Edited Text
|
POETRY.
Se ee
TIRED
â a
O for wings, that I might soar
A little way above
A little way beyond the roarâ
A little nearer to the sky
To the blue hills, lifted high
Where alone is beard the lark,
" STi e infinite arc
Where the the callow eagieis wink
On the bare and breezy brink
Aad siow pinivns rise and sink
Where the dim white breaker beat,
Under cloud drifts at our feet
ng, Singing, iow and swee
{
Where we see the glimmering bay
Gravely melting far away, '
On the contines of the day.
the charity of their good neighbors
degrees, as Bertha grew
| active, clever at her spinning wheel and her
breviary, industrious In
land tenderly careful of all the necessities o!
for then
the days were short and very dark in that
' narrow street, and old Fispeth could scarce
vo knit or spin Sometimes, t wher
i the
i the Rhine was partially frozon, and the |
}in the great old well near the Hauptkirct
had to be broken with an axe, her linge
stiffened with the cold, so that she cc uld not
use them, aithough the litt was crying
at her knees tor food and warmth Those
were fearful times for the Frau Elspeth; but
there was a watchful Providence which never
| suffered her to be utterly overborne: and by
|
up kind, eheerfu
household matters
Âą
smed s
her aged grandmother, things assum al
mfort once more
little
aspect for the better, and «
their
excell
fireside
t, kind
dawn upon
trutl
began to
Bertha an
was, in
| hearted, pious little soul, and as merry as a
Where the green larch fringes swee} bird. See her when you would, whether at
. a nal «
Rocky ies, 3t ana } | asa in the early morning, bending her fair
Where the tender â : " } ad over her t xk, and cast y her bl!
ueau yer â ' , BU a
* | . ° } â
Where the gentian blossoms blow eyes meekly down upon her rosary; whet
n ÂąâŹY i \ | { Ww i , tine
no yee) Maree Seow a | spinning or knitting with busy lingers
coin ite outside her grandmother's door, on a sum
Tot ns ly w leas mers evening ; whether chatting gaily to th
â wean 0? nah the trees ! i smote lietaning t} if
. g,. twickling e igh th neighbors, or demurely listening, with hall
ure as from celestial Seas
Where the face of heaven has smiled
Ave <Âą m, sweet and wild
Where no sound of human spee
And no human passions reach
Where t gels sit and teach
Where no troublous foot has tr
Where is 8 1) the sed
Only band and | tofGod!
âS Mejazin
CANADA TO BROTHER JONATHAN.
Dear Jonathan, from where I sit, |
I hear your nasal cheers
Break out in answer to the gun
That numbers off your !
While, from above, your wav
Displays its stripes and stars,
vea
nd Yankee Doodle proudly playe
Forgets the stars and bars.
Well, Jonathan, as nations li
You're yet the merest yout
A knowing young one, Ii) allow
And quite well grown, in trut!
But yet a dissipated life
And your almighty greed
Have left;a look upon your fae
Of running into so
Dear Jonathan I've l.veé so g
In hearing of your voice, |
That I've haif learned to sympathise
When yearly you rejoice
hough over me the ensign waves
That's braved a thousand years
Which | salute with filial pride
And you with scornful jeers
| And nobody bett
fon bu
nd Bertha was
| three months were past, and he did not
| severe and bitter winter.
averted head, to the bashful sentences murs
mured at long intervals 1! ear by young
Max, the bronzed and curly-headed son of
Herr Jugel the millerâat all times and uns
fer all circumstances, Bertha was charmit
Iness
: ha
r appreciated her goÂą
and beauty than Max. But he was not vet
twenty years of age, and she was scarce)
seventeen, and so it was absurd to think of
love or marriage yet; and the litile coquette
would sometimes faugh in hi
break in upon his love speeches with a jest,
which only made him admire her ten times
the more, in spite of his anger
Matters were in this position when, one
| autumnâs day, Max was sent by his father
siness to the distant city of Frankfort
left alone. She did not care
much for it at first; bul when some two or
turn, and When she heard from
}
Herr Juge!
himself that he might yet be f
a year longer, she
and to fear that
âchan
loved poor Max more dearly than
Winter cam
The sno
and alm
reauy
ao
imagined, unusually
hoked the
six successive days, stc
narrow streets of Boppart; then came thaw |
and frost, and snow and frost again, till they
thought the spring time would never arrive.
But the worst of all was, thatthe Frau Elss
} peth was seized cold in ! aged |
. r ts he
limbs, and the parish doctor said that with
} } ne end rÂą â food and
Dear Jonathan, at! i out she had rich wines, and good food, and
Beneath that U even brandy, to
When you to tear it ft strove, the outer fr she must die. Alas, poor
Ane stoutly beat } : , | Bertha! whence could she procure such
At Queeastown Heights, and Lundyâ: Lane | â ef
And Crysierâs Faym, you found j al vent
. ! : l f rT . ug} the
A grave was 2!| a foeman earned seeking from pla I u th
Of this Canacian grou town; but her scanty purse could not pur»
And Jonathan chase the things for which she inqui
The flag 1! her poor neighbors had none to give or lend, |
As must be seen ââ land she went homewards, weeping as if
a a ie ak her heart were broken.
hat be take my ac | re}
Resi e i She hed to cross the place of the Haupt
And enter rt | kirche on her road. The door stood oy
Uf glor â vines | and the last two or three who had been ats
ltending the v sper service were just dk
scending the steps. Bertha thought she
| would step in and say one prayer for hel;
to the Holy Virgin, for there was now no
other who couid aid her. She accordingly
LITERATURE,
RBA RFA wt
BERTHA'S CHOICE.
ars, and gliding up the dark
k
a
, knelt down hum
of the altar steps, and tried to pray. Butnot
a word of any prayer could she recollect,
her heart was so full of sorrow; and she
|
|a@ tall man wrapped in a
bend down her head and sob
eht }
touenu
uld
on her shoulder
was
the apathy of grief
She thought it
rose very meekly, and without
But the
same hand which had aroused,now restrained
e
i fallen.
who wanted ose the church
e
ynce looking up, turned to depart.
deep grave voice close beside her.
Bertha looked hastily round.
long travelling
There was
cloak standing there, looking down at her,
i"
with his large dark eyes full of compassion
and gentleness. Something in the tone of
his voice, or his glance, seemed to go at
yly at a corner |
RANDOW READIGNS.
|
ROBERT ORR & CP.
Beg to inform the Citizens of Charlottetown,
aud the inhabitants ov! Prince Edward Is-
land that they have rented the Building on
QUEEN STREET,
(Next door to Messrs. OWEN CONNNLLY &
Coâs), for the purpose of carrying on @
WHOLESALE & RETAIL
DRY GOODS BUSINESS
And trust by purchasing their Goods in
the best markets and selling them very low, |
to merit a share of the public patronage.
N. B. Wholesale Buyers, Far-
mers. and others will learn some- |
thing worth knowing by eraminine
ORR & (20°S
STOCK, before purchasing elsewhere.
Charlottetown, May 18 1874. ly
Cshuarlortetown
STEAM BAKERY,
BRICK BUILDING,
PRINCE STREET.
HE SUBSCRIBER in returning thanks
for past favors, respectfully intimates to
numerous customers and the
that he preparing
his
generally,
supply of
EILOT
No. 1 Pilot,
is
BREAD:
Extra Pilot,
| No. 2 Pilot, Cabin Pilot,
No. 1 Thin Pilot, No. 1 Navy,
No. 2. Thin Pilot, No. 2 Navy,
â| Sugar Crackers,
~| Water Crackers,
; Captainâs Biscuit,
| Soda Biscuit,
â| Wine
| Medford Biscuit,
Thick Family Pilot, | Fancy Pilot,
BISCUIT & CRACKERS:
Dyspepsia Crackers,
Cottee Crackers,
Ginger Crackers,
Oyster Crackers.
Wine Crackers,
Thin Captain's do,
Abernethy Crackers,
Lemon Crackers,
siscuit,
Seed Sugar Biscuit,
sutter Crackers,
recommend
and CHEAPER
whick he can contidently
warrant to be BETTER
| than can be imported.
|
: n }
impossibie for at to treat him with Âą
: at} ' writen
he would sit sometimes for an hour at a time When a bullet like an ox When it
, } âee Lie lg $
without speaking, ng his head upon fp
hat ere 1
hand,aad watching the rapid tingers of Bertha Wi th
j ih ba
knitting ! he w Ww At tin D it apnea do not sarily trave
Ww llead the subject 1 w! ' t
they knew little, and eight I r. measu! it tome Would
ands and toms away i i the end wi I round
of the great deeds of « i} tim Li iid that in the Paris gardens one
gone by, and the d men | may find every kind of roses, even including
) |
! â !
whe found fresh y ÂŁÂŁ
, the } What art r said a father to
) } * i | â
ovea I tl \ | . a a tinkering at an old watct
I o.% the I â
aa eyua \ . It I tit sil
{ I ÂŁ
nner current enthus I iy BX How many troubles might mankind be
ressed, and betrayed only by the lighting { s; lif they would only stop to hear each
p oft ark eyes and the faint flush upon | other's exp/anations
How tol partly acquainted with the
e sertl w 1 listen W
â ee ks, B a. Per th ve with your wife, mother |
eager attention and delight Phe stranger snd mothe i
eemed to wish to impart r } Our advat | holar comes in with th
istruction to her. and to d tall his Âą | suggestion that a title-page like charity
versation to her only, and Bertha knew this } because it begins a tome
ây '
and felt grateful It was very strange, but | What is the difference between a gauze
, said âwher he came whither he i dress and a drawn tooth? One is too thin
wae POiT e was stranger the ana ,
was going. H gfe r ? i Hue | Eminence 1of to be reached by a frantic
he had once said that the events shade I strug rhe road to it is much more com-
he first met Bertha was the v dav of } } m nplace. te who would dazzle must dig.
arriva e than this, they er ÂŁ A notorious miser, having heard a very
}
} l I ( jue chat sermo! , aimeu, * 1
and th Jare not ask anvthing juent parity rmon, exclaimed Chis
aes t ermon ngly proves the necessity of alms,
' } t e . t | â
And thus the win e shaky â i | hay sta mind to turn beggar
oe ae " 1 7 i eek ) {to a Danbury scholar, while |
sUGGINE tupon t vee, Bee is BT writ ng a compos yn ast week, to make the
pin the nstields, and bursting il ib tatement that âan ox does not
green leaves and grass,and wiid sweet f} wers } taste as Âą âas an oyster, but itcan ran
n forest and meadowsland, Still Max Jugie | faster
had not returned, and still the known | This is tl th that little boys find that
ih Bae oon pe we r their hats } i 1 too large for them,
} 7 > tle te n of nh. ; â
gentleman lingered in the litt â nine j}jand walk into school with long faces, and
part, and tLe neighbours all arour | began to | npathetic whisper â Why didnât you
whisper, and shake their heads, and prophesy | have head filed, instead of sand-paper-
for B 1 Sti j ed
it a fair evenin g upon t banks,â| 4 UNREN aman | ng rich and
j; elated at his progress in American civiliza-
suid t : oe 1 OME | tion, went through the streets of San Fran-
ibsence Ask the I u | l th, Bertha, | , rying, â Hoop-la-hoop-la Meall same
you may puton y cloak and walk with | »1man. Hair cut short and drunk
me for an hour beyond the town I have
: i g been asked by one curious in
something to say } f things, â why two-thirds of the
a fir me he had er { Lo . t ie :
It was the first me he had ever o! a hote sare bald,â a keen observer gives
walk with hersince that wintry nig when | itas his « n that it may beâ hecause the
they met in the chancel of the Hau _| forces of nature have been diverted from the
rl anaes ee Bertha | . alp to tl iltivation of supernatural |
he granamotna nse ak
. } vel
arroW in her hair, and hall-] a | [-res | ne of his pa Huding
tant, f ved him out of . se andj} to the wor i il sense
1 et 1 u + sid nisint {
who was paying with ar the] tt worms 1@ col nt f
town-gati
ertha blushed and trembled, and eyes : :
Bertha | 4 â | keys in the human s {
filled up with tears; but h penn draw out its sweeter and
seemed a he hea tnot,a k the path | m s. They may be the
rlong the riv sadness at 1 sorrow; they may be the loftier |
It 1 as as he had said aie suonian 1 a and Ifess. God knows where
ul leiynsn thas entat led ekaatil ee : ~"Âź' 1 the melodies of our nature are, and what
and the birds were singing ihe aleSl SONS | discipline will bring them forth. Some with
among the trees, as they walked onward ops} plaintive tongues walk in lowly vales
pe Ca er , sing of nothing but joys, as they thread the
baste ' F 1 they all unite
Let us sit h said the s taking the ascending
his seat upon thet f i tree ing hearts finds
» rodeamed ir
Bertha ot silence, a: r some time He med if
neither spoke, and the is i of the
! ard of the lady
river gurgling against i i ana t , i upon a certain
tinkling of the distant herd,bells, and the asion, that the only real, disinterested
> | \
buzzing ef the i were the only s sitcom nt she ever received was from a
pon the st air At length he spoke again il i wi asked permission to ign)
Bertha,â he said, and his though
low, was deep and t! ng, âwe have known
each other now f 1Âą months, and yet I
have never told wi whatla Y al
Jo not n know my nam }
He pa S a xpecting s piv, bul
Bertha remained silent and a
âMy name is Albert. J amri jinmy],.
