ee This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free,” —Evu™ xs. ee , x ke ee SINGLE Copigs Two CEnTs. oe - WWLLARS A \ BAI TC 5% i? ~ i ‘ i ) ' ‘\ 8 : \} i ij st ' i a* . OO —— eT Sel ‘ ° The aly Exanuacr je le seieat? A se ~—s- ; ming, by Dah Keht x ah Beas tblishine Coe at ‘o> kL ilg ing A . Vater and Cire wh, ry) nree i . rng Vv 50 am Ad rate rates } ; monthly, astorly. ‘ early advertise- ,*te — , —= os : aan 4 4A MAY. '885, rast m x : 1 i s. Mm, Pe th. 33m., a. m Ful \ 1s p. mM D 5 s d 1} High | Days ” x rises | water | len’h 1» afta morn h m Py 0 9 30 IL 5414 12 1 Fri g'Satui 1 4/10 20/aft 29) 1S 3 Sanda i Gis 6:2). 2 is 4\Monday t7 7A! 62 12 43 2U & ‘Tues : S$ morn| 2 28) 93 “a t4 9| © 231 3 17 23 7 Thur ed 4 mi & 8 g) Friday 41 iw 1LV8Ee Bt © Saturda 39 8613, I 50) 6 38 ot lo } i4 - 7 ee 361 {['Moaday 37 16; 2 54 § 4 3Y 9 Buea ay 17; 2 251 9 21 4i | 13. Wedues.!ay 4) 18 4 O10 5 44) ‘ } - : 41 ta 1 io + 4%) iv 47) 4) 5 Frviay 2 i a Ll St} 4 1§ Saturday ai u . 17 Suaday ov so é 4 | 0 lo g 15, Monday 29; 2% &£ aii 55 19, Tuesday 28, 2 946: 15 57 2 Wedues ia 2h <0 10 57! 2 44 oY 9} Thursday 25; 2Satt 7, 349.15 0 22! F riday 2 29 1145 4 3 23'Saturday 23 30 2 20) 6 21} 5 3 . i 94’Suacay 22 3 25, 7 27} 95 Monday 22 31 427| 8 24} 9} % Tuesday 2! 32.5 23' 9 4 il} 27 Wednes:lav .U 33' 6 92 9 44 13 i 23) Tharsday 20' 324 7 24/00 23) «15 ) 29 Friia 19 25: & 16}10 57! 5 | 30 Saturday is! 36 9 3tLl 33 18 | 2] Sanday 1 18 7 37) ¥ 46jait 8/15 19 i a Ia this mont increase 42 minutes; the alte morniags rnoons 43 minutes, A —— ee THE RAILWAY TIM TABLE, town Time. ) GOING WEST. A. M. Pr. #. SSS EOE Oe 8 92 3 02 Royalty J t pee North Vv ite 9 5 ikias Oe 17 417 Hunter River. 3 ctcees Ocean 932 432 ee 1010 509 County Line. iseceeede a ane i the caee sa ee 1035 634! SEE I FE i057 § 57 ‘ vesecsawvral 33 66a Summerside, / P. M. ( depart 1 47 OT ES ree 209 i cu ee 23 ne 3 22 Q’ Leary 6606+80e0euNe 4 42 Albsri TE @eeneben wees. 6 6086 000.008 5 47 ee ga Ga eG 6 47 fom VENT. A. M, Cs 606 cyseus okeeue 64anee 6 47 al Bia 88 SiR am 0 2 7 47 O'Leary. 9 02 Port Hill 10 22 I 11 07 DD be 66 eass 6oe tenbeees 11 34 | ATIVE . 20. ee eee es 1) 2: 4. 2 Summersicie, P. M. Papatt. ccuskncsuiad 202 732 a. . oo 0% bie dedee bea eee ae Srectown ... $00 58 30 County Link 317 845 Bradalbane.. oa ici dina in | oe ME AUER... 600 codencecdentae 402 932 Se WEG hive, .....¢ccccccssosQ ae | Bie Royalty Junction..............--809 1039 WR. .. 6s cecedhecbeseen 5632 1102 GOING BAST, PrP. M Charlottetown . ceccceeutdbeocesl hues 17 ay Sanction... i..cdvscei vedetesnccme | eS ae rT ee 417 Moant Stewart, } AITIVE, .. ce ecceseress 452 { depart....-.-.eceees 49; SIN, 6 dic osc ée cael obs sales ae 6 17 SE eS 6 42 Mount %t 5 ee 4 57 ML ncesa>ssue eee os Saniaeee 5 37 SINE. woo cae cccccvcsecet spatter 6 08 Bear Ri seeecectvoeoeseee on 0eeeee Seen o 57 I chs occ ccccoccedvocescesebieees 7 42 PROM RAer. A. M. Md 56 ocavcdicescévdodes cease SERUSS .. ...0dscnp ee ssun meee 7 37 St. Pet. When. cc be lckneuss et te ee § 26 ME ooo vaso co ca ceecks oekin ebae 8 57 Mount Stoy ; .9 37 SOI... cacecdacescbccua nerenie 7 47 TIA. cosinccenpenededeencheeanenle 8 12 Mount Stav TIVE. .00. cece ceeees 9 32 | e — ( depart...0.+ escecees 9 42 NEL. . ... oc vncesescnnen 0¢0qImEEE 10 17 See Junction. ....csncinixasmanans 10 54 PeMiatows .. .... .«.cscubnaticlaseate 1117 isieod, Mocson & MeQuarrie,' SARRISTERS ATTORREYS- AT-LAW. Cfice in Brown's Block. Queen Square (fj pv STAI WS) Oh tern, Fal }?. HRS WARBURTON & GONROY, BARRISTERS & ATTORNRYS-AT-LAW, Notaries Public, &c. Office in Cameron’ up stairs ; entrance next door to Taylor's Jewelry Store. Maroh 23, 1885 , , 3 Block, wky8m | | | en ae eee UH ARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1885, VOL, 17.