%. 7 ey ee oe Ive D ~~ ¥"NY - HRIES. ILLARS A YEAR. aly @xamiuer Y evening by Publishing Oo. corner of Water and Woors ; QUE \bove Apothecaries’ Hall. »9, 1283 —d 3m eod wky lL, ARTHUR & CO., r : UJ ets, Charlotte Sowa, . BSCRIPTION— eee 7 J ce ae aE iis tnt oie Ht 0 ans ‘ ss = tcrate rates c b ate for monthly, quar- ter! ; erly advertisements, o OG S2t ) S L Zod day, 7h., 34.6m., p. m., N., 9h, 11.0m. p.m., N.W, 1OrTriZ } wv iSth day, 7h., 43.6., p.m, ®; | } 5 Dalice 27.6m., au Mey mw. Ip Sun Moon High'Day’s M rises,sets , rises |water| len’h » mh mimorniaftr’inh m $507 2 6 16) 2 28/1419 f 1 3 3 4g Ig 18 G6 147) 455 18 47 7; 2 14; 6 12; 20 15 8} 242) 7 18} 2 14 T72t 2s HSS 45) 11) 3 26) 8 51) 28 thy 12}.3 63) 9 27| 34 : $3} 13) 417/10 i 34 ! - | 33! i4} 4 42/r0raal- 36 7} 15, 5 Sill @l- 3a } i6 5 4r11 40) 41 j 1 Is! 6 19} morn 44 33; 20; 7 2] 0 15) 47 32| 21| 7 5310 521 49 al} 21) § 50) 1 33) 50 i 30} 22) 9 53) 2 19] 58 29; 24111 -0} 3 ME Se i 25) 2ait 10) 4 20) 57 26] 23) 1 23:6 29) 3 25) 26] 2 37| 6 87115 1 24} 27/3548 2.2 23; 28) 5 13) 8 56 5 2} 29) 6 32] 9 43 7 21; 31} 7 49/10 28 9 21; 32; 9 Oda Is. li 20} 33/10 4:02 BOL 13 20; 34110 57 \aft 14 19} 35,11 42) 1 28) 16 } is| 36 Sete! 2°17) «18 31 t 18/7 37! 9 16) 3° 8}1519 —~ we ne + <<: Diswatats Luan Physician and Surgeon, oFFiIcgd: r? = 7 4 UPPER EN STREET, 23 OF Batter, Cheese EGGS Votatoes, Fruit & Vi ‘retables. ii2, 144 Commercial Street, LOSTORN, MASS. 1 va TS 3 2 “i 3 5A ne ; u: L ol Cc! 2or' G.A ee . ws ; - AMES A, .«iOR! MORMON & — « uv , : S 4 i > + pop ae cm = ¢5 uGp= Lika kt RERMENT - OF” THE JAL $.3. 60 MAL Gee . 54 STEAMERS ., Via Eastport and Port- inesday and Friday, at wn to Boston, 96,50, 2nd information appiy to F. W. HALES, P, GEORGE MUSGRAVE HUSGRAVE, Bi: OKERS i. . w pial —AND— HALIFAX — A ats of Island produce will receive be kK. L Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. nission Merchants, Vhomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier Halifax ; George Vik Scotia, ager o Bank « of oS ee RREN & JONES, Nova Scotia HERCHANTS, .p AND 9 & 14 Mincine Lang, JON DOK, a i M ; , Hal Ost. 24, 1887— ENGL AND. in Canada by Mogrison & ilax “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evniriwss. _CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, MAY 12. 1888, SUCCESS! ee () a Rid Gloves! FOUR STUD. @. owen Q <a $ — Just Opened, 50 Dozen above celebrated seule of Kid Gloves, New Stud Fastening, Colored Stitch Back, ONLY 80 CENTS A PAIR. denen Anse O- a ae il Danan cht —cisss-— BOSTCN DIRECT, —BY THE-— Bo:ton, Halifax and Prince Edward Island Steamship Line. THE ONLY DIRECT LINE WITHOUT CHANGE. — ‘THE stannch” and commodious Steamships horomvhity refuruished and put into first-class condition in-every particular, will, during th The Oarroll, on Saturday, Sth May. One of these veszels will leave Besten for Charlottetown every SATURD4« Y, at noon; and ; Rates! FAKES—First-class Passage Berth in well-! furni~hed Cabin, $6 50; Stateroom Berth, $8.50. STANLEY BROTHER BROWN’S BLOCK. S, Ch'town, April 21, 1888.—eod & wky. ——— — 1888. ANNOUNCEMENT. 1888. The Popular Standard-Bred Trotting Stallion HERNANDO, 2891, RECORD 2.37 1-2 ON A HALF-MILE TRACK, The Fastest Record ever made in a Race on Prince. Edward Island. 4 Bs STALLION, 16 hands high, weighing about 1200 lbs, bred by Gen. T. Withers, Fairlawn Centucky. Sire, Almont, 33, sire of Fanny Witherspoon, 2.16}, and 32 others in the 2.30 list, besides 27 song that have sired trotters, and 16 daughters that have produced trotters, m, Jenny Clay, by American Olay, 34, sire of the dams of Sir Walter, Jr.. 2.18}; Garnet, 2.193; Dyn soun 2.214, se 20d dam by Morgan Rattler, 3rd by Mambrino Chief, 11, 4th by Gano, 5th by Potomac, etc. For full Pedigree, History and particulars get Hernando’s 1888 Circular. HERNANDO has won every co tition in which he was ever entered. His stock are famed prize-winners, and sell young for r prices than these of any ether horse in Lower Canada. _ By rood fiites-an writers he has been pronounced“in comparison with ACT Stallions’id Lower Canada, es u Phe Prince of the Gollection,” and ‘‘The Noblest Roman of them all.” HERNANDO will make the Season cf 1888 as follows; SUMMERSIDE—May f to12; May 23 to June2; June 11 to 16; June 25 to 30; July 9 to lf uly 23 to 28, CHARLOTTETOWN April 30 to May 