— |e 7 é bs ie 4 i POuTRY. ee : oe sient nies Perl , very busy in preparing} Several years ago a stranger In @ travelling BLESS GOD FOR -RAIN. _aliceigh antag cinasiubsectadl | : Mr. Perl { | sulky, was leisurely pursuing his way tos _—____ son we s condemned to d in { » last t Jerk voluntee | ' ) ' . ¢ F wai ahi ash ’ : bgp pene Mrs. } wards a little tavern, situated at the foot of « Bless God for rain the good man said, | the time of his death was fixed “ at the ring= | to wash ¢t hes one sia ne of the Western States \ {ain me at 2 Wester é 3 j And wiped away a grateful tear; ing of tl ‘ Naturally such a doom | king gla , t} 1 went i yais,in That we may have our daily bread th sis ail | a " : a ba 2 idvan of him a negro returning wou t an tier to O1 nthe year rs tak n ‘ i He drops a shower upon us . " Lt , el i i - i m the plough, was singing the favorite Our @ather! thou who dwell’st in Heavy his hope and pride, but to this unhappy | She had just reached t W t : ied a Wo + ' , : nA pian meody of - vank thee for the pearly shower youth death was doubly terrible, since he W&8s¢ voice of Mr. Perkin bil : ' Shinhon Qiey i : “Gwine dow hinhone The * essed present thou has given soon to be married to a beautiful young lady the dis} } { i saihorlpaalins : ‘ wnt % ; nik " i te _— ” " Long wo. Te mé@n, and beast, and bird, and flowe whom he had long loved. The lady, w! veatat tack A v0 ved. | i “ore a, © TI t haile Vint will uiiog ty lips t loved him ardently in return, had used her} yy. perrins found a wood unted The $ e os scenes “se The dusty earth, with lips apart i 7a a firs. Perkins found & woode y Snowball Looked up where rolled an orb of flame | utmost efforts to avert his fate, pleading With) i) and peached up the curtain stick I } i. i hold ! { i . | s said ylacke ling up his Asthough a prayer came from its heert | the judges, and even with Cromwell himst an’t find that dishseloth ” came the & — i ' For ae we wid > hag al _ but of no avail. In her despair she tried to | Mr. Parker up the stairway I ler Ul The Indian corn with silken ime mba the old mm not.to wring thel but | . , Is that the ha vay | » ahead yon- Aad tiny pitchers w ed, oy tne orn Semen Bele ee | sink, hanging on a nail, I say,” she repeated. | Send up their praise m she found that impossibie ‘he hour drew | It ‘ta there, I a ur Mr. P 1 ' = ' ,; mit rivy ' , ‘ _ rye . . a ' 4 Lee n 10- For precious drops stilled ur for t exe } The preparation ‘ wa weath Mrs. P ae van | N iassa Db 3 lw mpleted r! of 3 of the law | | ' . wil snd eel tt «2 sie Peal nd ares ea tfrom the i t nie i sh The modest grass is fresh and green brought forth the prisoner, and waited while i nee ‘Hotei, ay, Billy Leeman The brooklet swells its song again eyugets ‘ aa tb "| of n th r under I duc ak can dae Waele: aaa Methinks an angel's wing is seen } the sun was setting, for the signa 1 th | silently but significantly t g dish- . Bick _ sca é | ’ sd a ein ae - wnt e@ ‘naa nt 1e In every cloud that brings us rain, I the distant bell-tower. To the wonder of | , loth. With the same discree FA iycen. pine rane maaan Glatt. re ; There is a rainbow in the sky, ' ae eo \ dum mobe now; keeps mushous nice tabern Upon the anak w here tempests tro everybody it did not ring! Only one human | Perkins took it down, keeping his back t pee ’ abi t { ‘ 4 / ; P > | | ell Ver God wrote it ere the world was dry- being at that moment knew the reason The wards his wit Mi Perkins re ended tell It is the autograph of God half wild with the thought of her |, sta clita the nple adv Mr. | ‘ Indeed * ” Ae i R , on nee ‘ ver’s peril, had rushed, unseen, uy the wind- | p, k y keep his eves in front of} Again ‘ Yes sah, you siops dis ebening I speck, Up where the heavy thunders rolled : , het i ’ ee : péectable gemme ite » dar. You And clouds of tire were swept along ng stairs,and climbed the ladder oe tae sh inted the woc hair, and took hold | °° °F ‘ I Tho sun rides in a car of gold ry loft, Jand seized the tongue of th : rtains Matildy ?? shouted Mr. Pe: Ton haentar’ eu cal And soaring larks dissoive in song The old sexton was in his place, prompt to] ae We cciaimed that rdv. wit! myo, Here s Je or the ft The rills that gush from mountains rude, | ¢hoe patai moment. He threw his weightupon | bs eraker 0s the | dish for you.’ , y trie , » tt ren cc uaiaeaNNY " ’ mary us brevity hat water peels th : E : 3 bg sean to the se base the rope, and the bell, obe lient to his prac- | ; rane a Ree ‘Tankee Massa, tankee; Quash my name ust like the tears of gratitude al aie ‘ kin off me’ he exclaimed t : P ‘ i hand. reeled an rg to and fro inthe] , : i ‘ ‘Quash, ay That often stain a good man's fa ticed hand, reeled an s tim it, tt said Mrs. Perkins, as : ° nt the br » girl kept her hold and | ‘™ ‘, : Yes sah, at erbi Vol grunted ~— at ae Saye pare See | to her work What's that?’ said Mr. f | Great King of Peace, deign now to bless no sound issued from its metallic lips. Again} — ; : he delighted A : dis is nice, better bi a : n Uni ‘ peOaad Ss 6 he f t {tl » stairs M: P kit The windows of the sk; ‘i — and again the sexton drew the rope, but with isk ee ; lan common bacca, tankee Massa, tankee Shower down the rain of Righteousness,}) °°" “* : t he air with omy ee : i , Yesnerate strength the young heroine held ‘Well Quash, what kind of a gentleman And wash away th tain of War +03} shag wengss % ’ : § ; f 1 flasl g ey and slked to the head ¢ : . : And iet the radiant bow of Love on. Every movement made her position more Pr coi eared me we i this Mr. Leeman In beauty mark the moral sky fearful; every sway of the bell’s huge weigh! asia nl tte. Cevkla cae thot Put td Oh ah, be n man, moushous nice j a nnro ’ e Mt * } face O1 M erains at the to te COs Like that fair sky unrolled abos threatened to fling her through the big tow- | ne , ia in, Moushous nice man, empertains gem- But not like it to fade and die : water in it,’ she recited in an elevated key. er window ; but she would not let go. id poae he fust stvle and I takes care ob de cen A Aen a '.