i SINGLE Fars Away THE DAILY EXAMINER. r [TerMs :—Five DoLtuars A YRAR. NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. Che Daiip Examiner —a a — 8 ; so oh am : es & : ooh) I i Every Eveni ” Ape Fe S is s issued Every Evening by ot PS we | axa a a Maw The Examiner Publishing Co., FROM THEIR OFFICE, ~|\]--—--—-—- ti LB 7 : QD oY RT ° e . LONDON HOUSE, QUEEN SQUARE, r ADDITION to the decided Bargains offered by us in PAR- Charlottetown, P. E. LOR and CHAMBER SUITES of our own manufacture . . . . . ? ——-~ we have secured some immense Bargains in lines of Imported RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Goods, and invite the public to investigate. Oe HN . Sc ecvnue due oes en tay dues: $2 50 TS BOR ns ob kdb we bbe cedaneces 1 23 ee ee a PICTURE MOULDINGS.--Our stock takes the lead in or Advatising 0b math tentenete vile. quality and price, new patterns, best makes. Island. Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- terly, half-yearly or yearly advertisements on application. ALMANAC POR NOVEMBER, 1688. MOON'S CHANGES, OIL PAINTINGS.-—150 just received from the studio of a famous art gatherer of Chicago. ‘These Paintings are all works MATTRESSES. We have just received a carload faom the largest Bedding House in Canada. Hair Mattresses, $9.00 each ; Flock Mattresses, $3 50; Fibre, Wool,;Moss, Sea Grass and Straw Mattresses at corresponding low prices. New Moon, 3rd day, 7h, 49.9m. a. m., S8.E. First Quarter, 10th day, 0h., 3.3m., p.m., E., (below horizon. ) Full Moon, 18th day, Ilh., 3.4m., a. m., N., (below horizon. ) Last Quarter, 26th day, 1h.,5.0m., p.in., W. SPRING BEDS. The Dominion Wire, the best Bed in the Di Sun Sun | Moon High Day’s + . . i world. Each Bed warranted for five years. WEE! i : sajPA* wy “\rises|sets | rises |water| len’h h mih mimorniattr’n' h m' peda” | ani 301 4 301 9 41| Gr WOVEN WIRE BEDS, adjustable, only $3.00 each. This: 3 Saturday | 50; 385581025 48 Mattress is sold all over the Dominion for $5.00 each. 4 Sunday 51| 36) 7 17\11 7 45 i 5\Momday | 53) 35, 8 37/11 51) 42 ge as : e 7] S| oatey , SS ee RATTAN and R#*ED CHAIRS, CHILDRENS’ CHAIRS, | 2 day | 56] 33)10 59] 035) 37 yy . 4 siThursday | 37| 3111 Sei 1 23, 434 New Patterns and Nice Designs. | 9 Friday 58; 29 aft 43) 216) 31 10 Saturda 7 OF BLS s id} 8 " lise” «| (ol) ia ee 25) 26; KITCHEN CHAIRS, 40 cents each and upwards. 12) Monday |} 3] 26) 290) 5 43). 23) 13 Tuesday 14! Wednesday 15; Thursday ~~ 4) 25) 2441653) 21) ; . 6; 2413 71750] 18 Our Stock is large and our Prices are low. 7) 22; 3 29) 8 #4 15:5 @ ¢ ne " : afore } 16| Friday s| 21 352913; 13/22 dollars and cents to call on us before buying. 17| Saturday 10} 20) 4 18) 9 49) 10} | | It will pay you | | 18) Sunday 11} 19) 4 46/10 23) 8 | ———— (0) _ 19 Monday 13} 19) 5 18)10 59) 6) 20, Tuesday 14) 18) 5 56/11 29) 4) 21 Wednesday 16; 17| 6 43\aft 5) | n> a’ THN &, 17} 16) 7 32) 0 41) 8 59) : Be 6 tyy ata | ie Sa! 22 Thursday 23' Friday 18| 15) 831i 120} 87 24 Saturday 20) 14,9 33 | 2 2) 54 | Charlotteto wn, Nov. 21, 1888—2aw & wky 25| Sunday | 2t; 13420 39) 251; 52 . : . : 26, Monday | 23) 13%) 48) 3 49) 50 27| Tues lay | 24; i2’morn!| 5 0 48 | 6 28)| Wednesday | & ll O oS) 6 19) 47 : 4 ; ed . 29 Tharsday | 26h 11) 211) 7 28) 45 eA. 30/Friday \7 28/4 10) 3 x 8 * 8 43 a fe i | ‘ B WONTON STEAMLRN. Ahead ! [x] T IS A FiRST-RATE PLACE TO BE, and as we undoubt- edly possess the ability to keep ahead, we can afford to lend a helping hand to our numerous struggling c»mpetitors. As é ’ ‘ i Carroll’ & ‘Worcester, | we have attained to the proud position we now enjoy as leaders $4.00. a in our art, through years of toil and hard work, we would say EXCURSION TICKETS, ‘to our competitors, DON’T BE DISCOURAGED. Step by step, if you persevere, perchance may find you approaching our pre- ‘sent standard. BUT REMEMBER! you will not find us ‘there. Perfecti n is our Standard, and nothing short of that will satisfy our ambition to present a faultless garment upon a faultless gentleman. To supplement our own natural skill, we employ artists, ‘who acknowledge no superiors in the Dominion of Canada. SA LO BRIDOR, & L. BURR| 0US equipped with superior heads and unequalled hands, and \Goods of the finest quality, we feel safe in saying that we are WHEAT, BRIDGE & BURR, prepared to fill the bill every time. Receivers and — mae’ McoLE0D & McKENZIE, POTATOES, EGGS, star