’ ‘ ———7 ~A Aime a HE & A Weeklu Hournal of ®) ca olitics, Literature, and Alews, 2. —_———_ --- -- --- ** This is trne Liberty, when Freeborn Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”---Euripides. Charlottetown, Prince Edward Vol, NUE. Island, Monday, July 27, 1863. naan | accept the suggestion offered me, and knock. FOR SALE | ’ HE HOUSE and FARM belonging to the Subscriber situate on the Malpeque Road, | and within 1} mile of Charlottetown. The HOUSE is suitable for a Gentleman and Family, and the FARM consists of seven Pasture Lots, or about eighty-four acres. The purchaser can have the House and premises oie with ag many of the said Lots as he may want, also the CROP on the Farm this year, if required. Apply to OHN MORRIS. LITERATURE, THE CRY IN THE DARK. It was on Windermere, one sunny evening last autumn but one, that the following ed- venture was told me by a kindly middle- aged gentleman,whose pleasant acquaintance /I had made at the hotel where | was stay- ‘ing. We had come out with the intention \of fishing, and were anchored about twenty Naw SVORa 17 SUMMERSIDE. Wholesale and Retail, YHE SUBSCRIBER OFFERS FOR SALE, at brs Store in SUMMERSIDE, the follewing GOODS, Whotesate and Retail ata small ed*aace or first cost, fer cash or upproved eredit :— | 4) Bole. FLOUR, 25 Bowes Honey-dew TORACCO, SO) Chests and half-cheet« TEA, 1S sides SOLE LEATHER WwW ite. PILOT BREAU 2 Dez. BUCKETS, Wier, BROOMS 50 Nagjare, Clinton, Waterloo and Premium OOK STOVES W Bexes CANDLES, YY De SOAP, Seear, Water Soda and Ovater Crackers; Cheese, | Iirown Sewar, Windew Glass. Scythes, Sneaths and Rites; Hav Rakes and Forks, Shovels, Nar row and Head Axes, Adzes, Hats and Caps in wariety; Chairs, Bedsteads; Ladies’ and Misses Fi0oP SKIRTS JOHN ANDREW McDONALD. Summerside, July 13, 1863 isl Im ‘Better than Gold to Farmers! Nitro Superphosphate Manure. rpsits MANURE has been analyzed by W.T. Ricmarns, F.C.S., for J. D. Nasy & Ce, and contains: ‘the door was opened as far as the chain cover his chin, mused a moment, and then replied that he thought he could perhaps do Charlottetown, June 8, 1863 ——ee 'to admit us. IMPROVED | We found ourselves in a room of consider- jjake; but finding the perch in no humour 7" f . f 3 | . . POR SALE. to bite while the sun was high, we sat chat- | 7ENHE subscriber offers SEVERAL VA-! ting and smoking, and watching the purple LUABLE IMPROVED FARMS FOR SALE, shadows steal slowly up the sides of the situated on Township No. 31, viz: " . great hills that guard the head of the lake, | TWO FARMS containing 48 and 60 acres each, , and located on the Sonth Wiltshire Road, and within | hiding our time pati ntly till the fish should | eight miles of the city. These Farms are in a good state of cultivation, with Dwelling Houses, Barns, Water, &c., on the premises ALSO, 100 acres, situated on the Tryon Road, with good Buildings, a well of water, and good improvements AND ALSO, several other improved PARMS, beautifully situated on the Weat River, with good improvements also ALL THESE PROPERTIES are in a flourishing fire with an air of enjoyment, and relieved be hungry enough to be tempted by our | gide where he could keep a half-eye con. bait 1 had been taking a walking tour stantly upon it, requesting me at the same through Lakeland, and my companion had | time to order what [ pleased for sypper. day; so that our conversation, working gradually round from divergent points, at issued, in answer to my summans, g tall big: ALL ROPERTIES are in a flouris! length fell waturally on pedestriapism, and ‘boned mulatto woman, attired in g check | settlement, with abundance of Hard and Soft Wood, the amount of health d pleasure to be de- | ° é and within ten miles of the city, and convenient to oder-w-tuate Gath Bnd p ur ; cotton gown, and having a red handkerchief shipping places, and obtaining advantages in the | rived from travelling through a country on! pound round her head. This apparition was way of sea manure, &c., seldom met with. ot : it was on this bi : Possession to any of the above farms can be given foot . and -— — b hint that my | SO unexpected, and secrned to? me so ludi- ' ,companian spake as follows : immediateiy, if required } : " For further particulars apply to | When I was a young fellow (said he), that is to say, more than thirty summers WM. DOUSR, - ‘irrepressible fit of laughter as the woman Anril 63 } rlotteto . . ° SIE. wise i) al: gt Ni April 20,1863. tf Charlottetown, ago, I was gs fond of walking tours as any-| stepped forward into the room; but the Soluble Organie Matter - - 10,765 s r ~ ‘y | body. be first I ever took s through! 