at wee bites —— eee ne ines Ra was ene IAIN NI A MN: . seas mnintatintnettanes Se is e sGebemeosl. its - dawn when the| HE ECONOMY OF HUMAN LIFE. POETRY | he whispered If we but steal a march ups , 2 Sebdasto} V ei — , " ; ' hells of Sebast menced toring, The i . wi them this time, I believs 3 ais Carry met se a ‘ a } ls for church ROELTY, HATRED, AND ENVY. V THE GRASS GROWS OVER ME, | the great redoubt, which Prince Menschikofl “ i me te. 2 ni Revenge is detestable; what then is cruelty? Gmtnanmatinrents declares would defy all the ar s in the aS naw 1} ; Lo! it possesseth the mischiefs ef the others, | : ‘ " d ( | taken ‘ | Sundae at the Wo. ie st 1 } World to capture; he deems it impregnat art sae », | but it wanteth even the pr tence of its pro » ian! t ere | nl " i B ; The sound { yw S,asil ! ‘ ition © us ve i \t ' ¥ Wind thal blows, i. ete ; aught n | ny Men disown it as not of their nature; they ‘ ‘ @ wes 72 Was O 1 fe las o™ I i : +4 eddie S I “ “ ’ " had , are ashamed of it asa stranger to their hearts; _yeenvegeaedic oA, ty ain f ae t , | do they not call it inhumanity. ~ ab »me as “@ J - t id i \ ; j : C.ose above me a nu pa Ge rai,’ said I,‘ It's a i | 4 : gg ie " Whence then is her origin? unto what st ys io | man wrapped in wh t letia ! segiaty . owneth she her existence? Her — is wa : ; , m ie an take smay, is it not her mo- “ = the oullying picke t, crossed \ pest ! Another and ynott wed rat acas nd peo i Disin . _ ae tp ii ie tt 4 The hero lifteth his sword against th ; e ¥ al a iat } ) ‘ He iil W U bhe Ger 3 ’ in Ll had i enemy that resisteth ; but no awe Was, he; short time | was fully restored, an? burt Lad us What was his surprise to see a ~ Ht : f : ‘ iiis steps were bent; to know what had transpired. To my ur . is tise a nicntad babetede Mane \ s Seba ulterable astonishment I irned a stoutis! ¥ I a ZAspe what wrapped in a white cloak, appeared ? eee —_— , s@ syste. | sudde nthe o swa ile ads at r ar man $ It anoWw a t 0 we : ath, 4 dr by ke Ww + Wael k j R all pa 5 “6 Lively sought the trig- mpogsible 'o barely see your hat a . rad 1 eat hi word ud . 1 SiPu => Set ' re e OF i was deter- | u Some say tt ed tl . 7 B i ; lee) as I mil at aii hazards, (his mysterious Dy the ieg Others s gots t in i he drew g t mot cape me On it came Mlead. And t bh scaped then ici , nots Pi g $ ke the movement through tinis storm, captain, said an Ip f : Sn. wing as it was, | old sergeant We ace afeared of shooting), .. 6 i ‘og t mazes “ { shadows of night failing fast | each other.’ —- a " at of al enpsptitete i e rE ON ay e G mat , rniah afenek . hanced a sin't 1 : and t was somethiug waich struck I be hange 1 if b 0 ippea beace and & \ rst surprise was 0 ie | | had seen this ghostly-loeking per- | go, smack into our lines 4 ee a tear aside his ge before. But where? That was the; I was seated in my rude hut a week after visiter’s cloak: and when that was ne he rails Cle 1 Whell ti > i : that et that moment was difficult to | this terrible event, and who should walk in saw before him ‘his own apparation, bloody } 4 sei we rid ' 3 .u ‘ ai ab aitiv ’ 4 I re onan tees a8 tho | . ieutenabt . 2 cal ate ‘ Gradually lrosefrom behind a thorny | but Lieutenant Brows. He ca seated and ghostly, whereat he was so astonished and confronted the intruder with my \ himself, as was his wont. and serenely | |, at he immediately swooned away. On re | tua. ue sk ov eiy SW wa ay s, | ¢ I ort pi ‘ ; - smoked big short pipe covering, he saw the spectre waik out again, mes there * seid | energetically. ; Positively a stranger, Brown, said | | and vanish down stairs Wien he had got A} ptible stare warned x24 thet al | A Litt out of sorts,’ he answered, sta the better of his tright he undressed and ist coofronted @ spy. ; ing me full in the face went to bed ; however, fin ting he could not ‘a but a bair’s breadth. said !,: and! I was ever of the opinion that men of sleep he rose early and went to his uncle and ' ~ ’ gir ty seg @houid ar rirht th . ma inister ee uid " er rig “6 X r guardian, Sir Rebert’ Southwell, who lived i was as 1} girarn of dull moons | eyes upon another man’s. [ laug his a sane ie ae t in vif i ist fis it & \ rh a st c Tt 4 falia "¥ and was , tat tial ' 1 Ss warned nied. % familiar ferwards a . t Pa 1 r DY in ’ r i ‘ Lientenan sorry to hear it, brepliet. 