--~ ee em © ee Se ee ee zx ~. a 4 LAR LCT SVT. eens eRmSiNG Alumnae: sr stems y Ver deren Sogeeter: TNT er Bee Ree Mant di.) Oh che ae ee ae cs ane ae em home n Zhi ?s; CH ARLOTTE' ‘MoLeod, Morson & tt. W. VEINATCOMBE, PIANO TUNER Pianos Tuned, -W ‘ORG ORG Voiced, Tuned, and. Regulate \ TAT Dom CABINET Tuned, |] Lune ired aad Regulated, ; . e - ze { with Care. ORGANS Le-toned and Re paired, t } , biaviny ears the nearly twenty ° edXpericnce Laglish, American and German Pianos, and under the patronage of Government House, the Conyent and the leading musical families on the Island, feels rSei Satisiaction, with construction <« i giving UDIVE Mr. V. will engage professionally for public Or private concerts the county season. filee—C. P, Fletcher's Masie Store. Ch town, Oct. 25 18-4 a? Hibbs, ATTORNEYS - AT- LAW Solicliors in Chancery, Pte P TVA & MAL A OU Libh ¥ Aad © TA fia VOPTARIibhs PUBLIC, OFFICES ioran’s Building, Great ‘ l¢ itetor. rl a o Los Ww, Q. C, | Cusstar B. Macnee, Jan 2 MeQuarrie, SARRISTERS As D “/ATTORNEYS- AT-LAW. Otice in Old Bank, (UP STAIRS). Ch'town, Feb. 21, 1884. , “~* ayy ln Exauiner ei et eulog by niner Publishing Oo. rl of Water and t riottetown, iward island SUBSCRIPTION ;: $2 50 l 26 0 50 \ 4 ost moderate rates vie for monthiy, ye r yearly advertire SLMANAS FOR JANUARY, i885, ' Ns CHANGES, eo :arter 7th day, Llh. 24m., p. m, N ‘i léshn day, 4a, 24m., a. m, Vir r ira day, Ya. l4m., p. m, Ful iv. Uh. sm noob ; Movn|tligh | Daya rises water len’h ah no tn morn; h m} Lt 7 504 19 5 38 10 44 § 9 2 Fy ou 0 47 {1 30 30 sa y SO’ 21:8 tieteis 31 ‘!Sunday 9 12] 0 54; 32 Mi ‘Y ty 110 30. 1 37 33 Tu ‘ i 22:41 27) 2 22 35 , : 2 mori S il 37 ts 6 O St 4 10 od : : 51s 5 OD { 1) Saturday 417, 29 2301 630; 42 1} iNue ‘ss 2 8 7 oe 4+ 12'M ‘ 31' 418 8 26' 45 13 Te . A mw &§6 12 9 i; 1a We tay OS 34: 5 69 9 49 49 m7 ay 45 35' 6 42/10 27) ol 1g Fr “4| 37,7011 2 5 17 Saturda § 39: 7 SB Al 35 Do 13 Sanday. 497, 40 826 morn} 58 19M : 1? ti, 8 561 010)-9 1 o0'Tu > t] ‘2 9 24, 0 43) t oi We suayv +! ‘4962 1 19 ¢2\Thursday » $510 21, i 59 23' Fri dS 46 10 53) 2 45 24 Sacurcday 37; 48:11 29' 3 45 25 Sa day 3 49'a't 6 4 OV lé a0 Mon ay 35 50; 1 lL 6 30 7 27, Tuesday 34' 52! 1 5417 49; 29} 28) Wednesday 3 86:3 7, © oe 21) 29 Thursday — 32' 55| 421) 9 44! = 23) 30 Friday Si 57: 5 52,10 31} - 31) Saturday 7 29 4 58) 6 46 11 14; 9 29 TH RAILWAY TIME TABLE. (Charlottetown Time. ) GOING WEST. ia. 2M, Charlottetown, a 02 p2 | i Royalty Junction. $25 425] Etre ea, Norti Wiltshire. . OFF «4 334 Mantes. River.....y0-020e ons 932 432|Laths, Canned Lobsters, Mac- : : a ? $ brac aibane, . .1010 8609 Coun ine ioe 2 $19 . ne bane. ereOeiae oot kere, Berries, Eggs, Freetown . wea §& 34 | Kenginzton oll 1057 & a7 | -. : Vy ee eee 1132 623) ' ish Lic. PueNERCESS, P. M. | Best Prices for all Shipments. Write fully € Mamet ce . sscnceuint 1 47 tes Cranintient Miscouche. .2 09 } : . sit ouil. Wel.iazt on 37 HA " rT} ‘7 Port 3 22 ; 4 by , AY | adhe A O'Leat 442 é MOMOIN 6... ccc cnc Reee 5 43 | General Commission Merchants, Diga.sin 6 47 i . oh eal . 2 122 Centrai Whart, Boston. - 4n } ° © +, ‘ 9 Tignish 6 <i Members of Board of Trade, Corn and Alb: 7 47 Mechanivs Exchange. 0’ Leary .9 02 ee nr ~ son / Ch’towa, Nov. 19, 1884. i ee ae ly 22 a de es onsanisncigpuiiie i We huton Li 07 | } + ly & ee . ap i i ~ aise —_ GPOCKaPyWare, Glassware, W6., \ arrive 116i a Su erside ., j 7 y [7m ™ ' ; lepart "ean 7 32 | EN V A RikT 7_ Kensington.. Ba 237 807} ny Freetown 300 5 30 | N addition to my former stock of goods, I County Line 317 5 20) have just received a large and varied Sradulbaue ,. 