4., . Inw lable Organic do - 23,112 I < rie SALE : b J T ey took was thro igh \ dark scowl! that chased away the good-na- Alkaline Sulphate and Chloride 2,226 SHORE FARM, at Kildare Capes, Cornwall, when ] was but a lad of Seven-/tyred grin with which she had just greeted Soluble Phosphate Lime - 19,580 on Lot Three, containing 100 acres of LAND, re on which occasion | met with a little me, warned me not to carry my amusement Insoluble do do - 20,630 70 of which are ina good state of cultivation, fenced | adventure, which, with your good leasure, ict i i iti Sulphate Lime - - - 6850 | off inte eight acre fields, and the remainder covered | I will Jat to : - e } P lighted | too far, On strict in ulry, the capabilities Silica - - - - - 130 with Hardwood and Fencing. The Main Road . © . e you as soon as ave ighte | of the house resolved ¢ emsel ves iuto an un- Less - ° . ; ° 242 } runs through the Farm, and it basa front of ten | another cigar. | limited supply of eg sand bacon; go we were | chains on the Gulf Shore, where abundance of With a six weeks’ holiday in view befare | fain to eine ene sakes acovedinah Afte 100,000 | Sea Manure can be obtained. 4 gry. r The Buildings are nearly new —DWELLING | returning to the drudgery of my father's | the remnants of the meal had been cleared HOUSE 30 « 25; a FRAME BARN 40 « 30; a office, and with a purse not badly supplie : LOG BARN of about the same size, and a small I : P de . 3 oP ied, away, the landlord himself entered the room FISH ROUSE at the shore. set out on my tour, determined to enjoy | to ask what we would liketodrink. Certain. Part of the Purchase Money can remain en the myself after my owe free and independent ly a yery low, smoath, insinuating veice r . ” 7 oO . very different from that of a rude country premises. Application for further particulars to be | fachian » no a made to Mr. Thomas Monniain on the premiseg | fashion; and to thoroughly explore the ro Nitrogen 5 62 per cent. Ammonia § 80 per cent. | In using this Manure it should be first wel! mixed | with about ten times its own weight of dry soil or | sand, so as te ensure a uniform distribution over the | surface, from 200 to 500 Ibs per acre, according to | previous state of the ground will be required for each acre. If once used, no farmer will ever be | or to GEORGE W. HOWLAN. "7 mantic country I had chogen as the scene of | landlord. He was a large-built fleshy man, 10 it. i 2 ¢ ocr re inere: Alberton, March 9, 1863. 3 : : . “es . es ie . ° without it, if he ean procure it, ag the large increase | Alberton, March 9, 1803. }s] _|my wanderings, which was at that time little ‘with a red, fresh-coloured, whiskerless face, i hetter than ¢erra incognita to the ordinary ; 0 |which gave you at the first glance the idea ran of tourists, who firmly believed they had of aaa cali neithined with an of crop is such that uo other can equal it. | . a eee Agent for P ParBic® STEPHENS, | Itreechold Land Gene é 3 0 . . . " . eneral Agent for Se as FOR SALE. eee ; re A few Barrels of the above have just srrived as si : a ‘ ‘ , | Seen everything that was worth seeing after ‘equal amcuat of stolid indolence; but when sample, and wijl be sold cheap = oe a to 2 wes _ a — 5 of “ ALD ABLE staying for a few hours in each of the prin- | those heavy overhanging lids were fairly prove it for next season, at Mr Jobn Williams’, t‘EEHOLD Lz ), on Lot 8&jn Prince | ,:.° il eee ° ‘ —_—.? 5 , Charlottetown, W E Dawson's, Esq, Charlottetown, | County. a good part of which is cultivated, will be cipal towns, and viewing the intermediate | raised, and you caught a glance from the ’ , ly , ; ; I i fr . J ° g the Royal Agricultural Society, and at the Depot. sold cheap, on application, at Summerside, to the country rom the top of a ceach, or the win- grey restless eyes beneath them «xe restless PATRICK STEPHENS, |°*"*?— MRS. dows ofa post-chaise. For my part, I dis-| and treacherous as thase of a tiger—then JOHANNA O'CONNOR. Onwert Cyeap Stone, (where may be found from Apri! 18, 1863 ‘dained all guide-books and road-maps ; and you felt that there was something wore than quneme to ansher,) Gonera! Agent for t rE I ' never knew, when J set out in the morning, somnolent good nature about thie man,~— N B.