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- follows extracts trom this book will âve pursd@l
Litho: âMey 184 2pewas a famous day in
| calendar. that day was reared the cairn)
Gow ih of thé HKig possession of
me and 0 stage fell Âą to echebrate
ao, a. : Ă© ÂŁ3 * :
PRAY, Oot, 11, 1852.âCThis day has been\a
epBy akg, « «t memorable oneâ-our last! A fine mo
ing. âbert had t& see Mary Walpole;and therefore it
neayy Âą palclock before we could po ap tothe top
Cragic sâŹ0'the eairn baift which was to com
~ meee this dene place m and the
RAD Com own. We âsetâ off With âall
children, Males and w few of the ain ee
Mo
eluding M ia wnd rant, who had not already gone
UPYHOS, he! the Mow House; whith is halfway,
ate Faery ie af poate gt nel Stew
1, » bag )yqst, poipt -raig Gowan,
bia ig Whe tebtonte tnd oie, withâ
old relaticis. âAll our MrdlĂ©
Mery #ymons and Lizzie Stewart, the
four Grants, aud se âovbeta, 1 then! Plecedehig first
ing oe ee * dnid one, then the children accordÂą
ing to the is. All the ladies and gentlemen placed one;
and then every one czme forward at.once ; each person car-
rying a stone and piecing ts on the cairn. Mx, add Ale?
Andee ame Gere, Me y played, und whisky was given
toall, It took, lam sure, an hour building; and whilst it
their Wives and children and
friends were there.
was
Co Abergeldiec) danced; and many Of the
ehildren, Mary Symons and-hierie Stewart, danced go nice.
° âRobert Gorgoy's {faithful old wae
ge Sy inK, seven or eight fet high, wes nearly completed
Algert lim bid dake a top of it, and placed the last ston
ufter, Mijtod cliddrs were given. It was a gay, pretty,
and touching site; and I felt almost inclined to ery. The
vi 8 ify! over the, hills ;-the day, so fines,
eee Straten a do thes this ies, tha al.
low t andl be y it yet many a long year! Af.â
ter tuucheon Albert decided toevalk through the wood for |
tapt-tiang, to Laven lnatichance pnd allowed | Vicky ed
ae with us lf-past three oâclogk wwe, started,
= up Grail tone a part of Catrep idtcpeing
@ go along the upper part, when a stag was TOMS.
and wa all tutned fetal ene rnd. roucept bi eaeh we got
into, HemwifdAle Path. | !ANvert soon left us to go lower, and
we sat down to wait. for hii, presently we heard: earshot-â
ts tine hp go ao ms another pause of some lit.
time t tery Pip Was. engin ed b
complete AWe verte pb ohets look. + wh
returned saying Âą stag had been, twice hit, and the
were after him, artetonntd next Ye a abo io
op tomebEgive tamgnes ng ad
thes a pre wr bed listened g little while, and then began
moving down, hoping to arrive in time ; but. the ing had
ceased, and"Aibert tid Litenty hile it Kia} yi on the
road he lay, si ver beth ond Invergelderâthe beauty
t miyed yesty day evan g. , He was p. if,
ooth EEah esa ol dosed Lack ehba chet Par
him on a tof p ipet-that MeDenald had in his pocket,
which I put on @ stone, while Albert and Vicky, with the
of itelp chigtO mark the spot. We heard.
after Tbed finished my little serawl,.and the carriege had |
pepe peery â had been seen near the road- |
and we aa far ag the âronsâ before wel saw one
RE oe Arons wet
below thd Fr hg 86 hinilsomeé, Albert jumped out
Te W dnd Abmerefoliotecdl Very Meseig alter how)
ever. we heard a cry, and ran.dgwn and found Grant and
Neome merry recls were danced on &8fOne.OP> | foundation, i â . i. tl
bi sna ople Yeven the gardener's Wife from } ooudation, ia whieh waygmay be | i Phe aia os
ly : â : declare that the hettem of the ba
erated ail-pangion Aowe | Fuse O92) ore was before, aud 18 now, 40 fathoms of water.
side 4a tho beach... Whe Fettirhed, in the
orth nears eg f Aon it carried oe ay
the warehouses, into the fipst street of the town, (âThi
wave in iug took her hack towards the bea@h. and
left hewgwarlye perpendicular om the edge of @ coral
reef, where she is ae cecind over ice. angle of 15
1 .thawns the work of a few moments only,.and
soon after the waters of tho bay subsided into theirâ
viacurally frandeil state, leaving us high and dry on the
A spectacle which drdws a crowd daily to the Tull-
âleries gardens is that of a lady who, in her daily walk,
attracts round her flights of the wild: ne who lodge
n-the-old trees, and scores of sparrows and other birds,
who perch on her shoulders, and even have the audacity
âto peck at her mouth Tho lady is daily escorted to her
home by d pérteet eyvadron of her feathered friends,
who then return to their quarters, © ~
' The Gloucester Advertizer says the-eoil ishing business
from that town will be extensively pirosecatell the pre-
ae pa her ge toward) a â rahe
struck heavily two er. 28 rat larch ear-
ried the rifle gun ac the Aictetebe Sealant, Had the
oe Leen Carried ten or fifteenâ feet: fortheront. die
mastâ inevitably Haveâ been forced over. on her beam
enils, revylting, I fear, tu her total destrtiction, and ty
the loss of tphay. Hives. Providentially, only foar men
were lost; they were in the bouts at âthe tine the shock
commenced. ~ The boats that Afi downâ were all
ors except my cigy which was Crashed under the
keel, killivg my coxswain; a most valuable man. Dare
ing the terrific seene the officers and nen behaved with
coolness and subordipatian ys (taffosde wp great pleasure
to state that after a careful examination of the position
and condition bled to. that
she has Pelee tals harteg eee Wall
The sternpost is bent, and some twenty feet of her keel
apoetials eyne propeller and shaft uninjured. © The
ower pintle of the rndder is gone, hat no other damuge
is sustained by it.â No damage is done to her hall nore
erious tun the jossof several sheets of eoppĂ©r, tornâ
feom her starboard bilge and from her keel. She now
lies on the edge of a coral reef, which forms a solid
be launched in ten feét of water at 1
beach. Gentlemen looking at the ship fom the shore,
was visible where
To extricate the chip from her present posivion, T re-
spectfally: suggest that M. J. Hanseom be sent down
with suitable material for ways, ready for laying dawn:
and india ruliber vdyela to huey her ap. âthink there
isis nd insuperable obstacle to her being pnt afloat
provided a gang of ten or twelve good ship carpenters
be sent down with the naval constrictor, as her boilers |
and engines appear to have enstained uo injory. A!
valintble ship may thus be saved to the navy, with all
her stores and equoipments.
YOUNG AMERICAN AT THE WIIFEL,
A well known clergyman was crossing Lake Erie,
some time ago, on one of the lake steamers, and seeing
a small lad at tho wheel, steering the boat, he accosted
him as follows :â~ i
âMy son, you appear to be. a small boy to steer go
large a boat.â r <7
*Yes sir, was the reply, * but you ece I can âdos it
though,â oi, | â
*Do yout think you understand your vusiness, my
son, a, a
*Yea sir; 1 think Pdeâ
*Okn you 'box the compass ?â
* Yes sir.â
âLet mw hear you bex it.â Ă© :
The hoy ai is requested, when the minister said:
âWell, really) You eat doit. Can you do itâ back-
ward?â : j . : Lop
*Yesminâ*t
âLet me hear yon.â
The boy again did ag requested, when the, minister?
remarked; Oe
âI deelare, my son, you do seem to understand your
business.â
Donald Stewn jpg yp a yitha very pretty head.
