e ss fd itil ie ee * a eh DOLLARS A YRAK ‘his is true Libe Che Daily Examiner 2 \ ; . 2 es } ° a = ; nhita . ihe pAcvelliaaGl Wishing U0. From 4 r of Water and ivreca »* ttetown, 1 \ ru isi eh th, “3 ar 2 50 L 26 v 50 Ldvertisiug at most moderate rates, Vontracts may be made for monthly, ‘teriy, Nalf-yearly or yearly advertire. ih al lication. RIMANAG FOR DECEMBER, 1934, ’ Previous to Stock-taking they will Sell the balance of their MANTLES and JACKETS at a big’ reduction, Men’s Fur CAPS at a big reduction, Knitted Wool JACKETS at a big reduction. Always Cheap and prices Reliabl without doubt this is the place to buy your Blankets, Comforts, Counterpanes, Flannels, Wincey, $0 6 Friday 9s 9 7 ob aft 29 : 6 = £ . » Saturday 3 * ¢ & i4 vA t = 7, 3up Lay oo $ 10 i7i ¢ i 33 8 . n 32 c St MOON S CHANGES, Full Moon, 2nd day, 2h. 47.2m., a. m. Last Quarter 9th day, 7h. 18.0m., a. m. New Moon I7th day, 9a, 17.0m., a. m. First Quarter, 2oth day, 9a. 8.7m., a, m, New Moon, Ist Jan., 18%5. Dp ~~ on @ieeree Sun | Moon! High Days Ml rises sets | rises | water! len’h. h mh m aft’n morn; hm i; Mouday 7 °8 4 10) 3 47 9 23) § 42 2 Tuesday 30, 10: 43910 12' 40 2 Wednesday 31 9 5 39/10 58 3 $ Thursday 32. «9 «6 46th 44 3 sf I > 2 3! Monday 36, Sill 24! 2 52) j c esday 37 S morn! 3 50; inesday 35 S; 0 29) 4 &9 30 1! lay 49} 8: 12756 2 29 2 Friday ma .8 2m 76) 13 saturday 41 8 3324 810; 27) 14 Sunday 42 8' 4 33, 8 54] 26) i ynday 43 9 5 31) 9 34 26 Ig Tuesday , 44) 9 625013} 25 17 Wednesday | 44 9 7 16130 47° 25 13 Thursday s 45 io @ 7.90 oe 25 19 Friday 3, 30,8 46,11 57, 24 2) Saturday 47; 10| 9 22 morn; 724 >| Sun lay 47 li: 9 56. O Sil 22 Moaday S7: 31.30 37) 1-6 23| Tuesday 47; 1110 56] 1 44 24 94) VW e€ lnesday 47 Zit f' 2 Zs 25 23 Thursday | 48 1311 63) 3 15) 25 26 Friday | 49 M4aft23) 419! 25 27 Saturday ; 49 15 0 5s] 5 371 2 23, Sunday | 4 36' 1 37° 6 57 26 29 Monday . OF. . 228, 8 7 7 30, Tuesday 49 17,3 °7;9 4 31| Wednesday 7 SU t 19 4 CONSIGNMENTS souieireo, aul £&. us e re 1 i R. O’DWYER, Commission ald General Merchant FOR SALE OF P. KE. I, PRODUOE, 289 WATER STREET, Si. Johns’ Newfoundland. In connection with the above is Captain | English, who is well known in P. E. Island, | who wili take special charge of all consign-| ments, and wili also attend ‘o the chartermg | of vessels for the carrying trade of P. E. I. The firm is one of theoldest and most reli- able in Newfoundland Keturns guaranteed to be prompt and satisfactory. Parties wish- ing to procure Labradore Herring should send their orders ia time. ‘ept. 6, 1S94.—till 3lst dec, *S4. SULLIVAN & MAUHBILL, ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW Soliciiors in Chancery, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &c. OF FICES— O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown. Gas” Money to Loan, W. W, Scnuvas, Q. C, | Canstae B. Maonsiun Jan. 16, 93. H. W. VINNICOMBE, PIANO TUNER Pianos Tuned, Re-wired and Regulated. CHURCH ORGANS Voiced, Tuned, and Regulated with Care. CABINET ORGANS Tuned, Re-toned and Repaired. Having nearly twenty years’ experience with the construction of Eaglish, American and German Pianos, aud under the patronage of Government House, the Convent and the leading musical families on the Island, feels sure of giving universal satisfaction. Mr. V. will evgage professionally for public or private concerts the coming season. Otive—U. P. Pletcher’s Music Store. Ch'town, Oct. 25 15-4. NLeod, Moron & McQuarrie, BARRISTERS ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Giice in Gld Bank, (UP STAIRS). { h’town, Feb. 7%. 