327 «68 55 |assortmeat, consisting of Dinner Ware, Tea Hunw E WAVER. 2... ceeecececees ,< v2 v 32 |Sets,in white and gold, and printed; Tea North Wiits hire $17 947 land Breakfast Cups, im china and printed bwoyaisy J ou. 5U9 1059) ware; Rockingham Tes aud Coffee Pots ; Vaarottetow: tees .532 1102) Bedroom Sete, in white and gold, and granite GCING EASI Pp. M.| ware; Dessert Sets, in French china and Unariottetown . esecceeeere+3 17 | gold, ensmelled and printed; Epergnes, Royalty Junction ..340\ Claret Jogs, Cut Tumblers, Cut salts, Cus. Bediord cediensl eens sqeuann 417! terd Cups, Jelly Glasses and other elegant \f A ROE, oc usene ee 4 52 |Table Ware in great variety. ; ea. Pare SMe, cdaees danee 457) Also; An assortment of Table, Library Vara (wees eden 6 \7\and Study Lamps, in bronze and nickel George sn iia cp elcnind onde seus 6 42 | silver, Lamp Fixinog, and Lamp Chimneys of ode i /| many kinds, ail of which is otfered at the —_— 9 9! | Lowest Prices. OG, Ceters..... b Ud} J.B POLLARD, ns Saal Kent Street. WEEE coeccccdcoesaeseedoweneeeee ‘ 71 Ch’town, Dec. 12 1R884—12i sa-tu FROM A. M-. —_—— TED ncseccecoeanvegnencessa eee 6 52 | - TAR Aku Bate Rive 2... crcsccesccessecvessetece 7 37} wD U a WOOO Mo ccocnd conceeuseeseneus ures 5 20 re MHS See Ee CONS OM et i . a —7r 1 sy ry ry OE eccoceeeeedonsesedn heeds ene eres oll 1%: ASC RANGE GU ‘ "7 ; ‘ . % ' oe Wee ss ce see ded 6060465847049 492 43 (Lk pu AOD li i i ; 4 eo WELLE. . conccconeesenseeeesesesestes 3 iL} ee i ) BTTIVE. .cac cece 4 L[ tae ost ouual (reneras alecting of (neat ee E AOPOFE. coos cesecses 942) £4 the Standard Lite Assurance Company, . MALT savalty Janation.....00-+0+++00204e+: 10 54) April, 1833, the following results for the Charlott WR civcceous eaeentaeee an 17| year ended 15th November, 1883, were re — en ee ee | ported — 1 ' . + [3,055 ne w proposals for life as- Sanard B: king Powder surance were received the . pub GALLS #| year for $9,754,085 38 | 2,561 proposals were ar epted, (Manufactured by Holister, Crane & Co, | assuring 7,239,048 13 9) Broad Street. New York.) hn Gntad oxiel ‘ \ " wnees in at Lbta Novem ber, a ie 18 §2, amount d to $6,936,302 91 phe ESITIONABLY the purest aad most wholesowe Baking Powder mado, Gro- Cerf are ~ethorized to gusrantee every caa to be full weight, and positively pure, Ask for *ah ' Superb ” and take no other, Put up in ¢. 4 and I-lb, tine, and for eaie by every ree spétctable wholesale and retail grocer anid general dea'er ia Canada. The Canadian trade supplied by JOHN T. REED 105 Water Street, St. Joua, N. B 4 x o —§mn eod ING les< TOB PRINT of every ripti 93 executed with Neatnoss ead Jospae a at tho KKAAMINDR JOG PRiNTIN« POO oog. Weter avt Grant Gravgs Sterat i | WE SELL Potatoes, | piling, Bark, | R. R. Ties, hivebdienetaumaeely 10 17 |heid at Edinburgh on ‘Luesday, the 24th of (Of which $7, 753,031.15 was | reassured with Other offi ces) 'The claims by death which | aroge during the year amount- | ed, including bonus addi- tions, to he annual revenue amounted {T “A +e! LE A A SA ee a TOWN, LL A A ee ORGANS 2,462,226 59 ne & oo ae ns nb i tlt a true Liberty, wien Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”’—Evniripgs, oO acoeemenipmeecnepen —— — - oe SINGLE Copies ‘Iwo CENTS. “eee CK &D PRIN 1885. JANUARY _ 1886. J. B. WACDONALD, WARD ISLAND. TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1885. ADAM BEDE. JHAPTER XX. ADAM VISITS THE HALL FARM. j rants. VOL. 16.