â Sarat â
native Du lam noble. re | the sailor returned, with humble
Still Bertha ked Wn, Âą made no] defere âls i ke to know your
answel
âWhen I first Âą i here, it was with the in eel
ntention of rema g two orth ays li
I ways travelling slowly threught untry id man, would
for my pleasu I met youâ and | re- | y
ae ; Ht , answered the old tar, looking
mained here unt now âan \ 1 ¹£ $5 Wh h âa yup, âina storm al sea, with danger
I remained, Bertha â or death me, | would like to aali the
She shook her head, and murmured ââNo name rhtest thing I'd ever seen in
} } f sunshine in it even in the
He looked earnestly into her face, and a | â„°@. â â
Seiseh Ă© : larkness
Taint Smile passed over his lips. i
: 1 } Wowman.âPlace her among flowers, foster
Bertha, you are young, you avection- | her as atender plant, and she is a thing of
ate, you are truthful. It is true that I am | fan *"y, waywardness and follyâannoyed by
. a law- â mm
some few years older than yourself, but I am | 2 G@W-drop, I oâ L by pe touch of a but
still „ sung: it true that Iam more educat- | terly s wing, andrea ly to faint, at the sound
pee A ga a j nd she is overnowere , 3
ed, but it will be the pleasure of my t fal and sne is Over] wered by the
nstruct you. I love you, Bertha, and I w perfume of a rosebud, But let real calamity
ie a fa : come, rouse her affections, enkindle the fires
make you my wil „ As a sa ta
He took her hand in hisas he said this, | Of ber heart, and mark her t ea; how
| and drew nearer towards her ; but she rose | 2errt ci esa it ae vis âs 18 r
in an impulse of sudden agitation, and strove | Heart, place ber in ihe heat of the battleâ
: . âvo her hild â( vthing to pre .
| to withdraw it. He rose also, eee a birdâanything sah oki
âYou do not speak to me, Bertha; you d and sĂ© o . eee rarer
t âeo ) | her white arm eild, as her own blood
not tell me that you love me â ing 7 a
- You are too good for me, my Lord,â fals | ae Wig âą 1 2 al. i :
tered the young girl. âIâlI cannot marry te pl +n I 7 = Ă©
wens . n the dark place f earth, call forth her ens
you , } sii al | ~ - he breath POMS â
'T is you w hoaret 10 gC od for me, erg! 10 a { i 8) I ath beeom . a
Cx k mv wifel healing, her pres ea blessing She dise
and as fur rank, my wife be } Ă© â
: '? nat putes inch by inch the stride of stalking pes-
âcannot!â repeate I J f
âBut canted tte tins tilence, when man, the strong and brave,
â] have not yet told | pale and affrighted shr nks away. pg?
was noble, but I am tune haunts her n wears away a lil
Ă© | of silent endurance ; and goes forward with
pose I am a Duk , eer SRE her bridaj. In pr r
ae â ail ity she is a bud full of odors, waiting but for
| mother shall have serva! }
| . vile wis the winds of adversity, to scatter them abroad
honour, Bertha; and y sone .
" âpure gojd, valuable, but untried in the
In one of the darkest and narrowest | that her grandmother was dying
streets of the antique wa town of Bop- âWhat ails her? Where do you live?
pert on the Rhine, there lived, some fifty | Has a doctor seen your grandmother ? Is ail |
years ago, an aged woman named Elspeth | help unavailing?â asked the stranger, ra-
Stuler, and her pretty gr laughter Bertha pidly
Every traveller who has seon Boppart} A few wor is told ali the little story, and
will req ts line of old umbling | he listened to it as he walked along beside
walls, a!) surrounded by long tufts of v ng | her out of the church porch, and across the
grasses and bunches of white netiles; its | Market-piace. ae
quaint Morisco turrets, with their tapering} â Iwill go with you to your home, mat sass
ts glo finished. â Your
roofs hed entrance, an
old round tows
farther than the rest, yet
iis g.00my are
near enough
reflected with them upon the surface of the |
water. Then there is the Hauptkirche life |
ing up its twin slender spires, with the |
curious little gallery which unites them like }
& vridge; and the picturesque houses of the
town, crowding together their high slated |
roofs and pointed gables within the walis;
and above ali, the broad, rushing, sunny |
Rhine river, which here takes so sudden a
r
ks like some v lake shut
bend that it lo
in by the mountains, and woods, and vine-
yards, and rich green pasture meadows,
* +t
which extend all along the the
littie village of Kamp, haifa league away on
the side fecing Boppart. And
summer evenings, when the
nd golden with the sunset, and the
runs more soft!
stand by st
shadows lying at their
vaguely near the waters edge, the
come down here from the
with tinkling bells hanging to their necks,
and, splashing in among the flags and water-
lilies, drink with quiet content; while the
young herdsmen stan! by singing songs of
the Liebenstein or the Lurley, or whispering
in the ears of the fishersâ daughters sitting |
under the cherry trees
And it was in this rare i primitive t
that Elspeth Stuler lived
of its beautiful situation, for
blindânot for the sake of
its Homan w
about themânot for the sake of anything,
in short, which might attract the
antiquery, or the traveller
banks upt
in the sweet
SaV iS @! red
, and the purple mountains
iil and solemnly, with their
feet ring
ows
$0
, and quiÂą
farms and villsges,
wn
the sake
$oe@ Was ne iriy
not tor
its antiquity and
remains, for she kne
artist, the
nothing |
i
|
Dut simply be- |
cause she had been born. married, ind |
widowed there; and because the little old
cemetery outside the town contained the
dust of all whom she had best loved, and
amongst whom she also desired to sleep.
So she lived in a very old hous?,in a nar.
row dirty little street, no better than a lane,
with a gutter running down the centre. It
was a Very curious house, and bad once been
inhabited by people of some mark and |ike-
jibood. The gables were richly ornamented
wish bas-relie/s of remarkable intricacy ;
the upper windows projected quite over the
footway, and were set in deep carved mould-
ings; and the old arched doorway was ac~
tually emhowered in a portico laden with
the most elaborate wood-carvings of fruit,
iver |
the he said. when she had
standing back somewhat | grandmother must not die.
9 be | to this city, and I know not where to seek
| shops,
} and hesitating
foliage, and grotesque heads of birds and
animals. Beautiful as it was, and is (for the
house is yet standing), it was used hy a
merchent, to whom it belonged, as a store-
house for wool, and Elspeth and her grand-
child lived rent-free in the lower rooms, and
took care of the property.
They were very poor» so poor, indoed,
that when Bertha was a little child, they
poust have starved may a winter, but for
I am a stranger
to
that is
for what Lead me your
and
you require.
we will purchase all
needful.â
He spoke to her soothingly and tenderly,
as if she were achild,and placed his heavy
purse in her trembling hand. Wher
strove to thank him with her quivering lips,
}
accents, he only shook his
head, and bade her hasten on and be silent.
There was a great abundance that evening
upon the little table in frau Elpsethâs cham-
ber, and a bright fire glowing merrily upon
the hearth; and above all, there were glad
and grateful hearts beneath that roof.
âThe blessings of be
noble sir!â murmured theold woman, feebly,
from her bed, when he rose from
chair beside the fire, and turned
Bertha said nothingâ but as he reached the
door, she bent down and kissed his hand in
the old simple German fashion; and the
gentleman did not prevent her; but whea
she had done it, he laid his hand upon her
shining hair, inclined his lofty head towards
her, kissed her gently on the forehead, and
without another word, went out, and closed
Heaven upon you,
the arm-
to go
the door.
Berthaâs heart fluttered painfully, and her
cheeks grew pale and red by turns, as she
stood for some moments rooted to the spot.
Then, with a sigh anda smile, she
her pretty head, began humming the burthen
of an old song, and busied herself in prepars
shook
| ing some warm messes for her sick charge.
From that moment the Frau Elspeth began
to mend, and inthe course of a few weeks
was restored to ber usual health. But the
st.anger did not on that account cease to
visit or befriend her,
four or five times a week; and scarcely a
day passed on which they did not receive
some fresh proof of his bounty. Now it was
an easy chair, or 4 warm rug, or an eider-
down quilt for the old lady; or a piece of
fine wooilen cloth for a cloak for Bertha; or,
perchance, a lamp for evening use, for it
was still winter time. But more frequently
there came baskets of wine, and meat, and
fish, and dried fruits. And such rare and
delicious conserves as neither Elspeth nor
Bertha had ever tasted or heard of before.
They came also in so great a profusion that
the grandmother had to eutreat him to be
less liberal. it was quite plain, she said,
that the gentleman could know nothing of
housekeeping; at which he smiled in his
grave way, and said that he had generally
left those things to the care of persons who
understood them better than himself
He came regularily
He was a strange, calm, silent man;
very unassuming and kind, but withal so
Stately in his look and bearing, and so reserv-
ed in his conversation, that it would have been
she |
ess!
as he had
But Bertha, instead of looking,
expected joyful and surprised, wrung
hands together, and turned deathly pale.
âAlas! alas!â she said â| wh
bitterly, â what
| shall | do? what shall I do?
A stern change passed over the face of the
wooer. He dropped the hand which he had
been holding, and drew hack.
âBertha,â he said in a low distinct voice,
mn
â why do you refuse me?
She began to weep. At thismomenta little
boat containing two men came up the middle
ot the river. One man was rowing, and
other was standing up in his place, shading
his eyes with his hand and looking in the di-
rection of Boppart. Bertha started, and
looked intently at the boatâher colour came
and wentâshe tried to speak, and her voice
faltered.
âMy Lord,â she said turning away her
head, ** iâI loveâanother.ââ
The boat came nearer and nearer. There
was a long silence, so long that at last she
looked round, The Duke was still standing
in the very attitude in which he had last
spoken, except that his head was bent upon
his breast, and his eyes fixed on the ground.
The mute grief ef his attitude struck Bertha
to the heart. She crept timidly to his side,
and, as she had done once before, upon the
first night of their meeting, took his band in
both her own, and covered it with tears and
kisses.
He lifted his lofty brow, and looked at her
sadly and tenderly.
âYou should have told me this before
Bertha,â he said, very gently. âBut yet it
is not yonr fault, for I never spoke of love to
you tillnow. I thought to have made you
my Wifeâto have taught you all the wisdom
and poetry of lifeâto haveâbut enough of
this! The dream is past, and it is vain to
dwe!! uponits illusions, Who isfthat, Ber-
tha ?â
The boat was by this time moored to the
bank, a little lower down than where they
stood, and a young man was hastening to-~
wards them.
â Bertha !â
tha !
âThis is he, my Lord,â said she, blushing
and smiling through her tears
The Duke paused and looked steadily at
the young pair before him. Then he turned
somewhat paler than usual, a shade seemed
to pass over his brow, and his lip quivered
visibly.
âHeaven bless you, Bertha,â he said, âand
you, my young friend. I shal! not forget
either of you. Adieu.â
He stepped forward, and once more kissed
her on the forehead. It was for the last
time. Then he drew his hat down lower up-
on his brow, and walked swiftly away. In
less than an hour a carriage rolled out of the
gates of the Rheiniseher Hotel, and took the
road to Cologne.
Many weeks had not elapsed when Max
Jugel received an appointment at the irons
works of Iohenrain, which enabied him to
marry his pretty Bertha without further delay.
It came unanimously, and he could never
discover the name of his unknown benefac-
tor; but as hoherain lies in the territories of
Nassau, it was conjectured by many to have
been the gift of hisânoble and generous rival.
Bertha and Max are stilldiving; but the
Duke of Nassau has been dead some twenty
years. Hemarried a noble lady, the daugh-~
ter of a royal house, and was succeeded by
his son, the present sovereign. :
And this, reader, is a true story of the
Rhine.
he cried, waving his cap, ââBer-
| furnace
her |
| the great charm of existence.