4 Lad a r Brow I with a searching gianc W hat seni , f t foure it < of this spy affair? 4 - a in t t i la atled 1 ‘ivsright enough, Captain W | 1 saw , o i " : Now * i neiete r ‘ ba if is mo a H 1é r “a if an 3s. lLeould have s F tt m Math rea- ‘E 2 ET ae had stolen my seal-skin jacket rhe 4 i mR ee —_ s i t i ‘ ‘ ‘ ’ 4 a tt, F ¢ t t 1 7 teeth Did said | 108 ibaa Sir Rohert 8 iret It ¢ remains to ‘ sith i clin i ! far th g was bor ut , | pre el to laugh hear at this ' ‘ ' : : i by the result, and x wrin trath the ghost ' 5 ‘ nala h * was a gleam in $s cruel eyes, was an honeal ahi ' nanee vii saw it instantly cankered ia his bos.) ~"* “ ciel, ape : 1a , i Fy i tai Several days aflerwards Robert Percival , ! we to catch | Om © proposed some grog, and between : a : * ” she — Saye Ay } ' j my ‘ ‘ waa assaijed by twi hans in the Stra atin sked ne | US we got slightly eleyaied. The subject of < ; ar { brut 1 mocked us, y . it he escaped from then lichtly wounde i of | our mversaltion was that if the Russians but h tped , y unded, 4 took ‘fuze in @ tavern. » left the ‘ some fine morning made a grand attack | #9 toon | ; rn. He left the ' ‘ . } ’ ; ; ‘ ‘ntoreturn to Lincoln’s Inn, an was ; ah ' ayeeif, | 24" the Inkerman heights, ii was probable ‘avers we . : id wa , fl ag a deat . assen Myeee, rt : ' never aflerwards seen alive. Le was found ! : enw o | be ales would be swept into the sea; this : that u : ave Brown? stoue-dead near t s lied May-pole in ae rin Tl was discussed pro and con im our camp,and i Th was his whiskers, the : the Strand, which occupied the site of an ? - = now I meant to hear Lieut. Brown's opinion : : tu : and thick figure t ancient stone cross. Having been diseover- upon } Lie ant B i w kiew, Was no ! . ‘re early in the morning, lis body was weal) tie sili ‘Monstrous!’ said he. * Have we not got * he , i ig! ‘ ? { rite of s ste Went by the cognomen | removed to the watch-hovs here was a : bts the finest troops in the world—our foot i Wea, j of ‘foreigner,’ yet he distinety avowed that tie uate deep wound under his lef breast—by bim eh ey ae guards loeated there ; : A be was Eng!ish to the backbone : Q , was his bloody sword—vet it was generally es a : ‘ Look here, Brown, f know and so do you in . I reme mthat i rot Brown : supposed at the time that he had been killed ' ~tu fact, it is tramSparent to everybody, . oe a é tas i seen “.- .«. 1 in some house, and laid there afterwards. : tod on | except those at headyquarters—-that if the t i +} ¥Y auded t It was alsyv said that a stranger's hat, with ea enemy during asnow storm, or foggy u a 1 : at Spouse h ‘ ee | : r 2 bu ribpons in tt, wa vl by his uta t , ‘ Keph @ ui , 3 side; Dut, notwithstanding these indications, ,, | Upon our pickets before the alarm cou! : ar it t ange. A muiti- | “4 $ I i ” y ne and the earnest exertions of his friends and } P f yCCur Si ip before me | 81¥E, they could carry ¢ very ihing before relatives, the assassins never ild be dis- | rusje g hi abserb ag in- | thei over Peta ng nier ! attack. His! He jaughed heartily at this, and yet | eo a respecting the | thought it wasaserious laugh. We smoked Phe golden age Bn ve ht ; when in my | and drank, and IJ feigned to fall asleep as did & deepond os vlna heer 23 i y : id &@ cesponding ert ill n s mee at w, and why, | Lieut. Brown took out his supposed diary 7 ; fig ‘ . i . ali i" , , Vhy ts tie @lepoint the most sagacious and the wherefore of every trivial detail} He scribbled some words in it upon a loose | of travellers ?