Teams :—Five Dottars a Yuan. ” This j is true liste cineali Free-born Men haine to oilties the Public, may aon free,’’—Evxipipes. Ly, elem tenn ntindll dso —engpertll ag _ - - —— SINGLE Corres Two CENTS. NEW SERIES. SHLOUICING OFF A 'T- W. a. HUTGHESOW’ shall Sell oft my Stock of Groceries at Cost. ’ — ee CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESD. AY, JANUARY 3 1882. ———— S. Parties wishing to get their GROCERIES Cheap should call at once and leave their orders. GOOP TEA, 25, 30 and 33 cents ; CRACKERS, RAISINS, 10 cents ; 4 to 14 cents; CURRANTS, 8 cents. MOLASSES, SUGAR, 8 47 cents; cents. | A large lot of CONFECTIONERY from 15 to 20 ceats; lot CHRISTMAS GOODS, very cheap; and sundry other articles too numerous to mention—all at cost for Cash only. Dec. 16, 1891—3m eod, wkly 109 Upper QuEEN Stuer | W. A. HUTCHESON, | BRITISH WAREHOUSE, QUEEN SQUARE. W. & A. BROWN & CO. the Kmas season. Dee. 9, 1881. W. In their FANCY GOODS DEPARTMENT Have just opened a large assortment of Novelties and Fancy Ware suitable for & A. BROWN & CO, = —- “70, a ww ‘iG cet Will during this month, offer the Balance of their ; Knit Weol Goods, ‘ Mantles, Ulsters and Furs, 0: AN IMMENSE STOCK OF Staple and Fancy. Dry Goods of Every Desciption, at VERY LOW PRICES, On Menday, December 5th, we will open 7 cases of Fancy & suitable for Christmas and New Year’ s Presents, barlotte town, Deo. 3, 1881. COST! Tweeds and Heavy Cloths, AS I WANT TO CLOSE OUT MY STOCK IN THIS LINE. ATT Readymade Clothing, Some Expensive Ladies’ Cloth Mantles and Dolmans, and Fur Lined Cloaks, Sealettes and Colored Dress Goods. AT A LARGE REDUCTION. JUST OPENED AND MARKED Low, A Select Assortment of Flowers, Feathers, Velveteons, Ladies’, Saoques, de, &e. R. W. TREMAINE, Nor. 1, 1841. Hats, Bonnets, AT GREAT BARGAINS IN ORDER TO CLEAR PERKINS & STERNS. - PERKINS & STERNS. > oods ee ————— ———— —_—----~- FIRE! 100 bbis. Extra Fat Ne. 1, equal to Yarmouth Bloaters, at the London House. NORTHERN ASSURANCE CO., soa a —s 12 il 1 Moorgate Street, Londen. 300 Mackerel Barrels (good stock), 1000 bushels Fishing Salt. For Sale Y | On hand, @ fall supply of Cotton Duck, Capital, ° Rot £3,000,000 stg. | Bolt Rope, Hemp and Manilla Cordage, Lines |"FYHAT. Freeho! em and Twines, Paints and Oils, eighty feet Mvery description of propertyur +5 s DAVID SMALL, four feet on © carreut rates, in tows and country. Queen’s Wharf, Sept, 10, 1881. cans, 16 - aD FRED. W. HYNDMAN. | j UBSORIBEfor the DAILY EXAMINER, | ine ~ ormer Queen and Water Streets. . * the hens snd mort Neway..Paper) Gatews, Der. 6, 9i-ntf | Publistivd in | 7 "88 QUEEN STREET —— Bank of P. E, Island. ANK OF P. £. ISLAND NOTES taken at their face in exchange for Dry Goods, GHO, DAVIBS & CO. siialsin adil —s disiaal ' et. front of ‘ghty-, TAETMATEY, Neuralgia, Sciatica, iene, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Cout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swoi!- ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and a// othar Pains and Aches. No caf ur on earth equals St. Jacons Orr as a sufe, sure, ome ‘oA cheap External Remedy trial entails but the comparatively trifling culty of 50 Cents, and every one suffering ba pain can have cheap and positive proof of ite ele‘ms. Directions in Eleven Languages. 80..D BY ALL DEUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDIOINE. A. VOGGELER & CO., Baltimore, 14., U. 8. Ae CITIZENS’ INSURANCE CO0., OF CANADA. SIR HUGH ALLAN..... .«- PRESIDENT. Capital... Deposited with Dominion Gov't.. sa 188,000 142, 000 Fire, Life, Accident and Guarantee. Risks taken in the moderate rates. Dwellings a speciality.) office at Charlottetown. promptly and liberally. above Company at Policies issued in Losses settled A. 8. URQUHART, General Agent for P, E, I Ch’town, Dec 9, 188i—1m W.C. BISHOP, Pda dee ae ae —AND— FORWARDING AGENT, Maring Insurance Broker, General Commission Agent, 80 BEDFORD ROW, P. O. BOX 1 HALIFAX, N. S. ARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned +} Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks thereon. Hulis, Cargoes, and Freights insured in first-class offices at most favorable rates. Consignments of Produce solicited, and prompt returns guaranteed. Correspondence solicited and answered promptly. Mov. 14, 1881—lyr Queen Insurance Co'y OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL - TWO MILLIONS STERLING. Insurance effected on all kinds of Buildings, Merchandise and Produce, Also, on Vessels on the stocks, Special rates for isolated residences, All Losses settled promptly, GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Agent for Priuce Edward Island TO LET. HE BRICK HOUSE adjoining the resi- dence of Mr. Arcup Kennepy, Water Street; also the premises adjoining, lately oc- cupied by the “ Examiner Printing Co,’’ Ap. ply to the owner, Ju17] JOHN INGS. Ch’town, Sept. 7, 1881 LOOK YOU HERE, STOVEPIPE. STOVEPIPE, NHE subscriber is now making an assort- ment of Stovepipe and