—_ aaa a oa -Five Do_uars a YRAR. NEW SERIES. TERMS: Che Daily Examiner is :asued every evening by The Examiner Publishing Oo. From their office, corner of Water and Great George Street, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. —RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION— Ccls. so cace cb vieeseesee le $2.5 ed ee Ebha nes ote 1,25 toe pe okeeen a cwe en el 50 Advertising at moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar-| terly, half-yearly, or yearly advertisements, | on application. | = es ALMANAC FOR FEBRUARY, 1886. | MOON’S CHANGES, New Moon 3rd day, llh, 25m, p. m. First Qiarter 11th day, i0h, 33 7m, p. m. | Fall Moon 18th day, 2h, 2 5m, p.m. Last Quarter 25th day, Oh, 55 5m, p. m. San |San !Moon! High! Days} oo PAY OF WEEK - : ; M! ' rises sets | rises |water|len’h. th mih m/morrlaft’n |h m ls Oo al ® } Monday 17 28.4 59| 5 36) 9 25| 9 31| 2\Pueday | 27/5 1) 611/10 4| 34] 3|\Wednesday | 26 3| 6 50/10 5*| = 37) 4|Thursday | 24 4) 793/11 11) 40) 5| Friday | 23] 6 7 53}11 44) 43 6} jatur lay : 7; S2iimorn|} 46) 7) Junday 19 S| 8 48! O 15 49 § Monday 18} 9] 915) 048] 51] 9 Cfuesday 17} 11; 9 46] 193) 54) 10 Wednesday 16) 13)10 23} 2 3] 57] 11! Tharsday 14; 15)10 45) 2 46)10 1) 42 Friday 12} 16)11 22) 345) = 4) 13\Saturday | Lili Ijaft 7) 5 3) 7| 14| Sunday | 9} 19) 0 59 6 33| 10 15, Monday s 21 2 0) 7 49| 13 16 Cuesday 7} 93] 3 9) 850) 16 17|Wednesday | 5| 24| 4 23] 9 43} 19) W8\Charsday | 3) 26) 5 40/1030) 23 19 Friday | HM 27) @ 57/1 12) 26! 20\iatarday {6 59, 28| 8 12/11 46) 29) 21| Sunday | 58 30) 9 24) aft 33) 32 22) Monday 56! 31;10 29) 1 13) 35 23| Tuesday | 55) 33/11 49) 1 56} 38} 24| Wednesday | 52! 34) morn) 2 43) 42) 25) Charsday Bil 36) 0 44, 344) 45 26) Friday 49} 37| 1 43| 4 52] 48 g7|4aturday | 47| 38| 237) 611) Sl 28) junday (6 45/5 40) 3 26 7 19:10 56 i i 1 | | | ! i ; | | WARBURTON & SMALLWOOD, NOTICE OF CO-PARTNERSHIP. The undersigned have this day entered into ——s under the style and firm of farburton and Smallwood, Barrisiers, Attoroeys-at-Law, Notaries Public, &c. Office—Cameron Block, Queen Square. 4 A B. WARBURTON, B.A., B.C.L. | C, R. SMALLWOOD, a@ The firm are Agents for the Equitable Life Assarance Society of the United States, which does the largest business of any Life Insurance Cempany in the world. L. ARTHUR & CO., GEN HRRAL Commission Merchants, 12] ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. —_ Eggs and Produce a Specialty. July 15—dly wkly CAUTION. FACH PLUG OF THE MYRTLE. NAVY T & B. & IN BRONZE LETTERS. None Other Genuine. ; ron, Grange and Lemon Peels at eed —— — A EN ae This is true Liberty, when Free-Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free. --Kiuririves. CHARLOPEETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 13 ENGLISH CONFECTIONERY. The finest assortment of English and Canadian Confectionery for Christmas trade we have ever offered. BEEe & GOFF. f NOW THEN FOR ‘ttc. A. BRUCE'S MEENE ES ‘ee CLOTHING & CENTS? FURWISHINGS Choice Brand, for Sale at BEER & GOFF Canned Sailmon, Sandwiches, Peaches, Pine Apples, ; Corns, Tomatoes, Peas, &e., choice brands. - —— 0: E have on hand one case Cloths, one case Gents’ Furnishings, sent by mistake, and sold to us at a big advantage rather than return them. We are manufacturing hese cloths into BEER & GOFE. Husee AND OVERCOATS, charging only FIVE PER CENT. OVER COST! and: from 6450 to $6 for making and trimming Overcoats ; from $5 to $7 for making and trimming Suits with Good Trimmings and COOD WORE MAN SATE: ee () ee COFFEE! COFFEE Fresh roasted and ground—fine’ quality ; also Essence Coffee and Condensed Coffee & Milk. BEER & GOFF. | CLOTH, by the yard or piece, Very Cheap. We have on hand a few Suits and _Overcoats, made to order, not called for CRANBERRIES. SELLING AT COST. 30. bris. Cranberries and Foy-| berries at | , |. This ought to convince you that there is money lost if you don’t purchase from us, instead of buying imported ciothing. ALLOUR CLOLTHING IS MADE ON THE | PREMISES. No $3 Overcoats. The Custom Tailoring, ao a the RE of MR. JAMES McLEOD, leads all others for Al work. rices in this department will be found lower than ever. Our past r i i a Dd a fH e ecord is sufficient BEER & GOFE'S guarantee to secure your future confidence. . . A large portion of our Neckwear has been manufactured to our special order, from patterns that will be found the very thing you want. SPECI ALTIES, A. BRUCE, i> a2 3 | Oe, \B Ch’town, Dec. 3, 1885.