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GET TANT
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1 aetiomhd aia heed ES TNE FFT NTT ew
j 5 ’ . ‘p.,
MOET She does nothing but cry all day,’ says PAYING AN OLD DEBT.
— : Baa—aa! says the lamt a
i j | WW I
- f ! we nb
ON \ A | \\ I vy t l
~ W 33 nad, a \
ib \ 1%, ‘Ny \ ,
\ W WW * v { (}
‘ 4 yenerar 1 gel N } ! {
Wh nz wt nd Tom bel
. ai fl Was t \ vy | back in the
I : Ww was repr nted as ir $s "
t rving ali day, haking with laug B 1
r? tea " W but pres My
9 Wi i PCA \ al —
T f ed B V j i the shout fom ich : ,
t n ‘ ght. Th ry driv- 4} : a i 5 met
a { ty ! a ee habit f ' . wi) t ,
| and } i the wl :
N a as if cons ft } m | I 7
1 } i w t
\ Ae, Putin 210 8 i
I s . | withallh \
r | ¢ to feel it Lnath wears 1} eld
i 1 ie we ¢ $s merely ta rent
‘ i ' - a } 1
ra | MAED, &8 sates ‘ o ff
I . 1s i.an eat it moment to X}
} te vw is. wi ! brus! t
Her Ee | f " his with hand, | is i
E . a
AY Ww kK .
the fi a 3 g t
brother, that eht we ma
S { and i
' WwW
; art t
st > ‘ : J . r
. sa fo : 3 ie ? haw . we Wwe y en On t
. & was not let Tom, however lead the quietest ible und the !
4 1707. 2 her} in the world. She liked, with the usual } ro-| pared, and all t notes, due-! ind a
S E | pensity of her sex, occasionally to vex the unts, which, in uding intere nounted
Pa ee isiaa nd assert her sway over 8 in {
man she loved, and assert her y ; ‘ a ‘ ! ice
ran lars. We ommitt
te 1<] low. He, in histu ay- thirty thousand I . .
: t . —. ‘T ob ~ | n in t]
l vs, l $} : ed off th y we A or ng | to tl
2 Whenever the w w Was angry, and that _“ bis 1 t!
i _\ he wanted to bi in bent 1 wins ing in is
ae acd | was to steal behin : :
4 $28. he was made an Acad-| ly, putting his brother's office. walt Bie, he
; | ~ ty of | to pat her gent s Ww m, when t ime a ds
\ | secree | cry ‘ Baa! Ol ittie old man, wl La tim
{ Lov 1 shed. soon ter ho went to , M - ‘)
e aol + t mt : and 1 weathe i 1 Lil ‘
\ so who Londen, two % oe a oe “°- + ward of him f evenly Ite asked i
sken | Aflerwards me out ‘Rory O'More,’ ‘ The | ny } her was not the « My br ,
- ‘ i f} Happy Mar [ White Horse of the Pep- | was
= ; r , g- | pe s,, and other tales. He also wrote songs, | pa tno, nteste
i" S } ‘NM Carew,’ and ‘ Molly Bawn,’ ‘ I I ’ ( { ] "7 |
} wee kc His‘ Molly Carew’ shews how well bh ! My brotii 1 ed n t ik t
: 1 ] ¢ i SWEET MOLLY CAREW and pu * On ; pe
act This a r! a Arrah ! what shall I } i ancien cing 1
° ‘ his t slowly tw g his with
‘ 2 .
S } a a this old ¢ ‘ ‘ u
re wren And “tis all about you e Sig , .
A u 7 " My sweet Molly Carew phras i s tly wis
i ! Wf i And, indeed, lis a sin anda shame, that t jd man’s name might be found on
an \ 33 You ompleter than nature | the forgiv list Mi j was soon at
# In every featu oe m ti 1
v , lo that forehead s his res t Phe « lL debt
rt $ " And Id rathe by fa was | d rty ollar It id
| Ha of what ey panda , ale i. t-
| i to wil seven ght | } -
i PF I iter f that i ex iw it rg i t ] a
Y e distant to me tha al same. ;
() we sthr * bs .
a
t e lama ‘ i
; able | n this w it 1 ma t My |
. Arrah why uld I peak
, a (of rf ead and e vers
a iv se, it ’
? ®
Paddy Blake, the scl master, ‘ ‘ ' ‘
i ih th ie hen \ i
bi I ey " To Br . lated tw £ it i
* e i’ 4 a be § >
: is gi, d i s
fie I a .
" Pt "i An as y s } a t t
: , ~ | And It is tIh n the world. It
*"Tw good, hitt | ro and my old woman and I hope we may hav
I know tw BL Pt ry vith G I wishto do sow
: : : a Tis we ury Wilda iW j i
‘ : i man, I 1 like to pay it.’ And he la
+
‘ 8 i & 86° t I cn b m th reques
: Fro
= I can lak t |
‘ ed Bid Och h I'm alone! old man ala l ha
; . mal n this world without you! ‘ ; ‘
{ v— y £ - ast s iterest s
1 * fe : kh ee eit di : I
t st nse dre i The del ght to have been paid g a
going . a. twice as high ve ; .
have a! ~ take share knew I'd ky, andt
a con wis : ey, | Lhough the piperI beat, My | die
, ator ase ai!) All for fear the old cheat ee i shat
: part , i ‘ Was not playing your favourite tur before him, and taking Hang 5
‘ Matters , rigs , | And then, when at Mass, turned t I tman’s
Jadies set, the lam! i@e 1 ow ieee a ’
ate , 1 . i Cross, telling t g
0 ig For of you Carew ;| , j a 4
ss : pene ~ | For y Ist on purpose i ai . S
n case Ay ORO CBT A bor childr to destroy certa I Is
i { t! " , .
the re ‘i ' . . That I hat sweet and s of 30
= © Purty face get a peep ‘ '
, h F the wires Bratavatetaal™ Ding apie tho \ gut ) !
A il ne Take and lave off that bonnet, a
W ed,—' B ) aw ' Or else I'll lay on it them
p The loss of my wondering soul Ir am t the | n appea to ]
«\ « eave B : |
o’ the road ls rr lied, Och h like an owl! and wiped the tear om his 1id—
mt s isiy, that Day is night, daer, without you. From the time that I heard-of 4 fa 5
» : ' 1 “te Och hone! don’t provoke me to do it | death, I ha ked and aped, | 10]
van t ,, | For there’s girls by the scor: land spared, to get the ney toget! f
l gut | That le vesme, and = | the payment of the debt. About ten days
| ) ‘ And you'd look mighty quare, | s ; hi
‘ . e , if one morning you'd meet 1} ago I made up the sum within twenty-live
j f I D me My wedding a 1g dollars.
s a In pride up th ‘My wife knew how much the payment of
st oor t Faith you'd ' : sat iad this dobt lay on my Spirits, and advised me
B ito 1 . Oh, | And drop dead with surprise, ; . eat i "
a i ley! I wish fo see twas not yourself that came to it. to sell « cow and make up the difference,
: that asked And sure Katy Neale, land get the heavy burden off my mind. I
Ir i Durfy close With her cow, I'd go bail, | did so, and now what will my old woman
‘1 UW past ; . ¢ decay Cate \ '¢ 4 3 "
, , , rani to B Woul np if Vd say, Katy Neale name the} .3 > 1 must go back to thi Cape and tel!
‘ a 4 . j i i ’ } ] r} ¥ “oo .
: ' é And though she’s short and dark | her the good news. She'll perhaps repeat the
‘ Pp up. 7 vidow | AS old winter's day, | very words she used when she put her hand
. from the it whom | And you're fresh and fair asthe blossoms in| on my shoulder when we parted :-—' I have}
. s! ; 1? eam ben's j never seen th right mus forsaken, nor his
' ir ea Wr ie Before Easte *n Lent seed begging bread.
peg m t 4 [ ver marry for spite Giving each of s a shake f th hand,
Och hone! weirasthrue, and a blessing on our old father’s memory,
J An i if I die for you ha went on his way rejoicing.
- My sweet Molly Carew, , sige” ‘ ;
Hi he My Ghost wilt behaunting you every night, After a short silence, taking his pencil and
P i at Och hone! weirasthrue! making a cast ‘ There,’ said my brother,
P iB Och hone! I'm SIORG | ‘ Your part of the amount would be so much.
“ e I'mal a this world without you i
g he e ' Contrive a plan to convey me your share of
i ‘ var his ocecuns ) ar ecruit h zs :
hit s : ick To vary hi yccupation, and recruit his the pleasure derived from this operation,
. * “fe strength, which had suffered from literary] 2.4 (he money is at your service
ahour Ot ade . i . ; >
surpt ibour, Lover made up an entertainment, Such is the simple tale which I have told
‘ % roprising varieties f frist ¥ { fo ay ;
y bb { wa t | comprising varieties of Irish humour and hav-| 9. i, was told me. To add to the evident
taking i | ing entitled his performance ‘Trish Evenings, moral would be an insult to the reader.
: " ‘ sah aes "| travelled about the country, and gave public Ses :
{ UG recreations. He was very successfulin this} wWoeaith A man’s wealth depends more
H ' Mrs | ava sid Te } effort. on his wife than his income. Some women
\ 1, poor thing Finding how much the English people ap- | will ta rags husbands to become rich on
G B y t , five hundred pounds a year; others ean
preciated his art in giving an evening’s en. : “ : ; ’ st
at i Pf . 1 ri tify } scarcely keep out of debt on five thousand.
, , Tom who. | tertainment, he resolved to gratify his own :
i fom who, | ; : . Content. — A man must invest himself
» +? ' S . w ste for ave ae rovi ya 3 nh i
for U pury ar-| taste for travelling, in providing @ new eN-| near at hand and in common things, and be |
j by, that i t- | tertainmeat. He went to the United States, ] content with a steady and moderate return,
tion | tw i was Ul ani spent several months there, On his res if he would know the blessedness of a cheer-
welcom j ws . ful heart, and the sweetness of a walk over
. +} , u i 848, he gave his ‘Transatlantic Ee- . nisi ac ‘ i een ee
ro} i , ‘at his yo | turn, in 1848, he ga an intic the round earth.
of tertainment,’ which was also well received 7" ] t j
1 t rt ’ . ' . ugh sometimes small evils, liké yis-
ve . (ood morning His literary labours for the amusement of : 6 ti ctelnianeh sp seg vils, like invis
‘An yu althy.’ ‘pat a ; ible insects inflict pain, and a single hair
3, D G t so, yesterday, | Se people were so highly prized, that her} may stop a vast machine, yet the chief secret
4 ssid 2 | rot afra:t of | Majesty's Government conferred on him a lof comfort lies in not suffering trifles to
stop t , Is ar pension, which, added to the somewhat ire vie" one, = 4 pregently cultivating an
aval . ) , undergrowth of sma easures, since re
preys ' I regular and uncertain gains of literature, en- — — aten § fn } “Mngnap elles:
Just rt the G of Far re : find great ones, alas! are let on long leases
: , ‘i . . | abled him to spend his latter years in come ; : '
ait ti io beat fhe | fort. We died on the 6th July, 1868, If you de ir lo 0a to be ¢ - picuous,
b : . to monopclize attention, to hurt the feelings
fh " ry | ee of innocent people, and to sow dissensi:
as » near ige.| Why isa bubbie like a bruise? Because} 0 2BOCeR* People, ¢ : ton
© alt . : nag between friends, you cannot make a lady or
wit wa t mb | it comes from a*blow ; i al Ae
ina . ; : | gentleman of yourself by any number of airs
. mig! B the | A tobacconist, with commendable frauds | and graces. Butif you are kind and good
ad theuaht } , lise vré 1 € _ ‘ rar » ‘ . " _ " ahaa ’
houg! so 7 of | ness, advertizes, ‘ shall continueto keep on} and wish people well, and prefer to say
making jaunting cara market art, 1ed~ | hand imported cigars of my own manufacs pleasant things when you can, you will be
fen : Titty lhe ial ween ture. polite without trying to be, and only silly
s ree rse Into Lie Cort r . «4s a al » wd
ul ; : nbarrassment A French paper points out how the pas-| people will criticise any form of hearty wel.