Tinware, Best quality,which he is selling cheap for Cash, Tinware and Stovepipe, all kinds, made to order, Special prices to wholesale dealers. Orders for fitting up Stoves promptly and ~n- carefully attended to. Orders solicited. Shop opposite Dr, Jen- 1's residence, Queen Street, R. RODD, Practical Tinsmith, Jottetown , Sept. 30,’81 -8m (Farm Property and Isolated | THE WAR: TRAIL! CHAPTER XVIII. THE PHANTOM HOBSE. { have encountered dangers—not a few—but they were the ordinary perils of flocd and field, and I understood them. I have had one limb broken, aud its fellow bored with an ounce of lead. I have swam from a sinking ship, aud have fallen upon the battle-field. looked at the muzzles of a hund muskets aimed at my person, at less hig thirty yards’ distance, and felt the cer- | tainty of death; though the volley was, fired, aud I still live. W ell, you will, | no doubt, acknowledge these to be perils. Do not mistake me; | am not boasting of having encountered them; I met them with more or less courage—some of th: ma with fear; but if the fears inspired by all were combined into one emotion of terror, it would not equal in intensity that which I experienced at the moment | I pulled up my horse upon the prairie. I have never been given to supersti tion ; perhaps my religion i is not strong enough for that; but at that moment I could not help yielding to a full belief in the supernatural. There was no natural , cause—I could think of none — that would account for the mysterions dis- | appearance of the horse, sneered at the credulous sailor and his| phantom ship: had [I a phantom horse ! The hunters and trappers had, indeed, invested the white steed with this charac-| ter ; their stories recurred to my memory | at the moment. I had used to smile at! the simple credulity of the narrators. I, was uow prepared to believe them. They were true! Or was I dreaming? Was it not all a! dream? he search tor the white steed | —the surround—the chase—the long, | long gallop? For some momeats I actually fancied that such might be the case ; but soon my consciousness became clear again ; I was in the saddle. and my panting, smoking | steed was under. and positive. I remembered all tt the in- cidents of the chase. They, too, were real, of a certainty ; the white steed had been there: he was gone. The trappers spoke the truth. The horse was a phantom ! Oppressed with this thought, which had almest become a conviction, I sat in| my saddle, bent and silent, my eyes turned | upon the earth, but their gaze fixed upon | vacuity. The lazo had. dropped from | my fingers, and the bridle reins trailed untouched over the withers of my horse. My belief in the supernatural was of short duration; how loug I know uot, for, during its coutinuance, I remained in a state of bewilderment. My senses at length returned. My eyes had tallen upon a fresh boof-print on the turf, di- rectly in front of me. I knew it was that made by the white steed, and this awoke meto a process of reasoning. Had the horse been a phantom, he would not have made atrack? I had never heard of the track of a ghost; though a horse-ghost might be different from the common kind! My reflections on this head ended in} the determination to follow the trail as far as it led; of course to the point where the steed must have mounted into | the air, or evaporated—the scene of his apotheosis. With this resolve, I gathered my reins, and rode forward upon the trail, keeping | my eyes fixed upon the hoof-prints. The| line was direct, and I had ridden nearly two hundred yards, when my horse came | to a sudden stop. I looked out forward. to discover the cause of his halting ; with ' that glance,vanished my new-boru super- stitions. Ata distance of some thirty paces, a dark line was seen upon the prairie, run-! ning transversely to the course, I was following. Is appeared to be a narrow crack in the plain; but on spurring near- er. it provel to be a fissure of consider- . } ' able width—-one of these formations known throughout Spanish America as barrancas. Theearth yawned, as though reut by an earthquake; but water had evideatly something to do with its form- ation, It was of nearly equal width at top and bottom, and its bed was: covered with a debris of rocks. rounded by attrition. Its sides were perfectly vertica’, and the stratification, even to the surface-turf exactly corres ponded—-thus rendering it invis’ble at the distavce of but a few paces from its brink. It appeared to shallow to the right, and no doubt ended not far aff in that direction. ‘Towards the left, on the contrary, I could see it became deeper and wider. At the point where I had reached it, its bottom was near ly twenty feet from the surface of the prairie. Of course the disappearance of the white steed was uo longer a mystery He bad made a fearful leap—nearly twenty feet sheer! There was the torn iurfon the bink of the chasm, and the displacemeut of the loose nett where he hed bounded into its bed. He had ee I had often | lived to look upon! a phenomenon equally strange, yet true—| was. real| the Seoond VOL, 10.