——e dite de® Sa Fates o ETE A A RO EER PE HTD. Ee ae. [aRMS Five Doutars A YEAR, ~NEW SERIES. - BRITISH WA W. ~ Have just opened a la the Xmas season, Dec. 9, 1881. De ee ee nee DECHIVM BHR ! “6 67? re ee ree haat rn RETOUSE, QUEEN SQUARE. 2 emeccemnene () ‘ oman & A. BROWN & CO. In their FANCY SOODS rge ass riment W. & A. BROWN & CO, et SL ee —— re PERKI Will during 1 Knit Weo! en his month, offer the Balance of their coeds, Hats, Bonnets, NEanties, Uisters and Fars, AT GREAT BARGAINS IN ORDER TO CLEAR. AN IMMENSE STOCK OF Staple and Fancy Dry Goods of livery Daesciption, at VERY On Monday, December 5th, we will open 7 cases of Fancy & oods, suitable for Christmas and New Year’s Presents, Charlottetown, Dec. 3, 1881. ee LT Readymade Some Expensive Ladies’ Cloth Manitles and Dolmans, and Fur Lined Cloaks, Sealettes and Colored Dress Geods. Qe. dm ba BRO BD TARA WO Tito aw. JUsT A Select Assortment of Flowers, Feathers, Velveteens, Ladies’ Sacques, &e., &c, Nov. 1, 1881. STOVEPIPE., STOVEPIPE. HE subscriber is now making an assort- ment of Stovepipe and Tinware, Best quality,which he is selling cheap for Cash, Timware and Stovepipe, all kinds, made to order, Specia! prices to wholesale dealers. Orders for titting up Stoves promptly and carefully attended to. Orders solicited. kin’s residence, Queen Street, a seek, BODB. Practical Tinsmith, Charlevstown Sept. 3), ’-1 -3m Vennor’s Predictions ! Big Storms Anticipated! | | Stovepipe. Stovepipe F you want your STOVES attended te, leave your orders with C. F. HARRIS. I SUarantee Promptnesss and a Boss Job, C. F. HARRIS, Upper Queen Street, Oct 28, '81] Removed. RS, W, W. IRVING begs to notify he | frieads and the public generally that) ahe bas opewed ber Fall and Winter Classes | for Painting and Drawing in all their different | “ For terms, etc,, apply at her Studio yo of Mr, Peebles, South Side of King Square. p: pau 29 tf 7 Clothing, AS I WANT TO CLOSE OUT MY STOCK IN THIS LINE. Shop opposite Dr. Jen- | ‘ Aes LOW PRICES, PERKINS & STERNS. as ne ee om T COST! Tweeds and Heavy Cloths, ee ee, eee eae OPENED AND MARKED LOW, RR. W. TREMAINE, 83 QUEEN STREET. Ee nee eee ee LOOK YOU HERE. GHirAD WINTER CLOTHING! ' —_AT— J. B. Macdonald’s, Queen Street. -——-s ee ere * i oe etl — ~- - CHARLOTPELOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, TUESD4Y. DEPARTMENT of Novelties and Paney Ware suitable for ~ _—s i ; ' | ‘Cera teny i FOR RAEUMATISN, feuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, | Backache, Soreness of tha Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swel!- | ings and Sprains, Burns and i Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tocth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and ali ether Pains and &ches. No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacons Or as a safe, sure, simple and cheap External ; Remedy. A trial entails but the comparatively ; trifing outlay of 60 Cents, and every one suffering | with pain can have cheap and positive proof of iw | ¢laims. i Directions in Bleven Languages, | 80LD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALLRE } IW MEDICINE, | A. VOGELER é& CO.. Baltimore, lfd., U. 8. A. FOR SALE OR TO LET. eee Valuable Frechold Property, situate of us would have felt it more profound on Sidney Street, and owned by the or keon. i heirs of the late M, W. Skinner, Esq., con- sisting of Dwelling, Stable and Coach House. oat Also, a VACANT LOT, suitable fora Gar-,Of sudden and unexpressed hostility, den, adjoining the above. rooms, fining Room, Parlor and Kitchen. The Sho Inspector of Weights and Measures. on the premises to ap29 ‘ MISS SKINNER. DECEMBER 13, The House contains 1 large Shop, 7 Bed- isnt “prevetit, occupied by the perhaps more than ence in your life, TO RENT! L. J. Williams. Apply to HORACE HASZARD. Aug. 25— OF ENGLAND. ‘CAPITAL - TO MILLIONS STERLING. Insurance effected on all kinds of Buildings, Merchandise and Produce, Also,on Vessels on the stocks, Special rates for isolated residences. All Loases settled promptly, GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), Ageut for Priuce Edward Island W. C. BISHOP, Sali eel IN ct ~—AND— FORWARDING /OENT, Marine Insurance Broker, —AD— General Comission Agent, 8§ BEDFGRD ROW, P. & BOX 1 HALIFAX, N. 8. Ju77] Men’s Warm Reefers $3.75, Men’s Warm Reefers $4.25, Men’s Warm Reefers $5.75, — Men’s Warm Reetfers, good, $6.50, Men’s Warm Reeters, good, $7.50, Men’s Warm Reefers, better _ 68°50, Men’s Warm Regyes, better. $9. 