Cau i? LARS A i BAR a : - eye ais Nin it Oia Che Daly LES, Eraminer ening, by The Examiver Publishing Go. Water and From rher of ivreai 4, Charlottetown, Island. CRIPTION ; Six Months, $2 &0 Three Montus, - ' : l 25 ee = Ad OPUS LIS . Most moderate rates. Quatracts may %* ior monthly, quarterly, Halt yt y or yearly advertire- meuts, on apps afior, ALMANAG FOR NOVEMBER, i8e4. WVON 8 Puli Moon, 3rd day, 4h. 24 3m., a, m. Last Quarter 9th day, 6h. 59.9m., p. m. New Moon i7th day, lh, 59 2m., p. m. Firat Quarter, 2oth day, 6n. 3.4m., a, m, uade CHANGES, -_— D. Sun ‘Sun |Moon/High | Days y DAY OF WSS rises sets | rises | water |len’b, ' h mh m att’'n morn; hm ] Saturday 6 47/4 41: 3 57) 8 58) 9 54 2 Sua lay 48} 39, 4 * 943! 51 2 Monday 50 33} 5 15110 29 48 4) Puesday 5]' 36] @ 831 10 45 § Wednesday 53} 35 6 58\11 56 42 6\Tharsday 54, 34) 8 Olaftai| 37 7 Friday 65; 3219 6 129) 36 gisaturilay 57; 311013} 220} 34 § Sunday 58 2941 21; 3 as} gt 10 Monday 0! 2*imorn!' 4 29 28 [1 Tuesday ] 2710979 5 47 26 12) Wedaesday | 3% 26 1 33) 6 a 23 13 Thursday S| 256i 237i 7 S6 19 * 14 Friday r 6 mia sa (lié 15| Saturday Z| 22" 4.41: 9 Zi 14 ig6 Sunday 8 21; § 41' 9 oo) i2 17 Moaday % 970 6 40 10 34 10 18. Tuesday at 619 7TH PF, 7 19) Wednesday 12] 18: 8 29.41 44 5 99 Theraday ma Wee morn | $ $1, Friday I, 1610 4017 » Oi Saturday If, 15.10 44 0 52, 8 Sy $3 )Sanlay 18}. 15,11 20, 1 30 56 24 Moaday 20: 14'11 52’ 2 12 o4 23 Tues lay |} at]. Ia'aft93 2 58] 82 2% Wedarsday 22} 32) 0 33) 3 Go av 27 Thurs tay 23; ima a2i5 6 4 28 Friday 4, 21° 1 52 6 2t 47 29 Satumiay lil 29) 7 @ 45 30 Sauda, 7 2714 10) 3 3, § 31; 8 #4 ' ' i | i TAG RAILWAY TIME TABLE. (Charlottetown Time.) * GCLInG 6 ESi A. M. . M. Charlottetown 647 912 Huuter River. ..747 1055 P. M.3 Kensington ......-+-eeeues §42 1222 705 s side, | Strive 208 Me 37 aummersiade, j depart......9 27 2 32 oe Port Hill seinen. 15 Te eee eoecthe 6 O Tignish......csccccseeess 1242 747 FROM WEST. > Am OM OMe ED 6s saeccesees seein 202 647 Vherton .. ~ Jcues tb 7 57 Pe SEs, cc ons chonneeee 415 10%5 Summerside, | 2#t¥e---+-- 517 1207 — depart...... 542 122 657 iitingten..:+ccssene+ee wae ae meee MINOT, co dssoones 71708 323% 384i bbnkbetowe oo. sccce cues $802 507 1007 GCING EAST, aa & & Charlottetown. . ; we oe M eee a BETIVE occ cece §22 837 ntatte ( Y 527 -902 ee bee. . occ ccc cues esses 617 1002 RP. BM. aes 3722 12@ A. M. Sind Ubowast.....cscstss siets HE OF Cardigan edebicnl iene 629 1022 Georgetown ........ccceccccecces 647 1047 FROM EAST. ae ft Souris .... i ee oe i PUROP O.. o occ cevecedeeanunees 7 52 4 oI ok ¢ g ) BRFIVE wc ce cece 8 42 3 Mount Stewart, \ depart........ s 47 5 42 Usarlo.vetown. .. eoaeves ae 52 4 <i NODE . .nceccoccace eaneeee 123i (& 32 ncccinhaeseucues cae) 745 357 en Gibwas®. . ....0ccneanennns 842 512 Dr. Toombs, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Mount Stewart. Charlottetown, Oct. 20-—-Im wkly 6m L. ARTHUR & CO,, GHN ERAL Commission Merchants, 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) BOSTON, MASS. kyos aud Produce a Specialty. Maw 1K 1804 wily if SULLIVAN & HAGNEILL, ATTORNEYS - AT- LAW Séliciiers in Chancery, NOWVARIES PUBLIC, &e. OF FICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. @4° Money to Loan, W. W. Soxtivany, QO, | Cnustsa B. MasoneiLe Jen 16, '82, "ATTORNEYS: AT-LAW. Se PE gg 8 he epi 2 2 - Mai a AN s -y - t a ‘og zai «fis 1s true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to adv a IE Re era sents pote ees SS ets + up SZ esate sca SPV eee > ise the Public, may speak iree.”’—EvXIPipEs, UHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1884, GRAND SALE OF FURNITURE! *?4™ BEDE. HAVHEWAY & cy. PES RL ELESRR SS? AGENTS. ND Geueral Commission Merchants. 