In short woman a miracleâ-a
mystery, from the center of which radiates
is
A Worp, Morners.--Each mother is a
| historian. She writes not the history of
empires or of nations on paper, bul she writes
her history on the imperishable mind of her
child. That tablet and that history will re-
main indelible when time shall be no more
| That h
the |
stery each mother
and read with eternal joy or unutterable
woe in the far ages of eternity. Thisthought
uld weigh on the mind of every mother,
render eply circumspect and
and faithful in her solemn work of
her children for heaven and im
V [he minds of children are very
ble and easily impressed. A word,
may engrave an impression
will meet again,
sh
and
prayerful,
training up
mortality
Susce]
a look, a frown
upon the mind of achild whieh no lapse of
time can efface or washout. You walk along
the sea shore when the tide is out, and you
orm characters, or write words or names in
the smooth white sand which lies spread out
as clear and beautiful at your feet, according
as your fancy may dictate, but the returning
tide shail in a few honrs wash out and efface
forever all that you have written. Not so
the lines and characters of truth, or error,
which your conduct imprints on the mind of
your ehild. There you write impressions for
the everlasting goed or ill of your child,
which neither the floods ner storms of earth
can wash out, nor deathâs cold fingers can
erase, nor the slow moving ages of eternity
can obliterate. How careful, then, should
each mother be of herself in her treatment of
her child. How prayerful, and how serious,
and how earnest to write the eternal truths
of God on his mind, those truths which shall
be his guide and teacher when her voice
shail be silent in death, and her lips no
longer move in prayer in his behalf, in com-
mending her dear child to her covenant God.
This isto certify, that in May last, I was
sorely troubled with what the doctors pro-
nounce pleurisy, and other complaints. Afier
applying to several eminent physicians, and
obtaining no relief, I was, by the advice of
of friends, who had used Gatesâ medicines,
induced to make a trial of the same. After
using two bottles of itI am happy to say
thet lconsider myselfentirely free from the de-
sease Which the dectors pronounced incurable
and safely reco nmend it to allthose suffer-
ing with the same complaint.
Miss Asay Conoon
The above sworn to before me, at Liver-
pool, (Jueenâs County, this 18th day of Oes
tober, 1871.
T. N. Setios, J. P.
Jy 27,â1m
A DISTINGUISHED PHYSILOGIST
has said that Neuralgia is the ery ot the
hungry nerves for their special food, which
is the Pohsphorous contained in the blood.
This painful disease isusually followed by
general prostration on account of the great
waste of nerve tissue and insufficient supplyof
nerve force to maintain the functions of the
vital organs. The common cause of Neural-
gia and Rheumatic Pains is depraved Nutri-
tion arising from Derangements of the Sto-
mach, Mal-assimilation of food, and Poor
Blood.
Phosphates and Calisaya supplies Phosphor-
ous for the nervous system Lime as an excis |
tant of nutrition, Iron for the blood, and
Calisaya for promoting strength. No pre-
paratiou in existence is so reliable to main-
tain the vital forces and energize all the organs
and tissues of the body.
Dr. Wheeler's Compound Elixiar of |
|
Persons requiring any of the above articles
;| Will please send in their orders immediately
Ile has now ready
300 bbis.
of Superior No. |, & No.2
Navy Bread, which he
offers for Sale on his
usual liberal Terms.
All orders from town or country receive |
prompt attention.
JOHN
Ch town April 20, 1874
QUIRK,
QUEEN SQUARE
KFURNTEPURE
WAREROOMS !
Qur premises have heen greatly
and are now the
LARGEST and BEST ARRANGED | LIFE of
IN THE CITY,
and equal to any in the Lower Provinces.
ALL WORK WARRANTED TO GIVE
PERFECT SATISFACTION.
I have 200.000 feet Seasoned Lumber under
cover, for manufacturing purposes.
Ihave 20,000 feet Gilt and Walnut Picture
Frame Moulding, 80 different
Cheap.
Oval, Gothic and Square Picture Frames, in
Gilt and Walnut.
patterns
All the latest Styles of Rustic Frames Heavy
Gilt, for Oil Pictures, Cheap.
English, German, and American Looking |
Glasses and Mirror Plates.
A few Large Mantle Mirrors and Pier @lass-
es, Cheap.
Window Furniture, AC.
Poles, Rings and Cornices, Rollers, Shades
Blinds, Tassels, Cords, &c.
Upholstery Goods, Hair Seating,
Bedding, Ke.
New patterns, in Damask, Repps, Terry,
Plushes, Poplins, Brocatells, Fringes,
Gimps, Buttons, Tufts, &c., cheap.
BeddingâFeather, Hair and
Pillows and Bolsters, constant-
ly on hand, cheap.
IRON BEDSTEADS AND CRIBS,
a Great Variety, Cheap.
A few of the celebrated Iron Bed CHAIRS,
âit makes a Bed, an Easy Chair, and in-
valid Chair,and a Lounge ina few seconds,
very durable. No house should be with-
out one.
Our siock is the Lar est in the
City, and the very Cheapst
Strongest CHAIRS aud BEDSTEADS,
Most beautiful and durable Drawing Room,
Dining Room and Chamber Fnrniture, in
suits.
It is a pleasure to have customers come
and examine.
George Woods & coâs.
CELEBRATED
CABINET ORGANS
FOk SALEâCHEAP.
JOHN NEWSON.
_ Queen Square, Mareh 10, 1873
Boone Bay Herring!
200 BBLS. split BOONE BAY HER-
a VU RING. in prime condition.
FOR SALE BY
FENTON T. NEWBERRY.
July 13, 13, 1874.âtf
NOTICE.
A LL PERSONS indebted to the Examin-
+4 kr, either for Subscriptions or Adver-
tisments, are requested to make IMME-
DIATE PAYMENT to the undersigned,
who alone is authorized to receive and grant
receipts for the same.
By order,
W. L. COTTON,
Manager
1874, FRESH SEEDS. 1874.
HE Subscriber has received via Halifax,
from CovENT GARDEN, London, a
LARGE SUPPLY or
Field,Garden and Flower Seeds.
Warranted the growth of 1873.
Wa. R. WATSON,
City Drug Store, May 4, 1874. tf
Jan.19th, 1874.
~âTMPORTANT 70 THE PUBLIC.
public |
a large |
and |
| Manufactured by
Flock Beds, | i
|
| PARKâS COTTON WARP!
Dr. J. Walkerâs California Vin-
egar Bitters are a purely Vegetable
preparation, made chietly from the na-
tive herbs found on the lower ranges of
| the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor-
| nia, the medicinal properties of which
| are extracted therefrom without the use
of Alcohol. The question is almost
daily asked, ââ What is the cause of the
unparalleled success of VINEGAR BIr-
TERS?â Our answer is, that they remove
the cause of disease, and the patient re-
covers his health. They are the great
blood purifier and a life-giving principle,
a perfect Renovator and Invigorator
of the system. Never before in the
history of the world has a medicine been
compounded possessing the remarkable
qualities of Vingear Birrers in healing the
sick of every disease manis heir to. They
are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic,
relieving Congestion or Inflammation of
the Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious
Diseases.
The properties of Dr. WaLKerâs
VINEGAR BiTTERs are Aperient, Diaphoretic,
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic,
Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Sudorific, Altera-
tive, and Anti-Bilious.
R. H. McDONALD & CO.,
ists and Gen. Agts., San Francisco, California,
and cor. of Washington and Chariton Sts., N. „,
Montreal to Charlottetown.
âPE Subscribers intend running two
vessels between the above ports,
ing the Summer,
The Laodamia, '6 tons,
| will leave Montreal about the
| by another vessel a fortnight later.
We shall thus be enabled to supply our |
customers with FLOUR. at Cost, Charges |
and Freight.
HYNDMAN BROS.
Châtown, 19th May, 1874-â4i
| have just received our usual Stock of
TEAS, GROCERIES, &c..
per recent arrivals from Great Britain.
Also, to arrive per Lady Rodney, from
| London, 50 Chests TEA, warranted good.
HYNOMAN BROS,
Ch town, May 28, 1874.
Mout! & Acadian §, . Company
tween
and Picton.
SS. COLUSEIA,
so Ss. CANA IDA,
S§.8. CALIFORNIA,
HYNOMAN BROS.
Agents.
Apply in Montreal to
DAVID SHAW,
305 Commissioners Street. |
1874. tf
NEWS
âhâtown, June 22,
JOYFUL
|
|
}
MAW BITTERS
âANDâ
COMBINED MEDICINES,
CURES,
Dropsv in its worst form; Liver Complaint;
Jaundice ; Swelling of the Limbs
Asthma, of whatever kind ; Dyspepsia, Bili-
{ousness, Consumption, Spitting of
Bronchitis, Sick Headsache, Running Sores,
Erysipelas, Stoppage of the Menses, Kidney
and Gravel Complaint, Measels, Fevers, Sea
Sickness, Heart disease, Pleurisy, Piles,
Worms, Rheumatism, Spinal disease, or Aff.
Dysentry, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Tooth
ache and Ague, Sprains, Strains, Felons
Chilblains, Burns, Scalds, Bruises, Sore E
Lame Back and Side, and
Hands, &c.
ba For Certificates, &ec., taken
Justices of the Peace, see Pamplets which;
can be furnished at the Agencies.
ves
â
Cuts
For sale by dealers generally.
Agents at Charlottetown, T.
Wholesale Agent, Wm
Desh:
R. Watson.
isay
CALEB GATES, & Co.
Middleton, Annapolis, Co.
1873.
Dec. |
WHITE, BLUE, RED, ORANGE AND GREEN,
f b J uj Ro NJ 9 NJ
No's 5's to 10's.
TARRANTED to be FULL LENGTH
and weight, STRONGER AND BET-
| TER in every respect than any other Eng-
lish or American warp.
|
| BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
\
None is gennu-
ne without our name on the labels. For
|
| sale by all dealers.
Wn. PARKS & SON,
| New Brunswick Cotton Mills, St John N. B.
Feb. 2nd, 1374. ly aie
ak te Fle ay
Mines,
Victoria Sydney,
VHE above Mines are delivering a superior
article this season, quite free from slate
froma depth of 135 feet below any previous
year. We can recommend this COAL to con-
sumers and dealers, and feel confident that it
will give satisfaction.
The Company are enabled to deliver largely
in excess of previous years. Vessels will have
no delay in getting their cargo.
Prices $3 for Round, $1 for Slack.
Terms, sixty days or 2: per cent discount for
Cash.
HYNDMAN BROS.
Agents for P. EF. I.
Ch town, June 8, 1874.âar pa 3mo
A CARD.
A S my connection with the Wesleyan
Academy ceases at the expiration of
the Vacation, I purpose taking pupils dur-
ing the hours recently given them, vit:
from 9 a. m., till 2p. m. Arrangemen s
can be made so that hours can be given to
suit the coavenience ofall pupils. At the
end of every Quarter, pupils will perform
before parents and friends. Application
must be made at once, as a limited number
only can be taken.
First Quarter will commence on Monday,
July 6.
TERMS WILL BE AS FOLLOWS:
For Quarter of 24 lessons, Instru-
mental Music per half hour's
duration, $5.00
For Quarter of 24 lessons, Instru-
mental Music, 1 hourâs dura-
tion, 10.00
Leasons in Vocai Music only. 10.00
Instrumental Lessons of an hour's
duration, with the first rudiments
of thorough Bass and Transposi-
tion &c., 15.00
Vocal and Instrumental, half hour's
duration, 7.00
Lessons on the Organ, 20.00
Cabinet Organ and Melodeon, 15.00
No Pupil will be taken for less than six
months.
Orders taken for the best Pianos and
Organs, and the utmost satisfaction is
guaranteed.
Ss. N. EARLE.
Ch'town, June 29, 1874.
Wanted.
A" experienced NURSE GIRL,
ences required, Good Wages.
Apply at this Office.
Châ town, July 6, 1874,
Refers
dur-
Ist JUNE, |
| calling at Summerside, and will be followed |
We would also inform the Trade that we |
WEEKLY LINE.
Nae undermentioned Steamships will |
Form a Regular Weekly Line be- |
Montreal, Shediac, Charlottetown |
and face; |
blood, |
ection of the Spine, Coughs, Colds and
Whooping Cough, Diptheria and_ Sore}
Throat, Pains in the Stomach, Diarrhea, |
Cracked |
before |
Commercial College.
