8 ee eT ~ . 4. " \ & FY, * | a * ~ j 4 " . - X , | | y } ey 7 $. DOLLARS A YEAR ie Git ce “as OR Stee ae Pa ee te ey chan wee Ed ” SS See en Zhis is true Liberty, when Free-boru Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free,” —Evnipwesa, SINGLE Corizs Two CENTS. SERIES Fie Daily Examiner fhe Examiner Publishing Oo. Water and > * harlottet i [siang Fre rher ol wh ev 50 1 25 ‘i v a0 wm Ad isiug moderate rates ra made for monthly, ear or yeatly advertize- iy ‘ ativl QLMANAG FOR JANUARY, (885. INS CHANGES, Li test Quarter 7t 24m., p. m, “ew Moon i6:! y, 4h, 24m., a. m. 23rd day, 9. 14m., p. m. Oh. 7m., Boon n ‘Moon High | Days Lay ° lay Firat Quarter, Fuli Moon, 30th day, Db sun is 1¥ we . AS CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1885. i. W. VINATC OME, PIANO TUNER ube Tuned, Re-wired aad Regulated, CHURCH ORGANS \ yolced, Tuned, and Regulated with Care. CABINET ORGANS funed, Re-toned and Repaired. Having nearly twenty years’ experience with the construction of EKaglish, American > and German Pianos, and under the patronage of Government House, the Convent and the leading anusical families on the Island, feels sure of giving uviversal satisfaction Mr. V. will engage professionally for public }or private ceucerts the cominy season. i Office—t'. P. Fletcher’s Musie Store. /Ch town, Oct. 25 1884 ' Hicheod, Morson & McQuarrie BARRISTERS AND ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Oflice in Old Bank, {UP STAIRS). Ch’town, Feb, 21, 1884. SULLIVAN & MAGHEILL, . VT TORNEYS - AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC. &c.| OF FICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great | George Street, Charlottetown | 642” Money to Loan, MAOMRILL | ¥, Soutivan, 2. C. | Cunsren B, | | “i rises , water |len’h, es h mh m alt’n morn; hm} \| Tharsday 7 504 19 5 38 10 44) § 2% 2) Friday 50} 20) 6 47,11 30 36 3’ Saturday SO} 21) 8 IJjaft 13) Sl ; Sunday 30 22 9 12} 054) a2 5 Monday 49' 22)10 3 | 37} oo 6. Tuesday 49, 223)11 27; 2 22 35 7) Wednesday 45' 25'morn; 3 Li 37 | ai Thureday 48 26 0 30' 410 35| g Friday 48' 28'136 5270, 40 10 Saturday 47; 29, 2 30) 6 30; 42) ji Sunday 4 30,3 27'7 34) 44 12' Monday 16; 31' 418 8 26 45 13, Tuesday 46) 33, 5 12, 9 10 7 14 Wednesday 45, 34) 5 59, 9 49 49 15, Thursday 45, 35' 6 42/10 27) 51] 1 Friday 4+ 7, 7211 2 5! i; Saturday L> J 7 55 il 35 55! js Sunday +? to) § 26 morn 53 | jj Monday $2; 41, 8 56,0109 1) 20' Tuesday ti} 42 9 24; O 43) i) 2}, Wednesday 0 644 9 52 1:19 | g2| Thursday 39| 4510 21; 1 69 8 2?) ¥riday 38) 646 80 53) 2 45 li | 24 Saturday as 45ii1 291 3 45 13 | 95 Suuday 360 « 49'att G6 4 OV iG 2% Monuay 35) 50} 1 2630! 17) gy iuesday 4 2' 1 541 7 49 19) 28 Wednesday sas ws Tee 21 99 Tburaday ; 32; 55: 4 21, 9 48 23} 80 PF riday Bl 8a) 5 S210 31) 26) 31 Saturday 7 29 4 53! 6 46/1i 14; 9 29) THE RAILWAY TIME TABLE. (Charlottetown Time.) & GOING WEST. P. M, Charlottctown, se 308 Roy ity dupction ..8 2 2 25 North wWiltsaire. vil 417 Hauter River. 932 432) ws ere csc ween a ene tui0 5v9 Lounly bine. i ly 2 19) ss, codecen dann duueat 1035 534!) Keasig tou On 8.7 | ACTIVE... 2.000 eees 4132 62% Sammerside, y. & ( depart i 47 accueil z2u9 Wellinzton . <.. ae Port Pe eka kd hone aeeen 22 O'Leary .442 Siverwa, 5 7 Tigaish. . ..6 47 FROM WEaT. A. M Tiguish 6 47 coc pee oben seen ue 7 47 U Leary v 02 Port tii LU 22 Weilington Ll 07 Miscouche .. Li 34 _ | arrive tb 6: as Mh Summerside, P. M. { depart 2u2 732 Kensington.. rN 237 3 07 | Freetown . 300 #830 County Line 317 846 Bradaibane 327 855 TE a 402 9% 32) North Wiltshire. 417 9 4] Royalty Junction 5609 1039 Unariottietown. 632 1102 GCING EAST. Pr. M ee ee 3 ig Royalty Junction 3 49 Bediord , aaa k ikea el 417 Mount Stewar | errene st 4 52 ” {depart ..497 Cardigan one ces cicevpebusreeres 6 42 Mouat stewart . 457 ee a a 5 3] i) ITAL o vc bee ce udind cclea dee ueeaeee 6 08 eee 6 37 Souris. 7 42 PROM FAs’, A. M Souris se ok we co Gc Le 6 52 ee eee 7 37 ee ot ae ee 8 26 Morell... : ace Mouat Stewart ae ec owbee ae te 747 Cardigan. . pead-ennd denne Mount Stewart, } SPTIVE:---- eee cee ee: 9 32 "* | depart.....+.eee+0e-8 42 Bedford _. Be NT See 10 17 Royalty Junction.... a ces destae ae Re Super) Baking Powder. (Manufactured by Holister, Crane & Co., 9. Broad Sireet, New York.) TE hywees STIONABLY the purest and most wholesowe Baking Powder made, Gro- Cers 4*e authorized to guarantee every cad to be tull weight, aud positively pure. Ask for tue * Superb” and take no other, Pat up in 4.4 aad 11d. tins, and jor gale by every re- 7| A. Potatoes, Spilling, Bark, R. R. Ties, Lumber, Laths, Cann: d Lebsiers, Mac- kerel, Berries, Eggs, Fish kite. Best Prices for all Shipments, for Quotations, HATHEWAY & CO. General Commission Merc ianta, 22 Centrai Whart, Boston. Members of Board of Trade, Mechanics Exchange. Ch’town, Nov. 19, 1884. - SURPLUS BAND INSTRUMENTS FOR SALE. SET of Brass Band Instruments, con- sisting a3 foliows, viz. : Write fully Corn and One B Flat Baritone Brass, Piston Valve, One E Flat Pocket Cornet, Silver Plated, Piston Valve, Foar B Flat Brass Cornets, Rotary Side TEAS OV&aRCOATS! CVERCOATS! Une pair Cymbals, Turkish. The above Instrements can be seen by ap plyiag to Mr. Galbraith in this city. HENRY BEER, Lt Col. & Pres. Band Committee, Ch’town, Dec. 11, 1884—eod wkly2i STANDARD LF ASSURANCE 00. A the 57th Annual General Meeting of the Standard Lite Asgurance Compary, heid at Edinburgh on Tuesday, the 24th of April, 1833, the following results for the year ended 15th November, 1883, were re ported ;— 3,038 new proposals for life as- surance were received the site iia x year for ™ $ 9,754,085 38 2,561 proposals were accepted, oo 7,239,048 13 The total existing assurances 12 force at 15th November, 18 82, amounted to i (Of which $7, 753,031.15 was reassured with Other offi ces) The claims by death which aroge during the year amount- ed, including bonus addi- tions, to $6,936,302 91 2,462,226 59 spectable wholesale and retail grocer and Eeaueral dea'er ig Canada, trade « Upplied by JOHN T. REED, 105 Water Street, St. John, N. B | Ang §—.8m eod ew PRINTING of every descmpt ©? «xecuted with Neatness and Des at the EXAMINER JOB P ion ING BOOMS cov. Wabr: sed Grsot George Sireet The Canadian | teh | THOMAS Tke annual revenve am oun ted at 15th November, 1882, to The invested funds at same date amounted to Jeing am inerease during the year of 4,267,546 00 29,503,416 00 1,062,648 35 JOHN LONGWORTH, Agent for Charlottetown, KERR, I tor of Agencies. Oh'town, August 3, 1688. "aan » with the bare muscular arms, and the T , F I Brass, Rotary To ( F man with the ; Actim ev oil Tc Gauntlets, 75cts; Men’s Buckskin Lined do, 80cts; Men’s thick, firm black hair tossed abvut like One B Flat Baritone, do do do | ° “3 @ : trodden meadow-grass whenever he takes Oae E Flat “ircular Bass do do do }Cloth Ringwood, WC. | off his paper cap, and with the strong bari- ADAM BEDE CHAPTER XIX. (Contin d. ) TO THE TRADE. 0 FAIL S'TOCE, o—_-—- 1884. But it was Adam’s strength, not his cor- relative hardness, that influenced his medi- tations this morning. as foolish for him to marry a blooming) young girl, so long as he has no other pros- pect than that of growing poverty with a growing family. And his savings had been 'so constantly drawn upon (besides the ter- i\rible sweep of paying for Seth’s substitute in the militia), that he had not enongh ‘money beforehand to furnish even a small ‘cottage, and keep something in reserve |@gainst a rainy day. He had good hope that he should 9e ‘firmer on his legs’ by and | by; but he could not be satisfied with a | Vague coufidence in his arm ard brain ; he ;}must have definite plans, and set about |them at once. The partnership with Jona- ‘than Burge was not to be thought of at | present—-there were things implicitly tacked 'to it that he could not accept; but Adam thought that he and Seth might carry on a little business for themselves in addition to | their journeyman’s work, by buying a small ‘stock of superior wood and making articles {of household furniture, for which Adam had no end of contrivances. Seth might ‘gain more by working at separate jobs -under Adam’s direction than by his journey- -mau’s work, and Adam, in his over-hours ‘could do all the ‘nice’ work, that required peculiar skill, The money gained in this | way with the good wages he received as 'foreman would svon enable them to get | beforehand with the world, so sparingly as ithey would al] live now. No sooner had ithis little plan shaped itself in his mind | than he began to be busy with exact calcu- ilations about the wood to be bought, and ema jaapaeenn the particular article of furniture that should be undertaken first—a kitchen cup- ‘board of his own contrivance with such an 4 E i R & G O ~ i ingenious arrangement of sliding doors and @ bolts, such convenient nooks for stowing | household provender, aud such symmetrical result to the eye, that every good housewife = !would be in raptures vith it, and fall {through all the gradations of melancholy longing till her husband promisod to buy it i\forher. Adam pictured to himself Mrs. 'Poyser examining it with her keen eye,and trying in vain to find out a deficiency, and, of course, close to Mrs, Poyser stood Hetty, and Adam was again beguiled from jcaleulation snd contrivances into dreame and hopes. Yet he would go and see her this evening—it was se long since he had been atthe Hal Farm. He would have liked to go to the night-echool, to see why Bartle Massey had not been at church yesterday, for he feared his old friend was ill: but, unless he could manage beth visits, the last must be put off till to-morrow —the desire to be n ar Hetty, and to speak to her again, was too strong. | As he made up his mind to this, he was jcoming very near to the end ef his walk, | within the sound of the hammers at work on the refitting of the old house. The suund of tools to aclever workman who loves his work, is like the tentative sounds of the orchestra to the violinist who has to bear his part in the overture ; the strong fibers begin their accustomed thrill, and what was a moment b fore joy, \exation, or ambition, begins iis change imto energy. All passion becomes strength when it has ‘an outlet from the narrow limits of ‘our personel lot in the labor ol jright aam, the cunning of our right ‘hand, or the © still creative ac- tivi y of our thought. Look at Adam ithrough the rest of the day, as he stands lon the scaffulding with the two-feet ruler in \his hand, whistling iow while he considers ‘how a difficulty about a floor-joist or a | window-frame isto be overcome; or, as he pushes one of the younger workmen aside, and takes his place in upheaving a weight of timber, saying, ‘ Let alone, lad ! thee’st got too much gristle i’ thy bones yet,’ or as : he fixes his keen, black eyes on the motions ‘of a workman on the other side of the ‘room, and warns him that bis distances are y not right. Look at this broad-shouidered Received and to Arrive Shortty : 1.200 Barrels FLOUR (choice, ) 300 «6©do)|6Ontario APPLES, 160 do Nova Scotia APPLES, 300 Boxes and half boxes RAISINS, 500 «do Choice FIGS, 100 Casks KEROSENE OIL, 125 Boxes CHEESE, 175 do Boneless FISH, 1,000 Pounds JAMS and MARMALADE. — ee (oe Large stock Sugar, Molasses, Biscuits, Confectionery, &e. Oa eee Splendid Value in half-chests and five-pound air-tight Tins, a Oe WHOLESALE PRICES VERY LOW. November 20, 1884. Clothine & Fur Caps, ——0:0 ——e FUR CAPS! FUR CAPS! sail enipnciiguipnteaiicioes LL who want Overcoats and Fur Caps will do well to call on L. E. Prowse, as he has the largest and best assortment in town, and his prices are very low. Ladic’s Sacques, Ulsters, Wool Squares, Wool Scarfs, &., on a big discount. Call and see our goods and prices and we will convince you that we mean what we say. L. E. PROWSE, Sign of the BIG HAT, 74 Queen Street. Ch’town, Dec. 27, 1884. JAMES SHAND, STEVENSON’S BUILDING, QUEEN ST., IS OFFERING | Men’s Lined Kid Gloves, 75cts; do Fur Trimmed, $1 ; dc tone voice bursting every now and then Ladies’ Lined Kid Mitts, 50cts; do Long Cloth ibives, jars: eat ane en ere ee . 