22 Central Wharf. BOsTOoN. Ch'town, Nov. 10, 1884. H.W. VINMCOMBE, _ PIANO TUNER >: r , Pianos Tuned, Ne wired aad Regulated. CHURCH ORGANS Voiced, Tuned, and Regulated with Care. | CABINET ORGANS Tuned, Re-toned and Repaired. Having nearly twenty years’ experience with the construction of English, American and German Pianos, and uader the patronage of Government House, the Convent and the leading musica! familjes on the Island, feels sure of giving wniversal satisfaction. Mr. V. will engage professionally for public or private concerts the comiug séason. Otlice—C, P, Fletcher's Music Store, Ch'town, Qct. 25 1844. ’ HicLeod, Moron & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS: —AND-— | | | ! dihce in Old Bank, (UP STAIRS), Ch’town, Feb, 21, 1584 RR. O’DWYER, ‘Commission and General Merchant | FOR SALE OF P. B. I, PRODUCE. j | j Si. Johns’ Newfoundland. | | | Jn connection with the above is Captain, English, who is well known in P, E. Island, who will take special charge of all consign- , ‘ments, and will also attend to the chartering | |of vessels for the carrying trade of P. E. [. The firm is one of the oldest and most reli-| lable in Newfoundland Returns guaranteed | ‘to be prompt and satisfactory. Parties wish-| |ing to procure Labradore Herring should send | their orders in time. } Sept. 6, 1894.—till 31st dec, ’84. APPLES, APPLES, APPLBS, CHARLES DONALD & co., | 79 Queen St, London, E, C., | Will be glad to correspond with Apple Grow- ers, Merchants and Shippers, with a | view to Autumn and Spring | business. They willalso give the usual facilities to, aug] ‘customers requiring advances. WEST & RENDELL, Commission Merchants, St. John’s, Newfoundland. Consignments solicited. Liberal advances | made, July 25, 1884.—2aw 4m W. WHEATLEY, lor Wreayiey & Sons, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. IsLaNnpb) ' Commission Merchant, 269 BARRINCTON STREET, HALIFAX, WN. 5. ge Special attention given to the sale of P. E. Island produce. a eT Gach and Door Factory. gk. P. LEA, in returning thanks to the | M public for the liberal pat~aageextended ‘to him while in business i Charlottetown, = leave to inform his old customers and | ithe public venerally, that he, m™ company | with Mr, William Rogers, has appointed ‘Messrs. B. Williams & ce, | | Dealers, Rene Ne Charlottetown, our agents, who wl eep connate on hand a fall supply of Mould- ings, Window Sashes, Doors, ete.. at | LOWEST CASH PRICES, All orders entrusted to them will receive, Lumber and Coal mummers VE" ROGERS, ‘| ann oe os Menoton, N, &. —_——— 0 -— + COMMENCENG EVERY MORNING ATS AM. a eee naesitnive ; i ie ’ AYILNG lately increased our motive power and made several additions to machin- ery plant, we are in a better postion than ever before to attend to the wants of our Customers, Having a large staff of workmen employed, our monthly output of Furniture is very large; but as we do not intend paying the exorbitant rate of insurance asked, we are desirous of keeping our stock down to a certain limit, and to do this we will seil all /our goods at the lowest possible price FOR CASH. The public are respectfully invited to examine our stock and ask for prices. Orders by letter promptly attended to. Funeral Furnishing a Speciality. Beau- tiful, Good and Best Value in the Proy- inces. NMIARK WRIGHT & CO. Charlottetown, Nov, 14, 1884. CLEARANCE SALE! Se as NEW FALL GOODS, Regardless of Profits. —s we eee CONSIGNMENTS SoLi¢iTep, Having in view a change in business, to intend ENTIRE STOCK BEFORE Feb, we sell our {st, CONSISTING {N PART OF :.289 WATER STREET, 4.200 Yards Suitings & Overcoatings (ONE OF THE BEST SELECTIONS IN THE PROVINCE.) UNDERCLOTHING <a large variety.) ‘OVER (000 WHITE AND COLORED SHIRTS. (AT A SACRIFICE). Flannels and Flannel Shirts, Cardigan Jackets, Umbrellas, Waterproof and Fur Coats, Overcoatg and Suits, Children’s Jersey Suita, Hats, Pur and Cloth Caps,’ Sleigh Robes, Gloves and Mitts ‘all kinds); | ilk Handkerchiefs, Mufflers Collars and Cufts, and one of the finest selections of NECK-, WEAR in the Dominion. Intending buyers will find that there is no place in P. £. Island where they can get such bargains as we offer for the coming three months, as a GENUINE CLEARANCE SALE is intended. D, A. BRUCE, Merchant ‘Failor. Charlottetown, Oct. 18, 1884—-dm eod wkly. NOTIC#. LOWER 0 MORE ROOM. MORE GOODS. 