OM RON ROTEL Be RR ee A PP TOF POE BRE I AR AI BE eR OT 4 OUTSET S espons 7 ciements of corre CORRESPONDENCE, rv) . j fey ot si Patri: f. SIR, ihe old adage that *‘ the bully usually a coward,” 1s weil illustrated in Having re fused to allow me to delenad myself in the columns yo ir precious person, f the paper you control, against your malicious attacks, you return to the charge | and bellow forth your slime like a bull of Bashan. Yourcraven heart would not beat fra ‘| mv reniie had ni.re fale) uul tree if my repites had @ pice, (aitnuough pru tei in the smallest type, and shoved away in the most obsenre corner of the daub which you calla newspaper.) You want to fight from your own dunghill; and you are welcome to the delectable spot, You have made tts atmosphere to suit you admirably. Mr. Maleolm McLeod’s letter seems to show how little beth you and your paper are thought of in this community He was attorney for O’Farrel in the late ease. You said that a stolen letter was produced in Court by ‘‘O’Farrel’s attorney and demanded w hy I did not prosec the man in whose possession the letter was found, and who had the audacity to use it as evidence in a Court of Justice. This fonl charge against one of the foremost members of our bar had appeared four days in your paper, and yet Mr. McLeod did not see it until I incidentally referred to it in Tue Examiner. Itis not probable that Mr. McLeod's numerous friends, no more than himself, ere readers of your contem)t- | ible paper, or they would have called his attention to it. Or possibly they did not think anything you could say calculated to | injure any responsible man. I[ am sorry | that my incidental reference to your foul) charge against Mr. McLeod has had the} effect of giving a respectable circulation to, a personal detraction. Mr. MeLeod’s letter affords additional , evidence of how rotten are all your declar- | ations. In the Patriot of the 17th, in speaking of Mr. Strong's letter to McDon- ald, you said that I had ‘‘ the best reason | to believe that it was stolen or intercepted | out of the Pest Office.” Mr. McLeod gives O’Farrel’s version of how he received that} letter, which version is corroborated by | Mr. Strong, who has now returned to the office. Mr. Strong says that he delivered | that letter te John O Farrell in a sealed | envelope, who volunteered to carry it to | McDonald, at a time when it was thought | that the dispute would be amicably settled. | The forwarding of this letter in this way | by Mr. Strong was a straightforward act. | Bat, in your article of yesterday you say | that it would not surprise you to find that | the letter was given O’Farrel ‘ by one of | the official in the Land Office,” aud you} add: ‘‘A little patient urging when one has | untruthful, tricky people to deal with | often resulta in making strange discover- | ies.” When you wrote this you knew that | the letter was delivered to O’Farrel by Mr. | Strong. You may, however, spare your-| self the trouble of accusing him or any | officiais of the Land Office of “* tricks” or | “‘ ontruthfulness.” The name of Strong | is synonymous in this Island with honesty | and truth. Inthe depth of your moral} obliquity, I suppose you think if Jobn | O’ Farrel had the letter given him to carry | to McDonald, he was quite right in open- | ing it and using it for his own purposes. Mr. McLeod may well say he was surprised when he heard McDonald! positively swear that there was! no condition annexed to his purchase. Were he a reader of the Patrivt, he would, | probably, be equally surprised to find that you have again and again, and with great | vehemence, made the same statement which | your we!l chosen friend McDonald swore | to. But no amount of oaths or protesta- | tions by such people as you are, can blot} the condition from the books of the Land Office. It can be seen by any person who will take the trouble to call at this office, | as stated by Mr. McLeod, on the counter- | foil of the Land Sales Book. When you say that I led you to believe | that the Gillis survey was never in the | office, you stated an impudent falsehood. | I told you it was not produced by O'Farrell | as it should have been when he commenced his purchase in 1879, but that it