Albert had path Wen bea tA eM § and Vicky
remamed with Donald Stewart, the stag ang. the dogs, oI
eat te to sketch, and post, Vicky urifortunately seated
erse Waspâ nest. and was. much stung. Ronald
Stewart eedued dese? t could not, hethg mys A sor
-The boy then took his turn at question asking, begin-
ning : ii t :
âPray, sir, what might be your business 2â
âLam aminister ofthe Gospel.â /
*Do you understand pour business?â
âTP think Lido, my son.
algrmed... âjoined us in 20 minutes, unaware of hav-
fog killed 9 Tats cts delightful day ; but one ty
should be the tase dirgl â Hohe by a six. We found
our nad im much,
er Majosty gives a liwély account of a thoroughly High-
tandinBer 6 W = .Y if oh
âSrpt. 10, 1852.âWegined at .a quarter pastcmix âof -
clock, inthe morning gowns, (not ordinary onea, but such
&s ere worpat beeal . mudat Zstarted for Corr'e nuzice
fors corel ig. air, I wo oe mute bon-
a f . + and (necording to Highland fash-
en,) my pid scarf aver my shoulder, and. Albert his |
Highlan Rel We wellre abe ty evening. We drove
in the post. chaise, Âą two ladies, Lord Derby, and Colone:
Gordon Moving the âpilir carriage, 1% omiild
thongh- nite evéning, but fortonatly hel dns.
We arrived there at half past eight o'clock, by which time.
of course, it was quitĂ© âdatk» Mr.iond Lady Agnes Duff
ag bina us van door, and _ took us at once throngh
the house tothe ope where the ball wa hich was
hid from ae Gh curtains: sere dint ound r.
It was really dota coe most unusual sight. All the
2 Werte agscindled there. A space about 100 feet in,
Take Oaandlad int widthâ was âfoot ay and entirely âsur.
rounded by Highlanders beming torcltes, which were placed
in sockets, and constantly replenished, There were seven
5) ini, tokether, Mackey leadingâand they -recei-)
ed us with the usual sxlute and three cheers, and âNis {|
â
most animated recl: âThere were, above sixt
Het extia Ni off autaiticth, of whowt théte were ning
oy AN the Mibnnd gentlemen, and thy Who were a
ttishy; wore in kilts, (Ho ladies inevening dbĂ©sĂ©w, âThe
anwaril the Miphluanders danced pretty neirty alter-
ouDbere were we or three sword dancds.:) We were
upon a haut pas, over whith thĂ©te wasa conopy: âThe whole
gawas adnrirably done, aud very well. worth seving
was delighted with it. I.must not omit sta mens
Sang doy « ht Uighlanders holding .torches in,
their s, We le
at half-past nine o'clock, and were
pecheletepy: A long way certainly, (14 miles
THR NEV, J. CATRD,
be C â BÂą Churgh . reecives shumour,
Prey asty tsb alle ga Da ati ed wie
Oct. 14, 1856:-~*'Fo pirk as 12 -olclocksiThe Rev. J.
one of the âiidstâeelebrated preachers in Scotland,
ried the r„co, find cléétritied all present By a mos
âaritÂź Beatttifal âSeriion, Which InstedÂź pearly ©
Which kept oneâ# attentiĂ©w revitiel,â âThe text wis
iat Hiwpter of Romans, âgna the' 11th „orke'y âNot!
wat a Mt a and bait
\ ful and dimple r'whi
Ge f4 j ow * ough to lervuas âeverâ âaeton
oh; HOE a ot Ip iy for Kandays, "or for our
ening tidfive ua from âtheâ World ; riot
bd Hooks, but âbeing and doingâ
a aS ting everyt mapew weg @ Christian â
aot
Pitsiised 2 is, Yntityadiie
sibiNi Prone :
A STEAMER FLOATING OVER THE TOPS.OF
~~~ WARENOUSES IN A DANISH â ~~ -
WES INIT LISD.
ope id wGopy of Commadoreâ Biaselâs 4
whiih âUpon Phe oes hag = age
ayâ Fy
Wiad tegret, that the United
hip Motion âo, wiider tyy eommand, te
âin view of ts etaet Pred-
: where she wae! Wrote by the
Jehrihqnake ever know here. The ehoek
eg ey niy âon the Pel inet! Up te:
eit ther wae aud pe indication
ge thaw@et by the barometer, âtoad |
ead! aâ violent th or td ship, pee
âUbe wate
| you do yours.â
: fers
| Cos the
âCan yon sayotheiLordâs Prayer.â
Yes,â i
âSay it.â /
The clergyman did so, repeating the words in aivery
fervent.manner, as though trying to. make an impres-
sion on the lad. -
âWell, reully? said the boy on its conclusion, «You
do know it, donât you. Now, say it backward,â
âOb, f canât do such a thing ae that, of course.
| tovchartary th
sentseason, There are already a few vessels engaged
in-the Western Bank fishery, and by the first'of Febra.
ary thére will bea hondred'sail in Le at ens hn,
fs and. The horr.ng fivet are coming alon Aually,
and there will be ng lack of bait when âthe Vessels are
âready âto start. sai mn
A late Canadian paper contains the following inter-
esting hymevial announcement: Married, at Sarni,
on the âfth inst..by the Rev! Wamtecoosh netic, Amos
Sawpaw, of Wequadoong, grandson of Chief Shaawenod
and nephew of Chief Wawanosh, to Miss Nary Maveil,
of Ahnejewenoong, daughter of the St, Claw Indian
aneanee, andl grand-daughter of the late Dr. Wawpoose.
Fs â
Chictgo declines the fotoristy of being âthe
great divorce head-centre of the United States,â and
triumphantly points to Tadtinapolis, where, inâ 1866;
there were 822 marriages wad 210 applications for di-
voree. In Chicago there were 4,182 marriages during
the same period, and 338 spplications for divoree, or
tess than one in twelve, But the Indianapolis has the
benefit of Indiana laws. ©
The death of John Jacob Astor divulges. facts whichâ seem
hike a romance, For about half a century the deceasedâ
who lias beew deranged sinee his seventeenth yearhas
lived in a spacious house uptown, in New York, where he
has had âhis attendants and physicians, The building was
surrounded by a high fence; and the very éxistence of its
unfortunate.millionaire inmate was unknown.to the present
generation,
The drain upod thé Indian army, eaused by the Abys-
sinian expedition, has caused the British Government
steamslip dusinalian to convey traops
from England to ARS The Australian will carry
out one field offver, three captains, one lady, seven sub-
alterns, ove .mddival dffiver and bis wife, G00 men, 55
women, and 43 children. :
âWill you have a Daily Sun.â sad a newsboy to Mra.
Partington. âWilli Lbave a daily son? Why, you
seapegrace, how dare you fnsindate against a lone
woman {vom home, No, indeed, | won't have âna daily
son! My poor dead man used to complain awefully
when T used to present him with a yearly son, indeed!
Begone ydu little upstart imp.â :
A-writer in Harper's Weekly recommends a new form
of capital punishment. The mothod is âdeath by elec.
tricity:â Heways: * [tis perfectly painless and abso-
lutely thetantancous,ââ Another writer says: Wity is
not this in every way preferable, and a thousand times
less shameful to a civilized people thitt the slow strang-
ling now practised upon our criminals.â
An old Scotch lady had an evening party, where a
young tin Wag present who was about to leave for an
appointment in China.
gaution his conversation about himself, the old lad
said when he was leaving, * Takâ gude care o'youreelâ
when ye are awaâ}âfor, mind oe, they vat puppies in
China.â oe
A Newfoundland: dog was seen carryiog a bundle in
his mouth down Second-aye., N. Y, on Thursday night.