5; May 21 to 26; June 4to9; June 18 to 23; July 2 to 7; July 16 to 21. TERMS —Twenty-Five Dollars for the Season, or Thirty-Five Dollars to insure. The above route will be adhered to as closely as health, weather and other conditions will permit, Mares from a distance will be received and cared for at moderate prices. Send for Circular. j W. A. NOONAN, in Charge. May 7, 1888—dy Im wky 3m ae jin the Supreme Court, In the matter of “‘An Act of the Parliament of 4 to an order nisi, dated the 3rd day of May, inst., 1H -T and desirabje Residence on Prince Street. Lowest rates for Freight, which is always care: | fully handled. i CARYVELL BROTHERS, Agents, Charlottetown. HARRISON LORING, Managing j)irector and Treasurer, Lewis’ Wharf, Boston. Ch’town, May 3, 1888—pat sum jour DOMINION OF CANADA, ) _ Province of k Prince Edward Island. ) Canada, passed in the forty-fifth year of Her present “ajesty’s Reign, Chapter 23, intituled, * An Act respec'ing Insolvent Banks, Insurance Companies, Loan Compauies, Building Socie- ties and Trading Corpora'ions,’ end of the Pre- sident, Directers and Company of the Bank of Prince Kkdward Island, au lasolvent Banking Company :— ! NOTICE is hereby given that on WEDNES- DAY, the 16th day of May, instant, A. D)| 1288, His Honor Me. JaStice Peters will, pursuant aoeetes in the above matter, order that the alance or sum of $198.55 in the hunds of the Liquidators of the above uamed Insolvent Bank- ing Company tothe creditof the Liquidation Account be paid intothe Bank of Nova Scotia, there tobe deposited as required by law ; and also that the recognizances severally given by the three Liquidators of said Insolvent Bank be vacated and delivered up, unless cause to the contrary be shown before him at the Judges’ Chambers, inthe Law Courts Building, in Char- lgeeto wD, On Th? Gate ttth dav of May, instant, al the hour of Tweive o'clock, ‘noun. by any of the creditors, contributories, shareholders or members of the above named Insolvent Banking | Company. Dated ith day of May. A. D, 1888, J. A. LONGWORTH, Prothonotary. i R, R. FirzGer ip, Solicitor. may4i—dy 106i Family Residence. { E Subscriber offers for sale his weil known The House is in good condition ; the rooms are lurge, airy and weil ventilated. For convenience net situation it is unsurpassed in the city, For further particulars apply to JOHN HIGGINS, may1—tf Prince Street. NEW STOCK. , 2 = 2 Fu ie, WF J. H. BELL | Charlotetown Bout & Shoe Faery 70: | ' i YITH Improved Premises, Experienced Workmen, ‘New Lasts, Better Leather, we W now turn out NEATER, BETTER FITTING AND WEARING BOOTS than ever. Every Pair Warranted. FOREIGN MAKE.—We import from Canada and the United States the latest styles in Ladies’ and Gents’ Boots, Shoes, Slippers and Rubbers. Buying in large quantities, for cash, it enables us to sell cheap. ou do not require a heavy purse when dealing with us. SHOEMAKERS, ATTENTION! | CUSTOM SOLE LEATHER by the Side, 24 cents per lb. Kip, Grain, French Calf, Kid and Goat. Awls, Welts, Shoe Thread, Heel Ink, Dressing, Pegs, Pincers, Hammers, Wax, | Bristles, Nails, Eyelets, English Tops, &c. As we have to keep these articles for our own use, and buying them in large quantities, we can afford to sell cheaper than any in the trade. | GOFF BROS, Successors to Dorsey, Goff & Co, ‘ial Reduced Prices for Tw Months Oaly, Spo Tine CAIRNS & McLEAN’S, Kent Street (Phillips Old Stand.) ee () Having purchased the entire Stock cf MR. JAMES PHILLIPS and of the late E. G. HUNTER, we are over- stocked, and have decided to sell at a Discount of 10 to 20 Per Cent, for Two Months from date, Parties wanting anything in this line would do well to call early and have first choice. Over 200 Fine Designs to select from. CALRNS & McLEAN. February 28, 1888—eod & wky April 13, 1888—wky 2m dy Im 2aw cearate Si W ISHKES to inform his customers and the pub-| tic generally that be has received a poruon | of Fine Laced, esveciaily for spring and summer | wear, also some nice Elastic Side, and a variety } of nobby Shoe Uppers, which he will make up in the latest atvles and at the lowest possible prices, | Living under low reat, anid importing aur stock ! seis OF direct, enables us to make up Custom iota aathe a Deacttaceed” Gale Work cheaper tlian any other house in the city. WO) 2 — | ee ne er 4 We always handle