—Wanted a TON or TWO of GOOD WOOL ; VALUABLE what spot would be my resting-place at ' /that there was an iron wil! to do and to dare beneath that impassive exterior. Jacoby chose some whiskey on tie lgnd- lord’s recommendation, and | ordered a ‘tumbler of the same, more for *! the good of the house,” as the saying is, than because ae my for it on ins jnight. [ delighted in cross-roads, and ; country lanes, and sheep tracks among the | hills; any footpath or bye-way thet led rom the dusty prosaic high-road had allure- ments for me that [ could rarely resist. | a ee Freehold Properties Stoves! Stoves! Stoves! For Sale in Charlottetown, EXELE subscriber is authoriged, by Powe UST RECEIVED by Schooner “EMILY,”| HE subscriber is auhoriged, by Power of Attorney from the Proprietor, Mr. Tuomas > > . nT . rec ‘i © . } 1 t if 2 “ fee eee DIRECT, at DODD'S w,,, Lams, of rae, New Zealand, to sell the | bad been leading this pleasant sort of life|{ cared to drink it. On Jagoby’s invita- ik , {E— ° following PROPER .S, of which the two first! ¢ t a {; to ¢ 4! =} } : j : * 600 SFOVES are FREEHOLD and the third LEASEHOLD :_— | ©2F Sbout a ae eee Working | tign the Jandlord came and joined us; for ; 4° seeees eas ' , é & DSt Wi d i a. i ! . ; | “ let iM ’ Black __Fittt— The “ OSBORNE HOUSE This pro- | ™J hee Outowestward towards the sea, | the pedlar was fond of society, and probably among which are the celebrated Magician, Black | ...+¢ is sitrated on the North side of Water-stree fhen |; > — | ape = bi _ mn ‘Lm 4 al c rk —— a perty } sitvate lon the X rth si of Vate str t, when late one afternoon a gioomy over thought he saw séme chance af driving a Jiiamuad. and[ mon Coal Covking Stoves, baving a frontage thereon of forty-two feet, and| east afternoon, a¢ [ well remember — I} j imbibi ie DODD & ROGERS. running back eighty feet, being part of ‘Town Lot — a : a bargain ; at all evouis, after imbibing a glass a Yo \- ail} s t : . +. } . . June 22, 1863 ial Gw No. 14, in the first hyndred of Town Lots in Char oyertoog a pediar among the hills, a German or two of whiskey, be grew more talkative lottetown. The Pwelling Houge is one of the most! Jew fellow, with a box hanging from astra ‘ : ig a a ae a aun Z t commodions and best finished in the City, with ex i ” hi sh : Ide ‘ j ik “t d ; P than ever, and at last lifted his box on to Flour ! Flour ! Flour! cellent Stable and Qut-buildings, whilst its immedi. | OV€F 318 Shoulder j apd asthe road was very | his knees, opened it, and spread out on the ' a # {ate vicinity to the Wharves, Dank, “Islander” | lonely, and we both happened to be going | table a quantity of cheap jewellery, which o - ' ottice, Bonded Warehouse, Telegraph Otfice, and e . ° ° ‘ : i i principal segs of business, renders it one of the| the same way, we naturally fell into conver: | jooked very bright and glittering in candle- <> J UST RECEIVED from New : Yor) nost eligible business stands in the City. It is at | Salon; for in those days L was always ready light, but was, io reality, of very smal} in- : ght, k. and will be sold low for cash— . ; resent occupied onder Lease, of which about three ak he ae int: Pa , ’ » | : 300 Bols. Extra and Superfine es aaa a iraah. as an Hotel, a which it is ae ae pap I tag of anybody. The ' trinsic value ; and endeayuured, by a FLOUR, | admirably adapted ‘satiated i. ae a de ee ee and energetic harangue, to tempt - |} Second — Thi leasantly situated COTTAGE)! a bridle path amon » hi yhi ad | : : 100 Bbls. Pastry FLOUR. and OU LI Sr ities om chneenered Prince and oe teen ot ti ’ ” ™ had | the landloed 1uto becoming a purchaser. eaten | Fitzroy Streets, opposite Holland Grove and the |. 2 canes, hevher snowing nor Car-' Phat calm and sententiougs individyal ex- M. LOWDEN residence aE a oe ig, < prseens in the qe- | INDY whither it might lead me; and it WaS | amiaed the baubles one hy one, replaced Di. 4 Un cupation of Mr. Hobs, Cabinet Maker The landis (9 such effect that [ answered my companion, | them carefully on the table, and ended | by expressing his opinion of them by a little ‘silent laugh, and two or three extra puffs \from his pipe; thereby intimating, as plain- ly as though he had said so ia as many ‘words, ** Rubbish, every bit of it ; don’t at- | empt to deceive me!” Veake's Building of Town Lot No. 76, in the Fourth Hundred May 11, 1869 @ part of Town Lots in Charlottetown, measuring seventy two feet nine inches on the West side of Prince Street, and eiglity-four feet on the South side of Fitzroy Street. The pleasant situation, and it being smile, and a little shrug of the shoulders, on the hig 1, mukes jt one of the most de-| Which might either be one of pity at the sirable Properties for @ private residence in they ideg of any rational being finding pleasure City ie . | Thirnk—A VALUABLE LOT OF LEASEHOLD | OF profit in sych aimless wanderings, or one LAND on the South side of Water