mn ne Lhe increasing embarrassme : A . ¢ ¢
iB i , icaivn toh f still would | 208 for gambling is shown in this country, | come, any effort to make them comfortable
ui mady an uer aesire tO be Ci, & * ile. hss
talk ind - th s love of minchiet “| it being necessary even in wedding notices| that may occur to you,
arr igr py Py sion | to state that there were ‘ no cards.’ ei
‘l beg your pardo: * continued, * just | 0 stste t 7 - Hints about Beauty.—There is nothing
one moment more—! wanted to ask, was it} [neredible—A beliman of a seaport not) more unfavorable to female beauty than late
not apoplexy, for | heard an odd repert about | one hundred miles from Whitby, in announc-| hours. Women who spend most of the day
his death ? ing a teetotal meeting to be held in the Tem-} in bed, and the night at work or dissipation,
Ob says Biddy, ‘ apoplexy—good | perance Hall at that place, said that the} have always a pale, faded complexion, and
bye ! meeting would be addressed by six females | dark-rimmed, wearied eyes. Too much sleep
‘ Did he speak at all? asked Tom. who had never spoken before, | is almost as hurtfu! as too little, and is sure
‘Baa ? says the lamb | A pensive young man in Wisconsin, while | to bloat the person with a pallid and uns
Tom cocked his ears. Biddy grew redder, | singing ‘Come, love, come,’ beneath his | wholesome fat. A gross and excessive in-
andthe wihlew crammed her handkerchief | Dulecinea’s window the other night, had love,} dulgence in eating and drinking is fatal to
int: Ler mouth, to endeavourdo smother her | music, wind, and every thing else knocked | the female charms. Regularity of time in
laughter out of him by a something in a long white | the daily repast and scientific looking are the
‘I hope poor Mrs. Flanagan bears it well?, | garment that fell out of a chamber window. | best means of securing not only good health
says Toi. {t proved to be nobody but his girl, who, in| but good looks. The appetite should never
. og! sa' ale ‘ a . gh , ie c y i i j
Poor thing, says Biddy, ‘she’s inconsols | her anxiety to know who was serenading| be wasted during the intervals between
abe.’
‘ Bac- avs the lamb
ed whence the sound proceeded,
Biddy spoke Jouder and faster, the widow | ‘Come, love, come,’ again, he will keep
sicked with laughing, and Tom then suspect- | away from under the window,
|dier, leaned too far over the window-sill,
hence the result. He says when he sings
as his system
' cannot stand many such shocks,
meals on pastry. confectionety, or any other
tickler of the appetite, which gratilies the
taste, but does not support the system. Ex.
ercise is, of course, essential to female
beauty.
AN INTERESTING PATIENT,
A STORY OF CHARLES DICKENS.
sii — |
TO THE
iene’ 4 . oe f the most I chanced to be travelling some years ; A CARD.
‘
' t alfa QP is. He | ago,” he said, “in arailroad carriage betweet —
rm ’ ith] ruddy | Livery | London. Besides myself there .* my connection with the Wesleyan |
fi ss Pa Academy ceases at the expiration of |
' rt red } , vere tw 1 | nuieman occupy a : “sah as tut |
, ' ‘ ; the Vacation, I purpose taking pupils dat
} id iTriac aha to De I ing the hours recently given them vit: |
" { { h ot In fat once ita] from 9 a. m., till 2 p. m Arrangemen s
, ddr ré i th rt I was occupied | ean be made so that hours an be given to |
i that it 7; , | suit the convenience of all pupils. At the |
i ; er ' i y : ; j end of every Quarter, pupils will perform |
tt! ind of ina Ye my attention | perore parents and friends. Application |
I | t} AY . 1 men tl ' t a vel won wa ! I | must be made at once, as a limited number |
, lered man ard a the three other persons in the | only can be taken.
ul vith reference to m\ f ay ! First Quarter will commence on Monday,
1 « iV ren iB si : a : rag .
July 6.
| () it na s| books. One of the ladies were perusing July : f
la py {I ' ‘chad ‘aad TERMS WILL BE AS FOLLOWS:
“i +} ie . —_ alia - ® eon For Quarter of 24 lessons, Tustru-
fle ran a ter into his thigh; it is} “we clergyman bad commenced @ conversa~ | mental Music per half hour's
" I rich en rf, | tion by asking what b ok they were reading duration, $5.00
“ | On being told the authors name and the litle | por Quarter of 24 lessons, Instru-
\ na rey { tor lof the book, he xpressed himself greatly mental Music, 1 hour’s dura-
‘ * ‘| nei aa . . te | tion. 10.00
u mile at the simplicity | Breve’ Nhat any facy in Magiand shoul’ 4 Leasons in-Vocai Music only 10.00
h itor, ‘we will ta that after a | Willing to lake up the writings of so vile 4) yystrumental Lessons of an hour's
Fell me explicitly what is the mat-| character as Charles Dickens. Both the duration, with the first radiments
ter with your child 7 i ladies showed great surprise at the low esti- of thorough Bass and Transposi- see
Snot tion &c., 5.00 |
Mon r, the splinter has festered in his | mate th lergyman put upon an author Vocal and Instrumental, half hour's |
h and he will let no « touch it: he {| Whom they had been accustomed to read, | duration, 7.00 |
is hea al} he gent! It ; 0 8a the least, with a certain degree of | Lessons on the Organ, 20.00
: : | Cabinet Organ and Melodeon, 15.00
_ t — elicl “r) i easure i were evidentl ch shock- gan ‘ J
will be necessary to perform a slight opera-| pleasure. 1 ne * ee hope: | No Pupil will be taken for less than six
hut} leant and headstrong about lat what the man said of the immoral! ten- | inonths
. j ef a i ,
t deney of these books, which they seemnever{ Orders taken for the best Pianos and}
‘ Leavy vi { How 1 is} before to have suspected ; but when he at Organs, and the utmost satisfaction {s |
he tacked t uthor’s private character and } guaranteed. S. N. EARLE
we. ade vr wists
‘Fo yea mly. But I am™afraid 1 told menstrous stories of his immoralities in Ch'town, June 29, 1874.
or tcl you attempt to} every direction, the volume was shut up and
touch it. Y« 1ust administer cholorofurm,’ | consigned to the dark pockets ofa travelling~ I } . [
‘Not at Your child} bag. 1 listened in wonder and astonishment, ) eS 2 Gh i s)
1 not! exercise of | behind the newspaper, to storiesof myself,|~ r ec
temper years old,’ which, if they bad been true, would have | — . .
‘But he is larg his age consigned any man to a prison for life. After | QUEEN SQUARE
‘No, no, 1 wil y) with you to see your] my fictitious biographer had occupied himself
{ : 1 bie tee &
! It w ¥ $0 GUtinisrer Cn mM} for nearly an hour with the eloquent recital }; U R. NI i 5
1 suon a cas of my delinquencies and crimes, I very —— iy
) iS you do not kn quietiy joined in the conversation, Of course
W l 1 {the man portunately. | ] began by modestly doubling some state | WA {
I pray, | beseech yon to take the ch *{ ments which I had just heard touching the
form the ne, im case you should need | author of ‘Bleak Hous and other unim-
t portant works ofa similar character. The} Oyr premises have heen greatly enlarged
To dispel t anxieties of the mervouS| ma: stared at me, and evidently consider. and are now the
nan, Doctor Lemoine carrie! with him the|ed y uppearan n the conversational
, anasthet nd shortly arrived at | stage an intrusion and an impertinence LARGEST and BEST ARRANGED
1 ig I isroom, which | al knov { Mr ‘ is V4 .
K iil slal the cc ry) quainted with him? |
oke t iffering patien | ‘He rather evaded the stion, but follow- | and equal to any in the Lower Provinces.
1 | os ' ly, | ae ual eee. nt r ih Ag r »p As a OR Ti G1IVk
tne } ! W 1! ndisturbed by the he had been talking, notfrom hisownknow.| 4LL WORK WARRANTED TO G
hi P ; A | WP RRO Ss ” Ss An OT ON.
performances, Ascend with me, picasr ledge of the author in question, but he said PERFECT SATISFACTI
hey & hatt-tad half-stair- | he knew for a certainty that every statement |
se, t 1 ol t The d having | he had made was a true one. I then became I have 200.000 feet Seasoned Lumber under
: ee . 4 ‘© | more earnest in my inquiries of proofs, which) cover, for manufacturing purposes.
iy ae are gantiy \ bite 1 giving. Ihave 20.000 feet Gilt and Walnut Picture
forme! i le $ ise at this] ‘The ladies sat by in silence, listening in-
| 2 Ys e ine. x iffere patter:
t € 1g of his id was | tently to what was going forward. An au- z. ume Moulding, 80 different p 8
saiuled wit 1oW wl from th hey had been accustomed to read for . P : : i
f the room. H stels : . : Oval, Gothic and Square Picture Frames, in |
Mer Ol t ! MMe LY sement had been traduced for the first 1e%e | a j
| Gilt and Walnut. |
al : ‘ aS oe a - i 25 : ei iid ich. ei © | All the latest Styles of Rustic Frames Heavy
sia da ieteenD asus pagan a to learn what lL had to say in refutation of Gilt, for Oil Pictures, Cheap.
ing vn } \ 4} oa |} j , \ a} |
j ULES 1 ’ he clergymen’s charges. I was taking up} .. : ‘ : :
= ‘nnetional hil 3 eee Sie . wes “F'| English, German, and American Looking
‘ : ; | his vile charges one by one, and stamping} Glasses and Mirror Plates.
g upon c ntenan | ‘ ee Ree vor naninnianr hy » | f ‘ r *
sbi | them as false in every particular, when the! 4 few Large Mantle Mirrors and Pier Glass-
vianbanatctiarcescils lulls ave 5 ' man grew furious and asked me if I knew| es, Cheap.
hi cad « thing rut le oy atoll .
—_— cpbiateiciranees, ie 8@ 10! Dickens personally. ieee concn
the a voice t 1. ee be i fectly we no man knows | Ts EK . &
repli Liy ell 10 é s | sa y ‘ ‘ ge
rhe d s not only ghastly pale, but | ‘ fo men os’ Window Furniture, &c.
| him better than [ do, and all your stories, 4
_— n a it | from beginning to end, to t » ladies, are} Poles, Rings and Cornices, Rollers, Shades
I pe K* | unmitigated lies.” Blinds, Tassels, Cords, &c.
hiene " ta re he is | ;
' : mt . |} ‘The man became liv with rage, and ask- |
\ | |
op tical led forn d | ay . - . sae s
Still showing his white teeth slowel ss Upholstery Goods. Hair Seating
You Nee | t 59
ei ' 2 *} taking ©, I presented it to him without | Bedding. &e.
3 be Ve thie $4 » eye es |
the Jardin des Plant fle " pe ee ern ee ee 1!) New patterns, in Damask, Repps. Terry,
| London, so that I was spared a longer in- Piushes, Poplins, Broecatells, Fringes,
. . “s daha o , “48 | terview withany lruihful companion ; but if Gimps, Buttons, Tufts, 4c., cheap.
gies, | is! ul form | “ . pA : * : *
: : : neat |, t 1 hundred years, | | not | Bedding—Feather, Hair and Flock Beds,
eacana } ray | ¢ hes
1, and in a second al regan | narrator of my crimes was instantly plung | ly on hand, cheap.
t un r the lTects of the lg rh Ss] ed. His fa 1d as White as his carvat, | . . -
1a still further admin ati fait s ait sacl #2 BE T © #3in ;
t i and his ips ised to utter words, He | GR BS EARS nS CRBS,
} nh powerless be- } "}
ee : 3s I seeme.t like a willed vegetable, and asif his |
TH — 4 x a | - oe ae, ¥
{ 1 rh ] n rey 1 was then | 14. belong oneal else. The ladies | a Great Variety, Cheap.