«Do you hear that Well, you needn't : a Ww and deaf, the sexton had not noticed that it ne t it bled tt happy Mr He funny, too, tells heaps ob stor- THE PLOW. gaverno sound. At lasthewentaway. The | ri RE : y . uw p ki ies "bout ghoses and sperits, notwithstandin Clear the brown path to meet the coulter’s} Drave girl descend 1 from th pep blee turned to the 1ir, w ved it again, and he ‘fraid ob dem hisself too, my ‘pinion. — gleam ! ing and wounded. She hurried from the Ne dani teal anes ‘Afraid of ghosts, ay?’ said the traveller, mal i : ’ weareuly toon hoi in- Lo! on he comes behind his smoking team, } .5,,,.4 bee ce of execution, Cromwe!! : using. ‘ Well, go-ahead Mr. Quasb, as its With toil’s bright jew-drops on his sun-]~ oe sph ? i utes passed uninterrup cme — ee ad Mr. Quasb, as | Saont brow se W-Crops himself was there, and was just sending to : ii i — rhe weed getting late, I guess I'll tarry with this Mr. ’ : curtains was < n all right be wooden | * eat The lord of earth, the hero of the plow lemand why the bell was silent J } chair was moved to the other window, and Leeman to-nignt. hoe in oe p> ocho om pomaprne, By i Slowiv England’s sun was setting o'er the was again ascended, when Mr. Perkins Y h,up, ho, Dobin! get along ‘ 8 ws when the day is done, Perey. wee a5 agai . , na i a eae es i Pe phe ‘i Salehe the burning sod ' hill topsfar away, : ‘love the i ‘Matilda ’ | * id setting off at a brisk trot followed oe ee oe oe ene Oe Filling allthe land with beauty at the close | * by the traveller, the musical Quash again : } Lite Gant hawe & . . I the travel , th n t Juash Marks the broad acres where his feet sav: of one sad day, Mrs. Perkin p W } nai witt ’ heel ’ " sii ist . |} Drone in ia : wes: io ol bh} sin ae 4} And the last rays kissed the forehead ofa man | what j Wt A | : : , Sill oe he treads the stub! clods and lady fair,- pamey - ’ | ‘Gwine down Shinbone Alley The Recovery fresh { = na d and He with footstep slow and wear she with | J fhe burden of ‘Long time ag was 3 Re ° sO iurrc open ee} I we Pr ting } ‘ } fe 2e gdapted t a : sunny Hoating hail taken up by some one apparently in an ads — . b tact 1 i" He with bowed head, sad and thoughtful, she } } wn and then | ' field. which asioned Quash to | Matted and dense - eangres et" — with lips all cold and white, | raising voice for his benefit, she added : | 3 ae Meliow and dark the ridgy cornfeld cleaves Struggled to keep back the murmut | wi ' . i prick up his ears with some surprise, he : hilleside here the a ee oe mi y f¢ her t alway ym the na aCK i Up the steep hillsside where the laboring ‘Curfew must not ring to-night t ys l Ine | cakianel, beware, sho Serkan vl train | pantry d Anoth silence | wed the | sane (indden.’ wi t} , Stands the long track that scores th vel] «« Sexton,” Bessie’s white lips falter point-| withdrawal of Mr. Perkins. A moment pass- | sil “ Hep — . cpr nn a: : ing to the prison old, | id ss ain't the sid Mr. Perkins from | SP" m t field Long time rough the moist valley clogged with 002-/ With its turrets tall and gloomy,and its walls | ©": , ‘ | oe . . z ss al , . ‘ —— ca dada | 5 ing clay, dark, damp and coid, | th tof th i An exp tted W tat ?* seid t tmeiaiead seine The petient convoy breaks its destined way I've a lover in that prison, doomed this very | across Mrs. Perkins t th tion ve . e mae At every turn the loosening chains resound, night to die, | this | sition Wiel deeereed « king sudden his ind looking The swinging plowshare circles glistening | At the ringing of the curfew, and no earthly | | billit than tl are walls , nto tee sides for t ause of his sur- round } ly is nigl } ter t than a i rempt : . ie@ip is Digu, — P pris¢ Till the wide field one billowy waste ap-} Cromwell will not come till sunset,” and her | room. ‘ It must be there,’ she replied in a pears, lips grew strangely white | voice of emotior OW | t see it,’ he] we z And wearied hands unbind the panting} as ghe breathed the husky whisper ilk Miia akat, Heil sale sai tiie s your master’s spirits | suppose steers «“ Curfew must not ring to-night ‘geugeal : : : } Quash, in a very thoughtful mood led the ia at eile — | Perkins was evidently waiting to hear him | ; un the tnwes stihiut atiotine enol oi ia me : i : ‘ i way Lhe tavern, wilhout ullering another — . . . ‘* Bassie, caimly spoke the sexton, every | move aw 1y in renewal! of the search, but no | adtiniw ial t! . 4h - seieiail ; word pierced her young heart, | such sound reached ker. ‘I declare, Daniel,’ | ore ee ere ee ee oe LITERATURE. Like the piercing of an arrow, jikea deadly | =) NSS gS th RAN was soon waited on by the obliging Mr. IDDBA LAW poisoned dart. | she sud lenly snapped «| ul, yOu are nouga poeeere = bustling talkative vewan *, “ : | es ‘ve ru hatcurfew.from } to try the patience of a saint I tell you that ’ ' CATCHING A TARTAR. Long, long years I've rung that curfew,from to try the pa e of a sain bag | who greeted his customer with— Light, | that shadowed, gloomy tower | towel is on the nail back of t ul door | riot 1 _ oO 1+ Wall (Prom the St. Lovis Reput Every evening, just at sunset, it has Pd | and at rit tite s half of » tgt i in Qua ih ‘ Out se pudeicd } ¢ Ad n anvi ee i , i I I . : i ' he | g f sir ‘Quash take off that rug « Come { i j : " } 1 @lasn ta Ol tha ug om There were four of them and they Were! 1'\4 don tt ind estand | t ! was i cdl ewes Wis: Lc dn thas nl young bloods; young bloods u have} | : i geen @ young blood. He is the son of his| Now I'moldTIst j self,’ said Mr. Perkins, with a tinge of sa Do yeu | him to stand on a dirt Hos - + rt sir? father end his father is rich. He is called a! ilo det | casin go and k for it again, Da i young blood Lecause he bleeds the old man.| Wild her e} er features, stern | | Perkins It don't 1as if if y pieas : ither particular The young bivod toils not, neither does he and whit htful brow, I could go down these steps ag Sti S 10dging wit hin tio Sass . j i ‘ Tell, Quash bi t ! WwW spin— but his head spins once in a wh le. | And withil B ema 4 s.’ Mr. Perkins shoved a‘ , $ nea W Juash, take : to: 3 V Well there were four of thea It was Sun- ' i a ‘. | and Mr Perkins with a sigh t i "u ta ind tend him well I like to ¥a aly t Our Of Lem ' Was 10 She had ges rea with- il : i : ' anes a ba day night.