3 ——. ~~ One of the foremen in the finishing de partment, coming to the office for somejlast orders about the shipment of some goods, éaid that Mr. Somerville had appointed to PODTRY. A A Ot ll LIFE OR DEATH. NNO te Doth Life survive the .. ne | mee. iim there at moon, and the proprietor 1 : a tlio : He > y ‘ * « } Desth’s hand «i ihe secret : } of Somervili: Son's frame factory was a Which as to such one he unfolds man of rigid punctuality. P We press to know with bated breat? ! Ten, fifleen, twenty minutes Stephen Hol i ton waited in the office, watching Nellie's A whisper there, a whisper her: j ten Waited in the office, wa busy hand as she folded, sealed and directed that never Confirms the hope to which we clit But stiil we grasp at anything a& lot of And sometimes hope and sometimes tear had be seen a face $o x ~ musical‘as Nelile Somervilie s circulars, and thinking fair, or heard a voice . so clear an I know a Stoic who has thoyght, iy ' ak ele hae Wali As healthy bloo | flows through his veins, | But, as the clock struck the hall Hout a And jov his present looked up with a startled face life sustatns, Ani all this good has come unsough ‘Something has happened, Stephen, she said; my half an hour be- hind time ‘The men are all at father is never Send some one to look for him Miss Nellie, For more he cannot rightly pray Life may extend, or life may cease He bides the issue, sure of peace Sure of the best in God's own way. linner, will go myself But, even as he riedly entered the ollice, saying * Mr. Somerville was thrown from his horse spoke, a messenger hur- Perfection waits the race of man. : If, working out this great desig: God cuts us off, we must resign To be the refuse of His plan while on his way here trom the village and . is badly injured.’ t ns } —e : But |, for one, fee! no such peace ‘Where?’ broke from Nellie’s white I dare to think I have in me That which had better never be lf lost before it can increase lips *We took him home, and he asked me to come here for you.’ Even in her horror and grief Nellie retains mind, Looking into And oh! the ruined piles of mind Daily discovered everywhere, Built but to crumble in despair } ed some presence i dare not think Him so unkind. | Stephen Holton’s grave, sympathizing face, . vi she said ‘You will take charge here unt:! you hear I will be responsible.’ The rudest workman would not ding The fragments of his work away If ev'ry useless bit of clay | He trode on werea sentignt thing | | confidence in him at such a time try tedomy duty from my father ‘Thank you,” he said, deeply moy ed at her ‘Twill And does the Wisest Worker take Quick human hearts, instead of stone, And bhew and carve them one by one, Nor heed the pangs with which they Preak ? | ‘Tam sure of that,” she answered, and ex- tended her hand. Two minutes later she was hurrying home- And more, if but Creation’s waste, None too soon was her clear head and Would He have given us sense to yearn For the perfection none can care, And hope the fuller life to taste” } ward. quiet resolution brought to bear upon the ex- cited household. Her mother was in hysterics, » servants bustling here and there, pur, I think, if we must cease to be, the servan ling Itis a crueity refined, To make the instincts of our min Stretch out toward eternity poseless and terrified, and her father lying upon the bed in the hands of a surgeon and | two gentlemen who hail assisted in bringing him home Wherefore I welcome Nature's cry There was plenty to do. ' time thie As earnest of a life again, lime than [nu le ives Ww _ thought shall RWOVCE ae a | would have seemed possible, the servants ‘ , af ‘ ior ne | ‘ . a And doubt before the tight shall fly | were in their proper places Mrs. Somer. — a = | ville quieted, and Nellie, white as a sheet, LITERATURE. but perfectly tranquil, actively eng aged in meat a oe | eig epen tha surgecs SOMERVILLE AND SON. pea ke ol followed taxed every nerve of the girl's frame, but she bore the ee Sate Bctery agen strain bravely ; and when the surgeon led ee eerie ane OP St ber her to the drawing room, he felt a deep res 2 a amp ma om BURIED ALIVE. -_—-_ PROBABILITY OF A GENERAL IN, DIAN WAR. The American papers are again discu ing the alarming question Is there to be another general Indian war? It is feared eis wands be eee ethene that the outbreak will be general, and that te belle vbieke seas aoanel Willads extreme measures will have to be adopted B. : ' to the San Francisco Chronicle. ] att Lage, July 4.—A horrible discovery Lackhurst, who was buried in the ceme- On the 20th of a picnic here, by the military authorities to suppress If. | a yet, the try on the 23d June last. june, Lackhurst attended ind while there concluded to take a bath, After coming out from his bath Lackhurst went back to the picnie grounds and gets» ting into a swing began to amuse himself. In some of the Western States, Indians have not commenced hostilities, but the probabilities are that all will engage in the fight. gives the following account of the deplorable state of affairs ;--—-‘* The raging in some parts of the plains is assuming end our red One of the western pape} ene wer now \ll at once, while in the swing, his head dropped, his maseles relaxed, and he fell one ee He was picked up friends seem to be everywhere on the war Reports from nearly all points of the dine de heavily to the ground. and ev ery effort made to revive him, but in vain. The young man was | placed in a carriage and driven home, where restorative agents were employed, | but to no purpose. After some hesitation the physician in attendance pronounced the young man dead, and preparations were made for his interment. The body presented a singularly life-like appearance —so much so, indeed, that the friends felt uneasy about going on with the funeral until more positive evidence that life had wholly gone had been obtained. The fus path. senseless compass bring accounts of fighting and raid ing of more or less serious character. A re> port was current at Wichita a few days ago, that an army of Indians, three thousand strong; had attacked Medicine Lodge,burn- ing the town, and killing eighteen men. They also succeedesi in carrying away with them 800 head of cattle belonging to a Texas stock raiser. The story of the sack- ing of the town, was brought by two sur- vivors, who were the only ones that up to that time had succeeded in reaching a wet! ed gan inleol delayed one day, bat tlement. Startling as the report is, it has finally the physicians reaffirmed their pres vious conclusion that Lackhurst had died of heart disease, and the body was theres fore interred June 23d, 3ut one or two friends of the