i i al ee a ee age PERKINS & STERNS CerMs:-—kive DoLttars a YRAR. ‘ This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men having to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Evnxiriwes. SInGie Cortes Two CENTs. NEW SERIES. S AiT,! : shall JIG he. “T-: IEE py XY at, al YF Stock of Sell off my = (;oceries at CoO Parties wishing to get their GR@CERIES Cheap should call at once and leave their orders. GOOD TEA, 25, 30 and 33 cents ; CRACKERS, 4 ¢ RAISINS, 10 cents ; Cv ‘ MOLASSES, 47 cents ; ANTS, 8 cents. SUGAR, 8 centa. A large lot of CONFECTIONERY from 15 to 20 cents; lot CHRISTMAS GOODS, very c heap ; and sundry other articles too numerous to mention—all at cost for Cash only, W. A. HUTCHESO 109 Upper Queen Srreer it Dee. 16, 1881—3m eod, wkly BRITISH WAREHOUSE, QUEEN SQUARE. Se ()-——~ loses W. & A. BROWN & CO. In their FANCY GOODS DEPARTMENT Have just opened a large assortment of Novelties and Fancy Ware suitable for the Xmas season. : W. & A. BROWN & CO, Dec. 9, 1881. _— — ——- -—_- -- -— — ee —_—_—- a _—-— = ae ee ee DiC iM Bik | ao Will, during this month, offer the Balance of their Knit Weoil Goods, Elats, Bonnets, Maantles, Uisicrs and Furs, AT GREAT BARGAINS. IN ORDER TO ame Oh, ee ee IMMENSE STOCK OF CLEAR AN Staple and Fancy Dry Goods of Lvery Desciption, at VERY LOW PRICES, On Monday, December 5th, we will open 7 cases of Fancy ~ oods, suitable for Christmas and New Year’s Presents, PERKINS & STERNS. ; —— "7 barlotte town, Dec. 3, 1881. ————_ ee Se ——— =. : SS See ee ieeeanerton ee aI. Lh Dest! | Readymade Clothing, Tweeds and Heavy Cloths, AS I WANT TO CLOSE OUT MY STOCK IN THIS LINE. Some Expensive Ladies’ Cloth Mantles and Dolmans, and J 4 4 os ' : 1 me ur Lined Cloaks, Sealettes and Colored Dress Goods, AT A LARGE Beep oTtTON. JUST OPENED AND MARKED Low, A Select Assortment of Flowers, Feathers, Velveteens, Ladies Sacques, &¢, &e, ; R. W. TREMAINE, , 83 QUEEN STREET Nov. a 1881. ERE! | LIBERAL (Berring, Hersing. ISCOUNT will be given to cash satin | D ers in want of good-fitting SUITS or| 109 bbls. Extra Fat No. 1, equal to Yarmouth | | te ' OVER OATS, A splendid lot of Scotch and) jo ante atid NORTHERN ASSURANCE (0 English Tweeds, Meltons, Pilots and Worsteds| 99 -~— ao” 0 ? to select from, Not being very ’ 12 casks Cod Oil, 300 Mackerel Barris (good stock), moderate rates. office at promptly and liberally. Jw77] CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1881. . lL pe aoe ot by meee iD ; at Soe fF . : For REEUMATISN, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Cout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swe!!- ings and Sprains, Burns asd Sca/ds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and ali other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth equals Sr. Jacons O11 as a safe, sure, simple and cheap External Remedy A trial entails but the comparatively trifling outlay of 50 Cents, and every one suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of is “Piventions in Eleven Langueges. &0LD BY ALL DREUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE. A. VOGELER & C®., Baltimore, Md., U. 8. As CITIZENS’ INSURANCE CO., OF CANADA. |SIR HUGH ALLAN.........PRESIDENT. I, shaaitadin ninth conten aeenaiiiatosios $1,188,000 recklessly after, now breasting the thick- Deposited with Dominion Gov’t.... 142,00 Fire, Life, Accident and Guarantee. Risks taken in the above Company at (Farm Property and Isolated Dwellings a rpeciality.) Policies issued in Charlottetown. Losses settled A. 8. URQUHART, General Agent for P, E, I Ch’town. Dec 9, 188!—lia Credit Foncier ~ * ; ailin ' fing hit 3388 F r w nh C 0 - G w QO a a 1 én os The thio, 2 ad Capital, - - - $5,666,600 Sead President—Hon. E. Duclere,Senator, Paris. Vice-Pres.—Hon. J. A. Chapleau, Montreal. The Company will make long term loans with sinking fund, and short term loans with- out sinking fund, For particulars,apply at the office of Messrs. Sullivan & Morson, Solicitors, Charlottetown, W. W. SULLIVAN, Aug. 24, 1881. . W. C. BISHOP, adda, ee ee -~~AND— FORWARDING AGENT, Maring Insurance Broker, —AND— General Commission Agent, $0 BEDFORD ROW, P. O. BOX 1 HALIFAX, N, 8, ARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks thereon, Halls, Cargoes, and Freights insured in first-class oftices at most favorable rates. Consiguaments of Produce solicited, and | prompt returns guaranteed, Correspondence solicited and answered promptly. Nov. 14, 1881—lLyr Queen Insurance Co'y OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL - TWO MILLIONS STERLING. Merchandise and Produce, on the stocks, Special rates for isolated residences, All Losses settled promptly, GEORGE MACLEOD (Union Bank), "CONSERVATIVE 2 tsterh tre : d fit Ladies’ and Misses’ U]s-/_ Oa hand, a full supply of Cotton Duck,’ Capital, £3,000,000 stg. ae — cote apd é Bolt Rope, Hemp and Manilla Cordage, Lines | d 2 . ‘and Twines, Paints and Oils. 0 of p MEETING Every description of property insured at) a+ DAVID SMALL, Current rates, in town and country. the wants of all, will manufacture the sam 1 Moorgate Street, Londow. oo