Arriving at 451, occapied, by Mr. Van. Winkle, fd
walked up the steps. and having deposited the bundle
at the top-most step, ran off. The package cotained a
female infabtabout one week. old, wer ye
* You are from the country, are you not?â said a
dandy young bookseller toa homely dressed quaker
who had given tim sonie trouble. * Yes.â + Well
|| here's an Essay on the Rearing of Calves.â â That,â
replied Aminadab, as lie turned to leave the shop,
âthee had better present to thy mother.â
means of which the beatings of the heartâare not only
registered but photographed. âThe pulsations ard made
to act upen the surface of a bent tube containing mer-
cury. the fluctuations of; which are noted iu the same
âYou can't do it el!" retarned the boy. * Well, von
see I utiderstand my business a great deal better than
Way. as.those of the thermometel and barometer, and
photographed
| Ri clergyman thought he had said enough, and re- |
tired, â j
ai {
All Sorts of Paragraphs.
* Like Oger Morners Do.\âThe Virginia (Montana)
Enterprise says:â' We were considerably amueed the
other evenipg, at three little girls playing among the
sage brush in a back yard, Two of them were âmak: |
ing believe keep houseâ a few yarde distance from each
otherâneighbors as it were One of them says to the |
third gifl: There, now, Nelly, You @° to Sarah's
house, and stop a Jittle while and talk, and then you
come. bagk and tell me what she gays about me; and |
will talk about her; then you go and tell her what |
say, then we'll. get mad and don't apeak to each other,
aa eMg our mothers do you know. QO! that'ill be such
un.â nd
NR A NR a gg na
A aarle jatenalthus, catalogues tho beauties of the
Princess Metternich ==" Eyes. which have the sweet-
nees of a German reverie; teeth ef brightest enamel:
4 forcbeatl smooth and clear as an infant's, bigh and
wide as that ofa thinker's; an abundant cilky brown
hair; the form of bead, as Greek as that of Venus wf
Milo; her ear like a pink shell ; the beautiful fall of Her
shodlders, the exquisite form of her army, the long dis.
tocriitie hand, âandthe narrow dainty foot, Bu she
dressed fn blue, red or yellow; be ehe eoifed with her
toque over her yes, or with a sergeant-de-villeâa cap,
as she appeared one day at the Tuileriesâshe is, and re.
maing a princess.â
Labitsâ Sprcritâ Prrvitixads.âThe" ladiea have.
for the past eighteen centuries. enjoyed special privile-
geajeap year, In an ancient Saxon law it ia enneted :
* Albeit as often ne leap. yeare. dathe. occure, woman
holleth prorogative over the menne in matter of eaurt-
shipe, love and matrimonee, so that when the ladie pro-
poseth ot-shall not be awful for mienne: to sey ber naa
hot shall received lier proposal jn. all: r
Girls tis law is still in foree. main goed Noarete
âDr Dove iy Your Heant.â"âWas thera ever
neber tenth aud: swogter poetry incarcerated in. fewer
lines of homely prose than those of Aunt Judyâan old
colored, womanâon..** hollerinââ at camp meetinâ? '
âTaint de rale grace, honey; âtnint the shure âglory.
You hollers too load. When you gitsde Dove in your
heart and de Lamb on your bosom, you'll feul as if you
was in dit stable at Bethlhem, and âthe blessed Virgin
hid lent you the #leepinâ baby to hold.â ~
âMadam,â said a husband to his young wile ina
little alterention which will spring n a the beat regu.
Inted faetuilids, + when a man and wite have quarrelled,
and each consldors the other at fanit, which of the two!
Ought to advance towards a reconeitiation? «The beat-
nattited and the wisest of the two.â said the wife, put.
ting up her mouth for a kiss, which was given with
uncifon. She was the conquerer. : :
Daring the recent restoration of achureh in B hen,
by the advanced Rimalists, one of âeeteon,
4 exclaimed, +1
awd 1," sald âbaother th
=; f Ta
heâ vebindreten ofa
â tint
i
bn would | â ly this
day mie would be
Pabdans we oF lef
Tie Vinton (Ohio) Record eays:â" Such an effort 't»
get alarge crop of wheat in the ground was never be-
fore made by ony farmers.as during the fall of 1867,
| Every foot of titlable ground, every new clearing, in
fact every availablo nere, is under cultivation.â
Advices from Havana give fearful accounts of the
raviges-of cholera at that place. There bad been as
many as three hundred cases âa day, nearly half of which
proved fatal, On the 10th «mst., there were filty-two
cases aud twenty-one deafis, :
Business Notices.
EITHER the Jerald nor the Royal Gazetle will Le
IN furnished to new subscribérs unless paid for in ad-
vaneg. We have so many debts on our books that, in
order not to swell their mimber, we are forced to this |. the best writers on Science, Religion, and genoral Litera.
step.
All ADVERTISEMENTS. intended for cither! of
those papers must be aceompanied bythe cash, at the
tate of 6s. per square of 24 lines, or under, and 1a, 6d,
fyr dach Continuation, r
HANDBILLS, if proportion to size, trom 4s. to 10s.
per set of 25, and Ts. 6d. each additional set.
Butlerâs Rosemary Hair Cleaner
N sega hes gen for the Toilet and Nursery,
Possessing, in the higacst degree, Wig edd of re-
moving Scurf and Danduff from the ittad, and by its invi-
gorating qualities, increwsing the growth of the Hair,
Sas W.R. WATSON.
City Drug Store, Nov, 23. 1967, * bd
NOTICE! .
Postage Stamps. | _
if ROM, andl after thisdate Postage Stamps will be sold
at this Office only between the hours of 10a. im, and
ey LILI ID
Fursens wishing to post Letters before or.after these
hours, can procure Stamps at the Stores a
D. Latods: ole) Ub Ay Marvids
EF. Reilly, Mrs, Bremner,
o» Mrs. a G. Hubbard,
HO: Metal) tneeph DesthribehÂź
Jas. DesBrisay, TL, Waszard, + f
G. & 8. Davies, T. O'Connell,
Zo ob THOS. OWEN, IP. M.G,
General Post Office, wy) j
Ch'town, Dee. 11, 1867. â
- MAILS,
Winter Arrangement.
ia ge g Provinces and the
TT Maits for the neighbor
nited States will, until further notice, be closed
at this ah orery Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
evening, at 7 o'clock, :
Mails for Great Britain, Newfoundland and the West
Todi
ture lat TH Wits Rllowds vere tet
Sat
Thursday, Dec, 12, 1867. ~~ Saturday, Feb. 22, 1868
Saturday, de 14,° do Thordday, Mch. 5, 4
Tuavdaye do $0, Oo... dmerdad, do 4) Oe
Sa y. do 38, do âThureday, do 19, Yo
turday, do 21, da
yy Fe 4,
aaa ie 16,
reday, i do „
Ass he was exceed ingly extrava~
A professor tm Enyope hag invented an apparatus by |
4
j
|
|
{
i
o tia etanl |
4 oe
igo
ie) ae he, ae
ENITE -unitorstqhed has heen instructed:
and LEASEHOLD #ROPERT
|, wel. wooded and po ssvssing other advantages ; and for which '
* also four LOTS being the residue of thirteen Building Lots (the other nine having been nel the pret Besson) in
tion, ki SUMMER UILLâ adjoining MONTAGUE BRIDGE, ten
le on âAcorceboare wines tate ts vebode burncle wenbees ore. annually ered ted nearly all paid for in Casb,
reat 1 &
âom, Geoâ wn Where lose âto 140000 bushels of
aT rater
time} eirb ne
y Grist and Saw
âabove tlass of Artizans now 80 wanted in this riking to
Lime Kiln, will be sola or ieasea 'â on reasonable terms
Plans, particulars or any other information
patch. A,
Orwell Store, Aug. 10, 1864.