new siock. Our workm sméhip|to the estates, but there were uyuly rumors second iv none. A fit warrantca or no Sale i tha | i tep-mo her had forced her Always up to time with orders. se tly done, | husband to p the life of hie eldest son, thet! REPAIRING neatly sud prompy a ht he heir; but of this the young | DON’T FORGET THE PLACE: UPPER GREAT GEORGE STREET, ap2l—1m sat tu thu re ~~ ~ 7% —AT THE— eREPIM, «|= ORES LoDo. HUUS Is Still Going On. —— Many Fine Grades of Goods. LARGE DISCOUNTS, And every effort made to meet the require- ments of CASH BUYERS. F. W. HOORE, Assignee of Harnis & STEWART. Ch town, March 2, 1888. FOR SALE OR TO LET For a Term of Years. oe e ic | LAWNDALE, situate on the St, Peter's Road, about one mile and a half from the city, ‘known as the “GARDINER PROPERTY,” ana recently occupied by K. Bridges, ( ; }mises are a handsome Dwelling House, goo | Barns, &e. This place consists of about Sixteen | Acres of Land, in good heart, | of land can he had adjoining, | Farm of about fifty acres. | For further information apply to JOHN INGS. Ch’town, Aprii 11, 1883—-3aw Uharlotieiown to Boston, ARROLL and WORCESTER, having been ! Heve ral yo i his y on foot Season of 1888, run as follows, commencing with i CK '4angers, TWO ! ; j F +Hors 1g be Geueral satisfaction yiven. , bers nigh } master of lfew months at home again departed upon Sign of the Greai Big Boot, | On the pre- and several pieces sufficient to make a a CO CAPTAIN LOCHIEL ; | | oR The Maid of the Mountain. BY COLONEL PRENTISS INGRAHAM, A Scotch lad of blue blood had disappeared mysteriously from his home in the Highlands, and not a trace of him could be found. / Jdiis home was thus made desolate, for he | was a handsome youth of seventeen, and his jequal asa huntsman, horseman, and daring jmountaineer could not be found. lt was supposed that he had fallen from mine lofty craig and been dashed to death; but asearch of the glens and tarus did not | discover his body, and so his fate remained a | mystery. ' i | rsafter, a young man was wending through the mounvains of stopped at a wayside inn for and a bite to regale himself a iss = OL with. Chere were in the inn half-a-dozen High- whom started at seeing the young man, and immediately went out to- ‘* Yes, MeDonal, it is, and no mistake.” ** Then Danaid played us false?” ‘* True, he did.” ‘‘And he is going home to the castle, and all will not be well with us.” “ No,” *‘ We must take care of ourselves,” ** Yes, you say well.” ‘** We will walk an ahead and drop him at the pass, and the stream wili carry his body away !” oo. And the two walked on together, disappear- ing upthe glen, while a moment after the young man came out of the inn and followed the same path, As he did so a young girl arose from where she had been reclinining, book in hand, on other side of a large tree, and followed him. She had heard all that the two men had said, and as the young man got out of sight of the inn she overtook him, ‘““T beg pardon, sir, but are you Master Lochiel, of Castle Craig?” ‘‘T am, Missy,” was the polite reply, as the young man beheld before him a beautifal girl of sixteen. ‘* You disappeared from home mysteriously some six years ago, as I remember hearing of it.” “Yes. I was taken at disadvantake by two men, dragged to the sea-cliifs, end thrown into the sea. But I was a good swimmer, and after holding ep for nine hours was pick- ed up by an American craft, and carried to foreign parts. ‘‘{ wrote home; ~but.got no replies, and after some years of wandering and hard knocks, I am back home again.” ** And the two men who attempted to kill you, were both in the inn, recognized you, and are now lying in wait to murder you, for I overheard their plot!” ‘* God bless you, my sweet girl. But are you not Aileen Garton, the dauginter of the inn-keeper ?” “ Yor mr.” ‘*l remember you now, sweet Aileen; but you have grown from a mere girl almost to womanhood, anc I thank you for the service done me, and will give those tellows a hot re- ception,” ‘* You will not go that way, sir, surely ?” ‘‘ Ah, yes, for l am warmed and armed, too ! ‘* We will meet again, few hours 1 am at home.” Soon after two shots rang out in the pass, and timidly approaching the spot, Aileen be- held the two plotters dead in the path, while the young man was nowhere to be seen. Hastening back to the inn she told her ge ther. | ! ; i Missy Aileen, the tee ee ee eee a — eS aaa, eee Nak Sa Sinetx Copies Two Cents 6 ~ VOL. 22.