family seemed haunted by the recollection of that life-like face. They went about whi pering their fears, and finally these haunt~ ing doubts spread throughout the city and led to a proposal to exhume the remains Permiss not yet been contradicted, and the worst is feared. What rendered it not improbable, too, is the fact that only a few days before, Sun City, a city with but a dozen houses, fortunately, was burned, five men killed, and the rest driven away. A great many of the settlers in that section of the country are flocking into the larger towns, and the panic is exaggerated by the ignorance which prevails as to the movement of the enemy. The Indians have proved themselves no re- They even at and settle the question forever. sion was obtained from the authorities, and yesterday a number of the friends of young Lackhurst repaired to the cemetry and opened the grave. Upon lifting the coffin and removing the lid a horrible and sick- ening sight met their gaze. The body was turned over on its side. The skin and great pieces of flesh had been torn from the face, the hair pulled out in huge patches from the scalp, the gravesclothes spectors of persons either. tacked the mails in the vicinity of Fort Dodge, when no less a dignitary than the commandant of that post, Major Compton, was with the escort. however, and were beaten oft with a loss of five killed and as many more wounded, They were not in force While we have accounts of the atrocities, and of Indians moving about several thou~ sand strong in the east, there are even bets and coffin lining torn in shreds, and the ter authenticated reports of the doings of a large body of Cheyennes Kiowas and Arapa- from 2500 to ; frantic efforts of the man to burst the ceres hoes, variously estimated al Canadian line hunters are daily being mur- dered and then mutilated, and only in large aanghter entered the sitting-room dreseed spect for the girl who had so nobly crushed as well be a bov as a gi 2su1re ‘ agony. ! have of your society. Every day you are Giving her a glass of water, and waking | at Che factory, leaving me salon her rest quietly for a few minutes, he wat ths! ‘] wiil me ba soon if wart me ed her face till the drawn rigidity of every mother, but { promised father to come down | feature relaxed, and the sirained eyes ky | and give my opinion of some patteras of | aj pitiously into his own | moulding that are to be sent in to-day ‘That is better,” he said kindiv—* You ma vy} A3 if the o; 2g of your age | cry now. was of any va Y edt back Neliie’s lips quivered. wn iy 4 cape not want to ores you ‘You have something tell me to rema t i Cu . * Yes, Are vou sir ng em ugh t tf | vf baving 4 ina iy . & That he will dis (9h, sav he w not iNstead © a é | Go Phe injuries are t fata \ riher | Nellie fal t! may live for years— tretled fa k 1a vt NI nN s tears i fgst ‘ the care en went : B th lock sntinued i Her stey . an t be al lo Walk again ! jury ( slow as she walk: ardt actory where | the spine will keep him a cripple for life. édredth time ! a a 1 as s ! outthe anguish in the drawingsroom, John | dated * vn Hw) Ua { pu | Somer e i is us of th dread iat | of her d N nelinati iat | that had gene forth, slept under U rile point stea O Fut enet of a powerfui opiat From t tim isping her fa rs For many days the two women who loved strong fing the little girl toddled by h him ha no thought fur anything but th side N Somer been the father’s | Strong man stricken down in the prime of pride, and the cz f her mother. Ckild | 25 life needing care like a little child. Under after child had been taken from the home of | She influence of a real sorrow, the crust of John Somerville to fill a little grave the | selfishness melted from the wife’s heart, and churchyard—the victims of an over-anxiety | Sb¢ became a devoted nurse, forgetting the to keep them from every breath of a ne fancied ailments she had nursed for years, in fortify their constitutions by incessant dos- | Binistering to her husband, as he la} heip- less and suffering But there came ng: to force heaith by combatting imagin- ‘ mers ary weakness aday when Joha Se jA large body of Apaches and Comanches are ‘more than fifty miles from there. | latest accounts of the depredations, sup- | the Dry Cimarron, forty miles beyond Trini. | ahd he left to die. }and driven away over 400 head of cattle. Ww N ' le was told kindly and cautiously of the ‘ The time is up, and he has to go. nen Ne *wasi n the lather 3 ‘ ’ ‘ ts j A em pK . P ‘ir i > . ‘ sigcghscenape ape 4 o “| doom before him, It to ‘k all the Christain | preacher of the wmoourt irouit, and the Advices from Germany report the at~ his authority. and the babe was brought up strength ot the man’s tature to endure the | Rev.John Shreve was the Methodist preach- tempted assassination of Bismarck by a simost in the open air, gad found perfect | |” attor death, he thought, than lifeat|@? on an adjoining circurt. On Tuesday | young ian who shot at him in the street, Meath and strength ia constant exercise. uch a price. The first agony over, he| last, these brothers, with the wife of the | the shot grazing his wrist. The assassin and f lf and a tot at f all rdials eT 7 : . ee “a was a cooper by trade, named Kullman. ' COFIGES | Ub ought of the factory, the bread winner for | first named, had been visiting a friend and «6 Hesshee i and narcotics. | wiv on § child—the b his life. Must | returned to the house of the first named | 5S°me who wrote to Horace Greeley inx De ae eel le. beet countering | THe amt Child— the business of his life. Must | returne th od din “nec quiring if guano was good to put on pota- ai ay . , } A tt the old firm die at last, and the flourishing near night. The evening meal had been toes. He said it might do for those whose 4 ws gS ia ‘ ” | business be sold for want of a master’s care? | prepared, and before partaking of it family tastes have become vitiated with tobacco garier ee \ > — ‘ 1 ie preferre avy ¢ > ie Involuntarily he turned to Nellie, and talked | prayer was proposed. Mr. R. S. Shreve 8ndrum, but he pr ferred gravy and but When cl =o | , wh “ays | long and earnestly. | had several children, the eldest of whom is“? i : ; : Q ever, tlie ¢ some from a seminary | 4 4, prise to him, in spite of what! sey Th ungest of them being fret A telegram from Fors Garry conveys ae , as i sl »4 her ae oe Ce : i! i ce priest pied al — : nna ore telligence of the complete breakdown of ia 6 distant ‘ — inolher | he had seen, when she replied : ful, the mother directed the eldest to take | ywekenzie’s arrangements for carrying on anew A g0¢ ir, &@ ine pianist ane ‘I knew the factory would be your [:S8t/ g)) of them