Merchant Tailors. Butter, Cheese, Poultry, Game, &c. | Charlottetown, October 2, 1833. —: fF | | ; z [x] —— _By— ~—GOOD FOR— BALANCE OF SEASON $6.00. CARVELL BROS., AGENTS. octl6— oe ee ee we eee Consignments of EGGS and POTATOES soli- cited and liberal advances made. tf ; 44 & 46 COMMERCIAL STREET, BOSTON, MASS. . Boston Chamber of Commerce Weekly Official Market Report sent to any firm on application, sept28—wky 3m dy law jawes AcMonumox. Oxonoe wosomave The Pulse and Heart Beat of Healthy Business. MORRISON & MUSGRAVE, —_ CTING upon this conviction, B. 8. DAVIES & CO. have im- BROKERS orted two splendid Tailors from the “Land of the —AND— 'Heather,” and having now at the head of their CUSTOM ‘TAILORING DEPARTMENT, Charlottetown’s efficient and Commission Merchants, popular Cutter, MR SYLVANUS KEITH, are now prepared to HALIFAX ‘make the most fashionable and nicely made garments that can ‘be turned out in this city. Cousignments of Island produce will receive | Our Stock of Cloths, in Scotch, West of England and French $ i . . S2@ - ° ° prompt attention. ‘manufacturings, in Suitings, Overcoatings and Trouserings and Reverences ; Thomas Fyshe, Esq., Cashier ae a ”"Holifax ; George Mens’ Furnishings, are unsurpassed, and equal to any to be Bank of Nova Seotia, Q : : Macleod, Manager Bank of Nova Scotia’ own in this city. Our Importations were completed last week, Charlottetown. = ex “Nova Scotian.” : WARREN & JONES, | We carry everything to be found in a First-Class Mens raya) 7 a‘ss Outfitting Establishment. rh. ee ma We import direct and buy from the leading poors - Loxpow, ENGLAND. ‘Coutinent, which enables us to place our goods at lowest possib : Representel in Canada by Moxeisox & prices, and guarantee to our patrons value unsurpassed by any Muscrave, Halifax first class house in the trade. Oot 74. te0e7 may be founda or 2 PER file at Geo. F , 2 2 g RowFtL & Co's | Beauty is desired and admired by all. Among the things which may best be done to enhance personal beauty is the daily use of Ayer’s Hair | Vigor. No matter what the color of the hair, this prepa- “~~ ration gives it a lus- tre and pliancy that adds greatly to its charm. Should the / hair be thin, harsh, dry, er turning gray, Ayer’s Hair Vigor will restore the color, bring out a new growth, and render the old soft and shiny. For keeping the scalp clean, cool, and | } of art, and will bear inspection. healthy, there is no better preparation in the market. “T am free to confess that a trial of Ayer’s Hair Vigor has convinced me that it is a genuine article. Its use has not only caused the hair of my wife and daughter to be Abundant and Glossy, but it has given my rather stunted mus- tache a respectable length and appear- ance.’’—R. Britton, Oakland, Ohio. “My hair was coming ont ({ without | any assistance from my wife, either). I tried Ayer’s Hair Vigor, using only one bottle, and I now have as fine a head of hair as any one could wish for.”’ —R. T. Schmittou, Dickson, Tenn. ‘‘Thave used Ayer’s Hair Vigor in my family for a number of years, and re- gard it as the best hair preparation I know of. It keeps the scalp clean, the hair soft and lively, and preserves the original color. My wife has used it for a long time with most satisfactory re- sults,’”’— Benjamin M. Johnson, M. D., Themas Hill, Mo. ° ** My hair was becoming harsh and dry, but after using half a bottle of Ayer’s Hair Vigor it grew black and glossy. I cannot express the joy and gratitude I feel.’’— Mabel C. Hardy, Delavan, Ill. 9 2 a Ayer’s Hair Vigor, PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by Druggists and Perfumers. D. A. MACKINNON, LL. 8., Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Commis- sioner of Deeds, Wills, &c., GEORGETOWN, - - P. E. ISLAND. MONEY TO LOAN. novl3—3m dy law wky eod RELIABLE nov20 THE PRICE OF GAS, A T a meeting of the Directors of the Char- lottetown Gas Light Co., held at their office this morning, the following resolution was unanimously adopted :— Resolvcd,—Tnat the net price of Gas to con- sumers ve reituced to Two Dollars and Fifty Cents per Thousand Feet, on and after the firs! day otf December next, and that no discount be allowed thereafter on the paysient of Gas accounts, “a DANIEL DAVIES, President. Ch’town, Nov. 17, 1888—pat he: guar FOR SALE. 50) Loads KINDLING WOOD, ) 200 Loads SEAWEED, -e°”06U™ PRA Appl; to JOSEPH MAHAR, Cumberland Street, USTED VITALITY. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE, the great Medical Work of the Age on Manhood, Ner- vous and Physicial Debility, Premature Decline, Errors of Youth, and the untold miseries consequent thereon, 300 pages, 8 vo., 125 pre- scriptions for all diseases. Cloth, fuli gilt, only $1.00, by mail, sealed, Illustrative sample free to all young and middle-aged men. Send now. ‘The Gold and Jewelled Medai awarded to the author by the National Medical Association. Address P. O. Box 1895, Boston, Mass., or DR. W. H. PAR- KER, graduate of Harvard Medical College, novl2—Iw EXH! aor ViES & CeO DA By e § 25 years’ practice in Boston, who may be con- sulted confidentially. Specialty, Diseases of Man. Office, No. 4 Bultinch Street. cevele tical: Bir WAM CAMERON BLOCK. | ang Sgaireeta ay EY YORK Charlottetown, October 25, 1883. jul3—iyr eod & wky * This is true Liberty, When Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxiripes. SIncLE Copiers Tw Crnts ISLAND, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1888. VOL. 24.—NO. 3. THE FAIR GOD. CHAPTER XIIL. ( Continued. ) The king watched the holy man until he dis- appeared in the crowded passage; then a deadly paleness overspread his face, and he sunk almost to the platform. The nobles rushed around, and bore him to his palanguin, their brave souls astonished that the warrior and priest and mighty monarch could be so over- come. They carried him to his palace, and left him to a solitude full of .unkingly super- stitions, Guatamozin, serene amid the confusion, called the tamanes and ordered the old Othmi and the dead removed. The Tezcucan still breathed. ‘**The reviler of the gods shall be cared for,” ha said to himself, ‘‘If he lives, their justice will convict him.” Before the setting of the sun, the structure in the tianguez was taken down and restored to the temples, never again to be used. Yet the market-place remained deserted and vacant; the whole city seemed plague-stricken. Aud the common terror was not without cause, any more than Mualox was without in- spiration. That night the ships of Cortes, eleven in number, and freighted with the ma- terials of conquest, from the east of Yucatan, came sweeping down the bay of Campeachy. Next morning they sailed up the Rio de Tabasco, beautiful with its pure water and its banks fringed with mangroves. ‘Tecetl had described the fleet, the sails of which from afar looked like clouds, while they did, in- deed, whiten the sea. Next evening a courier sped hotly over the causeway and up the street, stopping at the gate of the royal palace. He was taken be- tore the king, and shortly after, it went flying over the city how Quetzal had arrived, in canoes larger than temples, wafted by clouds, and full of thunder and lightning. Then sank the monarch’s heart; and, though the Spaniard knew it not, his marvellous conquest was half completed before his iron shoe smote the shore of San Juan de Ulloa. BOOK TWO. CHAPTEB IL. WHO ARE THE STRANGERS? March passed and April came, and still the strangers, in their great canoes, lingered on the coast. Montezuma observed them with becoming prudence; through his look-outs he was informed of their pregress ;from the time they left the Rio de Tobasco, The constant anxiety to which he was sub- jected affected his temper; and, though roused from the torpor into which he had been plunged by the visit to the go!den chamber, and the subsequent prophecy of Mualox, his melancholy was a thing of common observa- tion. He renounced his ordinary amusements even totologue, and went no more to the hunt- ing grounds on the shore of the lake; in pre- ference, the took long walks in the gardens, and reciiwed ia-the audience-chamber of his palace; yet more remarkable, conversatiory with his councillors and nobles delighted him more than the dances of his women or the songs of his minstrels. In truth, the monarch was himself a victim of the delusions he had perfected for his people. Polytheism had come to him with the Empire ; but he enlarg- ed upon it, and covered it with dogmas ; and so earnestly, through a long and glorious reign, had he preached them, that, at last, he had become his own most zealous convert. In all his dominions, there was not one whom faith more inclined to absolute fear of Quetzal’ than himself. Une evening he