Street, on which | of disbeliof at what he perhaps considered a | as 3 rontave of thirty-eight fee nt ine back . : it has # frostage of thirty-eight feet, Puuulng * too transparent attempt to impose upon his sixty feet, between the properties of Robert Long- ai . > t i ‘ worth, Esq., and Mr. Samuel Batt, and opposite | eredulity, After trudging along in silence the Osborne Honse and Bonded Warehouse. Has! fop g ghort time, he remarked that he was when be asked me for what place [ was bound. He greeted my answer with a Biarvdware. VWHMIUE Undersigned is landing, per EDA MARIJA, from Bostoy and from Exciasp,— KAGLE PLOUUGHS, EAGLE O. PLOUGH MOUNTINGS, HOSEL NAILS, POWDER AND SIIOT AL¥YRED PHILLIPS. 3. 1882. rhest land, Jacoby, with a shrug, put away his wares, 'elosed his box and resumed bis pipe. A Charlettetown, Dect POR SALE, T the Store of Mr. Hvucu Monaenay, - Queen Street, the ' |grateful space of silence intervened. The eniticient stone on it to build a Cellar Wall thiry feet front and sixty feet in length, eight fest high | bound for a certain town which he named, — as — ee the aoe This Property js held under Lease from g9me dozen miles away; that he had taken | 'OF¢ '0° a to keep his glass constantly # the late Janes Peake, with the privi-| 1h road through the hilla, hoping to find it | replenished. Before long the effects of the ; fiery liquor began to make themselves visible all round the Estate following— ' 7” lege of purchase on the expiration of the lease in Whiskey, Rum, Wine, Gin & Brandy : Tea, April, 1864, for the sum of £152 currency, and is a| a Rear cut ; that he had never been that Way). ; : Bugar, Molasses, Tobacco and Sole Leather. most eligible stand for any business. oefore ; and that he heard there was a iia his flushed face, and thick unsteady tones ; oe 8.90 If not preyjonsly disposed of by Private ne roadside ipa some mile or two further on | that mixture of shrewdness and caution whole of the above mentioned Propertizs will be 7 : i "| which, so fi; s ; h tori 30 bbls. CORNMEAL, and sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, on the various pre-| where we could probably obrain accommo. | FINE i ~s . could judge, @ ee 800 barrels FLOUR. thisee, On PURSDAY ° the 4th day of Al il ST dation for the night, as it would be dark in | 's ea ings wit every one, seemed su en y All of which wil be sold for the lowest prices. | PPxt- May 25 ccna BELL. | jee3 than an hour, and to attempt to find |'° desert him; be became at once noisy, 2m tharlottetown, Alay 2o, 1563. : ee ove’s way across the moors after dark would | ey aod confiding. ne be the height of folly. He conclded by| ve something here, now, that it wil] DR. SUTHERLAND | Leasehold Pari for Sale. do your eyes good to look at,’ he exclaimed, 7 ; ENO be sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, at asking me if I did not want a splendid gold | EGS to intimate that he has just opened, | the Colonial” Building, in Charjottetown, on watch, or a chain, or a Ting, or 3 breastpin, | drawing a omall leather bag from some Ex and “ Prioress,’ an extensive | TUESDAY, the Ilth day of Angust next, at the or a set of studs — apy or al! of whieh he | hidden pocket. Gems of the first water. ; . : ; : : § } I as Stock of jhonr of Ivo clock, nese, by wre Bet “a neg 7 See here, and here ! W hat do you say to ‘ | Sale contained in : Indenture of Mortgage, datec Drugs and « hemicals, il ntained in an Indenture « rigage, da would Jet me have at a ridiculously low! > : “ . ‘. ? ; | the 27th day of Jone 1861, and made between Ber fivure. Finding all his attempts to trade of | these ?' and he poured into his hand a with additional daily expected, selected from the | nard Shannon of Township 35, farmer, and John | hest London establish mente Shannon of the same place, mail carrier, of the one | no avail, he Shrugged his shoulders again, Medicines carefully prepared by himself, there- | part, and John Kuight of Souris, merchant, of the pulled up his bex a little higher on his | 4 scintitiated ii ial fore the public may have confidence in receiving a other part,—all the unexpired term of [9 years back, and becoming Lon camarade on the| and scintillated like star dust, or chippings genuine article and at the cheapest rates possible ’ : r ventioned in a certain lease from Roderick Cliarles | | a : ee from the great belt of Orion. ‘Oh, m : : : s McDonald to the said Bernard Shannon, and made iostant, offered me his box full of choice : < qed ’ y Toilet Articles in Variety. darlings, how I Jove you!’ said Jacoby Brown, White and Faney Windsor Soaps, Ede gnd the 24th