Queen’s Wharf, Sept. 10, 1881, N. | if required ) 'BSCRIBE for the DAILY EXAMINER PRED. is | a W. N. RIGGS, Tailor, is the Cheapest and most Newsy Paper Cb'town Remas h ory so i; | Oct, 21, 131 —eod Beales? Corper abl.ehed i> the Provinces, ’ os « TO RENT! N South Side Queen Square, the Store and Dwelling House lately occupied by L. J. Williems. Apply to HORACE HASAARD, Aug, 25—~ Insurance effected on all kinds of Buildings, Also, on Vessels Ageut for Priuce Edward Island, Shop & Dwelling House TH WAR-TRALL | CHAPTER XVII. THE HUNT OF THE WiLD HORSE. My gallant horse soon gave proof of his superior qualities One} after another of my companions was|my bridle arm: I ee ; over the horn of my saddle ; jfast tc a ring and staple firmly riveted i Yes; and all as it VOL, 10,---NO. 33, \desperate ride. Now, brave | another stretch, and you shall have rest! I look to my lazo; it Moro, hangs coiled one end is in the tree-wood. free. It is. The Is the loop clear and coil—is it straight? a. } hould be, [lift @ : a aa hee ift the coli, and rest it lightly over separate the noose, passed; and as we cleared tue avenuefand hold it in my right havd 1 am and entered a second prairie, I found} myself mixing with the hindmest of the wild mares. Pretty creatures some of them were; and upon any other occa- sion, I should have been tempted to fling a lazo over one of them, which I might easily have dove. Then I only thought of getting them out of the way, as they were hindering my onward gallop. Be- fore we had quite crossed the second prairie, I had forged isto the front rank, | and the mares, seeing | had headed, them, broke to the right and left, and} scattered away. All were now behind me, all but the white steed; he alone kept the course, at iutervals uttering the same shrill neigh, as if to tan- talize and lure me on. He was yet far in advance, aud apparently runuing at his ease | | The borse | bestrode needed neither ‘spur nor guidance; he saw before him the object of the chase, and he divined the wiil of his rider. I felt him ‘rising under me like a sea-wave. His | hoofs struck the turf without impinging ‘upon it. At each fresh spring, he came ,up with elastic rebound, while the flanks heaved with the conscious possession of | power. | Before the second prairie was crossed, ihe had gained considerably upon the | White steed ; but to my chagrin, I now isaw the latter dash right into the thicket, I fouud a path, and followed. My ear served io guide me, for the branches crackled as the wild horse broke througb. | Now and then I caught glimpses of his |white body, glancing among the green leaves. Apprehensive of losing him, I rode et, now tracing its labyrinthine aisles. [ jheeded not the thorny mimosas; my | my horse heeded them not ; but large ‘trees of the false acacia (robinia) stood} thickly in the way, and their horizontal branches hindered me. Often was | obliged to bend flat to the saddle, in order to pass under them, All this was in favor of the pursued, and against the | pursuer. I longed for the open prairie, and jto my relief it at length appeared. ipot yet quite treeless, but studded with timber “islands.” Amid these the white gained |ground, and was now a long way iu ad- vance of me. He was making for tie oo plain that lay beyond, and this! ishowed that it was habit to trust to his| ‘heels for safety. Perhaps, with such a'| ;pursuer, he would have been safer ‘o| have kept the chapparal; but that re- mained to be seen. In ten minutes’ time, we had pasaed ‘through the timber isla: ds, and now the {prairie—the grand, limitless prairie— stretched before us, far beyond the reach of vision. On goes the chase over its grassy level —on till the trees are no longer behind us, and the eye sees nought but the green isavannagh, and the blue canopy archiug over it—on, across the ceutre of that vast circle, which has for its boundary the whole horizon! The rangers, lost in the mazes of the chapperal, have long since fallen off; the mustangs have gone back; on all that wide plain, but two objects appear—the snow-white form of the flying steed, and the dark horseman that follows ! It is a long wild ride, a cruel gallop for my matchless Moro. Teun miles of the prairie have we passed—more thay that—and as yet I have neither used whip nor spur. The brave steed needs no such prompting ; he, too, has his in- ‘terest in the chase—the ambition not to be outrun. My motive is different; I think only of the smiles of a woman ; but such motives ere now has led to the loss of a crown or the conquest of a world. On, Moro! on! you must overtake him or die! There is no longer an obstacle. He cannot hide from us here. The plain. with its sward of short grass, is level and smooth as the sleeping ocean ; not an ob- ject intrudes upon the sight. He cannot couceal himself anywhere. There is sti!l an hour of sunlight; he cannot hid: from us in the darkuess; ere that comes down, he shall be our captive. On, Moro! on ! Ou we glideiu silence. The steed has ceased to utter his taunting teigh; he has lost confidence in his speed; he now runs in