0_——-——_—_—— PRICES ! ee a ee S my Store has been greatly enlarged, my importations have been greatly increased, thus enabling me to show Goods than usual. Every Department is well direct from the English Markets, Prices Low. Quality Good. a very much better assortment of filled with Chvice NEW GOODS, imported And, as | am bound to sustain my past ‘reputation for selling Cheap Goods, those who patronize me will ind my Assortment Large. CALL AND SEE US; L. E. PROWSE, Sign of the Big Hat, 74 Queen Street. Ch'town, Sept. 26, 1984,—-sod why CHAPTER UL | (Continued. ) Seth was unable to reply, and they walked on in silence. At last, as they were nearly at the yard gate, he said : | ‘Weill, Dinah, I must seek for strength ‘to bear it, and to endure as seeing Him who ‘is invisible. But I feel now how weak my faith is. It seems as if, when you are gone, I could never joy in anything any more, I ‘think its something passing the love of | women as I feel for you, for I could be con- tent without your marrying me if 1 could ' go and live at Snowfield, and be near you. | 1 trusted as the strong love God had given /me toward you was a leading for us both ; ‘but it seems it was only meant for my trial. Perhaps I feel more for you than | ought to ' feel for any creature, for 1 often can’t help | saying of you what the hymn says : | In darkest shades if she appear, | My dawning is bevun ; | She is my soul’s bright morning star, And she my rising sun, | | That may be wrong, and I am to be taught better. But you wouldn’t be displeased ‘with me if things turned out so as I could leave this country and go to live at Saow- field ?’ | ‘No Seth: but I counsel you to wait patiently, and not lightly to leave your OWN | jedoed ‘country and kindred. Do nothing without said, ‘the Lord’s clear bidding. Itsa bleak and barren country there, not like this land of , Goshen you've been used to, We musn’t | be in a hurry to fix and choose our own lot; ' we must wait to be guided,’ | ‘But you'd let me write you a letter, | Dinah, if there was anything I wanted to | tell you.’ ‘Yes, sure; let me know if you’re in any ‘trouble. Yow ll be continually in my | prayers. | ‘They had now reached the yard gate,and ‘Seth said, ‘1 won’t go in, Dinah, so fare- ‘well.’ He pansed and hesitated after she ‘had given him her hand, and then said, ‘There is no knowing but what you may see | things different after a while. There may he a new leading.” ‘Let us leave that, Seth; it’s good te live only a moment at atime, as |’ve read | in one of Mr. Wesley's books. It isn’t for you and me to lay plans; we've nothing to ‘slo but to obey and trust. Fareweil.’ Dinah pressed his hand with rather a / sad look in her loving eyes, and then passed ; through the gate, while Seth turned away ‘to walk lingeringly home. But instead of taking the direct road, he chose to turn | back along the fields through which he and | Dinah had already passed, end I think his blue linen handkerchief was very wet with ‘tears long before he had made up his mind that it was time for him to set his face steadily homeward. He was but three-and- twenty, and had only jast learned what it was to love—io love with that adoration which a young min givesto a woman who SINGLE Copies Two CENT>. VOL. 15—NO. 156. the deed has a beneficent radia‘ion that is not lust. Considering these things, we can hardly think Dinah and Seth beneath our sympa- thy, accustomed »s we may be to weep over the loftier sorrows of heroines in satin ‘boots and crinoline, and of heroes riding fiery horses, thewselves ridden by sull more fiery passions. Poor Seth ! he was never on horseback: in his life except or ce, when he was a little lad, and Mr. Jonathan Burge tock him up behind, telling him to ‘huld on tight ;’ and, instead of bursting out into wild accusing apostrophes to God and destiny, he is re- solving, as he now walks homeward under the solemn starligh', to repress his sadness, to be less