day of November, 1841) of ne end to that foreiga tobacco, and suggested a friendly | de <a sage f ‘| _— f land situate j edfore ‘ar i an’s e . wae . | fe v tie Jerfumery key C ae” penele Sete Ce ee eye h side of S Peters | pipe as the best alleviation of the toils of |'ONC'Y, Jou re easier to carry than gtiver Kimmel'«s Pertamery, Jockey inh, Koudoletia, | County, commencing enthe port » side ¢ f St. Peter's | ve : : | or gold and far rettier to look at A Verbena, Kiss Me Quietly, Milletienr, Queen's | Road, and running from thence North, one devree; the Way; & proposition to which I readily | & - ; ‘ P he 6 f ‘ Cen, Highland Perfame, Pomades, Hair | Kast, seventy-one chains ; thence West, Ors de- agreed, tor, young as I was, I had learnt | ragge coat is not always the sign oi a poor Oils. Hair Washes. Ean de Cologne, &c; lyree; North. five chains and five links ; thence , : E : | man, master landlord,’ Hair, Tooth, Nail, Shaving, Hat and | North, one degree; East, seven chains and thirty the art of smoking. And 80, walking, | Clothes Drushes linke; thence East, one degree ; Bong, 1X chains smoking, and chatting pleasantly together, | ; ; . | d fifty linke ; ance South, 1@ fegree ; ., : . j e Nursery Articles in Variety. and Sfty links ; the med eighty wix lakes ‘to the|#Q hour or more sped quickly away; and gave another fond look at bis treasures; Feeding Bortles, Nursery Syphon Shields ; . ; | then deposited them in the bag; and by a Koad, ‘aforesaid; and thence along said road to| t hardly knew how nearly durk it was till | : Gam Rings, Ivory and Gutta Percha; Combe, the place of beginning; bounded on the North by my companion pointed to a fuint light shin- | sle ght-o!-hand movement disposed of the ull sizes, shapes und prices The * Uranus lands in the oceupation of James KB. Wood and |. . A . * | Sees Mel ee on the Kast by Peter Phee’s i0g. in the distance, aud declared that it} bag and its contents about his person, iand, on the South by said rond, and on the West | myst procced from the inn of which we were |landlord’s heayy eyelids were lifted with by lands in the occupation ef James Brossngh, con- ats Salpetre, Baking Soda, Washing Soda, Baking Powder, Alam, Blue, Vitrol, Cudbear, Gream of ee cctimation, fifty-two acres, a little more | in quest. I bave said nothing hitherto as | Surprise as the pediar held out the brilliants aes, OTerrcns noe Des pn. 4 or less, with the apurienances thereunto belonging to the personal appearance of my pediar 10 his palm ; and he greeted them with & Liver tly Mostar, Rot mud Povedemed Ginger, | yg EMM 22 Rey cnt of te Paras ey ga |friend. In person he was thin and wiry, |long stealthy glance from the eorners of bis Mare Cloven, Olive Oi Bena Ta. Nutweth | delivery of the Deed. cia ‘with keen mobile featyres, sharpened and greedy, treacherous eyes, then let his eyelide yen so OS, Vian : oe, Alnand CN), __For further particulars apply to the Sabseriber oF intensified by the close bargaining of many fall again, agd went on with his smoking as tine Cundles, Prune Candles, &e &« gg he ay thie 10th Joly. 1883. | years. In age he might be fifty, or rather though there were no such things as diamonds (2 Dr. Sutherland can be consulted daily at his | JOUN KNIGHT. | more; and his hair and beard, both of them |in the world. establishment for Town and Country (uly 13. tong and tangled, and once black, were now| ‘You do not drink, young gentleman,’ He wore small gold 'said the landlord to me after a while. ‘I He spoke good am afraid the whiskey is not to your taste.’ Cartes Parmer, Solicitor. CY” Advice given to the Poor gratis. | - - lf; j (Queen Street, June 2, 1863, Kor Sale or to Let, ee sry. ; — sNITONE wr “(| cire 3 cars. oe Na WELL FINISHED DWELLING | ¢!relets through hb} : eer ret reer MOWING AND REAPI NG sna a STORE, with . good Goennes Kogtish, but with a elight foreign accent ; | ‘ The whiskey ~ ve excellent, I have MACHINES. jand Stable, in an excellent business stand, at the | and, finally, I gathered from his brass-let- no doubt, I replied; ‘ but | rarely drink ; : | eee sacl Ms Allg Apply to Andre’ “- tered box that his name was Max Jacoby. | spirits of any kind, more especially when I MPuE SUBSCRIBER begs to inform the “°°” “JOHN PARKER. | Toiling slowly upward, we at Jength|bave a long day's walk before me on the Farmers of P. E. Island that he has received | [ead St. Peter's Bay, 16th April, 1863. tf reached the summit of the hill, and found | morrow,’ an consigument of MANNY'S MOWING AN)! - oa : ‘The haps you will all me to br REAPING MACHINES, manufactured by Arginus ourselves