tale a AN gna DOLLARS A YL BAR, i as tense pean “ais is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Kvxirrprs, SINGLE Copirzs Two CrEnrTs, NEW SERIES CHARLOTTELOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16, I885, VOL 16.---NO. 74. Che Daily Examiner y evening, by ihe Examiner Publishing Oo. ort ot Water and reets, Charlottetown. e Hdward Island. { bie ie! . OF SUBSCRIPTION ES Six Months, $2 50 Three Vionths, 1 25 One Month, - v0 60 “~~ Advertising at most moderate rates, Cont puarteriy, . ehes, nay made for monthly, half-yearly or yearly advertize- ' Pei Oks —_—- ALMANAC FOR FEBRUARY, i885. MOON 8S CHANGES, uart day, 6h. 25m., p. m, ter ¢ ast \uartel = J ‘ w Moon 14th day, 10a, 9m., p. m. r, 22nd day, 6a. 19m., a. m. b Moon, 23th day, lth. 45m., p. m. } Sun Sun 'Moon| High | Days: Mi * rises sets | rises ; water/|len’h, h mh m aft’n morn; hm|! li Sanday 7 28:4 59) 7 Se, 11 55) 9 31) 2) Monday 27/5 119 Siait32) 34] Tuesday 26} 31101411 9} 37] 4 Weaa sday 24 5 il 'sS l 50 41) 5 Thureday 23 6 morn, 2 33 43 6 Friiay 2 S| 0 19: 2 24 $7 | 7\Saturday ig wv! 2 Isl 429) Bu} 3) Suaday 18; 10, 2 131 3 4 51] 9 Mouday 17, 11/3 6 6 53) 54! 10| Tuestay 16) 13] 3 53/757, 357] i}! Wedaesday 14) 15 433! 8 43:10 1) 12! Thursday > 2 16,518 9 % | 13 Friday ll} is! 5 6710 3] 7 | 14, Saturday ¥ 19 6 28 10 38, 10} 15, Sunday S 21) 6 6911 13 13! 16 Moaday 7 22: 7 #6 ii 47 16 17 buesday 5 24! 7 56 morn! 19} 18 Wednesday 3} 26' 8 26 0 21 23 | iy Thursday Lb 25 5 St; O 57 27 | a) Friday 659 29; 9 27° | ®@ 29 21 Sacurd Ay 8 ZultO Ij) 2 25 32 92 Suuday 56; 31 10 57) 3 21 35 23| Monuay | 535 33,11 50) 441; 38 24 Tuesday ' & Stintee, 6 2 42 2) Wedne- lay dl 36 1 53) 7 35, 45 25 Tuursday 49 337°3 91837! 48 27 Friday 47 38, 422: 9 29 dl 6 405 40) 5 34 10 " 9 55 25 Saturday | TH RALLWAY Tilt TABLE, (Charlottetown Time. ) } GOING WEST. aM, W ot TD is onc cts bbcdasosbe 802 302 Royalty Junction. iste eeceeae ae North Wiltshire. . iow; wie on ES SI Ee ee 932 432 cao s ue dalideses lv1i0 5u9 County Line. - 1019 . 619 Freetown > 1035 534 Kensington Keedee ueak: 4057 557 {| QETEVE,... cc cecccss 1332 26623 Sammerside, P. M, { depart.. 147 } Miscouche... ' bene | Wellington Covrceeevedstios ben saee 2 37 ng ou oo au meee +. | lc oocn gh wars Hue ss .4 42 ee ee .5 47 Tignish. ..6 47 FROM WE>sT. A. M, es nce oceseees dane cunee 6 47 IL ic cadescecccives eau 7 47 i ae cuny er boul 9 02 DP ARNE 6 60 ccdid bb dnc LU 22 Wellington an GF Miscou: ne.. vinci cere | AITIVE ©... ee eee ee Sie). ac MH Summerside, Pp. M. Cent. i ccc --202 732 Kensington.. ve oii. £0 Freetown . ..300 830 County Line .. iweee:6 6S Bradaibane ,. ee GH, ...ccesdcadecoaal 402 932 EE 417 947 Royalty Juaction ..509 1039 Caariottetown...... ..632 1102 GCING EAST, P. M) SOUNOE occ wsccdcceectelosiet 317 Royalty Junction ceidaeees ee Bedford . ea pec ae eae 417 eee heen s |) GETEUEr occ ccenceseus 452 Moaat Stewart, ( GepaeG. oo. cect teede: 457 Cardigan conte asen ee be neue 6 \7 hc ccceccccchisccectd cel utaa) 6 42 See MOUWAGD.... oo occcce cb es 457 ik ccdc ke ocak 5 37 St. Peter's. . ..6 08 Bear River oie ee MN eo ce ccececceccceesccl. 6 7 42 FROM EAST, A. M. ee 6 52 PUG, Soi. uadesanceeontl seis 7 37 es 8 26 RS AEE NT RR ih gS: ic 8 57 Mn UNNNS, . .. c. ccasehenccauiee 9 37 NN «oc coe nua base i 7 47 SE 5. ssp +cbiioddindataccs sau 812 et 9 32 Monst Stewart, } erate as BN iss scikc's enue tied ioc th eek ae 10 17 Royalty eee 10 24 nee: ae ee il i7 Weleou, Moron & meQuarrie, BARRISTERS —aNnvp—- ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Office in Brwa’s Blovk, Queen Square (UP STAIRS). 1 12, 1 BSD, , mm,’ en ee SULLIVAN & MAGNEILL, TTORNEYS - AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, Kc. OF FICES— O’Hailoran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown, Ga Money to Loan. W. W,. Scuuuivan, Q. 0. | Cassran B, Macusitn ies > voOwn, Fe CHILDREN’S WILL SELL THE BALANCE OF HIS STOCK OF —AT A— Reduction to Clear | ‘Free corns. —ALSO— A Lot of Ladies’ MANTLES aud WOOL GOODS —AT— HALF PRICH. Ch’town, Jan. 30, 1885. FANCY SLEIGHS, &., CHEAPEST, CHAIRS, CRADLES, COTTS, Mirrors & Looking Glasses, English and German, very Low. Our stock of Gilt and Walnut Picture-frame Mouldings is the largest in the Lower Provinces, unrivalled in quality and variety, and made to suit all kind of pictures—the Cheapest in the city. PARLOR & CHAMBER SUITS. Examine our Magnificent Parlor and Chamber Suits, which we are Selling at Cost. CHAIRS—Parlor, Chamber, Office, Children’s and Kitchen Chairs, cheap. All kinds of Upholstering Work, Painting, Varnishing and Gilding. BEDDING AND MATTRESS—Feather, Hair, Flock, Fibre, Excelsior, Wool, Straw—Cheapest in the city. Bedsteads, Lounges, Tables, Sideboards, Bookcases, Scheffioneers. Washstands, &.