1884, —=— ye PRIN TING of every deserrption @3 cxecuted with Neatneas and Des oseb at the EXAMINER JOB PRINTING A 22 Central Whart, Boston. f MIELA coe Water And Grant fearge Miter ot een — Cr isizm oe made an addition to GOODS HOUSE in this Province. in & position to give the very Best Value. UUMPLETE PREMISES, ‘ S te | . - Fur-lined CLOAKS ata big reduction, Ladies’ ULSTERS at a big reduction, Tr ~ . ) ‘ fs $ - Wool Scarfs & Squares at a big reduction, SCARFS and TIES, COLLARS and CUFFS, Gents’ UNDERCLOTHING, SLIPPER PAPTERNS, CUSHION PATTERNS, BRACKET PATTERNS, 5; Cotton Goods of Every Description we Guarantee to be as Cheap as anv to be found. PERKINS & STERNS. Ch’ town, Dee. 17, 1884. UHEAP GOODS Cloths, Linens, S It DRESS GOODS & VELVETEENS Gents’ GLOVES and MITTS, |‘ Ladies’ GLOVES and MITTS, Silk HANDKERCUILEFS, Fur CAPS and MUFFS, Real Lace SCARFS, HOSIERY and CORSETS. Newest CORSETS. 6,000 yards Scotch and Canadian TWEEDS at 20 per cent off, 2,400 yards Mantle and Ulster CLOTHS at greatly reduced prices, 3,000 yards Colored Silks, Satins and Plushes at 20 per cent off, +,000 Scotch and Canadian Wool Shirts and Drawers at 20 per cent off. Scarlet and Grey Flannels, Shirtings, Tickings, Sheetings, Pillow Cottons, Winceys, Prints,' Cretonnes, Bleached and Unbleached Damasks and Table Napkins at a big discount. Balance of their stock of Mantles, Dolmans, Ulsters, lined COATS, MILLINERY, X&c., ‘Carpets, Oilcloths, Mattings, Hearth Rugs, Door Mats, Xc., at prices that are bound to CLEAR THEM. Fur Caps, Hats. Muffs, &c., at greatly reduced prices. xe Remember the place—Desbrisay’s and directly opposite the Market House. Charlottetown, Dec. 8, 1884. er ee eee ae | SW. & A. BROWN & CO, intend making a change in their firm about the end of February they now offer their large and well assorted stock of Dry Goods at GREAT BARGAINS, ’ | that was present. AT COST. old stand, next door to Beer & Goff’s Grocery, W. & A. BROWN & CO, Potatoes, Spilling, Bark, R.R. Ties, DRY GOODS & CLOTHING CHEAP AND TEA GRATIS. Lumber, Laths, Canned Lebsters, Mac- kerel, Berries, Eggs, | Fish Ete. } Best Prices for all Shipments. Write fully | for Quotations, HATHEWAY & CO., | will be General Commission Merchants, Members of Board of Trade, Corn and Mechanics Exchange. Ch’town, Nov. 19, 1884. aacetineneoesi ; | DVERTISE in THE DAILY EXAMI- £4 a best advertising medium | Ch'town, Dec. 4, 1884. NEW YEAR'S |! ——— J B. MACDONALD will, during this month, give every buyer of —- . $2.00 worth of DRY GOODS, ilb. Good TEA, #4.00 worth of DRY GOODS, 2ibs. Gocd TEA, $6.00 worth of DRY GOODS and CLOTHING, 3ibs. Good TEA, $8.00 worth of DRY GOUDS and CLOTHING, 4ibs. Good TEA, $10.00 worth of DRY GOODS and CLOTHING, 5ibs. Good TEA. Purchasers not requiring Tea, and buying $5.00 worth of Dry Goods or Clothiug,’ My Tea is well and favourably known. This offers a rare opportunity to get the Winter’s Tea FRER OF COST, J. B& MACDONALD, Queen Street. away from bim, and wipe the tears pred the Holidays ut Matidousld's Bout ovore. tty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak iree,”—Evuiwrors. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, i884, Sterns their premises, they are now the Largest Exclusively DRY Giving their whole attention to this branch, they are LARGE STOCK. = 9 CHAPTER XIII. EVENING IN THE WOOD, Ir happened that Mes. Pomfret had a slight quarrel with Mrs. Best, the house- keeper, on this Thursday morning—a fact , which had two consequences highly con- 'venient to Hetty. It caused Mrs. Pomfret | to have tea sent up to her own room, and it § inspired that exemplary lady’s maid with | | so lively a recollection of former passages in |Mrs. Best’s conduct, and of dialegnes in ' which Mrs. Best bad decidedly the inferior- ity as an interlocutor with Mrs. Pomfret, that Hetty required no more presence of mind than was demanded for using her needle and throwing in an occasional ‘yes’ \or ‘no.’ She would have wanted to put on her hat earlier than usual; only she had (teld Captain Donnithorne that she usually set out about eight o’clock, and if he should go to the Grove again expecting to see her, ‘and she should be gone! Would he come ! , Her little butterfly soul fluttered inceesantly _ between memory and dubious expectation. ' At last the minute hand of the old-fashioned brazen faced time piece was on the last quarter to eight, and there was every reason for its being time to get ready for depart- ‘ure. Even Mrs, Pomfret’s preoccupied | mind did not prevent her from noticing what leoked like a new flash of beauty in & the little thing asshe tied her hat before | the looking-giass. | ‘That child gets prettier and prettier ‘every day, | do believe,’ washer inward ;comment. ‘The more’s the pity. She'll get neither a place nor a husband any |sooner for it. Suber well-to-do men don't jlike pretty wives. When IL was a girl, | Was more admired than if 1d been so very | | pretty. However, she’s reason to be grate-isadjy, half with a constrained smile. ful to me for teaching her something to get ' /her bread with, better than farm-house ; work, They always told me I was geod. , natured—and that’s the truth, and to my (hurt too, else there’s them in this house | that wouldn’t be here now to lord it over me | ' space of pleasure-ground which she had to | traverse, dreading to meet Mr. Craig, to | whom she could hardly have spoken civilly 'How relieved she was when she hed got safely under the oaks and among the fern of the Chase! Even then she was as ready Ei hk | a in the housekeeper’s room.’ | to be stariled as the deer that leaped away at her approach. She thought nothing of |the evening light that lay gently in the, | grassy alleys between the fern, and made} the strong knotted old oaks had no bend- the beauty of their living green more visible than it had been in the overpower- |ing flood of noon; she thought of nothing She only saw something | that was possible: Arthur Donnithorne any issue, till the twilight deepened almost ‘coming to meet her again along the, Fir-tree Grove. That was the fore-| ground of Hetty’s picture; behind it lay a bright hezy something—days that! were not to be as the other days of her life! had been. It was as if she had been) wooed by a river-god, who might any time! | Hetty’s eyes seemed to beseech him not to go away yet; but he patted her cheek and \said ‘Good-bye’ again. She was obliged | | to turn away from him and go on. ' As for Arthur, he rushed back \throngh the wood as if he wanted to SINGLE Copizs Two CENTS, VOL. 16.---NQ, 32. | had fallen on her rose-colored strings: she knew that quite well, ‘Come, be cheerful again. S nile at me, ‘and tell me what is the matter, Come, tell ; me.° | Hetty turned her head toward him, whisper- ed, ‘I thought you wou da’t coma,’ and slowly got courage t» lift her eyes to him; | That look was too wuch; he must have had ‘eyes of Exyptian granite, not tc lovk to ‘lovingly in return. | ‘You little frightened bird ! little tearful |rose ! silly pet! You won't cry agsin, now Tun with you? Ah ! he doesn’t know in the least what he issaying. This is not what he meant to say. Hisarm is stealing round the waist again, it is tightening its grasp; he is bend- ing his face nearer and nearer to the round ‘cheek, his lips are meeting those pouting chi'd-lips, and, for a long mo nent t we has vanished, He may be a shepherd w Arcedia for aught he knows, he may be the fist youth kiesing the first maiden, he may be Eros himself, sipping ‘he lips of Psyche— it is all one. There was no speaking for minutes after. ‘They walked along with beating hearts tiil they came within sight of the ga‘e at the end of the wood. Then they looked at each other, not quite as they had looked before, for in their eyes there was the memory of a kiss, But already something bitter had begun to mingle itself with the fountain of sweets; already Arthur was uncomfortable. He ‘took his arm from Hetty’s waist, and | said : ‘Here weare almost atthe end of the Grove. 