1 t! we t roper re- . :
vera became aware of the situation at once, and A few of the celebrated Iron Bed CHAIRS,
ss SEN al : , | bidding them “ good-day,” I stepped smiling- | —it makes a Bed, an Easy Chair, and in-
Neither doct ior Showman spoke a word "agi i aot all the oanein a Eee | valid Chair.and a Lounge ina few seconds,
untilthey had descended the steps and stood J 4 : ssl é eactey sno very durable. No house should be with-
. ‘ get away from the station the man had mus- out one
ly in the 1 below 1 | put one.
ay , we os A tered up strength sufficient to follow me, _—-
a | ba the s wman, you nave ; . .
ved. by vour wonderful presence of mind, | 2%4 his apologies were so nauseous and| Quy stock is the Largest in the
s ed, uu wis € i i >t bit we Balas a " 1 at . ‘ . ws f, i z y
craven, that I pitied hi ym my soul. I} ’
s incalculable to me.|. says 7 City, and the very Cheapst
: ae left him with this cantion: “Before you
Permit m Je ‘A 1} make charges against any man again, about | eaiainaa
; whom you 1oW nothng, and of whose} , a .
handed h indred franz not r . pe if | Strongest CHAIRS and BEDSTEADS.
ee ; wi you are so utterly ignorant, study to be | : z ‘
we ir D teur,’ replied ift Truth. and avoid Lying y | Most beautiful and durable Drawing Room,
1 é Pula, ahd avo umyingg as You aie ’ > . :
the p! y the satisfactory fi i ; i sia Dining Room and Chamber Furniture, in
Pi Fon Sea ae Svar Vile? It is a pleasure to have customers come |
v 1 simila I pray Al aby show isto be held in Montreal} ang examine
iv tain in. ee
‘Nn 4“ Ebi led | The Sp Government bas forbidden |
No, no, thatis not wha cai 1 han i re ee es ;
i son anal r th press irom attacking its financial schemas.| George Woods & co’s.
yeror William of Germany is to} bile a aaa tw
| BP! $3100 visit [taly the present year, probably in the} CELEBRATED
+ eee — tutluimMn
E} a D ~—flis vas pati Germany will propose to the International F A 8 i F T 0 Hy 6 A H §
ils Congress, now silting in Brussels, the recog- |
Ap I ‘ ial () y nition of the Spanish Republicans rN ‘ “
ead lette [The Paris Le Tem} s ¢tates that England, |
When +n v { 11-—When you turn | Germany and Italy, have agreed to establish j 4 y iY E wy * —)
it round. ; a joint surveilliauce over the Spanish fron € A i 4 wiih
A German caught cold by kissing a lady's liers, i
snowy brow. : | Of the group of seventeen Ministers who Quesn Square, Mareh 10, 1873
‘That beats awl!’ cried a cobbler, a , | took the oath of allegiance to Queen Victoria
: dogg ma - on her accession to the throne, thirtysseven 66 53
Jooked at a Shoe-making maciuina, ye
Puy 2 | years ago, but lwo lived to participate in the 4 2
rh > oldsf aig cd 6 sue ny crusade—A | }, t anniversary celebration—-Lord Russ
boy’s head and a linestoothe! comb, sel, now in his eighty-second year, and Earl THE
Question ion.—When a man | Grey, who is ten years younger,
sal sont hi 0 irge r too | >>} ay j
palate te slain nes ‘arge or 00} A young lady in a Pennsylvania town put LARGEST NEWSPAPER
small |a piece of wedding cake under her pillow,
The most important needie-work ever done | and weat to bed with the happy beliefjthat PUBLISHED IN
in the werld is supposed to have been done} she would dream ef seeing her future hus-
by the mariner’s ¢ ompass. | band, Thatcvening, however, she had eaten PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND
A Chicago lady complains of the uure= | two plates of ice cream, about a pint of Every week places before its readers the
mii her absent husband. He} Strawberries, several sweet cakes, and two} Jatest local and Foreign news: selections
nev r any money. | large pickles, and she now says she would | from the raciest and most improving Liter-
\ California poet has bought a mule, and | T@ther remain single all her life than marry | ature of the day; Editorial articles contri-
er poet chronicles it as a remarkable | he man she saw in _ — ' buted by the ablest writers in the Province.
aan aes uaa 4 Consumption, Scrofula, enlargement to the RLS i clon istekisonel
ton of selfspossessi wy Glands of the Neck, Eruption of the Skin, : SUBSCRIPTIONS SOLIC ITED.
A Texas man recently declined vo receive Spinal Disease, Torpid Liver with constipa- TERMS—One Dollar and sixty cents a year
a telegraphic despatch from a yellow fever | tion and head aches, Irritation of the Kidneys : Urs ‘
local rst he might catch the disease, and Bladders, Nervous Prostration and Oilice, corner Queen « King St.
The difference between a toper and a cow | General Debility all depends upon depraved Charlottetown.
isin favor of the latter. Two horns last her | nutrition and impoverished blood arising
a lifetime, while the loper needs more than | from indigestion. Dr. Wheeler's Compound JOYFUL NEWS
that every day. Elixir of Phosphates and Calisaya immediate- re i
may be found throned in the mother’s lap at ly reaches the prima, y cause of the diseases,
home, or done up in a little bundle of white | Dyspepsia, and enables the stomach to coms
flannel. A nation’s hope, before now, has | Pletely digest and assimilate a sufficent quan-
been found in a basket of bulrusivs. ily of nourishment to buildup the tissues. sana etn
Query.—What kind of cattle do they have This is to certify, that in May last, I was LIFE. of MAN BITTERS
in the North? A man there advertizes that ; sorely troubled with what the doctors pro-
he ‘wants a woman to wash, iron, and milk | nounce pleurisy, and other complaints. After AND—
one or two cows. |.applying to several eminent physicians, an
. , as ' Si ce ae | Obtaining no relief, I was, by the advice of COMBINED MEDICINES.
A house full of children {composes asj| ~) tho had weed Galese iatesa a
powerful a group of motives as ever moved ol friends, who had ust poe rates’ medic ines, CURES
1 heart or hand, and the secret of many a| mduced to make a trial of the same. After é a0,
struggle and triumph in the world’s battle | Using two bottles of itl am happy to say Dropsy in its worst form; Liver Complaint;
at a aE uae that lconsider myself entirely free from the de- | Jaundice ; Swelling of the Limbs and face;
he bois. gates wants np ’ di = ne er a 4 | sease which the doctors pronounced incurable | Asthma, of whatever kind ; Dyspepsia, Bili-
Sa ae oe aera ee ee sc and safely recommend it to all those suffer-] ousness, Consumption, Spitting of blood,
amusements were most popular in the spirit |; , y3 ise lee : winsnisitin Sisk eS ee
world, The reply was, ‘ Reading obituary ing with the same complaint. Bronchitis, Sic k Head ache, Running Sores,
rowan : ’ : : Miss Assy Conoon Erysipelas, Stoppage of the Menses, Kidney
no sis ss é : E The above sworn to before me, at Liver—| and Gravel Complaint, Measels, Fevers, Sea
‘ So the doctor is practising out West, is pool, Queen's County, this 18th day of Ocsj| Sickness, Heart disease, Pleurisy, Piles,
he?’ said an old lady. ’ Well, I declare | tober, 1871 i Worms, Rheumatism, Spinal disease, or Affs
to goodness, I’m glad of it, for I always r. N. Sextex, J. P. ection of the Spine, Coughs, Colds and
thought he needed practice! Jy 27,—1m Whooping Cough, Diptheria and Sore
Ancient manuscripts were written without : Throat, Pains in the Stomach, Diarrhoea
accents, stops, or separation between the oe oo poor : ee : isa Tha ie Dysentry, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Tooth
words: nor was it until after the ninth} ‘ a aka re a ter yt the finest} ache and Ague, Sprains, Strains, Felons,
century that copyists began to leave spaces en , " i ‘th Reena “y es potter limbed Chilblains, Burns, Scalds, Bruises, Sore Eyes,
between the words. and cnesied, larger eyed, and w th more lux-| Lame Back and Side, Cuts and Cracked
An impressive warning against attempting uriant hair and freer action, than any other Hands. &o
‘ SOtVe WEEN S6elist aviempuug | nation I have observed. The Pheenic r eis esti
to do unusual feats without practice, is given Spanish blood which has run ren wary hag eng senpeygenMg faken, betes
by an Indiana paper in the case of a citis| years in ead: walk still Matias aha ie en lB ' ogre see Pamplets which;
Ze y as whed j > cant EOE OP slyly : Bg ; > Ga" * | can be furnished at the Agencies.
ee the northern skin, these southern qualities For sale by dealers generally.
An Irish post boy having driven a gentie— | mingle most admirable and superb harmony. Agents at Charlottetown, T. DesBrisay
man a jong stage during torrents of rain, | The idea we form of Italian and Grecian} Wholesale Agent, Wm. R. Watson. :
the gentleman civilly said to him, ‘ Paddy, | beauty is never realized in Greece and Italy ; Manufactured by
are younot very wet?’ ‘Arrah,I don’t care | but we shall find itin Ireland, heightened CALEB GATES, & Co.
about being very wet, but, plaze, your honor, | and exceeded. Cheeks and lips of the deli- Middleton, Annapolis, Co. N.S
I’m very dry. cacy of carnation, with snowy teeth and eye- Dec, 1, 1873.
Alady who allows her serving maids to leg leigh 4 re mp in oy a
receive the visits of male cousins, one even- woe Be and bel eae Me r ony . d _
ing recently heard Patrick say to Biddy, 2a alate 0 a Bai peal “0g fall els; 1
‘ Yer darsn’t go up an’ git me one iv his cis ey rms, United, tal very
gars now, yer darsn’t. The ‘ his’ referred commonly to the Milesian. Modast to a pro-
a ugg RMS eae : . yerb, an Iriswoman is as unsuspecting of an -
to the lord of the household, and now Biddy | ; : ‘fit w ; :
receives callers at some other establish-| '=Propriety as if it were an impossible thing ;
ment . F ' and she is fearless and joyous asa midships 0 ‘
man, and sometimes as noisy. In a ball SEASON 1874.
The observation of a married man have | room she looks ill-dressed, not because her :
led to the conclusion that money put into | dress was ill put on, but because she dances,| ,, 4E Steamers “ Alhambra ” 782 tons, and
mirrors is a good investment, as it affords a} not glides, sits down without care, pulls her Cami,’ 1372 tons,having both being thoroughly
marvellous amount of comfort and gratifica—| flowers to pieces, and if her headsdress in~ overhauled, and fitted with very superior accom
tion to a woman. We says bis wife thinks | commodes her she wilbgive ita pull ora push Peete awn, sph one sean ating
sneenentiiess or glas “a \ ot ne ; ve a ar a 4 rery Saturday at noon
“ oe con: ulting = rg ge sae +d she It rae a0 = for an explana~| and returning will Be Charlottetown alter-
ies On her apron as when she ties on her | tion. She does not understand you, she| nately every Thursday at five p-m., calling at
bonnet, and while he goes to the door at| confesseth her ignorance. If she wishes to | Halifax and Canso bot ways.
once when there is a rap, she exclaims— | see you the next day, she tells you how and For freight or passage apply to
+ Mercy, ee who is that?’ and dashes} when. She is the child of nature, and child- CARVELL BROS, Agents
" 36 “ * ’
for the looking-glass. ren are not “ Stylish, Ch'town, June 1, 1873,—a p is
s California Vin-
egar Bitters are a purely Vegetable
preparation, made chiefly from the na-
tive herbs found on the lowgr ranges of
the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor-
nia, the medicinal properties of which
are extracted therefrom without the use
Dr. J. Walk
of Alcohol. The questign is almost
daily asked, “What is the cause of the
unparalleled suecess of VINEGAR Brt-
TERS?” 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 VingGar Brrrers 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. WALKER’s
VINEGAR BITTERS are Aperient, Diaphoretic,
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic,
Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Sudorific, Altera-
tive. and Anti-Bilious.
Grateful Thousands proclaim Vrx-
EGAR Brrrers the most wonderful In-
vigorant that ever sustained the sinking
system. 3
No Person can take these Bitters
according to directions, and remain long
unwell, provided their bones are not de-
stroyed by mineral poison or other
means, and vital organs wasted beyond
repair.