whe
A FINE: CHANCE âFOR
1 eA,
th nilators Purchase here and ship for G
i ere ge a
| Cloth Mills ; where { :
in trade atlow rates, Susoret epi iyâ? the only FrechdldProperty for sale in the place which renders it mostdesirable for the
uch Ar? a? ; âez
MoLanex, New Perth, Fustay W. McDonaua, Pinette; where
7
'
*
SPECULATORS:
Mid Âą
MEN! ,
Owners to offer for SALE oF toâ RENT soveral valuable FREEHOLD.
Neod FARMS teBauhacr and other parts of the Island in good
cultivation |
good and valid ti thes.and immediste, can be:
\ the United States ke.» é
ce Society lave been established for some
86 any quantity of all kinds lumber can be had
ri
A STORE and DWELLING on it capable of holding 13000 Viishels prodwee with a double Wharf and site for a
1 be obtaindd by calling ut the office of Messrs. Bau & Sox,
also be. had from
Wye Pagmaneon, 5. P. Norrox, Tos. Anson,
a $ . ti ee e ' â
Goonies pei teen oaaaren g ay ; F. W. Hoeaiins, Braminer Office, Charlottetown, and to he
subscriber at Orwell, who isalso Agent for the sale a Manny's Mow tng Se th the velebrated
Yarmouth COOKING STOVE, and also for the Fulling Mills of eee OURKE, âiew, the Honble, Jas
IL is received âand returned with dos
RICHARD J. CLARKE.
STOVES!
STOVES! 8TOV Es!
Fa OYQCeok STOVES suitable for coal,
> warranted to WORK. WHLA,
consisting of MAGICIAN, VICTORIA,
and HELPING HAND ~~
DODD & ROGERS,
(90k STOVES FOR WOOD, WATER
/ 1,00, BROADSIDE, PREMIUM, and
YARMOUTH COOK,
DODD & ROGERS.
FPARMERS BOILERS, all sizes,
: DODD & ROGERS.
PAkLor AIR TIGHT and SIIOP
- STOVES.
ââ âDODD & ROGERS.
PQEGISTER GRATBS and MARBLE
MANTLES, i tar
. DODD & ROGERS.
ReoFNG PITCH and FELT.
DODD & ROGERS.
cy No. 3 Singer's Sewing Machine.
DODD & ROGERS.
Nov. 13, 1867,
YARMOUTH âSTOVES
TVG SUBSCRIBER WAS JUST RECEIVED, Ex
Schooner * M. E. Banks,â direct from YARMOUTH
his USUAL SUPPLY of those Celebrated
COOK & BOX SâPFOVES,
which will be sold cheap for Casn, or approved Jomt Notes.
he J, CLARKK,
Orwell, Oct, 16, 1867, ig
COTTON (DVUCE,
I AVING been appofited Agént for the sale of the
celebrated
Russel's Mills Cotton Duck,
the Subseriber is prepared to reveive orders for all the
diferent Nuntbers, in quantities to suit purchasers.
I, ©, TLALL,
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He ba ~ Pe OF TAQOIE bs, ieee >= i F
ore
*
sere bs 8 oF
ie
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a Saeiintas
Cal
°
" ernest teeta
_â_
weius): |
\
a
â
"i
Bhigcel
gh fh : âi ae sag â -
re) Ă© , Yes Y â"
- follows extracts trom this book will âve pursd@l
Litho: âMey 184 2pewas a famous day in
| calendar. that day was reared the cairn)
Gow ih of thé HKig possession of
me and 0 stage fell Âą to echebrate
ao, a. : Ă© ÂŁ3 * :
PRAY, Oot, 11, 1852.âCThis day has been\a
epBy akg, « «t memorable oneâ-our last! A fine mo
ing. âbert had t& see Mary Walpole;and therefore it
neayy Âą palclock before we could po ap tothe top
Cragic sâŹ0'the eairn baift which was to com
~ meee this dene place m and the
RAD Com own. We âsetâ off With âall
children, Males and w few of the ain ee
Mo
eluding M ia wnd rant, who had not already gone
UPYHOS, he! the Mow House; whith is halfway,
ate Faery ie af poate gt nel Stew
1, » bag )yqst, poipt -raig Gowan,
bia ig Whe tebtonte tnd oie, withâ
old relaticis. âAll our MrdlĂ©
Mery #ymons and Lizzie Stewart, the
four Grants, aud se âovbeta, 1 then! Plecedehig first
ing oe ee * dnid one, then the children accordÂą
ing to the is. All the ladies and gentlemen placed one;
and then every one czme forward at.once ; each person car-
rying a stone and piecing ts on the cairn. Mx, add Ale?
Andee ame Gere, Me y played, und whisky was given
toall, It took, lam sure, an hour building; and whilst it
their Wives and children and
friends were there.
was
Co Abergeldiec) danced; and many Of the
ehildren, Mary Symons and-hierie Stewart, danced go nice.
° âRobert Gorgoy's {faithful old wae
ge Sy inK, seven or eight fet high, wes nearly completed
Algert lim bid dake a top of it, and placed the last ston
ufter, Mijtod cliddrs were given. It was a gay, pretty,
and touching site; and I felt almost inclined to ery. The
vi 8 ify! over the, hills ;-the day, so fines,
eee Straten a do thes this ies, tha al.
low t andl be y it yet many a long year! Af.â
ter tuucheon Albert decided toevalk through the wood for |
tapt-tiang, to Laven lnatichance pnd allowed | Vicky ed
ae with us lf-past three oâclogk wwe, started,
= up Grail tone a part of Catrep idtcpeing
@ go along the upper part, when a stag was TOMS.
and wa all tutned fetal ene rnd. roucept bi eaeh we got
into, HemwifdAle Path. | !ANvert soon left us to go lower, and
we sat down to wait. for hii, presently we heard: earshot-â
ts tine hp go ao ms another pause of some lit.
time t tery Pip Was. engin ed b
complete AWe verte pb ohets look. + wh
returned saying Âą stag had been, twice hit, and the
were after him, artetonntd next Ye a abo io
op tomebEgive tamgnes ng ad
thes a pre wr bed listened g little while, and then began
moving down, hoping to arrive in time ; but. the ing had
ceased, and"Aibert tid Litenty hile it Kia} yi on the
road he lay, si ver beth ond Invergelderâthe beauty
t miyed yesty day evan g. , He was p. if,
ooth EEah esa ol dosed Lack ehba chet Par
him on a tof p ipet-that MeDenald had in his pocket,
which I put on @ stone, while Albert and Vicky, with the
of itelp chigtO mark the spot. We heard.