50, Meas Wrm Reefers, best, $10.00. Men’s Heavy Overcoat’s A Men’s Heavy Overcoats $5.25, Men’s Heavy Overcoats $6.50, Men’s Heavy Overcoats, good, $7.50, Men’s Heavy Overcoats, good, $8 50, Men’s Heavy Overcoats, extra, $10.00, Men’s Heavy Overcoats, extra, $12.00, Men’s Heavy Overecoats, extra, $14.00. 250 Men's Heavy Winter Ulsters, splendid value, 50 Boys’ asd Youths’ Ulsters, splendid value, 100 dozen Men’s Shirts and Drawers, 35 cents and upwards, Cheap Scarfs, Ties, Woolen Shirts, Braces, Mitts, Gloves, &c Clothing made to order from good and cheap Cloths, at J. B. MACDONALD’S. — = =p ~~ Nov. 22, ‘si—wkly, pat “BANK OF P. B, ISLAND, eS j ‘ For Sale or to Let. { ANK OF P, E. ISLAND NOTES taken ‘¥XHAT Freehold Property, with a front of | at their face for Goods or in payment of i eighty feet on Pownal Street aud eighty- | Bills, at four feet on Sydney Street, the House con- taiuing 16 large rooms and two Kitchene, | Can be turned into one Dwelling by unlock 4 ingn door. Apply on the premem* ‘ UBSCRIGE for the DAILY EXAMINER, MRS, BOSWALL |,’ Hee nen es and =m Newsy Faper Mareb 12, 1551—tf Poblsted im Provincts. BOREGAM’S BOOT STORE. Nov. 29—tt ARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks thereon. Helis, Cargoes, and Freights insured in first-class offices at most favorable rates. Consignments of Produce solicited, and prompt returns guaranteed. Correspondence solicited and answered prompily. . Noy. 14, 1881—lyr DR. JENKINS Has resumed practice at his residence, Queen Street Hours for consultation 9 to 11 a, m., and 7,30 to 9 p, m, No eertificates given except to patients. [no 8 wkly pat ex pres lm, 3aw LIBERAL ISCOUNT will be given to cash custom- ers in want of good-fitting SUITS or OVER: OATS. A splendid lot of Scotch and English Tweeds, Meltons, Pilots and Worsteds to select from, Not being very CONSERVATIVE we will cut and fit Ladies’ and Misses’ Uis- ters and Sacques, and MEETING. the wants of all, will manufacture the sam if required W N,. RiGGs, Tailor, Ost, 2), ’%!—eod B- ales’ orne HE place to got your Printiag doge is ay _ the BXAMINER PRINTING ROOMB, Shop & Dwelling House that while gazing upon the face of that N South Side Queen Square, the Store lity. Therein I have spoken wihout and [welling House lateiy occupied by thought; it was fully expressed by beth Queen Insurance Co'y his is trae Liberty, when Free-born Men having to advise the Public, may speak free.’’—Ueurerpss. 18st. a VAR-TRAIL THE | CHAPTER X. AN OLD ENMITY. } / SINGL x Copres Two CENTS, VOL. 10,---Ne ) 7 ae aoe 18, - a“ eee hac seabnaee ate noe we a nen eminent - re tee are tee silent the expression of his eyes puzzled «me. It was of frantic joy, and it be- came that face where I had never ob- served a smile. But the strange look was 6000 explained—it was not friend- ship, but the joy of anticipated yen- I rode slowly, and but a few paces be- geavce! Breaking ivto a wild launch he . S 2 \fore,eining up my horse. Although I shrieked out, ‘“ Rafael Ijurra, by the | was uuder the impression that it would eternal God!” ‘be useless remaining, and that an inter- ! | view with Isolina was impossible, for produced its effect. tiene : a Phis awful and emphatic recognition i saw that Ijurra ‘ that day at least, 1 could not divest my- knew the man who addressed him. His | Self of the desire to linger a little longer dark countenance turned suddenly pale, | near the spot Perhaps she might ap- and then became mottled with livie spots, | pear again upon the azotea; if but for a while his eyes sciutillated and rolled ‘moment; if but to wave her hand, and about in the unsteady glances of terror. waft me an adieu; if but . ‘7 y : When a short distance separated me | Demonio!” — from the walls, 1 drew up, and turning ily to escape him. He made no reply beyond the ejaculation :” which seemed involuntar- He appeared unable FF "ania « 0 - . in the saddle, glanced back to the para- to reply; surprise and fright held him pet. A face was there, where hers had SPéll-bound