—ood wky 2mos QUEEN Pe PREET. ilies BER & GOFF’S., CANDIED PEEL, | Keiller's Celebrated English Cit Corned Beef, 20cts. per pound; Smoked Beef (shaved) 2icts. per pound; Bologna Sausages, licts. per pound; Ox Tongues (English), Pea Soup, Xc., at BEER & GOFP’S., eT ene BRITIS Pure Spices, Hssences, & Pure Spices, Cream Tartar and 7 i Baking Powders at WA -< o O U S = 3 BEER & GOFE’S. | 8S QUEEN STREET. . FALL AND WINTER STOCK, NOW COMPLETE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT. UNSURPASSED “FOR VALUE! ORANGES, LEMONS, GRAPES. 20 cases Oranges, 15 cases Lemons, | 25 bris. Grapes, just arrived from Great Britain. BEER & GOFF. RAISINS. 250 boxes received—Layers, Val- encias, Seedless. BEER & GOFF. A. TPP Ba - American Baldwins, N. 8. Tom- A. L. BROWN kins, Pippins, &c., at les tes SB aa a. & BEER & GOFP’S. | Ch’town, Nov. 19.—wkly. aaa = i a NS as Better Value Than Ever! 70% naa TO THE WHOLESAILE TRADE. DAMSONS = LOT ANIC” is PASTRY FLOOR. 2,3,5,10 and 12 pound packages, very choice quality, BEER & GOFF. Dee. 11, 1985. a i i UR new samples of BOOTS and SHOES for spring will soon be fout, and we will have the pleasure of calling on our castomers in a short time. ( We hope to receive your liberal patronage as heretofore. DORSEY, GOFF «& CO, 'Ch’town, Jan, 26, 1885, EVERYONE CAN © ‘call and examine the largest stock of Household Furniture, &c., \&c., ever shown in Charlottetown, and also discover that they FOR SALE. RIGHTON TANNERY, with its Steam Kogine, Boiler, Splitting Machine, Stuf fing Machine and other Plant is sale at private contract The above Tannery was formerly operated by the late Donald McKinnon, of the late tirm of McKinnon & Co., of this city. It is fitted up on the most modern principle, and has hitherto paid a large percentage on the capital invested. To capitalists no better In- vestment for their money, either by Bank or Manufactory, can be offered. Possession given immediately. MARY J. MACKINNON, Executrix. Ch’town, Oct. 17, 1835. ~ URSCRIBE for THE WEEKLY EXAMI. NER. The latest local snd foreigo news Can alwers be found therein. offered for se SAVE MONEY ‘and get Good, Reliable Home-made Goods of andisputed value, fine finish and good honest workmanship BY BUYING (ts, PROMPT. gts AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson’s Botanic Cough Balsam. It is as, pleasant as Colds, and | Asthma, which lead been speedily cured by the use of ADAMSON’S BaLSaM after honey. Coughs, to Consumption, have Sisdermaicinrian aie sewn tonciber (Staple Furniture, Bedding, Mattresses, FaneyGoods (for Xmas), mae adhe gh gee gree, nr yc apagal Picture Frames and Moulding, Mantle-mirrorsfand Mirror-plates, speedy rele! Jo not delay, get it at once FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS, Bagatelle Boards, Handsome Oil Paintings, Framed Chromos, and One Thousand and One other articles, FROM Stevens, N. B., by ———— - Bottled at St. the proprietors, Lovely New Style @f Chromo Cards, with name and prize for 10c. 12} packs, 12 names, for $1. A sample F. W. KINSMAN & CO., Druggists, Ai} THE P. E, ISLAND FURNITURE WAREROOMS, pack and ageni’s outfit with illus. $43 ita Avz., N. Y. trated catalogue of Tricks and Novelties, fo ei ARK WRIGHT & CO. ee nd i >, =~ N. S,—mar Ch’town, Dec. 3, "85—eod wky A, W. KINNEY, 9 856, TABERNACLE SERMON. “The Marriage Ring.” — wives.”