fete enhllieenninetnhindna dea ee a ne ie : , rinses mt in eremegrntiaenpeete meses Fn 2 Late. cme tee REE AERO <A Aare ee tk os an te he ha kk a ee ee ne a anne. em mms en ina —_ . — il ' Sw / Ir 3 | » / i ae ZX © a —— wera nee o ' . Ae this is trae Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Eveiriwrs, Sineie Corres Two Cents, - eT -— or = a — eS oe eo ees meme OW ARIS YHA | ITERTO TN PIP YAT.YE ’ 17 3 ET) CY 5 y YOM gyt y EW SuitLES HARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAN RIL 24, 186: OL. 16.—-NO. 13 ’ VAL . as U A tk UY AB Bd OV iN. 5 Rin OK, EDV ALD ISLAND, FRIDAY. Al 4 24. SO, \ ( +e ‘ A O, 2) LA - . — — The Daily Examiner @VvVehat \ v. +) hh] hy} y Y ie Examine! rudiisaing Cos, and ottetown, Vates e ’ , aart $2 &0 1 25 v0 50 t moderate rates, for monthly, rly advertise ——————— ALMANAC F223 APRIL, 1885. MOON S CHANGES, i. r Tth day, 10h. 30m., a. m. New Mooa 15th day, lh, 39m., p. m. | ‘ inarter, 2lst day, 7h. 8m., p. m, 29th day, 2h. 2m., a m. j mn Sub slo : High ' Dave rises sets | rises | water len’h i ‘ h mh:«m aft» morn h m |} Vedoesdny 5 446 23; 8 49.11 41/12 39) Thursday $2! 24) 9 S2lafe ib) 43) neta 40, 6110 461.0 52t 46} ¢ Saturday 38; 27 11 38, 1 3) 49 & Sunday : aa 29 morn! 2 i4 52 § Monday 35 30,0 76) 3d) D0 * Tueeda o> 32; 1 10° 4 2' 5Y 1 49 13 ~ w ’ a: Wea i » rx a s4 Satmruay ~ i ’ 2 is Sunday 23 38° 3 56; 9 6' ] 13 Moaday 22; 39 4 26) 9 4 17 14. Tuesdisy 20; 40 4 57°10 26; 20) 15 Wednesday Is' 47,520 11 4 24] ig Thursday 1G, 43; © fill 45, = 27] 17 Friday 15, 45) © 50} n mm} 30) jg Saturday iS 45 40) U 27} 33 ]9' Sunday 1 47 8 37) 1 Ili $6) 9) Monday 6 46 hU9 6H SB St Ce 3} Tuesday S §0 10 47; 2 69) 42) ooiWedneaday | 6 6111 57) 4 Ii 46 93/Thursday | 4) 83 aft 16} 5 37) 49| 24 Friday 2) 684 2 15, 6 56| 52] 25 Saturday 0 55 3 22 7 89 55 28 Sanday 458 56 4 28! 8 47] 5S! 97| Monday 57) 571 5 $3 9 29:14 OF 93/ Tuesday 56; 59, 6 35)10 8] 4} ag'Wednesday 547 0) 7 37/10 43! 6) 20 Tharsday 4652/7 2 8 36i1) 18/4 9| : a : — | He RAILWAY TIME TABLE. THe RAI a | en | (Charloitétown Time. ) - OOING WesT. A. M, re We TOOT... ..mecscceceneves S$Gzf 303 Royalty Junction sae 2a Nuctu Wiltshire. 917° 417) i So. ae 932 432!) Bradaibane. Foe OB eee 10619 6 19! Freetown 1086 SM! PE ss cose ee tes 1057 = 557 | arrive........-++, lim” ¢@ Summerside, P. M. ( depart...<. 1 47 Miseouche. 2 09 Wellington . ; theca DE docnuctiens oaus ee » eas U' Leary 4 42 Alberton , . ; Ke cucd UOeaE Tignish. . 6 47 FROM WEST. A. M, Sind. ocnntecsadebn 6 47 ee ok, aknees le nane ee 7 47 ' NC. «oye beheld eel 9 02 i <4. «5 ws cneens dee 10 22 ED. o.oo c wa na keane ll 07 Misconche..... “dio santa 11 34 ROTIVE . 6 one ddeee 1157 a.[M Sur-aerside, Pp. M. i depute, iietsceren 202 732 KRensington...... eet eubeal ..237 38907 a a 300 830 ND on . ed dilwegs csc a. ae Bradalbaue.. . » ded ohn ones Ga Hunter Kiver.. deedsee vhost et 402 932 North Wiltshire. 417 947} Royalty Junction....... 5.09 1039) Uhariottetown...:... 5 32 11 02) &CING EAST. Pr. M i. DIS... s .be'sccceccteoubenueae 317 Royalty Junction 6eees eel Bedford....,.. i. ht. aoe 417) Mount Stewart, } SPtives---+e+ee reer + 52| wr @ Mamet ics cece es semis 4 57 | Ee ee 5 17) Se ee § 42 eee Clann’... «dc'socdu-claeunaleun 457 SD ons oon o00-.cebioeneal ee 5 37 St, Pete “ 6 OS Bear Rive, sou a a 6 57 MRadk sc... cscctes oy ob ee 7 42 #®OM EAT, s, Souris... zs ovecés 06engneuee 6 52 8 SRR 737 Mt. Peter’s, Sb eckce cbcku 6 ass eee 8 26 Morell... , PCP Pe 8 57 Der’... .. -scucbe boku 9 37 SN ss .0ccectcnnks 7 47 Vaedigan , bis tee ese ore 8 12 Mount Stewart ATTEVO, cc cccces sheers 9 32 . ( dopast.. sci. subi euee 9 42 Bedford... es 10 17 Koyalt = pemetion. ....6..6c0 de eee 10 54 See er 1 17 WE SELL Potatoes, ti Spiling, Bark, R. RR. Ties, Lumber, laths, Canned Lobsters, Mac- kerel, Berries, Eggs, Pish tc. Best Prices for all Shipments. Write fully for Quotations, General Commission Merchants, 32 Central Wharf, Boston. dlenbers of Board of Tredeo Clarn and tchavics Jixchange “tows Naw 10 1004 Perkins SHEET AG COTTONS, . _——, | ele Sw . HAVE THIS DAY CLOSED THEIR BUSINESS! ES ES ASN Qn the @pening of Navigation the Premises will be - as = « r-UPER WitH A FRESH STocek — —. 