dread. Never before had he been so sorely pressed. He runs in silence, and so too, his pursuer. Not a i sound is heard but a sound of the gal- loping hoofs—an impressive silence, that betokens the earnestness of the chase. Less than two hundred yards separate us; I feel certain of victory. A touch of the spur would now bring Moro within ready- God of Heaven! thi It was a wild drawn from me by no common cause. In arranging my lazo, I had takeu my eyes from the chase, only fora moment : I looked out again, the h peared / With a mechanical movement I! drew bridle, almost wrenching my borse upon his haunches; indeed, the, animal had half halted of his own accord, and with a low whimper seemed to express terror. What could it mean ® Where was the wild horse ? I wheeled round, and round again, scanning the prairie on every side— though a single glance might have cerv- ed. The plain, as already deseribed, was level asa table; the horizon bound- ed the view; there was neither rock nor tree, nor bush nor weeds, vor even loug grass. The sward was of the kind known upon the prairies as ‘* butfalo-grass” (Sesleria dactyloides), short when full grown, but then rising scarcely two inches above the soil. A serpent could hardly have found concealment under it, bat a horse Merciful heaven! where was the steed ? An indefinable feeling of awe crept over me: I trembled; I felt my horse trembling between my thighs. He was covered with foam acd sweat; so was I —the effects of the hard ride: but the cold perspiration of terror was fast com- ing upon me. The mystery was heavy and appalling ! s ster d Ff exclamation, but it was when rse had disap- TO BE CONTINUED, aie AT ———_——_ aa TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. New Yorn, Dec 29. The match game of billiards, 600 points, cushion carron, for $50 a side and yate money, between Wm. Sexton and Jacob Schaefer, was won by Sexton, by 24 points. Ponrriann, Me, Dec. 29. The British barque ‘‘Fiora,” arrived in port to-day having on board the crew of the British, barque ‘‘Margaret Boyd,” aban- doned at sea November 27th, full of water, dismasted and with deck burst up. The disaster occnred five days before they were taken off, and they experienced mnch hard- ship. The barque was bound from Mira- michi, N. B., the Irving, Scotland. WasHInoron, Dee. 29. Mr. Brewster, the newly appointed Attorney General, in a letter to Gew. Bliss, epecial Attorney in the “Star Route” curses, ssys:—**These prosecutions must be ea nestly pressod. Trials must be prompt and cases well prepared. The uttermost penny lawlessly received and taken from the pub- lic treasury must be recovered. I have resolved my duty will require me to take an active part in the triala in court, and | pro- pose +> be present with you, and in persoa lead in the prosecution for the United States.” Busron, Dec. 29. The London police arrested, between the towns of Millstreet and Mucrain, Coun- ty Cork, a man named Conneil, on a charye of having arms in a prociaimed district A number of loaded revolvers were found in his possession. It is believed that he is the leader of a gang whe have been com mitting outrages in the district of Mii! Street during the past year. Among the documents found in his possession was one containing a list of pereons upon whom eut- rages were to be committed. The polix e found a large quantity of rifles, bayonets and cartridges in a vault of the Protestant Church at Kilkishen, County Clare. Kavunpb Oak, Ga., Dec. 29. A young farmer, named Gray, having in- terfered with a nevro dance on Monday night, was fatally stabbed by three neyro brothers. Gray fired into the brothers, killing all three. tee At the annual meeting of the St. Eleanor’s Farmers’ Club, held on Wednes- day, the 21st inst., the Directors gave their annual report for the past year, after which the President and Directors re- ceived a unanimous vote of thanks for the satisfactory manner in which they per- formed the business of the Ciuh, and also for giving their valuable time and atten- tion, The members then proceeded with the election of officers for the ensuing year. A long discussion followed con- cerning the future business of the Ciub, and the necessity of farmer's producing and sending better prepared produce to niarket. The Club intend having monthly meetings all throngh the winter, at which they will discuss some of the most important sub- jects on farming. The subject for disens- sion at the next meeting is, which is the mest profitable method of sowing grain.— Com. to. Pioneer. i es Ow Tuesday last, a meeting of the Moncton Cotton Manufacturing Co.,was held, and the fo' lowing Directors were clected:—John L. Harris, President ; John A Humphrey, Vice- President ; John M.Kenzie, Secretary; ad W. J. Robinson, Treasurer; C. P. Harris, Josiah Ward, C. P. Record, W. J Robinson, G M. Chandler The Company has a cap 'tal of $100,000, and has every prospect of enecesy, General Garibaldi is going to Paris, with the object of endeavouring to reconcile the range; it is time to put au end to this difference between the French and Italians