into an adjoining room and to the traflic of the Dawson route. Much suf- promising Laguist, she was averse to em inxiety, and Stephen has been here every quiet them during worship. The adult fering and privation a —_ ee | broide t wor sna of riding an evening to report tome. bringing me all the el : ee eas - | Ontario emigrants, and anot 1er blow struck | walkir t fin ail saciid i lav il y iown myself. persons then seated themselves for family at the Canadian route to the North-West. ae = ¥ esta ‘ mai) matter » Gay yeni dow Seu. en " } tween ane cide i thonahs i : afenios oa i aide eat, gia alk Os ae worship, Mr. John Shreve on one side of yy, Montreal special correspondent of the ak eettee? m6 ee roma the window, Mrs. Richard Shreve sat oppo. Eyyjnecring and Mining Journal of New : ‘ the new on ud : : |} site to him. Mr. Richard Shreve seating York, in a recent letter, writes: A notics | ons 1 ° i s we in me ne naleri b» vou feel able to go|.. ‘ . ‘ i a i ur trade ia i “tati 4 ne new ma - I la ) | himself in front of the window, and the ser- able — Leathe i r re pad peg hoo She entered the deta f house- | over wha have done ? é : »y sea of 1000 tons of Cumberland coal fro eat o3 he i vant girl was seated by a table in the centre by se not et we . _ - Ledtugg Keeping With @ hearty zest, though he Clearly she had explained every detail of]. pe sy : : “ae the C onsolidation Coal Company's mines. melhes ts ut Ly t- | the business in the four weeks that had pass- | of the room. The Bible had but just been | This coal is too costly for steam, but ts being ri v , w saci mn i iia a , passed to John Shreve to commence the intended for Smiths’ use, and is preferred a , . we s | Lopt of every | Setvice, when the death dealing electric by many to Newcastle. It is sold at £8 to , were , Nellie s nidentially, | him the memoranda she ha “yt OF ery ' ja e350 shi Ai : " aon ’ stroke came. The heavins were overcast | °°*?” ©*! hip. ae : ta her symap it . idout ha business transachor with a dark. angry cloud, and af lavas On Saturday, June 20th, Queen Victoria iw a dark, angry cioud, é a few large ' 9 “ : anvihimg, and wamma rks { am awtully ‘Nellie, he said, when she finished, « if} *** *' istiindhe ’ ©"? entered upon the 34th year of her reign. iiidainian bt sat bl Miaenin deaiesk en oe: eum, 1k Rbk elven te a scattering drops of water had fallen as the | gue was crowned June 20th, 1837. She heat them. not dab at them +t we ee ee Will vou wien rf ya's place | OMly premonitions or precursors of that | was thea a little over eighteen years old. ee a ad ttnow? With vou toassst me can carry on| ®Wful electric stroke. The eldest of the | Of all the sovereigns then on the thrones seguro : eo le acon pe oe | children came into the room immediately | °f Europe, Victoria is the only one now gat all lay yesteriay morning working upon | my factory though I lie crippled here. g : : ee | living. Louis Phillipe, Bernadotte, Isabella a horrible combination of zephyr aad vanvas There was a buzz or comment in the village | after the report, and surveyed the scene, jy \Mahomoud II., the Emperor Nicholas, foc 4 footstool. Bul mamma says | stab when Miss Ellen Somerville assumed the | and gives the only intelligible account. Her | and many less noted kings, queens, sultans, the work: and beiween you and papa, charge of the frame factory her father owned | father and mother were prostrated on the and emperors have died during the reign § did wish the footstool was in 2 sufli tly so long. Some of the workmen refused to be] floor. Mr. John Shreve was staggering hime hf Fort G rere ; : Hs : d sspatch from Fort Garry, Manitoba mead stats ' nt kicking it. |‘ ordered about’ by a girl, and were prompt- | ‘ 0) uttering some incoherent on nh ’ ’ advanced ata ‘ irrant me in kick it jeved about’ by a girl, and promp about the room, uttering ne says that the ministry has been defeated on I wish I wasa boy, then | uld be at iy disebarged ; but the majority worked better words and soon fell to the floor. The sers | 4 direct motion of confidence. A new Ang- factory aii t! under the stimulus of Nellie’s judicious praise. | vant girl was paralyzed with terror. The | elo-French coalition ministry is formed as Johan Summer’ sid aa at People who sneere! at ‘masculine woman’ | little girl thought to place her hand over Ree rg EY gr” Pg : ' . . ‘ : } avies, Lion. k. ay, Hon. J, Dus the handsome, healthy sised his | were forced t nf : that N ‘ : her father heart, and it y . till ¢ ting buc, Hon. ’. Ogletree. Its policy will prob- own, and wish it different in any wa t womanly, if notas helpless, asthe finest lady | The nearest neighbor was a half; mile dis- ably embrace the fixing of the qualification the hidden grief in his life was that there was | of them all. WVateons of the factory who | tant, The servaht girl was unacquainted with | for representation on an extended basis, no son to inherit the nan 1 the factory | prophesiged its utter ruim were forced to con-| the road, and finally the eldest gir!, leaving | the rye the oh spe Pear sign for three generatic: Somerville & | fess that their orders were filled as promptly | the other children in the house of death, improved Judiciary anc 1¢ reduction oO Tr , i > helt And yet, in the | ye lel as a aa al public expenditures. > " were kuown iol il n i ii andl as well a8 ever Dbetore And yet, i s jant gir jsrough the storm 7 ’ . ’ — i ' ted niing-house, only 4 woman controlled the | cro apenas i : i z R eased engage Coad, lage w ses : ee ee mpi to the nearest neighbor tor aid. The ‘eV. well know as an English grower of fine fuss and their natacs © gout in many of the entire business. keptthe books, answered the | John Shreve recovered, but the electric bolt chias, in relation to saving; advises that leading «ilies of t niry. Jobo had ins | letters, and guided every detail of the vast did its perfect work with Richard S. Shreve when the onnd averaging 4 vipseed a aan Festa ws aT eee Saas ia? ee ab i : y artly driec 1e sun, A w herited t tou site ath ind grand tablishment ‘and his wife, furnishing one of the most they be partly ried in oh in, after which father, but | t lark-eyed Tiree years had passed since Nellie became | : ae a | they should be cut in halves and quarters , aes ' the head of the business, when Stephen H | startling examplifications on record of the | with a moderately sharp, knife each part ag ite a epee : si ' ee ee we . a iy : : | truth of the line in the burial service in the | minutely examined. The old selfscoloured remained of tou ’ { her for a . : i "| Bools of Common Prayer to wit : ‘In the — produce = very ee More than i war sat eq | from his salary