3°" New & Fashionable Bry Goods, OF Direct from the English Markets. \Charlottetown, April 22, 1885 White Esttons, Grey Usttons, Print Cottons. PULLOW COTTONS. FLERCY COTIONS AD ALL OTHER - |very uncommon to see a young ‘looked white and scared. I thought looked i business of mine. ADAM BEDE. CHAPTER XLII (4 ‘outinned, 5 The efiect of this evidence on Adam was electrical ; it gave him new force. Heity could not be guilty of the crime—her heart must have clung to her baby—else why should she have taken it with her? She might bave left it behind. The little crea- ture had died naturally, and then she had hidden it; babies were so liable to death—and there might be the strong- est suspicions without any proof of guilt. His mind was 80 occupied ‘with imaginary arguments against such ‘suspicions, that he could not listen to the ‘cruss-examination by [Metty’s counsel, who tried without result, tog elicit evidence that ‘the prisoner had shown some movements of ‘maternal affection toward the child. The whole time this witness was being examined But the sound of the next witness’s voice touched a chord that was still sensitive; she gave a start and a frightened look toward bim, but immediately turned away her head and looked down at her hands as ibefore. This witness was aman, a rough peasant. He said: ‘My name is John Oldiug. [ am a laborer, and live at Tedd’s Hole, two miles out of Stoniton. A week last Monday, toward one o’clock in the afternoon, 1 was PrP FS ry > Hetty had stood as motionless as before; no F ‘word seemed to arrest her ear. ku ike * 5 ‘going toward Hetton Coppice, and about a quarter of a mile from the coppice I saw the prisoner in a red cloak, sitting under a bit of a haystack not far off the stile. She got up when she saw me,and seemed as if she'd be walking on the other way. It wasa regular road through the fields,and nothing woman there, but I took notice of her because she should have she was a beggar-woman only for her ‘good clothes. I thought she a bit crazy, but it was no i stood and looked back ‘after her, but she went right on while she was in sight. of the coppice to look after some stakes. I had to go to the other side } LETTERS TO THE EDITOR, je o A Doctor Wanted at West Cape or Springfield. ' —— Sin,—tn this part of the island we have many of the things needful to make a people happy and contented, but one of the things we do want, that we have not got, is a good Doctor. {t is a neglected place in this par- ticular, and in consequence thereof there is great suffering on the part of the sick, and hardship with the well, before medical assistance can be obtained. There is no doctor nearer than Alberton, a distance of from twenty to twenty-five miles from here. Now to get an M. D. you will have to drive from eighty to one hundred miles, and many of them at least do not have their own teains, 80 you must go io Alberton and bring him to see the sick one. When this is done you have travelled fifty miles ; then you must take the man of medicine home again. When you reach home from your second trip you have made one hundred miles and will have to pay from $10 to $14 for each visit. We do not so much complain of the charge as of the distance the Doctor is from us, for when the reads are bad, be- fore one can be had there is in many cases extreme suffering, and in some death ; all! for the want of a Doctor. This is a beauti- ful part of the Island for a man to live in; along the Weatern Shore the scenery is magnificent; the drive is charming. In Lots 7 and 8 there are well-to-do farmers and millers, who would pay well, and at the time Or visit for all medicalaid. There is plenty of work here for a man, and pay as well. Even if he charged us $10 for a visit we would much rather pey it than to have to drive from eighty to one hundred miles and pay more. Will not then some of our young men Ja'e from College come for a time at least. You can be made comfortable as to a good home; you can make money, and be a blessing to sick and suffering humanity. j SICKNESS. April 2ist, 1885. (Other papers please copy. ) The War Feeling in India. Recent mail advices from India differ | There’s a road right through it, and bits of significantly from the rose-colored official jopenings here and there, where the trees telegrams concerning the loyalty to Eng- jhave been