a en ee ee : lie. sid 2 en Amare AB! BS Cae C ee” wp % WW w! fb ) > r i} 4 7 ety) ae Lr Ny rae ce ary : . > rigensee er ‘ o : ; NEW SERIES VEAKLOPOETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1885, VOL. 16.---NO. 70, Che Daily Examiner » Sahin ff sa A UOUSRIng 0. Vater and .Leotown, CHILDREN’S FANCY GCHAIRS. CRADLES, COTTS, 29 50 ‘ 0) ‘ ) . * = SLEIGHS, &e.. CHEAPEST, 0 50 , ~\ rate rates. | gps .., “a ° seca a x ee aban sonal fivrors & Looking Glasses, Baglish and German, very Low. juarter|; ve r yearly advertise- ments, on 4 | competitions —— ALMANAC FOR FEBRUARY, !825. | oo : ™ Ou stock of Gilt and Walnut Picture-frame Mouldings is | the largest in the Lower Provinces, unrivalled in quality and arr variety, and made to suit all kind of pictures~-the Cheapest in Last Qt Gth day, 6a, 25m., p. m the city. New i4 ry, 10a, 9m., Pp. m. ! . First Qu - ‘ud day, Gh. 19m., a. m., wo ee |PARLOR & CHAMBER SUITS ‘ aie has ; D an Sun 'Moon/High |! Days} & ® we woe vi sets | rises | water}len’h, | a. h mh m ati’n morn; hm / ere queen L/Sundsy 7 28:4 59; 7 58 11 SSi 9 313 2) Monda S715 19 Gea 3 We aesun i . a : ware ) gious dg} g | AXamine our Magnificent Parlor and Chamber Suits, which eo iu As i ae : ‘ . 4) Wednesday 24 11 18 1 oa $i we are Selling at Cost. § Thursday 23 6 morn; 2 3 $c | 6 Fa i} «681019 S24! 47] ae ; i Saturday 19 1 is} 429) 50/\CHAIRS—Parlor, Chamber, Office, Children’s and Kitchen 3|Sunda} Is} 10:2131543 51 ee ee ”: , ; g|sunda, eS lS ae eee Chairs, cheap. All kinds of Upholstering Work, 19!Tues 16} 13] 3 53) 75% 57] Painting, Varnishing and Gilding. bi We sday 14} 15 3: 8 4310 1) : ' j2'Tharsday 12; 16, 8 18 9 74 + pp TQ Tt ’ 1Q . } i 13 Friday ii! isi55710 3| 7/BEDDING AND MATTRESS-—Feather, Hair, Flock, Fibre, 14 Saturday , 19, 6 23,10 38 lv lveale y St ys > 7 as 2A ? | ; y on , aoe Excelsior, Wool, Straw—Cheapest in the city. 16 Mouday 7 221 7 26 ik 47 li} i ee. 2) a Soe 0 21», Bedsteads, Lounges, Tables, Sideboards, Bookcases, Scheffioneers, 19{ Thursday | 28) 8 51; 057) 27] Washstands, &.—-Cheapest. 99! Friday 59, 29) 927 130' 29 c 2] Saturday AS 3H} 10 1h} 2 25 2 a © cum n> 99 SUDGAYS 50 ol 1U 57 3 21 oo, JOH Py ee WSON 23| Mo: da; 55’ 33 1l 50) 4 41 38 | bg tena es Ss ; “4! Tnesday 2 BHjaft50; 6 12, 421A. lec. 19. IRR4— § 85 Wedties i 1 68,7381 4)" wn, Dee. 19, 1 eae 26 Ther 1? 3 9] 8 $7 dp | ee es a o7 Friday ‘F. 3814221929 56 98 Saturday 6 405 40) 5 34:10 13) 9 55 ' | j ' THe RAILWAY Titi TABLE. Caartuttetown Time. } eoiING WEA sa. MM. P.M | Charlotictown. 802 3 2} Royalty Junction............+.-. ;swa Ss 25) North Wiltshire. O27 ° 4 Fai ee . . vc we keen wee 2 4381 ks osc eea eee reel Wild 6d 09 | County |.ime. 10i9 519} Freetown 1035 534; OR. eo ccceee wees 1057 5 57] ri li 32 ( 22) Sia lis rs! ‘ PrP. M. / rt 1G i Misc Pe ot eer ee 2 09 Wellin 337 Port 3 2 ME, ose suc eeneeseceawauns 442 i Albert 5 47 Tignis ..6 47 FRO A. M, Tigai 6 47 i Se,0-Tt 7 47 O'Leary .. te | Port Hi 10 22 Wellington il 07 Miscouche.... tiéimeeweeneeeeanue 113 j \ arrive ii 57 A. M oumimerside, P. M. | P Genet, «cassnunche 202 7 32) Kensington.. ais 237 807) Freetown . 300 8 30! iiwenty sine 317 8 45 Eradalbane .. 27 8 55 ec uaweede 402 9232 North Wiitshi: .417 9 47 | R ryalty Jun t n ° 5 09 10 oy Unarlottetow Dec aedn eee .6 32 ll 02) GCING EAST. P, M5 harlottetown . siecbeeces sons Royalty Junction sd ae Redford . a Ga7 rive 4 52 wey j depart. eaten Cardigan mS Georgetown .6 42 Mount > .. 457) Morell. ..5 37} SE... cous, ie ee 6 03 | Bear Rive; .6 57 | Souris : 7 42 FROM x A. MI TS ee 6 52) SN 737 WP, go conc cacao ueer se ee 8 26 Morell e ‘ .8 57 ne Meawat....... 