and speechless ! ‘heen; but oh, the contrast between her} lovely features and those that now met my gaze! Hyperion to the Satyr! ‘ Not that the face now before me was ugly or ill-featured. There are some, and women too, who would have term- _ed it handsome: to my eyes it was ‘hideous! Let me confess that its _hideousness, or more properly its cause, ‘rested in the moral, rather than the | physical expression ; perhaps, too, a little (of it might have been found in my own ‘heart. Under other circumstaaces, I imight not have eriticised that face so harshly. All the world did not think as | I about the face of Rafael Ijurra—tor it | was he who was gazing at me over the parapet. | Our eyes met; aud that first glance stamped the reiationship between us— ‘hostility for life! Net a word passed, and yet the looks of each told the other, ‘in the plainest language, ** I am your foe.” Had he sworn it in wild oaths, in i all the bitter hyperbole of insult, neither | I shall not stay to analyze this feeling ‘though the philosophy of it is simple enough, You too have experienced it— | without being exactly able to explain it. il am not in that dilemma: I could ex- ‘plain it easily enough; but it scarcely’ merits an explanation. Suffice to say, _man, [ entertained in it all its strength. | Ihave called it an unexpressed hosti ‘of us, though not in werds. Words are but weak symbols of « passion, compared } with the passion itself, exhibited in the ‘clenched hand, the lips compressed, the flashing eye, the clouded cheek, the quick play of the muscles—weak sym- ‘bol: are words compared with signs like ‘these. No words passed between Ijurra avd myself; none were needed. Each read in the other a rival—a rival in love a competitor for the heart of a lovely | woman, the loveliest in Mexico! It is ‘needless to say that, urder such an aspect, each hated the other at sight. In the face of Ijurra I read more. I /saw before me a man of bad heart and {brutal nature. His large, and te speak ** Traitor ! villain ! murderer!” shriek- ed Holingsworth, “* we've met at last; now fora squaring of our accounts!” and in the next instant the muzzle of his rifle was pointing to the notch iu the parapet—pointing to the face of Ijurra ! | TO BE CONTINUED. | oa Personal. Mr. Johu Dillon, M. P., is to be re- leased from prison. ; | Sir Evelyn Wood’s name is mentioned | for Governor of Natal. } | The national memorial statue to Daniel | O'Connell has been completed. It will be | erected in Sackville street, Dablin, Mr. Milner, of the ‘‘Chignecto Post,” has been appointed Collector of Customs at Sackville, inoom of the present collector, who is superanuated., Mr. Bliss, of the Customs Department, son of the late Rev. ©. P. Bliss, has been ordained at Kingston, Ont., a perpetual deacen under the canon passed at the last Proviveial Syned. It is said thisis the firat time this ceremony has been per- formed in the English Church for centuries past. In the close of his lecture on Ingersoll, Mr. George R Wendling says effectively : The most notorieus cutlaw known in the criminal annals of the West-—Frank Rande —stood a few. months ago at the bar of his cell in St. Louis, the very impcrsonateof every crime, and with the air ofa brag- gatt said to preachers, priests and police- men, to throngs of men and women—* I am a Bob Ingersoll man ’—and every man and woman in the land believed him !” The following is the reply which Prince Bismarck returned to an address tele- graphed to him by the Association of Ger- man students after the announcement of the result of eicctiona : “ I thank you most heartily tor your telegram. I am neither surprised ner discouraged by the Berlin elections. Chronic diseases require time and patients to effect a cure. Iam happy to find evidence in your address that the Association of Germau students is, like myself, animated by a firm confidence in the future.” Whatever he may feel, the Chancellor does not show any sign of diminished hope or resolution to carry his aims ultimately to accomplishment. Application will be made+to the Parlia- ment of the Domiiion of Canada, at its next $€8sieu, for an aet to incorperate a ithe truth, beautiful eyes, had in them an ‘animal expression. ‘They were not withgat | intelligence, but so much the worge, for | thatiutelligence expressed feronty and bad faith. His beauty was the beauty of the jaguar. He had the air of an accom- | plished man, ageustomed to conquest iu i the field of love — heartless, reckless, false. O mystery ot our nature, there are those vito love such men! In Ijurra’s face I read more: he knew my secret! ‘The significant glance of his eye told me so. He knew why I was lingering there. The satiric smile upon his lip attested it. He saw my efforts to obtain an interview, and, confident in his own positien, held my failure but lightly a something only toamuse him. I could tell all this by the sardonic sneer that sat upon his features. As we continued to gaze, neither mov- ing his eyes from the other. this sneer became too oppressive to be silently borne. I could no longer stand such a satirical reading of my thoughts. The insult was as marked as words could have made it; and [ was about to have re- course to words to reply, whe» the clatter of a horse’s hoots caused me to turn my eyes in an opposite direction. A horseman was coming up the hill, in a direct line with the pastures. I saw it was one of the lieutenants— Holingsworth. A few more stretches of his horse brought the lieutenant upon the ground where he pulled up directly in front of me. “Captain Warfield!” said he, speaking in an official tone, ‘‘the cattle are collect ed; shall we proceed”’ He proceeded no further with that sen- tence ; his eye, chance directed, was car- ried up to the azotea, aud rested upon the face of Ijurra. He started in his saddle, as if a serpent had stung him: his hollow eyes shot prominently ont glaring wildly from their sockets, while the muscles of his throat and jaws twitched in convulsive action! For « moment, the desperate passion seemed to company under the name of the ‘‘ Nova Scotia Railway Company, Limited,” with full powers to acquire wholly or in part, by purchase or otherwise, the existing lines of railway (excepting the Intercolonial Rail- way) whether finished or not, in Nova Scotia, or any ene or more ef them, and the appurtenances. 2%. The construction, completion, repair and equipment of exist- ng partially completed lines of railway im Nova Scotia. 3. The construction of a tine of railway in the Island of Cape Breton ind lines connecting with the Gevernment railway in the County of Pictou and the County of Halifax. 4. The establishment, maintenance and operation of ferries and steamboat service between Nova Scotia proper and the Island of Cape Breton, be- ween Prince Edward Island and Nova seotia, between New Brunswick and Nova scotia, and between Nova Scotia and the he United States of America. 5. The constriction, purchasing, leasing or hiring { steamboats, ferry boats, railways, coach- sand conveyances, and lines of telegraph in connection with said railways herein- efore mentioned, and the working and peration of the same for hire, 6. The caintenance and operation of all the lines of railway hereinbefore mentioned, whether iow constructed or hereafter to be con- structed. -“a--+ That the Chinaman ia capable of adopt- ‘ng our customs and civilization to the fullest extent is shown by the fact that a Chinese student at Marietta College, in Jhio, has committed suicide because a oretty servant girl at his boarding house re- fused to accept a queue with a man at- ached to it as ber lever, and so decidedly ‘ejected his addresses. ‘si ectihalihine It is understood that the Government save decided to ask Parliament to reduce che duty on unhulled rice seventeen and a half per cent., when imported directly from he rountry Of growth for the purpose es- ‘Sblishing rice mills in the Dominion and a 'rect trade between the East Indies and Canada. eee: With features heated and red, With head that throbs and aches, A woman stands in the kitchen, Turning buckwheat cakes. ieenennemiie The trial of Guiteau is character'ged “sg vaigar farce, not far removed from a ne strffe his breathing, avd while thas tional Uisgrave.”’ oe ACE ME or se me, is amma cae es = SO Bg ie aren MO SS TE I ENE PS ME PS IE rier >: Se a Se eee = oR = eee at 4 caiman esimnpens + map teal ae copeerente x eseeree 2 foe ees re ple poten ss inary i me — © a: amanagin ities med