—NO. 142. ing, and, with her, dressed in his uniform, they made a very handsome couple. The words were on the lips of Captain Lochiel.to ask Miss Underhill to be his wife, when he heard a rustling sound, and there, within tnree feet of him, he beheld the “ Maid of the Mountains.” She was as white as the dress she wore, and leaning against a large tvee as if for support ; _he saw that her face was pale and haggard. ‘* Aileen ! You here?” he gasped. ‘* Yes, but I meant not to bar your path,” was the low reply. He stepped towards her quickly and said: ** Aileen, 1 received letters that I ‘once believed came from you, but now I doubt that you wrote them, when 1 gaze inte your face. ‘* And more, Aileen, 1 have heard cruel stories of you, and yet I cannot believe them when your honest eyes meet mine.” ‘“* T was about to ask this lady to be my wife, but, ere [ do so, 1 wish you to tell me if you wrote me those letters, and if the stories told of you are true ?” : ** Lochiel, I wrote no letter to you, and not one act have 1 done that was wrong ; but ‘your step-mother plotted against you, and ‘against me, for had you become the husband 6t that young woman your life would bave ended, and your half-brother would have been heir to Castle Craig !” Chariott-town for Boston every THURSDAY, ‘ at. 6 o'clock, p. mn : mar : ; Without anether word she wheeled and : or . 2 ; ‘ » «fie 2 8 oot : ‘ : . : Excelient Passenger Accommodation! Low} It's the laddie ! said one. walked away, while Cuptain Lochiel, turning to the accused woman, said, sternly :— ** Miss Underhill, 1 believe what has been told me by that nuble girl, and my eyes open- ed now.” ‘* Return to Castle Craig, please, and say to Mrs. Lochiel that when I come back to my house at sunset, I wish to find that she, her son and her guest have left it forever.” **Should it not be so, I will have officers come to arrest her.” Miss Underhill was frightened and hastened away, and when Captain Lochiel returned to Castle Craig that night he found that his step mother, her son and guest had gone. Three months after, Aileen Garton left her home in the mountains and became the mis- tress of Castle Craig. _——————— Choosing a Husband. A VERY NATURAL AND VERY COMMON MIS- TAKE GIRLS MAKE. Husbands are not made to order; they just grow. To get agood one you have to know him when you see him. He may not look iike the man your fancy painted, yet you will recognize in him the qualities that go to make up the reliable, enterprising, amiable man. Asarule women are not possessed of acute business minds, and are not as observant as they might be. One after another they will fall intu the same open trap, just as though they were blindfolded or were impelled by some uncontrollable force. The majority of them seem to think that they must marry, and all that is necessary is to find amanthat is good louking or rich. The average girl first takes a fancy toa pretty man, and thinks and dreams of his» lovely hair, charming eyes,;-e*Te" divine moustache and dovelike voice. declares that he is too thing. > She sweet for any- This fever passes off in time, but too often it leaves 4 perverted taste. A dandy figure, swell manners and _ clattering tongue are apt to even outweigh a good heart, industrious habits and moral worth, Even after marriage visions of the early ideal rise up to disturb the serenity and tranquility of the domestic scene. Better such an ideal had never been formed. Two Reporiers. father what had happened, and at once the country rang with the news of the return of | lof his SPRING STUCK OF UPPERS, consisting | the young master of Castle Craig and his hav- ; ' ted ch ' ; ing killed the two men who had attempted to | court of the United States, recalis the , lesting fact that the proceedings of the Maine murder him in the past. During his absence trom home the father of of thiel had died, and his young son, wy LO Castile Craig said nothing, and afte: his travels. But during his stay at Castle Craig he had almost daily met pretty Aileen Garton in his ramblings. The people called her the “ Maid of the Mountaias,”’ as she vas almost sure to be found hunting, fishing, or gathering wild flowers among the glens and on the