---NQ. 5. MEN'S FELT GATS. 4750 NEW HATS $UST OPENED AT L. £. PROWSE'S, Including all the Leadirg Styles in This is the Largest Stock ever impo:ted to P, i. Island and MUST BE SOLD, BARGAINS will be given, beth Wholesale and Retail L. E. PROWSE, “ign of the BIG MAT, 74 Queen Street, so BIG 28 Ch’ tewn, April 28, L885. ~—— - a a — —— LONDON HOUSE ijo%on o Custom Tailoring Department ! A SPLENDID RANGE OF CLOTHS IN Worsteds, Meltons, ~‘Sunitings & Light © vercoatiugs, i = - To ——--(- —— Work done with Prompiness and in the Ra mw | Best Styles, at the Lowest Prices, GHO.;- DAVIESS & CoO. Ch'town, Feb. 5, 1885 2aw wkly ROYAL GANADIAN INSURANCE 60. oeieemeenememned i iieinestiemmesten BA" LEB. a ee) ee tem CAPITAL, ee ee a HAD OFFICE—Montreal. iWALIFAX BRANCH—J. Seott Mitchell, Agent. (il iat Risks Vatien en Most Faverabic .Terims. AGENT FOR PRINCE ROwARD ISLAND: * ft. ARNAUD, MERCHANTS RANK OW TTALIPAX DO NOT $2,000,000 (th town, Jan, 1Ras 7|Throw your money away in buying Shoddy Boots. Come eome at once and buy a Good Solid Feather pair of Boots or 2|Shoes for Spring, at a Low Price We want to keep all the money we can on the Island, so we are bound to give better value in cur make than can be had Therefore, buy from us. MORSGSEY, GOFF 2 OO. ‘in any imported Boot ‘tom CBaeande 9° cog CHARIOTIEGWA SASH AND DOOR FACTORY | Peake’s Yo. 3 Wharf. PALMER & CO... PROPRIETORS. oO We are now manufacturing end will sell at the lowest cash prices; ae. ¢ashee Doors Window and Door Frames, Arobitras,Spouting and Conductor Mould ings, Bellusters, Newel Posts, Stair Rails, Twists, etc. We are prepared to do al] kinds of Jobbing, in Planing, Jotnting, Mortiotng, Tenon ing, Jig and Fret Sewing, Turning, eto, j Ali kinds of Gothic Windows for Churches made at chortest nots: > With New and first-class Machinery, 12d the latest epr'ies: o9, we | +*most gatiafaction to al’ ~*r fawre re lth iNoly petromnaro Pree 1988 can ineure - G. H. HASZARD’S FOR ALL KINDS OF Blank Ledgers, Day Books, Journals, &s,, SELLING VERY CHEAP. 100,000 100,000 ENV BLOP ES, of all the leading s‘zes, by the 100, } or 4 thonsand boxes. —— eae FOOLSCAP, LETTER & WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, Stafinl’s Jet Black Writag Iaks Stafford’s Copyiig Laks, (In all s:ze bottles. ) This is now acknowledged to be the best Ink for ottice and private use. ALSO IN STORE : Carter’s, Stephens & Toiary’s Writing & Copying Inks, G. H. HASZARD, BROWN’S BLOCK, Queen Square, Ch’town, May 18, °85.—wky WARREN LELAND, whom everybody knows as the successful manager of the Largest Hotel Enterprises of America, says that while a passenger from New York on Hoard a ship going around Cape Horn, in the early days of emigration to Cal- ifornia, he learned that one of the officers of the vessel had cured himself, during the voy- age, of an obstinate disease by the use of , e Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Since then Nir. Lezaxp has reeommended AYER’S SARSAPARILLA in many similar cases, and he has never yet heard of its fail- ure to effect a radical cure. Some years ago one of Mr. wELAND’S farm laborers bruised his leg. Owing to the tad state of his blood, an ugly scrofulous swelling or lump appeared on the injured limb. Hor- rible itching of the skin, with burning and darting pains through the lump, made life almost intolerable. ‘The leg became enor- mously enlarged, and running ulcers formed, discharging great quantities of extremely offensive matter. No treatment was of any * avail until the man, by Mr. LELAND’S direc- tion, was suppliedwavith AYER’S SARSAPA- RILLA, which allayed the pain and irritation, healed the sores, removed the swelling, and completely restored the limb to use. Mr, LELAND has personally used Ayer's Sarsaparilla for Rheumatism, with entire success ; and, after careful observation, declares that, in his belief, there is no medicine in the world equal to it for the cure of Liver Disorders, Gout, the effects of high living, Salt Rheum, Sores, Eruptions, and all the various forms of blood diseases, We have Mr, LELAND’S permission to invite all who may desire further evidence in regard to the extraordinary curative powers of AYER’s SARSAPARILLA to see him person- ally either at his mammoth Ocean Hotel, Long Branch, or at the popular Leland Hotel, Broadway, 27th and 28th Streets, New York. Mr. LELAND’s extensive knowledge of the good done by this unequalled eradicator of blood poisons enables him to give inquirers much valuable information. PREPARED BY Dr. J.C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggisis; $1, six bottles for $5. SULLIVAN & MACNAILL, ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW Scliciters in Chancery, WOLARIES PUBLIC, Jeorge Strect, Charlottetown a, #a@° Money to Loar, January 16, 1885. Books, Kaglish, American and Canadian, NOTE PAPER,!. “ec. | through microscopes. OF MICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great | quile a different personage; he only read ADAM BEDE. { CHAPTER LI. (Continued. ) | | ‘ Let us go out into the sunshine, Dinah, ‘and walk together. | disturb you.’ They went out, and walked towards’ the fiside, where they would meet the family jcoming from the church, Adam said, | Take my arm, Dinah,’ and she took it. 'That was the only change in their manner lll speak no word to together. But no sadness in the prospect of her going away—in the uncertainty of the issue—could rob the sweetness from Adam's sense that Dinah loved him. He thought he would stay atthe Hall Farm all that evening. He would be near her as long as he could. ‘Heyday! there’s Adam along wi’ Dinah,’ said Mr. Poyser, as he opened the far gate into the Home Close. ‘I couldna think how he happened away from church. ‘Why,’ added good Martin, after a mo- ments pause, ‘what dost think has just jumped into my head /’ ‘Summat as hadna far to jump, for it’s just under our nose. You mean as Adam's fond o’ Dinah.’ ‘Aye! hast ever had any notion of it before ! ‘To be sure 1 have,’ said Mrs. Poyser, who always declined, if possible, to be taken by surprise. ‘I’m not one o’ those as can see the cat i’ the dairy, an wonder what she come after.’ ‘Thee never saidst a word to me about ‘Well, I aren’t like a_ bird-clapper, forced to make a rattle when the wind blows on me. I can keep my own counsel when there’s no good i’ speaking.’ ‘But Dinah’il ha’ none o’ him; dost think she wili? ‘Nay,’ said Mrs, Poyser, not sufliciently on her guard against a possible surprise; ‘She’ll never marry any body if he isn’ta Methodist and a cripple.’ ‘It ’ud ha’ been a pretty thing, though, for ’em t’ marry,’ said Martin, turning his head on one side, as if in pleased con- templation of kis new idea. ‘Theo'dst h’ liked it too, wouldstna?’ ‘Ah! I should. I should ha’ been sure of her then, as she wouldn’t go away from me to Snowfield, welly thirty mile off, and me not got a creature to look to, only neighbors, as are no kin to me an’ most of ‘em women as I’d be ashamed to show my face if my dairy things war like their’u. There may well be streaky butter i? the market. An’ I should be glad to see the poor thing settled like a Christian woman, with a house of her own over her head; and we'd stock her well wi’ linen and feathers, for I love her next to my own children. An’ she makes one feel safer when she’si’ th’ house, for she’s like ithe driven snow; anybody migbt sin for two as had her at their elbow.’ ‘Dinab,’ said Tommy, running forward to meet her, ‘*mother says you'll never marry anybody but a methodist cripple. What a silly you must be!’a comment which Tommy followed up by seizing Dinah with both arms, and dancing along by her side with incommodious fondness. ‘Why, Adam, we missed you i’ the sing- ing to-day,’ said Mr. Poyser. ‘How was it?’ ‘I wanted to see Dinah; she’s going away go soon,’ said Adam. ‘Ab, lad !can you persuade her to stop somehow? Find her a good hysband some- where i’ the parish. If you'll do that we'll forgive you for missing church. But, any way, she isna going before the harvest supper 0’ Wednesday, and you must come then. There’s Bartle Massey comin’, an’ happen Craig. You'll be sure, an’ come now at seven? The missis wenna have it a bit later.’ ‘Aye,’ said Adam, ‘I'll come, if [ can. But I[ can’t ofien say what I'll do before- haud, for the work often holds me longer than T expect. You'll stay till th’ end o’ the week, Dinah ?’ ‘Yes, yes!’ said Mr. Poyser; ‘we'll have no nay.’ ‘She’s no call to be in a hurry,’ observed Mrs. Poyser. ‘Scarceness o’ victual ‘ull keep; there’s no need to be hasty wi’ the cooking. And scarceness is what there's the biggest stock of i’ that country.’ Dinah smiled, but gave no promise to stay, and they talked of other things throngh the rest of the walk, lingering in the sunshine to look at the great flock of geese grazing, at the new corn ricks, and at the surprising abundance of fruit on the old pear tree; Nancy aud Molly having already hastened home, side by side, each holding, carefully wrapped in her pocket handker- chief, a prayer book, in which she could read litile beyond the large letters and the Amens. Surely all other leisure is hurry compared with a suony walk through the fields from afternoon church—as such walks used to be in those old leisurely times, when the boat, glidlng sleepily along the canal, was the newest locomotive wonder; when Sanday books had most of them old brown leather covers, and opened with remarkable pre- cision always in one place. Leisure is goue —gone where the spiuning-wheels are gone, and the pack horses, and the slow wagons, and the peddlers who brought bargains to the door on sunny aflernocns. Ingenious philosophers tell you, perhaps, that the great work of the steam-engine is to create leisure for mankind. Do not believe them; itonly creates a vacuum for eager thought to rush in. Even idleness is eager now—cager for amusement; prone to excursion trains, art museums, periodical literature, and exciting novels; prone even to scientific theorizing, and cursory peeps Old Loisure was |one newspaper, innocent of leaders, and was free from that periodicity of sensations |which we ecalltime. He was a contempla- W.W.Scuttvan,Q.C, | Crtgstér B. MACNEILU tive, rather stout gentleman, of excellent! ‘digestion—of quiet perceptions, undiseased to each other since they were last walking) by hypothesis, happy in his inability to know the causes of things, preferring the things themselves. He lived chiefly in the country, among pleasant seata and home steads, and was fond of sauntering by tlie |fruit-tree wall, and scenting the apricots |'when they were warmed by the morning sunshine, or of sheltering himself under the orchard boughs at nocn, when the summer |pears were falling. He knew nothing of |week-day services, and thought none the | worse of the Sunday.sermon if it allowed | him to sleep from the text to the bleasing— liking the afternoon service best, because ithe prayers were the shortest, and not ashained to say 8; for he had au easy, jolly conscience, broad-backed like himself, and ‘able to carry a great deal of beer or port wine—not being made squeam- jish by doubis and qualms and jlofty aspirations. Life was not a task to him, but a sinecure; he fingered the |guineas in his pocket, and ate his dinners, jand slept the sleep of the irresponsible; |for had he not kept up his charter by going |to church on the Sunday afternoon / | Fine old Leisure! Do not be severe ‘upon him, and jadge him by our modern | standard ; he never went to Exeter Hall. or heard a popular preacher, or read 7'racts | for the Times, or Sartor Resartus. (To be continned.) LETTERS 10 THE EDITOR. The Kecent Election. Srr,—No matter what excuses Grit writers may make in trying to acconnt for the defeat of their candidate at the recent Legislative Council election in the First District, the stubborn fact is now before the people, that Mr. McKachen, the Liberal- Conservative candidate in 1885 has been elected by a majority of 155 over iis opponent in the same district in which the Grit nominee in 1882 was elected by exactly 200 of amajority. These figures speak for themselves. They not only show tho popularity of the