—because he never takes his | - : : annie aauist he ‘ vt ar lis a t} leaf, then laid the book down a moment toa eye off his trunk. Bovlish and the| light bis pipe, and the draught between the | It has been said tha is better for aj i ie H ftussiana | beards of the rude hut wafled it upon the | Woman to be laughed at for not being mar- | ts : ried than to be unable to laugh bhecanse she | righ f ies pem attacks, ; litter atmy feet The Lieutenant staggered, : . sorta i oe vs tal : sen > i 2 . thoy. were alwes ste] Z corey j This | suatched up the book without noticing that Robert Coliver’s At Onee upon at me | oe i ! lv son t our men the ieal was gone, and a “parte ce hastily a genticman drewup his horse near a smith; ha s soon | picked up the note, and after much labor it} in a Yorkshire village. On ente ring it, he | i A x t wt tread hardly arrested the attention of a hoy who | seemed to be absorbed in tl work of blow- t 4a Sf wiro | tlack, | OW Up, Musi f A Negan - , i* j 10 | Atta How up, m i made} inethe bellows Cluser obser ition revealed I ria Eng ‘ es ad | on Inkerman side: at least. t i pin the presence of a book—its pag kept open f English—snegeet the first foezy mor; hy two b:ts of iron—placed ot shelf near At fit pe }ing—S the lad’s hl i Each | he brought down : i t} lie} a ¢ rejea adit } | ; tee} pnd the bares Tis as | eng gasped | : ea tI F ruer ie a ra . A ¢cheration passed awa i little yils * Ting i H b baer out I kept my own counsel I knew 1 Nos! lage had grown to be a brilliant town. . Low * - ; id riff bye “uber fourth and fifth, | should b on oute! thatched houses had made way before iine ing T : post duty, and what should hinder ime from | MARCOS a4 wy — which the above u eng if 4 Homag | capturing him? 1 did 4 incident was chserved was drawing near to > 4 u , & 4sthe 4 bd LOT NOS cap i nit ! vr itt "they Mj . ii ’ Pp ‘ Aeny * Ping } g rong in repeating | its day of disappearance. But before that . ry , * ‘ 7 » Y a ~ 4 1 madly through me. «Now for the mystery,’ | the circumstances to my superior officer day arrived another genUeman appeared at i ~via | ' c ghtl I my finger pressed Jetermined- The fourth of November came, ang. in the | the door and inspected with some interest gue f my revelver. as Ler ‘pt | meantime, 1 had ordered my servant to keep | an : vil stand 1 " centre of the shop : ! i ‘How long has that anvil been here ?’ up from whence the sound proceeded. 1a Strict wateb on Lieut. Brow © reports | . Al’ : & i . { . h mente ns rt ee | he asked of the blacksmith. Alls well, General heard the senic ed that evening that the foreigner s ae > : bi ah ’ porosieed fl WE Sner was Miss"). Why,’ said the workman, ‘it must have ered his fle and stood firm. | in. and, on inquiry, this turned out to be been here thirty or forty years.’ Por on por ty ai compliments, suchas{ ‘rue. Tetili kept my own coun-vl, butas I} + Well,’ srid the gentleman, ,I wili give | ' : 2 4nd saitiing totally ig-; halted mear the ravine overlooking Sebasto— you twice as much for that anvil as will buy | pol. £ promised promotion to auy man who | YOU @ new one. } ii | bs) o ? * Ah | ptam Wood, | be! eve,” said the | should capture any person coming from the | , rg gona 5 replied the puzzled simiih : i } é - ge . : rhe , , Gercral, who was on horeehack, leaning | enemy's tine, for I felt convinced the for. | iy bp to know what you want lown on the sa {eigner had gone over and would probably ‘Hetuolue y i “ Sa : “a iidine| mane , *| ‘1 willtell vow, There was formerly an 4 . ‘ return under cover of night. At midnight apprentice in this shop who used to work on t ¥ by this time had abated, and Sebastopol was enveloped in a dense fog. i. - Theos boy has now become a great man, | the } is grew Drighter loefore me