601 ads ovbeeseres 9 37 Georyet aa ch eeeeeus ass ee PONS... cnccccnssstbedscecapeeeen $12 Mount Stew \ arrive , 32 : / pai 2 42 Bedf rd .10 17 Kovalty Juuction 10 54 Charlottetown Li 37 Superb Baking Powder, (Manufactured by Holister, Crane & Co., 90 Broad Street, New York.) ae ee T UQUESTIONABLY the purest and most wholesowe Baking Powder mado, Gro- Vets &'o Gothorized to guarantees every can to be full weight, and positively pure, Ask for the ‘Superb ” and take no other, Put up in 4,4 2nd t-ib. tins, and for sale by every re- Spéectable wholesale and retail grocer and Beueral den'er in Canada, The Canadian trade sup; { by JOHN T. REED, 105 Water Street, St. John, N Ally f Em aod > DVERTISE in THE DAILY EXAMI- NER, if you want to reach the most Dple for the laveb mone;, EPRCREDESED "HGS Sell at Gost. — eee 11 our Large Stock of FUR AND CLOTH CAPS, WENTER UNDERCLOTHING, Ki AND BUCKSKIN ViePrrs. Hip AND BUCKSKIN GLOVES, BEAVY TOP SHIRTS, FLANNEL SHIRTINGS. CLS TES, OVERCOATS & RERPFERS, Hitigr Goods at Unprecedented Low Bargalas re Prices before Buying Elsewhere —AND— See our SPR, Be Convinced that we Mean What we Say. e D. A. BRUCE, ERCHANT TAILOR. Charlottetown, Dee. 19, 1884 H. W. VINNE GHBE, PIANO TUNER Pianos Tuned, Ke-wired and Regulated, CIEURCH ' Voiced, Tuned, and Regulated witi Care. | Tuned, Re-toned and Repaired. | Having nearly twenty years’ experience | with the construction of English, American ‘and German Pianos, and uuder the patronage lof Government House, the Convent and the | leading musical families on the Island, feels sure of giving universal] satisfaction, Mr. V. will engage professionally for public or private coucerts the coming season. Oftice—C, P. fletcher’s Music Store. Ch town, Oct. 25 1884 SULLIVAN & MAUNEILL, | ATTORNEYS -AT- LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOE ARIES PUBLEC, &c. OFFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Jeorge Street, Charlottetown. Ga Money to Loan, Great Jan. 16, '82 McLeod, iorson & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Gitice in Old Bank, (UP STAIRS), Ch’town, Feb, 21, 1884. WE SELL Petatoes, pi limg, teaerk, R. R. Ties, Lumber, Laths, Canned Lebsters, Mae- kerel, Berries, Eggs, Fisn Kte. Best Prices for all Shipments. for Quotations, HATHEWAY & (C0. General Commission Merchants, 22 Central Wharf, Bastion. Write fully rod ; biembers of Board of Tra‘ Corn and | Mechanics Exchange. Ch’town, Nov. 19, 1884. AYER’S herry Pectoral. No other complainis are so insidious in their attack as those aifecting the throat and lungs: none so trifled with ihe majority of suifer- ers. The ordinary cough or cold, resulting perhaps from a trifling or unconscious ex- posure, is often but the beginning of a fai -\ sickness. AveER’s Cuurry PrcrTogal has well proven its oMfigacy in a dovty years’ fight With threat and lung diseases, and should be taken in all cases without delay. Tax wy A Terrible Cough Cured, Tn 1857 I took asevere cold, which affected my lungs. | had a terrible cough, and passed night after n ght without sleep. ‘The doctors gave me up. 1 tried Ayrr’s CHERRY PEC TORAL, Which relieved miy lungs, induced sleep, and afforded me the rest necessary for the recovery of my strength. By tha continued use of the Prereora, q perma, nent cure was elt 4 ian now 62 years cted, ld, hz aud Néarty, and am satistied your CHERRY PECTOKAL saved me, HorAcE FAIRBROTHER,” Rockingham, Vt., July 15, 1682. aie Croup. —A Mother’s Tribute. “While in the conutry last winter my little boy, three years old, was taken ill with croup; it seemed as if 3 if he would die from strangu- lation. One of the family suggested the use of AVER’S CUERRY PECTORAL, a bottle of which was always kept in the hows.” Thi | in smail aud seequent doses, and an half an hour the ut was breathing easily. The doc that the 1cERY PrecTORAL had saved my darling’s Can you wonder at Our gratitude? Siucerely yours, Mins. EMMA GEDNEY.’® t im lesa ti ORGANS CHAPTER XXIL (Continued. ) The carts, of course, the Chase, the lodges, and the vehicles must be | back. ‘Why, the Chase is like a fair a’ready, ' } | i ers. many people i’ the two parishes. onus! how hot it is out o’ the shade. Come here, Totty, else your little face ’ be burnt toa scratchin’! They might ha’ cooked the dinners i’ that open space, an’ saved the fires. I shall go to Mrs. Best’s room an’ sit down.’ ‘Stop a bit, stop a bit, Mra. There’s th’ wagin comin’ wi’ the old folks in’t; itll be such a sight as wonra come o’er again, to see em get down and along all together. You remember some on ‘em i’ their prime, eh, father ?’ “Aye, aye,’ said old Martin, walking slowly under the shades of the lodge porch from which he could see the aged party descend. ‘I remember Jacob Taft walking fifty mile after the Scotch raybels, when they turned back from Stoniton.’ He felt himself quite a youngster, with a long life before him,as he saw the Hayslope , W. W. Scinivan, Q. 0, | Onsseer B. Maownm,| Patriarch, old Father Taft, descend from) the wagon, and walk toward him, in his brown night-cap, and leaning on his two 8 ‘Well, Mester ‘Taft,’ shouted old Martin, though he knew the old man was stone deaf, he could not omit the propriety of a greeting—‘you’re hearty vit. t an’ ‘Your servant, mesters, your servant,’ said Feyther Taft in a treble tone, perceiv- ing that he was in company. The aged group, under care of sons or| daughters, themselves worn and gray, passed on along the least winding carriage road toward the house where a special. table was prepared for them; while the, Poyser party wisely struck asroas the grass | under the shade cf the great trees, but not. ont of view of the house front, with its’ zioping lawn and flower-beds, or of the, pretty striped marquee at the edge of the lawn, standing at right angles with two larger marquees on each side of the open green spaces where the games were to be. played. The house would have been. nothing but a plain, square mansion af Queen Anne’s time, but for the remnant of | an old abbey to which it was united at one, end, in rush the same way as one may, sometimes see a new farm-house rising high | and prim at the end of older and lower farm-ottices. The fine old remnant stood a little backward and under the shadow of tall beeches, but the sun was now on the taller and more advanced front, the blinds were all down, and the house seemed asleep in the hot mid-day; it made Hetty quite sad to look at it; Arthur yaust be some-| where in th, bacx “rooms, with a grand company, where he could not possibly know that she was come, and she would not see him for a long, long while —not witil after dinner, when they said he was to come up and make a speech. But Hetty was wrong in part of her con- jecture. No grand company wag cowe, ex- cept the Irwines, for voi the carriage had been sent egriy, and Arthur was at that moment not in a back room, but walking with the Rector into the broad stone clois-. ters of the old abbey, where the long, tables were laid for all the cottage tenanis} and the farin-servants. young Briton he looked to-day, ia spirits and a bright blue frook coat. The highest mode—his arm no longer in a sling. So open-looking and candid, too ; but can- did people have their secrets, and secrets leave no lines in young faces. ‘Upon my word,’ he said, as he entered the cool cloisters, ‘I think the cottagers have the best of it; these cloisters make | That was capital advice of yours, Irwine, about the dinners—to let them be as or- for the tenants ; especially as Thad only a timited sum aftcr all; for though my grandfather talked of a carte blanche, he couldn’t make up his mind to trust me, when it came to the point.’ ‘ Never mind, you'll give more pleasure in this quiet way,’ said Mr. Irwine. ‘In this sort of thing people are constantly con- founding liberality with riot and disorder. [t sounds very grand to say thatso many sheep and oxen were roasted whole, and everybody ate who liked to come; but in the end it generally happens that no one has had an enjoyable meal. If the people get a good dinner and a moderate quantity of ale in the middle of the day, they’ll be ADAM BEDE. Every one must get down at sent | +, ‘I . said Mrs. Poyser, as she got down from the CABIN ET ORGANS ‘eart and saw. the groups scattered under the | great oaks and the boys running about in| the hot sunshine to survey the tall poles’ surmounted by the flattering garments that, were to be the prize of the successful climb- ‘T should ha’ thought there wasna so. Massy ull! Poyser | ' ‘ A weer ee we willno longer make terms with them. : | Let them see that our public opinion is will- jing to exterminate them like rats. a delightful dining-room on a hot day. | derly aud comfortable as possible, and only | The Dynamiters Crime. | DENUNCIATIONS OF . THE PRESS~NO TOLERANCE F< | | UNITED IK STATES MURDERERS The New York Herald denounces the were not to enter Dynamitere in the following language : ‘‘London is startled. Sois New York. he silly fellows at whom we have leuszhed ,| have tried to show that they can do real jmischief, They have tried to blow up two | English landmarks—the Houses of Parlia- Well, we e opinion of the dynamit- ers. We still believe that they are mas- 'querading in the guise of patriots. We still believe that their only obj: ct is to col- | Ject funds from servant girls and washer- |women, The Hera/d is not concerned to | protect the puckets of Irish servant girls and washerwomen ‘The Herald's largely | concerned to protect the good name of the United States. And the Herald does not pose to allow masquereders tobring dis- ecedit upon the Unted Stetes without | stripping off the mask and showing the evil |features which it conceals. America has ithe utmost contempt for the dynimiters. _It knows them to be scoundrels. It knows ;them to be hypocrites. It knows them to ibe repudiated by the opinion of decent Irishmen domiciled among vs. It knows | that murder is as far from the thoughts of ‘Irishmen in America as it is from the |thoughts of all other classes of American 'ment and the Tower of London. still hold the sam citizens. Americans loathe these black- {guards. They have long ccncealed their loatning from motives of int-:national comity. They have not wished to express (a personal feeling on matters which touch ithe weil being of a friendly nation like ticks. | Kngland. I€ England misgoverns Ircland, we hint at the utmost stretch of his voice—-for| ** the palpable points of misgovernment. | If the Saxen cannot live with the Celt, we jmark their ethnological differences. You ean! law of repression is passed, we show where : ; ° 1 1 h itic , , enjoy yoursen to-day, for ali you're ninety | it m ght have ¢en mitigated by an absence better.’ : | of prejudice. Ifa But when it comes to mur- ‘der, we take another point cf view |Murder? Ay. the murder of innocent travellers. The murder of Americans enjoying their holiday abroad. The murder of tourists who have read of the Tower and of the House of Parliament, and who, on a Saturday. visit those monuments of English history. The murder of men who, taking their pleasure, become the victims of vile schemers making a pecuniary profit out of the ignorance of the lowest class of their countyrmen and counirywomen. Do not let us mince matters. Let us ad- mit right here that these p'ans ere laid in America. Let us admit that the brawl in Chambers atreet shows clearly enough where the headquarters of these con- spirators lie. And let us say that, as they live here, here in the midst cf us, im the foremost city of the United States, we ex press the opinion of the people of New York and of the United States in hoping that such cowardly scoundrels may be brought to justice. ** It is no question of lish indepcndence. On that theme we are never wearied of giving our views. It is a question of das- tardly assassination, and if a moral law exists, if society is bound together by any other code than that of accident, we de- clare that this leprosy must be stamped out, now and fvurever. Socialism and anarchy have been rampant abroad. The news of every day recounts their victims. From Czars to ministers of police, from rulers on the throne io the meavest spies, their bloody list is constantly unfolded. But we do not propose that socialists and anarch- ists shall live and thrive and hatch their plots among us; and they shall not take ¢s their reason of existence the tionbles of any nation with which we may profoundly sympathize. ‘* Let this be understood. Let ail scoun- drels domiciled in America understand that Then ‘their absurd vanity, their craving for noto- ‘riety, their belief that an explosion in Lon- ,don makes heroes and martyrs out of their imiserable self-conceit, will vanish like | noisome vapor dispelled by the rays of the morning sun.” The Boston Adrertizer wakes the Ameri- ean people up to the danger