passed from his bath to the dining-hail for the last meal of the day. In- vigorated, and, as was his custom, attired for the fourth time since morning in fresh gar- ments, he walked briskly, and evendroned a song. No monarch in Europe fared more sumpt- uous!y than Montezuma. The room devoted to the purpose was spacious, and, on this occasion, brilliantly lighted. The floor was spread with figured matting, and the walls hung with beautiful tapestry; and in the | centre of the apartment a luxurious couch | had been rolled for him, it being his habit to eat reclining ; while, to hide him from the curious, a screen had been contrived, and set up between the couch and principal door, The viands set down by his steward as the} substantials of the first course were arranged | upon the floor before the couch, and kept) warm and smoking by chafing-dishes. The} table, if such it may be called, was supplied | by contributions from the provinces, and fur- | nished, in fact, no contemptible proof of his} authority, and the perfection with which it was exercised. The ware was of the finest | Cholulan manufacture, and, like his clothes, | never used by him but the once, a royal cus-) tom requiring him to present it to his triends. | When he entered the ing I have mentioned, there were present only his steward, four or five aged councillors, with whom he was accustomed to address as ‘‘uncles,” and a couple of women, who occu- pied themselves in preparing certain wafers and confections which he particulary atfected. He stretched himself comfortably upon the couch, much, I presume, after the style of the Romans, and at once began the meal. The ancients moved back several! steps, and a score of boys, noble, yet clad in the inevitable nequen, responding to a bell came in and post- ed themselves to answer his requests. Sometimes, by invitation, the councillors were permitted to share the feast; oftener, however, the only object of their presence was to afford him the gratifi- cation of remark. The conversation was usually irregular, and hushed and renewed as he prompted, and not unfrequently ex- tended to the gravest political and religious subject. On the evening in question he spoke to them kindly. ‘«] feel better this evening, uncles. My good star is rising above the mists that have clouded it. We ought not to complain of what we cannot help; still, I have thought that when the gods retained the power to afflict us with sorrows, they should have given us some power to corret them.” “ail One of the old men answered reverentially, “A king should be too great for sorrows; he should wear his crown against them as we wear our mantles against the cold winds.” ‘*A good idea,” said the monarch, smiling ; ‘but you forget that the crown, instead of protecting, is itself the trouble, Come nearer, uncles ; there is a matter mere serious about which I would hear your minds.” They obeyed him, and he went on. ‘* The last courier brought me word that the strangers were yet on the coast, hove: ing about the islands. Tell me, who say you they are, and whence do they come?” Ssieesnentbsissineasieeadinencees soe -oaeeeeeeee ‘* How may we know more than our’ wise master ?” said one of them. ‘*And our thoughts—do we not borrow them from you, O king?” added another. — * What! Call you those answers? Nay, uncles, my fools can better serve me; if they cannot instruct, they can at least amuse,” The king spoke bitterly, and looking at one, probably the oldest of them all, said: “*Uncle, you are the poorest courtier, but you are discreet and honest. I want opinions that have in them more wisdom than flattery. Speak to me truly: who are these strangers ?” **For your sake, O my good king, I wish I were wise; for the trouble they have given my pose understanding is indeed very great. I lieve them to be gods, landed from the Sun.” And the old man went on to fortify his belief with arguments. In the excited state of his fancy, it was easy for him to con- vert the cannon of the Spaniards into engines of thunder and lightning, and transform their horses into creatures of Mictlan, mightier than men. Right summarily he also conciud- ed that none bat gods could traverse the do- minions of Haloc, (god of the sea), subjecting tne variant winds to their will. Finaily, to prove the strangers irresistible, he referred to the battle of Tabasco, then lately fought