sufficient to make a comfor- oa ‘lat of Lif aan | choice very sparingly, particularly the lig t mids e we are in death. t ig . his mind, ° ii ve Nellig | table home, and Nellie knew he loved oe amie r : varities. An abundance of hollow seed will ; - ; faithtully, as she had long loved him. So] se a alae Lia be found, but good plump seed is about res ™ ; i ea saat’ he sought hor fathor Frederick [1, of Prussia set a remarkable | half the size of the pansy, and is easily dis the keen ‘ il nage = By example to his court in the simplicity of | tinguished and picked out. there. to ask for bis eBid wi his dress. A story is told that, on | 4 street corner teleseope man in Chicago, i i ue ‘From all the world, John Somerville suid, | stranger's requesting to be shown the royal | on a recent night had his instrument pla« sais el ae I Nethe be. |) cowl not have chosen aman to w hom [| wardrobe, a large cupboard was opened | carded “splendid views of the comet.” He +. cia would gladly give my Nellie, It will eoms| Completely empty. ‘But that’s not the| charged ten cents a peep, and those who earme Tate i v thy i ' ty i liye i 9? , . ‘4 ie . 2 ee fort me, in the years that may be left of my | Wardrobe?’ remarked the visitor. Excuse | hought the privilege saw a flaming body purchase of th uber to t riticisim of neat a ald _,,| me, sir,’ replied the guide, ‘there are no that covered three or four degrees in the the finished work the bad 0 cle oti pt _— ae “ protect?) others.’ ‘But where are the king’s vest-| heavens. Business was brisk. the ‘Oh! decile Ghat Metectall the slightest inequalities | Yh" ' 9% Ste. Tvl, Stephen, there isone| mani?’ + Ab, f should have told you his | hs !"’ and «« Good graciouses’’of the patrons ; : oe Te ' eart the on can vrati ’ ; , ae A o? 47, maa \ ie eines iy paetiad weed cel des Wish very near my heart that you can gratify.’ | majesty is gone out! a Well, exciting great curiosity. At length one of : we Name it, sir. | when the king goes out, natura ly he hes | those prying incredulous fellows investigat- eye was at onee quick and correct. Little | his clothes on.’ ‘ Well-’ ‘Well, when he /edand found that the telescope man had by little, almost unconsciously John Somer Ishall, on your marriage day, deed puts his clothes on, natu ally he takes his | painted a nice little comet ou the lens. At ville trusted Nellie with much of the deci-| you the factory and business, subject only | clothes wth him. Aod ccm Oh, | this the swindled people pushed over the sion in purchases, and | book-keeping | to a moderate tife-income for myself and} then there are none left here! apparatus, and so scared the showman that was often in her ie for weeks together, | wife. But I would like to keep tie old name A Kixpor Enocu Arpen Story.—The case | he cordially thanked the policeman who when there was a pressure of work, Mra.| there. An act of the legislature will give | of a man who went out to buy a cigar and took him into custody and p:otection, Somerville whinet anil elled over the | you the right to be Stephen Somerville, and was gone ten years, has been more than Here isa story from the San Francisco of her child, but | Somerville & Son still five in the old » | firm’s place. strangely masculine taste her father hecame more parting with her in bus may and more averse t mess nours Twe \eurs alter Nellie returned from | She became the wife of Stephen Holton So. school, and just afier hor twentystirst b rihs | Merville. Gradually she found her duties in her the | new home drawing her little by littief rom an | * | active place in the factory; and, proud of day, she started « morning, as seen in opening of miy story, to look at some palteras to be sent for Such matters were {| her husband, she gladly resigned her author- often entrus'ed entirely to her jadgment, so she was not surprised to find her father had gone out, leaviny the ity to him, finding scope for her energies in | the duties around her till one sunny morns But ing, walking over to her father'’s,she put into Mer she had given the order, and answered | his arms a tiny, crowing babe, and said, with @ lot of letters lying upon the desk had wan- | lad tears — dered all over the building aud returned} My business cares are over, papa, Hence- @gein to the office, she was surprised at her! forth I resign in favour of * Somerville & father’s long absence. | Son. decision to her | | sident of Jefferson, named Osgood, went out | | apparently to attend to his usual business | So when Nellie married, scae months later | affairs, leaving an enfeebled wife and five when the lid of the coftin was removed. MISCELLANEOUS. parties are safe from attack. The body of body of one John Jones has been discovers ed, pinned to the ground, with his limbs stretched to the utmost and a stake driven A new Mi ic sale “ i oe spain. through his bowels. But even these fall ‘Siiens of the fair sex are employed in short of the reported massacring and pluns Montreal brick yards. dering going on in the vicinity of Trinidad. : $25,000 bail,and absconded. George Eliot has been offered $5 1,000 for the novel she is now engaged on. Messrs. Fournier and Geoftrion have been “sworn in as Cabinet ministers of the Dominion.”’ Che Beecher-Tilton Scandal is being in- vestigated. Mr. Tilton has, it is reported, exculpated Beecher. It is said that Prince Leopold,the young- est son of the Queen, is to study for the English Bar. Ile is now at Oxford. now raiding in force within a circuit of no The posed to cover everything up to Monday, reports the killing of two white men,named Budhe and Ghase, and three Mexicans on dad. One ofthese expired through bleeds ing to death, his arm having, with unnecess sary cruelty, been hacked from his body, Their raids have gene< \ miles in three minutes. was not far behind, but she had to give up. A new invention of telegraphy, by which four messages can be sent at the same time, on one wire, has been successfuly tested in Brooklyn. A despatch from Berlin says there is great excitement there, on account of an attempt having been made to assassinate Prince sismark. A letter from the Gold Coast says that the King of Ashantee has sent down another portion of the indemnity, but 80 absurdly small that the Governor has indignantly re- fused to accept it. One day some people from Leeds called on Mr. Disraeli at manchester. He made them a little speech and, in the way of ban- diage, said would visit Leeds in fifteen years. rally been successful, and they have stolen Men are being sent forward from Trinidad to drive them back as fast as horses can be procured. Added to these accounts we had reports by telegraph yesterday of the {ndiens