—They had been out at Rinkie’s 0 sigh, tention to t tair Ss W nade is aps 7 &e aS 15 8 20 i . At the ringin {the Curfew. Basil [ °! +} ; ' ritter,, exclaimed the landlord, slapping ead were coming home, on the St. Charles; “‘** ‘he ringing 0: the Lu aa lers{ nervous by t eq t is ping : oe ; wood must die. , | iin eit down was t 1 the back rockroad. They sat in a two,seated buggy, And her breath came fast and faster, and her | ee ee ae Tak ' ij the | drawn by a dashing span of bays Preserit- eyes grew large aud br ght— | an ] painful, Mr. I ki Pi bay : I v : : : en } rinr i Y ‘ F t ckens d s this ear e ly they came to the large open common at/ In an undertone she murmured, that she was beginning to think i nd nat K c mean: ¢ the intersection of the rock road and King’s * Curfew must notring to-night. whea his foostep was heard at 1imed th , es site of the stairs. az vain his ® as~ SiJence, Belzebub, said the traveller highway She with quick step bounded forward, sprang f the stairs, and again his voice a Doe : ag 0 ; Here an episode occurred Y haye within the old church door } cend Itjaint thers,’ Mrs. Perkins camé ressing t animal, and then turning to seen an episo je. } Left the old man treading slowly paths so oft) down so sud jenly from her chair as to cause | (4 indlord, he observed—‘ You must ex : he'd tread before. . Sa RS Se iam 3 he’s raiber an aristocratic It is something sudden Not dae moment paused t] ‘ or Mr. Perkins to wink where he stood. The Is rather an aristocratic “a i ™ : + Obs ras =p ¢) P used the maiden yi ma ; ‘ 4 ee i a And so unexpecte!. i eves and cheek aglow | next instant she swept down the stairs with | horse, its t ect of edi on, sir. | } ' } ¢ } ' i } ‘ a's the ad It seizes you with amazement. Transiixes| Mounted up the gloomy tower, Where the | flushed tace and hard determined eyes. Mr He's the devil, sir ou wiih awe In this i tt bell swung to and fro, | Perkins nu 1 awa advar and pr ‘None of your familiarity,’ said the horse J € ul (ie e@pis e , atl i ,an 1 DOs} : Y 1 . . And she climbed the dusty ladder on which | | ted Sia dain ‘whos and ctar,| looking spitefully round at the astonished mashed your nos¢ fell no ray of light, les he pantry entrance, and start-| ‘OOKIDE . A countryman was driving homein a lowly | Up and up, her white lips saying, | ¢ 1 inside triumphant S waived him | *#Ver! keeper ioe truck-wagon drawn by an aged and metho- | “Curfew must not ring to-night. aside with her hand and the simple word Ho! there Quash aid the astonished | PY t 1é\ ia ee " ha are wo dice! grav | The voung ! i a | She had hot at ‘ta td , Getaway b 3 a md y i by the traces, what are you ice! gray horse. 7 young b is came She had reached the top-mast ladder, o'er her 2. 2? me as ‘ : ‘ t 50 dashing up with their steeds. The young hangs the great dark bell, ! towel wasn 1 the nail, t bloods were beerv Awful i3 the gloom beneath her, like the path- | quick tected it in pla 4 the Landlord,’ said Belzebub, ‘I want my id Tt a ; rei . Z i : way down to hell. ee Cie ea 2 But the countryman had about two drinks | go. the ponderous longue is swinging, ‘tis the | first shelf, and with hardly a pause s oat tes ‘ of whiskey in him and hence had the advant- jour of Curfew now, | straightway reached up and picked it uy Qua t a or ack p age. And the sight has chilled her bosom, stopped | ‘There, do you see (hal * andshe shook it in to the por ind the traveller had to A gill of whiskey holds the same an it her breath and paled her brow, | his face. To t Mr. Perkins \ t I to his vehicle and drive round in ey ; i Shall she let-it ring? Nonever! Flash ber | ..-nisod would be to misret a arch of the stable himself of fight as 2 galien of beer, and then itis s eves with sudden light Ir] A Would misre} it l- ey ¥ iO succen light, . ‘ : “eel F it - ‘ . oe lod sposing of his horse much hanidier and less cumbersome. And she springs and grasps it firmly ings, but the towel was not 1a anid Having 16d lisposing of h 1OUSE The young bloods drew rein and the coun- Curfew shall not ring tosnight.”’ 'Mr. Perkins sperately ‘oe he returned to the tavern; anon supper : "8 ‘ | | straw I told 4 war rere ? al the eggs had all apparently young tryman haliowed whoa! The y. D.asked the Out she swung, far out, the city seemed a ~t i tefl ‘ . aC - ; if he conid tell them where they were g \ ark of light below . }* wan t (her xclaimed Mrs. Perkins spite h , The landlord was greatly coni ab bnem nere tiney were go s Pe Gi gn red | r . : ; The profane c. told them “to h— Twixt heaven and earth her form suspend- | fully It was right in ntof ‘ Hust mortifying circumstances Then one of the y said ‘ 1 are a blank- ed, as the betl sw ing to and fro. and an od buta blockhead w ha but } traveller amend from a ; ii ‘ And the sexton at the bell rope, old and deaf, | ... sit atone We t ‘ \ cold pig, which, as 1 inserted the carving a heard not the bell if 9 * = Mr. Per} ¢ | forl to. utt 1a piercing squeal, spond- i l ] Suit . | nniso n, S : t ins ! nt f nie 1 § eal, rt I At this the countryman laid down his lines, | But he thought he still wasringing,fair young | "” ee mr. rs n a tone vile ’ ! img aes eo end got out of the truckewagon and made a Basil's funeral knell. Voice at indicated the subj was becoming | ed to by a louder or rr * the . ' dy speech as follows * Wee reeeters hen iit os the maiden clung most firmly, and with | distasteful to (il finish them myself,’ | Down went th earving-knife an‘l fork, and ’ ee trembling lips and white, i 1 Atss Uiedine Bon 4 haa ear a +} vanivatian ioess ts arcw in lanes bene . : ¢ id ; : | said Mrs. Perkins firmly And I might have | the perspiration began to grow In larg ads the wrong fence. Just one of you stayin the | Said to hush her heart's wild beating, | - ; bs iad irae f Hl | done them at first, and saved my strength,for | on the forehead of the poor host who stood wagon @nd the other three git right out here. ‘Curfew shall not ring to-night. Drags te ways ii shunts. peng i ? ' iness knows Ihave got little enough.’ ‘J| gazing fearfully at the grunter His attens I ken !ey all the dust between here and town — saan DT, su msigsaieat nag opiutg ta alanine ia if ' with Oh! fel k It was oer the bell stop swaying, and the tell you I'll do them,’ protested Mr. Perkins, | tion was soon taken, however, from veices ? I j maiden stepped once more, | seg nee nee ist palit > « dealion |, botae! the flies. I'm better than any muskeeteer| Firmly om the dark old ladder, where for | ‘N® You have done mischief enough for one | from nies space ne ber. Just one of you hold them horses | hundred years before, | day,’ said Mrs. Perkins hysterically, «you | landlord é + You HOw net 10PS < | ’ - ie i : une ot had not been planted. The brave | had b or go down street and enjov voursel ‘Ave!aye! coming gentlemen, more tra- my ole ware I"!1 stand without hitchin—and H — oe vot sr _ i. The brave had better go down street ” 1 enjoy yourself a Ose : —_ i geed that she had done, | with vour cronies The unhappy man retire | vellers—help yourself, sir. the balance just waltz to Joseph right here! Should be told long ages after, as the rays of | bg p youl ronies,” The un # pS — it | : ' i li ; ¥* aes d from the room in great depression, ant * Landior mow. Come on, git out And the irate setting stn, : so i a ane pnt ‘ ‘Coming, gentlemen—here John, a light ennounced his firm belief in the canine pa-| Should illume the sky with beauty ; eventually disappeared down the street,mut- | ORES: © aieens ignt, rentage of the y.b.