be- tween Cortes and the Indians. Montezuma heard him in silence, and re- plied, ‘‘ Not badly given, uncle; your friends may profit by your example; but you have not talked as a warrior. You have forgotten that we, too, have beaten the lazy Tabascans. That reference proves as much for my caciques as for your gods.” (To be continued, ) Words Not to Use. The following, which we clip from the Chicago Mail, condenses into small com- pass a large number of solecisms, most of which are in too common use amongst ourselves. One ortwoof the condemned expressions may, perhaps, be defended on the ground of good usage, viz: ‘‘ I had rather” is found in King James’ translation of the Bible, in Shakespeare, etc, ‘* as soon,” in the sense of *‘ aslief,” is used by Addison and others. But even these are connemned by most authorities and probably bythe best modern usage, while the great majority of the expressions taboo- ed are indefensible. Would it be unchari- table to hint that the teacher may, in some cases, find himself committed, if he at- tempts the reform indicated, to « double task, first that of connecting his own speech, secondly, that of his pupils ? Cute, for acute. Party, for person. Depot, for station. Promise, for assure. Posted, for informed. Stopping, for staying. Like I do, for as I do. Feel badly, tor feel bad. |. First-rate, as an adverb. Healthy, for nn Try and do, for try to do. : ae These kind, for this kind. Cunning, for small, daintily. Funny, for odd or unusual. Guess, for suppose, think. Fix, for arrange or prepare. Just as svon, for just as lief. Had rather, for would better. * ~ Right away, for immediately. Between seven, for among seven, Not as good as, for not so good as. Some ten days, for about ten days. The matter of, for the matter with. Not as I know, for not that I know. Somebody else’s for somebody’s else. Kind of, to indicate a moderate degree. Storms, for it rains or snows moderate- ly. Above, for foregoing, more than, or be- yond. Try an experiment, for make an experi- ment. More than you think for, for more than you think. Nice, indiscriminately. (Real nice may be doubly faulty.) Real, as an adverb, in expressions, real good, for really or very good. Singular subject with contracted plural verb viz: ‘* She don’t skate weil. Taste and smell of, when used transitive- ly. Iustration : We taste a dish which tastes of pepper. Some or any, in an adverbial sense, viz : ‘** T have studied some,” for somewhat. ‘‘I have not studied any,” for at all. — — 920+ November Clothing. room, the even-! mone Dr. Wm. F. Hutchinson, says in The Ameri- can Mayazine for November ; Proper clothing for November includes soft, firm woolen texturhs near the skin. If some of the various varieties of winter wear can- not be obtained, a good substitute may be found in vests and pants made of pure flannel. Looseness of fit is essential ; for in such pliable folds as these garments are forced by pressure of outer garb, body heat is entangled as in a net and retained, while outside cold is barred entrance. My patients often say tome, ‘‘Doc- tor, I cannot bear wool next my skin. It causes intolerable itching and is uncomfort- able.” ‘* Very well,” is the answer ‘‘but try it just for twenty-four hours longer; and ‘if you are still restless you may change.” Inside the given time, cutaneous nerves have been accustomed to the new-comer, and have welcomed him as a far better friend than the one set aside ; and in a week the most delicate patient would not change back at all. teside additional “warmth, there is an elec- trical action aroused by the friction of wool against human “skin that promotes capillary circulation, keeps skin functions going, end largely contributes to general health in that singular way which I have named for want of better term, vitalizing power. For electricity is close kin to life ; how near, no one can tell. ~~ + Eczema. Itchy, Sealy, Skin Ter- tures. The simple application of Swayne’s O1nt- MENT, without any internal medicine, will cure any cise of Tetter, Salt Rheum, RK ng- worm, Piles, Itch, Sores, Pimples, Eczema, all Sealy, Itchy Skin Eruptions, no matter how vbs‘inste or long ——— It is potent, effective, and costs but a trifle. oet]2 6m dw —— +e Far Goods, al! kinds, good and cheap, at Stauley Bros., Brown’s Block. nov2l 3i * wre oe 0 a 7 Ld Pit ior Ses emae r tt e sally - ? yan f: