The Daily The bxXauiiuver ing, by Examiner Yon bi in Radial te rubdlusuing Oo. Som th Water and Great G PONOCOWR, a. ‘\ Sis \ ve 60 “ l 25 : : 0 50 Ads wt moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, quarterly, half-yearly or yearly advertire ments. On applicarik n. ALWANAC FOR DECEMBER, ‘eg4, MOON S CHANGES, Full Moon, 2nd day, 2h. 47.2m., a. m. GONSICHMENTS SOLICITED. R. O’DWYER, Commission ant General Merchant FOR SALE OF P. E. 1, PRODUCE. | 289 WATER STREET, Si. Juhns’ Newfoundland. | In connection with the above is Captain | Eaglish, who is well known in P, E. Island, | who will take special charge of all consign- | ments, and will also attend to the chartering | ae ‘* This is true ti. W. VENNEC OMBE, PIANO TUNER . on Pianos Tuned, Re-wired and Rega'ated. CH URCH ORGANS Voiced, Tuned, and Regulated with Care, CABINET ORGANS Tuned, Re-toned and Repaired. }with the construction of English, American and German Pianos, and under the patronage ) of Government House, the Convent and the | leading musical families on the Island, feels | sure of giving universal satisfaction. Mr. V. will engage profes sionally for public or private concerts the coming season. Otilvee—t. P. Fletcher’s Music Store. CHARLES BONALD & 60., 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) customers requiring advances, augl WANZER — sewing Machines. THESE CELEBRATED MACHINES a eee Pree Having nearly twenty years’ eXperience their orders in ¢ ~W. WHEATLEY, © (Op WHEATLEY ime. & Soxs, Vv. E. JsLanpb) Nept. 6, 1834.—till 3ist dec, ‘84. of vessels for the carrying trade of P. E. I. The firm is one of the oldest and most reli- able in Newfoundland to be prompt and satisfactory. Parties wish- ing to procure Labradore Herring should send Returns guaranteed CHARLOTTETOWN, Commission Merchant, 269 BARRINGTON STREET, HALIFAX, W- &# Special attention given to the sale of P. E. Island produce. April 24, 1584, Ss. Jan. 16, 82. NOTAKIES OF FICES~ O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. 2 Money to Loan, W. W. Scnurvaw, Q. C. | Camera B, Maomsiun SULLIVAN & MAGNBILL, ATTORNEYS - AT- LAW Solicitors ia Chancery, PUBLIC, &C. Ch’town, Feb (een -—-AND— . 21, 1954. L. ARTHUR & CO. GHNERAL Commission Merchants, 121] ATLANTIC AVENUE, (ROSS MARKET) oLeod, Morson & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS ATTORNEYS- AT-LAW. Office in Old Bank, (UP STAIRS). BOSTON, MASS. a Byes aud Produce a Specialty. Wey 16 1584 —whly i RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS At all the leading Exhibitions of the World, Only Goid Medal ia Canada, 1883. J. F. WILLIS & CO., Sole and only authorized Ageats for P. F, I y 30 MONCTON Sash and Door Factery. AAR. P. LEA, in returning thanks to the pS {| public for the liberal patrenageextended to him while in business in Charlottetown, begs leave to inform his old customers and the public generally, that he, in company with Mr. William Rogers, has appointed Messrs. B. Williams & Co Lumber and Coal Dealers, Pownal Wharf, Charlottetown, our agents, who will keep constantly on hand a full supply of Menld- ings, Window Sashes, Doors, etc., at LOWEST CASH PRICES. All orders entrusted to them will receive prompt attention. LEA & ROGERS, Menoton, N, B Sen wie TANDARD LPB ASSURANCE 00, T the 57th Annual General Meeting of A the Standard Lite Assurance Company, heid at Hdinburgh on Tuesday, the 24th of April, 1883, the following results for the year ended 15th November, 1883, were re- ported :— 3,035 new proposals for ne urance were receive e nian a - $ 9,754,085 38 2 561 proposals were accepted, — naaaiiee * 7,239,048 13 [he total existing assurances in force at 15th Novem ber, 18 §2, amounted to | (Of which $7, 753,031. 