after Tbed finished my little serawl,.and the carriege had |
pepe peery â had been seen near the road- |
and we aa far ag the âronsâ before wel saw one
RE oe Arons wet
below thd Fr hg 86 hinilsomeé, Albert jumped out
Te W dnd Abmerefoliotecdl Very Meseig alter how)
ever. we heard a cry, and ran.dgwn and found Grant and
Neome merry recls were danced on &8fOne.OP> | foundation, i â . i. tl
bi sna ople Yeven the gardener's Wife from } ooudation, ia whieh waygmay be | i Phe aia os
ly : â : declare that the hettem of the ba
erated ail-pangion Aowe | Fuse O92) ore was before, aud 18 now, 40 fathoms of water.
side 4a tho beach... Whe Fettirhed, in the
orth nears eg f Aon it carried oe ay
the warehouses, into the fipst street of the town, (âThi
wave in iug took her hack towards the bea@h. and
left hewgwarlye perpendicular om the edge of @ coral
reef, where she is ae cecind over ice. angle of 15
1 .thawns the work of a few moments only,.and
soon after the waters of tho bay subsided into theirâ
viacurally frandeil state, leaving us high and dry on the
A spectacle which drdws a crowd daily to the Tull-
âleries gardens is that of a lady who, in her daily walk,
attracts round her flights of the wild: ne who lodge
n-the-old trees, and scores of sparrows and other birds,
who perch on her shoulders, and even have the audacity
âto peck at her mouth Tho lady is daily escorted to her
home by d pérteet eyvadron of her feathered friends,
who then return to their quarters, © ~
' The Gloucester Advertizer says the-eoil ishing business
from that town will be extensively pirosecatell the pre-
ae pa her ge toward) a â rahe
struck heavily two er. 28 rat larch ear-
ried the rifle gun ac the Aictetebe Sealant, Had the
oe Leen Carried ten or fifteenâ feet: fortheront. die
mastâ inevitably Haveâ been forced over. on her beam
enils, revylting, I fear, tu her total destrtiction, and ty
the loss of tphay. Hives. Providentially, only foar men
were lost; they were in the bouts at âthe tine the shock
commenced. ~ The boats that Afi downâ were all
ors except my cigy which was Crashed under the
keel, killivg my coxswain; a most valuable man. Dare
ing the terrific seene the officers and nen behaved with
coolness and subordipatian ys (taffosde wp great pleasure
to state that after a careful examination of the position
and condition bled to. that
she has Pelee tals harteg eee Wall
The sternpost is bent, and some twenty feet of her keel
apoetials eyne propeller and shaft uninjured. © The
ower pintle of the rndder is gone, hat no other damuge
is sustained by it.â No damage is done to her hall nore
erious tun the jossof several sheets of eoppĂ©r, tornâ
feom her starboard bilge and from her keel. She now
lies on the edge of a coral reef, which forms a solid
be launched in ten feét of water at 1
beach. Gentlemen looking at the ship fom the shore,
was visible where
To extricate the chip from her present posivion, T re-
spectfally: suggest that M. J. Hanseom be sent down
with suitable material for ways, ready for laying dawn:
and india ruliber vdyela to huey her ap. âthink there
isis nd insuperable obstacle to her being pnt afloat
provided a gang of ten or twelve good ship carpenters
be sent down with the naval constrictor, as her boilers |
and engines appear to have enstained uo injory. A!
valintble ship may thus be saved to the navy, with all
her stores and equoipments.
YOUNG AMERICAN AT THE WIIFEL,
A well known clergyman was crossing Lake Erie,
some time ago, on one of the lake steamers, and seeing
a small lad at tho wheel, steering the boat, he accosted
him as follows :â~ i
âMy son, you appear to be. a small boy to steer go
large a boat.â r <7
*Yes sir, was the reply, * but you ece I can âdos it
though,â oi, | â
*Do yout think you understand your vusiness, my
son, a, a
*Yea sir; 1 think Pdeâ
*Okn you 'box the compass ?â
* Yes sir.â
âLet mw hear you bex it.â Ă© :
The hoy ai is requested, when the minister said:
âWell, really) You eat doit. Can you do itâ back-
ward?â : j . : Lop
*Yesminâ*t
âLet me hear yon.â
The boy again did ag requested, when the, minister?
remarked; Oe
âI deelare, my son, you do seem to understand your
business.â
Donald Stewn jpg yp a yitha very pretty head.
Albert had path Wen bea tA eM § and Vicky
remamed with Donald Stewart, the stag ang. the dogs, oI
eat te to sketch, and post, Vicky urifortunately seated
erse Waspâ nest. and was. much stung. Ronald
Stewart eedued dese? t could not, hethg mys A sor
-The boy then took his turn at question asking, begin-
ning : ii t :
âPray, sir, what might be your business 2â
âLam aminister ofthe Gospel.â /
*Do you understand pour business?â
âTP think Lido, my son.
algrmed... âjoined us in 20 minutes, unaware of hav-
fog killed 9 Tats cts delightful day ; but one ty
should be the tase dirgl â Hohe by a six. We found
our nad im much,
er Majosty gives a liwély account of a thoroughly High-
tandinBer 6 W = .Y if oh
âSrpt. 10, 1852.âWegined at .a quarter pastcmix âof -
clock, inthe morning gowns, (not ordinary onea, but such
&s ere worpat beeal . mudat Zstarted for Corr'e nuzice
fors corel ig. air, I wo oe mute bon-
a f . + and (necording to Highland fash-
en,) my pid scarf aver my shoulder, and. Albert his |
Highlan Rel We wellre abe ty evening. We drove
in the post. chaise, Âą two ladies, Lord Derby, and Colone:
Gordon Moving the âpilir carriage, 1% omiild
thongh- nite evéning, but fortonatly hel dns.
We arrived there at half past eight o'clock, by which time.
of course, it was quitĂ© âdatk» Mr.iond Lady Agnes Duff
ag bina us van door, and _ took us at once throngh
the house tothe ope where the ball wa hich was
hid from ae Gh curtains: sere dint ound r.
It was really dota coe most unusual sight. All the
2 Werte agscindled there. A space about 100 feet in,
Take Oaandlad int widthâ was âfoot ay and entirely âsur.
rounded by Highlanders beming torcltes, which were placed
in sockets, and constantly replenished, There were seven
5) ini, tokether, Mackey leadingâand they -recei-)
ed us with the usual sxlute and three cheers, and âNis {|
â
most animated recl: âThere were, above sixt
Het extia Ni off autaiticth, of whowt théte were ning
oy AN the Mibnnd gentlemen, and thy Who were a
ttishy; wore in kilts, (Ho ladies inevening dbĂ©sĂ©w, âThe
anwaril the Miphluanders danced pretty neirty alter-
ouDbere were we or three sword dancds.:) We were
upon a haut pas, over whith thĂ©te wasa conopy: âThe whole
gawas adnrirably done, aud very well. worth seving
was delighted with it. I.must not omit sta mens
Sang doy « ht Uighlanders holding .torches in,
their s, We le
at half-past nine o'clock, and were
pecheletepy: A long way certainly, (14 miles
THR NEV, J. CATRD,
be C â BÂą Churgh . reecives shumour,
Prey asty tsb alle ga Da ati ed wie
Oct. 14, 1856:-~*'Fo pirk as 12 -olclocksiThe Rev. J.
one of the âiidstâeelebrated preachers in Scotland,
ried the r„co, find cléétritied all present By a mos
âaritÂź Beatttifal âSeriion, Which InstedÂź pearly ©
Which kept oneâ# attentiĂ©w revitiel,â âThe text wis
iat Hiwpter of Romans, âgna the' 11th „orke'y âNot!