was pro- | duced subsequent to the date of both sales. | Mr. McLeod, if he thought it worth while, | could have disposed of this question, as} this survey was in his possession at the! Court, and was returned to me by him | immediately afterwards. | For the third time you repeat your false- | hood that I blamed McDenald for not acting on the advice contained in Mr. Strong’: letter. Any person who wiil take the trouble to refer to my letter in the Examiner of the 16th inst., will find that you are simply repeating what you know to be utterly false. I have now done with you. The public have witnessed fur years the malignity and persistency with which you have slan- | dered me. | now publicly and deliberately | spit upon your influence The meanness | of your charac’er and the still greater | [ACDONALD meavness of your abilities, stamp you as a, person much more to be prized as an| enemy than a friend. You have disgraced every position of life which | vou have attempted to fill, I am) told that at one time you adopted | farming as a profession. The re- flection that the grass would grow while | you slept, no doubt influenced your choice. | A little experience, however, demonstrated | to your satisfaction that the same rain anc | sunshine which caused the grass to grow 1n | the fields of industrious men, served at the | same time to make the thistle and the briar | grow more juxuriantly in the garden of the | siuggard, You abandoned farming in dice) gust. You becams a schoo'master; and wt, a time when examinations were merely | nominal, you secured a third, or lowest, | cla:s license. But even the children des- pised you; and I have myself, when you were a teacher in this town, seen you pur-) sused on the public streets by crowds of boys who amused themselves by shouting} “ Rufos” in your ca..—a nickname by) which they familiarly knew you. Through. | out life, notwithstanding your invincible | lizim g3, there was one thing for which you could be indueed to leave the bed of the slugger}, and that waa to abuse and black. | guard the best men in the country. For this purpose you have bern bought and sold like neat in the shambles. But every man who has bought you,sma'l as your price has been, has confessed that he was cheated out of his money. I am yours, &c., D. Fereveon. ale TEA: - - - FLOUR - - - THE DAILY EXAMINER, DECEMBER 28,1881. lo gus 5 es SVeli-Selccted ®toeck of The Usaal is > : : #% f 3 “ay ee WATCHES A/a a C5 aes tel £8 z ? ex.ge aBaeerr*=ra Bre , aegis “S Px : @ a X J a pur eee 4 ya * ou & > Wy A E> SS Ces & aa ‘y des a Yy i ; Pho eS & Pee Fas & * heen STITAULS FOR PEESENTATION, WILL BE FOUND AT ~~ + . f re 2 ro cy 9 ™~ = LAS % fs F378 Rew 8 eee a 4 i¢ avy Say South Side Queen Square. | g 3 see 3 oo im.) Sok @ 5 ¢e ; AYLS st & CO w; North Side Queen Square. | AS CHEAP AS ANY IN THE CITY. ST UHRISTMIAS & NEW YEAR. [de 21 4i aN, w "f, i f ‘ . gs ' ~ | Nae During the Holiday Season | ewe sere I WiLL SHLL Ries Dry ccoods, Clothing, oh 2% S| re and ‘Reas, “| CHEAPER TEIAN EVER: SCTVNOGOVIN ci Will Guarantes Aargains in Every Department. J. IF YOU WANT CHEA? GeaDs TRY J. 5. MACDONALD’S, Dee. 20, *S1— Qozen Sraxer. —— _— es ~— = : ~ = — oe <n ce nee AFYVER ALL, The Great tush is te BHRER & GOFR’S. OUR EXTENSIVE. STOCK is MCVING OFF RAPIDLY, AND OUR CUSTOMERS ARE Best Quality at —_—_—o Getting. Low Prices. * CHRISTMAS SUPPLIES! al Table Rajsias (Extra Choice), RAISINS - Valeneias (OM Stalk, fine and large) 3oxes and Half-Boxes, Cheap. FICS Stink ituainiltl 350 Boxes of Very Choice Layer u Figs, GOFFEE - - Candies, a very large assortment. eel Roasted and Ground on our ” CONFECTIONERY: . | very large assortment ! Chocolates, Creams, Toys, Scotch Mix- premises, warranted Choice. 