Bilious, Remittent and Inter-
mitient Fevers, which are so preva-
lent in the valleys of our great rivers
throughout the United States, especially
those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri,
Illinois, Tenuessee, Cumberland, Arkan-
sas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande,
Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ro-
anoke, James, and many others, with
their vast tribytaries, throughout our
entire country during the Summer and
Autumn, and remarkably so during sea-
sons of unusual heat and dryness, are
invariably accompanied by extensive de-
rangements of the stomach and liver,
and other abdominal viscera. In their
treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow-
erful influence upon these various or-
gans, is essentially necessary. ‘There
is no cathartic for the purpose equal to
Dr. J. WALKER’S VINEGAR BITTERS,
as they will speedily remove the dark-
colored viscid matter with which the
bowels are loaded, at the same time
stimulating the secretions of the liver,
and generally restoring the healthy
functions of the digestive organs.
Fortify the body against disease
by purifying all its fluids with ViInEGazr
Birrers. No epidemic can take hold
of a system thus fore-armed.
Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head-
ache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs,
Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour
Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste
in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpita-
tation of the Heart, Inflammation of the
Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kid-
neys, and a hundred other painful symp-
toms, are the offsprings ef Dyspepsia.
One bottle will prove a better guarantee
of its merits than a lengthy advertise-
ment. 2. ,
Serofula, or King’s Evil, White
Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck,
Goitre, Scrofulous Inflamnmations, Indolent
Inflammations, Mercurial Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, ete.
In these, as in all other constitutional Dis-
eases, WALKER’s VINEGAR Bitrers havo
shown their great curative powers in the
most obstinate and intractable cases.
For Inflammatory and Chronic
Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit-
tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of
the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder,
these Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases
are caused by Vitiated Blood.
Mechanical Diseases.—Persons en-
gaged in Paints and Minerals, such as
Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and
Miners, as they advance in life, are subject
to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard
against this, take a dose of WALKER’s VIN-
EGAR Bitters occasionally.
For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tet-
ter, Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples,
Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring-worms,
Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Lich,
Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors
and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name
or nature, are literally dug up and carried
out of the system in a short time by the use
of these Bitters.
Pin, Tape, and other Worms,
lurking in the system of so many thousands,
are effectually destroyed and removed. No
system of medicine, no vermifuges, no an-
thelminitics will free the system from worms
like these Bitters.
For Female Complaints, in young
or old, married or single, at the dawn of wo-
manhoed, or the turn of life, these Tonic
Bitters display so decided an influence that
improvement 1s soon perceptible.
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when-
ever you find its impurities bursting through
the skin in Pimples, Bruptions, or Sores;
cleanse it when you
_— in the veins; cle
foul; your feelings wi
the blood pure, and
will follow.
Druggists and Gen. Agts.
and cor. of Washington
Sold by all uggcist
August 25.
HEALTH TTRENGTH & VIGOR.
Just Published, Price One Shilling Stg.
\HE SCIENCE OF LIFE; or SELF-PRE
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 or disease,
or from over-taxed or abused energies,
whether of body or mind; with the Instruc-
tions for the Treatment of all Disorders re-
sulting from the Loss of Nervous or Physical
Force. By S. LA’MERT, M.D.,L.S. A.,
&e.,37 BEDFORD SQUARE, London.
“An excellent manual for all who may
learn how to use life and not abuse it.—
Church and State Gazelle.
**On the subjects of diet and the recula-
tion of the functions the advice throughout
is admirable.”— Mirror.
Dr. La’MErt is the only regularly-qnalified
Practicioner, who, for thirty years, has de-
voied his entire attention to the cure of these
disorders.
Patients residing in the Colonies can be
successsfully treated
and remedies will be forwarded in
and safety to any address.
THE SCIENCE OF LIFE may be had,
price one shilling stg., in Halifax, Nova
Scotia, J. H. Woodrich, Drug Store; Yar-
mouth, H. A. Parr; Pictou, Henry Ellott;
St. John, N. B., H. Chubb & Co., und in
CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I., of Messrs. Brem-
ner Brothers, 44 Queen Street.
secreey
IMpoRTANT CauTion.—The public
earnestly warned against a piracy of the
above work emanating from a so-called
‘‘Peabody Institute.” Boston, which unblush-
ingly appropriates the titles of two works,
published by Dr. La’Mert for thirty years.
ER 8.8. Somerset, from Bostun, and Schr
Bonnibell from New York,
2,900 Barrels Flour & Cornmeal
which will be sold in quantities to Traders,
very cheap for cash, or at 3 months on approv- |
ed paper.
OWEN CONNOLLY.
Office, old stand, Dorchester St
Ch’town, May 4, 1874,
Girls Wanted,
AT THE
ISLAND PARK HOTEL.
Ten Girls as Waiters and Chambermaids,
&c. Referencerequired, Wages, 8S
to $88 per month. nies
J. L. HOLMAN,
Summerside, June J, 1874.—t£
by correspondence, |
are j
Quarterly . Reviews |
EDINBURGH REVEW. ; Whig
LONDON QUARTERLY REVIEW :
URL ‘i SW C
serve ) “> (Con,
WESTMINSTER
BRITISH QI
REVIE
wr
“
’
ain Liberal )
area - RLY REVIEW, (Loan,
AND
A's TY
Black woou's Eeiaburgh Maarig
:
| REPRINTED BY
THE
Leonard Scott Publishing Co,
140 Furton Sr. N, Y,
By arrangement with the English publi
ers who receive a liberal compengatin. *
SAtion,
These periodicals constitute a Onderf
mesicellz ha of modern thought,
and criticism. The cream of all] Europe
books worth reviewing is found here
they treat of the leading events of
world in masterly articles written by
who had special knowledge of the matte
treated The American Pablishers
upon al. intelligent readers in this po
a liberal support of the Reprints Which
they have so long and so cheaply fuppj
feeling sure that no_ expenditure for
literary matter will yield so rich a
as that required for a subscriptio
the — ae
Leading Periodicals of Great Britian
TERMS :
About one third the price of the origi
For any one Review, $4 00
For any two Reviews, 74 eo
For any three Reviews, 1000 « &
Foa all four Reviews, 1200 # -«
For Blackwood’s Magazine, 400 « «
For Blackwood and one
Review, TO « «@
For Blackwood and two
Keviews, 1000 « «
For Blackwood and three
Reviews, 13 00 & «
For Blaekwood and four
Keviews, 100 “« «
PREMIUMS -
New subscribers (applying early) for the
year IS74 may have, without charge, the
last volume for 1573 ef such periodicals gs
they may subscribe for.
Or instead, new subscribers'to any two,
three, or four of the above penodi
may have one of the ‘ Four Reviews’ fy
1873; subscribers to all five may have tro
of the ‘ Four Reviews,’ or one set of Black
woud’s Magazine for 1873.
Neither premiums to subscribers por
discount to clubs can be allowed unless the
money is remitted direct to the publisher,
No premiums given to clubs.
Circulars with further particulars may be
had on application.
LEONARD SCOTT PUBLISHING Oo,,
140 FULTON STREET, NEW YORK,
Dec. 17, 1873.
VOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.—Se
Deuteronomy, Cap. xii., verse 23,
CLARE 1s
World Famed Blood Mixtare,
Trade Mark— ‘Blood Mixture ”
PURIFIER & RESTORE
For cleansing and clearing the blood frm
all impurities,cannot be too highly recommended
Eor Scrofiila, Scurvy, Skin Diseases, and Sore
THE GREAT BLOOD
of all kinds itis a never-failing and permagem
cure
{4 Cures cold Sores
Cn Uc 1 Sores or the Neck,
j Cascus Uleeratred Sore Lege
Cares Elackheads or Pimples on the Pea
Cu ? ‘4 ivy “Sores
(ures Ca s Ulcers
Cures Blood aud Skia Diseases.
Cares Glandular Swellings
Cleure the Kloed from ail nnpure Matter,
F ri ieVer cause arising.
e ® ix is pleasant to the taste, and
warranted tree rom snything injarions to the
mos lelicate ¢ mof either vex, the Pr
eoli reto give it a trial te te
iia Value
housamds - i from all parte,
Sold in Bottles $1.00 end sand in Cures, con-
taining ixtimes th quantity $1.0 ch—saficient
to effec! w permanent
cure in the great urjority of
longestanudi: 1
ALL CLERMISTS wat
PATENT .
t
MEDICINE VENDORS thronghon
Sole proprietor, F. J. CLARKE, Chemigt,
APOTHECARIES’. HALL, LINCOLN, ENG
LAND
EXVORT AGENTS.
Burgoyne, Burbidges and Co., Coleman st. Louden
Newbury and ous, 37 Newgate st., London
Barclay & Sons, 95 Farringdon st , Loudon,
Sanger & Sows, Oxford st., London
And all the London Wholesale Houses,
AGENTS IN CANADA.
Tor Elliot & », Wholesale Druggiste
se hant id Owen.
Han n. Wir ‘
St John, X. b.—- 1 r.
Ha N A ind Co,
Charlottitiwa Cemetery Company.
| _ the Act of our Legislature, passed
| 4 inJune, 1872, enacts, that from and
| after the first day of January, 1874, it shall
| not be lawful, under certain penalties, to
inter any dead body in the Protestant burying
Ground, on tle Malpeque Road, it
the fifth ward of this City ; and #
jthe New Cemetry is now ready for
reget nt, application for burials there
in must be made to the undersigned,
at his residence in Kent Street.
Plof® for interments, 15 by 20 feet, equal
tol share of the Company’s ground, avail
able for $30,0n payment of two-thirds of
the purchase money, and subject to another
call of 810.
Plots for individual interment $2 cach.
Persons desirous of obtaining allotments
in the Cemetry, will please apply
William Cundall, Esq., the Treasurer 3
the Company.
By Order
JOHN LEPAGE, Sec’y.
1873.
Dec. 29,
Employment at your homes o
travelling. The work is conge
FREE nial, honorable, and pays the best
+ of anything ever before offered.
Cash wages, samples, and complete outfits seat
“ree. Address at once, Cleremont Daniels & Co.
235 Notre Dame St., Montreal.
10( AGENTS WANTED—Maleand Fe
male, forthe “‘ Transmission of Life.”
and the “ Physical Life of Woman, ” both
by Dr. Napheys. Agent's profits, $150 #
$250 a month. ‘Testimonials from most
eminent Divines, Physicians and Editors it
America. Immense sales everywhere.
Send for Terms and Circulars to C. W
MITCHELL, St.John, N. B
Jan. 12, 1873.
ree.
ONE BOX OF CLARKE’S B41 PILLS
. seg to care all discharges tne SS
rinary Organs, in ether sex, acquired of
constitutional Gravel and! Pains m the
Sold in Boxes, $1.50 each, by all Chemists and
Patent Medicine Vendors.
Sole Proprietor, F, J. CKARKE,
APOTHECARIES’ HALL, LINCOLN, ENGLAND,
EXPORT AGENTS.
surgoyne Barbidges and Co.,Coleman St. London
Newbury and Sons, 37 Newgate Street, London
Barelay and Sons, “5 Farringdon Street, Loudon
Sanger aud Sons, Oxford street, London.
And all the London Wholesale Houses.
AGENTS IN CANADA.
I\*—Elliott and Co., WholesaleDruggiat®
Shapter and Owen.
Hamiiton.—Wiuer and Co
mM. dobu, N. it ti. L. pencer
Halifax , N. S—-A very, Brown and Co
_ October 18, 1873. ly
|
Moutrea
TOBACCO & CIGARS
pee Subscrib: «fers for sale (in Bond,)
a choice Lot of
SMOKING AMD CHEWING TOBACCO,
and three Cases CIGARS.
74 Boxes Tobacco, in Solace, Sunshine, Vit’
ginian, Navy and Black Diamond.
3 Cases Cigars in Victoria & Flor Gertrade-
Samples can be seen at Sale Raom
N. RANKIN,
j Corner Water & Pownal Sts
| Ch’town, April 13, 1874.
VAN TED.
XIX Energetic Men, to sell Cucumber
wood Pumps. An active man can ear?
| Fifty Dollars a week at this business.
G. C. CARMAN,
Manutacturer’s Agent
Hyndman’s Building. Queen Street,
May 18, 1874. ow
|
|
|
|
}
1 aetiomhd aia heed ES TNE FFT NTT ew
j 5 ’ . ‘p.,
MOET She does nothing but cry all day,’ says PAYING AN OLD DEBT.
— : Baa—aa! says the lamt a
i j | WW I
- f ! we nb
ON \ A | \\ I vy t l
~ W 33 nad, a \
ib \ 1%, ‘Ny \ ,
\ W WW * v { (}
‘ 4 yenerar 1 gel N } ! {
Wh nz wt nd Tom bel
. ai fl Was t \ vy | back in the
I : Ww was repr nted as ir $s "
t rving ali day, haking with laug B 1
r? tea " W but pres My
9 Wi i PCA \ al —
T f ed B V j i the shout fom ich : ,
t n ‘ ght. Th ry driv- 4} : a i 5 met
a { ty ! a ee habit f ' . wi) t ,
| and } i the wl :
N a as if cons ft } m | I 7
1 } i w t
\ Ae, Putin 210 8 i
I s . | withallh \
r | ¢ to feel it Lnath wears 1} eld
i 1 ie we ¢ $s merely ta rent
‘ i ' - a } 1
ra | MAED, &8 sates ‘ o ff
I . 1s i.an eat it moment to X}
} te vw is. wi ! brus! t
Her Ee | f " his with hand, | is i
E . a
AY Ww kK .
the fi a 3 g t
brother, that eht we ma
S { and i
' WwW
; art t
st > ‘ : J . r
. sa fo : 3 ie ? haw . we Wwe y en On t
. & was not let Tom, however lead the quietest ible und the !
4 1707. 2 her} in the world. She liked, with the usual } ro-| pared, and all t notes, due-! ind a
S E | pensity of her sex, occasionally to vex the unts, which, in uding intere nounted
Pa ee isiaa nd assert her sway over 8 in {
man she loved, and assert her y ; ‘ a ‘ ! ice
ran lars. We ommitt
te 1<] low. He, in histu ay- thirty thousand I . .
: t . —. ‘T ob ~ | n in t]
l vs, l $} : ed off th y we A or ng | to tl
2 Whenever the w w Was angry, and that _“ bis 1 t!
i _\ he wanted to bi in bent 1 wins ing in is
ae acd | was to steal behin : :
4 $28. he was made an Acad-| ly, putting his brother's office. walt Bie, he
; | ~ ty of | to pat her gent s Ww m, when t ime a ds
\ | secree | cry ‘ Baa! Ol ittie old man, wl La tim
{ Lov 1 shed. soon ter ho went to , M - ‘)
e aol + t mt : and 1 weathe i 1 Lil ‘
\ so who Londen, two % oe a oe “°- + ward of him f evenly Ite asked i
sken | Aflerwards me out ‘Rory O'More,’ ‘ The | ny } her was not the « My br ,
- ‘ i f} Happy Mar [ White Horse of the Pep- | was
= ; r , g- | pe s,, and other tales. He also wrote songs, | pa tno, nteste
i" S } ‘NM Carew,’ and ‘ Molly Bawn,’ ‘ I I ’ ( { ] "7 |
} wee kc His‘ Molly Carew’ shews how well bh ! My brotii 1 ed n t ik t
: 1 ] ¢ i SWEET MOLLY CAREW and pu * On ; pe
act This a r! a Arrah ! what shall I } i ancien cing 1
° ‘ his t slowly tw g his with
‘ 2 .
S } a a this old ¢ ‘ ‘ u
re wren And “tis all about you e Sig , .
A u 7 " My sweet Molly Carew phras i s tly wis
i ! Wf i And, indeed, lis a sin anda shame, that t jd man’s name might be found on
an \ 33 You ompleter than nature | the forgiv list Mi j was soon at
# In every featu oe m ti 1
v , lo that forehead s his res t Phe « lL debt
rt $ " And Id rathe by fa was | d rty ollar It id
| Ha of what ey panda , ale i. t-
| i to wil seven ght | } -
i PF I iter f that i ex iw it rg i t ] a
Y e distant to me tha al same. ;
() we sthr * bs .
a
t e lama ‘ i
; able | n this w it 1 ma t My |
. Arrah why uld I peak
, a (of rf ead and e vers
a iv se, it ’
? ®
Paddy Blake, the scl master, ‘ ‘ ' ‘
i ih th ie hen \ i
bi I ey " To Br . lated tw £ it i
* e i’ 4 a be § >
: is gi, d i s
fie I a .
" Pt "i An as y s } a t t
: , ~ | And It is tIh n the world. It
*"Tw good, hitt | ro and my old woman and I hope we may hav
I know tw BL Pt ry vith G I wishto do sow
: : : a Tis we ury Wilda iW j i
‘ : i man, I 1 like to pay it.’ And he la
+
‘ 8 i & 86° t I cn b m th reques
: Fro
= I can lak t |
‘ ed Bid Och h I'm alone! old man ala l ha
; . mal n this world without you! ‘ ; ‘
{ v— y £ - ast s iterest s
1 * fe : kh ee eit di : I
t st nse dre i The del ght to have been paid g a
going . a. twice as high ve ; .
have a! ~ take share knew I'd ky, andt
a con wis : ey, | Lhough the piperI beat, My | die
, ator ase ai!) All for fear the old cheat ee i shat
: part , i ‘ Was not playing your favourite tur before him, and taking Hang 5
‘ Matters , rigs , | And then, when at Mass, turned t I tman’s
Jadies set, the lam! i@e 1 ow ieee a ’
ate , 1 . i Cross, telling t g
0 ig For of you Carew ;| , j a 4
ss : pene ~ | For y Ist on purpose i ai . S
n case Ay ORO CBT A bor childr to destroy certa I Is
i { t! " , .
the re ‘i ' . . That I hat sweet and s of 30
= © Purty face get a peep ‘ '
, h F the wires Bratavatetaal™ Ding apie tho \ gut ) !
A il ne Take and lave off that bonnet, a
W ed,—' B ) aw ' Or else I'll lay on it them
p The loss of my wondering soul Ir am t the | n appea to ]
«\ « eave B : |
o’ the road ls rr lied, Och h like an owl! and wiped the tear om his 1id—
mt s isiy, that Day is night, daer, without you. From the time that I heard-of 4 fa 5
» : ' 1 “te Och hone! don’t provoke me to do it | death, I ha ked and aped, | 10]
van t ,, | For there’s girls by the scor: land spared, to get the ney toget! f
l gut | That le vesme, and = | the payment of the debt. About ten days
| ) ‘ And you'd look mighty quare, | s ; hi
‘ . e , if one morning you'd meet 1} ago I made up the sum within twenty-live
j f I D me My wedding a 1g dollars.
s a In pride up th ‘My wife knew how much the payment of
st oor t Faith you'd ' : sat iad this dobt lay on my Spirits, and advised me
B ito 1 . Oh, | And drop dead with surprise, ; . eat i "
a i ley! I wish fo see twas not yourself that came to it. to sell « cow and make up the difference,
: that asked And sure Katy Neale, land get the heavy burden off my mind. I
Ir i Durfy close With her cow, I'd go bail, | did so, and now what will my old woman
‘1 UW past ; . ¢ decay Cate \ '¢ 4 3 "
, , , rani to B Woul np if Vd say, Katy Neale name the} .3 > 1 must go back to thi Cape and tel!
‘ a 4 . j i i ’ } ] r} ¥ “oo .
: ' é And though she’s short and dark | her the good news. She'll perhaps repeat the
‘ Pp up. 7 vidow | AS old winter's day, | very words she used when she put her hand
. from the it whom | And you're fresh and fair asthe blossoms in| on my shoulder when we parted :-—' I have}
. s! ; 1? eam ben's j never seen th right mus forsaken, nor his
' ir ea Wr ie Before Easte *n Lent seed begging bread.
peg m t 4 [ ver marry for spite Giving each of s a shake f th hand,
Och hone! weirasthrue, and a blessing on our old father’s memory,
J An i if I die for you ha went on his way rejoicing.
- My sweet Molly Carew, , sige” ‘ ;
Hi he My Ghost wilt behaunting you every night, After a short silence, taking his pencil and
P i at Och hone! weirasthrue! making a cast ‘ There,’ said my brother,
P iB Och hone! I'm SIORG | ‘ Your part of the amount would be so much.
“ e I'mal a this world without you i
g he e ' Contrive a plan to convey me your share of
i ‘ var his ocecuns ) ar ecruit h zs :
hit s : ick To vary hi yccupation, and recruit his the pleasure derived from this operation,
. * “fe strength, which had suffered from literary] 2.4 (he money is at your service
ahour Ot ade . i . ; >
surpt ibour, Lover made up an entertainment, Such is the simple tale which I have told
‘ % roprising varieties f frist ¥ { fo ay ;
y bb { wa t | comprising varieties of Irish humour and hav-| 9. i, was told me. To add to the evident
taking i | ing entitled his performance ‘Trish Evenings, moral would be an insult to the reader.
: " ‘ sah aes "| travelled about the country, and gave public Ses :
{ UG recreations. He was very successfulin this} wWoeaith A man’s wealth depends more
H ' Mrs | ava sid Te } effort. on his wife than his income. Some women
\ 1, poor thing Finding how much the English people ap- | will ta rags husbands to become rich on
G B y t , five hundred pounds a year; others ean
preciated his art in giving an evening’s en. : “ : ; ’ st
at i Pf . 1 ri tify } scarcely keep out of debt on five thousand.
, , Tom who. | tertainment, he resolved to gratify his own :
i fom who, | ; : . Content. — A man must invest himself
» +? ' S . w ste for ave ae rovi ya 3 nh i
for U pury ar-| taste for travelling, in providing @ new eN-| near at hand and in common things, and be |
j by, that i t- | tertainmeat. He went to the United States, ] content with a steady and moderate return,
tion | tw i was Ul ani spent several months there, On his res if he would know the blessedness of a cheer-
welcom j ws . ful heart, and the sweetness of a walk over
. +} , u i 848, he gave his ‘Transatlantic Ee- . nisi ac ‘ i een ee
ro} i , ‘at his yo | turn, in 1848, he ga an intic the round earth.
of tertainment,’ which was also well received 7" ] t j
1 t rt ’ . ' . ugh sometimes small evils, liké yis-
ve . (ood morning His literary labours for the amusement of : 6 ti ctelnianeh sp seg vils, like invis
‘An yu althy.’ ‘pat a ; ible insects inflict pain, and a single hair
3, D G t so, yesterday, | Se people were so highly prized, that her} may stop a vast machine, yet the chief secret
4 ssid 2 | rot afra:t of | Majesty's Government conferred on him a lof comfort lies in not suffering trifles to
stop t , Is ar pension, which, added to the somewhat ire vie" one, = 4 pregently cultivating an
aval . ) , undergrowth of sma easures, since re
preys ' I regular and uncertain gains of literature, en- — — aten § fn } “Mngnap elles:
Just rt the G of Far re : find great ones, alas! are let on long leases
: , ‘i . . | abled him to spend his latter years in come ; : '
ait ti io beat fhe | fort. We died on the 6th July, 1868, If you de ir lo 0a to be ¢ - picuous,
b : . to monopclize attention, to hurt the feelings
fh " ry | ee of innocent people, and to sow dissensi:
as » near ige.| Why isa bubbie like a bruise? Because} 0 2BOCeR* People, ¢ : ton
© alt . : nag between friends, you cannot make a lady or
wit wa t mb | it comes from a*blow ; i al Ae
ina . ; : | gentleman of yourself by any number of airs
. mig! B the | A tobacconist, with commendable frauds | and graces. Butif you are kind and good
ad theuaht } , lise vré 1 € _ ‘ rar » ‘ . " _ " ahaa ’
houg! so 7 of | ness, advertizes, ‘ shall continueto keep on} and wish people well, and prefer to say
making jaunting cara market art, 1ed~ | hand imported cigars of my own manufacs pleasant things when you can, you will be
fen : Titty lhe ial ween ture. polite without trying to be, and only silly
s ree rse Into Lie Cort r . «4s a al » wd
ul ; : nbarrassment A French paper points out how the pas-| people will criticise any form of hearty wel.