bent on having his own will, and to live more for others as Dinah does. (To be continied.) | Sir Roger Again. The “Tichborne claimant,” in aldressing |a large audience at St. James’ Hail, Picca- idilly, a few days age, said it was a | mystery to him how he had preserved the use of his speech after five years’ experience of the silent system. He had no faith in the reforming pover cof such a system. | After some reference to the treatment be had received, he went over some particulars of his case, dwe}ling emphatically on Lady | Tichborne’s recognition of him as her son. j .. | Instead of being satisfied with the mother \that he acknowledged and who acknow- him, his persecutors, he had procured another woman to serve that purpese. It was novelty in law to try and persuade people that a mother could not kuow her own son And when he put the question whether the audience believed that a woman was likely to be deceived in such circumstances, hearty sympathy was expressed with the speaker's view. The strangest thing ‘Sir Roger’ said wasthat the government had gone against him on account of Mr. Gladstone's connection by marrisge with the Tichborne family. He was indignant at the conduct of the press which had generally exagger- ated those features of the trial that secimed adverse to him. The ‘ctlicer’ (meanin:s ‘editor’s of one paper bad gone arm in arm with the jury every night and talked with them and when he compliined to the court of it, the Judge would not interfere. The secret service mouey of the state had also been ured to circumvent and defeat him, and Guildford Onslow had been offered a baronetcy te give up the advocacy of hiscause. The fact that Lord Rivers believed in him showed that he was no imposter. In conclusion,he intimated that in future he weuld live in the bosom of his family, but so long as he had strength, he would also battle for his children’s rights by appealing ‘o the publie. A resolution was passed that justice shonld be vindicated and Sir Roger Tichborno re stored to the position of which he was so unjustly deprived. —_ The Holy Grail has been re-discavered at Valencia, in Spain. [t is the cup or chalice, known through ali literature, as feels to be greater and better than himself. Love of this sort is hardly distinguishable | from religious feeling. What deep and worthy love is so? whether of woman,or child or art, or music, Our caresses, our tender words our still rapture under the influence of , autumn sunsets, or pillared vistas, or calm, “majestie statues, or Beethoven symphonies, all bring with them the consciousness that | they are mere waves and ripples in an un- 'fathomable ocean of love and beauty; our emotion in its keenest moment passes from expression to silence; « ur love at its highest flood rushes beyond its object, and loses itself in the sense of divine mystery. And this blessed gift of venerating love has been given to too many humble craftsmen since the world began, for us to feel any surprise shat it should have existed in the soul of a Methodist carpenter half a century ago, while there was yet a lingering after-glow from the time when Wesley and his fellow- laborer fed on the hips and haws of Corn- wall hedges, after exhausting limbs aud lungs in carrying a divine message to the poor. That after-glow has Jong faded away; and the picture we are apt to make of Method- ism in our imagination is not an amphi- theater ot green hills. or the deep shade of broad-leaved sycainores, where a crowd of rough men and weary hearted women drank in a faith which was a rudimentary culture, which linked their thoughts with the past, lifted their imagination above the sordid de- tails of their own narrow lives and suffused their souls with the sense of a pitying, loving, infinite Presence, sweet as summer to the houseless needy, [t is too possible that to some of my readers, Methodism may mean nothing more than low-pitched gables up dingy streets, sleek grocers, sponging preachers, and hypocritical jargon—ele- ments