—Then he danced an prenced up and down the road and kicked a the herses’ ears and gyrated his long arms end threw his old sk ich hat up in the air “Oh Ima catamount, |! am. I like to be stepped in the middie of the road, I do. I'm @ four-year-old bull pawin’ up big clods right out of the ground, I am—I'm a whole menagrie of royal Bengal tigers, an a cage fuil of grizzly bears. I've fit in the ring heave. Git out here! Git out,1] say’ and show you whar you're goin Then three of the young bloods pulled of their coats and accepted the pressing invit tion. The other sat in the buggy and hele the horses. He was the lucky one. He could go to see his girl the next night, if he wanted | it, for its twin stars are centered in the soul. te, and had not to tell ber that he had been out to the Dase-bali match and got hit with the | bell. The best place in the v buggy helding the horses. Weil the three? bounded out countryman set those long arms going. aad “nity was in the hen the 1 CORPEW MUST NOT RING TOs ‘| Leng | O'er the distant hills came Cromwell ; the three immediately imagined that the hot | speil bad brought cn a tornado, accompanied by anearthquake and enlivened by strokes of lightning. The countryman seemed to have about teen fists “P'i tell you whar you're goin’,” he ed as the first of the three tried to climb over the fense on his east ear. “That's whar you're goin!l as the second of the three executed @ back somersault in the ditch. “An’ this is the way for you to travel! ve yelled, as the last of three tried to balance of the| himself on his nose in the middle road. . xe lucky fellow who wasin! Sanger aught ‘ y | b-b-believe I'll tststake these three.” the wagon holding the horses, but the luck ! rapid | said the famons essayist, ‘but I object to sires with heads of white, should tell the Kittle children Curfew did not ring that night. aged | ' ' } Bessie sees him and her brow, | Full of hopes and full of gia iness, has no} anxious traces now, feet she tells her story, all bruised and torn ; And her face 30 sweet and pleading sorrow pale and worn, Touched his heart with sudden pity, lit his eye with misty light; ! your lover lives,”’ said Cromwell, ‘Curfew shall not ring tosnight.” — oe + At his shows her | yel with “Go There is nothing onearth so beautiful as the household on which Christian. love for ever smiles, and where religion walks, a counsellor and a friend. No cloud can darken No storms can make it tremble, for it has a heavenly supvort and a heavenly anchor, One of the queerest duels on record was that in whieh Sainte~Veouve was engaged. it began to rain slightly after he had taken up his position, whereupon he cooly held jis umbrella over his head with his left hand, while holding the pistol with his right. The expostulation of his witnesses had no effect upon him. ‘ [t isall very well to be killed,’ | catching cold in my head.’ | could not always ge | One morning he saw a lot, and iuquired of | he shrieked | ‘About a | he | fellow let the horses go and got out of the way A good many stories ef stammerers are told, but none of recent date better than the | following of Platt Evans, of Cincinnati: 1} was one of his pleasures to teach his friends | |how to purchase tender geese, though he | them in the market, the farmer how many there were dozen,’ was the reply *‘ W-w-weall,’ said | Platt, ‘Ik-k-keep boarding-house, and my b-b-boarders are the biggest e-eaters you | ever s-s-saw. P-p~pick out n-n-nine of the } t-t-toughest you've g-gsgot. The farmer complied, and laid aside the other three tens ‘ > if Polly der ones. Platt picked them up carefully, and putting them in his basket, said, ‘I | The Baked Beans in Danger.—Last Sun- | day morning a family living in the suburbs | of the city wentto a suburban church, leats Then he made another speech as follows:| ing a little girl about seven years of age in “Oh, 'm an earthquake, I am cano right from the bowls of theearth. Give) phe family were to have beans for dinner, | conclusion, therefore, Give me room! me some more nuts to crack! —Give me ap!’ I'm a vol- some more raw meat to chaw | to cook | charge of the house. The church was situ- ated but a short distance from the house. and these were jeft in a vessel on the stove The little zirl while playing sud- | denly began to smell the odor of burned | beans, upon which she rushed out of the The three siid of behind the fence, down to | house, over into the church, where the pastor where number four sat, holding the horses, was gravely and earnestly preaching the and quietly into town, and then the three slid @rtively into a drug store bit with the ball. They knew where t They had been out to dee the base bal! match and got) ey | profound Werd of God. The first person of the family the little girl espied was a young lady cousin, and to her in a lond voice, which startled the assemblage considerably, she cried, ‘Come home, come home, the beans Were going during the balance of that trip | are burning,’ and immediately rushed out Atell events they did not enquire of any | More countrymen, quietly drying home their truck wagons. again The astonishment was great, and all the solemnity of the preacher as well as in| the congregation disappeared beneath a trymen, and devoted more than ever to his broad smile. | tering to himself | ture ; a | A DANBURY MAN WASHES run! ‘it wan't on the nail any way. —Danbury News 7 —_— - A Minnesota paper made a young poetess say, ‘Oh, for a heart fullof sweet yearlings! The poetess wrote to the editor. declaring | that she wrote ‘ yearnings,’ and that the | printer who set it up ‘yearlings’ was a| calf. A citizen of Portland was walking down | town one morning, when a stranger ad- | dressed him: ‘Do you know where the post officeis?’ * Yes,’ answered the Portiander, | affably, and walked on without further pars | ley. After proceeding for about ten steps | he looked back and inquired in his turn. ‘Why? Did you want to know?’ ‘Hoe,’ | replied the victim with earnestness; and then, the account having been balanced, the two shook hands and gravely walked off | | CrxcInNATUS AT THE PLow.