WELSH & OWENâS BUILDING,
Queen Street. Charlottetown.
EATON, PRAZBE & REAGH, PROPLILTORS
DEISMIC: NIL) 1"
Educate Young Men for Business
1}
| lateral subjects, thorougly taught and prac-
tically applied by means ofa
Complete Course of Actual Business,
gaged in by all the students. Particular
attention given to
ARITHMETIC,
CORRESPONDENCE,
SPELLING, &c.
Our Course of Instruction affords a
| amount of
| PRACTICAL INFORMATION
relating to Business pursuits, which is of the
greatest importance to Young Men intend§
ing to go into business for themselves.
BANKING
BUSINESS
large
No Yorng Wan Can Afford to miss a Courso at this
Institution.
3usiness men and others tnuterested are
system.
Hoursâ94 a. m. to 12 p. m., from 2 to 4,
and 74 to 94 p. m.
Circulars containing full particulars will
be sent free to any address, on application to
T. B. REAGH, Principal.
5, 1874.âtf
Châtown, Jan
HEALTH STRENGTH & VIGOR.
Just Published, Price One Shilling Stqg.
} saideneibicebe
fENUE SCIENCE OF LIFE;
SERVATION. A practical Guide to
Health, Strength, and Vigorous Old Age.
Address to the Nervous, the Sedentary, the
Dyspeptic.and all those whose constitutions
have become debilitated or relaxed from ir-
regularities of life, climate, age er disease,
or from over-taxed or abused energies,
sulting from the Loss of Nervous or Physical
| Force. By S. LAâMERT, M. D., L.
| &c.,37 BEDFORD SQUARE, London.
} âââAn excellent manual for all who may
learn how to use life and not abuse it.â
Church and State Gaseile
â*On the subjects of diet and the regula-
tion of the functions the advice thr t
is admirable.ââ Mirror.
Dr. LaâMERT is the only regularly-qua
Practicioner, who, for thirty vears, has d
voted his entire attention to th ire of these
disorders.
Patients residing in the «
| successsfully treated by respond
and remedies will } warte ser
and safety to an} idress.
THE SCIENCE OF LIFE may
price one shilling stg.. i
Scotia, J. H. Woodrich,
H. A. Parr; Pi
| mouth, ou, ll
} St. John, N. B., H. Chubb nd
| CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I., of Me Bre
| ner Brothers, 44 Queen Street.
ImporTANT Cavution.âThe public are
earnestly warned against a piracy of the
above work emanating from a so-called
â*Peabody Inst â* Boston, which unblush-
'
ingly appropria the titles of two works,
published by Dr. LaâMert for thirty years.
âBOSTON STEAMERS.
SEASON 1874.
THE Steamers â Alhambra
729
Ss
} | toe tons, and |
enlarged | OR THE AFFLICTE Caroll,â1372 tors,having both being thoroughly
overhauled, and fitted with very superior accom
modation for passengers, will leave Boston during |}
the season alternately every Saturday at noon,
and returning will leave Charlottetown alter-
nately every Thursday at five p.m., calling at
| Halitax and Caaso both ways.
| For freight or passage apply to
CARVELL
Châtown, June 1, 1873.âa p is
JUST ARRIVED.
Pp S.5. Somerset, from Boston, and Schr
Bonnibeli from New York,
BROS, Agents
2,900 Barrels Flour & Cornmeal
very cheap for cash, or at 3 mouths on approv-
{
which will be sold in quantities to Traders, |
ed paper.
OWEN CONNOLLY.
Office, old stand, Dorchester St |
Châtown, May 4, 1874,
âTHE EXAMINER.â
THE
LARGEST NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHED IN
PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND
Every week places before
latest local and Foreigi
from: the raciest and most improving Liter-
ature of the day; Editorial articles contri-
buted by the ablest writers in the Province.
i
|
| SUBSCRIPTIONS SOLICITED.
its readers the
news: selections
TERMSâOne Dollar and sixty cents a year
Office, corner Queen & King St.
t
Charlottetown.
When people see a man advertise they know }
he is a business man, and his advertizing pro-
claims that he is not above business, but anxious
to do it. Customers, like sheep, are gregarious,
and flock where they see others go. If nobody
else were engaged in the same business, it would
be important to tradesmen and dealers to adver-
tize in the paper, because they are tempted to
buy what they read of. But others are engaged
| in the same business, and even if they do ad-
vertize, it becomes the more important tor you |
| todoso; if they do not advertize it becomes
doubly important.â Anon.â
; osinen
j THE ATTENTION OF
Sl
| importers and Dealers
IS RESPECTFULLY DIRECTED TO
THE BEATER
MERCHANTS
WILL FIND CUSTOMERS FOR THEIR
SPRING GOODS
| BY ADVERTIZNG IN
âTHE EXAMINER.â
The usual reductions to those who
ADVERTIZE
BY THE YEAii.
Manilla! â
The best and the cheapest in the market, and |
and manufactured by the
Canada Cordage Co., Montreal.
WE SOLICIT ORDERS, at manufacturer's |
lowest prices, and deliver at Charlottetown
on the shortest notice.
Samples always in Stock.
We refer shipbuilders and all dealers to
the accompanying certificate.
CARVELL BROS,, Agents.
Châtown, 15th June, 1874.
CERTIFICATE,
Having used largely during the past year,
MANILLA, the manufacture of the Can-
ada Cordage Company. ordered through
Messrs CaRVELL Bros., and having sub-
mitted it to the severest tests, we highly
recommend its use to all shipowners.
PEAKE BROS., & CO..
JAMES DUNCAN & CO.,
HYNDMAN BROS.,
ARTEMAS LORD,
LONGWORTH & CQ.,
BOURKE GILLAN & CO.,
WELSH & OWEN,
2mo
BOOK-KEEPING in all its branches, both
»y SINGLE and DOUBLE ENTRY and Col- |
cord.ally invited to call and examine our |
or SELF-PRE |
whether of body or mind; with the Instruc- |
| tions for the Treatment of all Disorders re- |
|
| PATENT
Sole proprietor, F. J. CLARKE, Chemiat,
APOTHECARIESâ HALL LISCOLN, ENG
LAND.
| to!
} able for S30,
pau
ONE BOX OF CLAREDâS B41 PILLS
THE RRITISH
Quarterly Reviews
EDINBURGH REVEW ( Whig
LONDON QUARTERLY REVIEW
a EW. (Con,
WESTMINSTER REVIEW
,
( Liberay )
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1 > (40H.
â WwW â
Blackwoolâs Edinburgh Magarip
REPRINTED BY THE :
Leonard Scott Publishing Âąg
140 Funton St. N, Y.
Wonderfy)
Europes,
of thy
These periodicals constitute a
| msicellany of modern thought,
| and criticism, The cream of all
books worth reviewing is found
they treat of the leading events
world in masterly articles written
who had special knowledge of the
treated. The American Pnblisher,
upon all intelligent readers in ght, urge
a liberal support of the Reprints gp
they have so long and so cheaply furni
feeling sure that no expenditure for
literary matter will yield so rich 9
as that required for a subseri tion
the . ââ
Leading Periodicals of Great Britign
TERMS :
About one third the price of the Originals
For any one Review, $4 00 per annum,
| For any two Reviews, 10 « &@
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| Foa all four Reviews, 1200 « «
| For Blackwoodâs Magazine, 4 00 « = «
For Blackwood and one
Review, 1a « @
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Reviews, 1000 «© «
For Blackwood and three
Reviews, 13300 « «w
For Blackwood and four
Reviews, 1500 « «
PREMIUMS -
New subscribers (applying early) for the
year [574 may have, without charge, the
last volume for 1573 of such periodicalag
they may subscribe for.
| Or instead, new subscribersâto an
three, or four of the aboveâ pe Fae
| may have one_ of the â Four Reviewsâ fy
1873; subscribers to all five may have two
of the â Four Reviews,â or one set of Black
wood's Magazine for 1873.
Neither premiums to subscribers nor
discount to clubs can be allowed unless th
money is remitted direct to the publishen,
âo lums given to clubs,
rculars with further particulars may be
had on application.
EONARD SCOTT PUBLISHING (o,,
_ 14) FULTON STREET, NEW YORK
F R THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.âSe
Deateronomy, Cap. xii., verse 23,
CLAR KEâ:
World famed Blood Mixture,
Trade Markâ âBiood Mixture.â
THE GREAT PURIFIER & RESTORE
For cleansing and clearing the blood fr
all impurities,cannot be too highly recommended
Eor Scrofula, Scurvy, Skin Diseases, and Sots
BLOOD
of all kinds itis a never-failing and permants
cure;
Lt Cure ld Sores
es Ulecerated Sores or the Neck,
Cuces Uleerated Sore Lege
( es lack ids or Pi nples ou the Pac
( eB o« Sores
Cures Cine us Ulcers
â sts sud Skip Diseases.
( : Glandular Swellings
Clears the Blood from all impare Matter,
From Ww lever catise arising.
Se this unxture is pleasant to the taste, and
werranted free from anythiag injurious to the
most delicate Constitution of either sex, the Pre
pt tor solivite sufferers to give it a trial te tes
iis value
arte,
Thousands of te niale from all
! iin Cases, eos
Soldin Bottles § 1.00 ¹
tiining ixtimes the quantity, $41.0) cachâsufficient
to effect a Sermanent cure in the wreat Ina) ority of
long-standi ases. BY ALL CHEMISTLS and
MEDICINE VENDORS thronghoa
the worid
EXPORT AGENTS.
Burgevne, Durbidges at d Co. Cx Jet
van st. London
Newbary an
| Sous, 37 Newyute et., London
Barclay & Sons, 9 Farringdon st , London.
Sanger & Sons, Oxford et., London
And all the London Wholesale Honses,
AGENTS IN CANADA.
Torouto.âElliot & », Wholesale Druggiste
â Shapter and Owen.
Hamilton. â Winer and C
St Joho, N. B.âil. L. Spencer.
Ialifux N.S.âAvery, Brown and (oe.
AÂź the Act of our Legislature, passed
inJune, 1872, enacts, that from and
after the of January, 1874, it shall
not be la under certain penalties, to
t day
wrul,
inter any dead body in the Protestant burying
Ground, on the Malpeque Road, ia
the fiftl ward of this City ; and
the New etry is now ready for
interment pplication for burials â there
in must be made to the undersigned,
at his residence in Kent Street.
Plots for interments, 15 by 20 feet, eqas!
share of the Company's ground, avail
0,on payment of two-thirds of
money, and subject to another
the purchase
call of SIO,
et ie o* a
lots for individual interment &2 each.
Persons desirous of obtaining allotments
in the Cemetry, will please apply @
William Cundall, Esq., the Treasurer @
the Company.
By Order
JOHN LEPAGE, Secây.
Dec. 29, 187
OUTFITS Employment at your bomes or
travel] âhe work is conge
ii nial, honorable, and pays the beat
* ot anything ever betore offered
s, and complete outfits seat
Âą, Cleremont Daniels & Co
Montz
, Sampl
: ge
235 Notre Dame St.,
eal
AGENTS WANTEDâMaleand Fe
male, forthe ** Transmission of Life,â
and the âPhysical Life of Woman, â both
by Dr. Napheys. Agent's profits, $150
$250 a month. âTestimonials from mos
eminent Divines, Physicians and Editors i
America. Immense sales everywhere.
Send for Terms and Circulars to C.W
MITCHELL, St, John, N. B
Jan. 12, 1873.
S warranted to cure all discharges from the
Urinary Oryaus, in e.ther sex, acquired or
constitutional Gravel andâ Pains in the Back.
Sold in Boxes, $1.59 each, all Chemiete and
Patent Medicine Vendors.
Sole Proprietor, F, J.
CKAKKE
APOTHECARIESâ HALL, LINCOLN, ENGLAND,
EXPORT AGENTS.
Burgoyne Burbidges and Co.,Coleman St., Londot
Newbury und Sons, 37 Newyuate Street, London
Barelay and Sons, 95 Farringdon Street, London
Sanger aud Sous, Oxford street, London.
And all the London Wholesale Honses.
AGENTS IN CANADA.
Montreal ââklliott and Co., WholesaleDruggistÂź
Shapter and Owen,
Hamilton. âWiver and Âą
St. John, N. BâH. L. Spencer
Halifax, N. Sâ-A very, Brown and Co
_ Uetober 13, 1873. ly
Tobacco & Cigars! â
rr HE Subsx ribs 4 flers for sale (in Boud,)
a choice Lot of
SMOKING & CHEWiNG TOBACCO,
and three Cases CIGARS.