---NO. 34, barranea, hoofs was visible gone to the left—down the The abrasion of his upon the rocks, | Il looked down the defile: he was not to be seen. The barranca turned off at an angle at no great distance. He had already passed round the angie, and was out of sight. It was clear that escaped ; that to follow would be use; and with this refl ed all thoughts of further. he had of no ection T abandon. carrying the chase TO BE CONTINUED, TELEGRAPHIC REWS. UNITED STATES Sareveporr, La., Dee. 31. Ed. Belton, one of the colored men sen- tenced to be hanged in Mansfield ys sterday, who broke out of jail here Tuesday night, was captured by three colored men, twenty- five miles below here, and bronght in at noon yesterday, badly wounded. He attempted to escape and was shot. As ,s00n as his wounds were dressed he was ‘placed in a special train and started for Mansfield, his place of execution, which is forty miles distant. A special last night says he was not hanged, as he arrived too late, the Governor having fixed the hour between 12 and 2, and the train did not leave here until after one. “Another day will be fixed. The cther two men, John Mobile and Paul Pringie, sentenced to be hanged for the same offence, have not been irecaptured. Srprinecriztp, Dec. 31. The woodwork in the shaft of Dresser & Co’s coal mine caught fire last night and was consumed with the engine house. The oss is $10,000. The loss occasioned by | the stoppage of work will be very heavy. One bundred and twenty-five men at work in the shaft escaped and will be temporarily thrown out of employment. Rocrrs, Ark,, Dec. 30, On Friday last Eson Balin was shot and killed by hig wife while asleep in bed. The woman was arrested and confessed the murder, st tating that her husband was a murderer and. horse thief, and had made her life unbearable. On Monday she cut her own throat and died almost immedi- ately. The Adjutant-Cenéral of Illinois has iss ed orders disbanding six companies of Second Brigade of militia and one of the Third Br igade. GREAT BRITAIN AND [RELAND, Loxvon, Dec. 30, A passenger named Walsh on the steamer Celtic, whieh sailed from Liverpool on Thursday for New York, was arrested yes- terday on the arrival of the steamer at | Queenstown, on the charge of having ened? a murder in the county of Gal- Way, Descix, Dec. 31. The police yesterd ‘red the shops of all News agents engaged in the sale of seditious journals end ized all copies found of the United Ireland, Trish World iand United Ivishmen. The copies of the | Irtsh World which were seized were dated ithe 17th and 24th inst. ty en d Lonpvon, Dec. 31, The Earl of Courtown has sent. to the Lord Mayor a statement showing that since the formation of the Property De- ‘fence Association 357 writs have been i served, 629 sheriffs sales of farms and 39 ‘sales of cattle attended, and 410 care takers have been supplied to farms, PANAMA. Lonvon, Dee. 30, i The News, discussing the Paname Canal ‘enterprise, says it may be hoped that a pro- | tectorate, in which Ey urope co uid not acqni- sce, will be no more heard of. Blaineism is probably destined to become in America like Jingoism here and Chauvinism in | France, the name of temporary aberration \from political reason. MEXICO. | City oF Mexico, Dee. 30, | Port Anton Lizards, the Gulf terminus of the Mexican Southern Railroad, is , opened for foreign and coasting trade. =_— z ey Georgetown Notes. Alex. Stewart and John Hamilton Esquires, sat upon ihe Bi oe in the old Court Room above the Ja jeorgetown, on the 29th of Dec., bala re whom the King’s County prosecutor had summoned most of the offenders ay rainst the Canada Temperance Act in this part of the County. In the case of Donald Grant, Gee John McSwain, of Lorne V most unwilling witness, continually re- peating ‘‘I knows not” to al t juntil asked by Mr. Peters ,teid the prosecutor’s son? when he re- marked ‘‘I did not think he was going to catch me.” (Laughter) In the cases against James Campbell, Montague Bridge, all the evidence was indisputable, except rgelowL, aney, Was a l questi ns, he had what that of Mr. Finway, who said he drank three flasks one morning, and ‘‘ can’t tell after me drunk.” Joseph and Ananias Cainpbell failed to put jn an appeararee, be ing under the lm pression that they wele safe because they ha ided receivi: g the summonses personals from the land, of the constable ; yet both came to George- town and the Court House. Witn.: ses at- tested to having bought spirituous bguers frem Joseph, and ihe charges egainst Ananias were postponed to next Court for further evidence, there being ne lack, Capt. W. Gordon, of Brudnell, did not appear, but there is evidence against him not easy to rebut. John J yet to be bronght to task. and two of the witnesses in this case may find warants after them, as they did not come up toe the mark. ~-Com., McDonsld is