assuming the offensive in Dakota. Ex. Fape AILLED BY A A CLERGYMAN AND HIS WIFE KILLED BY A THUNDER ROLT WHILE AT WORSHIP. (Falls Church, (Va Cor f Was! oy on Str.) Riehard S, Shreve was the Methodist equaled. More than forty years ago a re-| Chronicle, illustrating what, the vigorous wooing of woman will accomplish: ‘Two years ago Joel H. Masfield having become enamoured of a certain Miss Mary Hein, very small children dependent on the sweet | and having failed to impress that young charities of the world, if he forgot to return | lady as favourably as he desired, met her on which he did. Years after, one of the | the street one afternoon and blazed away at children, grown to manhood, in passing | her with a pistol. She was with another through New York State, came across this young man at the time. Mansfield fired uondam pater familiar comfortably settled | three times at her. Two of the shots took own toa new affinity, and the father of a | effect, and for some time Miss Hein’s life second crop. | was in danger. Mansfield was tried two or Recently, the man, feebled | and whitened with age, accompanied by the } three times for the assault, but each time the jury disagreed, and cares the patience npn the third partner of his joy, returned to the | scene of his earlier years, to find his des | of the prosecuting officers beifg exhausted, serted wife long since in her grave, and the | a nolle prosequi was entered. The sequel children surrounded by children and grand~ children of their own. Verily truth is stranger than fiction !—- Lancaster N. H., Republican, to this romantic affair is that on Monday | last the County Clerk issued a marriage | licence to Mr. Mansfield and Miss Hein,and | during the week they were made one flesh, finger nails worn down to the quick by the | ments of his grave. The sight was the 3000 in the south and west. Along the most terrible ever witnessed, and the | stoutest hearted of the party nearly fainted listerial crisis is impending in | A New York tax collector has forfeited a | A Boston man recently walked twenty | His mothersin law | eee , Vr RANDOM READIGNS. | ee i ee ee ee ae ee ALA PD | - | The wave on which a poor fellow has ! --n carried awavis the wave of a lace-t | cambric handkerchief laa? | A Down East clergyman recently i VU ) of rabber wrapped up in a ircus naster. He is earefulto state that the poster was second-hand | An unsophisticated person once declined 1 plate of Maccaroni soup with the remark that they ‘ couldn't palm off any biled pipe- stems on him A lady recently applied to a tire insurance company for a position as agent When asked what her qualifications were, she touched her ‘ unblushing cheek.’ A little boy was asked about the story of Joseph, and if he knew what wrong his brethren done in disposing of him, when he replied, ‘1 suppose they sold him too cheap. An interesting little boy, timid when left alone in a dark room,was o¢erheard recently by his mother to say in his loneliness, *‘ Oh, Lord, don’t let any one hurt me, and Ill go to church next Sunday, and give you some money.’ We find the following item an Illinois paper: ‘Mr. ———, who has been in re- lirement for a few weeks afer marrying and burying three sisters, came up smilingly to the altar again yesterday, having begun an new family.’ A spread eagle orator of New York State wanted the wings of a bird to fly to every village and hamlet in the land; but he Wilted when a naughty boy in the crowd sang out. ‘ Youd be shot for a goose before you had flew a mile.’ Rapparees, as | have said, were the worst marauders Ireland has produced. Disband- ed soldiers of the lowest class, they united to their vices sufficient order to enable them to rob om an extensive scale; and ull they were dispersed by regular troops, they contrived to lay the country under pretty general contri- bution. Still, it must be owned that, with ail their villainy, these fellows had a spice of humor which, if it did no credit to its nation-~ tn {| and tlock where they see others go | else were engaged in the same business, it would | be important to tradesmen and dealers to adver- eR AE ON a ON CE TET he aOR a ea aed When people see a man advertise they know he is a business man, and his advertizing pro- claims that he is not above business, but anxious to doit. Customers, like sheep, are gregarious, If nobody tize in the paper, because they are tempted to buy what hey read of. But others are engaged in the same business, and even if they do ad- vertize, it becomes the mcre important for you todoso; it they do not advertize it becomes doubly important.—Anon.’ THE ATTENTION OF importers and Dealers IS RESPECTFULLY DIRECTED TO Que BRAWN: MERCHANTS WILL FIND CUSTOMERS FOR THEIR SPRING GOODS BY ADVERTIZNG IN “THE EXAMINER.’ cay the The usual reductions to those who ADVERTIZE BY PETES YIcAié. Voutreal & Acadian §. S. Company. WEEKLY LINE. Steamships Line will be- undermentioned T= a Regular Weekly Form tween Montreal, Shediac, Charlottetown and Pictou, ality, unmistakably proclaimed it, One of them, arrested for aighway rob- bery, on being breught before a magistrate, asseried that he was'more entitled to be pitied than to be punished. | ‘Pitied ! exclaimed the justice, while his | eyebrows arched with more than ordinary | wonder and contempt ;“andon what account, | pray ” “Sure on account of m ‘Your misfortune, indeed! we've caught you I suppose!" “Ob, the jintieman that’s brought me here | knows my misfortune well enough,” { But the gentleman was astonished as the | magistrate himself, and as incapable of guess- ing the culprit’s meaning. | ‘You will own | suppose,” said his wore | ship, “that you stopped this gentleman on | the bh ghway ? i “Oh, yes, | did that same.” | + Amd that you took from him fifty pounds in Bamk-of-W exford bills?” * Amd there your honor’s right again i “Well, then, you perplexing vagabond, | |} what do you m misfortune,’ un by your misfortune ? | “Sure | mean that the money wzesi’t iu | my pocket above a week, when the dirty bank | stopped payment, and | was robbed of every shilii -Samuel Love) There isaclass of persons in every com- | |; muity who take a seeming delight in pretend | ing to know a great deal more than they do, | often %v the disperagment of persons of real | knowledge and culture. No matter what | subject may bappen to be introduced in cons Versalion these volunteer oracles are always ready to offer explanations. Being generally | gifted with considerable fMuency, they sel- |} dom tueet with contradiction, giving, in faez | } litle chance of interruption, Most audiences, terpose, and of those who are not ignorant | }but im such cases, do tot think it worth }while to imlerpose. Sometimes, however, | lthese would he omniscient humbugs jare ceught and tripped up when they least expect it, though, for the most part, their self~coneeit renders them realiy unconcious | of their discovered blunders. An instance is recorded how dividizals came to grief | left no room for escape ’ one of these pretensions in- in 4 manuer which or apology. A gentle- man of considerable wealth aud rare cuiture had avulgar parvenu on a visit. and an; odious lite snob with the purse of a Croes] manners of a billard marker, and | | hetoc< him over his choice collections of | pictures, pointing oultheir special beauties, | While the jitthe parvenu nodded and grinned, | and said “Ah” and “Yes” now and then, as | if he anderstoud it all. But for some time | he was fortunately not obliged to commit | himself to a any definite opinion which should | display his ignorance. At last they came | to the sculpture gallery. Stopping opposite | a ine copy of the Greek Slave, the} gentleman, whom we may call Dovetail, said | “There, thatsan old friend. Of course you know that Qur little snop put on his eyes glass, looked puzzled for a moment or two, as he gazed with the critical eye of a con- | noisure atthe undraped figure, then a flood | Sa ‘ +} } SUS and the of light suddenly burst upon him, and with | a curious smile he turned to Dovetail and | said “Oh, ah, yes, of course; Mrs,Dovetail!” | We draw a veil over the rest; poor Dove- | tail’s feelings are to sacred la be held up to} public view | Latest Yokohama advices deny the report | of the assassination of Minister Kido. A | son of the Belgian Ambassador accidently | shot himself on the 15th of June. Twelve | hundred persons died of small-pox during | | the month of April at Kitao. | From the other side of the Atlantic there | is increasing intelligence of the most abnor- } mal weather, which will likely amect agricul- | tural interests seriously. When, within a | | wees or LwiSof the summer sol-tice, lamaging frosts afflict a country, as they have this} ear afflicted Great Britian, the prospects of husbandman must be greatly jeopardized Tweed, has not been so low since 1826, corm was so Shortin the stalk it was pulled by hane, The droughts have been se | nsivethat the hay harvest has been very short and cattle have suffered while the unseasonable dryness has been relieved oniy | y destructive hail storms. \ DISTINGUISHED PHYSILOGIST has said that Neuralgia is the cry of the huugry nerves fur their special food, which | is ie Polisphorous contained in the blood. This painful disease tsusually followed by | general prostration on account of the great waste of nerve tissue and insuflicient supplyof nerve force lo maintain the functions of the | vital organs, ‘The common cause of Neural- } gia and Rheumatic Pains is depraved Nutri- | tion arising from Derangements of the Sto- | mach, Mat-assimilation of food, and Poor Blood. De, Wheeler's Compound Elixiar of | Phosphates and Calisaya supplies Phosphore | ous for the nervous system Lime as an excis tant of nutrition, Iron for the blood, and Calisaya for promcting strength. No pre- | paratiou in existence is so reliable to main- | tain the vital forees and energize all the organs and tissues of the body. | 1 Tl iw | when the It is stated that Mrs. Tilton has already been before the commitee of investigation relative to the charge preferred against Mr. Seecher by her husband, and has denied in the most positive manner, that there ever was tee slightest impropriety in the conduct of Mr. Breecher towards her. The reason assigned by Mrs. Tilton for the strange conduct of her husband is that running after stage women and publicly an- nouncing that he has become a convert to the doctrine of free-love. It was at that time that Mrs. Tilton asked Mrs Breecher for his advice, and according to the statement, he} advised her to Jeave her husband. With | the lapse of time T. T’s free love fever cool- ed and he learned of the advice Mr. Breech- er had given to his wife, and to that. cir- cumstance all the trouble and mistery are due. ; To Pickts Green Crcumpens—Take small ones of uniform size, wash, put in a porcelain kettle, cover with cold water, add a little salt; sel it on the stove, jet it heat gradually and boil live minutes, then drain off the water : add gocd vinegar,to one gallon of vinegar add one cup, of nolasses,one tablespoonfu. cloves, do cinnamon ; let boil five minutes ;*remove toa stone or earthern vessel ; pour over them the hot vinegar; cover tight; when they are cold its ready foruse. I never use any acids, nor cook in brass to make them look green, considering them both injurious to health. When we prepare them for winter, | wash and scald the barrel tomake it perfectly clean, cover the bottom with salt, wash the cucums bers in plenty of cold water, putin a layer of cucumbers, sprinkle over with salt, and so continue, pulting in alternate layers of cus cumbers and salt each time of putting into the barrel; cover with cold water, laying on a flat stone to keep them under water ; if any are allowed to come to the top of the brine, thereby being exposed to the air, they will rot. These will keep perfectly for one, two, or three years if desired. When wanted for use, soak im cold water, changing every six hours ; keep covered while freshening, as the light has a tendency to fade them, when the salt is all drawn out prepare as green cu- cumbers, except to cook them longer.—{Cor. Rural New Yorker. ; | Ch’town, June What! that | -— when his intimacy with Mrs. Woodhull| Ground, on the Malpeque Road, in was at her height, she called upon Mr.| the fifth ward of this City ; and as Breecher, as her pastor, and asked him for | the New Cemetry is now ready for his advice. Herteclings had been terribly | interment, application for burials there- outraged in consequence of her husband | it must be made to the undersigned, soa. COLD MILTA, SS. CANADA, B.S. CATLIFORNIA, nr HYNOMAN BROS, t Agents. Apply in Montreal to DAVID SHAW, 305 Commissioners Street. 1874. tf THE BRISK Quarterly Reviews ! EDINBURGH REVEW, (Wisy.) LONDON QUARTERLY REVIEW. servalive.) WESTMINSTER REVIEW, (Liberal ) BRITISH QUARTERLY REVIEW, (Eean- gelical.) oo ony (Uon- AND Blackwood’s Kdinburgh Magazine, REPRINTED BY THE Leonard Scott Publishing ¢... 140 Funton Sr. N. Y. By arrangement with the English publish ers who receive a liberal compensation. These periodicals constitute a wonderful msicellany of modern thought, research, and criticism. The cream of all European books worth reviewing is found here, and they treat of the leading events of the also are composed of those who are compara-| world in masterly articles written by men | lively ignorant and therefore, afraid to ins | who had special knowledge of the matters | treated. The American Pnblishers urge upon all intelligent readers in this country a liberal support of the Reprints which they have so long and so cheaply furnished feeling sure that no expenditure for literary matter will yield so rich a return as that required for a subscription to these the Leading Periodicals of Great Britian. About one third the price of the originals. Fgr any one Review, For any two Reviews, For any three Reviews, 1000 “ “ | Foa all four Reviews, aor eS For Blackwood’s Magazine, 400 “ “| For Blackwood and one Review, 12° 8 4 Blackwood and two Reviews, vw * For Blackwood and three Reviews, cl oe lean alia For Blackwood and four Reviews, ae * fA 00 per annum, 7 OO “ ‘4 } For PREMIUMS - New subscribers (applying early) for the year I874 may have, without charge, the last volume for 1873 of such periodicals as they may subscribe for. Or instead, new subscribers’to any two, three. or four of the above periodicals, may have one of the ‘Four Keviews’ 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. Tobacco & Cigars! | HIE Subscrib : a choice Lot oj SMOKING & CHEWi\G TOBACCO, and three Cases CIGARS. 74 Boxes Tobacco, in Solace, Sunshine, Vir- ginian, Navy and Black Diamond. 3 Cases Cigars in Victoria & Flor Gertrude. Samples can be seen at Sale Raom N. RANKIN, Corner Water & Pownal Sts Ch’town, April 13, 1874. WANTED ge Energetic Men, to sell Cucumbere wood Pumps: An active man can earn Fifty Dollars a week at this business. G. C. CARMAN, Manutacturer’s Agent Queen Street. iw fers for sale (in Beond,) | Hyndman’s Building. May 18, 1874. Charltetown Conetery Company. NOTICE S the Act of our Legislature, passed in June, 1872, enacts, that from and after the first day of January, 1874, it shall not be lawful, under certain penalties, to inter any dead body in the Protestant burying at his residence in Kent Street. Plots for interments, 15 by 20 feet, equal tol share of the Company's ground, avail- able for $30,0n payment of two-thirds of the purchase money, and subject to another call of $10. Plots for individual interment $2 each. Persons desirous of obtaining allotments in the Cemetry, will please apply to William Cundall, Esq., the Treasurer ot the Company. By Order JOHN LEPAGE, Sec’y. Dec. 29, 1873. Montreal to Charlottetown. MMUE Subscribers intend running two vessels between the above ports, dur- ing the Summer, The Laodamia, {6 tons, will leave Montreal about the Ist JUNE, calling at Summerside, and will be followed by another vessel a fortnight later. We shall thus be enabled to supply our customers with FLOUR. at Cost, Charges and Freight. q HYNDMAN BROS. Ch’town, 19th May, 1874.— We would also inform the Trade that we have just received our usual Stock of TEAS, GEOCERIES, &c.. per recent arrivals from Great Britain. Also, to arrive per Lady Rodney, from London, 50 Chests TEA, warranted good. HYNDMAN BROS. Ch town, May 28, 1874. | PATENT | Montreal* ‘—! Niott and Co., WholesaleDrage The best and the cheapest in the market, and and manufactured by the Canada Certage Co., Montreal. WE SOLICIT ORDERS, at manufacture 2's lowest prices, and deliver at Charlottetown ov the shortest notice Samples always in Stock. We refer shipbuilders and all dealers to the accompanying certificate. CARVELL EROS., Ch’town, 15th Jane, 1874, Ave CERTIFICATE. Having used largely during the past yen MANILLA, the manufacture of the C: ada Cordage Company. ordered throu Messrs Carve. Bros., and having sub- mitted it to the severest tests, we highly recommend its use-to all shipowners. PEAKE BROS., & CO.. JAMES DUNCAN & CO., HYNDMAN BROS.. ARTEMAS LORD. LONGWORTH & CO., BOURKE GILLAN & CO., WELSH & OWEN. 2mo 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 success of VINEGAR Brr- TERS?” Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the paticnt 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 inedicine been compounded possessing the remarkable qualities of Vingear Birrens 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 ol | the Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious | Diseases. . | ie properties of Dr. WALKER’s VINEGAR Birrers are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, | Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Sudoriiic, Aitera- | tive. and Anti-Bilious. R. H. McDONALD & CO., Druegists and Gen. Agts., San Francisco, California, and cor. of Washington and Chariton Sts., N. Y. , Sold by all ists and Dealers. Deuteronomy, Cap. xii., verse 23. | OR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.—See | | GLARE E's | World famed Blood Minar. T:ade Mark— Biood Mixture *’ THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER & RESTOKER | all impurities,cannot be too highly recommended Eor Scrofula, Scurvy, Skin Diseases, and Sores | of all kinds it is a never-failing and permanent | cure; It Cures (ld Sores Cures Uigerated Soree or the Neck. Canes Ulcerated Sore U g? Cures Blackheads Cure® Searvy Sc Cures Cunecrons CureS Diood and Skin Diseases. Cores Glandalar Swel!linus j Cleure the Blood from all mupure Matter, | rrom whatever canee srising. As this mixture is pleasant 'o the taste, and Pimples on the Fa ce leer warranted free from anythivy injarious to the | most delicate Constitution ef either vex, the Pro prietor golicits’sufterers to give it a tial to ies | its value Thousands of testimeonialy from all parts, Soldin Bottles $1.00 each, and in Cases, eon tiining ixtimes the quantity $1.0) each—sufficient | | fo effect a permanent cure in the grent majority of bY MEDICINE the world Sol. preprictor, F. J. CLAKKE, Chemist APOTILECARIES' longestandiny eases, ALL CHEMIST? s VENDORS und | throuchon HALL, LINCOLN, ENG. | LAND EXPORT AGENTS. Burgoyne, Burbidg dC ‘oleman et. London ald Sons Newburs e wynte st. Barclay & Sons, 95 Farringdon st » London, Sanger & Sone, Oxford st., Le Aud #ll the London Wiel udon seule Hone *, AGENTS IN CANADA. Torente.—Ellict & te » Wholessle Drngyists sig shiny and Owen. ’ Hamilton, — and Co St John, N. B. -!f L. Spencer. vn and Co, “THE EXAMINER.” THE Halitux. N. S.— Avery, ibs 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. Charlottetown. PARWS COTTON WARP! WHITE, BLUE, RED, ORANGE AND GREEN, \f on ©¢.. No's 3's to 10's. \ JARRANTED to be FULL LENGTH | and weight, STRONGER AND BET- | TER in every respect than any other Eng- lish or American warp. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS None is genu- ine without our name on the labels. For sale by all dealers. Wn. PARKS & SON, New Brunswick Cotton Mills, St John N. Feb, 2nd, 1374. ly Lb. Employment at your homes or | travelling. The work is conge- FREE nial, honorable, and pays the best + of anything ever before offered. Cash Wages, samples, and complete outfits sent | 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 to | $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. Sugar & Molasses. B80 Arrive, Sea Foam, from Halifax. cbamace, tell oor Bs ch : 33 bbis g Bright Crocery Sugar. 10 puns ? 11 tierces § For Sale Low. MOLASSES. HYNDMAN BROS. Ch’town, June 1874. Gw ONE BOX OF CLAREE’S B41 PILLS S warranted to cure a!l discharges from the Urinary Organs, in ether sex, acquired or constitutional Gravel and’ Pains im the Back, Sold in Boxes, $1.50 each, by all Chemists aud Patent Medicine Vendors. Sole Proprietor, F. J. CRKRARKE, APOTHECARIES’ HALL, LINCOLN, EXPORT AGENTS. Burgevue Burbidges and Co.,Colemay St., London, Newbury and Sous, 37 Newzate Street, Louden. Barclay and Sous, 95 Farringdon Street, Loudon Sanger and Sons, Oxford street, London. And all the London Wholesale Houces, AGENTS IN CANADA. oo” -—>) ENGLAND, ists Shapter and Owen, Hamilton.—Winer and Co St, John, N. BH, L. Spencer Halifax , N. S---A very, Brown and Cy For cleansing and clearing the blood from | i St. | CHARLOTTETOWN, LP. E. I., of Messrs. Bret a = a Manilla! | IMPORTANT 0 THR POaLe oie ROBERT OAR & ep, | Beg toinform the Citi ens of Ch arl |and the inhabitants of Prifice Edwang We } land that they have reuted the B win Uilding On QUEEN STREET, Next door to Messrs. Owen Cox: ‘o"s), for the purpose of carrying pe WHOLESALE & RETAIL “RY GOODS BUSINESS And trust by purchasing their Good the best markets and selling them ye a to merit a share of the public patronage ' N. LB. Wholesale Buyers, Far. mers, and others will learn thing worth knowing by examin, ORR & OO’S STOCK, before purchasing e Charlottetown, May 18 1874, Jy BOSTON STEAMERS, ‘ “i = SEASON 1874, THE Steamers “ Albambra ” 782 tons Caroll,” 1372 tors, having both beiag thoroughly overhauled, and fitted with very superior accom modation for passengers, will leave Boston d the season alternately every Saturday at aud returoing will leave Charlottetows alter. nately every Thursday at five p.m, calling at Halitax acd Caaso both ways. For freight or passage apply to CARVEL 4 BROS, Agents Ch'town, June 1, 1873.—a pis JUST ARRIVED, — DER S.S. Somerset, from Boston, and Sehr Bonnibell from’ New York, 2,500 Barrels Flour & Cornmeal which will be sold in cheay fer cash, quantities to or at 3 months on approy. OWEN CONNOLLY, (Mice, old stand, Dorchester St 1874, Commercial College, (WELSH & GWEN’S BUILDING, | | Clitowa, May 4, es gon Me we EATON. PRARER & REAGH, PROPRIETORS, DiesiGaNinp TO ‘Educaig Young Men for Busines | BOOK-KEEPING in all its branches, both | by SINGLE and DOUBLE ENTRY and Cob ; lateral subjects, thorougly tanght and prae- | tically applied by means ofa Complete Course of Actual Business, j engayved in by all the students. Particular attention given to | BANKING ARITHMETIC, | BUSINESS CORRESPONDENCE, SPELLING, &e. Our Course of Instruction affords a large amount of PRACTICAL INFORMATION relating to Business pursuits, which is of the greatest importance to Young Men in ing to go into business for themselves, iNo Vorng Man Can Afford to miss a Course af this lustitution. Business men and others interested are cordially invited to call and examine our system. Hovurs—94 a. m. to 12 p. in., from 2 to4, | and 74 to 94 p. m. Circulars containing full particulars will be sent free to any address, on application te T. B. REAGH, Principal. Cl’town, Jan. 5, 1874,—tf JOYFUL NEWS. FOR THE AFFLICTED! Lif - of MAW BITTERS AND- COMBINES MEDICINES. CURES, Dropsy in its worst form; Liver Complaint, Jaundice ; Swelling of the Limbs and face; Asthma, of whatever kind ; Dyspepsia, Bili- Consumption, Spitting of blood, ousness Bronchitis, Sick Headsache, Running Sores, Erysipelas, Stoppege of the Menses, Kidney and Gravel Complaint, Measels, Fevers, Sea Sickness, Heart disease, Pleurisy, Piles, Worms, Nhcumatism, Spinal disease, or Aff ection of the Spine, Coughs, Colds and Whooping Cough, Diptheria and Sore Threat, Pains tu the Stomach, Diarrhea, Dyseutry, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Tooth- ache and Ague, Sprains, Strains, Felons, Cliiblains, Burns, Scalds, Bruises, Sore Eyes, Lame Back-and Side, Cuts and Cracked Hands, &e “Ke For Certificates, Ae., taken before Justices of the Peace, see Pamplets whieh; can be furnished at the Agencies. For sale by dealers Agents at Charlottetown, T. Wholesale Agent, Wm Manufactured by CALEB GATES, & Co. Middicton, Aunapolhs, Co. NS Is73. generally. DesBrisay R. Watson Dec; {, Just Published, Price One Shilling Stg. jor SCIENCE OF LIFE; or SELF PRE SERVATION. A practical Guide # Health, Strength, and Vigorous Old Age- Address to the Nervous, the Sedentary, the Dyspeptic.and ail those whose constitutions | have become debilitated or relaxed from it- 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 Phys Force. By S. LA’MERT, M. D., L.S. 4» &ec., 37 BEDFORD SQUARE, London. **An excellent manual for all who may learn how to use life and not abuse it— Church and State Gazelle “Qn the subjects of diet and the regula } tion of the functions the advice throughout is admirable.”— Mirror. Dr. La’MERT is the only regulariy-qualified Practicioner, who, for thirty years, bas voted his entire attention to the cure of these | disorders. Patients residing in the Colonies can successsfully treate? hy correspondence, | and remedies will be forwarded in secrets | and safety to any address. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE may be had. price one shilling stg., in Halifax, Nov Scotia, J. H. Woodrich, Drug Store; Yar- mouth, H. A. Parr; Pictou, Henry Ellott: John, N.B., H. Chubb & Co., and i ner Brothers, 44 Queen Street. Important Caurion.—The public af | earnestly warned against a piracy of above work emanating from a so-called ‘Peabody Institute,” Boston, which unblush- ingly appropriates the titles of two works. published by Dr. La’Mert for thirty years. March 30th 1874. ly. COAL! Mines, Sydney. HE above Mines are delivering a superio? article this season, quite free from slate, froma depth of 135 feet below any previous year. We can recommend this COAL to com sumers and dealers, aud feel confident that will give satisfaction. ? The Company are enabled to deliver largely in excess of previous years. Vessels will have | no Victoria delay in getting their cargo. Prices $3 for Round, $1 for Slack. — - Terms, sixty days or 2} per cent discount HYNDMAN BROS. Agents for P. E, I, Cash, Oetober 13, 1873; ly Chtowa, Juve 8, 1874.—ar pa 3mo