mn ne Lhe increasing embarrassme : A . ¢ ¢
iB i , icaivn toh f still would | 208 for gambling is shown in this country, | come, any effort to make them comfortable
ui mady an uer aesire tO be Ci, & * ile. hss
talk ind - th s love of minchiet “| it being necessary even in wedding notices| that may occur to you,
arr igr py Py sion | to state that there were ‘ no cards.’ ei
‘l beg your pardo: * continued, * just | 0 stste t 7 - Hints about Beauty.—There is nothing
one moment more—! wanted to ask, was it} [neredible—A beliman of a seaport not) more unfavorable to female beauty than late
not apoplexy, for | heard an odd repert about | one hundred miles from Whitby, in announc-| hours. Women who spend most of the day
his death ? ing a teetotal meeting to be held in the Tem-} in bed, and the night at work or dissipation,
Ob says Biddy, ‘ apoplexy—good | perance Hall at that place, said that the} have always a pale, faded complexion, and
bye ! meeting would be addressed by six females | dark-rimmed, wearied eyes. Too much sleep
‘ Did he speak at all? asked Tom. who had never spoken before, | is almost as hurtfu! as too little, and is sure
‘Baa ? says the lamb | A pensive young man in Wisconsin, while | to bloat the person with a pallid and uns
Tom cocked his ears. Biddy grew redder, | singing ‘Come, love, come,’ beneath his | wholesome fat. A gross and excessive in-
andthe wihlew crammed her handkerchief | Dulecinea’s window the other night, had love,} dulgence in eating and drinking is fatal to
int: Ler mouth, to endeavourdo smother her | music, wind, and every thing else knocked | the female charms. Regularity of time in
laughter out of him by a something in a long white | the daily repast and scientific looking are the
‘I hope poor Mrs. Flanagan bears it well?, | garment that fell out of a chamber window. | best means of securing not only good health
says Toi. {t proved to be nobody but his girl, who, in| but good looks. The appetite should never
. og! sa' ale ‘ a . gh , ie c y i i j
Poor thing, says Biddy, ‘she’s inconsols | her anxiety to know who was serenading| be wasted during the intervals between
abe.’
‘ Bac- avs the lamb
ed whence the sound proceeded,
Biddy spoke Jouder and faster, the widow | ‘Come, love, come,’ again, he will keep
sicked with laughing, and Tom then suspect- | away from under the window,
|dier, leaned too far over the window-sill,
hence the result. He says when he sings
as his system
' cannot stand many such shocks,
meals on pastry. confectionety, or any other
tickler of the appetite, which gratilies the
taste, but does not support the system. Ex.
ercise is, of course, essential to female
beauty.
AN INTERESTING PATIENT,
A STORY OF CHARLES DICKENS.
sii — |
TO THE
iene’ 4 . oe f the most I chanced to be travelling some years ; A CARD.
‘
' t alfa QP is. He | ago,” he said, “in arailroad carriage betweet —
rm ’ ith] ruddy | Livery | London. Besides myself there .* my connection with the Wesleyan |
fi ss Pa Academy ceases at the expiration of |
' rt red } , vere tw 1 | nuieman occupy a : “sah as tut |
, ' ‘ ; the Vacation, I purpose taking pupils dat
} id iTriac aha to De I ing the hours recently given them vit: |
" { { h ot In fat once ita] from 9 a. m., till 2 p. m Arrangemen s
, ddr ré i th rt I was occupied | ean be made so that hours an be given to |
i that it 7; , | suit the convenience of all pupils. At the |
i ; er ' i y : ; j end of every Quarter, pupils will perform |
tt! ind of ina Ye my attention | perore parents and friends. Application |
I | t} AY . 1 men tl ' t a vel won wa ! I | must be made at once, as a limited number |
, lered man ard a the three other persons in the | only can be taken.
ul vith reference to m\ f ay ! First Quarter will commence on Monday,
1 « iV ren iB si : a : rag .
July 6.
| () it na s| books. One of the ladies were perusing July : f
la py {I ' ‘chad ‘aad TERMS WILL BE AS FOLLOWS:
“i +} ie . —_ alia - ® eon For Quarter of 24 lessons, Tustru-
fle ran a ter into his thigh; it is} “we clergyman bad commenced @ conversa~ | mental Music per half hour's
" I rich en rf, | tion by asking what b ok they were reading duration, $5.00
“ | On being told the authors name and the litle | por Quarter of 24 lessons, Instru-
\ na rey { tor lof the book, he xpressed himself greatly mental Music, 1 hour’s dura-
‘ * ‘| nei aa . . te | tion. 10.00
u mile at the simplicity | Breve’ Nhat any facy in Magiand shoul’ 4 Leasons in-Vocai Music only 10.00
h itor, ‘we will ta that after a | Willing to lake up the writings of so vile 4) yystrumental Lessons of an hour's
Fell me explicitly what is the mat-| character as Charles Dickens. Both the duration, with the first radiments
ter with your child 7 i ladies showed great surprise at the low esti- of thorough Bass and Transposi- see
Snot tion &c., 5.00 |
Mon r, the splinter has festered in his | mate th lergyman put upon an author Vocal and Instrumental, half hour's |
h and he will let no « touch it: he {| Whom they had been accustomed to read, | duration, 7.00 |
is hea al} he gent! It ; 0 8a the least, with a certain degree of | Lessons on the Organ, 20.00
: : | Cabinet Organ and Melodeon, 15.00
_ t — elicl “r) i easure i were evidentl ch shock- gan ‘ J
will be necessary to perform a slight opera-| pleasure. 1 ne * ee hope: | No Pupil will be taken for less than six
hut} leant and headstrong about lat what the man said of the immoral! ten- | inonths
. j ef a i ,
t deney of these books, which they seemnever{ Orders taken for the best Pianos and}
‘ Leavy vi { How 1 is} before to have suspected ; but when he at Organs, and the utmost satisfaction {s |
he tacked t uthor’s private character and } guaranteed. S. N. EARLE
we. ade vr wists
‘Fo yea mly. But I am™afraid 1 told menstrous stories of his immoralities in Ch'town, June 29, 1874.
or tcl you attempt to} every direction, the volume was shut up and
touch it. Y« 1ust administer cholorofurm,’ | consigned to the dark pockets ofa travelling~ I } . [
‘Not at Your child} bag. 1 listened in wonder and astonishment, ) eS 2 Gh i s)
1 not! exercise of | behind the newspaper, to storiesof myself,|~ r ec
temper years old,’ which, if they bad been true, would have | — . .
‘But he is larg his age consigned any man to a prison for life. After | QUEEN SQUARE
‘No, no, 1 wil y) with you to see your] my fictitious biographer had occupied himself
{ : 1 bie tee &
! It w ¥ $0 GUtinisrer Cn mM} for nearly an hour with the eloquent recital }; U R. NI i 5
1 suon a cas of my delinquencies and crimes, I very —— iy
) iS you do not kn quietiy joined in the conversation, Of course
W l 1 {the man portunately. | ] began by modestly doubling some state | WA {
I pray, | beseech yon to take the ch *{ ments which I had just heard touching the
form the ne, im case you should need | author of ‘Bleak Hous and other unim-
t portant works ofa similar character. The} Oyr premises have heen greatly enlarged
To dispel t anxieties of the mervouS| ma: stared at me, and evidently consider. and are now the
nan, Doctor Lemoine carrie! with him the|ed y uppearan n the conversational
, anasthet nd shortly arrived at | stage an intrusion and an impertinence LARGEST and BEST ARRANGED
1 ig I isroom, which | al knov { Mr ‘ is V4 .
K iil slal the cc ry) quainted with him? |
oke t iffering patien | ‘He rather evaded the stion, but follow- | and equal to any in the Lower Provinces.
1 | os ' ly, | ae ual eee. nt r ih Ag r »p As a OR Ti G1IVk
tne } ! W 1! ndisturbed by the he had been talking, notfrom hisownknow.| 4LL WORK WARRANTED TO G
hi P ; A | WP RRO Ss ” Ss An OT ON.
performances, Ascend with me, picasr ledge of the author in question, but he said PERFECT SATISFACTI
hey & hatt-tad half-stair- | he knew for a certainty that every statement |
se, t 1 ol t The d having | he had made was a true one. I then became I have 200.000 feet Seasoned Lumber under
: ee . 4 ‘© | more earnest in my inquiries of proofs, which) cover, for manufacturing purposes.
iy ae are gantiy \ bite 1 giving. Ihave 20.000 feet Gilt and Walnut Picture
forme! i le $ ise at this] ‘The ladies sat by in silence, listening in-
| 2 Ys e ine. x iffere patter:
t € 1g of his id was | tently to what was going forward. An au- z. ume Moulding, 80 different p 8
saiuled wit 1oW wl from th hey had been accustomed to read for . P : : i
f the room. H stels : . : Oval, Gothic and Square Picture Frames, in |
Mer Ol t ! MMe LY sement had been traduced for the first 1e%e | a j
| Gilt and Walnut. |
al : ‘ aS oe a - i 25 : ei iid ich. ei © | All the latest Styles of Rustic Frames Heavy
sia da ieteenD asus pagan a to learn what lL had to say in refutation of Gilt, for Oil Pictures, Cheap.
ing vn } \ 4} oa |} j , \ a} |
j ULES 1 ’ he clergymen’s charges. I was taking up} .. : ‘ : :
= ‘nnetional hil 3 eee Sie . wes “F'| English, German, and American Looking
‘ : ; | his vile charges one by one, and stamping} Glasses and Mirror Plates.
g upon c ntenan | ‘ ee Ree vor naninnianr hy » | f ‘ r *
sbi | them as false in every particular, when the! 4 few Large Mantle Mirrors and Pier Glass-
vianbanatctiarcescils lulls ave 5 ' man grew furious and asked me if I knew| es, Cheap.
hi cad « thing rut le oy atoll .
—_— cpbiateiciranees, ie 8@ 10! Dickens personally. ieee concn
the a voice t 1. ee be i fectly we no man knows | Ts EK . &
repli Liy ell 10 é s | sa y ‘ ‘ ge
rhe d s not only ghastly pale, but | ‘ fo men os’ Window Furniture, &c.
| him better than [ do, and all your stories, 4
_— n a it | from beginning to end, to t » ladies, are} Poles, Rings and Cornices, Rollers, Shades
I pe K* | unmitigated lies.” Blinds, Tassels, Cords, &c.
hiene " ta re he is | ;
' : mt . |} ‘The man became liv with rage, and ask- |
\ | |
op tical led forn d | ay . - . sae s
Still showing his white teeth slowel ss Upholstery Goods. Hair Seating
You Nee | t 59
ei ' 2 *} taking ©, I presented it to him without | Bedding. &e.
3 be Ve thie $4 » eye es |
the Jardin des Plant fle " pe ee ern ee ee 1!) New patterns, in Damask, Repps. Terry,
| London, so that I was spared a longer in- Piushes, Poplins, Broecatells, Fringes,
. . “s daha o , “48 | terview withany lruihful companion ; but if Gimps, Buttons, Tufts, 4c., cheap.
gies, | is! ul form | “ . pA : * : *
: : : neat |, t 1 hundred years, | | not | Bedding—Feather, Hair and Flock Beds,
eacana } ray | ¢ hes
1, and in a second al regan | narrator of my crimes was instantly plung | ly on hand, cheap.
t un r the lTects of the lg rh Ss] ed. His fa 1d as White as his carvat, | . . -
1a still further admin ati fait s ait sacl #2 BE T © #3in ;
t i and his ips ised to utter words, He | GR BS EARS nS CRBS,
} nh powerless be- } "}
ee : 3s I seeme.t like a willed vegetable, and asif his |
TH — 4 x a | - oe ae, ¥
{ 1 rh ] n rey 1 was then | 14. belong oneal else. The ladies | a Great Variety, Cheap.