—In that portion of imagination’s realm reconnoitred by the ‘mind’s eye,’ and as bearing upon Roman history thereis no incident, it seems to the writer, better calculated to cause a thrill of admiration and sympathy in every magnani- mous breast than the picture of the grands | est character that Rome ever produced, dili- gently engaged in the manual (but nol de- grading) occupation of guiding tbe plow. The fact that this purest, least ambitious, and most really influentiai citizen that Rome | ever boasted, should have, almost exclusive- ly, devoted his time, his talents, and his wonderful energies (whenever the Common- wealth could dispense with the latter) to purely agricullural pursuiis, simply demons strates the moral grandeur of the man’s na- implying, as it does, that in comparison with all other merely human pursuits Cincins nnatusfdeemed the ‘tilling ofthe soil’ to be at once the most natural,the most innocent, and therefore the most conducive to man’s happis ness of all others. In his utter freedom, in- | deed, from ambition, and his lofty indiffer- ence to that species of renown which “Plays round the head, but comes not to | the heart,” he proved himself + the noblest Roman’ of them all, and emphatically that immaculate character, in heathen times, who carried out, in his daily walk and behaviour, the pre- | cepts and practice of Christianity, without being aware that its great Founder was on his way to promulgate his doctrines to a be- | nighted world. | } | We deduce this general from his devotedness to agricultural pursuits, and from the re- | markable preference he evinced in relation thereto, as contrasted with his apparent lukewarmness in the matter of state affairs, that Cincinnatus, more than any other man of his time, understood in what true happi- ness consisted; and though more capable | than any of his contemporaries of conduct— | ing such affairs wisely and well, (for was he | not Rome’s ‘ pilot in extremity ?’) and when |. the waves ran high’ was sure to be at his | post ; yet, the disagreeable task being ac- ; complished, he would hasten back to his plow, unmoved by the plaudits of his couns beloved vocation of cuitivating the ground, HUMOROUS SKETCH. bring a light to the door—Sally, wait on the gentlemen, and out bounced the landlord with lights, but returned, declaring there was no living thing about. and returned a second belief that the whole was haunted that night by ing, he went again time, declaring his plantation evil \ spirits, The stranger presently rose from the table | and drew his chair to the fire, having made } a pretty good supper on the eggs and young porker, their cries to the contrary notwiths standing, That night, rumor saith, Mr. Billy Lee- man slept with the Bible under his head, | and kept a candle burning in his room till daylight; and those who pass there till this day discover the heels of old horse-shoes peering over the door casement as a bulwark against witches, hobgoblins, and other evil spirits. The traveller was a Ventriloqguist. ee ae Having suffered for several years from Dyspepsia resulting in great nervous prostra- tion and general debility, impoverished blood Eruption of the Skin, Rheumatic and Neus ralgic Pains, Restlessness, want of sleep and extreme lassitude, I was recommended to take Dr. Wheeler's Compound Elixir of Phos- phates and Calisaya, Having persisted in its use for several weeks I recovered perfect health. My wife, and children also, have taken it, for general Tonic purposes to ins vigorate and strengthen the system and pros mote the formation of pure blood. with per- manent benetit. It energizes an sustains the the vital forces in a remarkable manner. Samver J. Burr, Agent of Toronto Globe, Montreal. Nationa, Desrs.—Nearly every nation in the world is either a borrower or lender, and the startling declaration is made by a writer in the London Daily Telegraph that the world ‘“‘ regarded by the mass, is living be- yond its means.’ During the 10 years end- ing with 1872, while England reduced her debt $175,000,000, Holland about $30,000,000, and the United States $400,000,000, in five years there was an increase, in some cases exceedingly large, in the debts of France, llaly, Spain, Russia, Turkey, Austro—Hun- | gary, Egypt, Brazil, Portugal and Peru, to say nothing of other nations which are com- paratively small debtors. France has gone deepest, increasing her liabitities by about $2,500,000,000 in the decade. The Editor of ‘Fenn on the Funds,’ a well known book of reference in England, estimates the toual in- crease in the aggregate of national debts for the years from 1862 to 1872, at nearly $10,- 000,000,000, while an additional sum of $5,- 606,000,000 is estimaied to have been raised for joint stock companies. The figures nec- essary to express the total volume of the world’s indebtedness, public and private, would represent a sum almost incomprehen- sible.— Republic Magazine. nant The voices calls | HOMELY OLIVER. It was at one of Sir Joshua Reynolds | Supt 1 Leicester Square that an ins fen took place wh nsed the wilspowet of Dr. Folmson The rather plain sister of the | irtis! had beer 1 called upon by the company, aller suyppe is the custom was, to give a ast. She hesitated, and was accordingly ‘oquired, again according to custom, to give the ugliest man she knew In a moment the | name of Oliver Gol Ismith dropped from her ps, end immediately a sympathizing lady on | pposite s le of the table rose and hoo hands with Miss Reynolds across the } table Johnson had heard the expression, ind inad marked the pantomimic per- form f sympathy, and he capped both by aremark which set the table in a roar an { which was to an effect which cut smart- lv in three ways 1 he, ‘the ancients on the com- of their to e a beast Th» affair ends prettily ‘ Tiaus,’ sai mencements friendships, used between them.’ } S$acri A few days after the ‘ fraveler’ was published Johnson read lit alocd from beginning to end to delighted hearers, of whom Miss Reynolds was one: As Jclinson closed the book she emphatical'y remarked, ‘Well, [never more shall think Dr. Goldsmith ugly Mi eynolds (who, it has been said, used herself to paint portraits with such exact imitation of her brother’s defects and avoidan of his beauties, that everybody but himself Janghed at them) thought it mar- | vellons that so much dignity could have been given to the poel’s face and yet so strong @ likeness be conveyed; for ‘Dr. Goldsmith’s cast of countenance,’ she proceeds to inform us, ‘und, indeed, his whole figure from head to foot, with the idea of his being alow mechanic ; impressed every one at first sight partival The smith had himselfonce said. i believe, a journeyman tailor,’ founded on Gold- Coming ruffled ily belie! was what | | | | | j into Reynold’s drawingsroom, Goldsmith angrily referred to an insult which his sensi- tive mature fancied had been put upon him at a meighboring coffee-house, by ‘a fellow i who, said Goldsmith, -ltook me, 1 believe, for aia I! mpany laughed inore or eSs nonstratively, and rather confirmed than -ispelled the supposition Poo? Goldsmith's weaknesses were a good leal played upon by that not too polite com- pany. One aftern Bourke and a young | i Trish offi OM were crossing the | square to Revnold’s house to dinner, They | passed a group who were gaping at, and mak- | ing admiring remarks upon some samples of beautiful foreign husseydom, who were look- | ig owt of t windows of one of the hotels. Goldstnith was at the skirt of the group look- ing or Bourke said toO’ Moore as they pas- sed uuse Look at Goldsmith; by an by, at Reynold’s, you will see what I make vf this At dinner, Bourke treated Gold- smith with askeil { an explanation. Bourke readily replie at monstrous indiscretion on Goldsmith's part, uare, of which Bourke and Mr. O's th his manner in the sq Me had been the witness¢ Ss. Poor Gold- emithasked in what way he had been so ins . ‘Whys’ answered Bourke ‘‘ did you not exclaam upon looking up at those women, what stupid beasts the men must be, for star- admiral such coolness, that Oliver at last was owing to the} ing with such n at those painted Jezebels, wh . man of your talent passed | by u t '? s y my dear friend,” cried Goidsmith, horror-striken, “ I did not say so !," “ify had not said $ retorted Bourke “how should [ have known it?’ “That's true.” answered. Goldsmith with great iumility, * I’m very sorry: it was very foolish! 1 do recollect that something of the kind }assed through my mind, but I did no think 1 had uttered it | > =_—- Balwons do not cost much; for ascent. they are thade Chinese maxim—Never rub your eyes ex- cept with your elbows. Farmers gather what they sow, while} seams-resses sew what they gather. t! j } } } | ‘If f should die, dear, where would you | go?’ ‘Go? Goaft lr insurance money,’ was the reply of a fond wife. ‘Pray, madame, why do you name your | old hen Macduff?’ ‘Because, sir, | want | m * i her to lay on. A intry editor advises Queen Isabella to advertise if she wishes to find the throne she Jost some time ago Eminence is not to be reached by a frantic struggle Che road to it is much more com- mennlace. He who ed a guillotine, a gallows, and a Net girls to be shipped him from Some one says if we would show ourselves res od to our daughters, we ‘must be g is tothem in a truer sense than that of hanging trinkets on their necks.’ No words could be more sensible. Nine girls i I have TO THE LADIES! A CARD. with the Wesleyan my connection Wes : , the expiration of A* P Academy ceases at the Vacation, [purpose taking pupils dur- ing the hours ree nily given them, vit: from 9 a. m., till 2 p. m {rrangemen 8 given to At ean be made sc that hours can be the convenience of all pupils end of every Quarter, pupils before pareni and fri must be made at once, as only can be tal ault nds. Appheation a limited number KCN. First Quarter will commence on Monday, | July 6. TERMS WILL BI For Quarter of Instru- mental Music per half hour's AS FOLLOWS “4 legsons, duration, $5.00 For Quarter of 24 lessons, Instru- mental Music, 1 hour’s dura- tion, 10.00 Leasons in Vocai Music only 10,00 Instrumental Lessons of an hour's duration, with the first rudiments of thorough Bass and Transposi- tion &e., 15.00 Vocal and Instrumental, half hour's duration, 7.00 Lessons on the Organ, 20,00 Cabinet Organ and Melodeon, 15.00 No Pupil will be taken for less than six months. Orders taken Organs, and the guarantecd. best Pianos satisfaction for the utmost 5S. N. EARLE. Ch'town, June 29, 1874 QUBEN SQUARE FURNIPTUR WAREROOMS ! —— Our premises have heen greatly enlarged and are now the LARGEST and BEST ARRANGED IN THE CITY, and equal to any in the Lower WORK WARRANTED TO GIVE PERFECT SATISFACTION. ALL I have 200,000 feet Seasoned Lumber under cover, for manufacturing purposes. 20.000 feet Gilt and Walnut Picture Frame Moulding, 80 different patterns Cheap. Oval, Gothic and Square Picture Frames, in Gilt and Walnut. All the latest Styles of Rustic Frames Heavy Gilt, for Oil Pictures, Cheap. English, German, and American Lookiag Glasses and Mirror Plates. A few Large Mentle Mirrors and Pier Glass- es, Cheap. Window Furniture, &e. Poles, Rings and Cornices, Rollers, Blinds, Tassels, Cords. &c. Upholstery Goods.Wair Seating, Bedding, &e. er ey in Damask, Repps, Terry, Poplins, Brocatells, Fringes, New patterns, Plushes, Gimps, Buttons, Tufts, &c., cheap. 3edding—Feather. Hair and Flock Beds, Pillows and Bolsters, constant- ly on hand, cheap. IRON BEDSTEADS AND CAIBS, a Great Variety, Cheap. A few of the celebrated Iron Bed CHAIRS, —it makes a Bed. an Easy Chair, and in- valid Chait.and a Lounge ina few seconds, very durable. No house should be with- out one, Our siock is the Largest in the City, and the very Cheapst Strongest CHAIRS and BEDSTEADS. Most beautiful and durable Drawing Room, Dining Room and Chamber Furniture, in suits. It is a pleasure to have customers come | and examine. would dazzle must dig. | mprovements in Persia—The Shah | out of ten would rather have a camel’s hair | shaw! than a necklace. Parents should re- member this {| a CERTIFICATE OF CURE. Mrs. Elisa Rhynard, of Annapolis County, in the Province of Nova Scotia, maketh oath and saith that a year ago last September her husband boughta bottle of Dr. Caleb Gates’ Eye Relief, forthe purpose of applying it for the cure of sore eyes ; and seeing on the label of the bottle that it was recommended for the cure of piles also, with which she had been for a long time most painfully afflicted, and had applied to different doctors in her own neighbourhood, and tried various other res medics, but found no permanent relief, tried it for the piles also, andina very short time was cured of both complaints by the use of one small bottle. She had also been used to very frequent turns of fainting, some-~ times as often as three times a day, and | having thistime moved into the more ims mediate neighbourhood of Dr, Gates, she commenced taking his Life of Man Bitters | and Syrup about the first of May last, and | is most thankful and happy to say, that | through a kind Providence and the skill of Dr. Gates, she has not had one of her former fainting turns since the month of June Jast past, and she has frequently taken the | Bitters and Syrups for colds, &c., and has in- | variably found unfailing relief in the use of the above medicines. | Sworn to at Middleton, this third day of | February, 1872, before me, : James Wueetock, J, P. | | Aug, 24.