mountain sides, And in those meetings the young master of ‘Castle Craig had learned to love the beautiful girl who had saved his life, as he well .knew, lby putting him upon his guard against the ' assassins. And Aileen fairly idolized the handsome young Soot, so that when he went away on _ his travels, she had pledged him to one day be this wife. A few moments after the departure of the young Scot, news came that a gallant young Highlander, who had enlisted as a private soldier, had risem from the ranks by his superb courage, and that the famous “Captain Lochiel,” as he than the master of Castle Craig. He had gone into a Scotch regiment station- hiding his identity, had been willing to work his way up. His regiment was soon ordered to Eastern lands, aud there his courage in battle soon won his fame, and at last the secret came out, and Aileen Garton rejoiced at the fame won by her lover. A year after his second departure Captain was called, was none other ed in Canada, after his escape from death by being picked up by an American craft, and The Portland Argus, in its notice of the newly appointed chic! justice of the supreme inter- legislature of 1856 were reported for the Kennebec Journal by James Gillespie Blaine, land for the Augusta Age by Melville Western Fuller. These cwo Maine reporters bave turn- ed out well, as reporters usually do. The proportion of reporters who subs quently wit distinction and fortune at the bar, in the | pulpit, in business or literature is Jarge. A good reporter has to be an exceedingly | bright man, and his calling gives one of the ibest educations to be had in intelle: §:al alertness, knowledge of men, readiness of lresource, patience and industry. It is no |wonder that reporters who do well in their business do well in other business when they take it up. But the wealthiest and most famous of the reporters who have graduated from that great school of human nature over which the city editor presides, probably will never enjoy themselves more, albeit their work was hard and exacting, that in the days when they were scooting to fires or putting picturesqueness into a dog fight. New York Sun. he Marrying Age. What age should a young man be before he thinks of marrying? This depends upon the young man, one man being better fitted for marriage at twenty-five than another at thirty-five. If, however, mar- riage is postponed much past this latter age the man is likely to get into the habit of celibacy, a habit which is not so easily shaken off. Then between fifty and sixty he grows desperate, as it were, and pro- poses wildly to almost every woman he meets, until at last he is picked up, not for himself but for his money and position, or because seme one has grown tired of ‘* Miss,” and desires to have the novel ex- perience of writing ‘‘Mrs.” before her name. It is not natural for a girl to fall in Lochiel again returned te Castle Craig. He was met in London by his step-motzer and half-brother, a youth of sixteen, and a young lady of great beauty, a kinswoman of Mrs. Luchiel, who was going to spend a few months at Castle Craig. . : Days passed by after the return of Captain Lochiel, and Aileen’s heart was full of sorrow, for he had not come near her, nor had she been able to meet him, as before, in the mountains. And more still, ramor had it that the gai- lant captain was to marry Miss Vere Under- hill, the lady guest at Castle Craig. One day Ceptain Lochiel was walking in the words with Miss Underhill. She was a very beautiful girl, very fascina- love with aman who might be her tather. The best rule for a young man isto wait until he can’t wait, until that *‘not impossi- ble she ” crosses his path, whose bewitch- ‘ing smile and gracious presence force him ‘to propose. He who is fit for and worthy of marriage can hardly marry too soon, and he who is not fit ought not to marry at all. As to the age women should marry, I give that up, being afraid of burning my tingers. Please yourself, good sir; only do not marry either a child or an old woman. If some women are not worth looking at alter thirty years of age, worth speaking to quite as many are not before it.—The Quiver, ees ae i: ie ee ei U nee vont ca ’ LF A SE MBE TSG BS sietidls Peg t: eae ae st ben 9 Sccaenrtrtemalarmnancnapsiaitendinipssspedinechaaandladatinamealgineteaie ee Ee a