cut down, and some of ’em not |Jand of the native chiefs and people. Mail carried away. I didn’t go straight along advices indicate that there is a pretty the road, but turned off teward the middle, | general feeling among Indians which, under | | ‘| heard a strange cry. and took a shorter way toward the spot I wanted to get to. I hadn’t got far out of the road inte one of the open places, before I thought it didn't come from any animal I knew, but I wasn’t for stopping to look about just then, But it went on, and seemed so strange to me in that placa, I couldn't helj: stopping to look. 1 began to think I might make some money of it, if it wasa new thing. But I'd hard work to tell which way it came from, and for a good while I kept looking up at the boughs. And then Il thought it came from the ground. and there was a lot of timber- choppings lying about, and loose pieces of turf. and a trunk ortwo. And | looked certain circumstances, might prove any- thing but advantageous to British prestige in India in the event of a stubborn Arglo- Russian conflict. The native Indian press are nearly unanimous in favor of war, but with more of a feeling of resistance to Rus- sian aggression than of loyalty to purely British interests. ‘The Lahore 7'ri/vne calls for a national Hindoo army, not com- posed of mercenary Sepoys, but of volunteers recruited on a _ national basis. The Behar Herald advocaies a levy of all able-bodied men. The Kurrachee TifMes urges that a council of war composed of native princes be held at Calcutta to adopt a war policy, and that the council about among them, but at last the cry | offer four hundred thousand troops to the lk 9005 af stepped. Sol was giving itup, and went/|Indian Government to resist Russia, The ] 5 , ; 9 on about my business. But when I came} Madras Hindvo predicts that the struggle AT VeRY LOWEST PRICES. PERKINS & STERNS. } i Ch’town, Feb. 20, 1885. rsa ~~ = 2 oD 6 = = a — a © = # e © aa) ta 5 : ae ©} = “Heme = 4 . oo a <2 _ ; Sia — = 2 - = = @ PP om rt , eae ‘HSNIDON2 % NWOMSINY . PROWSE:, cena EER ! i | | | i 44 QUEEN STREET. . — ——— W.A.BRENNAR, Book, Job and Oreamental Printer, Book-Binder, Paper Ruler, —AND— BLANK-BOUX MANUFACTURER. The Printing and Biading machinery and back the same way pretty nigh an hour after, I couldn’t help laying down my stakes tohave another look, And just as 1 was stooping and laying down the stakes, | saw something odd and round and whitish lying on the ground undera nut- bush by the side of me. And I stooped down on hands and knees to pick it up. And [ saw it was a little baby’s hand.’ At these words a thrill ran through the court. Hetty was visibly trembling; now, for the first time, she seemed to be listen- ing to what a witness said. ‘There was a lot of timber-choppings put together just where the ground went hollow, like, under the bush, and the hand came out from among them. But there was a hole left in one place, and I could see down init, and see the child’s head; and L made haste and did away the turf and the choppings, and took out the child. It had got comfortable clothes on, but its body was cold, and Il thonght it must be dead. I made haste back with it out of the wood, and took it home to my wife. She said it was dead, and I’d better take it to the parish and tell the constable. And I said, ‘Vil Jay my life it’s the yonug jwoman’s child as [ met going to the cop- ' pice.’ Bat she seemed to be gone clean out of sight. And I took the child on to Hetton parish and told the constable, and we went on to Justice Hardy. And then we went locking after the young woman till dark at night, and we went and gave information at Stoniton as they might stop her. And the next morning, another constable came to me, to go with him to Plant in this Cflice is that of the late Bremner Brothers. and is well known as one of the most com- plete printing and binding concerns in the Lower Provinces. With such facilities itis no trouble to do the best work at moderate rates. 