—Dr. MORNING. HUSBANDS To SUNDAY ‘SHUTIES OF TALMAGE’S SERMON Brooxtyy, N. Y., February 7.—- The Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage, D. D., preached to-day in the Brooklyn Tabernacle, the fifth of his series of sermons on ‘‘The Marriage Ring,” the subject being ‘‘Duties of Husbands to Wives.” Before the sermon he explained the twenty-third chapter of Genesis, concerning Abraham’s admiration for Sarah, her age the only woman’s age mentioned in the Bible, implying that in- quisitiveness on that subject isjan imperti- nence. The hymn sung was: “Blest be the tie that binds Our hearts in Christian love.” To-day was moving day in the Brooklyn Tabernacle. Once a year the pews are rented, and while mapy retain their old seats there are many changes seen to-day. At the annual rental Dr. Tucker paid $7.60 for first choice of a pew, making his rent come to about nine hundred doliars ; Mr. Everett paid $525 for the second choice of a pew, making his rent about seven hundred dollars. ‘The premiums and rentals were larger this year than ever before, and the income will be about thirty- one thousand dollars. Ali the pews in the galleries except the four front rows, are free, 8» that the church is conducted on the two plans, the free and the rented, aud no man can say he cannot attend because he has not the means. The text of the sermon was from Genesis xxiv, 63: ‘‘And Isaac went out to medi- tate in the field at the eventide; and he lifted up his eyes, and saw, and, behold, the camels were coming.” Following is the sermon in full : A bridal pageant on the back of drome- daries! The camel is called the ship of the desert. Its swinging motion in the distance is suggestive of a vessel rising and falling with the billows. Though awk- ward, how imposing these creatures as they move along, whether in ancient or njiodern times, sometimes carrying four hundred or feur thousand travellers from Bagdad to Aleppo, or from Bassorr to Dam- ascus. In my text comes a caravan. We notice the noiseless atep of the broad foot, the velocity of motion, the gay caparison of saddle and girth and awning, sheltering the riders from the sun ; and the hilarity of the mounted passengers and we cry out, ‘“‘Who are they?’ Well, Isaac has been praying for a wife, and it is time he had one, for he is forty years of age ; and his servant, directed by the Lord, has made a selection of Rebekah ; and with her com- panions and maidenr, she is on her way to her new home, carrying with her the bless- ing of all her friends. Isaac is in the fields meditating upon his proposed passage from celibacy to monogamy. And he sees a speck against the sky, then groups of peo- ple, and after a while, he finds that the grandest earthly blessing that ever comes toa man is approaching with this gay cara- van. The drivers cry ‘‘Kneel’ to the camels, and they kneel, and putting foot on the neck of the stooping beast the bride dismounts and greets the man who was as worthy of her es she was worthy of him. ‘“‘And Isaac went out to meditate in the field at the eventide ; and he lifted up his eyes, and he saw, and, behold, the camels were coming.” In this fifth discourse on ‘‘The Marriage ting,” having spoken of the choice of a lifetime companion, I take it for granted, O man, that your marriage was Divinely ar- ranged, and that the camels have arrived from the right direction, end at the right time, bringing the one that was intended for your consort, a Rebekah and not a Jeze- bel. I proceed to discoursed as to how you ought to treat your wife, and my ambition is to tell you more plain trnth than you ever heard in any three-quarters of an hour in all your life. First of all, I charge you, realize your re- sponsibility in having takeu her from the custody and care and homestead in which she was once sheltered. What courage you must have had, and what confidence in yourself to say to her practically: ‘I will be to you more than your father and mother, more