1 t! we t roper re- . :
vera became aware of the situation at once, and A few of the celebrated Iron Bed CHAIRS,
ss SEN al : , | bidding them “ good-day,” I stepped smiling- | —it makes a Bed, an Easy Chair, and in-
Neither doct ior Showman spoke a word "agi i aot all the oanein a Eee | valid Chair.and a Lounge ina few seconds,
untilthey had descended the steps and stood J 4 : ssl é eactey sno very durable. No house should be with-
. ‘ get away from the station the man had mus- out one
ly in the 1 below 1 | put one.
ay , we os A tered up strength sufficient to follow me, _—-
a | ba the s wman, you nave ; . .
ved. by vour wonderful presence of mind, | 2%4 his apologies were so nauseous and| Quy stock is the Largest in the
s ed, uu wis € i i >t bit we Balas a " 1 at . ‘ . ws f, i z y
craven, that I pitied hi ym my soul. I} ’
s incalculable to me.|. says 7 City, and the very Cheapst
: ae left him with this cantion: “Before you
Permit m Je ‘A 1} make charges against any man again, about | eaiainaa
; whom you 1oW nothng, and of whose} , a .
handed h indred franz not r . pe if | Strongest CHAIRS and BEDSTEADS.
ee ; wi you are so utterly ignorant, study to be | : z ‘
we ir D teur,’ replied ift Truth. and avoid Lying y | Most beautiful and durable Drawing Room,
1 é Pula, ahd avo umyingg as You aie ’ > . :
the p! y the satisfactory fi i ; i sia Dining Room and Chamber Furniture, in
Pi Fon Sea ae Svar Vile? It is a pleasure to have customers come |
v 1 simila I pray Al aby show isto be held in Montreal} ang examine
iv tain in. ee
‘Nn 4“ Ebi led | The Sp Government bas forbidden |
No, no, thatis not wha cai 1 han i re ee es ;
i son anal r th press irom attacking its financial schemas.| George Woods & co’s.
yeror William of Germany is to} bile a aaa tw
| BP! $3100 visit [taly the present year, probably in the} CELEBRATED
+ eee — tutluimMn
E} a D ~—flis vas pati Germany will propose to the International F A 8 i F T 0 Hy 6 A H §
ils Congress, now silting in Brussels, the recog- |
Ap I ‘ ial () y nition of the Spanish Republicans rN ‘ “
ead lette [The Paris Le Tem} s ¢tates that England, |
When +n v { 11-—When you turn | Germany and Italy, have agreed to establish j 4 y iY E wy * —)
it round. ; a joint surveilliauce over the Spanish fron € A i 4 wiih
A German caught cold by kissing a lady's liers, i
snowy brow. : | Of the group of seventeen Ministers who Quesn Square, Mareh 10, 1873
‘That beats awl!’ cried a cobbler, a , | took the oath of allegiance to Queen Victoria
: dogg ma - on her accession to the throne, thirtysseven 66 53
Jooked at a Shoe-making maciuina, ye
Puy 2 | years ago, but lwo lived to participate in the 4 2
rh > oldsf aig cd 6 sue ny crusade—A | }, t anniversary celebration—-Lord Russ
boy’s head and a linestoothe! comb, sel, now in his eighty-second year, and Earl THE
Question ion.—When a man | Grey, who is ten years younger,
sal sont hi 0 irge r too | >>} ay j
palate te slain nes ‘arge or 00} A young lady in a Pennsylvania town put LARGEST NEWSPAPER
small |a piece of wedding cake under her pillow,
The most important needie-work ever done | and weat to bed with the happy beliefjthat PUBLISHED IN
in the werld is supposed to have been done} she would dream ef seeing her future hus-
by the mariner’s ¢ ompass. | band, Thatcvening, however, she had eaten PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND
A Chicago lady complains of the uure= | two plates of ice cream, about a pint of Every week places before its readers the
mii her absent husband. He} Strawberries, several sweet cakes, and two} Jatest local and Foreign news: selections
nev r any money. | large pickles, and she now says she would | from the raciest and most improving Liter-
\ California poet has bought a mule, and | T@ther remain single all her life than marry | ature of the day; Editorial articles contri-
er poet chronicles it as a remarkable | he man she saw in _ — ' buted by the ablest writers in the Province.
aan aes uaa 4 Consumption, Scrofula, enlargement to the RLS i clon istekisonel
ton of selfspossessi wy Glands of the Neck, Eruption of the Skin, : SUBSCRIPTIONS SOLIC ITED.
A Texas man recently declined vo receive Spinal Disease, Torpid Liver with constipa- TERMS—One Dollar and sixty cents a year
a telegraphic despatch from a yellow fever | tion and head aches, Irritation of the Kidneys : Urs ‘
local rst he might catch the disease, and Bladders, Nervous Prostration and Oilice, corner Queen « King St.
The difference between a toper and a cow | General Debility all depends upon depraved Charlottetown.
isin favor of the latter. Two horns last her | nutrition and impoverished blood arising
a lifetime, while the loper needs more than | from indigestion. Dr. Wheeler's Compound JOYFUL NEWS
that every day. Elixir of Phosphates and Calisaya immediate- re i
may be found throned in the mother’s lap at ly reaches the prima, y cause of the diseases,
home, or done up in a little bundle of white | Dyspepsia, and enables the stomach to coms
flannel. A nation’s hope, before now, has | Pletely digest and assimilate a sufficent quan-
been found in a basket of bulrusivs. ily of nourishment to buildup the tissues. sana etn
Query.—What kind of cattle do they have This is to certify, that in May last, I was LIFE. of MAN BITTERS
in the North? A man there advertizes that ; sorely troubled with what the doctors pro-
he ‘wants a woman to wash, iron, and milk | nounce pleurisy, and other complaints. After AND—
one or two cows. |.applying to several eminent physicians, an
. , as ' Si ce ae | Obtaining no relief, I was, by the advice of COMBINED MEDICINES.
A house full of children {composes asj| ~) tho had weed Galese iatesa a
powerful a group of motives as ever moved ol friends, who had ust poe rates’ medic ines, CURES
1 heart or hand, and the secret of many a| mduced to make a trial of the same. After é a0,
struggle and triumph in the world’s battle | Using two bottles of itl am happy to say Dropsy in its worst form; Liver Complaint;
at a aE uae that lconsider myself entirely free from the de- | Jaundice ; Swelling of the Limbs and face;
he bois. gates wants np ’ di = ne er a 4 | sease which the doctors pronounced incurable | Asthma, of whatever kind ; Dyspepsia, Bili-
Sa ae oe aera ee ee sc and safely recommend it to all those suffer-] ousness, Consumption, Spitting of blood,
amusements were most popular in the spirit |; , y3 ise lee : winsnisitin Sisk eS ee
world, The reply was, ‘ Reading obituary ing with the same complaint. Bronchitis, Sic k Head ache, Running Sores,
rowan : ’ : : Miss Assy Conoon Erysipelas, Stoppage of the Menses, Kidney
no sis ss é : E The above sworn to before me, at Liver—| and Gravel Complaint, Measels, Fevers, Sea
‘ So the doctor is practising out West, is pool, Queen's County, this 18th day of Ocsj| Sickness, Heart disease, Pleurisy, Piles,
he?’ said an old lady. ’ Well, I declare | tober, 1871 i Worms, Rheumatism, Spinal disease, or Affs
to goodness, I’m glad of it, for I always r. N. Sextex, J. P. ection of the Spine, Coughs, Colds and
thought he needed practice! Jy 27,—1m Whooping Cough, Diptheria and Sore
Ancient manuscripts were written without : Throat, Pains in the Stomach, Diarrhoea
accents, stops, or separation between the oe oo poor : ee : isa Tha ie Dysentry, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Tooth
words: nor was it until after the ninth} ‘ a aka re a ter yt the finest} ache and Ague, Sprains, Strains, Felons,
century that copyists began to leave spaces en , " i ‘th Reena “y es potter limbed Chilblains, Burns, Scalds, Bruises, Sore Eyes,
between the words. and cnesied, larger eyed, and w th more lux-| Lame Back and Side, Cuts and Cracked
An impressive warning against attempting uriant hair and freer action, than any other Hands. &o
‘ SOtVe WEEN S6elist aviempuug | nation I have observed. The Pheenic r eis esti
to do unusual feats without practice, is given Spanish blood which has run ren wary hag eng senpeygenMg faken, betes
by an Indiana paper in the case of a citis| years in ead: walk still Matias aha ie en lB ' ogre see Pamplets which;
Ze y as whed j > cant EOE OP slyly : Bg ; > Ga" * | can be furnished at the Agencies.
ee the northern skin, these southern qualities For sale by dealers generally.
An Irish post boy having driven a gentie— | mingle most admirable and superb harmony. Agents at Charlottetown, T. DesBrisay
man a jong stage during torrents of rain, | The idea we form of Italian and Grecian} Wholesale Agent, Wm. R. Watson. :
the gentleman civilly said to him, ‘ Paddy, | beauty is never realized in Greece and Italy ; Manufactured by
are younot very wet?’ ‘Arrah,I don’t care | but we shall find itin Ireland, heightened CALEB GATES, & Co.
about being very wet, but, plaze, your honor, | and exceeded. Cheeks and lips of the deli- Middleton, Annapolis, Co. N.S
I’m very dry. cacy of carnation, with snowy teeth and eye- Dec, 1, 1873.
Alady who allows her serving maids to leg leigh 4 re mp in oy a
receive the visits of male cousins, one even- woe Be and bel eae Me r ony . d _
ing recently heard Patrick say to Biddy, 2a alate 0 a Bai peal “0g fall els; 1
‘ Yer darsn’t go up an’ git me one iv his cis ey rms, United, tal very
gars now, yer darsn’t. The ‘ his’ referred commonly to the Milesian. Modast to a pro-
a ugg RMS eae : . yerb, an Iriswoman is as unsuspecting of an -
to the lord of the household, and now Biddy | ; : ‘fit w ; :
receives callers at some other establish-| '=Propriety as if it were an impossible thing ;
ment . F ' and she is fearless and joyous asa midships 0 ‘
man, and sometimes as noisy. In a ball SEASON 1874.
The observation of a married man have | room she looks ill-dressed, not because her :
led to the conclusion that money put into | dress was ill put on, but because she dances,| ,, 4E Steamers “ Alhambra ” 782 tons, and
mirrors is a good investment, as it affords a} not glides, sits down without care, pulls her Cami,’ 1372 tons,having both being thoroughly
marvellous amount of comfort and gratifica—| flowers to pieces, and if her headsdress in~ overhauled, and fitted with very superior accom
tion to a woman. We says bis wife thinks | commodes her she wilbgive ita pull ora push Peete awn, sph one sean ating
sneenentiiess or glas “a \ ot ne ; ve a ar a 4 rery Saturday at noon
“ oe con: ulting = rg ge sae +d she It rae a0 = for an explana~| and returning will Be Charlottetown alter-
ies On her apron as when she ties on her | tion. She does not understand you, she| nately every Thursday at five p-m., calling at
bonnet, and while he goes to the door at| confesseth her ignorance. If she wishes to | Halifax and Canso bot ways.
once when there is a rap, she exclaims— | see you the next day, she tells you how and For freight or passage apply to
+ Mercy, ee who is that?’ and dashes} when. She is the child of nature, and child- CARVELL BROS, Agents
" 36 “ * ’
for the looking-glass. ren are not “ Stylish, Ch'town, June 1, 1873,—a p is
s California Vin-
egar Bitters are a purely Vegetable
preparation, made chiefly from the na-
tive herbs found on the lowgr ranges of
the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor-
nia, the medicinal properties of which
are extracted therefrom without the use
Dr. J. Walk
of Alcohol. The questign is almost
daily asked, “What is the cause of the
unparalleled suecess of VINEGAR Brt-
TERS?” 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 VingGar Brrrers 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. WALKER’s
VINEGAR BITTERS are Aperient, Diaphoretic,
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic,
Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Sudorific, Altera-
tive. and Anti-Bilious.
Grateful Thousands proclaim Vrx-
EGAR Brrrers the most wonderful In-
vigorant that ever sustained the sinking
system. 3
No Person can take these Bitters
according to directions, and remain long
unwell, provided their bones are not de-
stroyed by mineral poison or other
means, and vital organs wasted beyond
repair.