of harboring those devilish enemies vf all men, as fol- lows : There is no occasion to be lenient to the acts or the motives of these monsters. To excuse them on any ground whatever is to make the apologist particeps criminis. The Irishman who does not condem them, or who, while he condemns, palliates them and professes that his sympathy with Ireland’s woes prevent him from taking any active interest to have the criminals detected and punished, does more than all England can do to wean American sympathizers from Irelaud’s cause. It is impossible to exaggerate the wick- | edness of this performance. The guilty imenare the enemies of all men, and of ‘every country. The brigands of Greece, ROYAL GANADIAN INSURANCE GU. O—n—- 1 ice A. 0 = - cA PITA 4y HEAD OFFICE —Montreal. HALIFAX BRANCH-— J. Scott Mitchell, Agent. om Risks Taken om Mest Favorah‘e Terms. AGENT FOR PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND: REG SHaMAUD, Jan. 1 Oh'town, $2,600,000. 159 West 128th St., New York, May 16, 1882, “1 have used AvERr’s CHERRY PECTORAL in my family for several years, and do not hesitate to provounce it the most effectual remedy for coughs aud colds we have ever tried. © A. J. CRANE.” Lake Crystal, Minn., March 13, 1882 “IT snuifered for eight years from Bronchitig, and after trying many remedies with no sug > the use of AYER’S CHEB. JOseEPH WALDEN.” iiss., April 5, 1882, Sess, ] was cured by BY PECTORAL, Byhalia, } “I cannot say enough in praise of AYER’s Cuernny PecTroral, believing as I do that but for its use | should long since have died from lung troubles. i. BRaGpon.” Palestine, Texas, April 22, 1882, No case of an affection of the throat or lungs exists which cannot be greatly relieved by the use of AYER’S CHERRY PECTORAL, and it will always cure when the disease ig not already beyond the couvtrol of medicine,’ PREPARED BY Dr.J.C. Ayer &Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggists, er able to enjoy the games as the day cools.! the thugs of India, the pirates of the China You can’t hinder some of them from get-; seas, the Ku-Klux Klan of the Southern :¢honte Rank of Walifax * UBSORIBE for THE DAILY EXAMI. WER, Uf yor want the latest mows ting too much toward evening, but drunk-| enness and darkness go beiter together than drunkenness and daylight.’ ‘Well, [hope there wont’t be much of it. I’ve kept the Treddleston people away by having a feast for them in the town; jand I’ve got Casson and Adam Bede, and ‘some other good fellows, to look to the giv- \ing out of ale iu the booths, and to take care things don’t go too far. Come, let us go up above now, and see the dinner- tables for the large tenants.’ They went up the stone staircase leading simply to the long gallery above the clois- States are not more deserving of the repro- bation and anathema of the good citizeas of every race and land. Common murderers and common tyrants grow respectable be- side such assassins and such defenders of liberty. The people which tolerates such deeds in its behalf advertises its unfitness for self-government, and makes all nations that have outgrown the degradation of savages unwilling to recognize its claim to be regarded as a portion of civilized human- ily. When such persons profess a regard for human rights, for just laws, for the in- stitutions of liberty, it has about as much jters, a gallery where all the dusty, worth- \less old pictures had been banished for the \last three generations—mouldy portraits of ‘Queen Elizabeth and her ladies, General ‘Monk with his eye knocked out, Daniel |very much in the dark among the lions, ‘and Julius Cesar on horseback, with a high ‘nose and a laurel crown, holding his Com- _mentaries in his hand. (To be continued.) significance as when the tenants of a prison rave against society for depriving them of their freedom. ' he Irish race have some excellent and ' admirable traits, but they have no virtues | which can secure them respect if they show | a readiness to condone such times as these, or accept them as services done in the cause of nationality. We do not forget that, while representative Lrishmen and |