74 Boxes Tobacco, in Solace, Sunshine, Vit-
ginian, Navy and Black Diamond.
3 Cases Cigars in Victoria & Flor Gertrude.
Samples can be seen at Sale Raom
N. RANKIN,
Corner Water & Pownal Sts
Châtown, April 18, 1874.
WANTED.
S'* Energetic Men, to sell Cucumber
wood Pumps. An active man can esra
ed
Fifty Dollars » week at this business.
G. C. CARMAN,
Manutacturerâs Agent
Hynudmanâs Building. Queen Street,
May 18, 1874. 3
ow
POETRY.
Se ee
TIRED
â a
O for wings, that I might soar
A little way above
A little way beyond the roarâ
A little nearer to the sky
To the blue hills, lifted high
Where alone is beard the lark,
" STi e infinite arc
Where the the callow eagieis wink
On the bare and breezy brink
Aad siow pinivns rise and sink
Where the dim white breaker beat,
Under cloud drifts at our feet
ng, Singing, iow and swee
{
Where we see the glimmering bay
Gravely melting far away, '
On the contines of the day.
the charity of their good neighbors
degrees, as Bertha grew
| active, clever at her spinning wheel and her
breviary, industrious In
land tenderly careful of all the necessities o!
for then
the days were short and very dark in that
' narrow street, and old Fispeth could scarce
vo knit or spin Sometimes, t wher
i the
i the Rhine was partially frozon, and the |
}in the great old well near the Hauptkirct
had to be broken with an axe, her linge
stiffened with the cold, so that she cc uld not
use them, aithough the litt was crying
at her knees tor food and warmth Those
were fearful times for the Frau Elspeth; but
there was a watchful Providence which never
| suffered her to be utterly overborne: and by
|
up kind, eheerfu
household matters
Âą
smed s
her aged grandmother, things assum al
mfort once more
little
aspect for the better, and «
their
excell
fireside
t, kind
dawn upon
trutl
began to
Bertha an
was, in
| hearted, pious little soul, and as merry as a
Where the green larch fringes swee} bird. See her when you would, whether at
. a nal «
Rocky ies, 3t ana } | asa in the early morning, bending her fair
Where the tender â : " } ad over her t xk, and cast y her bl!
ueau yer â ' , BU a
* | . ° } â
Where the gentian blossoms blow eyes meekly down upon her rosary; whet
n ÂąâŹY i \ | { Ww i , tine
no yee) Maree Seow a | spinning or knitting with busy lingers
coin ite outside her grandmother's door, on a sum
Tot ns ly w leas mers evening ; whether chatting gaily to th
â wean 0? nah the trees ! i smote lietaning t} if
. g,. twickling e igh th neighbors, or demurely listening, with hall
ure as from celestial Seas
Where the face of heaven has smiled
Ave <Âą m, sweet and wild
Where no sound of human spee
And no human passions reach
Where t gels sit and teach
Where no troublous foot has tr
Where is 8 1) the sed
Only band and | tofGod!
âS Mejazin
CANADA TO BROTHER JONATHAN.
Dear Jonathan, from where I sit, |
I hear your nasal cheers
Break out in answer to the gun
That numbers off your !
While, from above, your wav
Displays its stripes and stars,
vea
nd Yankee Doodle proudly playe
Forgets the stars and bars.
Well, Jonathan, as nations li
You're yet the merest yout
A knowing young one, Ii) allow
And quite well grown, in trut!
But yet a dissipated life
And your almighty greed
Have left;a look upon your fae
Of running into so
Dear Jonathan I've l.veé so g
In hearing of your voice, |
That I've haif learned to sympathise
When yearly you rejoice
hough over me the ensign waves
That's braved a thousand years
Which | salute with filial pride
And you with scornful jeers
| And nobody bett
fon bu
nd Bertha was
| three months were past, and he did not
| severe and bitter winter.
averted head, to the bashful sentences murs
mured at long intervals 1! ear by young
Max, the bronzed and curly-headed son of
Herr Jugel the millerâat all times and uns
fer all circumstances, Bertha was charmit
Iness
: ha
r appreciated her goÂą
and beauty than Max. But he was not vet
twenty years of age, and she was scarce)
seventeen, and so it was absurd to think of
love or marriage yet; and the litile coquette
would sometimes faugh in hi
break in upon his love speeches with a jest,
which only made him admire her ten times
the more, in spite of his anger
Matters were in this position when, one
| autumnâs day, Max was sent by his father
siness to the distant city of Frankfort
left alone. She did not care
much for it at first; bul when some two or
turn, and When she heard from
}
Herr Juge!
himself that he might yet be f
a year longer, she
and to fear that
âchan
loved poor Max more dearly than
Winter cam
The sno
and alm
reauy
ao
imagined, unusually
hoked the
six successive days, stc
narrow streets of Boppart; then came thaw |
and frost, and snow and frost again, till they
thought the spring time would never arrive.
But the worst of all was, thatthe Frau Elss
} peth was seized cold in ! aged |
. r ts he
limbs, and the parish doctor said that with
} } ne end rÂą â food and
Dear Jonathan, at! i out she had rich wines, and good food, and
Beneath that U even brandy, to
When you to tear it ft strove, the outer fr she must die. Alas, poor
Ane stoutly beat } : , | Bertha! whence could she procure such
At Queeastown Heights, and Lundyâ: Lane | â ef
And Crysierâs Faym, you found j al vent
. ! : l f rT . ug} the
A grave was 2!| a foeman earned seeking from pla I u th
Of this Canacian grou town; but her scanty purse could not pur»
And Jonathan chase the things for which she inqui
The flag 1! her poor neighbors had none to give or lend, |
As must be seen ââ land she went homewards, weeping as if
a a ie ak her heart were broken.
hat be take my ac | re}
Resi e i She hed to cross the place of the Haupt
And enter rt | kirche on her road. The door stood oy
Uf glor â vines | and the last two or three who had been ats
ltending the v sper service were just dk
scending the steps. Bertha thought she
| would step in and say one prayer for hel;
to the Holy Virgin, for there was now no
other who couid aid her. She accordingly
LITERATURE,
RBA RFA wt
BERTHA'S CHOICE.
ars, and gliding up the dark
k
a
, knelt down hum
of the altar steps, and tried to pray. Butnot
a word of any prayer could she recollect,
her heart was so full of sorrow; and she
|
|a@ tall man wrapped in a
bend down her head and sob
eht }
touenu
uld
on her shoulder
was
the apathy of grief
She thought it
rose very meekly, and without
But the
same hand which had aroused,now restrained
e
i fallen.
who wanted ose the church
e
ynce looking up, turned to depart.
deep grave voice close beside her.
Bertha looked hastily round.
long travelling
There was
cloak standing there, looking down at her,
i"
with his large dark eyes full of compassion
and gentleness. Something in the tone of
his voice, or his glance, seemed to go at
yly at a corner |
RANDOW READIGNS.
|
ROBERT ORR & CP.
Beg to inform the Citizens of Charlottetown,
aud the inhabitants ov! Prince Edward Is-
land that they have rented the Building on
QUEEN STREET,
(Next door to Messrs. OWEN CONNNLLY &
Coâs), for the purpose of carrying on @
WHOLESALE & RETAIL
DRY GOODS BUSINESS
And trust by purchasing their Goods in
the best markets and selling them very low, |
to merit a share of the public patronage.
N. B. Wholesale Buyers, Far-
mers. and others will learn some- |
thing worth knowing by eraminine
ORR & (20°S
STOCK, before purchasing elsewhere.
Charlottetown, May 18 1874. ly
Cshuarlortetown
STEAM BAKERY,
BRICK BUILDING,
PRINCE STREET.
HE SUBSCRIBER in returning thanks
for past favors, respectfully intimates to
numerous customers and the
that he preparing
his
generally,
supply of
EILOT
No. 1 Pilot,
is
BREAD:
Extra Pilot,
| No. 2 Pilot, Cabin Pilot,
No. 1 Thin Pilot, No. 1 Navy,
No. 2. Thin Pilot, No. 2 Navy,
â| Sugar Crackers,
~| Water Crackers,
; Captainâs Biscuit,
| Soda Biscuit,
â| Wine
| Medford Biscuit,
Thick Family Pilot, | Fancy Pilot,
BISCUIT & CRACKERS:
Dyspepsia Crackers,
Cottee Crackers,
Ginger Crackers,
Oyster Crackers.
Wine Crackers,
Thin Captain's do,
Abernethy Crackers,
Lemon Crackers,
siscuit,
Seed Sugar Biscuit,
sutter Crackers,
recommend
and CHEAPER
whick he can contidently
warrant to be BETTER
| than can be imported.
|
: n }
impossibie for at to treat him with Âą
: at} ' writen
he would sit sometimes for an hour at a time When a bullet like an ox When it
, } âee Lie lg $
without speaking, ng his head upon fp
hat ere 1
hand,aad watching the rapid tingers of Bertha Wi th
j ih ba
knitting ! he w Ww At tin D it apnea do not sarily trave
Ww llead the subject 1 w! ' t
they knew little, and eight I r. measu! it tome Would
ands and toms away i i the end wi I round
of the great deeds of « i} tim Li iid that in the Paris gardens one
gone by, and the d men | may find every kind of roses, even including
) |
! â !
whe found fresh y ÂŁÂŁ
, the } What art r said a father to
) } * i | â
ovea I tl \ | . a a tinkering at an old watct
I o.% the I â
aa eyua \ . It I tit sil
{ I ÂŁ
nner current enthus I iy BX How many troubles might mankind be
ressed, and betrayed only by the lighting { s; lif they would only stop to hear each
p oft ark eyes and the faint flush upon | other's exp/anations
How tol partly acquainted with the
e sertl w 1 listen W
â ee ks, B a. Per th ve with your wife, mother |
eager attention and delight Phe stranger snd mothe i
eemed to wish to impart r } Our advat | holar comes in with th
istruction to her. and to d tall his Âą | suggestion that a title-page like charity
versation to her only, and Bertha knew this } because it begins a tome
ây '
and felt grateful It was very strange, but | What is the difference between a gauze
, said âwher he came whither he i dress and a drawn tooth? One is too thin
wae POiT e was stranger the ana ,
was going. H gfe r ? i Hue | Eminence 1of to be reached by a frantic
he had once said that the events shade I strug rhe road to it is much more com-
he first met Bertha was the v dav of } } m nplace. te who would dazzle must dig.
arriva e than this, they er ÂŁ A notorious miser, having heard a very
}
} l I ( jue chat sermo! , aimeu, * 1
and th Jare not ask anvthing juent parity rmon, exclaimed Chis
aes t ermon ngly proves the necessity of alms,
' } t e . t | â
And thus the win e shaky â i | hay sta mind to turn beggar
oe ae " 1 7 i eek ) {to a Danbury scholar, while |
sUGGINE tupon t vee, Bee is BT writ ng a compos yn ast week, to make the
pin the nstields, and bursting il ib tatement that âan ox does not
green leaves and grass,and wiid sweet f} wers } taste as Âą âas an oyster, but itcan ran
n forest and meadowsland, Still Max Jugie | faster
had not returned, and still the known | This is tl th that little boys find that
ih Bae oon pe we r their hats } i 1 too large for them,
} 7 > tle te n of nh. ; â
gentleman lingered in the litt â nine j}jand walk into school with long faces, and
part, and tLe neighbours all arour | began to | npathetic whisper â Why didnât you
whisper, and shake their heads, and prophesy | have head filed, instead of sand-paper-
for B 1 Sti j ed
it a fair evenin g upon t banks,â| 4 UNREN aman | ng rich and
j; elated at his progress in American civiliza-
suid t : oe 1 OME | tion, went through the streets of San Fran-
ibsence Ask the I u | l th, Bertha, | , rying, â Hoop-la-hoop-la Meall same
you may puton y cloak and walk with | »1man. Hair cut short and drunk
me for an hour beyond the town I have
: i g been asked by one curious in
something to say } f things, â why two-thirds of the
a fir me he had er { Lo . t ie :
It was the first me he had ever o! a hote sare bald,â a keen observer gives
walk with hersince that wintry nig when | itas his « n that it may beâ hecause the
they met in the chancel of the Hau _| forces of nature have been diverted from the
rl anaes ee Bertha | . alp to tl iltivation of supernatural |
he granamotna nse ak
. } vel
arroW in her hair, and hall-] a | [-res | ne of his pa Huding
tant, f ved him out of . se andj} to the wor i il sense
1 et 1 u + sid nisint {
who was paying with ar the] tt worms 1@ col nt f
town-gati
ertha blushed and trembled, and eyes : :
Bertha | 4 â | keys in the human s {
filled up with tears; but h penn draw out its sweeter and
seemed a he hea tnot,a k the path | m s. They may be the
rlong the riv sadness at 1 sorrow; they may be the loftier |
It 1 as as he had said aie suonian 1 a and Ifess. God knows where
ul leiynsn thas entat led ekaatil ee : ~"Âź' 1 the melodies of our nature are, and what
and the birds were singing ihe aleSl SONS | discipline will bring them forth. Some with
among the trees, as they walked onward ops} plaintive tongues walk in lowly vales
pe Ca er , sing of nothing but joys, as they thread the
baste ' F 1 they all unite
Let us sit h said the s taking the ascending
his seat upon thet f i tree ing hearts finds
» rodeamed ir
Bertha ot silence, a: r some time He med if
neither spoke, and the is i of the
! ard of the lady
river gurgling against i i ana t , i upon a certain
tinkling of the distant herd,bells, and the asion, that the only real, disinterested
> | \
buzzing ef the i were the only s sitcom nt she ever received was from a
pon the st air At length he spoke again il i wi asked permission to ign)
Bertha,â he said, and his though
low, was deep and t! ng, âwe have known
each other now f 1Âą months, and yet I
have never told wi whatla Y al
Jo not n know my nam }
He pa S a xpecting s piv, bul
Bertha remained silent and a
âMy name is Albert. J amri jinmy],.