Bilious, Remittent and Inter-
mitient Fevers, which are so preva-
lent in the valleys of our great rivers
throughout the United States, especially
those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri,
Illinois, Tenuessee, Cumberland, Arkan-
sas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande,
Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ro-
anoke, James, and many others, with
their vast tribytaries, throughout our
entire country during the Summer and
Autumn, and remarkably so during sea-
sons of unusual heat and dryness, are
invariably accompanied by extensive de-
rangements of the stomach and liver,
and other abdominal viscera. In their
treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow-
erful influence upon these various or-
gans, is essentially necessary. ‘There
is no cathartic for the purpose equal to
Dr. J. WALKER’S VINEGAR BITTERS,
as they will speedily remove the dark-
colored viscid matter with which the
bowels are loaded, at the same time
stimulating the secretions of the liver,
and generally restoring the healthy
functions of the digestive organs.
Fortify the body against disease
by purifying all its fluids with ViInEGazr
Birrers. No epidemic can take hold
of a system thus fore-armed.
Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head-
ache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs,
Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour
Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste
in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpita-
tation of the Heart, Inflammation of the
Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kid-
neys, and a hundred other painful symp-
toms, are the offsprings ef Dyspepsia.
One bottle will prove a better guarantee
of its merits than a lengthy advertise-
ment. 2. ,
Serofula, or King’s Evil, White
Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck,
Goitre, Scrofulous Inflamnmations, Indolent
Inflammations, Mercurial Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, ete.
In these, as in all other constitutional Dis-
eases, WALKER’s VINEGAR Bitrers havo
shown their great curative powers in the
most obstinate and intractable cases.
For Inflammatory and Chronic
Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit-
tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of
the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder,
these Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases
are caused by Vitiated Blood.
Mechanical Diseases.—Persons en-
gaged in Paints and Minerals, such as
Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and
Miners, as they advance in life, are subject
to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard
against this, take a dose of WALKER’s VIN-
EGAR Bitters occasionally.
For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tet-
ter, Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples,
Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring-worms,
Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Lich,
Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors
and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name
or nature, are literally dug up and carried
out of the system in a short time by the use
of these Bitters.
Pin, Tape, and other Worms,
lurking in the system of so many thousands,
are effectually destroyed and removed. No
system of medicine, no vermifuges, no an-
thelminitics will free the system from worms
like these Bitters.
For Female Complaints, in young
or old, married or single, at the dawn of wo-
manhoed, or the turn of life, these Tonic
Bitters display so decided an influence that
improvement 1s soon perceptible.
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when-
ever you find its impurities bursting through
the skin in Pimples, Bruptions, or Sores;
cleanse it when you
_— in the veins; cle
foul; your feelings wi
the blood pure, and
will follow.
Druggists and Gen. Agts.
and cor. of Washington
Sold by all uggcist
August 25.
HEALTH TTRENGTH & VIGOR.
Just Published, Price One Shilling Stg.
\HE SCIENCE OF LIFE; or SELF-PRE
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 or disease,
or from over-taxed or abused energies,
whether of body or mind; with the Instruc-
tions for the Treatment of all Disorders re-
sulting from the Loss of Nervous or Physical
Force. By S. LA’MERT, M.D.,L.S. A.,
&e.,37 BEDFORD SQUARE, London.
“An excellent manual for all who may
learn how to use life and not abuse it.—
Church and State Gazelle.
**On the subjects of diet and the recula-
tion of the functions the advice throughout
is admirable.”— Mirror.
Dr. La’MErt is the only regularly-qnalified
Practicioner, who, for thirty years, has de-
voied his entire attention to the cure of these
disorders.
Patients residing in the Colonies can be
successsfully treated
and remedies will be forwarded in
and safety to any address.
THE SCIENCE OF LIFE may be had,
price one shilling stg., in Halifax, Nova
Scotia, J. H. Woodrich, Drug Store; Yar-
mouth, H. A. Parr; Pictou, Henry Ellott;
St. John, N. B., H. Chubb & Co., und in
CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I., of Messrs. Brem-
ner Brothers, 44 Queen Street.
secreey
IMpoRTANT CauTion.—The public
earnestly warned against a piracy of the
above work emanating from a so-called
‘‘Peabody Institute.” Boston, which unblush-
ingly appropriates the titles of two works,
published by Dr. La’Mert for thirty years.
ER 8.8. Somerset, from Bostun, and Schr
Bonnibell from New York,
2,900 Barrels Flour & Cornmeal
which will be sold in quantities to Traders,
very cheap for cash, or at 3 months on approv- |
ed paper.
OWEN CONNOLLY.
Office, old stand, Dorchester St
Ch’town, May 4, 1874,
Girls Wanted,
AT THE
ISLAND PARK HOTEL.
Ten Girls as Waiters and Chambermaids,
&c. Referencerequired, Wages, 8S
to $88 per month. nies
J. L. HOLMAN,
Summerside, June J, 1874.—t£
by correspondence, |
are j
Quarterly . Reviews |
EDINBURGH REVEW. ; Whig
LONDON QUARTERLY REVIEW :
URL ‘i SW C
serve ) “> (Con,
WESTMINSTER
BRITISH QI
REVIE
wr
“
’
ain Liberal )
area - RLY REVIEW, (Loan,
AND
A's TY
Black woou's Eeiaburgh Maarig
:
| REPRINTED BY
THE
Leonard Scott Publishing Co,
140 Furton Sr. N, Y,
By arrangement with the English publi
ers who receive a liberal compengatin. *
SAtion,
These periodicals constitute a Onderf
mesicellz ha of modern thought,
and criticism. The cream of all] Europe
books worth reviewing is found here
they treat of the leading events of
world in masterly articles written by
who had special knowledge of the matte
treated The American Pablishers
upon al. intelligent readers in this po
a liberal support of the Reprints Which
they have so long and so cheaply fuppj
feeling sure that no_ expenditure for
literary matter will yield so rich a
as that required for a subscriptio
the — ae
Leading Periodicals of Great Britian
TERMS :
About one third the price of the origi
For any one Review, $4 00
For any two Reviews, 74 eo
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For Blackwood’s Magazine, 400 « «
For Blackwood and one
Review, TO « «@
For Blackwood and two
Keviews, 1000 « «
For Blackwood and three
Reviews, 13 00 & «
For Blaekwood and four
Keviews, 100 “« «
PREMIUMS -
New subscribers (applying early) for the
year IS74 may have, without charge, the
last volume for 1573 ef such periodicals gs
they may subscribe for.
Or instead, new subscribers'to any two,
three, or four of the above penodi
may have one of the ‘ Four Reviews’ fy
1873; subscribers to all five may have tro
of the ‘ Four Reviews,’ or one set of Black
woud’s Magazine for 1873.
Neither premiums to subscribers por
discount to clubs can be allowed unless the
money is remitted direct to the publisher,
No premiums given to clubs.
Circulars with further particulars may be
had on application.
LEONARD SCOTT PUBLISHING Oo,,
140 FULTON STREET, NEW YORK,
Dec. 17, 1873.
VOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.—Se
Deuteronomy, Cap. xii., verse 23,
CLARE 1s
World Famed Blood Mixtare,
Trade Mark— ‘Blood Mixture ”
PURIFIER & RESTORE
For cleansing and clearing the blood frm
all impurities,cannot be too highly recommended
Eor Scrofiila, Scurvy, Skin Diseases, and Sore
THE GREAT BLOOD
of all kinds itis a never-failing and permagem
cure
{4 Cures cold Sores
Cn Uc 1 Sores or the Neck,
j Cascus Uleeratred Sore Lege
Cares Elackheads or Pimples on the Pea
Cu ? ‘4 ivy “Sores
(ures Ca s Ulcers
Cures Blood aud Skia Diseases.
Cares Glandular Swellings
Cleure the Kloed from ail nnpure Matter,
F ri ieVer cause arising.
e ® ix is pleasant to the taste, and
warranted tree rom snything injarions to the
mos lelicate ¢ mof either vex, the Pr
eoli reto give it a trial te te
iia Value
housamds - i from all parte,
Sold in Bottles $1.00 end sand in Cures, con-
taining ixtimes th quantity $1.0 ch—saficient
to effec! w permanent
cure in the great urjority of
longestanudi: 1
ALL CLERMISTS wat
PATENT .
t
MEDICINE VENDORS thronghon
Sole proprietor, F. J. CLARKE, Chemigt,
APOTHECARIES’. HALL, LINCOLN, ENG
LAND
EXVORT AGENTS.
Burgoyne, Burbidges and Co., Coleman st. Louden
Newbury and ous, 37 Newgate st., London
Barclay & Sons, 95 Farringdon st , Loudon,
Sanger & Sows, Oxford st., London
And all the London Wholesale Houses,
AGENTS IN CANADA.
Tor Elliot & », Wholesale Druggiste
se hant id Owen.
Han n. Wir ‘
St John, X. b.—- 1 r.
Ha N A ind Co,
Charlottitiwa Cemetery Company.
| _ the Act of our Legislature, passed
| 4 inJune, 1872, enacts, that from and
| after the first day of January, 1874, it shall
| not be lawful, under certain penalties, to
inter any dead body in the Protestant burying
Ground, on tle Malpeque Road, it
the fifth ward of this City ; and #
jthe New Cemetry is now ready for
reget nt, application for burials there
in must be made to the undersigned,
at his residence in Kent Street.
Plof® for interments, 15 by 20 feet, equal
tol share of the Company’s ground, avail
able for $30,0n payment of two-thirds of
the purchase money, and subject to another
call of 810.
Plots for individual interment $2 cach.
Persons desirous of obtaining allotments
in the Cemetry, will please apply
William Cundall, Esq., the Treasurer 3
the Company.
By Order
JOHN LEPAGE, Sec’y.
1873.
Dec. 29,
Employment at your homes o
travelling. The work is conge
FREE nial, honorable, and pays the best
+ of anything ever before offered.
Cash wages, samples, and complete outfits seat
“ree. Address at once, Cleremont Daniels & Co.
235 Notre Dame St., Montreal.
10( AGENTS WANTED—Maleand Fe
male, forthe “‘ Transmission of Life.”
and the “ Physical Life of Woman, ” both
by Dr. Napheys. Agent's profits, $150 #
$250 a month. ‘Testimonials from most
eminent Divines, Physicians and Editors it
America. Immense sales everywhere.
Send for Terms and Circulars to C. W
MITCHELL, St.John, N. B
Jan. 12, 1873.
ree.
ONE BOX OF CLARKE’S B41 PILLS
. seg to care all discharges tne SS
rinary Organs, in ether sex, acquired of
constitutional Gravel and! Pains m the
Sold in Boxes, $1.50 each, by all Chemists and
Patent Medicine Vendors.
Sole Proprietor, F, J. CKARKE,
APOTHECARIES’ HALL, LINCOLN, ENGLAND,
EXPORT AGENTS.
surgoyne Barbidges and Co.,Coleman St. London
Newbury and Sons, 37 Newgate Street, London
Barelay and Sons, “5 Farringdon Street, Loudon
Sanger aud Sons, Oxford street, London.
And all the London Wholesale Houses.
AGENTS IN CANADA.
I\*—Elliott and Co., WholesaleDruggiat®
Shapter and Owen.
Hamiiton.—Wiuer and Co
mM. dobu, N. it ti. L. pencer
Halifax , N. S—-A very, Brown and Co
_ October 18, 1873. ly
|
Moutrea
TOBACCO & CIGARS
pee Subscrib: «fers for sale (in Bond,)
a choice Lot of
SMOKING AMD CHEWING TOBACCO,
and three Cases CIGARS.
74 Boxes Tobacco, in Solace, Sunshine, Vit’
ginian, Navy and Black Diamond.
3 Cases Cigars in Victoria & Flor Gertrade-
Samples can be seen at Sale Raom
N. RANKIN,
j Corner Water & Pownal Sts
| Ch’town, April 13, 1874.
VAN TED.
XIX Energetic Men, to sell Cucumber
wood Pumps. An active man can ear?
| Fifty Dollars a week at this business.
G. C. CARMAN,
Manutacturer’s Agent
Hyndman’s Building. Queen Street,
May 18, 1874. ow