25 Cents anp Upwarps. [ ( Woodburn’s (St. John) Celebrated Pure ) | tures, Gum Drops, &e., &c. ° Iialf-chests, Caddies, 5, 7, 10, 15 and 20 lb. boxes. Our new Tea is giving excellent satisfaction. Very Choice Brands (warranted), Hia- watha, Primrose; National Policy, Crown Patent, Xe. Nuts, Dates, Spices, Candied Peel, Biscuits, Chocolate, Cocoa (Epps), Schiveitzer’s Cocoatina, Cranberries, Green Fruit, &e¢., &e. Charlottetown, Dec. 13, 1881. BEER & GOFE. PRANC'S 53 Queen Street. Prize Christmas Cards. SIGN OF THE Blue Flag, i | First instalment received this day at HARVIES’ BOOKSTORE, Oct. 31—tf - NOTICE. % TE, the undersigned, have this day en- WW tered into Co-Parincrship to practice as Birristers and Attorneys in Charlottetown, Se a ; " in the office lately occupied by Messrs. Sul- opportu ity is a very rare one to secure really livan & Morson,’’ in the Young Men’s Chris- TA SRVELLOUS BARGAINS. tian Association Buil/ing in Charlottetown, P. &. Island Bank notes taken at their full os EDWARD PAYFIELD. valus for goods, E. W. SMITH. Extraordinary and Urcrecedented Bargains IN BOOTS AND SHOES. The stock is good aad seasonable, and the STANISLAUS BLANCHARD, no 28 dly pat 2aw, ne pros | (h'yywn, Dec. 5, 1881--co Special Notices. PRIMROSES can be had at Ridgeway’s [dec 22 21 W. W. Weiner received a lot of Jewelry | and Electro-Plated Ware to day, which com- | pletes the largest aud best selected stock in | the city to select Christmas or New Year i i | ; | Presents from. d22 2 | Come and see the great spread of Fancy Confectionery—pure and good—at KR. K. | Brace’s. dl | THERE. is no mistake about it, W. F. Carter’s candies are the best. d20 4i f | Come, ere it be too late, and sélect your | shelis and Xmas presents, at RK. Brace’s. a2i Tue Bank of P. FE. Island notes taken at jJOhn Quirk’s. Steam Bakery,.in exchaage for | goods, or in paymeat of Book Account, dec 21 tf | AN immense quantity of tweeds will be | sold at a slight advance en cost at D., A, d21 wtl d31 | Buy your Christmas Cakes at W. F. | Carter’s, They are the best in the city. | d20 4i | A worp to the ladies! Do rot exchange | your old Sewing Machine for a new ore; but | fetch it to me and I will repair it and make it | as good as new or no charge made.— WILLIAM Brown, shop on corner of Prince and Grafton Streets, Charlottetown, P. E. L | Bruce’s, 72 Queen S‘reet. 20 6i and Curranta, at the Family Grocery.—R. K. BRAcE. ad?21 ¥resu Spices, Essences, Candied Peels, at Frazer & Reddin s Drag Store. dl5 Mey’s and boys’ Ulsters and Reefers selling for cash at D. A. Bruce’s, 72 Queen Street. d21 w tl d31 Cuoict Confectionery, only 25 cents per Ib., during Xmas and New Year’s holidays, at the ‘‘ City Steam Bakery,” Prince Street. di5 (om ard see the Christmas Tree, at R. K Brace’s, d2 Tue best Billiard Table in the city is at the Lorne Restaurant. [dee 8 10in eod XMAS CONFECTIONERY. —J have on hand the largest lot of home-made Candy ever made in Candy from the best houses in Canada. War- ranted pure. Inspection solicited.—W. F. Carrer. d20 4 Eggs for Xmas, as well as other rovelties, at the *‘ City Steam Bakery,” Prince Street.” dl5 Tue 35 cent, 14 lb boxes of fresh layer figs can be had at the Lorne Restavrant for 25 eents. [dec § 10ia cod Curistmas Confectionery, from twenty-five cents to seventy-five cents per pound at W. F. Carter’s. 420 4i A LARGE stock of Meerschaum and Briar Pipes, Choice Havana Cigars, Cigarettes, Cigar Holders, Cut and Ping Tobaccos, Tobaceo Pouches, etc., at Fraser & Reddin’s Drug Store. , dl5 Frese dates, Confectionery, Maple Sugar, Green Grapes, all kinds of Canned fish, French Mustard, Pickles and Sauces, at the Lorne Restaurant. [dee 8 10in eod Pmaser & Reppin have just opened a large and superior assortment of Hair Brushes, Ivory Back Hand Mirrors, Combs, Perfumes, etc., suitable for Xmas Presents. did CALL at Harvie’s Bookstere and see the beautifu designs of Prang’s Prize Christmas Cards. ect 3h _ PickLING ViNEcak’s and apices. at Brrr & GorFv’s. vaw Dox’r delay bunt call at Harvie’s Book tore for Prang’s Christmas Cards—a splendid lot. oct 31 Smoxep Dicsy’s at Beer & Gorr’3, 3aw Just received, at the City Drug Store, fresh ground spices, pure essences, candied citron, lemon and orange peela, Crosse & Black- well’s mixed pickles and sauces, red and black currant jelly, lemon, orange and calf’s foot jelly (in at. bottles); lemon and orange marmalade, preserved ginger, in boxes ; genu- ine India currie powder, vermice}li macaroni, &c.