wat a Mt a and bait
\ ful and dimple r'whi
Ge f4 j ow * ough to lervuas âeverâ âaeton
oh; HOE a ot Ip iy for Kandays, "or for our
ening tidfive ua from âtheâ World ; riot
bd Hooks, but âbeing and doingâ
a aS ting everyt mapew weg @ Christian â
aot
Pitsiised 2 is, Yntityadiie
sibiNi Prone :
A STEAMER FLOATING OVER THE TOPS.OF
~~~ WARENOUSES IN A DANISH â ~~ -
WES INIT LISD.
ope id wGopy of Commadoreâ Biaselâs 4
whiih âUpon Phe oes hag = age
ayâ Fy
Wiad tegret, that the United
hip Motion âo, wiider tyy eommand, te
âin view of ts etaet Pred-
: where she wae! Wrote by the
Jehrihqnake ever know here. The ehoek
eg ey niy âon the Pel inet! Up te:
eit ther wae aud pe indication
ge thaw@et by the barometer, âtoad |
ead! aâ violent th or td ship, pee
âUbe wate
| you do yours.â
: fers
| Cos the
âCan yon sayotheiLordâs Prayer.â
Yes,â i
âSay it.â /
The clergyman did so, repeating the words in aivery
fervent.manner, as though trying to. make an impres-
sion on the lad. -
âWell, reully? said the boy on its conclusion, «You
do know it, donât you. Now, say it backward,â
âOb, f canât do such a thing ae that, of course.
| tovchartary th
sentseason, There are already a few vessels engaged
in-the Western Bank fishery, and by the first'of Febra.
ary thére will bea hondred'sail in Le at ens hn,
fs and. The horr.ng fivet are coming alon Aually,
and there will be ng lack of bait when âthe Vessels are
âready âto start. sai mn
A late Canadian paper contains the following inter-
esting hymevial announcement: Married, at Sarni,
on the âfth inst..by the Rev! Wamtecoosh netic, Amos
Sawpaw, of Wequadoong, grandson of Chief Shaawenod
and nephew of Chief Wawanosh, to Miss Nary Maveil,
of Ahnejewenoong, daughter of the St, Claw Indian
aneanee, andl grand-daughter of the late Dr. Wawpoose.
Fs â
Chictgo declines the fotoristy of being âthe
great divorce head-centre of the United States,â and
triumphantly points to Tadtinapolis, where, inâ 1866;
there were 822 marriages wad 210 applications for di-
voree. In Chicago there were 4,182 marriages during
the same period, and 338 spplications for divoree, or
tess than one in twelve, But the Indianapolis has the
benefit of Indiana laws. ©
The death of John Jacob Astor divulges. facts whichâ seem
hike a romance, For about half a century the deceasedâ
who lias beew deranged sinee his seventeenth yearhas
lived in a spacious house uptown, in New York, where he
has had âhis attendants and physicians, The building was
surrounded by a high fence; and the very éxistence of its
unfortunate.millionaire inmate was unknown.to the present
generation,
The drain upod thé Indian army, eaused by the Abys-
sinian expedition, has caused the British Government
steamslip dusinalian to convey traops
from England to ARS The Australian will carry
out one field offver, three captains, one lady, seven sub-
alterns, ove .mddival dffiver and bis wife, G00 men, 55
women, and 43 children. :
âWill you have a Daily Sun.â sad a newsboy to Mra.
Partington. âWilli Lbave a daily son? Why, you
seapegrace, how dare you fnsindate against a lone
woman {vom home, No, indeed, | won't have âna daily
son! My poor dead man used to complain awefully
when T used to present him with a yearly son, indeed!
Begone ydu little upstart imp.â :
A-writer in Harper's Weekly recommends a new form
of capital punishment. The mothod is âdeath by elec.
tricity:â Heways: * [tis perfectly painless and abso-
lutely thetantancous,ââ Another writer says: Wity is
not this in every way preferable, and a thousand times
less shameful to a civilized people thitt the slow strang-
ling now practised upon our criminals.â
An old Scotch lady had an evening party, where a
young tin Wag present who was about to leave for an
appointment in China.
gaution his conversation about himself, the old lad
said when he was leaving, * Takâ gude care o'youreelâ
when ye are awaâ}âfor, mind oe, they vat puppies in
China.â oe
A Newfoundland: dog was seen carryiog a bundle in
his mouth down Second-aye., N. Y, on Thursday night.
Arriving at 451, occapied, by Mr. Van. Winkle, fd
walked up the steps. and having deposited the bundle
at the top-most step, ran off. The package cotained a
female infabtabout one week. old, wer ye
* You are from the country, are you not?â said a
dandy young bookseller toa homely dressed quaker
who had given tim sonie trouble. * Yes.â + Well
|| here's an Essay on the Rearing of Calves.â â That,â
replied Aminadab, as lie turned to leave the shop,
âthee had better present to thy mother.â
means of which the beatings of the heartâare not only
registered but photographed. âThe pulsations ard made
to act upen the surface of a bent tube containing mer-
cury. the fluctuations of; which are noted iu the same
âYou can't do it el!" retarned the boy. * Well, von
see I utiderstand my business a great deal better than
Way. as.those of the thermometel and barometer, and
photographed
| Ri clergyman thought he had said enough, and re- |
tired, â j
ai {
All Sorts of Paragraphs.
* Like Oger Morners Do.\âThe Virginia (Montana)
Enterprise says:â' We were considerably amueed the
other evenipg, at three little girls playing among the
sage brush in a back yard, Two of them were âmak: |
ing believe keep houseâ a few yarde distance from each
otherâneighbors as it were One of them says to the |
third gifl: There, now, Nelly, You @° to Sarah's
house, and stop a Jittle while and talk, and then you
come. bagk and tell me what she gays about me; and |
will talk about her; then you go and tell her what |
say, then we'll. get mad and don't apeak to each other,
aa eMg our mothers do you know. QO! that'ill be such
un.â nd
NR A NR a gg na
A aarle jatenalthus, catalogues tho beauties of the
Princess Metternich ==" Eyes. which have the sweet-
nees of a German reverie; teeth ef brightest enamel:
4 forcbeatl smooth and clear as an infant's, bigh and
wide as that ofa thinker's; an abundant cilky brown
hair; the form of bead, as Greek as that of Venus wf
Milo; her ear like a pink shell ; the beautiful fall of Her
shodlders, the exquisite form of her army, the long dis.
tocriitie hand, âandthe narrow dainty foot, Bu she
dressed fn blue, red or yellow; be ehe eoifed with her
toque over her yes, or with a sergeant-de-villeâa cap,
as she appeared one day at the Tuileriesâshe is, and re.
maing a princess.â
Labitsâ Sprcritâ Prrvitixads.âThe" ladiea have.
for the past eighteen centuries. enjoyed special privile-
geajeap year, In an ancient Saxon law it ia enneted :
* Albeit as often ne leap. yeare. dathe. occure, woman
holleth prorogative over the menne in matter of eaurt-
shipe, love and matrimonee, so that when the ladie pro-
poseth ot-shall not be awful for mienne: to sey ber naa
hot shall received lier proposal jn. all: r
Girls tis law is still in foree. main goed Noarete
âDr Dove iy Your Heant.â"âWas thera ever
neber tenth aud: swogter poetry incarcerated in. fewer
lines of homely prose than those of Aunt Judyâan old
colored, womanâon..** hollerinââ at camp meetinâ? '
âTaint de rale grace, honey; âtnint the shure âglory.