than all the friends you ever had or ever can have. Give up everything and take me. I feel competent to see you through life in safety. You are an im- mortal being, but I am competent to defend you and make you happy. However bright and comfortable a hume you have now, and though in one of the rooms is the arm chair in which you rocked, andin the garret is the cradle in which you were hushed and the trundle-bed in which you slept, and in the sitting room are the father and mother who have got wrinkle-faced and stoop- shouldered and dim-eyesighted in taking care of you, yet you will do better to come with me.” Iam amazed that any of us ever had the sublimity of impudence to ask such a transfer from a home assured to a home conjectured and unbuilt. You would think me avery daring and hazardous adventurer if I should go down to one ef the piers on the North River, and at atime when there was a great lack of ship captains, and [ should, with no know- ledge of navigation, propose to take a steam- er across to Glasgow or Havre, and say, ‘* All aboard! Haul in the planks and swing out !” and passing out into the sea plunge through darkness andstorm. If I succeeded in getting charge of one, that would be the ship that would never be heard of. But thatis the boldness of every man that proffers marriage. He says: ‘‘ I will navigate you through the storms, the cyclones, the fogs of a lifetime. [ will run clear of fogs and icebergs. I have no ex- perience and I have no seaport, but all aboard for the voyage of @ lifetime! admit that there have been ten thousand cry ! action, practically says : | Srxcie Corizs Two CENnts. VOL. 18---NO. 70, My arm is weak, but I will depend on the strength of yours. [ don’t know much of the world, but I rely on your wisdom. I put my body, my mind, my soul, my time, my eternity, in your keeping. I make nto reserve. Even my name I resign and take yours, though mine is a name that suggests all that was honorable in my father, and all that was good in my mother, and all that was pleasant in my brothers and sisters,’ I start with you on a journey which shail not part except at the edge of your grave or mine. Ruth, the Moabitess, made no more thorough self-abnegation than I make, when I take her tremendous words, the pathos of which many centuries have not cooled : ‘ Entreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee; for whither thou goest I will go, and where thou lodgest I will lodge. Thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God. Where thou diest will I die, and there will T be buried. The Lord dose te me and more also, if aught but death part thee and me.’ Side by side in life. Side by side in the burying ground. Side by side in heaven. Before God and man, and with my immortal soul in the oath, I swear eter- nal fidelity.” Now, my brother, how ought you to treat her? Unless you are an ingrate in- finite you will treat her well. You will treat her better than anyone in the uni- verse except your God. Her name will heve init more music than in all that Chopin or Bach or Rheinberger composed. Her eyes, swollen with three weeks of night watching over achild with scarlet fever, will be to you beautiful as a may morning. After the last rose petal has dropped out of her cheek, after the last feather of tho raven’s wing has fallen from her hair, after across her forehead and under her eyes and across her face there are as raany wrinkles as there are graves over which she has wept, you will be able truthfully to say, in the words of Solomon’s Song: “* Behoid, thou art fair, my ijove] Behold thon art fair!” And perhaps she may respond appropriately, in the words that no one but the matchless Robert Burns could ever have found pen or ink or heart or brain to write :— “John Anderson, my jo, John, We clamb the hill thegither ; And mony a canty day, John, We've had wi’ ave anither, Now we maun totter down, John, But hand in hand we'll