— Wm. R. Watson. dl7 6i pat Gi 10,000 Imported Cigars, (choicest brands), cigarettes in Old Magic, Caporal, Vanity Fair, Upera Puffs, etc., and a large lot of superior Smoking and Chewing Tobaccos, just rece ved at the Lorne Cigar Store. [dec 8 10in eod Geo. Bavies & Co. are now pre- pared to take orders for Carpets for Spring delivery. They have just received patterns for the com- ing season from one of the best manufacturers in England. Latest designs in Srusselis, Tapestrys, Wil- tons, and Scotch Carpets. These Patterns will be here for about en days only. di9 10i GRAND HOLIDAY GIFT ENTERPRISE. FIRST PRIZE—A comfortable DOUBLE DWELLING HOUSE, only eight years old, and Freehold Lot, situated on Euston Street, Charlottetown, SECOND PRIZE,—A new and handsomely finished ( OTTAGE, with Coach House and Stable attached, on Freehold Lot, situated «pn the Malpeque Road, about half a mile from Charlottetown, 3500 Tickets will be issued at ONE DOLLAR EACH. Clubs of 1] tickets for $10 276 prizes will be distributed as follows :— lst Prize. Double Dwelling House, described ADOVE ...... 16s. ceeeeeeee $1,200 00 nd Prize, New Cottage, do. do,...... 1,000 Ou L'Cash Prize............. sececreseceeees ecedes 250 (0 OE... gamqeqnse cvstececcedeer- perenne 100 00 a 1G secccceceencess estone sovcccese 50 0 sy Oe. ppnwernprecgsccongane gnome oseen ° 25, 00 2 * Prise’ each B10. 2.22. 2.20. e0ce8e 20 00 . * s - Dusesecectnscgenvene 41) 00 6.* ” - Bicccces coccocentees 20 00 250% “ . Licenkentee sncctesee 250 00 The Owners of the properties guarantee to the holders of the lucky tickets a full and nn- disputed title, free from all encumberance, and I will pay the cash prizes immediately after the drawing isclosed. The drawing will take place in Charlottetown, on Saturday, the dist Dec. Nexi, A meeting of ticket holders will be held on FRIVAY, ecember 30th, te appoint a Com- mittee of five persons to conduct the drawing on the following day. Parties ordering tickets by mail ere requested to register their letters Agents wanted in Towns and Vil- . | lages. | { Auy further information in reference to above propeitics or their owners will be che ex- fully supplied. E. H. BABBITT, Kent St., Ch’town, Dec, 3, wkly Manager. nov 1 tf wy } J. B. MacponaLp, Queen Street, will give | great bargains in Dry Goods and Clothing | | during the holiday season. Go there.—Dec. | Tue cleanest, cheapest and best Raisins | this city. Also avery large lot of imported | SoMETHING NEw in Confectionery — Decorated THIS Is A GRAND TIME 1) PURGHASE ALL AIMS GF GOODS | FOR THE SEASON, USE, special inducements to BUYERS. ‘and can meet the wants aud means of all in ‘Town and Country, i | —AT THE- } * N ~ sa. - 5 a ts * | es 15 as we are offering CASH ! 20: WE IiAVE AN IMMENSE STOCK OF DRESS GOODS, Special Values, at 9, 10, 12, 16, 20 and 25 cents per yard. ————0: — , BLACK & MOURNING GOODS, ALL PRIGES. A large lot of Ladies’ Felt, Cloth and Knitted Skirts, from 50 cis, up, Ladies’ Sacques and Fur Lined Circulars, A lot of Colored Table Cloths, many ef them ai Half Price, to clear. Wool T'weeds for Men’s and Boy’s wear, at 50 cents per yard, up, fiantle and Clster Cloths, double width, 50 cis, per yd. up. Grey Unien Flannels for 16 cents, up. : All Wool Flannels, in all prices, A LARGE STOCK OF Ladies’ Weel Squares. Bales of Buffale and Wolf Rebes. Coon and Baffaio Coats. Waterproof Pweed and Rubber Coats, JUST OPEANDD. L VERE LARGE STOCK OF OVERCOATS & DLSTERS, Reefing Jackets, $3 up. A GOOD LINE OF BOYS CLOTHING, SUITS FROM $1.50 UP. Boys’ Ulsters and Storm Coats. Men’s Wincey and Flannel Shirts 50 cents up. Men's Woolen UNDERCLOTHING and CARDIGAN JACKETS, A Good Selection of Ladies’ and Mens Fur Caps. A VALUABLE STOCK OF BLANKETS, IN WHITE AND GREY. BATCHELORS’ QUILTS; $1.10 UP. HORSE RUGS, 81.25 UP. “xcellent Value in Grey and White Cottons, Tickings, and all Staple Goods, A FULL LINE OF GROCERIES Superior Teas, in Chesis, Halfchests and Boxes. 0:0 Our House has long been popular for the quality of its Goods and the Cheap rate at which it has supplied its customers, and with greatly increased facilities for trade, we intend that its reputation in this respect shall be fully sustained in time to come, GEO. DAVIES & CO. Charlottetown, Nov. 21, 1881, os ae OF RENEE apt = mma RRR SRE MOM, | emma e eee Wa : & an Pl AP id a ‘ fj aie Pe ’ 7 a J 5 n he) is ) am eee F i i cel a ae Fr ccm Bs MBS reer ae f 0 +: yr fi + oes —— 1 agin sateen | AEN Bil nema Me GI El I 80s EE HE . a D . , Fea