---NO. 87, jshow you. I'll be glad now if you'd go into }the garden and tell Hetty to send Totty in |The child ‘ull run in if she’s told, aud I /know Hetty’s letting her eat too many cur- lil be much obliged to you, Mr. | Bede, if you'll goand send her in; and |there’s the Yurk and Lankeater roses beavti- Apa™ came back from his work in the/ful in the garden now—you'll like to see ‘empty wagon ; that was the reason he had em. But you'd like a drink 0’ whey first | PN erder to make a speedy reduction before Stock-taking wil] give great bargains in changed his clothes, and was ready to set | p’r’aps ; | know you're fond o’ whey as most Clothing in Overcoats, Ulsters, Reefing Jackets and Suits. PUR CAPS ! FUR CAPS ! A Big Reduction in price of Men and Boy’s Fur Caps to clear. ! Balance of stock of Ladies Mantles, balance of stock of Shawls, balance of stock of Knitted Woolens, Squares, Scarfs, Vests, Jackets, &c.; Ladies Plush Felt and Velvet, 26 }cents (half price). Blankets, in white and grev, very cheap. Buffalo and Geat Robes, Coon and Bear (oats, Ladies Astracan Jackets, Ladies Fur and Plush Caps and Muffs.— Must be | cleared, | Come 2nd get Real Bargains to J. B. MACDONALD, Queen Street. j ! Charlottetown, Jau. 3, 1885—wkly her pres ~ Di CiDED TS Sell at Gost. j | &e.| All our Large Stock of ‘FUR AND CLOTH CAPS, | WINTER UNDERCLOTHING, | KID AND BUCKSKIN MITES, KID AND BUCKSKIN GLOVES, HEAVY TOP SHIRTS, FLANNEL SHIRTINGS, ULSTERS, OVERCOATS & REEFERS, | Jiher Goods at Unprecedented Low Bargains Prices before —-AND— See our Buying Elsewhere Be Convinced that we Mean What we Say. D. A. BRUCE, MERCHANT TAILOR. Charlottetown, Dec. 19, 1884. JAMES SHAND, STEVEXSON’S BUILDING, QUEEN ST., IS OFFERING: Men’s Lined Kid Gloves, 7idcts; do Fur Trimmed, $1; do Cloth Ringwoud, &c. Ladies’ Lined Kid Mitts, 50cts; do Long Cloth Gloves, 32cts; do Long Thread do, 28cts. kerchie!s from Sets, Men’s Colored Cashmere Handkerchiefs in great variety, Ladies’ White Cambric Handkerchieis from cts, Ladies’ Linen do from 10cts, Ladies’ Embroidered and Lace-edge Haudkerchiets, Ladies’ Silk Handkerchiefs from 16 to 60cts. Ladies’ Fancy Embroidered Ties, Bands, Brushes, Combs, Toilet Pins, Be!ts. Buttons in great variety ; Laces, Edgings, barred and Jaconet Muslin, Lace Curtains, Black and White Figured Nets, BLACK AND COLORED VELVETEENS. A Large Stock Canadian Shirts and Drawers from 40 Cents, at 15th November, 1882, to 4,267,546 00 rennin iThe invested - nds at same daenans bb | date amcunted to 29,503,416 Of “ENE om : se Pe menace: Mea OE oka ¥e>>_- Remember the place: Stevenson’s Building, Queen rear ¢ 1, 062,648 35) JOHN LONGWCRTH, ' CT HOMAS KERR, inapector of Agencies. Oh’town, Angust 3, 188%. ‘Street, where all goods kept by us are sold at prices which can- Agen * for Oharlottetown, | 44 he ley: timately competed with. \Charlottetown, Dec, 15th, 1884. with Gauntlets, 75cts; Men’s Buckskin Lined do, 80cts; Men’s: Insertions, Swiss Embroidery, a large stock. Book, Cross-' out to the Ball Farmavhen it still wanted & quarter to seven. | for ? | came down stairs. | school i’ thy best coat ? | ‘No, mother,’ said Adam quietly. ‘What’s thee got thy Sunday cloose on} said Lisbeth,’complainingly, as she |*a drink o’ whey’s allays a treat to me, ‘Thee artna goin’ to th’| rather have it than beer any day.’ ‘l’m | small white basin that stood on ,folks is when they hanna got to crush it jout.’ ‘Thank you, Mrs. Poyser,’ said Adam ; I'd ‘Aye, aye,’ said Mrs. Puy ser, reaching 2 the shelf, going to the Hall Farm, but mayhap I may | aud dipping it into the whey-tub, ‘the smell gv to the school after, so thee mustna | wonder if Ima bit late. Seth ‘ull be at | home in half an hour—he’s only gone to the village, so thee wonta@ ind.’ ‘En ! an’ what’s thee got thy best cloose on for to go to th’ Hall Farm? The Poy- ser folks see’y thee in ’em yesterday. I warrane What dost mean by turnin’ worki'day into Sundey a-that'n? Its poor keepin’ company wi’ foiks as donna like to see thee 1 thy workiu’ jacket.’ | ‘Good-bye, mother, L can’t stay,’ said | Adam, putting on his hat and going out. | But he had no sooner gone a few paces | beyoud the door than Lisbeth became un- |eusy at the thought that she had vexed him. | Of course the secret of her objection to the |best clothes was her suspicion that they | were put on for Hetty’s sake; but deeper | than all her peevishness lay the need that | her son should love her. She hurried after | him. and laid hold of his arm before he haa got half way down to the brook, and said : ‘Nay, my lad, thee wotna go away an- gered wi’ thy mother, an’ her got nought to do but to sit by herself an’ think on thee 7’ ‘Nay, pay, my mother,’ said Adam, gravely, and standing still while he puc his arm on her shoulder, ‘1 am not angered; but I wish, for thy own sake, thee’dst he more contented to let me do what I’ve made up my mind todo. Ill never be no other than a good son tu thee as long as we live. But a man has other feelings besides what he owes to his father and mother, and thee onghtna to want to rule over me body and soul. And thee must make up thy mind, as l’ll not give way to thee where I've aright todo whatI like. So let us have no more words about it.’ ‘Eh!’ said Lisbeth, not willing to show that she felt the real bearing of Adam’s words, ‘an’ who likes to see thee i’ thy best cloose better than thy mother? An’ when thee’st get thy face washed as clean as the smooth white pebble, an’ thy hair combed so nice, an’ thy eyes a-sparklin‘—whai. else is there as thy old mother should like to look at half so well? An’ thee sha’t put om thy Sunday cloose when thee lik’st for me—I’ll ne’er plague thee no more about’n.’ ‘Well, well; good-bye, mother,’ said Adam, kissing her, and hurrying away. He saw there was no means of putting an end to the dialogue. Lisbeth stood still on the spot, shading her eyes, and looking after him till he was quite out of sight. She felt to the full all the meaning that had lain in Adam’s words, and, as she lost sight of him and turned back slowly into the house, she said aloud to herself—for it was her way to speak her thoughts aloud in the long days, when her husband and sons were at work—‘ Eh ! he'll be tellin’ me as he’s goin’ to bring her home ene o’ these days; an’ she'll be missis o’er me, an’ I mun look on, belike, while she uses the blue-edged platters, an’ breaks em mayhap, though there’s ne’er been one broke sine my old man an’ me bought ‘em at the fair twenty ’ear come next Whitsuntide. Eh ! she went on, still louder, as she caught up her knitting from the table, ‘but she’ll ne'er knit the lads’ stockin’s, nor foot ’em nay- ther, while I live; an’ when I’m gone, he'll bethink him as nobody ‘ull ne’er fit’s leg and foot as his old mother did. She'll know nothin’ o’ narrowin’ an’ heelin’, I warrand. an’ she’ll make a long toe as he canna get’s boot on. That’s what comes o’ marryin’ young wenches. I war gone thirty, and th’ feyther too, afore we war married, an’ young enough too. She'll be a poor dratchell by then she's thirty, a marr’in’ a- that’n, afore ber teeth’s all come.’ Adam walked so fast that he was at the yard gate before seven. Martin Poyser avd the crandtather were not yet come in ifrom the meadow; every one was in the ’ Men’s White Cambric Hand-| meadow; even to the black-and-'an-terrier ;| no one kept watch in the yard but the bulldog, and when Adam _ reached | the house door, which stood wide open, he _sawthere was no one in the bright clean ‘house place. But he guessed where Mrs, | Poyser and some one éise would be quite | within hearing; so he knocked on the door } i and said, with his strong voice, ‘Mrs. | Poyser within?’ | ‘Gomme in, Mr. Bede, come in,’ Mrs, | Poyser called out from the dairy. She ! jalways gave Adam this title when she re- ceived him in her own home. | Adam walked into the dairy, where Mrs. _Poyser and Nancy were crushing the first evening cheese. | ‘Why you might think you war come to a ‘dead house,’ said Mrs. Poyser, as he stood |in the door-way ; ‘they’re all ‘i the meadow; i but Martin’s sure to be in afore long, for |they’re leaving the hay cocked to-night |ready for carrying first thing tu-morrow. {I've been forced to have Nancy in, upon | count as Hetty must gather the red cur- irants to-night; the fruit always ripens so contrairy, just when every hand’s wanted. An’ there’s no trutein’ the children to ‘gether it, for they put more ’i their own mouths vor into the basket ; you might as | well set the wasps to gether the fruit.’ | Adam longed to say he Would go into the ‘garden till Mr. Poyser came in, but he was 0’ bread’s sweet t’every body but the baker. |The Miss Irwines alleys ray, ‘O, Mra, Poyser, lenvy you your chickens; and what a beautiful thing a farm house is, to be sure!’ An’ I say ‘Yis ; a faim house is a fine thing for them as look on, an’ don’t know the liftin’, an’ the stannin’, and the worritin’ o’ the inside as belongs to’t.’ ‘Why, Mre. Poyser, you wouldn’t like to live any place else bt in a farm house,so well as you manage it,’ said Adem, taking the bassin; ‘and there can be nothing to look at pleasanter nor a fine milch cow. standing up to its knees in pasture, and the pew milk frothing in the pail, and the iresh butter ready for market, and the calves and the poultry. Here’s te your health, and your aliers have strength to lock after your own dairy, and set a pattern t’ all the farm- ers’ wives in the country.’ (7'o be continued.) CURRENT NOTES. More earthquakes in Spain. Famine prevails in Archangel. A house is to be presented to Hon. Mr Costigan by his admirers. There was a $250,000 fire in Hamburg Inst week. One fireman killed. A Cincinnati drummer has been serious!y ill from the escape of gas in his room. He must have gone to sleep with his mouth open. — Yonkers Statesman, The manager and accountant of the branch of the Union Bank of Australia at Roeburne, West Australia, have been found murdered in the Bank, having been tomahawked. The assassins escaped. An Indian woman has come te Sylvester's trading post on the Laird River, B. C., bringing a report that five Indian men anc one woman have been killed by Takowa Indians, who