—Imo | | | | } | | | Ceorge Woods & co’s. CELEBRATED CABINET ORGANS FO! SALE—CHEAP. JQHN NEWSON., Queen Square, Mareh 10. 187% “THE EXAMINER.” THE LARGEST NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Every week places before its readers the latest local and Foreign news; selections from the raciest and most improving Liter- ature of the day; Editorial articles contri- buted by the ablest writers in the Province. - SUBSCRIPTIONS SOLICITED. TERMS—One Dollar and sixty cents a year Office, corner Queen & King St. FOR THE AFFLICTED! LIFE of MAN BITTERS —AND— COMBINED MEDICINES. CURES, Dropsy in its worst form; Liver Complaint; Jaundice ; Swelling of the Limbs and face; Asthma, of whatever kind ; Dyspepsia, Bili- onsness, Consumption, Spitting of blood, Bronchitis, Sick Headsache, Running Sores, Erysipelas, Stoppage of the Menses, Kidney and Gravel Complaint, Measels, Fevers, Sea Sickness, Heart disease, Pleurisy, Piles, Worms, Rheumatism, Spinal disease, or Affs ection of the Spine, Coughs, Colds and Whooping Cough, Diptheria and _ Sore Throat, Pains in the Stomach, Diarrhea, Dysentry, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Tooth ache and Ague, Sprains, Strains, Felons, Chilblains, Burns, Scalds, Bruises, Sore Eyes, Lame Back and Side, Cuts and Cracked Hands, &c. For Certificates, &c., taken before Justices of the Peace, see Pamplets which; can be furnished at the Agencies. For sale by dealers generally. Agents at Charlottetown, T. DesBrisay Wholesale Agent, Wm. R. Watson. Manufactured by CALEB GATES, & Go. Middleton, Annapolis, Co. N.§ Dec. 1, 1873. BOSTON STEAMERS, bi SEASON 1874. THE Steamers “ Alhambra ” 782 tons, aad Caroll,”1372 tors,haviag both being thoroughly overhauled, and fitted with very superior accom modation for passengers, will leave Boston during the season rage every Saturday at noon, and returning will leave Charlottetown alter- nately every Thursday at five p. m., Halitax and Canso both ways. For freight or passage apply to : CARVELL BROS, A Ch’town, June 1, 1873,—a p is and | is Shades | ecann renanenemmenatnetictl the | will perform | | | j Provinces. | | | | | | | | | | | | | } Dr. J. Walker’s California Vin- egar Bitters are a purely Vegetable preparation, made chiefly from the na- tive herbs found on the lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor- nia, the medicinal properties of which are extracted therefrom without the use of Alcohol. The question is almost daily asked, “‘ What is the cause of the unparalleled suczess 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 Viygear Birrers in healing the sick of every disease manis heir to. They are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic, relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Orgaus, in Bilious Diseases. The properties of Dr. WALKEr’s Verunantbevions are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Sudorific, Altera- tive. and Anti-Bilious. Grateful Thousands proclaim Viy- EGAR BITTERS the most wonderful In- vigorant that ever sustained the sinking system. 2 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- mittent 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, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan- sas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pear], 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 BITITERs, as they will speedily remove the dark- colored viscid raatter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same timo stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. a TRE BRITS mt ' Quarterly Reviews | | I DINBURGH REVEW, ( Whig | LONDON QUARTERLY REVIEW. } 4 art i MINSTER REVIEW. Liberat ) | BRITISH Qt \RTERLY REVIEW (Con. » (Kevan AND . Blackwood’s Eeinbarah Magazine REPRINTED BY THE Leonard Seoit Publis ‘ oil Pu lishing lo, 140 LTON St. N, Y. sy arrangement withthe English publish ers who receive a liberal compe . Nsation . These periodicals constitute onderfyj niles of modern thought, ‘nesesr and criticism. The cream of all Burope books worth reviewing is found here they treat of the leading events of world in masterly articles written who had special knowledge of the treated. The American Pnblisherg upon all intelligent readers in this ange a liberal support of the Reprints whj they have so long and so cheaply furpj feeling sure that no expenditure for literary matter will yield so rich a as that required for a subseripti the ——— Leading Periodicals of Great Britian. TERMS About one third the price of the ori in For any one Review $4 00 par cal For any two Reviews, 10 « 42 For any three Reviews, 1000 « « | Foa all four Reviews, i200 4 « For Blackwood’s Magazine, 400 « « For Blackwood and one Review, 7@ 42 @ For Blackwood and two Reviews, 1000 & & For Blackwood Reviews, For Blackwood Reviews, and three 1300 & «& and four 1500 « & PREMIUMS - New subscribers (applying early) for the year 1874 may have, without ¢ last volume for 1873 of such periodicals ag they may subscribe for. Or instead, new subscribers’to an three. or four of the above’ per ical may have one of the ‘ Four Reviews’ for 1873; subscribers to all five may have two | of the ‘ Four Reviews,’ or one set of Blacks wood’s Magazine for 1873. | Neither premiums to subscribers nor , discount to clubs can be allowed unless the | money is remitted direct to the publishers, | No premiums given to clubs. | Circulars with further particulars may be | had on application. | LEONARD SCOTT PUBLISHING Co., 140 FULTON STREET, NEW YORK, Dec. 17, 1873. | CLARK E'S THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.—See uteronomy, Cap. xii., verse 28. | i) : Fortify the bod inst disease if by purify i all its feide with VINEGAE, | World : aMed Blood Mixture BiTrers. No epidemic can take hold | ivade Mark— Biood Mixture” of a system thus fore-armed. | THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER & RESTORE Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Mead- cleansing and clearing the blood from 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 painfulsymp- | toms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertise- ment. Scrofula, or King’s Evil, White Swellings. Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammztions, Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, ete. In these, as in all other constitutional Dis- eases, WALKER’s VINEGAR Bitters have 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 equ Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases.—Personsen- | gaged in Paints and Minerals, such as | Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance in fife, 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-hea®, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, 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, — 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- manhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an influence that improvement is soon perceptible, Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when- ever you find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when you find it obstructed and — 8 pg in the veins; cleanse it when it is | foul; your feelings will tell youwhen. Keep | the blood pure, and the health of the system | will follow. R. H. McDONALD & CO., Druggists and Gen. Agts., San Francisco, California, and cor. of Washington and Chariton Sts., N. ¥. } Sold by all Druggists and Dealers. « | August 25. 1873 HEALTH STRENGTH & VIGOR. Just Published, Price One Shilling Stg. FYNHE 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 8S. LA’MERT, M.D.,1L.S. A., &c.,37 BEDFORD SQUARE, London. ‘“‘An excellent manual for all who may learn how to use life and not abuse it.— Church and State Gazette. ‘*On the subjects of diet and the regula- tion of the functions the advice throughout is admirable.”— Mirror. Dr. La’MERT is the only regularly-qualified Practicioner, who, for thirty years, has de- voted his entire attention to the cure of these disorders. Patients residing in the Colonies can be successsfully treated by correspondence, and remedies will be forwarded in secreey 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., and in CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I., of Mesars. Brem- ner Brothers, 44 Queen Street. ImrortaNt Cavutiton.--The public are earnestly warned against a piracy of the above work emanating from a so-called “Peabody Institute.” Boston, which unblush- ingly appropriates the tithes of two works, published by Dr. La’Mert for thirty years. March 30th 1874. ly. Girls Wanted, AT THE ISLAND PARK HOTEL- Ten Girls as Waiters and Chambermaids, &e. Reference required, Wages, 8&5 to $8 per month. J. L. HOLMAN. Summerside, June ], 1874.—tf JUST ARRIVED. — p= S.S. Somerset, from Boston, and Schr | Bonnibell from New York, | 2,500 Barrels Flour & Cornmeal | i | which will be sold in quantities to Traders, | calling at | very cheap for cash, or at 3 months on approv- | ed paper. | OWEN CONNOLLY, Office, old stand, Dorchester St May 4, 1874, ots | * | Ch'town, vw ' t be too highly recommended a, Scurvy, Skin Diseases, and Sone isitis a never-failing and permanest £ l es ( a Uleer d Sores or the Neck. ( ® Ulec rated Bore Legs ‘ ls or Pimples ou the Face ‘ sf ‘ 6 Ulees sb nd Skin Diseaees. (‘a (j}1 } Swellings Clears the blood from all impure Matter, rrom Whotever canse arising. A nix is pleasant to the taste, ang warrant tree ui anything injurious to the most di Cons tion of either sex, the Pr- levers to give it a trial te te * from all parte, $ 1h) each, and in Cases con- tity, S405 eac h—eufliciens to effec; a permanent cure in the xreaul inajority of long-standing cases BY ALL CHEMES?S and PATENT MEDICINE VENDORS thronghon the world Sole preprictor, ¥. J. CLARKE, Chemigt, APOTHECARIES’ HALL, LINCOLN, ENG LAND EXPORT AGENTS. turbidges a d Co, Coleman st. Lopios 4 , London , Landen. 1. Oxford st., London li the I lou Wholesale Houser. AGENTS IN CANADA. Tor —Elliot & » Wholesale Draggists se hanter { Owen, Hamilron.— Wainer and «% he J ‘ ub, —il LL, Spencer, Uiarlcitétown Cemetery Company. NOTICE. _ the Act of o inJune, 1872, * Legislature, passed enacts, that from and after the first day of January, 1874, it shall not be lawful, under certain penalties, to inte: any dead body in the Protestant burying Ground, on the Malpeque Road, ia the fifth ward of this City ; and @ the New Cemetry is now ready for j interment, application for burials there in musi he made to the undersigned, at his residence in Kent Street. Plots for interments, 15 by 20 feet, equal tol share of the Company's ground, avail- able for payment of two-thirds of the purchase money, and subject to another call of S10, ao, On Plots for individual interment $2 each. Persons desirous of obtaining allotments in the Cemetry, will please apply to William Cundall, Esq., Treasurer ot the Company. the by Order VOHUN LEPAGE, Sec’y. Dec. 29, 1873. J Employmen 0 TITS travelling. The work is conge FREE nial, houorable, 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 t $250 a month. ‘Testimonials from most eminent Divines, Physicians and Editors in “America. Immense sales everywhere. Send for Terms and Circulars to C. W MITCHELL, St, John, N. B Jan. 12, 1873. ONZ BOX OF CLARKE’S B41 PILLS ky warranted to care all discharges from the Urinary Organs. in ether sex, acquired oF constitutionul Gravel and! Pains in the Baek Sold in Boxes, $/.50 each, by all Chemists aod Patent Medicine Vendors. Sole Proprietor, F. J. tat your homes or CKARKE, APOTHECARIES’ HALL, LINCOLN, ENGLAND. EXPORT AGENTS. Barg yue Burbidges and Co.,Coleman St., Londoa. Newbury and Sons, 37 Newgate Street, London- Barclay and Sons, 95 Farringdon Street, Lon Sanger and Sona, Oxford street, London. And all the London Wholesale Honses. AGENTS IN CANADA. al**—k}liott and Co, W holesxleDruggiste tex i Owen. rand Sha Hamilton. ge al and Co Mout St. John, N. Bb —H poncer Halifax, N. S---Avery, brown and Co. _ October 13, 1873, ly TOBACCO & CIGARS HE Subscribes «fiers for sale (in Bond,) a choice Lot of SMOKIMG AND CHEWING TOBACCO, and three Cases CIGARS. 74 Boxes Tobacco, in Solace, Sunshine, Vit ginian, Navy and Black Diamond. 3 Cases Cigars in Victoria & Flor Gertrude. Samples can be seen at Sale Raom N. RANKIN, Corner Water & Pownal 8% Ch’town, April 13, 1874. WANTED. ‘IX Energetic Men, to sell Cucumbers wood Pumps. An active man can ear Fifty Dollars a week at this business. G. C. CARMAN, Manutacturer’s Agent Queen Street, ow Hyndman’s Building. May 18, 1874. fy N wy ~~ we ww |