time,and throughout all of my travels I did not observe that any suspicions were directed towards me by detectives or others, though I made no effort to disgvise myself or change my appearance in any manner. At Moville, where the mails were landed, I left the steamer, proceeded to Dublin, crossed to Holyhead and made for London. Here a couple of days later | engaged a stateroom on a passenger steamer for Egypt end was landed at Suez. I spent a good deal of time wandering about this country, visiting Cairo, Alexandria and other interesting points. From Egypt I went to Italy, visiting Rome and Naples among other places, then passed through Switzerland to Vienna and other Austrian cities. I made stoppages at innumerable points, the names of which | not pretend to repeat, but at no place did | remain more than a few days. 1 was ever on the move, for the purpose of baffling any pursuit that might be gein After going through France, Germany nd Belgium, I returned to England and kept moving round there till I determined to Coui | return to Canada, and accordingly took passage on the steamer Polynesian for this city * Tf Wi bgypl that i j ' at letter th Dall it was hot i wa l with th te n opebing neyouation ra i but for the purpose ol finding some me Lo restore the stolen bonds. I did not come to Halifax at the request of any person, bu entirely of my own accord, Kven the bank authorities did not know of my being on the way till four days after the steamer Polynesian sailed from England, when they received a letter posted there by me. That letter, 1 am informed, and believe, was opened in the Saco post office, for some of its contents were known to outsiders in Saco before it had been delivered to the bank. The result of its receipt was that my brother came to Halifax to meet me. What passed between us in reference to the bonds I cannot say. The bank could not make any compromise with me in order to secure them, because the law will not permit. To dispose of this question, how- ever, | must decline to say anything touch- ing the whereabout or disposition of the bonds. If I would, I could say where | believe them to be, of my own knowledge, but I will not impart any information on that point ‘*The removal of the bonds was planned and executed by me inside of two hours, Up to the Monday afternoon when I left Saco the idea had never entered my mind, It was a sudden impulse, which rendered me desperate, and J determined to carry it out. The case was only another of the many where people receiving small salaries like I did, and spending too much, get into the habit of taking a little at a time and end up by attempting a big and sudden sweep. The stories about fast living, fancy women, sppending nights away from home, and others of the kind, are not true, as everybody in Saco knowing me can testify. In proof of this I may say that there is a Saco merchant of high standing who is known to have offered to give me a situa- tion if 1 returned and made amends to the bank. I don’t know that I will return, but iT have thought seriously of doing so, and it may result in that. I expected arrest as soon as | arrived in Halifax, therefore it came with no surprise whatever, but I knew nothing could be done with me in Canada and felt no alarm,”