You hollers too load. When you gitsde Dove in your
heart and de Lamb on your bosom, you'll feul as if you
was in dit stable at Bethlhem, and âthe blessed Virgin
hid lent you the #leepinâ baby to hold.â ~
âMadam,â said a husband to his young wile ina
little alterention which will spring n a the beat regu.
Inted faetuilids, + when a man and wite have quarrelled,
and each consldors the other at fanit, which of the two!
Ought to advance towards a reconeitiation? «The beat-
nattited and the wisest of the two.â said the wife, put.
ting up her mouth for a kiss, which was given with
uncifon. She was the conquerer. : :
Daring the recent restoration of achureh in B hen,
by the advanced Rimalists, one of âeeteon,
4 exclaimed, +1
awd 1," sald âbaother th
=; f Ta
heâ vebindreten ofa
â tint
i
bn would | â ly this
day mie would be
Pabdans we oF lef
Tie Vinton (Ohio) Record eays:â" Such an effort 't»
get alarge crop of wheat in the ground was never be-
fore made by ony farmers.as during the fall of 1867,
| Every foot of titlable ground, every new clearing, in
fact every availablo nere, is under cultivation.â
Advices from Havana give fearful accounts of the
raviges-of cholera at that place. There bad been as
many as three hundred cases âa day, nearly half of which
proved fatal, On the 10th «mst., there were filty-two
cases aud twenty-one deafis, :
Business Notices.
EITHER the Jerald nor the Royal Gazetle will Le
IN furnished to new subscribérs unless paid for in ad-
vaneg. We have so many debts on our books that, in
order not to swell their mimber, we are forced to this |. the best writers on Science, Religion, and genoral Litera.
step.
All ADVERTISEMENTS. intended for cither! of
those papers must be aceompanied bythe cash, at the
tate of 6s. per square of 24 lines, or under, and 1a, 6d,
fyr dach Continuation, r
HANDBILLS, if proportion to size, trom 4s. to 10s.
per set of 25, and Ts. 6d. each additional set.
Butlerâs Rosemary Hair Cleaner
N sega hes gen for the Toilet and Nursery,
Possessing, in the higacst degree, Wig edd of re-
moving Scurf and Danduff from the ittad, and by its invi-
gorating qualities, increwsing the growth of the Hair,
Sas W.R. WATSON.
City Drug Store, Nov, 23. 1967, * bd
NOTICE! .
Postage Stamps. | _
if ROM, andl after thisdate Postage Stamps will be sold
at this Office only between the hours of 10a. im, and
ey LILI ID
Fursens wishing to post Letters before or.after these
hours, can procure Stamps at the Stores a
D. Latods: ole) Ub Ay Marvids
EF. Reilly, Mrs, Bremner,
o» Mrs. a G. Hubbard,
HO: Metal) tneeph DesthribehÂź
Jas. DesBrisay, TL, Waszard, + f
G. & 8. Davies, T. O'Connell,
Zo ob THOS. OWEN, IP. M.G,
General Post Office, wy) j
Ch'town, Dee. 11, 1867. â
- MAILS,
Winter Arrangement.
ia ge g Provinces and the
TT Maits for the neighbor
nited States will, until further notice, be closed
at this ah orery Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
evening, at 7 o'clock, :
Mails for Great Britain, Newfoundland and the West
Todi
ture lat TH Wits Rllowds vere tet
Sat
Thursday, Dec, 12, 1867. ~~ Saturday, Feb. 22, 1868
Saturday, de 14,° do Thordday, Mch. 5, 4
Tuavdaye do $0, Oo... dmerdad, do 4) Oe
Sa y. do 38, do âThureday, do 19, Yo
turday, do 21, da
yy Fe 4,
aaa ie 16,
reday, i do „
Ass he was exceed ingly extrava~
A professor tm Enyope hag invented an apparatus by |
4
j
|
|
{
i
o tia etanl |
4 oe
igo
ie) ae he, ae
ENITE -unitorstqhed has heen instructed:
and LEASEHOLD #ROPERT
|, wel. wooded and po ssvssing other advantages ; and for which '
* also four LOTS being the residue of thirteen Building Lots (the other nine having been nel the pret Besson) in
tion, ki SUMMER UILLâ adjoining MONTAGUE BRIDGE, ten
le on âAcorceboare wines tate ts vebode burncle wenbees ore. annually ered ted nearly all paid for in Casb,
reat 1 &
âom, Geoâ wn Where lose âto 140000 bushels of
aT rater
time} eirb ne
y Grist and Saw
âabove tlass of Artizans now 80 wanted in this riking to
Lime Kiln, will be sola or ieasea 'â on reasonable terms
Plans, particulars or any other information
patch. A,
Orwell Store, Aug. 10, 1864.
whe
A FINE: CHANCE âFOR
1 eA,
th nilators Purchase here and ship for G
i ere ge a
| Cloth Mills ; where { :
in trade atlow rates, Susoret epi iyâ? the only FrechdldProperty for sale in the place which renders it mostdesirable for the
uch Ar? a? ; âez
MoLanex, New Perth, Fustay W. McDonaua, Pinette; where
7
'
*
SPECULATORS:
Mid Âą
MEN! ,
Owners to offer for SALE oF toâ RENT soveral valuable FREEHOLD.
Neod FARMS teBauhacr and other parts of the Island in good
cultivation |
good and valid ti thes.and immediste, can be:
\ the United States ke.» é
ce Society lave been established for some
86 any quantity of all kinds lumber can be had
ri
A STORE and DWELLING on it capable of holding 13000 Viishels prodwee with a double Wharf and site for a
1 be obtaindd by calling ut the office of Messrs. Bau & Sox,
also be. had from
Wye Pagmaneon, 5. P. Norrox, Tos. Anson,
a $ . ti ee e ' â
Goonies pei teen oaaaren g ay ; F. W. Hoeaiins, Braminer Office, Charlottetown, and to he
subscriber at Orwell, who isalso Agent for the sale a Manny's Mow tng Se th the velebrated
Yarmouth COOKING STOVE, and also for the Fulling Mills of eee OURKE, âiew, the Honble, Jas
IL is received âand returned with dos
RICHARD J. CLARKE.
STOVES!
STOVES! 8TOV Es!
Fa OYQCeok STOVES suitable for coal,
> warranted to WORK. WHLA,
consisting of MAGICIAN, VICTORIA,
and HELPING HAND ~~
DODD & ROGERS,
(90k STOVES FOR WOOD, WATER
/ 1,00, BROADSIDE, PREMIUM, and
YARMOUTH COOK,
DODD & ROGERS.
FPARMERS BOILERS, all sizes,
: DODD & ROGERS.
PAkLor AIR TIGHT and SIIOP
- STOVES.
ââ âDODD & ROGERS.
PQEGISTER GRATBS and MARBLE
MANTLES, i tar
. DODD & ROGERS.
ReoFNG PITCH and FELT.
DODD & ROGERS.
cy No. 3 Singer's Sewing Machine.
DODD & ROGERS.
Nov. 13, 1867,
YARMOUTH âSTOVES
TVG SUBSCRIBER WAS JUST RECEIVED, Ex
Schooner * M. E. Banks,â direct from YARMOUTH
his USUAL SUPPLY of those Celebrated
COOK & BOX SâPFOVES,
which will be sold cheap for Casn, or approved Jomt Notes.
he J, CLARKK,
Orwell, Oct, 16, 1867, ig
COTTON (DVUCE,
I AVING been appofited Agént for the sale of the
celebrated
Russel's Mills Cotton Duck,
the Subseriber is prepared to reveive orders for all the
diferent Nuntbers, in quantities to suit purchasers.