present Government, but they also show that some of the self con- stituted leaders of the Grit party have lost the confidence of the people, and that the hand writing foretelling their own political fate is already on the wall. The property voters of this district deserve to be congratulated upon their con- duct in the late election. They have elect- ed a man from am8ng themeelves to sup- port the present economical Government. Many of them twice asked to vote for “our man,” simply because they formerly voted on the Grit side of politics. Earnest ap- peals were made by the electors to stand true to the party, but the good common sense of the people prevailed over all purely party considerations, and the result is that, though bitterly opposed by many would-be leading ‘‘politicians,” the Governmental candidate 1s the choice of the district, As might be expected, there are a num- ber of Grits very angry and disappointed indeed at the way the election went. One of them, I observe, has given vent to his feelings in a letter to the Patriot, signed “ Grit,’ dated from Svuris, written the day after the election. Parsing over the three first paragraphs of ‘‘Grit’s” letter, which are really too nonsensical to demand atten- tion, the readers of the Patriot are told that ‘* lies were circulated, religious preju- dices aroused, and even national feelings appealed to to secure Mr. McEachen’s re- turn.” As for the lies, ‘* Grit” is doubt- less a good authority on the subject, as he claims a sort of monopoly in that line dur- ing election times. He cannot name one lie that was set afloat by Conservatives. Not so with the opposite party. The re- port of the Grit meetings, as given in the Patriot, will give you some idea of the gross misrepresentations and falsehoods that were circulated in order to dawage Mr. McKach- en’s prospects, The ‘religious prejudices” are something before unheard of in this part of the country. The fact is they only exist in the heated imagination of ‘‘Grit” himself. Both Candidates are of the same religious persuasion. Where then could the religious prejudices come in! National feelings were not appealed to either, as the vote in this section of the district clearly shows. It is insulting to the electors to accuse them, as “Grit” does, with having indulged in national or in religions prejudices in the late contest. But the most insulting part of Grits letter is where he says: “If Dr. McIntyre had been here the result might have been different.” Does he mean to say by this that electors require to be told how to vote? Not only this, but that it requires Dr. Mc- Intyre to lead them by the collar to the polls, there to vote for the man he may see fit to bring out. The one-man power, let me tell Grit, in a free country like this, will not be tolerated even in the matter of a Legislative Couscil election. It is really humiliating to the rank and file of the Grit party to have such assertions as Grit makes circulated through the press. The electors voted independently, no odds what to say to tue contrary, and | very much mistake them if they do not, at the very pext opportunity teach him and his leader a lesson that they will not soon fotget. ELecror. Morell, May 21, 1885. ‘First-Class Goods,” In which merit is at once recognized, are now, aud always have been, imitated, espe- cially the manufactured article. After years of labor, and the expenditure of a fortune, in perfecting and placing before the public that which people appreciate and demand, some one who never had an original idea offers a counterfeit or substi- tute to compete with the genuine, Curtis Davis & Co., makers of the ‘‘ Welcome Soap,” find the above true in their case at least, the excellence of whose productions are everywhere acknowledged as the ‘‘stand- ard” of quality, being imitated in every way that competition can suggest. But in the use of their goods, the consumer re- alizes the full benefit of value received, — ee ae ee ae A ae re ee ed