15 was reassured with Other offi ces) The claims by death which arose during the year amount- ed, including bonus i- ions, to The cauuel revenue amounted at 15th November, 1882, to ‘The invested funds at same date amounted to Being an increase year of fept & *” i §6,936,302 91 2,462,226 59 4,267,546 00 29,503,416 00 1,062,648 35 JOHN LONGWORTH, Agent for Charlottetown, rHOMAS KERR, lus peor 9 1888, during the Ch’towa, oo eke | ee ee ta mega: oo et ee eee ete —+ er. Liberty, when Free-born CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDW BEF ORE CHRISTMAS SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR GASH LENBeN 0——_—_ examine the above, as they are the Cheapest we have ever offered for sale, 70; a2Q00 yards Table Linen, 7000 do Bed Ticking, bought Cheap. A number of DRESS LENGTHS, in Colored Silks, good colors, worth $1.35 to $1.50, all for 95 cents to $1.10 per yard. and 95 Cents, for 65 and 75 cents. 20: 70 cents, for SO cents. Lengths of Striped Washing Silks at 50cts. ———— 0; A Large Stock of DRESS GOODS, Black and Colored French RUSSIAN CORDS, &e., &e. all wool, 38 cents, former price 5() cents. Sty Bargains in our Large FALO AND BLACK DOGSKIN COATS, FUR CAPS AND GLOVES. 250 BOYS’ SUITS, IN LOTS, AT $1.50, $9.00, $3.00 AND $4.25. 20. oe ~ variety, of Quality and Price. ALOT OF REMNANTS OF TWEEDS. oO: ULSTERS AND MANTLE CLOTHS MARKED VERY LOW t ‘ Blankets, Quilts & Gumfo oO: KCw KC, &C. 0: A LOT OF HORSE AT A BARGAIN. GEO. DAVIES Charlo‘tetown, Dec. 3, 1884. & CO. y 7 7 oy aetna Men, having to advise the Public, may speak iree.”—Kvuuirwes. ARD ISLAND, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1884. MERINOS, CASHMERES, SERGES, COSTUME CLOTHS, Ends and pieces Fancy Flannel SHIRTINGS, 32 inches wide, ck of Ready-Made Clothing. MEN’S OVERCOATS, ULSTERS,REEFING JACKETS, BUF- Men’s and Boys’ Underclothing, in great rtors in Great Variety, BUFFALO & JAPANESE ROBES, ADAM BEDE. CHA Pren ' X. DINAH VISITS LISBETH, Ar five o’clock Lisbeth came down stairs with a large key in her hand; it was the key of the chamber where her husband lay dead. Thronghout the day, except in her occasional outbursts of wailing grief, she had been in incessant movement, perform- ing the inital duties to her dead with the awe and exactitude that belongs to religious She had brought out her little store of bleached linen, which she had for long years kept in reserve for this supreme use. It seemed but yesterday—that time 80 + many midsummers ago, when she had told rites. Thias where this linen lay, that he might be sure and reach it out for her when she died, for she was the elder of the two. to the strictest purity every object in the sacred chamber, and of removing from it every trace of common daily occupation. The small window which had hitherto free- iy let in the frosty moonlight or the warm summer sunrise on the working man’s slumber, must now be darkened with a fair white sheet, for this was the sleep which is as sacred under the bare rafters asin ceiled houses. Lisbeth had even mended a long neglected and unnoticeable rent in the checkered bit of bed curtain; for the moments were few and precious now in |which she would be able to do the smallest oftice of respect or love for the still corpse, to which in all her thoughts she attributed ‘some consciousness. Our dead are never ‘dead to us until we have forgotien them; ‘they can be injured by us, they can be | wounded; they know our penitence, all our aching sense that their place is empty; all | the kisses we bestow on the smallest relic ‘of their presence. And the aged peasant 'woman most of all believes that her dead ‘are conscious. Decent burial was what Lisbeth had been thinking of for herself throngh years of thrift, with an indistinct expectation that she should know when she | was being carried to the churchyard, fol- \lowed by her husband and her sons; and |now she felt as if the greatest work of her life were to be done in seeing that Thias | was decently buried before her—under the ‘white thorn, where once in a dream she had thought she lay in the coffin, yet all the while saw the sunshine above, and smelled ,the white blossoms that were so thick upon ‘the thorn the Sunday she went to be | churched after Adam was born. But now she had done everything that ,could be done to day in the chamber of death—had done it all herself, with some aid from her sons in liftirg, for she would let no one be fetched to help her from the village, not being fond of female neighbors ‘generally; and her favorite Dolly, the old housekeeper at Mr. Burge’s, who had come to condule with her in the morning as soon as she heard of Thias’s death, was too dim-sighted to be of much use, She had locked the door, and now held the key in her hand, as she drew herself wearily into a chair that stood out of its place in the middla of the house ficor, Quarter 9th day, /f. 18.0m., a, m. “¢ + , , ° et : fn New Moon 17th day, 9a, 17.0m,, a.m. _—(| Ch"town, Oct, 25. 1824 ‘The balance of our stock of Trimme™” ‘en there had been the work of cleansing First Qu i oth aay, 9a, 8.7m. , a. m, oi Lee . = © dele ns OS | We SELL | Millinery at Half Price. _ Sun Sun | Moon igh ays! ° - Bia OF WEEK rigos ects | rises /water|len’h, | Potatoes The balance of cur stock of Ladies Man- ai h mbm alta morn | hm | ; : | tles, Dolmans and Ulsters at a very i ; ouday i % ¢4ji 9 2; 2 Z| . | 2 Tuesday © io dao yo) Spilling, Bark, _ Large Reduction, to clear. 2 Wednesday 3l 91 5 39,10 58 39 | . ' 7 $/Tharsday 32,9, 6 4GjUL 44) 37] R. R. ‘Pies, : oe ee : § Friday 33,9) 7 SG.aft29| 36 3000 Pieces White aud Grey Cottons, purchased at greatly Ssendsy, =| asl 8017/2 1 3g Lumber, Reduced Prices a oa’ gine Gal @-hel el | _ "7 Tpeedey a 2a 2e2 » Laths, Canned Lebsters, Mac- endey . ens Se | wi ‘ 24 inc at 3 Cents Wednesday | 33] $1 0291459 30 , aa ‘WHITE COTTONS, in Lots No. 1, 24 inches, at 3 Cents. itbarday” | 49! si ia7'e 2 29] kerel, Berries, Eggs, | ‘6 gg “6 9 30 « 5 ‘ 12 Friday 40) 8 2234 716) Bi . oe ie : 13 Saturday 41} 8| 334 810) 27] Fish Ete. “ $6 “ a ‘“ 6 “ 14 Sunday 42 8! 4 33 8 54 26 | 66 ‘6 “ ‘c 4. 35 é 7 ‘“ 1§ Monday 43 9 5 31] 9 34 26 Best Prices for all Shipments. Write fully ( ge “ «“ - ., 2 é6 Q 6s 16 Taeslas ; 44) 9 6 25/10 13) 25) es died eae | ” - , ...1—0ypo 5 : Wednesday | 44) 9 7161047 25) a ‘ ‘< ‘< <« g 88 ‘< 9) << WTharsday ‘ 45 108 71125) 2 eae a” | sane SIMATHEWAY & CO) “9 “« « «ta « 10 2 Saturday 47; 10,9 te morn | 26 "% | vial : . ieady a + = = - ar General Commission Merchants, 5 : is pmol tay ti ~¢ ) - 1 ' © 93) Tuesiay 47 111056 144) o¢ SV Central Wharf, Boston. Best Eng ish Vi a leas direct from: the Wednesday | 47) 1211 23' 226 25 4 iteredar’ 48 1311 53) 3 3s} on nn Board of Trade, Corn = ao ’ &% Friday 49, 14 aft 23} 4.19! 25) Mechanics Exchange. WSetnriay | 49) 15) 058) 5.37] 26' Ch'town, Nov. 19, 1834. Milis, from 12 £0 25 Cents. 2) Suuday 49; 15 1 37' 6 37 26 | ——— peri | 33 2S APPLBS, APPLES, APPLES : eday | 49 17) 317) 9 27 os 4% : Wh: re yee Bl Wedoexday y boleke 4 19) ee 28 | , ., ' Parties in want of White or Grey COTTONS are invited to 450 y a rds Colored Dress Silks, worth 85 ‘where in ordinary times she would never ‘have consented to sit. The kitchen had |had none of her attontion that day ; it was soiled with the tread of muddy shoes, and untidy with clothes and other objects out But what at another time would Lengths of Japanese Silks, worth ican intolerable to Lisbeth’s habits of order and cleavliness, seemed to her now just what should be; it was right that things should look strange, and disord:r:d, and wretched, now the old man had come to his end in’ that sad way; the kitchen ought not to look as if nothing hid happen- ed, Adam, overcome with the agitations and exertions of the day, after his night of hard work had fallen asleep on a bench in the workshop, and Seth was in the back kitchen, making a fire of sticks, that he might get the kettle to boil, and perauade his mother to have a cup of tea, an indulg- ence which she rarely allowed herself. There was no one in the kitchen when Lisbeth entered and threw herself into the chair. She looked round with blank eyes at the dirt and confusion on which the bright afternoon sun shone dismally; it was all of a piece with the sad confusion of her mind—that confusion which belongs to the first hours of sudden sorrow, when ‘he poor human soul is like one who has been deposited sleeping among the ruins of a vast city, and wakes up in dreary amaze- ment, not knowing whether it is the grow- ing or the dying day—not knowing why and whence came {this illimitable scene of deso- lation, or why he too finds himself desolate in the midst of it. At another time, Lishbeth’s first thought would have been, ‘Where is Adam? but ihe sudden death of her husband had restored him in these hours to that first place in her affections which he had held six-and-twenty years before; she had for- gotten his faults as we forget the sorrows of our departed ehildhood, and thougnt of nothing but the young husband’s kind- ness and the old man’s patience. Her eyes contiaued to wander blankly until Seth came in and began to remove some of the scattered things and clear the small -|round deal table, that he might set out his mother’s tea upon it, ‘What art goin’ to du? she said, rather peevishly. ‘I want thee to have a cup of tea, mother,’ answered Seth, tenderly. ‘It'll do thee good; and [ll put two or three of these things away, aud make the house more comfortable.’ ‘Comfortable ! How canst talk o’ ma’in’ things comfortabie? Let abe, let a-be. There's no comfort fir me no more,’ she went on, the tears coming when she began RUCS COUGAR iar ee incaded, an gor ne | tual for’m for thirty ‘ear, an’ him allays so |pleased wi’ iverything I done form, an’ used to be so handy an’ do the jobs for me when I war ill an’ cumbered wi’ th’ babby, an’ made me the posset an’ brought it up stairs as proud as could be, an’ carried thre lad as war as heavy as two childrén for five ee: caeeiiia list aniiae cis SINGLE Copies Two CENTS. VOL, 16.-—-Ni, 22 mile, an’ ne’er grumbled, «il the way to |War’son Wake, ’cause I wanted to ge an’ ‘see my sister, as war dead an’ gone the very next Christmas ae’er come. Au’ him to be drownded in the brook «s we pas ec o'er the day we were married an’ eome home together, an’ he'd made them lots o’ shelves for me to put my plates an’ things jon, an’ showed ‘em me as proud as could , be, ‘cause he know’d I should be ple red. An’ he war to die an me not to know, but to be a sleepin’ i’ my bed, as if I caredna noght about it. Eh! an’ me to live to see that! An’ us as war young folks once, an’ thought we should do rarely well when we war married ! Leta be, lad, let abe! I wonna’ ha’ no tay; I carena if I ne'er ate nor drink no more When one end o’ th’ bridge tumbles down, where s the use ©’ th’ other stannin’! I may’s well die, an’ foller my old man. There's no knowin’ but he’li want me.’ (To be continued.) A Wise Man's Advice. WHAT A NOVA SCOTIA PROFESSOR KNOWS OF PETER TUFTS AND HIs ESLATE. Professor J. F. Tufts, of Horton Colle- giate Academy, has written a letter refer- ring to the reported action being taken by descendants of Peter Tufts to recover a large area of ground embracing a con- siderable porticn of what is now known as the town of Medford Mass. Prof. Tufts, who is himself a descendant of the ancient Peter, says:—The first person bearing the name of Tufts who eame to New England was Peter Tufts. He settled in Medford and owned about 1,000 acres of land in that vicinity. At present there are records of twenty-seven different deeds of land pur- chased and held by him. He left three sons and six daughters, who inherited his property. His eldest son, Peter Tufts, was born in 1648. He lived in Medford, and died there in 1721, leaving sixteen children, four by his first wife and twelve by his second, who wasa daughter of Rev. Sea- born Cotton. This man had children enough to take care of his property. Rev. John Tufts, the seventh son cf the last named Peter, was born in 1689, and died in 1750, leaving four children, one of whom, Rev. Joshua Tufts, came to Nova Scotia as chaplain to a British regi- ment. He and his wife died soon after coming to this province and left three sons, from whom the people in Nova Scotia bear- ing the name have descend: d. It is not true that most of the descendents of Peter Tufts are or ever have been in Nova Seotia. I fail to see how anybody can expect to recover lands in Medford, Muss., that have so many years been held in peaceful possession. I trust none of the descend- ants of Peter Tufts resident in Nova Seotia will build any hopes upon this *‘trewendors fortune.” — ee nee CURRENT NOTES | There is to be a Chinese Council of War in a few days. Toronto will not allow tallow-rendering within the city limits. Ottawa brewers refuse to }uy barley from Scott Act farmers. Vanderbilt has filed « judgment against Gen. Grant for $155 000. A pearl weighiog 93 karats has jus’ been shipped to London from Mexico. Herbert Bismarck will begin his dutics as German Unader-secretary of State in January, {t is generally accepted that President Arthur will enter the Senatorial con‘est in New York. DeLesseps says the report that it has been decided to widen the Suez canal is premature. The home government continues to re- ceive information of the continued activity of the dynamiters. Mr. George Stephen hopes to beat the United States route between Corina and New York by a week. A Chattanooga, Tenn. woman has for the second time within the year presented her husband with triplets. The Prince of Wales will not ask partia- ment for an allowance for Prince Victor until the youth marries. Diptheria is more than usually fatal in New York at present, forty-three deaths being reported last week. It is expected that Biswarck’s recent re- marks in the reichstsg were n +t intended as a special criticism ot Mc. Gladstone. Tne Italian finances are reported to be in good condition, notwithstanding the bad effect on trade of the cholera epidemic. The Pope has ordered an enquiry into certain grave charges that have been pre- ferred against members of the !talian clergy. Thirty thousand acres of land on the north shore of Lake Superior have been bought by American speculators for mining purposes. A St. Louis lady has given $300,000 of the three niiilion that will be rm quired for the proposed new Cathohe university in the United States. The Times says the prospect that America will stop the coinage of silver has unsettled business in India, and caused Calcutta ex- change to decline to 1s, 634. Sunday's meeting of Paris workingmen urged the repudiation of all rents under 500 frances, and demanded that government relicf be given to the nnemployed. Besides the reciprocity treaties with [Beate and Mexico, conventions have been ‘negotiated with Guatemala, Saivador and ithe Colombian States, and will be laid be- ,fore the Senate shortly, where it seems | probable they will meet with stropy oppost- tion. a 6 REM >. atti te eel r J ee enema inenaceananneeenan , SS sh NNR NN A BES * pene ares Cie a ee Ie ee en | A ; nh Me " SE Se A I ee PETS greg “A Se aa rg ee see ee gee ee ene ee Be Ps a Tae Se aT PoE