I, ©, TLALL,
Charlottetown, May 22, 1867. 7 :
BRITISH PERIODICALS.
The London Quarterly Review, (Conservative.)
The Edinburgh Review, (Whig.),
The Westminster Review, (Radical.)
The North British Review, (Free Church.)
, 4 AND :
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, (Tory.)
These periodicals are ably sustained by the contributions
ture, and stand unrivalled in the world of letters. They
are indispensible to the scholar and the professional man,
and to every reading man, as they farnish a better record of
the current literature of the day than ean be obtained from
any Other âsource,
TERMS FOR 1868;
POSTAGE.
Subscribers shold prepay by the quarter, @t the office of
delivery, âLhe Posracn to any partof the United States,
Two Cents anuwber, This rate only applies to current
subscriptions, âPor backnumberd thi postage is Jouble,
: so BACK NUMBERS.
Subscribers, by remitting direct to the Publishers, may
obtain back numbers at the following reduced rates, viz i: â
The North British from January, 1863, to December, 1867,
inclusive ; Edénburgh and the Westminster from April, 1464,
to December, 1867, inclusive, and the London Quarterly forâ
the years 1865, 1866 and 1867, at the rate of $1.60 a year
fur each or any Review ; also Blackwood for 1865 and 1867+
for $2.50 a year, or the two years together tor $4.00
THE LEONATD SCOTT PUBLISHING CO,
» $8 Walker Street, New York.
L. 8. PUB, CO, also publich the
FARMER'S GUIDE,
| By Hewny Sruriens, of Edinburgh, and the late J. P
Nonron, of Yale College, (2 vols, Royal Octavo, 1600 page
and numerous Engravings. " es
Price $7 for the two volumesâby Mail, post-paid,
STHSLLUA COLuaAsSs
Rimmels Stella Colas Bouquet,
dedicated by permission to this
talented Artist.
ti oneal Walea, inant + of - Valle
4
Jockey Club, Wood Violet, i Lf 7
sence Bouquet, Patchouly, âViolet.
West End New Mown Hay, Loves Myrtle,
$3 49
de Cologue, Treble Law Wi Fotos Lavender
Flowers, Verbena wy Be, hy Perfumed,
Tercertitenary Souvenir, 8 âSeented
Katract of Lime Juice and for making: the
% and geoney | ; AN vement il
let Powder; Hi Ninivon, for the Complexion,
Dopulatory Powder for removing uous baire without
pro ope i halaaettoes for pechnigs |
ead Wiehetva netustt and ent shade trouble
and Uanger, eset a Wiete Gc3 FP Sy
Ph gran» nyo Water Crackors, a new and amusing doviee
* wt HORT ee oe mee ay i?
ee W.R, WATSON.
per annum.
For any one of tho Reviews, +++ = $4.00
For any two of the Reviews, - - 7.007
Forany three of the Reviews, + - - 10,00
For all four of the Reviews, - . 12,00
For Blackwood's Magazine, - - - 4,00
For Blackwood and one Keview, . - 7.00
For Blackwood aid any two of the Reviews; + 10.00
For Blackwood and three of the Reviews, - ~ 18.00
For Blackwood and the four Reviews, |: =) 16,00
at ogee . .
Co-Partnership Notice.
MPHE SUBSCRIBERS have this day entered into
[ CO-PARTNERSHULP as BARRISTERS and AT-
TORNIES-AT-LAW under the name, style and firm cf.
ALLEY & DAVIES,
Office «+++ O'Halloranâs Building
Great George Street, -
GEORGE ALLEY,
LOUIS H. DAVIES.
Oct. 23, 1867., if
R. REDDIN,
Attorney and Barrister at Baw,
CONVEYANCHER, &. .
Office---Great George-St., Charlottetown,
(Near the Catholic Cathedral.)
_ August 22,1866. -~Etf
NORIH AMERICAN HOTEL.
KENT-STREET, - - - CHARLOTTETOWN
MUS HOTEL, formerly known as the â* GLOBE
HOTEL,â is the largest in the City and centrally
situated; it is now opened for the reception ef perma-
nent and transient Boarders. âThe subscriber trusts, by
strict attention toâ the wants and comfort of his friends
and the public generally, to merit a share of public pa-
tronage. :
tv The Best or Liquors always on hand. Good:
stabling for any number of horses, with a careful hostler
in attendance, i l
JOHN MURPITY, Proprietor.
Charlottetown, P.E. I.
Nov. 25, 1868, + . â
UNDER ROYAL PATRONAGE
THEâ WAVERLY HOUSE,â
7s King St..----SÂą. John, N. B,
THIS MOUSE BAS BEEN PATRONIZED BY
HR. He THE PRINCE OF WALES,
H.R: H. PRINCE ALFRED,
By all the British American Governors, and by the Enge
lish Nobility and Gentry, as well as by the most â
distinguished Americans, whom business or
pleasure may have brought to St, John, |
who have joined in pronouncing it
THE FAVORITE HOUSE OF THE PROVIXCES
re The Proprietor, thankful for past favors, woulls
respectiully intimate to the travelling Public that be will
spare no paihs or expense to, render the House stall fur-
ther deserving their patronage.âLvery attention paid
to the comfort of guests. -
JOUN: GUTHRIE, Prope ietor.
St. Juhn, N. B,, Oot. 31,1866, |, 1
â , BY ' *
,
HOLELOWAY'S OINTMENT >
Bad Legs, Ulcerous Sores, Bad Breasts
No deseription hy wound, sore or ulcer can resist the heal,
ing properties of this excellent Ointment. âThe worst case
raadily assume a healthy appearance whenever this medical
ag nt ix applied; sound flesh springs up from the bettem o
the wound, inflammation of the surrounding skin is ar_osted
and a complete and pexmanent cure quickly follow th'euse
of the ointment, :
Piles, Fistulas, and! Internal Inflammation
These disressing and weakening diseases may wish cet-
tainty be cured by the su themselves, if they will us
Hollowayâs intment, and closely Attend to the printed in.
structions. It should be well rubbed upon the neighboring
parts, when all obnoxious matter will be remo poul-
tice of bread and water may sometimes be applied at bed
time. with advantage; the most scrupulous cleanliness must
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under the notice of such of their acquaintances whom it may
oncern, they will render a service thatwill never be forgot-
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Rheumatism, Gout and Netiralgia., â
Nothing has the power of reducing inflammationand sub-
dujng pain in, these complaints in the same degree as Moile-
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simaltancously they drive all nilammation vities
from the system, stibdue andâ remove allâenlargement of the,
its, and leave the sinews ahd miuacles lax dad uncontract-
ed A cure may always] ctel, even âunder the worst
circumstance, if the use of these inedicines be persevered in ©
Leruptions, Scald Mead, Ringworm, and «
other Skin âDiseases.
After fomentation with warm water, the utmost relief and
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Un the appeardnce of any ot these maladies the Ointment
should be weil rubbed at loast three times a dey upon the
neck and upper part of the chest, so as to penctrate to the
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Scrofula or Kingâs. Evil and Swelling of
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This class of easds may ve cured by Ifollowayâs cove
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blood and strengthening the system renders them nmiore aff-
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Both the Ointment and Pills should be used in the FoMowin
The Bard of Avon's Perfume, in a neat Hox ; Sydenham Fau | Burns.
âYa
Peapes emer coretceaaer a
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He ba ~ Pe OF TAQOIE bs, ieee >= i F
ore
*
sere bs 8 oF