44 Queen Street, Sign of the BIG HAT, 74 Queen Street Charlottetown, P. E. Island. » meee — DO NOT Ch’town, March 17, 1885—wkly Throw your money away in bu come at tins and buy a Good Solid Leather pur Shoes for Spring, at a Low Price. We want to keep all the money we can in any imported Boot. Therefore, buy from us. BPORSEVY. GF (th’tneen, March 2%, 1888 on the we are bound to give better value in our make than can be had | g core Stroct, Charlottotows, cas i | March 17th, 1885. SULLIVAN & MAGNETLE, buying Shoddy Boots. Come ‘ATT ORBEYS * Af- LAW of Boots or) Seliciiers in Chancery, Island, se | VP AMEES WURRLAE, Ae, CoO. | OF FILCES— O'Hailoran’s Bailding, Great €@ Money to Loan, Wo SULLIVAN, Q, 4) | Cereewer R84 wwe Tem--«--+ 12 tQee the spot where I found the child. And when we got there, there was the prisoner a-sitting against the bush where I found the child; and she cried out when she saw us; but she never offered to move. She’d got a big piece of bread on her lap. Adam had given a faint groan of despair while this witness was speaking. He had hidden his face on his arm, which rested on the boarding in front of him, It was the supreme moment of his suffering; Hetty was guilty; and he was ailently calling to God for help. He heard no more of the evidence, and was unconscious when the case for the prosecution had closed—un- consciovs that Mr. Irwine was in the witness box, telling of Hetty’s unblemished character in her own parish, and of the virtuous habits in which she had been brought up. This testimony could have no influence on the verdict, but it was given as part of that plea for mercy which her own counsel would have made if he had been allowed to speak for her—a favor not granted to criminals in those stern times. (To be continued.) ’ We are selling a'l kinds of Crockery very cheap fora few weeks, to make room for new lake, at w P OCeale& ills he a v why mah le against Russia cannot be successful unless India be armed to assist England. Most other native organs discuss the situation in similar terms. Other Indian papers, prob- ably under official influence, urge the for- mation of an Anglo-Indian force as prefer- able to a purely Indian corps unless the latter be officered by Englishmen. It is plain that the Indians do not look upon . themselves as mere dependants upon Great Britain for protection.» It is difficult te estimate how strong this feeling of national independence is, but it is believed to he sufficiently prevalent to prove dangerous if too far ignored by Great Britain. nn — EE ——— Smuggling in Nova Scotia. A return brought down on the 17th in parliament shows that the total number of customs seizures in Nova Scotia during the year ending 30th June last was 63, and the total amount of fines exacted was $15,738. One-third of the fines seems in all cases to have been paid to the officers making the seizures. The seizures at each port were: Halifax, 29; Annapolis, 7; Arichat, 1; Bridgetown, 2; Cornwallis, 4; Digby, J; Gaysborough, 2; Lunenburg, 1; Margarets- ville, 2; Parrsboro, 7; Yarmouth, 5; Port Hood, 2. The total number of seizures in the last six months of 1884, was 81, and the total fines exacted $37,507. From the seizures made at Amherst during the last six months of 1884. J. S. McLaren, cus- toms officer, received as his share of the jtines $1,282. For the seizures made at Bridgetown, Mrs. J. 8. Mclaren and J L Bonness received $100 each. The sawe |officers were also paid for seizures at other | ports as follows:-——-At Cornwallis, $1,856; | Margaretville, $3; Londonderry, $80, aud | Windsor, $123. ——a > <> ~<a. ‘ There seems good reason to hope that General Grant may recover from his pre sent illuess. For several weeks his case was considered hopeless—it being under- stood that his physicians had decided that he was suffering from an incurable cancer. But later indications are that his physicians quite mistook the cause of his illness. The probabilities now are that he will recover. i <li> + Ai —e There are 13,501,206, milch cows in the United States, and yet to talk with a milkman you would be led to suppose that cows are scarcer than water in the desert. — [Lowell Citizen. And to drink the milk which is generally furnished, the opinion would be materially strengthened. —[ Boston | Post. | | Wa. Brown, Gold and Silver Plater, of ~~ as spoons, forks, cruet stands, tea setter, |watches, and jewelry of every description Shop on corner of Prince and Grafton Streets, Charlottetown. [ap 18 wky tf a : p a ene AaES fcc meee encanta See iil