â Sarat â
native Du lam noble. re | the sailor returned, with humble
Still Bertha ked Wn, Âą made no] defere âls i ke to know your
answel
âWhen I first Âą i here, it was with the in eel
ntention of rema g two orth ays li
I ways travelling slowly threught untry id man, would
for my pleasu I met youâ and | re- | y
ae ; Ht , answered the old tar, looking
mained here unt now âan \ 1 ¹£ $5 Wh h âa yup, âina storm al sea, with danger
I remained, Bertha â or death me, | would like to aali the
She shook her head, and murmured ââNo name rhtest thing I'd ever seen in
} } f sunshine in it even in the
He looked earnestly into her face, and a | â„°@. â â
Seiseh Ă© : larkness
Taint Smile passed over his lips. i
: 1 } Wowman.âPlace her among flowers, foster
Bertha, you are young, you avection- | her as atender plant, and she is a thing of
ate, you are truthful. It is true that I am | fan *"y, waywardness and follyâannoyed by
. a law- â mm
some few years older than yourself, but I am | 2 G@W-drop, I oâ L by pe touch of a but
still „ sung: it true that Iam more educat- | terly s wing, andrea ly to faint, at the sound
pee A ga a j nd she is overnowere , 3
ed, but it will be the pleasure of my t fal and sne is Over] wered by the
nstruct you. I love you, Bertha, and I w perfume of a rosebud, But let real calamity
ie a fa : come, rouse her affections, enkindle the fires
make you my wil „ As a sa ta
He took her hand in hisas he said this, | Of ber heart, and mark her t ea; how
| and drew nearer towards her ; but she rose | 2errt ci esa it ae vis âs 18 r
in an impulse of sudden agitation, and strove | Heart, place ber in ihe heat of the battleâ
: . âvo her hild â( vthing to pre .
| to withdraw it. He rose also, eee a birdâanything sah oki
âYou do not speak to me, Bertha; you d and sĂ© o . eee rarer
t âeo ) | her white arm eild, as her own blood
not tell me that you love me â ing 7 a
- You are too good for me, my Lord,â fals | ae Wig âą 1 2 al. i :
tered the young girl. âIâlI cannot marry te pl +n I 7 = Ă©
wens . n the dark place f earth, call forth her ens
you , } sii al | ~ - he breath POMS â
'T is you w hoaret 10 gC od for me, erg! 10 a { i 8) I ath beeom . a
Cx k mv wifel healing, her pres ea blessing She dise
and as fur rank, my wife be } Ă© â
: '? nat putes inch by inch the stride of stalking pes-
âcannot!â repeate I J f
âBut canted tte tins tilence, when man, the strong and brave,
â] have not yet told | pale and affrighted shr nks away. pg?
was noble, but I am tune haunts her n wears away a lil
Ă© | of silent endurance ; and goes forward with
pose I am a Duk , eer SRE her bridaj. In pr r
ae â ail ity she is a bud full of odors, waiting but for
| mother shall have serva! }
| . vile wis the winds of adversity, to scatter them abroad
honour, Bertha; and y sone .
" âpure gojd, valuable, but untried in the
In one of the darkest and narrowest | that her grandmother was dying
streets of the antique wa town of Bop- âWhat ails her? Where do you live?
pert on the Rhine, there lived, some fifty | Has a doctor seen your grandmother ? Is ail |
years ago, an aged woman named Elspeth | help unavailing?â asked the stranger, ra-
Stuler, and her pretty gr laughter Bertha pidly
Every traveller who has seon Boppart} A few wor is told ali the little story, and
will req ts line of old umbling | he listened to it as he walked along beside
walls, a!) surrounded by long tufts of v ng | her out of the church porch, and across the
grasses and bunches of white netiles; its | Market-piace. ae
quaint Morisco turrets, with their tapering} â Iwill go with you to your home, mat sass
ts glo finished. â Your
roofs hed entrance, an
old round tows
farther than the rest, yet
iis g.00my are
near enough
reflected with them upon the surface of the |
water. Then there is the Hauptkirche life |
ing up its twin slender spires, with the |
curious little gallery which unites them like }
& vridge; and the picturesque houses of the
town, crowding together their high slated |
roofs and pointed gables within the walis;
and above ali, the broad, rushing, sunny |
Rhine river, which here takes so sudden a
r
ks like some v lake shut
bend that it lo
in by the mountains, and woods, and vine-
yards, and rich green pasture meadows,
* +t
which extend all along the the
littie village of Kamp, haifa league away on
the side fecing Boppart. And
summer evenings, when the
nd golden with the sunset, and the
runs more soft!
stand by st
shadows lying at their
vaguely near the waters edge, the
come down here from the
with tinkling bells hanging to their necks,
and, splashing in among the flags and water-
lilies, drink with quiet content; while the
young herdsmen stan! by singing songs of
the Liebenstein or the Lurley, or whispering
in the ears of the fishersâ daughters sitting |
under the cherry trees
And it was in this rare i primitive t
that Elspeth Stuler lived
of its beautiful situation, for
blindânot for the sake of
its Homan w
about themânot for the sake of anything,
in short, which might attract the
antiquery, or the traveller
banks upt
in the sweet
SaV iS @! red
, and the purple mountains
iil and solemnly, with their
feet ring
ows
$0
, and quiÂą
farms and villsges,
wn
the sake
$oe@ Was ne iriy
not tor
its antiquity and
remains, for she kne
artist, the
nothing |
i
|
Dut simply be- |
cause she had been born. married, ind |
widowed there; and because the little old
cemetery outside the town contained the
dust of all whom she had best loved, and
amongst whom she also desired to sleep.
So she lived in a very old hous?,in a nar.
row dirty little street, no better than a lane,
with a gutter running down the centre. It
was a Very curious house, and bad once been
inhabited by people of some mark and |ike-
jibood. The gables were richly ornamented
wish bas-relie/s of remarkable intricacy ;
the upper windows projected quite over the
footway, and were set in deep carved mould-
ings; and the old arched doorway was ac~
tually emhowered in a portico laden with
the most elaborate wood-carvings of fruit,
iver |
the he said. when she had
standing back somewhat | grandmother must not die.
9 be | to this city, and I know not where to seek
| shops,
} and hesitating
foliage, and grotesque heads of birds and
animals. Beautiful as it was, and is (for the
house is yet standing), it was used hy a
merchent, to whom it belonged, as a store-
house for wool, and Elspeth and her grand-
child lived rent-free in the lower rooms, and
took care of the property.
They were very poor» so poor, indoed,
that when Bertha was a little child, they
poust have starved may a winter, but for
I am a stranger
to
that is
for what Lead me your
and
you require.
we will purchase all
needful.â
He spoke to her soothingly and tenderly,
as if she were achild,and placed his heavy
purse in her trembling hand. Wher
strove to thank him with her quivering lips,
}
accents, he only shook his
head, and bade her hasten on and be silent.
There was a great abundance that evening
upon the little table in frau Elpsethâs cham-
ber, and a bright fire glowing merrily upon
the hearth; and above all, there were glad
and grateful hearts beneath that roof.
âThe blessings of be
noble sir!â murmured theold woman, feebly,
from her bed, when he rose from
chair beside the fire, and turned
Bertha said nothingâ but as he reached the
door, she bent down and kissed his hand in
the old simple German fashion; and the
gentleman did not prevent her; but whea
she had done it, he laid his hand upon her
shining hair, inclined his lofty head towards
her, kissed her gently on the forehead, and
without another word, went out, and closed
Heaven upon you,
the arm-
to go
the door.
Berthaâs heart fluttered painfully, and her
cheeks grew pale and red by turns, as she
stood for some moments rooted to the spot.
Then, with a sigh anda smile, she
her pretty head, began humming the burthen
of an old song, and busied herself in prepars
shook
| ing some warm messes for her sick charge.
From that moment the Frau Elspeth began
to mend, and inthe course of a few weeks
was restored to ber usual health. But the
st.anger did not on that account cease to
visit or befriend her,
four or five times a week; and scarcely a
day passed on which they did not receive
some fresh proof of his bounty. Now it was
an easy chair, or 4 warm rug, or an eider-
down quilt for the old lady; or a piece of
fine wooilen cloth for a cloak for Bertha; or,
perchance, a lamp for evening use, for it
was still winter time. But more frequently
there came baskets of wine, and meat, and
fish, and dried fruits. And such rare and
delicious conserves as neither Elspeth nor
Bertha had ever tasted or heard of before.
They came also in so great a profusion that
the grandmother had to eutreat him to be
less liberal. it was quite plain, she said,
that the gentleman could know nothing of
housekeeping; at which he smiled in his
grave way, and said that he had generally
left those things to the care of persons who
understood them better than himself
He came regularily
He was a strange, calm, silent man;
very unassuming and kind, but withal so
Stately in his look and bearing, and so reserv-
ed in his conversation, that it would have been
she |
ess!
as he had
But Bertha, instead of looking,
expected joyful and surprised, wrung
hands together, and turned deathly pale.
âAlas! alas!â she said â| wh
bitterly, â what
| shall | do? what shall I do?
A stern change passed over the face of the
wooer. He dropped the hand which he had
been holding, and drew hack.
âBertha,â he said in a low distinct voice,
mn
â why do you refuse me?
She began to weep. At thismomenta little
boat containing two men came up the middle
ot the river. One man was rowing, and
other was standing up in his place, shading
his eyes with his hand and looking in the di-
rection of Boppart. Bertha started, and
looked intently at the boatâher colour came
and wentâshe tried to speak, and her voice
faltered.
âMy Lord,â she said turning away her
head, ** iâI loveâanother.ââ
The boat came nearer and nearer. There
was a long silence, so long that at last she
looked round, The Duke was still standing
in the very attitude in which he had last
spoken, except that his head was bent upon
his breast, and his eyes fixed on the ground.
The mute grief ef his attitude struck Bertha
to the heart. She crept timidly to his side,
and, as she had done once before, upon the
first night of their meeting, took his band in
both her own, and covered it with tears and
kisses.
He lifted his lofty brow, and looked at her
sadly and tenderly.
âYou should have told me this before
Bertha,â he said, very gently. âBut yet it
is not yonr fault, for I never spoke of love to
you tillnow. I thought to have made you
my Wifeâto have taught you all the wisdom
and poetry of lifeâto haveâbut enough of
this! The dream is past, and it is vain to
dwe!! uponits illusions, Who isfthat, Ber-
tha ?â
The boat was by this time moored to the
bank, a little lower down than where they
stood, and a young man was hastening to-~
wards them.
â Bertha !â
tha !
âThis is he, my Lord,â said she, blushing
and smiling through her tears
The Duke paused and looked steadily at
the young pair before him. Then he turned
somewhat paler than usual, a shade seemed
to pass over his brow, and his lip quivered
visibly.
âHeaven bless you, Bertha,â he said, âand
you, my young friend. I shal! not forget
either of you. Adieu.â
He stepped forward, and once more kissed
her on the forehead. It was for the last
time. Then he drew his hat down lower up-
on his brow, and walked swiftly away. In
less than an hour a carriage rolled out of the
gates of the Rheiniseher Hotel, and took the
road to Cologne.