go; And sleep thegither at the foot, John Anderson, my jo.” If anyone assail her good name you will have hard work to control your temper, and if you should strike him down the sin will not be unpardonable, By as complete asurrender asthe universe ever saw, ex- cept that of the Son of God for your salva- tion and mine, she has a first mortgage on your body, mind and soul, and the mort- gage is foreclosed, and you do not more thoroughly own your two eyes or your two hands than she owns you. The longer the journey Rebekah makes and the greater the risks of her expedition on the back of the camels, the more {thoroughly is Isaac bound to be kind and indulgent and worthy. Now, be honest and pay your debts. You promised to make her happy. Are you making her happy? You are an honest man in other things, and feel the import- ance of keeping a contract. If you have induced her into a conjugal partnership under certain pledges of kindness and valu- able attentions, and then have failed to fulfil your word, you deserve to have a suit brought against you for getting goods under false pretences, and then you ought to be mulected in a large amount of damages, Review now all the fine, beantiful, compli- mentary, gracious and glorious things you promised her before marriage, and reflect whether you have kept your faith. Do you say, ‘‘ Oh, that was all sentimentalism and romance and a joke,” and that “ they all talk that way.” Well, let that plan be tried on yourself ! Suppose I am interested in Western lands, and I fill your mind with roseate specula- tion, and I tell you that acity is already laid out on the farm that 1 propose to sell you, and that a new railroad will run close by and have a depot for easy transportation of the crops, and that eight or teh capital- ists are going to put up fine residences close by, and that the climate is delicious, and that the ground, high up, gives tio room for malaria, and that every dollar planted will grow up inio a bush bearing ten or twenty dollars, and my speech glows with enthusiasm until you rush off with me to au attorney to have the deed drawn, and the money paid down, and the bargain completed. You can-hardly sleep nights because of the El Dorado, the Elysium, upon which you are soon to enter, You give up your home at the East, you bid good bye to your old neigh- bors and take the train, and after many days’ journey you arrive at a quiet depot from which you take a wagon thirty miles through the wilderness, and reach your new place. You see @ man seated oa a wet log in 2 swamp and shaking with the fifteenth attack of chills and fever, and ask him who he is. He says: “Lam a real estate azent, having in charge the property around here,” You ask him where the new depot is. He tells you that it has not yet been built, but no doubt will be if the company get their bill for the track through the next Legislature. You ask him where the new city is laid out. He says with chattering teeth: ‘If you will wait till this chill is off, I will show it to you on the map I have in my pocket.” You ask him where the capitalists are going to build their fine houses, and he says: ‘Somewhere along those lowlands out there by those woods, when the water has been drained off.” That night you sleep im the hut of the real estate agent, and though you pray for everybody else you do not I{many men who go oat in such ciroum- ‘stances, you have money enough to get shipwrecks on this very route, but don’t | hesitate! Tut! tut: There now! Don’t) Brides must not cry at the wedding.” | have swindled me out of everything. What In response to this the women, by her) do you mean in deceivin ‘‘T have but one} Westerr property ?” life to live, and I entrust it ail to you.! was all right, pray for me, Being more fortunate than and out of back, and you come to me, “You breath in you indignation, you say : g me about that “Oh,” L reply, ‘‘that that was sentimeutalism and