1! wonder how late it is,’ he added, pulling out his watch. ‘ Twenty minutes past eight—but my watch is too fast. However, I'd better not go any farther now. Trot along quickly with your little feet, and get h: me eafely. Good-bye.’ . He took her hand, and looked at her half ; put a wide space between him- Hetty walked hastily across the short/self and Hetty. He would not go to the Hermitage sgain; he remembered how he had debated with himself there before dianer, and it had all come to nothing—worse than nothing, He walked right on into the Chase, glad to get out of the Grove, which surely was haunted by his evil genius, Those beeches and smooth limes—there was something enervating in the very sight of them; bat ing languor in them—the eight of them would give a man some energy. Arthur lost himself among the narrow openings in the fern, winding about without seeking to night under the great boughs, and the hare looked back as it darted across his path, He was feeling much more strongly than he had done in the morning ; it was as if his horse had wheeled reund froma leap, and dared to dispute hia mastery He was take her to his wondrous halls below a! dissatisfied with himself, irritated, morti- watery heaven. There was no knowing what would come since this strange en- trancing delight had come. If a chest full of lace, and satin, and jewels had been s-nt her from some unknown source, how could she but have thought that her whole lot was going to change, and that to-morrow some still more bewildering joy would befall her. Hetty had never read a novel; (if she had ever seen one, | think the words ;would have been too hard for her; how then conld she find a shape for her expecta- ;tions?) They were as formless as the sweet languid odors of the garden at the Chase, | veEn had floated past her as she walked WHSLESALE ANB RETAIL ! This is a bona fide Sale, as all Goods must be cleared out before the change is made in February. Call early and avoid the rush. by the gata. She is at another gate now—that leading into Fir-tree Grove. She enters the wood, where it is already twilight, and at every step she takes the fear of hr heart becomes colder. If he should not come! Oh, how dreary it was—the thought of going out at the other end of the wood, into the un sheltered rood without having seen him. She reaches the first turn toward the Hermitage, walking slowly—he is not there. She hates the leveret that runs across the path; she hates every thing that is not what she lonys for. She walks on, happy whenever she comes to a bend in the road, for perhaps he is behind it. No. She is beignning to cry; her heart has swelled so, the tears stand in her eyes; she gives one great sob, while the corners of her mouth quiver, and the tears roll down. She doesn’t know that there is another turning to the Hermitage, that she is close against it, and that Arthur Donnithorne is only a few yards from her, full of one thought, and a thought of which she is the only object. He is going to see Hetty again—that is the longing which has been growing through the jast three hours to a feverish thirst. Not, of course to speak in the caressing way in which he had un- guardedly fallen before dinner, but to set things right with her by a kindness which would have the air of friendly civility, and |prevent her from running away with the | wrong notions about their mutual relation, | Jf Hetty had known that he was there, | she would not have cried; and it