Many weeks had not elapsed when Max
Jugel received an appointment at the irons
works of Iohenrain, which enabied him to
marry his pretty Bertha without further delay.
It came unanimously, and he could never
discover the name of his unknown benefac-
tor; but as hoherain lies in the territories of
Nassau, it was conjectured by many to have
been the gift of hisânoble and generous rival.
Bertha and Max are stilldiving; but the
Duke of Nassau has been dead some twenty
years. Hemarried a noble lady, the daugh-~
ter of a royal house, and was succeeded by
his son, the present sovereign. :
And this, reader, is a true story of the
Rhine.
he cried, waving his cap, ââBer-
| furnace
her |
| the great charm of existence.
In short woman a miracleâ-a
mystery, from the center of which radiates
is
A Worp, Morners.--Each mother is a
| historian. She writes not the history of
empires or of nations on paper, bul she writes
her history on the imperishable mind of her
child. That tablet and that history will re-
main indelible when time shall be no more
| That h
the |
stery each mother
and read with eternal joy or unutterable
woe in the far ages of eternity. Thisthought
uld weigh on the mind of every mother,
render eply circumspect and
and faithful in her solemn work of
her children for heaven and im
V [he minds of children are very
ble and easily impressed. A word,
may engrave an impression
will meet again,
sh
and
prayerful,
training up
mortality
Susce]
a look, a frown
upon the mind of achild whieh no lapse of
time can efface or washout. You walk along
the sea shore when the tide is out, and you
orm characters, or write words or names in
the smooth white sand which lies spread out
as clear and beautiful at your feet, according
as your fancy may dictate, but the returning
tide shail in a few honrs wash out and efface
forever all that you have written. Not so
the lines and characters of truth, or error,
which your conduct imprints on the mind of
your ehild. There you write impressions for
the everlasting goed or ill of your child,
which neither the floods ner storms of earth
can wash out, nor deathâs cold fingers can
erase, nor the slow moving ages of eternity
can obliterate. How careful, then, should
each mother be of herself in her treatment of
her child. How prayerful, and how serious,
and how earnest to write the eternal truths
of God on his mind, those truths which shall
be his guide and teacher when her voice
shail be silent in death, and her lips no
longer move in prayer in his behalf, in com-
mending her dear child to her covenant God.
This isto certify, that in May last, I was
sorely troubled with what the doctors pro-
nounce pleurisy, and other complaints. Afier
applying to several eminent physicians, and
obtaining no relief, I was, by the advice of
of friends, who had used Gatesâ medicines,
induced to make a trial of the same. After
using two bottles of itI am happy to say
thet lconsider myselfentirely free from the de-
sease Which the dectors pronounced incurable
and safely reco nmend it to allthose suffer-
ing with the same complaint.
Miss Asay Conoon
The above sworn to before me, at Liver-
pool, (Jueenâs County, this 18th day of Oes
tober, 1871.
T. N. Setios, J. P.
Jy 27,â1m
A DISTINGUISHED PHYSILOGIST
has said that Neuralgia is the ery ot the
hungry nerves for their special food, which
is the Pohsphorous contained in the blood.
This painful disease isusually followed by
general prostration on account of the great
waste of nerve tissue and insufficient supplyof
nerve force to maintain the functions of the
vital organs. The common cause of Neural-
gia and Rheumatic Pains is depraved Nutri-
tion arising from Derangements of the Sto-
mach, Mal-assimilation of food, and Poor
Blood.
Phosphates and Calisaya supplies Phosphor-
ous for the nervous system Lime as an excis |
tant of nutrition, Iron for the blood, and
Calisaya for promoting strength. No pre-
paratiou in existence is so reliable to main-
tain the vital forces and energize all the organs
and tissues of the body.
Dr. Wheeler's Compound Elixiar of |
|
Persons requiring any of the above articles
;| Will please send in their orders immediately
Ile has now ready
300 bbis.
of Superior No. |, & No.2
Navy Bread, which he
offers for Sale on his
usual liberal Terms.
All orders from town or country receive |
prompt attention.
JOHN
Ch town April 20, 1874
QUIRK,
QUEEN SQUARE
KFURNTEPURE
WAREROOMS !
Qur premises have heen greatly
and are now the
LARGEST and BEST ARRANGED | LIFE of
IN THE CITY,
and equal to any in the Lower Provinces.
ALL WORK WARRANTED TO GIVE
PERFECT SATISFACTION.
I have 200.000 feet Seasoned Lumber under
cover, for manufacturing purposes.
Ihave 20,000 feet Gilt and Walnut Picture
Frame Moulding, 80 different
Cheap.
Oval, Gothic and Square Picture Frames, in
Gilt and Walnut.
patterns
All the latest Styles of Rustic Frames Heavy
Gilt, for Oil Pictures, Cheap.
English, German, and American Looking |
Glasses and Mirror Plates.
A few Large Mantle Mirrors and Pier @lass-
es, Cheap.
Window Furniture, AC.
Poles, Rings and Cornices, Rollers, Shades
Blinds, Tassels, Cords, &c.
Upholstery Goods, Hair Seating,
Bedding, Ke.
New patterns, in Damask, Repps, Terry,
Plushes, Poplins, Brocatells, Fringes,
Gimps, Buttons, Tufts, &c., cheap.
BeddingâFeather, Hair and
Pillows and Bolsters, constant-
ly on hand, cheap.
IRON BEDSTEADS AND CRIBS,
a Great Variety, Cheap.
A few of the celebrated Iron Bed CHAIRS,
âit makes a Bed, an Easy Chair, and in-
valid Chair,and a Lounge ina few seconds,
very durable. No house should be with-
out one.
Our siock is the Lar est in the
City, and the very Cheapst
Strongest CHAIRS aud BEDSTEADS,
Most beautiful and durable Drawing Room,
Dining Room and Chamber Fnrniture, in
suits.
It is a pleasure to have customers come
and examine.
George Woods & coâs.
CELEBRATED
CABINET ORGANS
FOk SALEâCHEAP.
JOHN NEWSON.
_ Queen Square, Mareh 10, 1873
Boone Bay Herring!
200 BBLS. split BOONE BAY HER-
a VU RING. in prime condition.
FOR SALE BY
FENTON T. NEWBERRY.
July 13, 13, 1874.âtf
NOTICE.
A LL PERSONS indebted to the Examin-
+4 kr, either for Subscriptions or Adver-
tisments, are requested to make IMME-
DIATE PAYMENT to the undersigned,
who alone is authorized to receive and grant
receipts for the same.
By order,
W. L. COTTON,
Manager
1874, FRESH SEEDS. 1874.
HE Subscriber has received via Halifax,
from CovENT GARDEN, London, a
LARGE SUPPLY or
Field,Garden and Flower Seeds.
Warranted the growth of 1873.
Wa. R. WATSON,
City Drug Store, May 4, 1874. tf
Jan.19th, 1874.
~âTMPORTANT 70 THE PUBLIC.
public |
a large |
and |
| Manufactured by
Flock Beds, | i
|
| PARKâS COTTON WARP!
Dr. J. Walkerâs California Vin-
egar Bitters are a purely Vegetable
preparation, made chietly from the na-
tive herbs found on the lower ranges of
| the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor-
| nia, the medicinal properties of which
| are extracted therefrom without the use
of Alcohol. The question is almost
daily asked, ââ What is the cause of the
unparalleled success of VINEGAR BIr-
TERS?â Our answer is, that they remove
the cause of disease, and the patient re-
covers his health. They are the great
blood purifier and a life-giving principle,
a perfect Renovator and Invigorator
of the system. Never before in the
history of the world has a medicine been
compounded possessing the remarkable
qualities of Vingear Birrers in healing the
sick of every disease manis heir to. They
are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic,
relieving Congestion or Inflammation of
the Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious
Diseases.
The properties of Dr. WaLKerâs
VINEGAR BiTTERs are Aperient, Diaphoretic,
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic,
Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Sudorific, Altera-
tive, and Anti-Bilious.
R. H. McDONALD & CO.,
ists and Gen. Agts., San Francisco, California,
and cor. of Washington and Chariton Sts., N. „,
Montreal to Charlottetown.
âPE Subscribers intend running two
vessels between the above ports,
ing the Summer,
The Laodamia, '6 tons,
| will leave Montreal about the
| by another vessel a fortnight later.
We shall thus be enabled to supply our |
customers with FLOUR. at Cost, Charges |
and Freight.
HYNDMAN BROS.
Châtown, 19th May, 1874-â4i
| have just received our usual Stock of
TEAS, GROCERIES, &c..
per recent arrivals from Great Britain.
Also, to arrive per Lady Rodney, from
| London, 50 Chests TEA, warranted good.
HYNOMAN BROS,
Ch town, May 28, 1874.
Mout! & Acadian §, . Company
tween
and Picton.
SS. COLUSEIA,
so Ss. CANA IDA,
S§.8. CALIFORNIA,
HYNOMAN BROS.
Agents.
Apply in Montreal to
DAVID SHAW,
305 Commissioners Street. |
1874. tf
NEWS
âhâtown, June 22,
JOYFUL
|
|
}
MAW BITTERS
âANDâ
COMBINED MEDICINES,
CURES,
Dropsv in its worst form; Liver Complaint;
Jaundice ; Swelling of the Limbs
Asthma, of whatever kind ; Dyspepsia, Bili-
{ousness, Consumption, Spitting of
Bronchitis, Sick Headsache, Running Sores,
Erysipelas, Stoppage of the Menses, Kidney
and Gravel Complaint, Measels, Fevers, Sea
Sickness, Heart disease, Pleurisy, Piles,
Worms, Rheumatism, Spinal disease, or Aff.
Dysentry, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Tooth
ache and Ague, Sprains, Strains, Felons
Chilblains, Burns, Scalds, Bruises, Sore E
Lame Back and Side, and
Hands, &c.
ba For Certificates, &ec., taken
Justices of the Peace, see Pamplets which;
can be furnished at the Agencies.
ves
â
Cuts
For sale by dealers generally.
Agents at Charlottetown, T.
Wholesale Agent, Wm
Desh:
R. Watson.
isay
CALEB GATES, & Co.
Middleton, Annapolis, Co.
1873.
Dec. |
WHITE, BLUE, RED, ORANGE AND GREEN,
f b J uj Ro NJ 9 NJ
No's 5's to 10's.
TARRANTED to be FULL LENGTH
and weight, STRONGER AND BET-
| TER in every respect than any other Eng-
lish or American warp.
|
| BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
\
None is gennu-
ne without our name on the labels. For
|
| sale by all dealers.
Wn. PARKS & SON,
| New Brunswick Cotton Mills, St John N. B.
Feb. 2nd, 1374. ly aie
ak te Fle ay
Mines,
Victoria Sydney,
VHE above Mines are delivering a superior
article this season, quite free from slate
froma depth of 135 feet below any previous
year. We can recommend this COAL to con-
sumers and dealers, and feel confident that it
will give satisfaction.
The Company are enabled to deliver largely
in excess of previous years. Vessels will have
no delay in getting their cargo.
Prices $3 for Round, $1 for Slack.
Terms, sixty days or 2: per cent discount for
Cash.
HYNDMAN BROS.
Agents for P. EF. I.
Ch town, June 8, 1874.âar pa 3mo
A CARD.
A S my connection with the Wesleyan
Academy ceases at the expiration of
the Vacation, I purpose taking pupils dur-
ing the hours recently given them, vit:
from 9 a. m., till 2p. m. Arrangemen s
can be made so that hours can be given to
suit the coavenience ofall pupils. At the
end of every Quarter, pupils will perform
before parents and friends. Application
must be made at once, as a limited number
only can be taken.
First Quarter will commence on Monday,
July 6.
TERMS WILL BE AS FOLLOWS:
For Quarter of 24 lessons, Instru-
mental Music per half hour's
duration, $5.00
For Quarter of 24 lessons, Instru-
mental Music, 1 hourâs dura-
tion, 10.00
Leasons in Vocai Music only. 10.00
Instrumental Lessons of an hour's
duration, with the first rudiments
of thorough Bass and Transposi-
tion &c., 15.00
Vocal and Instrumental, half hour's
duration, 7.00
Lessons on the Organ, 20.00
Cabinet Organ and Melodeon, 15.00
No Pupil will be taken for less than six
months.
Orders taken for the best Pianos and
Organs, and the utmost satisfaction is
guaranteed.
Ss. N. EARLE.
Ch'town, June 29, 1874.
Wanted.
