Cae ee a NEW SERIES. fuk Datty EXAMINER 4 issued eve me by The Examiner Publishing Co. From t corner of Water and sreat Lreorg streets, ( Rar rttetown, Prince Kdward Island, Ra : SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, . $2 50 three Jlonths - . | 25 One Month, 0 50 re Advertising at Contracts made for monthly, quarteriy, hail-yeariy or yearly advertise- ments, on application, nost moderate rates. vie . ’ nay * ALMANAC FOR MARCH, i834. VOON 8 CHANGES, Firet Quarter, 4th day, %h. 20.Gm., a. m, ¥ail Moon, lith day, 3h. 27.5m., p. m. Last quarter 19th day, 7h. 0.5m., p. m. New Moon 27th day, th, 35 Um.,, a. m. D Sun '‘San 'Moon/High | Days! DAY OF WEXK Ae 5 73 M rises |sets { rises | water len’, | bh m,h m | morn/morn} h m | 1| Saturday 6 435 42) 8 32. 0 42/10 58 2)/Sunday ' 49, 43) 9 11) 1 26)11 1 2 Monday | 39 44 9 55) 2 16 4 4 Tuesday | 37) 46:10 45 3 15 8 5 Wednesday | 30, 4811 42 434 11 6 Tharsday ; 34) 49 aft43 G 3) J4, 7| Friday | 32! 50,148 7 22 13 | §/Saturday }°30, Si! 254 8 23) 21} 9 Sunday | 20] 63| 359910) 24 .0 Monday | 27] 54,5 4) 9 52 27 | 11 Tuesday | 25' 56,6 810 341 31] 12! Wednesday 22| 57,7 10/11 2] 35] 3, Thursday 20}; 58; 8 1211 35 38 | {| riday | 19] 59! 9 12laft 7] 41] 16 Saturday | 176 1/10 11, 046) 44) 16 Sunday ; 13, 2a) OF 2 1St 47; 17 Monday > 13) 2) morn] 1 &4 50 | 18 Tuesday | Ab} 8} O 3) 238 4 19} Wednesday | 9% 6) 0 55) 3 32; 3T} 20 Thuraday 7| 7 1 481 4 4212 9 $1) Brida io @ Saat ey §2|Satupday #° 10; 3 @| 7 12) | 23}Sunday |} 1| 41! 343) 812] 10] 24 Monday 16 59| 13/4169 1 4 | Q5\Tuesday | 57| 14 449, 944) 17] 26| Wednesday | 56 16 5 21)10 26; 20 27\Thorsday | 54) 17) 554/11 5! 23 28| Friday 52; 18) 6 48'll 46) 26 29| Saturday 52; 19) 7 7)morn 29 30 | Sanday 48} 21! 7 51; 0 28) 33 31| Monday 47| 22' 8 401 1 14! 36 TAS. BE. GRANT, Sale Agent fox P. E, Island fer MOS. CONNOR & SONS, Rope Manufacturers, ST. JOHN; N. B. a@ Orders from the trade respectfully solicited. Ch’town, Feb. 29, 1884.—1lm McLeod, Morson & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS -—AND— ATTORNEYS - AT -LAW. Office in Old Bank, (UP STATRS). Ch'town, Feb. 21, 1884. DR. MACKAY, Physician and Surgeon OFFICE: ROCKLIN HOUSE, Kent Street, Charlottetown, P. E. I. ~ Feb. 16, 1883—3aw if SULLIVAN & MACNEILL, ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW Solicitors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, Xe. OFFICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great george Street, Chaiiotvetown, . eam Money to Loan, W. W. Scttivan, Q. C. | Cugstex, B. Macnen, Jan. 16, '83. LIFE INSURANCE, United States Life Insurauce C0, —oPr THE CUTY OF ALW YORK. ORGANIZED 1850. ee New Features, Incontestible Policies, Prompt Settlemeut of Claims Guaranteed, Apply at residence, Weymouta Street, trom sto 10a. m, and 4 to 6 p. m. A. H. McPHERSON, Agent. Sent. 25, 15833.—2aw > ¢ . P, Island Pottery. excitement E are Agents for the P. E. Island \ Pottery. Orders sent to us will re- ceive prompt attention. Jars, Jugs, Bean Pots, Mugs, Flower Pots, Spitoons, Stove Stones, etc., etc,, lm stock. BEER & GOFF AGENTS Ch'town, Out, #6, ‘83. “<4 oy os ~ i a ° . his is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free,’’—EvxiprpEs. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1884, a fe MERCHANT TAILOR, r OVER-STOCKED with the tollowing GOODS, and offers them ata REDUCTION OF TWENTY PER CENT, Gents’ Woollen Underwear, Flannel Shirts, Fur Caps, Kid Mits, Sleigh Robes. OVERCOA TINGS, WHICH’ YOU CAN HAVE MADE TO YOUR MEASURE Cheaper Than Imported Ready Made. D. A. BRUCE, Dec, 20, 1883,—eod wkly 72 Queen Street, Charlottetown aaa e GRAND SALE DRY GOODS OHN MACPHEE & CO. will, during tho HOLIDAY SEASON, give special bargains in Dress Goods, Kuit Wool Goods iantles, Shawls, Flaunels, Hosiery, Gloves, &¢ CLOTHING. CLOTHING. Men's Overcoats, $3.90, $5.00, $4.50, $¥.50, up. Men’s Ulsters, $4,95, $6.25, $7.00, up. Men’s Reefers, $2.95, $3, $3.50, $5, $4.50, $5.50 up. OF ANU GLOTHING. ——_—O—— Fur Caps, Kid Mits and Gloves, Cardigan Jackets, Worsted Tweeds, Under- clothing, Buifalo Robes, Horse Rugs, Small Wares, etc. PARES WARP, CHHBALF. REA L BARG AINS in retting Cash Buyers can depend on g g Department, every WHOLESALE AND RETAQL, JOHN WAGPHEE & CO, ROBERT ORR’S OLD STAND, Ch’town, Dec, 12, 1883.—2aw wkly pres pat epee ee ce SIGN OF TRE ELEPHANT. o-—-— ty KR. BOREHAM has now on hand the LARGEST AND \ / , BEST STOCK OF HOTS, SHOKS, SLIPPERS, OVERSHOES & RUBBERS, His motto is a good article at a moderate ever shown by him. price, LADIES’ AND GENTS’ FINE GOODS, a specialty. ; A nice lot of LADIES’ AND GENTS’ FANCY SLIPPERS for the Holidays. Try BOREHAM for a pair of GOOD BOOTS. W. R. BOREHAM, North Side Queen Square. Ch’'town, Dee. 10, 1883.—mo we fr 2m ee are verwer om : —= THE EXAMINER JOB PRINTING OFFICE HAS LATELY BEEN REPLENISHED WITH A Large Supply of Printing types and Material OF THE LATEST INVENTION AND BEST DESCRIPTION, AND WE ARE NOW PREPARED, ‘Tuder the Careful and Skilful Supervision of Mr. J. W. Mitchell, TO PRINT LETTER HEADS, RECEIPT”, pos) ERS, BILL HEADS, BLANK CHEQUES, NOTES OF HAND, HAND BILLS, } { ! RWS, NEW FOR 1988 CORSETS. A LARGE DISPLAY OF TUR NEWEST AND BaST GOODS, All Sizes, Just Received. al Sent free by post to any address in the country on receipt of price. W. A. WEEKS & GO. DRESS §=GO00DS ! RE W PRINOEN, CORDS, CASHMERES, SERGES, New Satins, Velvets, PLUSHES —AND— SILKS. Wedding Millinary & Outfiis SUPPLI£D AND MADE BY Exprrienced Hands. W. A. WEEKS & GO. VELVETEENS —IN ALL— Leading Colors and Black. VERY POPULAR FOR WINTER WEAR, We have a Fine Stock of Nice Goods, W. A: WEEKS & C0. MILLINERY. MANTLtes, JACKETS DOLMANS, ETC., . MADE TO ORDER, W. A WEEKS & C0, Ch’town, Jan. 22, 1884,—eod wkly. Tie Ladies of St James’ Kirk INTEND HOLDING A Good Old Time Teh AND FANCY TABLE, ON THE [2TH MARCH NEXT, a@ Further particulars will be given. TO LET, ‘a RAILWAY HOUSE, situated on Richmond Street, sear London House. Also a shop adjoining, 16x30 feet. Apply to THOMAS CAMPBELL, Ch’town, Feb. 23, 1884.—tf RTE SHIP AND HOUSE BUILDERS, Will find every requisite for the trade at DUCHEMIN'S STEAM FACTORY, Beer’s Wharf, Always on hand, a complete stock of Ship’s Blocks. : Deadeves, Steering Wheels, —ALSO — . Mouldings, in great variety, Cornice, Base Panel, Door and Window Finish, Spouting, Conductoy and Handrail, Newel Posts, Balus- ters and every description of Turning. Fret, Circular and Jig Sawing, Planing and Moulding turned out neatly and with des- patch. Satisfaction guaranteed. Don’t forget the place, Beer's Wharf near PODGERS, AC, KC... Neer Coal Depot. Albert Duchemin. ‘On Short Notice, in Good Style, at Cheap Prices.’ curows, sau, 2, 1984,—wkly 6i | } OU E,: Bh By Charles Reade. cone, -— —_ CHAPTER LVIIL | Punervuatty at ten o’clock Helen returned |te Fifth Street, and found behind a sort of counter, employed in trac- ing; a workman was seated at some little from him; both bent on their | distance | work. | ‘Mr, Undercliff?” said Helen. He rose, and tyrned toward her politely -~a pale, fair man, with a keen gray eye ‘and a pleasant voice and manner: ‘‘I am Edward Undercliff. You come by appoint- | ment ?’ | ‘Yes, sir.’ | ‘A question of handwriting!’ | ‘Notentirely, sir. Do you remember giving witness in favor of a young clergy- man, Mr. Robert Penfold, who was accused | of forgery?’ ‘] remember the circumstances, but not | the details.’ | ‘Oh, dear! that is unfortunate,’ said | Helen, with a deep sigh; she often had to sigh now. | ‘Why, you see,’ said the expert, ‘1 am ‘called on such a multitade of trials. How- lever, I take notes of the principal oves. What year was it in?’ ‘In 1864,’ Mr. Undercliff went to a set of drawers arranged chronologically, and found his notes directly. ‘it was a forged bill, madam, indorsed and presented by Pen- fold. I was called to prove that the bill was not in the handwriting of Penfold. Here is my fac-simile of the Robert Pen- foid endorsed upon the bill by the pris- oner.’ He handed it to her,and she examined it with interest. ‘And here are fac-similes of genuine writing by John Wardlaw; and here is a copy of the forged note.’ | He laid it on the table before her. She started, and eyed it with horror. It was a long time before she coulé speak. At length she said, ‘And that wicked piece of paper destroyed Robert Penfold.’ ‘Not that piece of paper, but the original; this is a fac-simile, so far as the writing is concerned, It was not necessary in this ease to imitate paper and color. Stay, here is a sheet on which I have lithographed the three styles; that will enable you to follow my comparison. But perhaps that would not interest you.’ Helen had the tact to say it would. Thus encouraged, the expert showed her that Robert Pen- fold’s writing had nothing in common with the forged note. He added: ‘I also de- tected in the forged note habits which were ‘entirely absent from the true writing of John Wardlaw, You will understand there were plenty of undoubted specimens in court to go by.’ ‘Then, oh, sir,’ said Helen, ‘Robert Pen- fold was not guilty. ‘Certainly not of writing the forged note. I swore that, and I'll swear it again. But when it came to questions whether he had passed the note, and whether he knew it was forged, that was out of my province.’ ‘I can understand that,’ said Helen; ‘but you heard the trial; you are very intelli- gent, sir, you must have formed some opinion as to whether he was guilty or not.’ The expert shook his head. ‘Madam,’ said he, ‘mine isa profound and difficult art, which aims at certainties. Very early in my career I found that to master that art I must be single-minded, and not allow my ear to influence my eye. By purposely avoiding all reasoning from external cir- cumstances,I have distanced mycompetiters in expertise ; but I sometimes think I have rather weakened my powers of conjectures through disuse. Now, if my mother had been at the trial, she would give you an opinion of some vaiue on the outside facts, But that is not my line. If you feel sure he was invecent, and wanted me to aid you, you must get hold of the handwriting of every person who was likely to know old Wardlaw’s handwriting, and so might have imitated it ; all the clerks in his office, to begin with. Nail the forger; that is your only chauee.’ ‘What, sir!’ said Helen with surprise, ‘if you saw the true handwriting of the person who wrote that forged note, should you recognize it?’ ‘Why not? Jet is difficult; but 1 have done it hundreds of times.’ ‘Oh! Is forgery so common? ‘No; but | am in all the cases; and, be- sides, | do a great deal in a business that requires the same kind of expertise-— anonymous letters. I detect assassins of that kind by the score. A gentleman or lady, down in the country, gets a poisoned arrow by the post, or perhaps a shower of them. They are always in disguised hand- writing ; thase who received them send them upto me, with writings of all the people they suspect. This disguise is generally more or less superficial; five or six unconscious habits remain below it, and often these undisguised habits are the true characteristics of the writer. And I'll tell you something ¢urious, madam: it is quite common for ail the suspected people to be innocent; and then I write back, ‘Seud me the handwriting of the people you suspect the least,’ and among them I| often find the assassin,’ ‘Oh, Mr. Undercliff,’ said Helen, ‘you make my heart sick.’ ‘Oh, it is a vile world, for that matter,’ said the expert; ‘and the country no better than the town, for all it looks so sweet with its green fields and curling rills. There they sow anonymous letters like barley]; the very girls write anonymous letters that make my hair stand on end. Yes, it is a vile world.’ ‘Don’t you believe him, mis@ said Mes. i i Mr. Undereliff | SINGLE Copies Two CrEnts, VOL, 14.-—NO. 88, ‘Oh, that is it, is it? said the expert, doubtfully. ‘Yes, that is it, Ned,’ said the old lady, quietly; then, after a pause she said, ‘I want you to do your best for this young lady.’ ‘T always do,’ said the artist. can I judge without materials! brings me none.’ (To be continued, ) ‘But how And she LETPERS TO THE EDITOR, Guy de Montgomerie Heard From. My Dear Sir—Allow me to thank you most sincerely for your courtesy in giving place to my letter of acknowledgement last week. I observe in your issue of yesterday, a communication signed, ‘‘Pro Bono Publico,”’ which, although not addressed to me, contains some indetinable reference to my letter, and evinces a gratuitous interest in my affairs entirely beyond my compre- hension, I have never been in the habit of reading anonymous letters, much less of paying attention to their contents, as 1 con- sider they are usually written for ‘‘mis- chievous purposes, and that it is anti- British to strike behind the back.” I thank ““P. B. P.,” however, for affording me the opportunity of making a slight conclusion, instead of acknowledging the receipt of ‘*Darwin on Primeval Man,” it should have been ‘‘Darwin’s Origin of Species,” and the mistake I shall explain. The book itself I had lent to a gentleman whom I met at a late meeting of the Diocesan Church Society, who informed me that it would be of use tohim in preparing a paper on ‘*Primeval Man;” when transcribing the list of articles, having in mind the fact thet the book had not been returned, 1 unfor- tunately substituted the name of the paper for the title of the book. For this slight lapsus penne, 1 beg to offer my apologies. “P. B. P.” considers me very green, but my verdancy does not prevent me recognizing him as a member of that too numerous class whose sole occupation consists in minding other people’s business. If charity to all men and women is suggested by a teapot, may I be pardoned if I recommend a strong infusion of that vessel's contents to “P. B. P.,” who makes such uncharit- able remarks upon my person and habits. His anxiety lest am examination of Darwin should disclose a family resemblance in the picture of some mischievous-looking animal, etc., is entirely uncalled for. He ‘muat be ignorant, indeed, who is not aware that my family traces its lineage beyond the days of the Holy Wars, when the brave Sir Robert de Montgomerie went forth with eleyen sons to rescue the Holy Sepulchre from ihe Mohammedans. In the succeed- ing centuries they have ever preserved their character for piety--their pilyrimages to the Holy Land and the tombs of the Apostles have been made the subject of story. Their religious fervor has always been of the most exalted degree, nor has it ever partaken of the wild fanatacism of nomadic votaries known as palmers or mendicant pilgrims. The de Montgomeries were gentlemen always. Before thanking you for your kindness in granting me space in your columns, may I be allowed to acknowledge since my last, the receipt of a green felt hat, and a copy of Dudiey Warners ‘‘Crapaud and that sort of thing.” Believe me, My dear Sir, Yours most faithfully, Guy pe Mon rcomeri£, M. A., Cantab. 8. Etheldreda’s Church, Riggs’ Woods, Feast of 8S. David, 1884. —— a ee nearer ae To what extent the commercial interests of Great Britain are bound up with those of her colonies will appear from a consider- ation of the vast amount of British capital invested ir. various colonial securities. At present this reaches a grand total of £620,- 000,000 sterling. Of this amount £225,- 000,000 are invested in India, £200,000,000 in Australasia, and £112,000,000 in the Canadian Dominion, of which latte’ amount £30,000,000 are due on Government loans, £55,000, 000 on railways and Provincial and city expenditures, £7,000,000 on banking, mortgage, and agency, and £20,000,000 on other in- vestments. In the Cape of Good Hope £30,000,000 are invested; in the West Indies and Guiana, £7,000,000; ia Ceylon, £5,000,000; in the Straits, £500,000; in Natal, £4,000,000; in Mauritius, £2,400,- 000; in Newfoundland, £500,000; and in other possessions; £3,000,000. The colon- ies, it will be seen, find employment for an enormous mass of British capital, ——_->- Mr. Labouchere says its all humbug that the late gillie John Brown was a particular favorite of Prince Albert, and commended by the Consort on his death-bed to the Queen, He was an ordinary upper servant when Prince Albert died, and then the Prince ‘‘looked with ineffable disdain upon those beneath him.” ‘‘Heaven itself,” says the editor of the Truth, ‘‘would sear- cely be acceptable to a German Prince if he were doomed to inhabit the same region as his sometime domestics, and I apprehend that such personage regard the assurance, ‘In my Father's house are many mansions,’ as a sort of guaranty that no auch grievous huddling iiogether of patricians and ple- beians is to be anticipated.” —_ ee —~ Dr, Abbott writes in Science that he once \found a full-grown chipmunk in the stom- iach of a builfrog; in another of the same Undercliff, appearing suddenly. Then|species (Rana Catesbyaua) he found an turning to her sop, ‘How can you measure |eighteen-inch garter-snake which had been the world! You live in alittle one of your |swallowed by the frog while the snake was own—a world of forgers and anonymous!in the act of swallowing a mouse. The writers; you see so many of these you fancy | snake could not defend itself while it had a they are common as dirt; but they are | mouse in its gullet, and be frog took ad- only common to you because they all come) vantage of the fact, Of course no one will your way,’ ‘find the story difficult to swallow, a A pe Te nl ns iO ’ Se SE