oe aE Cre (it Ne a ts is true Liberty, when Frec-boia Meu, havi LOTEETOWN, PRI a Pa! A\ “es [sk ll NEW SERLES CHA NUE EDWARD . : t A Ra A ws l. ng to advise the Public, may speak free "’—Evnipipss. ISLAND. FRIDAY. MARCH 20, 1885, Sinclée Corika iwo CENTS. VOL. 16.---NOQ. 102. RJ 4% The Waly Examiner > Bek em : Che Daily Exam PeCEDED Te Examiner Publishing Go. fae from their vilice, cornel of Water and Great Georg: Sorec ts, 4 Lartottetow ti, - Prince Edward Island, ; Raves OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, wz 50 ssi achiiini Three Months, 1 25 0 50 One Month, sa Advertisiny at most moderate rates, | All our Large Stock of Contracts may be made for moathly, | yearterly, ball-yoarly oF yoorly advert: FUR AND CLOTH CAPs, wents, on application — w : IRCLOTHING ALMANAC FOR MARCH, 1885. ENTE - UNDERCLOTHING, = ann KE AND BUCKSKIN MIPTrs, Kis AND BUCKSHIN GLOVES, ; MU@N S CHANGES, Quarter Sth day, 2h. 42m., p. m. h day, th, 24m., p. m. 23rd day, lh. Llm., p. m, day, Oh. 28m., p. m. (HEAVY TOP SHIRTS, PLANNED SHIRTINGS, ULSTERS, Last : New soon 16t virst Qaarter, Ful! Moon, 30th 5 ~~TSun |Sun |Moon|High | Daya! pay OF WEEK _..5 sets | rises ; water |len’h, — th mih m aft’n morn} h m | Sanday 6 43.5 41, 6 45,10 53/10 18) in aiid n a epley | 4°) 43| 7 53 + 30:11 3! OVERCOATS & Tuesaday 40; 44! 8 oo att 7 + \w) .32 {i Wedeavday 33} 45/10 2) 042 8° REEPERS § Thareday 36, 4711 4 199 Jl § Friday 34) 48 morn; 2 0) I+: - j\Saturday 32; Balt >| 245) 18 3) sunday 30! oa 0 57 2 2k 0 i 5 $ eels 9 Monday 29, 531 147,459, 24 th f (| t J fi f fl i, B aoooly | he gs) 3 UbMEL UOOUS ab Ulprebe ented LOW pirzatis ti Wednesday | 25) 56} 3.15) 713) 3! iTharedsy | 22) 5713 52) 810) 35 \3 Priday 21; 58 4 23) 8 55! 38 ee ee i4/Saturday | 19} 59| 4 a 8 36 | 40 15, Sunday 7\6 | 5 38) 44 . . -. tg Monday | 15) 21 5 53)10 4s = See our Prices before Buying Elsewhere 17 Tuesday is) 3, 6 27|11 25] 50| j3|Wednesday , I!) - S| $ ae 54) 9 Thursday 9 6 37; ¥ 57 | fo — $0! Friday , i 2s 11, 0 41'12 0 AND 21 ac teml | ¢ @6& | ; = 3! g2|Sgodcy | 9 o-—.*% t : ‘a evi; | 3 goa si 1 Be Convinced that we Mean What we Say. 24 Tuesday FY 13{Ll 33, 4 28 14 95 Wednesday | 57, 14'aft 56, 5 57| 17 | 25; Thursday 56 162 6 719) @W . es 27\F riday 54 1713 16, 8 2] 23; gs|Saturday 52; 19 4 26 912) 26 29 Suada) so 19) 5 34° 953, 29) @ Monday 43{ 21/6 40.10 51/33 | R UC io qiifuesdsy 5 46,6 22/7 46111 6 12 36 5 e 5 qH8 RAILWAY TIME TABLE.| =. ,, MERCHANT TAILOR. (Charlottetown Time. ) vid ht ea a, ft tnt Cee Se coIna WEST. 6. Mics 0 cool "Sy 55 CHARLOTTETOWN BOOT AND SHOE ACTOR | Kegalty Junction 8H 22 North Wiltshire. cove ae Seal { Mitshee River... . ... ~. 2006 esses 932 432 ; CED, . ccces oovcsoeeceeues 1010 509 ———— County Line...... .--eshO 19. 539 blsatevees cut cui viell 1035 534 ; . elie, al sins - 57 5 BT M* R. C. GOFF, of the firm of Dorsey, Goff & Co, has just returned, after visiting re, heat a a naiaditiians 1132 623 4 number of the leading Boot and Shoe Factories abroad. The CHARLOTTETOWN Jammerside \ a P. M. BOOT & SHOE FACTORY, which has been stopped daring his absence, will open with the : : { depart . 1 47 latest improvements, which will enable us to give our customers better satisfaction than ever. Miscouche...: 2 09 Spring Orders will receive our best attention. Wellington . . 2 37 Our Traveller, Mr. Devnis, will have the pleasure of calling on our customers through- Port Hill... .....----+++++: . 322 / ont the Island, some time in March, 0’ Leary ..4 42 Mi scnccs.-scepoocr DORSEY, GOFF & CO. Tignish........ seuhaaeneeues ..6 47 } Ch’town, Feb 6G, 1S85. FROM WEST. A. M, = SS > Tikh.......... 6 47 Alberton.....,... oemmes 4 47 ULaary..... ..9@ IES 3.5. 