close to the inn of which we were en pérhaps you will alloy Q orey : A Schooner of 50 Tons. re tot ae Minowns, beng of Worcester, Maas., similar to those i AV E the Spars Standing and Run- in search. The light we had scen 80 far i you a cup of cafe-au lait. learnt the art which he has bee lling for some vears past, with . n i ; eli i the oa fine { camel a all the iicaas laaeue. ning Rigging, Blocks, Patent Windlass, Chains | away proceeded from a lantern sus; ended } when 1 was a young fellow knocking about ments. ‘These Machines, whieh may truly beealled |” Anchors, Bout and other small gear, second | from the roof of a rude shed close to the Paris, and I flatter myself that I caa dq it the “Farmer's Friend” are warranted to eat an | band, which J will sel) Jow, and take Freight in inn, where a tall, brawny young sayage, of | tolerably well, And you 100, Mr. Pedlar, most forbidding aspect, was effecting some! would be none the worse for a drop of coffee. rude repairs to a rickety tumble-down cart. What say you? { ‘There was a light, too, in at least one room = * Just as you like,mein Enable; just as you of the inn, as we saw through a chink in like. This drink which Ll have here is very me the wooden shutter with which the window good, but I suppose I’ve had enough of it.’ Meaiilh ee ane eee en i — —- ‘was jealously guarded ; otherwise the placs| The landlord set to work with alacrity, Wa. Peardon, Winslow ‘Road: Jus. "Proudfoot. THE MANSION HOUSE. ‘seemed dark, silent, and tevantless. On and ina few minutes prodyced an excellent re Hous Thos. Ceubh, do Win, eoeeet, TENE SUBSCRIBER — late of the enquiring of the young savage whether we cup of coffee, — ro 2 [ me a well, do. ; Hon. Joweph W ightman, Three Rivers” “« ‘Terrace House” —has leased the large build. could be accommodated for the night, he tasted before. Imme ate alter . aa ing on the somney Of, Powee) & Bing. ae replied that he did not know, but that we was ready, Jacoby an arose, ee 7 ~ Sits. and TEL, Ie solicits the patrosaye bad better knock at the door and ask the to be shown to our 7 we : the | yfisnstGy” HOLE." which ‘ie ‘conveniently meaner. Not being in the habit of has, | OOO molgtt@™women god the young ‘ ; i * MANSIOD ») which 38 ently | ; ° ted the | day. aol The hight price given for Wool, washed inated or travelers on either businemar pleas | 1B AY Coe Doom Of COMnTy ta out. eree savage had retired come time before, 20 the WM. W. IRVING, ' ‘mony ; but finding the door would not yield landlord in person lighted our candles, and |to my efforts, 1 was obliged, after all, to, ushered us up the ricketty stairs, on the top were of grass or grain per hour, on any ground ynder | exebange. They can be seen here. cultivation, rough or smooth; and injtendjng pur chasers are referred to the following farmers, wha, having used them, can testify aa to their value :- GEO. W. HOWLAN. Alex. Rebertson, Bonshaw : W. H. Hvde, Weat Caseyumpec, Feb. 9, 1863 River; Johu Crosby, West River ; Capt. in| ee ao Nerth Kiver; Dr. Jenkine, Upton Farm, North NEW HOTEL. ——— ALS O-——- 100 Pine Ash-bound FISH BARRELS. ‘The subscriber will also have on hand, at the proper seeson, One and Two Horse Threshing Ma chines, with Shakers and Separators complete, Potatoe Diggers, &c. &e. ‘ing Room. Agricultural Agent. EDMUND MAWLEY, Proprietor. DesBrisay's Corner, Ch'town, June 15, 1803, i Ch. Town, P. E. 1., June 1, 1863. tf ‘ . , Aa He shook his head with drunken gravity ; | New Series.---No, 34. ‘of which we found ourselves in a gloomy of Jacoby? Was it he who had given ut-| whole tumble.down edifice to shiver and opening out it on either side. ‘into the lower parts of the house. I was 'so, unfastening the chain at the same time about to close my door, when Jacoby called the long night hours. I could see a} last, a shining patch on the dark oak step, where it had fallen drop by drop during I could not take my | A delay of half a minute or so, and then corridor lighted from the roof, having doors terance to that cry of agony in the dark? groan in the grasp of its invisible arms. 1 My room|I exhausted a thousand conjectures as I Suddenly I was startled by the clashing of withia would allow, and the landlord stood was at one end of this passage, and Jacoby’s | crouched in my corner watching the dawn some distant door; and there was 3 faint before us and enquired what we wanted. at the other. The Jandlord having seen slowly brighten, and still keeping my eyes rustle and whisper up tho stairs and Coyld he accommodate us for the night? each of us into his room, bade us a cheerful fixed on the