29°cts: do Long Thread do, 28cts. Men’s White Cambric Hand-| yet presently checking himself apparently coi Se eal ct -e Handkerchiefs i ‘crossed with some thought which jars with kerchiets from 5cts, Men’s Colored Cashmere Handkerchiels 1 | j). singing. Perhaps, if you had not been . . * * . . . & > j iia . bs . l t t 4 , great variety, Ladies’ White Cambric Handkerchiefs from bets, jalrendy, a per gent a aD eof. Ladies’ Linen do from LOcts, Ladies’ Embroidered and Lace-edge affection, whet tender, fluttering | hopes, ea : < - 7. ¢ n yo |had their homes in this athletic body with Handkerchiefs, Ladies’ Silk Handkerchiefs from 15 to 60cts. |the broken finger-nails—in this rough man, |who knew no better lyrics than he could ‘find in the Old and New Version and an joceasional hymn; who knew the emalilest Ladies’ Fancy Embroidered Ties, Bands, Brushes, Combs, Toilet Pins, Belts. Buttons in great variety ; Laces, Edgings, possible monet of prea history ; es ° A e - . = a r Vv ’ Insertions, DS wiss Embroidery, a large stock. Book, Cross ‘shape of the earth, the course of the e sun, and the changes of the seasons, lay in | the region of mystery just made visible by fragmentary knowledge. It had cost Adam a great deal of trouble, and work in over-hours, to know what he krew over and above the secrets of his liandicraft, and that acquaintance with mechanics and figures and the nature of the materials he worked with which was made easy to him by inborn, inherent faculty—to get the mastery of his pen, and write a plain hand, to spell without any other mistake than must in fairness be attributed to the un- reasonable character of orthography rather than to any deficiency in the speller, and moreover, to learn his musical notes and part-singing. Besides all this, he had read his Bible, including the apoeryphial books; Poor Richard’s Almanac, Taylor’s Living and Dying, The Pilgrim’s Progress, with Bunyan’s Life and Holy Wer, a great deal of Bailey’s Dictionary, Valentine and Orson, and pert of a History of Babylon which Bartle Miseey had lent him He barred and Jaconet Muslin, Lace Curtains, Black and Whit Figured Nets, BLACK AND COLORED VELVETEENS. Se A Large Stock Canadian Shiris aud Drawers trom 40 Gets. oO Ye Remember the place: Stevenson’s Building, Queen Street, wh ve all goods kept by us are sold at prices which can-, not be legitimately competed with. VOL. 16.---NO. 56. Bartle Massey, but he had no time for jreading ‘the common print,” as Lisheth called it, so busy was he with figu es in all | the leisure nom+nts which he did not fill |up with extra carpentry | Adam, you perceive, was by no means a |marvelous man, nor, preperly spesking, a | genius, yet | will not pretend that this was |an ordinary character smong workmen; and He had long made} , S pose up his mind that it would be wrong as well) the next it would not be at ali a safe conclusion that best man you may happen to eee with a basket of tools over his shoulder and & paper cap on his head has the strong con- science and the strong sense, the blended susceptibility and self-command of our friend Adam. He was not an average man. Yet such men as he are reared here and there in evéry generation of our present artisans—with an inheritance of affections nurtured by a simple family life of common need and common industry and an inherit- ance of faculties trained in skillful, cour- ageous labor; they make their way upward, rarely as geniuses, most commonly as pains- taking, honest men, with the skill and con- science to do well the tasks that lie before them. Their lives have no discernible echo beyond the rieighborhood where they dwelt, but you are almost sure to find there some good piece of road, some building, some ap- plication of mineral produce, some improve- ment in farming practice, some reform of parish abuses, with which their pames are associated by one or two generations after them. Their employers were richer for them, the work of their hands has worn well, and the work of their brains haa guided well the hands of other men. They went about in their youth in flannel or paper caps, in coats black with coal dust or streaked with lime and red paint, in old age their white hairs are seen in a place of honor at church and at market, and they tell their well-dressed sons and daughters seated round the bright hearth on winter evenings, how pleased they were when they earned their twopence a day. Others there are whodie poor, and never put off the workman's coat on week-days; they have not had the art of getting rich; but they are men of trust, and when they die before the work is all out of them, it is as if some main screw had got loose in a machine; the master who employed them says : ‘‘Where shal! | find their like ?”’ (To be continued.) Wedding Bells. The nuptial of Rev. W. C. Wilson and Miss Susan C. Cochrane, fourth daughter of the Jate Hon. A. McNutt Cochran, took place on the 22ad inst. at Holy Trinity Church, Maitland, N. 8S. Regarding the ceremony a correspondeut of the Halifax Herald at Maitland writes :— ‘*Maitland was the scene cf rejoicing | yesterday over the marriage of Miss Susan © Cochran,davghter of the iate Hon. Arthur McN. Cochran, and Rev. W. C. Wilson, Cuiate of St. George’s Church, Halifax. Mr. Wilson, on his ordination, was licensed to the Curacy of St. Mark’s, where he worked for some time, but was afterwards transferred to St. George's, having charge of St. Matthias’ Mission, in the western sub- urbs. Miss Cochran has endeared herself to all who know her by her amiable disposivon and bas been an active worker in the various enterprises connected with the church of Eogland in her native town. The Rev, Dr. Pactridge performed the ceremony. J. McNutt Gabriel, of the postal service, ‘ fiiciated asa best man. Evensong was per- formed on Wednesday evening, Rev. Mr. Wilson resding the prayers, when Dr, Partridge delivered a especial mission ser- mon. On Thursday morning the marriage ceremony took place, the Rector, Rev. G. RR. Marteil, assisting. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Geo, Esson, and Miss Esson, J. T. Twining, from the city; Mrs. Page of ‘Truro, Mrs. Borden of Cornwallis, and Gavin Stairs. Luncheon was served at Mrs. Cochran’s, to which the large company did full justice, and interesting speeches were made by the various guests. At 2 o'clock the bridal party left for Shubenacadie en rvute for Amherst and St, John, istending to return in about ten days. Dr. Partridge and Mr. Gabriel took advantage of the same couveyance to return to the city. The mail driver, A. Shaw Smith, drove the party the distance of twenty mules from Maitland to Shubenacadie in the unprece- denied time of 1 hour and 35 minutes. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson will be followed to their future home in Halifax by the best wishes of their friends.” = The Book of Mormon. A curious investigation is proceeding at the town of Richmond in Missouri, U, 5. It isno Jessthan an examination of the Book of Mormon in the original manuscript to ascertain whether the errors in otho- graphy and grammar which appeared in the first edition of that volume were in the copy furnished the printers. Near this village im Missouri resides David Whitner, one of the three men who testified on cath that they beheld the Angel of the Lord bring down the plates from waich the book was written and deliver them into the hands of Joseph Smith, the Mormon prophet, and it was in Whitner’s keeping that this origins! manu- script has remained for so many years. Whitner has lived where he now resides from boyhood, has never attended the Mormon migrations, but is a firm believer in the creed of the Latter Day Saints, ex- cept in the matter of polygamy. That, he says, is a modern innovation, and 1s not mentioned in the original manuscript. Sentient a Puoiistic.—Paddy Ryan, in conver- sation with a reporter on the 20th inst., ex- pressed a strong desire to meet Sullivan again at any time or place, and fe r any amount of money. He ieels confident he can “do” Sullivan now. Patterson, Ryan's backer, said he would put op $10,000 on Ryan, to fight Sullivan with smail gloves to the finish. Ryan will net $3 500 from the recent performance, If no match with Sullivan is arranged be will return to might have had many more books from Charivitetown, Deo, loth, 1884. Chicago. 4