which are regarded as an exhaustive analysis of Methodism in many fashionable quarters. That would be a pity; for I can not pretend that Seth and Dinah were any- thing elze than Methodists~-not, indeed, of that modern type which reads quarterly reviews and attends in chapels with pillared porticoes, but of a very old-fashioned kind. They believed in present miracles, in in- stanianevus conversions, in revelations by dreams and visions; they drew lots and sought fur Divine guidance by opening the Bible at hazard; having a literal way of interpreting the Scriptures, which is not at ali sanctioned by approved commentators; and it is impossible for me to represent their diction as correct, or their instruction as liberal. Still—if [ have read religieus history aright—faith, hope, and charity have not always been found in a direct ratio with a sensibiliiy to the three concords; and it is possible, thank Heaven! to have very erron: ous theories and very sublime feelings. Toe raw bacon which clumsy Molly speres from her own scanty store, that she may carry it to her neighbor's child to ‘stop the fits,’ may be a piteously ineficacious re 3 but the generous stir ring of neighborly kindndss tifat piduipted 'that in which the Saviour changed the wine into his blood. This chalice is «f eastern agate, in the form of two cups meeting at the stems. It is four inches in diameter and three feet high. ‘The up er part bears no ornament, but the foot is enriched with several pearls aad precious stones. This is the grailersangreal which all our poets have celebrated. irow Ciauc r te Tennyson and Lowell. The legend is that St. Peter brought the cup to Rome, where it was used in the exercise of t! e sec:ed mysieries till the time of Sixtus Il. It then passed to the church of Huesca in Spain, and re- mained in the monastery of La Sierra de la Pena till 1892, when the King, Don Martin of Aragon, transported it to Valencia, and later Alfonso V. constructed a chapel spe- cially therefor. The relic has lately been viewed and described by tonrists. As a work of art it is remarkable. peice The Buffalo Courier can tell a not very bad after-election yarn. A_ well-known woman of that city has among her varied collection of animals twenty-two roosters ; and as soon as she hed assured herself of the election of, her favourite candidate she hurried at once to the chicken-coop to com- municate the good news to her pets who, she knew, would be interested, On opea- ing the door she discovered the whole twenty-two perched in a row on the roost ; and, no sooner did the birds see her than they all piped up “Grover-Grover Cleve- land.” This they kept up all the time she was with them, and when she shat the door they were still crowing their song of tri- umph. ‘‘Not a rooster shall be killed this winter,” was the order she gave out as she returned to the house. ‘*Let every single one of them live to crow for Grover the entire season.” —~-—-— -o@be Itfis well known that Sir Robert Peel was at college with Lord Byron. The poet always spoke highly of the statesman, anc the latter was full of anecdotes of tix former. Carlyle relates that Sir Robert invariably called him Burov, It will be remembered that the author of ‘*Chil te Hareld” often signed Biron, thus contirm- to the French Jerivation and pronouncia- tion of the family name, Similarly, I aw informed that Poe's name is generaliy pro- nounced in England **Poa,” with two eyl- lables. An America admirer always wrote it “Edgar A. Poet,” which was correct to Sy - —_>seo--.—-~ Lady Georgiana Fullerton, the distin- guished authoress, and a wember of the Roman Catholic church, writes to the | Giornale di Roma that her brother, Lord Granville, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, is erecting, at his own expense, in the isle of Thanet, a monument to com- memorate the landing of St. Augustine im Eoglend, and his first interview with King Ethelbert. The incident is a very pleasing one, as testifying to the appreciation of a pre}