would | have been better; for then Arthur would ‘perhaps have behaved as wisely as he had | intended. As it was, she started when he appeared at the end of the side alley, and looked up at him with two great drops rolling down her cheeks. What else could fied. He no sooner fixed his mind on the probable consequences of giving way to the emotions which had stelu over him to day—~o' continuing to notice Hetty. of allowing himself any opportunity for such slight caresses as he had been betrayed into already--than he refused to believe such a future possible for hrmeelf, To flirt with Hetty was a very different affair from flirting with a pretty girl of his own siation—that was unders’ood to be an amusement of both sides; or, if it became serions, there was no obstacle to marriage. But this little thing would be spoken ill of directly, if she hap- pened to be seen walking with him ; and | then those excellent people, the Poysers, to whoma gocd name was 8 priciens os of they had the beet blood in the land in their veins —he should hate himself if he should make a scandal of that sort, on the estate that was to be his own some day, and among tenants by whom he liked, above all, to be respected. He could no more believe that he should so fall in his own esteem than that he should break both his legs and go on crutches al) the rest of his life. He couldn’t imagine himself in that position —it was too odious, too unlike him. And, even if no one knew anythiog about it, they might get too fond of each other, and then there could be nothing but the misery of parting, after all. No gentleman, out of a ballad, could marry a farmer's niece. There must be an end to the whole thing at once. It was too foolish, And yet he had been so determined this morning before he went to Gawaine’s, and while he was there something had taken hold of him and made him gallop back. It seemed he couldn't quite depend on his own resolution, as he had thought he could; he almost wished his arm wonld get pain- ful again, and then he should think of nothing but the comfort it would be to get rid of the pain. There was no knowing what impulse might seize him to-morrow, in this confounded place, where there was nothing to occupy him imperiously through the livelung day. What could he do to secnre himself from any more of this folly } There was but one resource He would go and tell Irwine-—teil him every thing. That mere act of telling it would make it seem trivial, the temptation would vanish, 93 thecharm of fond words vanishes when one repeats them to the indifferent. In every way it would help him, to tell Irwine. | with a thorn in her foot ? be done but speak to her in a soft, soothing! He would ride to Broxton Rectory the first ‘tone, as if she were a bright-eyed spaniel | thing after breakfast to morrow, Arthur had no sooner come to this deter- ‘Has something frightened you, Hetty 7 ™in«tion than he began to think which of given a handsome pair of Vases ; $10.00 worth, two pairs of Vases will be given. Haye you seen anything in the wood ?, the paths would lead him home, avd made Don’t be frightened—I'll take care of you | #8 short a walk thither as he could. He now.’ | Hetty was blushing so, she didn’t know | whether she was happy or miserable. To | be crying again, what did gentl. men think ,of girls who cried in that way? She felt! felt sure he shovld sleep now ; he had had enough to tire him, and there was nu more need for him to think. (To be continued.) even unable to say no, but could only lock} Great Bancatys in Boots and Shore during from her theek. Not beforé & grea Me, 2 ET RS ome. ae, i 3g oe = 8s i th hae ee ee x ~ ei debian a ae £35> seo g qinbemer cae T4848 a A a i gai RONEICS bull ttl Yipacii tin cae ltg © enc: ine s¢ Meee