also carried two womea and two children into captivity. A proposal is on foot to build a church in memory of Charles Reade, and many promises of support have already been re- ceived from admirers of the novelist. If carried out the first pastor will probably be his nephew, Rev. Compton Reade. The Fraser Institute, Montreal’s [free library, is almost ready for occupation. The library will open with about 15,000 volumes, although there is accommodation for about 20,000. The buildings have been fitted up with all conveniences, On Saturday night an unhearlded pro- cession purvorting to be of socialists, par- aded the streets of Cincinnati. From 50 to 75 men followed a drum and fife. They carried a black flag and a red one made out of paper muslin, also transparences, rudely prepared, containing incendiary notices. Threatening speeches were made. A mass meeting of 10,000 unemployed workingmen was held in London Saturday afternoon. A resolution was passed de- claring that: ‘*The depression in trade, chronic poverty, and difticulty of finding work, are intolerable evils to which those who svffer them ought not to tamely sub- mit. These evils result from the denial of the equal rights of men in the elements which the Creator has provided. Winans, the American millionaire, whose big deer park in Scotland was invaded by @ cobbler’s pet lamb, and who sued the cob- bler for damages, has met with a rebuke. Justice declared for the cobbler, who won the suit and was awarded heavy costs. The down trodden millionaire may new hold meetings to protest against the bloated monopolists at the cobbler’s bench ; for it was admitted that the cobbler’s lamb did eat the grass, for which Winans paid with his own savings. A strange story comes to the notice of the Bridgewater, N. S., Times, from Lake: ville, N S. Sometime since a man named Lohnes obtained a license to marry a Lake- ville damsel, and engaged a Bridgewater minister to perform the ceremony one evening last week. The minister travelled full twenty miles to be at the home of the would-be bride at the appointed time, but Mr. Lohnes did not put in an appearance, uor has be been seen since, Rev. Cure Labelle, parish priest of St, Jerome, Quebec, leaves for Europe in a short time, it is stated ou the authority of a federal minister as a representative of the federal government and the Canadian Pacific Railway, for the purpose of laying before the pvorer classes of France, Bel- guim and Swizerland, the advantages of the Northwest as a field for emigration. He will devote his erergies entirely in the direciion of French speaking Catholics, and he is empowered to wake terms with in- tending settlers. John Bright has just published a letter, in the form of a pamphlet, devoted to the consideration of the effect likely to be pro- duced by the extension of the franchise which has been brought about by the ifranchise bill. The great Liberal predicts uot quite courageous enough, so he said, ‘I!that a reformation of the land laws will ‘could be looking at your spinning-wheel, | foljow , such as will lead toa material m- then, and see what it wants doing to it, |provement in the present position «f farm Perbaps it stands in the house, where I can find it? | ‘No, I’ve put it away in the right hand parlor, but let it be till 1 cap fetch it an’ | laborers ; then will come a revision of the ‘game laws in the direction of accepting the principle that the’ game belongs to the farmers.