door, under which I knew a) the passage, was asked. He rubbed his hand slowly! good-night; and the next moment I heard thin red stream was slowly ooging. the creaking of the stair as he went down | along | as though the ghost of the mur- dered man was coming back to revisit its tenement; then the strong gyst outside swept swiftly away down the valley inland ; |and a brief lull followed. It was needful |to me from his room, - Good-night, old eyes off it, they seemed wedded to it by a|that I should look once more on the face in | fellow ? , Don’t overshleep y'self in the terrible fascination. I watched it while the | the glass while there was still sufficient day- FREEHO L D FAR M § yards off shore on the farther side of the able size, poorly furnished with a few chairs,| morning.” [ responded to bis greeting, day broadened by imporceptible degrees. I light left to see it by. 1 felt drawn to ; ‘and two tables of the commonest kind, bat) and then closed and looked the dotr. The got up after a time and went slowly towards this by some inward necessity, some occult looking cheerful just then in the light of the bedroom, like every other part of the house|it. I must try the door again. Perhaps’ magnetism working against my better na- large fire burning in a grate at one end off had seen, was poorly and scantily fur-| with daylight to assist me, | might discover ‘ture. What, then, was my surprise and the room. dacoby drew a ebair yp to the nished, and was of an old-fashioned, tumble some mode of escape. Ab, what a great) horror when, on looking once more through down appearance. Across the whole length dark patch still creeping slowly under the the Opening in the door, and staring stead. from the middle of which stood ovt con-. |Spicupusly a small strong hook, which gt once connected itself in my mind with the/ , Window consisted af small diamand panes set | in Jead, and barred with iron; the door out of old black oak; and there wag a descent, of two steps into the room. the chair. A dead stupor and lethargy, such as [ had never experienced before, | Seemed suddenly to weigh down both my body and brain. I got up, but could scarcely stand; and when I attempted to walk, I reeled forward towards the bed like a drunken man; and sank with my head on the pillow, weighed down by a heaviness unepeakabie ; aud knew nothing more. The coffee had undoubtedly been drugged. How long [ had slept | cannot tell— whether hours, or minutes ooly—-when I suddenly found myself sitting up in bed, trembling with horror, and with @ wild ery of agony ringing shrilly through my braia. * Murder!’ The sharp intense cry of one in dire ex- itremity. Whose voice it was that gave | utterance to it, and from what part of the house jt proceeded, [ could not tell; | only knew that without any preliminary waking, | (as it seemed to me, | found myself sitting | | up in bed, staring, with wildly-beating beart, | ‘into the intense darkness araynd me, not | remembering for the moment where | was, my brain still ringing with that terrible cry. But I had scarcely time to gather my scattered wits together, when following | quickly on the cry, came the sound of a | pistol-shot clase at hand ; then a heavy fall /on the floor ; aud then all was still, | had called to mind by this time where [ was, and all the occurrences of the evening; | aud on hearing the shot I leaped out of bed, and made for the door, and after groupiog about for a moment or two found it. I had locked the door befure going into bed, and now fastened it; but on attempting to open it, found that I could not do so. It was evidently fastened outside; but for what purpose ? Had it beea done to prevent me trom going to the assistance of the pedlar ? That cry,that pisto!-shot—poor Jacoby must have been murdered in his bed, and it would doubtiess be my turn next! Dead men tell uo tales, I was without arms, except a small clasp knife; a knife which { had when a school- lad, and stil! carried from long habit. This would probably be of little or no service in any coming encounter, but I got it ready | nevertheless, tying my handkerchief round | the haft so as to obtain a firmer grip. No- thing in the room [ could haye piled against | the door could have opposed for one moment the entrance of any one determined on coming in. I examined the window again, boping to find sufficient space between the bars to allow of my creeping through and dropping to the ground ; but the hope proved futile. I grouped my way back to the bed, and sat down on the edge of jt. I trembled no longey. The first surprise was over, and although the