was | But throughout that live-long night I was | Thousands love and honor him as a friend the Engtish commander and a teacher, and | wish to carry back this | + We attack ot daylight Laptain Wood, on the alert, encouraging the guards on my | rigut to keep # sharp eye und a ‘cuter’ ear’ of his life’ anvil as a memorial of (he humble begisning | in them are cowards. Conspirators are murderers because in death there 1s silence. Is it not fear that telleth them they may be betrayed That thou st not be erael, set thyself nave | above hatred; that thou mayest not be in- human, place thyselfabove the reach of envy. Every man may be viewed in two lights ; |} in one he will be troublesome, in the other | less offensive; choose to see him in that in which he least hurteth thee; then shalt thou net do hurt unto him. What is there that a man may not turn unto good? In that which ofendeth us most, there ig ground rather for complaint than hatred. “Man wishes to be reconciled to him of Whom he complaineth; whom murdereth be but him whom he hateth Ifthou art deprive! of a beneiit, fy not |untoa rage; the joss of thy reason ig the want of a greater | Because thou art robbed of thy cloak, wouldst thou of thy coat also, If the sam Sain strip thvseif fortune were offered unto thee, atthe same price, be assured, if thou wert wise, thou wouldst refuse it. Whatis the pay for titles but flattery ? How doth a man purchase power but hy } being a Slave to him who giveth it Wouldst thou lose thine own liberty to be able to take away that of another, or, canst thou envy him who doth it. Man purchaseth nothing of his superiors but for a} and that price, is it not more than the slue? Wouldst thou prevert the | ustom the world? Wouldst thou have the purchase an‘ the pu also ? As thou canst notenvy what thou wouldat not pt, disdain this cause of hatred, and he pa { If thou possess not anst thou envy hat whi bia latthe expense of it? If theu oN t jue of virtue, piliest tii I rhe 1. 80 Vr " taught thys ur the ~ ins gould ol men w mt rep thon : pin . sure If thou s good th s fallt a ! th them, th joice; for s hap 1 the pros] f tl virtuen | ! lappiness ' +} by t hic awn {KAVINESS PF HEAKY | : { the ch i! forceth asm mn the face of am »: but the «de spons i the sad deadeneth n the bright- s8 of ivy What is the source of sadness but a Iness of th 11? What giveth it power but the want of spirit? Rouse thyself to the mbat, aad sh juitleth the field betore thou strikest Sa es js in iv race, therefore ity hear 8 porsoneth the ter U a Ps She s adeth drowsiness as a veil over th tues » hideth them from those who would ho wihee on beholding them; she sniangleth and keepeth them down, while she maketh it most necessary for thee to exert them. Lo! she oppresseth thee with evil and she tieth down thine hands, when they would throw the load from off thee, Suffer not sadness to cover herself with the shew of wisdom thy Maker, let it not be clouded with melans choly then that sorrow, in her sight,is as a stranger. For what should man be sorrowful but for aMiction ? Why should his heart give up joy, when the cause of itis not removed from him. Isnot this heing the sake of misery, Is it not always the b that pros serrow; for, behold the same “UTeAasi thing hee not too abundantiy. The greatness of affliction is not to be the number of tears: the greatest griefs are often above such testi- mouiles ; as the greatest joys are beyond utterances. What is there that weakeneth the soul like grief?) What depresseth it like sadness. Is the sorrowful prepared for nople en- terprises, or armeth he himself in the cause of virtue. Subject net thyself to ills, where the > are no aivantages in return; neither sacrafice thou the means of good unto that whic! is in itselfan evil A worthy Kentucky farmer being asked ifa daughter recently married was still liv- ing with him, replied: ‘No, sir: when one of my girls swarms, she must hunt her own from ' hive,’ let her not deceive thee with a | Religion payeth honour to | Wisdom make thee happy, know | miserable for | heir sadness maketh things | | OM READINGS. eee RAND settee aol ater ld Breach of good manners-—for ruin to stare one in the face. The man who sat down on the spur the moment will not do so again. like the of Why is a school-mistress letter C? Because she makes classes outot Jasses. Hood called the slamming ofadoor by a person in a wooden oath. What is it that is always kept perfectly lary although there is ajrunning spring in it allthe time wilh patience, who maketh | | i ul : viations head ag st misfortune Wilh courage? Ap-| int 2 hown h this chron plause i } i be fuliowed by imitation. | self murd liminishes 1 SAanCsS $ aga {1 for itt mieth j pretat j highest } t as te herm ! i t i h «listort whats) numbers 18 60 which K{ r nat ? rable ep 92 tt 4 i A nen t rate nt 10,00 1 Eng und Wa and As the snow meiieth upon the mountains : Hegel from the rain that trickleth down its side, |) *" ; iho anit ansght-haeg ol dbl even so is heanty washed from off the cheeks | CXPeCt@tbion of life accor ting! ge : ia dea bel: ilaibtuens subs .ieb atin ila wa LY ale n most bape ng, and shows a ; m Vea ‘ my > SIXtY at py { Bebold Sadness in the public streets cast of res; oaks aes nt sit cht. d Aon ' thine eyes upon her in the places of resort; | seventeen. ten and irs, With fractions, | avoideth she not every one? Doth any one | ang amounting to the fearful per ntage, | jook upon her? Doth not every one fee from | respectively, of thirty-five, thirty eight, forty, | her presence ? fifty-one, and sixty-three per cent of pr ibable | See how Saduess droopeth her head like | life, as campared with the population. Surely | the flower whose root is cut asunder; see | strong drink is slow fire, and intemperance hew she fixeth her eves upon earth, see how | is voluntary madness and chronic suicide.— ! they serve her to no purpese but that of | Dr. Samuel O. Good, in Harpe? Yovyaszine weeping for May Ts there in ber mouth discourse? Is there Views is Caixa The London Daily Neu in her heart the love of society? Is there aaa : in her soul reason? Ask her the cause, she |‘ werce © vi oe kvoweth it. not; enquire tho oceassion, and | illustrative ef a journey rou: ‘ ' behold there is none. Mr Simpson, “author and artist > Yet will her s'rength fail her ;lo! at length | ‘Tt would be difficult to sav wi { she sinketh initio the grave, and no one say- greatest interest and value of Scien « eth, what is becomerf her? } lie, whether in the singularly accurate res Hast thou uaerstanding, aud seesi thou } presentations of such vast monuments as the not this? Hast thou Piety, and perceiveth great wall of China Tie Myriad Mile Wall,’ thou not thine errer ? as itis named in Chinese—which has long God created thee in mercy, had he not in- | Pen the great trafic road from Pekin to tended thee to be bappy, his goodness would Mongolia and Russia, or in st 1 a drawing {not have called thee inte existence: how | 25 that of the great Temp! Pokin, oc- darest thon then to fy inthe face of thy cin. 5 a ae i sh in oe oe Creator. ' | Wipe circular erraces, Constructed ha | } ysterious voferey to 1! hal of | Created he not all tnings liable to change, one ge : sae pa " te ot aii \ ak | and darest thou to weep at their changing? | tiles-ot tne brightest uliramarine blue as the If we know the law of nature, where- | azure tint of heaven. 1 are objects of | fore do we complain of it?) Uf we are ig-!} the greatest inte a Sci ve of an nurant of it, what should we accuse but} ancient people, and more ancient belief, which our blindness to that which every moment have never been so well shown bi for More giveth us proof of? j true and far more impressive too, are the | Kuow that it is not thou that art to| sketches of the gods out of 1 pair —those | give laws to the world; thy part is to sub- | gigantic images, which have lost their arms. | mit to them as thou findest them ; if they dis- | and whose *s have rotted with the mor- | tress thee, thy lamentation but addeth to | tai decay of a; id which have to be re- | thy torment. — | habilitated by some de penter, | Be not deceived with fair preténces, nor |, ; | suppose that sorrow healeth misfortune: it | *'24 . ." 7 } is a poison under the colour of a remedy : Ih sugenteyeney anes ; cal | |} while it pretendeth to draw the arrow from | He plac me rgnadee fee “qu } thy breast tit pluageth it into thy heart. | sides “ oer. ways, ae ae ree period 8d } nails, each Wiilet Nas ILS pr vu On While Sadness seperateth thee from thy | pi a so th i if any i ile w she yr : ar friends. doth she not sav th muoart unfit to] he ean pay the m ne through a cl rnd converse With them? W hile she driv th draw out the nail, thus ving the ed thee into orners, doth she nat preciaim | god-restorer f one his ; : od that she is ashamed of herself ot LO a ; paving so m 11oy } a, is it not 1 to meet the ar-j| There is nothing but i h §) rows of ill . ner dethreason | that the devoted priest st ¢x in require thee; it is thy duty to bear } the sitting postur I y n misfortune like # min: but first. thon must this prickly cell tad be { irs Tears may drop from thine eyes, though | to @ Jarge bell to tet toe w know what virtue falleth uot from thine heart; bethou | b¢ had to endure. Scarcely lees strange and careful there be cause, and that they flow | Curiously crue! is the self-imposed toi of a ; Chinese student : ; Shut ap in| rshippel like a | skinned man, with not very Tartar features, | | seated with his hands on his knees,the fingurs | having the nails grown to at least an inch and a half beyond the points of the fingures. 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 Reviews’ for 1873; subscribers to all five may have two | of the ‘ Four Reviews,’ or one set of Blacks wood's Mogazine for 1873. to | | Neither premiums subscribers No premiums given to clubs. Circulars with further particulars may be had on application, LEONARD SCOTT PUBLISHING Co., 140 FULTON STREET, NEW YORK. 17, 18738. Dec. Grateful Thousands proclaim Vrv- EGAR BITTERS the most wonderful In- vigorant that ever sustained the sinking system. - 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 orgaus wasted beyond repair. 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No p we of medicine, no vermituges, 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. eanse the Vitiated Blood when- ever you find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Exuptions, or Sores ; cleanse it when you find it obstructed and en ayhe Veins i ——_ it ing > is » your feelings will tell you when. Kee e bibod pure, ona the health of the ayotens will follow. . R. H. McDONALD & CO., gists and Gen. Agts., San Francisco, California, end cor, of Washington and Chariton Sts., N. ¥. by all ugsists and Dealers. R. H. McDONALD & CO., Druggists and Gen. Agts., San Francisco, California, and cor. of Washington and Chariton Sts., N. Y. . Seld by all Druggists and Dealers, August 25, 1873, nor | A | discount to clubs can be allowed unless the flemen, who bad | money is remitted direct to the publishers. LAND ASSESSMENT. TREASURER’s Orricr, P. E. Island, Charlottetown, January 24, 1874, + to the terms of the said Acts, of ail | tue of the above-mentioned Acts. viz: ACKES. Township No. 1, 9804 do. da. %, 2104 do. do. 6, 6024 do. do. 8, 351 | do. do. 11, 20114 | do. do. 18. 344 : do. do. 14, S444 do. do, 17, 999 do. 19, do. 20, do. 21, | do. | do. do. | do | do. | do. do. do. 27, 60 ' do. do. 28, 1164 | do. do, 29, 1056 do. do. 30, 4426 do. do $2, 1164 do. do. 38, 650 | do do. 34, 211 | do do. 35, 598 | do. do. 36, 29235 do. do. 37, $3 do. do. 88, 911 | do. do. 39, $278 do. do, 40, 33338 do. do. 41, 1860 do. do. 42, 1893 do. do. 43, 2675 | do. do. 44, 9824 | do. do. 46, 2864 j do. do. 50 703 do do. 51, 6608 do. do. 62, 14824 do. do. 53, 29954 do. do. 55, 1945 do. do. 56, 2795 | do. do, 58, 881 | do. do. 59, 958 do. do. 69, 20194 do. do. 62, 2915 do. do. 65, 1690 do. do. 66, 377 do. do. 67, 5477: First hundred of Town Lots in Chariotte- | town 3 of No. 7. 4 of 8, 4 of 15, § of 20, 3 of | pursuance of an Act of the General Assembly of this Island,made and pass- | ed in the twenty-fourth year of the reign of | Her Majesty Queen Victoria, intituled * An | Act relating to the Land Assessment at pre- | sent imposed by law on the Town and Roy- | alty of Princetown,” and also of an Act | made and passed in the Twenty-seventh year of the same reign, intituled “* An Act to consolidate and amend the several Laws imposing an Assessment on all Lands in : ‘ this Colouy, and for the encouragement of | Asthma, of whatever kina ; Dyspepsia, Edueation,” I do hereby give public notice, | that Ihave made proclamation, according the undermentioned Town Lots, Water Lots. | Common Lots, Pasture Lots Islands, or parts of Islands, Townships or parts of Town- ships, in this Island, in arrear for the non- payment of the several sums due and owing thereon to Her Majesty, under and by vir- JOYFUL NEWs FOR THE AFFLICTED! LIFE of MAN BITTER —AND- COMBINED WMDICINES. CURES, Dropsy in its worst form Liver Com Jaundice ; Swelling of the Limbs an t face ; . Bili- ousness, Consumption, Spitting of Bronchitis, Sick Uvad-ache, Ruaning Screg, Erysipelas, Stoppage of the Menses, Kid and Gravel Complaint, Measels, Fevers Sen Sickness, | Heart Pleurisy, Biley, Worms, Rheumatism, Spinal disease, or Atk disease ection of the Spine, Coughs, Colds and Whooping Coug Diptherta and Sore Throat, Pains in the Stomach, Diar Dysentry, Cholera, Cholera Morbus Tooth. ache ind Ague, Sprains, Strains, Fel Chilbiains, Burns, Sea Us, Bruises, Sore Byag. Lame Back and Side, Cuts and Cracked Hands, Ac. “For Certificates, &¢ taken Justices of the Peace, see ‘Pampiets aun can be furnished at the Agencies, For sale by dealers generally. Agents at Chariotictown, T. DesBrisay Wholesaie Agent, Wm. R. Watson, Manufactured by CALEB GATES, & Co. Middleton, Annapolis, Co, 8 Dec 1, 1873. ' “THE EXAMINER.” LARGEST NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN . PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Every week piaccs before its readers the latest local and Foreign news; seb from the raciest and most improving Liter. ature of the day; Editorial articles conggj. buted by the ablest writers in the Provinge, SUBSCRIPTIONS SOLICITED. TERMS— One Dollar and sixty cents a pear Office, corner Queen & King §t, Charlottetown. —enli k THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.—Gee Deuteronomy, Cap. xii, verse 28. CuaL At ik ils World famed Blood Mixture Trade Mark Blood Mixture? THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER & KESTORER | For cleansing and cicaring the blood frum: | all impurities,canuot be too highly recommended Eor Scrofula, Scurvy, Skin Diseases, and Soras permanent | 24. ] of 27, 4 of 38, 4 of 41, ¢ of 44, § of 48, | of all kinds it is a never-failing and 1-6 of 52. Second hundred of Town Lots fn Char- 32, 4 of 49, 4 of 54, G4, 74, 75, 76, 77, + of B2, + of 83, 85, 4 of 86, 4 of 87, 4 of 95. Third hundred of Town Lots in Charlotte town, Nos. 13, 14, 21, 22, ¢ of 24 1-12 of 29, $ of 30, 4 of 40. § of 44, 58, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 4 of 69, 77, 3-20 of 81, 1-12 of 93. sof 26, 1-6 of 34,16 of 35, 4 of 88, 4 of 39, of 45,46, 4 of 54,57, 4 of 58 $ 59, 77 78, 4 of 81, 93. Fifth hundred of Town Lots in Charlotte- lown, 4 of 2, 4 of 84, 1-6 of 51, 4 of 60, 1-6 of | 73, 4 of 79, 96 Lots in Charlottetown formerly occupied as the Barrack Square, 4 ot No, 12, 13. Water Lots in Charlottetown, opposite to the uadermentioned Town Lots in the first hundred, 4 of No. 11, Lots in the Common of Charlottetown, rs 1-12 of 239, 17-48 of 261, 281, 297, 313, 319, 321, 331, 383, 339, 367, 368, 369, 370, 371, 380, 473, 4 of 481, 482, 506, 4 of 556. Town Lots in Georgetown, Nos. 1, 11, 12, Ist Range. Letter A :; 2d = «do do do 6, 2 of 16, Ist do do B | 4 of 1, 4 of 2, vrd do do do + of 8, ¢ of 9, 12, 4 of 13, § of 14, j $ of 15. 4 of 16, a t 6.6. bs 4th do do | 2. 14, 15. Ist do do 14, 4th do do s. <. 8. lst do do 5, 6, 2nd do do do 4, 2nd do do G 2, 15, 4th do do doe ; i Water Lots in Georgetown, Nos. 6 and 20 al | town, Nos. 16, 26, 70, 96, 129, 151, 175, 193, | 327, 218, 296, 297. | Pasture Lots in Princetown Royalty, § of | No. &, 11-16 of 427, 4 of 459. | And the owners ofthe aforesaid Lots, | parts of Lots, and the tracts of land so fn | arrear, and proclaimed as aforesaid, are hereby notified, that iu case the sums charg- | ed on them as aforesaid, together with the | costs which have been incurred, shall not | be paid before the next Easter Term of the | Supreme Court, which will commence on Tuesday, the 5th day of May next, applica- | tion will be made to the Supreme Court, during the said Term, for Judgment against the said Lots and tracts of land respectively. JOSEPH POPE, Treasurer. Fcb. 23, 1874.—until 5th May, ONE BOX OF CLAREE’S B 4 PILLS iH Wariunted to eave all disehurges from the i Vii ry Urgave in @ither BEX, AOGUIrEed OF coust tational, Giasvel ard Paine m the Back Sold j xee, de tdench, by all Chemiste ard Patent Mecicine Verdore. “le Proprietor, F. J. CKAKKE, APOTUECARIES’ HALL, LINCOLN, ENGLAND. EXPORT AGENTS. Bu poxue Bui bidyves and Co Coleman Si. London, Newbury a7 Newyate Street, Loudon Barclay and Sous, 95 Favringden Street, Londen, | Sanger and Sons, (Oxford street, London, Aud all the | ondon Wholesale Honses AGENTS IN CANADA. Mercer & Co. Wholesale Dragiet unG Note Montreal - lottctown, 4 of 11, § of 17, 4 of 18, 31, 4 of 359, BIS, 399, 400, 401, $ 01 407, 408 4 of 449, | Pasture Lots in the Royalty of George- Fourth hundred of Town Lots in Char- | lottetown. Nos. 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 18, 14, 16, 17, | , \-6 OF 62, 63, 67, 5-12 of 70, 1-6 of 71, 72, 77, | 57, 5-48 of 170, 11-48 of 171, 1-6 of 200, I Marner f ao c¢ WELSH & GWe..’S BUILDING, ‘ No Young Wan Can Afford to miss a Course at the | and 74 to 94 p. m. ; ; Cure; It ou Li Sor Cures Owerated S ’ ¢ eth, Vases Ul rated 8 iege (‘ore@ idackhhbends in aot the Page Care@ Seurvy ies mm UT + oa ond Satu ihisearee Dsitelae eiling j ilood f Ulimpure Matter, POM Wialever « ¢ wring. Ae thie wixiare ie pt nt to the tuete, aml vavrante! fie mui jutows te the } mort Gelioa Ceriimion of ether rex, the Pro 77, | privtor «1 it~8 fl. trial te test | ha value Thomsen ida of tes ’ {ya tb ports, Sold Bett'e bi Cusea, Cum + tainin: X tives) ya » ite coc’ —sulieieel i toefl a permanent cure in fie creat gy ajovley of t longestardi' py cures OY AL ‘hide ts and PATENT MEDICIN VEN Fi heonyhon the w Sol - prev wo, FL 3 CLARKE, ¢ hemien APOTHEVARIES? ial. LINCOLN, ENG LADD EXPORT No. 3, 7-24 of 10, + of 9, ™ " rhaapess iad = 4 | Bargeyne, Barbidger Co, Uolvman ot, Le th Pasture Lots in the Royalty of Charlotte- | Newhary nnd “ons Seapute st., London Fe gown, § of 2, 5.24 of 3, 3 of 9, § of 10, 4 0f 12. | Barclay & Sun, % rien st, Lowden, -to 116, 1-6 of 17, 23, 4 of 24, 31, 32, 39, $ of | Sameer & xo 0 d ., Lond 40, 44, 49, 50, 1-6 of 53, 54, 58, 59, 7-12 of 61, hod oli the 1. widen Wholcenle Hones, AGENTS IN CANA ue Merecr& f (6 DA. ® le Dray ehete ‘ vine, Char nd Co, Tore ~k & » Wiwes le 1D) ovvions “ chante, ant Owen, Hamitia. — Worer at Hast Aye Commercial College, Queen Street. Charlottetown. act. eiga ite ee SE A E:T — ceeeEe—