A" experienced NURSE GIRL,
ences required, Good Wages.
Apply at this Office.
Châ town, July 6, 1874,
Refers
dur-
Ist JUNE, |
| calling at Summerside, and will be followed |
We would also inform the Trade that we |
WEEKLY LINE.
Nae undermentioned Steamships will |
Form a Regular Weekly Line be- |
Montreal, Shediac, Charlottetown |
and face; |
blood, |
ection of the Spine, Coughs, Colds and
Whooping Cough, Diptheria and_ Sore}
Throat, Pains in the Stomach, Diarrhea, |
Cracked |
before |
Commercial College.
WELSH & OWENâS BUILDING,
Queen Street. Charlottetown.
EATON, PRAZBE & REAGH, PROPLILTORS
DEISMIC: NIL) 1"
Educate Young Men for Business
1}
| lateral subjects, thorougly taught and prac-
tically applied by means ofa
Complete Course of Actual Business,
gaged in by all the students. Particular
attention given to
ARITHMETIC,
CORRESPONDENCE,
SPELLING, &c.
Our Course of Instruction affords a
| amount of
| PRACTICAL INFORMATION
relating to Business pursuits, which is of the
greatest importance to Young Men intend§
ing to go into business for themselves.
BANKING
BUSINESS
large
No Yorng Wan Can Afford to miss a Courso at this
Institution.
3usiness men and others tnuterested are
system.
Hoursâ94 a. m. to 12 p. m., from 2 to 4,
and 74 to 94 p. m.
Circulars containing full particulars will
be sent free to any address, on application to
T. B. REAGH, Principal.
5, 1874.âtf
Châtown, Jan
HEALTH STRENGTH & VIGOR.
Just Published, Price One Shilling Stqg.
} saideneibicebe
fENUE SCIENCE OF LIFE;
SERVATION. A practical Guide to
Health, Strength, and Vigorous Old Age.
Address to the Nervous, the Sedentary, the
Dyspeptic.and all those whose constitutions
have become debilitated or relaxed from ir-
regularities of life, climate, age er disease,
or from over-taxed or abused energies,
sulting from the Loss of Nervous or Physical
| Force. By S. LAâMERT, M. D., L.
| &c.,37 BEDFORD SQUARE, London.
} âââAn excellent manual for all who may
learn how to use life and not abuse it.â
Church and State Gaseile
â*On the subjects of diet and the regula-
tion of the functions the advice thr t
is admirable.ââ Mirror.
Dr. LaâMERT is the only regularly-qua
Practicioner, who, for thirty vears, has d
voted his entire attention to th ire of these
disorders.
Patients residing in the «
| successsfully treated by respond
and remedies will } warte ser
and safety to an} idress.
THE SCIENCE OF LIFE may
price one shilling stg.. i
Scotia, J. H. Woodrich,
H. A. Parr; Pi
| mouth, ou, ll
} St. John, N. B., H. Chubb nd
| CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I., of Me Bre
| ner Brothers, 44 Queen Street.
ImporTANT Cavution.âThe public are
earnestly warned against a piracy of the
above work emanating from a so-called
â*Peabody Inst â* Boston, which unblush-
'
ingly appropria the titles of two works,
published by Dr. LaâMert for thirty years.
âBOSTON STEAMERS.
SEASON 1874.
THE Steamers â Alhambra
729
Ss
} | toe tons, and |
enlarged | OR THE AFFLICTE Caroll,â1372 tors,having both being thoroughly
overhauled, and fitted with very superior accom
modation for passengers, will leave Boston during |}
the season alternately every Saturday at noon,
and returning will leave Charlottetown alter-
nately every Thursday at five p.m., calling at
| Halitax and Caaso both ways.
| For freight or passage apply to
CARVELL
Châtown, June 1, 1873.âa p is
JUST ARRIVED.
Pp S.5. Somerset, from Boston, and Schr
Bonnibeli from New York,
BROS, Agents
2,900 Barrels Flour & Cornmeal
very cheap for cash, or at 3 mouths on approv-
{
which will be sold in quantities to Traders, |
ed paper.
OWEN CONNOLLY.
Office, old stand, Dorchester St |
Châtown, May 4, 1874,
âTHE EXAMINER.â
THE
LARGEST NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHED IN
PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND
Every week places before
latest local and Foreigi
from: the raciest and most improving Liter-
ature of the day; Editorial articles contri-
buted by the ablest writers in the Province.
i
|
| SUBSCRIPTIONS SOLICITED.
its readers the
news: selections
TERMSâOne Dollar and sixty cents a year
Office, corner Queen & King St.
t
Charlottetown.
When people see a man advertise they know }
he is a business man, and his advertizing pro-
claims that he is not above business, but anxious
to do it. Customers, like sheep, are gregarious,
and flock where they see others go. If nobody
else were engaged in the same business, it would
be important to tradesmen and dealers to adver-
tize in the paper, because they are tempted to
buy what they read of. But others are engaged
| in the same business, and even if they do ad-
vertize, it becomes the more important tor you |
| todoso; if they do not advertize it becomes
doubly important.â Anon.â
; osinen
j THE ATTENTION OF
Sl
| importers and Dealers
IS RESPECTFULLY DIRECTED TO
THE BEATER
MERCHANTS
WILL FIND CUSTOMERS FOR THEIR
SPRING GOODS
| BY ADVERTIZNG IN
âTHE EXAMINER.â
The usual reductions to those who
ADVERTIZE
BY THE YEAii.
Manilla! â
The best and the cheapest in the market, and |
and manufactured by the
Canada Cordage Co., Montreal.
WE SOLICIT ORDERS, at manufacturer's |
lowest prices, and deliver at Charlottetown
on the shortest notice.
Samples always in Stock.
We refer shipbuilders and all dealers to
the accompanying certificate.
CARVELL BROS,, Agents.
Châtown, 15th June, 1874.
CERTIFICATE,
Having used largely during the past year,
MANILLA, the manufacture of the Can-
ada Cordage Company. ordered through
Messrs CaRVELL Bros., and having sub-
mitted it to the severest tests, we highly
recommend its use to all shipowners.
PEAKE BROS., & CO..
JAMES DUNCAN & CO.,
HYNDMAN BROS.,
ARTEMAS LORD,
LONGWORTH & CQ.,
BOURKE GILLAN & CO.,
WELSH & OWEN,
2mo
BOOK-KEEPING in all its branches, both
»y SINGLE and DOUBLE ENTRY and Col- |
cord.ally invited to call and examine our |
or SELF-PRE |
whether of body or mind; with the Instruc- |
| tions for the Treatment of all Disorders re- |
|
| PATENT
Sole proprietor, F. J. CLARKE, Chemiat,
APOTHECARIESâ HALL LISCOLN, ENG
LAND.
| to!
} able for S30,
pau
ONE BOX OF CLAREDâS B41 PILLS
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| msicellany of modern thought,
| and criticism, The cream of all
books worth reviewing is found
they treat of the leading events
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upon all intelligent readers in ght, urge
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New subscribers (applying early) for the
year [574 may have, without charge, the
last volume for 1573 of such periodicalag
they may subscribe for.
| Or instead, new subscribersâto an
three, or four of the aboveâ pe Fae
| may have one_ of the â Four Reviewsâ fy
1873; subscribers to all five may have two
of the â Four Reviews,â or one set of Black
wood's Magazine for 1873.
Neither premiums to subscribers nor
discount to clubs can be allowed unless th
money is remitted direct to the publishen,
âo lums given to clubs,
rculars with further particulars may be
had on application.
EONARD SCOTT PUBLISHING (o,,
_ 14) FULTON STREET, NEW YORK
F R THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.âSe
Deateronomy, Cap. xii., verse 23,
CLAR KEâ:
World famed Blood Mixture,
Trade Markâ âBiood Mixture.â
THE GREAT PURIFIER & RESTORE
For cleansing and clearing the blood fr
all impurities,cannot be too highly recommended
Eor Scrofula, Scurvy, Skin Diseases, and Sots
BLOOD
of all kinds itis a never-failing and permants
cure;
Lt Cure ld Sores
es Ulecerated Sores or the Neck,
Cuces Uleerated Sore Lege
( es lack ids or Pi nples ou the Pac
( eB o« Sores
Cures Cine us Ulcers
â sts sud Skip Diseases.
( : Glandular Swellings
Clears the Blood from all impare Matter,
From Ww lever catise arising.
Se this unxture is pleasant to the taste, and
werranted free from anythiag injurious to the
most delicate Constitution of either sex, the Pre
pt tor solivite sufferers to give it a trial te tes
iis value
arte,
Thousands of te niale from all
! iin Cases, eos
Soldin Bottles § 1.00 ¹
tiining ixtimes the quantity, $41.0) cachâsufficient
to effect a Sermanent cure in the wreat Ina) ority of
long-standi ases. BY ALL CHEMISTLS and
MEDICINE VENDORS thronghoa
the worid
EXPORT AGENTS.
Burgevne, Durbidges at d Co. Cx Jet
van st. London
Newbary an
| Sous, 37 Newyute et., London
Barclay & Sons, 9 Farringdon st , London.
Sanger & Sons, Oxford et., London
And all the London Wholesale Honses,
AGENTS IN CANADA.
Torouto.âElliot & », Wholesale Druggiste
â Shapter and Owen.
Hamilton. â Winer and C
St Joho, N. B.âil. L. Spencer.
Ialifux N.S.âAvery, Brown and (oe.
AÂź the Act of our Legislature, passed
inJune, 1872, enacts, that from and
after the of January, 1874, it shall
not be la under certain penalties, to
t day
wrul,
inter any dead body in the Protestant burying
Ground, on the Malpeque Road, ia
the fiftl ward of this City ; and
the New etry is now ready for
interment pplication for burials â there
in must be made to the undersigned,
at his residence in Kent Street.
Plots for interments, 15 by 20 feet, eqas!
share of the Company's ground, avail
0,on payment of two-thirds of
money, and subject to another
the purchase
call of SIO,
et ie o* a
lots for individual interment &2 each.
Persons desirous of obtaining allotments
in the Cemetry, will please apply @
William Cundall, Esq., the Treasurer @
the Company.
By Order
JOHN LEPAGE, Secây.
Dec. 29, 187
OUTFITS Employment at your bomes or
travel] âhe work is conge
ii nial, honorable, and pays the beat
* ot anything ever betore offered
s, and complete outfits seat
Âą, Cleremont Daniels & Co
Montz
, Sampl
: ge
235 Notre Dame St.,
eal
AGENTS WANTEDâMaleand Fe
male, forthe ** Transmission of Life,â
and the âPhysical Life of Woman, â both
by Dr. Napheys. Agent's profits, $150
$250 a month. âTestimonials from mos
eminent Divines, Physicians and Editors i
America. Immense sales everywhere.
Send for Terms and Circulars to C.W
MITCHELL, St, John, N. B
Jan. 12, 1873.
S warranted to cure all discharges from the
Urinary Oryaus, in e.ther sex, acquired or
constitutional Gravel andâ Pains in the Back.
Sold in Boxes, $1.59 each, all Chemiete and
Patent Medicine Vendors.
Sole Proprietor, F, J.
CKAKKE
APOTHECARIESâ HALL, LINCOLN, ENGLAND,
EXPORT AGENTS.
Burgoyne Burbidges and Co.,Coleman St., Londot
Newbury und Sons, 37 Newyuate Street, London
Barelay and Sons, 95 Farringdon Street, London
Sanger aud Sous, Oxford street, London.
And all the London Wholesale Honses.
AGENTS IN CANADA.
Montreal ââklliott and Co., WholesaleDruggistÂź
Shapter and Owen,
Hamilton. âWiver and Âą
St. John, N. BâH. L. Spencer
Halifax, N. Sâ-A very, Brown and Co
_ Uetober 13, 1873. ly
Tobacco & Cigars! â
rr HE Subsx ribs 4 flers for sale (in Boud,)
a choice Lot of
SMOKING & CHEWiNG TOBACCO,
and three Cases CIGARS.
74 Boxes Tobacco, in Solace, Sunshine, Vit-
ginian, Navy and Black Diamond.
3 Cases Cigars in Victoria & Flor Gertrude.
Samples can be seen at Sale Raom
N. RANKIN,
Corner Water & Pownal Sts
Châtown, April 18, 1874.
WANTED.
S'* Energetic Men, to sell Cucumber
wood Pumps. An active man can esra
ed
Fifty Dollars » week at this business.
G. C. CARMAN,
Manutacturerâs Agent
Hynudmanâs Building. Queen Street,
May 18, 1874. 3
ow