5 Vc coho cdbe oct 19 22 gs Wellingtou ......... ll O07 | DED. caccciscceccctoceecs 1134 : | AFTIVE 0.6 eee eee 3157 A. M, ne ummerside, < Pp, M. ~~ ote it Gapads... ins Sseves rt 1 . heals “300 830 CHILDREN'S FANCY CHAIRS, CRADLES, COTTS, sag lise nekers - 7 3 ae SLEIG HS, &e., CHEAPEST, Beadal © se eos seaseuanne t eres ie eadeveie dis 402 932 : Tiinhion. .. oi: ««cuncesenteee 1a ae - . * acsat : ’ Ruvalty Juntos 2 Es og 1039 Misrers & Looking Glasses, English and German, very Low. Cnarlottetown. .... oa + @CING EAST. P. M EE... ..-ccccoals seine ene 0 87) ees fayalty Juuctio sees ¢ cane ae s , Calis. ores gocvcnsewene doe tll 7 | Qur stock of Gilt and Walnut Picture-frame Mouldings 1s : ar Tc coceeeoetosorse ve . . . . . . Mpant Stewart, } Gooast.... cc. 0cc8 0s 437 the largest in the Lower Provinces, unrivalled in quality and Co hl Sper insueneonn MPT Te a 617 variety, and made to suit all kind of pictures—the Cheapest in Monnh Stewart. ........c.c-+ccceee+coe 57, UO Clty. Morell...... kuenenne onneeg el 5 37 :; Rina «onan tintin dinekaneeunl 6 08 ; oe: ‘* PARLOR & CHAMBER | MRT cece ewer en eeenens 742 % —_ enxumM BAT. A. M. | Ne sis ca'kcdidedocabeccincuut 6 52 et SIG... . ss sccsccdensoethncialae Ss or 7 e “nn i 3 . ‘ : . + ade sc ae, — = Examine our Magnificent Parlor and Chamber ‘Suits, which Mouat MiaMicine . 2 2 «duis Sue Lae di 9 37 we are Selling at Vost. WOMEMOWS ... csc occcreesses eeccees 7 47 : ; ; “ Migan........... oases teneetetne eas oz CHAIRS—Parlor, Chamber, Office, Children’s and Kitchen cant & SOUETE. 6. oss von oneeds . : , = es ET Te scien 9 42 Chairs, cheap. All kinds ot Uphoistering Work, ort + OU Painting, Varnishing and Gilding. Royalty Junction. . a ..10 54 Garlttetowa eI BEDDING AND MATTRESS-—Feather, Hair, Flock, Pibre, Ww E SEL Excelsior, Wool, Straw—Cheapest in the city. isteads, Lounges, Tables, Sideboards, Bookcases, Scheffioveers, Potatoes, | Bedsteads, g Washstands, &«.—Cheapest. Spiling, Bark, KR. R, Ties, JOHN NEWSON. Lumber, (oh town, Yoo 19. 1884-3 a, came oie Mae CHARLOTTETOMA SASH AND DOOR FACTORY Fisk Rie ; Peake’s No. 8 Whart, Best Prices for all intel Write tunty BB+ PALMER & CO. oO ee ree for Quotations, We are now manufacturing and will sell at the lovrest cash prices ; HATHEWAY & CO j | Sashes Doors Wi Ballusters, Newel Posts, Stair Rails, Twists, etc. o ali kinds of Jobbing, ia ‘Vurning, ec. **) ings We are prepared to d Jig and Fret Sawing, = An kinds of Gothic Windows for Guurca 28 mie %4 shor With New and first-class Machinery, and the latest »tmost satisfaction to all who fevor "° with thair patronsy + Jono 7 1984 -—TF Planing, ’oluting, Mortiotag, Tenon General Commission Merchants, 22 Central Whart, Boston. Members of Buard of Trade Corn and aa Exchange. ‘Wtown, Nov. 19, 1884. : tad : . pptisacas, we can insure fib town one taeeas ‘Yis, I know I’ve done it,’ said MAPLE HILL ; Choice Patente. Mrs. Poyser, ‘But I’ve had my say) GOLDEN AGE } : out, and ] shall be the easier for ISTRATHROY | Choice Superiors. t all my life. There's no pleasure in PROPRIGTORS. ndow and Door Frames, Architraves, Spouting and Conductor Mould TEA WORTH TRYING, ADABE BIDE. CHAPTER XXXII. wet | 4 (¢ ‘ontinued. ) _ ‘You may run away from my words, sir, and you may go spinnin’ underhand ways o’ doing us a mischief, for you've got old Harry to your friend, though nobody else jis, but I tell you for once as we're not ‘dumb creatura to be abused and be made | money on by them as ha’ got th’ lash i’ their hands, for want o’ knowing how t’ undo the tackle. An’ if I’m the only one as speaks my | mind, there’s plenty o th’ same way 0’ thinking i’ this parish and the next t’ it, for you're name’s no better than a brimstone match in every body’s nose—if it ispa two- three old folks as you think o’ saving your soul by giving ’em a bit o’ flannel and a drop 0’ porridge. An’ you may be right i’) thinking it'll take but little to save your soui, for it'll be the smallest saving y’ iver made wi’ all your scrapin’.’ There are occasions on which two servant | girls and a wagoner may be a formidable | andience, and when tho Squire rede away | lon his black pony, even the gift of short-| sghtedness did not prevent him from being | aware that Molly, and Nancy, and Tip were ; ‘grinning not far from him. Perhaps he {suspected that sour old John was grinning ibehind him—which was also the fact. » | Meanwhile the bull-dog, the black-and-tan ‘terrier, Allick’s sheep dog, the gander hiss- ing at asafe distance from the pony’s heels, | AND CHINA OF THE OWTH., , \ ‘Ld £0 CHALLENGE BLEND Ti: Gt | CHOICEST INDIA o— THE ABOVE VERY CHOICE BRAND OF INDIA & CHINA TEA (BLENDED) For family use, for sale at 50 cents per pound or 10-pound box for $4.75. aw Give it a Trial. BEER *« COFF. 1000 Barrels Flour ' Pay ; ‘carried out the idea of Mrs, Poyser’s solo in’ WHOLESALE AND BT ALD ome Poyser, 5 rc had no sooner ‘seen the pony move off than she turned | ee CHOICE BRANDS | DANUBE takes the lead. MATCHLESS } P jround, gave the two hilarious damsels a look which drove them into the back kitchen, and, uuspearipg her knitting began to knit again with her usual rapidity, as she re-entered the house. ‘Thoe’st done it now,’ said Mr. Poyser, a little alarmed and unezsy, but not with- out some triumphant amusement at his opular Brauds. wife’s outbreak. living, if you're to be corked up for iver, ‘and only dribble your mind out by the sly, ilike a leaky barrel. I shan’t repent saying what I think, if I live to be as old as th’ lold Squire; and there’s little likelihood— ‘for it seema as if them as arn’t wanted here are th’ only folks as cren’t wanted i’ th’ other world.’ ‘But thee wotna like moving from th’ ‘old place this Michaelmas twelvemonth,’ said Mr. Poyser, ‘and going into a strange ‘parish, where thee know’st nobody. Tell ‘be hard upon us both, an’ upo’ father, too.’ ‘£h! it’s no use worreting; there’s plenty o’ things may happen between this Coffees |@0d Michaelmas twelvemonth. The Cap- ‘tain may be master afore then, for what we know,’ said Mrs. Poyser, inclined to take an unusually hopeful view of an embarrass- ment which had been brought about by her ‘own merit, and not by other people’s fault. ‘j am none for worreting,’ said Mr. Poy- ser, rising from his three-cornered chair and walking slowly toward the door, ‘ but I should be loath to leave th’ old place, and the parish where I was bred aud born, and father afore me. We should leave our roots behind us, | doubt, and never thrive FF. jogein : | Tur barley was all carried at last, and ‘the harvest supper went by without waiting for the disme! black crop of beans. The | Apples and nuts were gathered and stored ; \the scent of whey departed from the farm- /houses, and the scent of brewing came in ‘its stead. The woods behind the Chase, and all the hedgerow trees, took on &@ ‘solemn splendor under the dark low-hang- jing skies. | Michaelmas was come, with its fragrant | basketfuls of purple damsone, and its paler ‘purple daisies, and its lads and lasses leav- ‘ing or seeking service, and winding along {between the yellow hedges with their (bundles under their arms. But though |Michaelimas was come, Mr. Thurle, that ‘desirable tenant, did not come to the Chase ‘Farm, and the old Squire, after all, had ‘been obliged to put inanew bailiff. It hroughout the two parishes ’s plaa had been frustrated s had refused to be ‘ put Poyser’s outbreak was farm-houses with The above and other CHOICE BRANDS! in stock this date. BEER * GOFF. COFFEE. COFFEES. VOID Adulterated Imported You can buy the Crean, or Whole Roasted Bean, —AND— Fresh Ground Coffee, (Java and other kinds) from BEER AND CO Apples. Apples. | tl bi CHAPTER XXXIIL ' ! } MORE LINKS. 390 Barrela—W UOLESALE & RETAIL, at BEBE & GOFRIS, CHEESE, CHEESE, a 100 Boxes—WHOLESALE & RETALL. BEER & GOES. REGULAR TRADE |was known t ‘that the Squire ‘because the Poyser upon,’ and Mrs, | discussd in all tie /a zest which was only heightened |by frequent repetition. The news that \* Bony’ was come back from Egypt 2p | was comparatively insipid,and the repulse of “eee |the French in Italy was nothing to Mrs. | Poyser’s repulse of the old Squire. Mr. ‘Jrwine had heard a version of it in every 1883. SPRING TRIP. 1885.) lof the Chase. But since he had always |parishoner’s house with the one exception | that capital thing I herrd her say about Craig—that he was like a eock who thought the sun had risen to hear him crow. Now that's an Aésops fable in a sentence.’ ‘But it will be a bad business if the old gentleman turns them oft of the farm next Michaelmas, eh ” said Mrs, Irwine. ‘Oh, that must not be; and Poyser is such a good tenant that Donnithorne is likely to think twice and digest his spleen rather than trrn them out. But if he should give them notice at Lady-day, Arthur and I must move heaven and earth to modify him. Such old parishoners as they are must not go,’ ‘Ah! there’s no knowing what may hap- pen before Lady-day, eaid Mre. Irwine. ‘It struck me on Arthur’s birthday that the old man was a little shaken : he’s eighty- three, you know. It’s really an unecncion- able age. It’s only women who have a right to live as long as that.’ ‘When they've got old-bachelor sons who would be forelorn without them,’ said Mr. Irwine, laughing and kissing his mother’s hand. (To be continued. ) A New Engine of War. A trial of dynamite projecticles was made by the United States military authorities on the banks of the Potomac River, on the 12th inst. Four shots were fired with six inch shells, carrying eleven ponn] bursting charges of uitro-gelatine, which contains about ninety-five per cent. of pure nitro- glycerine. The range was 1,000 yards, and the target was a perpendicular ledge of solid trap rock on the south bank of the river. The first shell struck near the eastern margin of the ledge and exploded by con- cussion, shattering the face of the rock fer a radius of about thirty feet, and carrying away several tons of debris, which were huried for hyndredsof yards upand down the stream. The second shell struck nearly in the centre of the ledge, exploding as before. It opened a cavity in the face of the ledge about twenty-five feet in diameter, and excavated a pit or crater about six fret deep. Some of the fragments cf rock from this explosion were hurled half a mile, o1e piece, weighing nearly twelve pounds, being thrown clear across the canal, and lodging near a farm house. The trial was regarded as a success in every respect, and as @ con- clusive proof of the destructive power of the six inch shells. The next test in the series will be made in a few days with eight inch -shells, carrying thirty-five pound charges of nitro-gelatine. One of these shells, well aimed, would wreck anything afloat. a The Russian Sentry Post. Sarakhs, the wew outpost from which Russia is now watching Herat, stands on a rocky ridge overlooking the valley of the Heri river, just at the meeting point of the frontiers of Persia, Afghanistan, and the Merv desert, and about 170 miles north- west of Herat itself. It was formerly a place of considerable sirength, and played an important part during the long wars be- tween Afghanistan and Persia in the earlier part of the last century, but of late years it has been entirely neglected, and its de- fences are in a very bad condition, The fortress is an irregular polygon in shape, with eleven bastions and numerous inter- mediate towers for muskeiry, which must have been formidably effective when well manned. At the time of the Russian occu- pation four years ago, however, the Persian garrison had dwindled down to 700 ill- armed infantry and a handful of irregular horsemen—a miserably inadequate force to defend a place whose circuit of walls would have required at least ten times that num- ber—while only one or two of the eleven cumbrous and old-fashioned cannon that stil lingered upon the crumbling ramparts were cajable of being fired without bursting. —-* An Indian Tichborne Case. A curious Indian Tichborne trial has just been decided at Ahmedabad, after four years’ litigation. A young Brahmin and hia wife went on a pilgrimage, during which he totally disappeared, and has not been heard of since. Soon after the widow snd- denly effected to recognize her lost husband in a devotee who lived on the banks of the Nerbudda. The religious man owned to the soft impeachment, set up house with the lady, and proceeded to make free use of her property. The jealous relatives, however, doubted his identity, and brought the question into couct. One of the most conclusive pieces of evidence against the imposter was that he had forgotten to speak or understand English, in which the Brahmin had passed a creditable examin- ation. Bob. Ingersoll's Discovery. —_——— Colonel Bob Ingersoll—and rather a with marvellous skill, avoided eny quarrel }with Mr. Donnithorne, he could not allow ‘himself the pleasure of laughing at the old | gentleman's discomfiture with any one be- side his mother, who declared that if she |were rich she should like to allow Mrs. | Poyser a pension for life, and wanted to in- | vite her to the Parsonage, that she might hear an account of the scene from Mrs. Poyser’s own lips. | ‘No, no, mother,’ said Mr. Irwine; ‘it was a little bit of irregular justice on Mrs. |Poyser’s part, but a magistrate like me ‘must not countenance irregular justice. ‘There must be no report spread that I have taken noticé of the quarrel, else 1 shall lose Pictou, Georgetown, Souris and | the: little influence I have over the old mab . 0] ‘Well, I like that woman even better Summerside. ‘than I do her cream cheeses,’ said Mre. For Freight or Passage, apply in Liverpool Irwine. ‘She has the spirit «f three men, to Piteairn Brothers, 51 South John Street ;| with that pale face of hevs, in London to J Pitcairn & Sons, 16 Great’ such sharp things too.’ ' Winchester Street ; or here to the owners THE CLIPPER BARK ex = - “3. 92 “MOS EBLiIS,’ 500 ‘Yons Reyister, Classed 10 years Al in English Lloyds. Alexander McLeod, - Commander WILL SAIL FROM Liverpool for Uharlottetown, On or about the Ist APRIL next, carry- ing Freight at through c" to and she says ‘Sharp ! yes her tongue is like a new-set bright man is Bob--has discovered another proof that religion :s ail a hoax. ‘Compare George Eliot with Queen Victoria,’ he says, ‘the one 1s clad in robes of glory woven in the loom of her own genius. The other is a queen by blind fortune We have seldom such a more unanswerable argument against religion. George Eliot was born a genius, and Victoria a queen. When these two vital facts are considered in all their intimate relations with the gos- pel, how can any one longer doubt that there is no God.— New York Tribune. “——_ Horsford's Acid i hosphate. WAKEFULN ESs. } i | FOR Dr. Wm. P. Clothier, Buffalo, N Y., says: ‘] prescribed it for a Catholic priest, who was a hard student, for wakefulness, extreme nervousness, ete, He reports great benefit * ~«—o- Faxcy Work, Cards, Taseels, Berlin Wool, Silks, Stamped Embroidery, Gold. Silver and Silk Braids, Purse Silk, Infant’s Jackets and DEAKE BROS: & CQ. rex chore Teateout wits. tha talk t00; ® 2 Ch'town, Feb. 3, 1885. stock a country with proverbs. I told you cne of those untavght wits that help to! Bootees, all selling very cheap at M. F. Eliis’s. (mar 1h