—Cheapest. JOHN NEWSON. Ch’town, Vee. 19, 1884- 3mos ROYAL CANADIAN INSURANCE CO. HT FR-B. CaperTal, - + >= + > > saeesjene HEAD OFFICE ~ Montreal. — HALIFAX BRANCH~— J. Scott Mitchell, Agent. o= Risks Vaken on Most Favoraivie Terms. AGENT FOR PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND: F. H. ARNAUD, den. 16, 82. Ob’town, Jan, 1h hierchants Bank of Halifax JAMES SHAND COMFORTS & BLANKETS LSaOTIOHO | Vad ONGTE FONITIVED “HILAMAOYD 'VNIHO GNV VICNI | | | | o~-—— THE ABOVE VEKY CHOICE BRAND OF j INDIA & CHINA TEA (BLENDED) For family ase, for sale at 50 cents per pound or 10 pound box for $4.75. ga Give it a Trial, BEER & GOFF. nan areata | i ! | —— aneewnee— j } j | VOID Adniterated You can buy the Greel, of Whole Roasted Beau, -~AND— Imperted Coffees Fresh Ground Coffee, ' ! (Java and other kinds) from BEER AND COFF. 1000 Barrels Flour. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. CHOICE BRANDS | —=————— DANUBE takes the lead. woey — Popular Brands, GOLDEN STAR MAPLE HILL GOLDEN AGE STRATHROY The above and other CHOICK BRANDS! In stock this date. BEER & COFF. Choice Patents. Choice Superiors, - 4 CHEESE, CHEESE, 100 Boxes—WHOLESALE & RETAIL. BEER & GOFF’S, ‘Apples. Apples. 300 Barrelsa—W HOLESALE & RETAIL, at BEER & GOFF’S, | REGULAR TRADER. THE CLIPPER BARK “MOSELL,” | i | | j |drinking his health on a day when he has BEDE. cisiibciaapiettaee CHAPTER XXIV. (Continued. ) ‘I thank you all, my good friends and ADAM neighbors,’ Arthur said, for the good opinion of me, and the kind feel. ‘ings toward me which Mr. Poyser has been expressing on your behalf and on bis ‘own, and it wili always be my heartiest wish to deserve them. in course of things we |may expect that if I live, I shall one day or |other be your landlord; indeed, it is on the }ground of that expectation that my grand- father has wished me to celebrate this day jand to come among you now; and I look | forward to this position, not merely as one | Of power and plessure for myself, but as a jmeans of benefitting my neighbors. It |hardly becomes so young a man as I am to \talk much about farming to you, who are most of you so much older, and are men of ,experience; still I have interested wyself a good de.lin such matters, and learned as ;much about them as my opportunities have ‘allowed; and when the course of events |shall place the estate in my hands, it will | be my first desire to afford my tenants all | the encouragement a landlord can give them in improving their land and trying to bring ‘about a better practice of husbandry. It | will be my wish to be looked upon by all \iny deserving tenants as their best friend, and nothing would make me so happy as to he able to respect every man on the estate, | }and to be respected by him infreturn. It is jnot my place at present to enter into 1 only meet your good| hopes concerning me by telling you that my! own hopes correspond to them—that what | you expect from me | desire to fulil; and Tam quite of Mr. Poyser’s opinion, that, when a man has said what he means he had better stop. But the pleasure I feel in| having my Own health drank by you would | not be perfect if we did not drink the health of my grandfather, who has filled | the place of both parents to me. I will say no more until you have joined me in | particulars, wished me to appear among you as the, future representative of his name and family.’ Perhaps there was no ove present, except Mr. Irwine, who thoroughly understood apd approved Arthur’s graceful mode of proposing his yrandfather’s health. The farmers thought the fyoung Squire knew well enough that they hated the old Squire, avd Mrs. Poyser said ‘he'd better not ha stirred a kettle o’ sour broth.’ The bucolic mind does not readily apprehend the re- finements of good taste. But the toest could not be rejected, and when it had beea drank, Arthur said— ‘l thank you both for my grandfather and for myseif; and now there is one more thing I wish to tell you, that you may share my pleasure about it, as I hope and believe you will. I think there can be no man here who has not a respect, and some of you, i am sure, have a very high regard, for my friend Adam Bede. It is well known to every one in_ this neighborhood that there is no man wh: se word can be more depended on than his; that whatever he undertakes to do, he does well, and he is as careful for the in- terests for those who employ him as for his own. I’m prond to say that | was very fond of Adam when I was a little boy, and I have never lost my old feeling for him— I think that shows that I know a good fellow when I findhim. It has long been my wish that he should have the manage- ment of the woods on the estate, which happen to be very valuable; not only becanse I think so highly of his character, but because he has the knowledge and the skill which fit him for the plece. And I am happy to tell you that it is my grand- father’s wish too, and it is now settled that Adam shall manage the woods—a change which Il am svre will be very much to the advantage of the estate; and I hupe you will by-and-by join me in drinking his health, end in wishing him all the pros perity in life that he deserves. But there 1s a still older friend of mine than Adam Rede present, and I need not tell you that it is Mr. Irwine. I'm sure you will agree with me that we must drink no other! person’s health un‘il wo have drunk his. I know you have all reason toleve him,but no one of his parishioners has so much reason asl. Come, charge your glasses, and let us drink to our excellent Rector—three times three ! The toast was drunk with all the en- thsiasm that was wanting to the last, and it certainly was the most _pic- turesque moment inthe scene, when Mr. I:wine got up to speak, and all the faces in the room were turned toward him. The’! superior refinement of his face was much more striking than that ot Arthur’s, when seen in comparison with the people round them, Arthur’s was a much commoner British face, and the splendor of his new- jashioned clothes was more akin to the young farmer’s taste in costume than Mr. lrwine’s powder, and the well brushed but well worn black, which seemed vo be his chosen suit for great occasions, for he had the mysterious secret of never wearing a new-looking coat. 500 Tons Regist<r, Classed 10 years Al in English Lloyds. McLeod, WILL SAIL FROM Liverpool for Uharicttetown, Ona or about the lst APRIL next, carry- ing Freight at through rates to Pictou, Georgetown, Sourls and Summerside. For Freight or Passage, apply in Liverpool to Pitcairn Brothers, 51 South Jchn Street ; in London to J Fitecairn & sons, 16 Great Winchester Street ; or here to the owners PEAKE BaOS. & CO. Alexauder Commuander, Chitown, Feb. 3, 1885, ‘This isnot the firet time, by a great jmany,’ he said, ‘that I have had to thank ‘my parishioners for giving me tokens of ‘tieir good-will, but neighborly kindness is ‘among those things that are the most jprecious the older they get. Jndeed, our pleasant meeting to-day is a proof that | vhen what is good comes of age and is likely to live there is reason for rejoicing, and the relation between us as clergyman and parishioners came of age two years ago, tor it is three-and twenty years since | first came among you, and I see some tall, fine-looking young men here, as well as some blooming young women, that were ‘far from looking as pleasantly at me when don was installed as postmaster thorne, for whom you have just expressed your regard. I had the pleasure of being his turor for several years, and have natur- ally had opportunities of knowing bim in- timately which can not have occurred to any one else who is present; and I have some pride as well us pleasure in assuring you that I share your high hopes concern- ing him, and your confidence in his posses- sion of those qualities which will make him an excellent landlord when the time shall come for him to take that important pesition among you. We feel alike on most matters on which a man who is getting to- ward fifty can feel in common with a young man of one and-twenty, and he has just been expressing « feeling which I share very heartily, and I would not willingly omit the opportunity of saying so. That feeling is his value and respect for Adam Bede. People in a high station are of course more thought of and talked ahout, and have their virtues more praised, than those whose lives are pessed in humble, every-day work; but every sensible man knows how necessary that humble, every- day work is, and how important o us that it should be done well, And I agree with my _ friend Mr. Arthur Donn'thorne in feeling that when a man whose duty lies in that sort of work shows a character which would make him an example in any station, his merit should be acknowledged. He is one of those to whom honor is due, and his friends should delight to honor him. I know Adam Bede weill—I know what he is as a workman, and what he has been as a ben anda brother; and I am saying the simplest truth when I say that I respect him as much as 1 respect any man living. But I am not speaking to you about a stranger; some of you are his intimate friends, and I believe there is not one here who does not know enough of him to join heartily in drinking his health.’ As Mr. Irwine paused, Arthur jumped up, and filling his glass, said, ‘A bumper to Adam Bede, and may he live to have sons as faithful and clever as himself !’ (T'o be continued. ) A Rough Trip. A BAD SHAKING UP ON A TWO WEEFKS’ JOUR- NEY FROM THE END OF THE TRACK—A MONEY ORDER GFFICE OPENED AT BEAVER CREEK, (From the Winnipeg Times, Feb. 3.) Post Office Inspector MeLeed arrived home from the west iasi night, a very much broken up man. <A Times reporter visited him at his residence this morning and found him in bed, completely exhausted. He re- Jated his experience as follows : ‘**I left here fovr weeks ago to go to Beaver Creek, or Canyon, -28 some cail it, Before going into the moonrains, I drove to M.Leod from Calgary end back, taking the train to my destination, which 1] reached without difficulty, I may stete that the object of the trip was the establishment of a money order office at Beaver Canyon, at the present end of the track. TT) is business was cffected on Monday, and Mr. Tom Gor- Leaving Beaver Creek we started east acain, travel- ling by rail os far as the third siding. Here the diflicuities commenced, it being the foot of the western slope of the Rockies, the grades are very steep, some of them four and ahalf per cent., and frequently the train service is suspended by the snew slides and the ice which forms across the track by the freezing up of the waters run- ning down the sides of the mountain, The train service of the C. P. R. does not ex- tend west of Lagyan and the balance cf the line to Beaver Canyon, a distarce of eighty-five miles, is operated by the con- tractors, It had not been intended to rnna regular train service this* winter, conse- quently we made arrang: ments last fal! to have the mail carried by dog train from Laggan to the third crossing, from whence there is a good road easily operated to the Beaver. Here our jurisdiction ends, and the mails are conveyed to the various camps by the C. P. R. mail company, each man being charged twenty-five c nts a month to keep up the service. Weill, when we got to the third siding we found the track was closed up and determined to travel to Laggan, a distance of forty miles, by the dogs. We were compelled to walk the whole distance, however, as the ani- mals had all they could do to drag the mails, the snow being from three to four feet deep. We had two days of this travel- ling over a road that defies discription betore reaching Laggan, the whole distance being an up grade. We stayed a day at Liggan, and ther got a tie train as far as Canmore. From there five of us secured a hand car and started for Calgary, a distance of fifty-five miles. The rovd has a down grade nearly the whole distance, but we were caught in a most terrific blizzard, and mee'ing frequently with immense snow drifts over the track, had to p” tase the hand car around them, a most laborious operation. Two days of this and we reached Calgary. Here I met Messrs. ©, 8. Drum- moud and Chaffey , and we started at once for the east in a freight train. Forty miles east at Strathmore we were doomed ‘o another delay, the train striking a big drifs, throwing the caboose and several cara into the ditch, We managed to reach Gileichen, where we stayed twenty-four hours, and managed to work along as far as Medicine Hat. Here we laid up and waited for the regular passenger from Calgary, as we could not catch one at Moose Jaw, ‘* The trip was the hardest and coldest I ever experienced,” said Mr. McLeod, “and I would not go through the same again for any money. Jt just took me two weeks to come from the Beaver, Mail matters are working very satisfactorily, althongh it is a hard division to handle. At Beaver Canyon there is a town of some five hundred people. The timber in the |{ christened them, as I[ am _ happy ! . ito see them looking now. Bur I’m sure you will not wender when I say, that awong all those young | men, the one in whom I have the strongest ‘interest is my friend Mr, Arthur Donui- district is splendid, and [| was shown Douglas pine 160 feet long and 18 inches in diameter at the top.” Mr. McLeod expects to be able to get around ju a day or two, |