suspense was terrible, I pre- pared like a man to meet the worst that could happen to me. I felt yery cold, chilled to the marrow, so | laid down my ‘knife for a moment, and wrapped my | travelling plaid carefully roynd me. My |tboughts wandered away to my mother. | How she would wonder what had become of | |her boy, and sit at home with sad patience, | jeanionty gone to sleep while sitting in ‘number of small brillian's, all of them anset, | month after month, waiting to greet him who! panels of the stout old door; but I broke |which, even in that wretched light, shone | Would never crosg the threshold more; but| my knife before I had been at work five a little sob that burst impressively from my | heart warned me not to give way, and fe: called my thoughts to the imminent danger |now before me. Yes, I would sell my life ‘dearly, if they did not shoot me down before | I had time to make one effort for my de- liverance- But why did they not come ?¢ A deathlike silence reigned through the whole house ; not a whisper ; not a footfall ; a silence and darkuess as of the graye, in- tense and horrible, not long to be borne) without madness. Was my bedroom door really fast? Had I, in my nervous haste, | examined it sufficiently to be sure of the fact ? I rose, and groped my way to the door, and examined it carefully again, a suring myself this time that it must really be secured on the other side. As I said before, there was a descent of two steps into the room; gnd_ as | moved my bare feet along these steps in my efforts to open the door, I slid one of them into a cool liquid pool of something |which was trickling slowly into the room. \1 fell back as though | had been shot. I 'was but a boy, remember, and scarcely re- covered from a long illness brought on by over- study ; my nerves were still weak, and this and nearer. Thank Heaven! not blood, but water ! himseif of his box, placing it clase to his gt the low ceiling ran a thick heavy beam, door! Slowly I approached it. Nearer |fastly into the glass, J saw that it was blank—that the face was no longer there ! I looked, and looked again, but with the In the revulsion of feeling caused by this same result; the face had certainly disap- | made the ascent of Pairfield on the previous |'The landlord had disappeared into an inner idea of some antegedent suicide; the floor | disoovery, J sank on my knees by the side | peared; the glass reflected nothing but the ‘room ‘ar kitchen, from which there now in many places was roygh and yneven; the gf the bed, and burst into @ passion of sobs | opposite wall of the room, and part of the and tears; and became thereby stronger and /furniture of a bed. The blood round my calmer, and again felt the sweet hopes of life. ‘chair, and went and sat down in the corner | Qa again trying the door, which was. | [had sat down tg note these things, 3nd strong and heavy, and made of dark old oak, | peered fearfully into the gathering gloom , 'crous and out of place in a lonely Cornish | was partly undressed, when I suddenly [ asoertaiped for a fact that it was fastenad | struggling hard to crush down the dim ‘inn, that L could not help bursting into an stumbled forward, and found that I had un-| oytside; the keyhole J found to be covered | ghostly fancies, and vain hauntings of terror, nestle warmly round my heart. by a plate on the other side. J] carefully examined the window once more, hut the iron bars were too close and strong to afford heart grew cold as [ looked; I got off the of the room farthest from the door, and which began to troop wildly around me, and claim me for their own. Whither had that white face vanished? I kept on asking my- me the slightest chanoo of escape that way. |aelf the question again and again, In the The chimney, too, after a glance, was) abandoned as hopeless. That unaccoyntable | stillness still continued, although it was now | broad day. I would break it at any risk, happen what might. I went back to the door and shook it, and halloed with ail my strength, calling Jacoby and the landlord by name; but there came no response but a few dull echoes, and whea they died away | silence fell on the place once more. There was a small semi-circular opening near the top of the door, probably intended originally as a means of ventilation to the room, and while casting about for some way of escape, the thought struck me, by getting on a chair and looking through the opening, I might ascertain something that might be of service to me, Next moment I had placed one of the two ricketty chairs | close to the door, and mounting it with) cayticn, foynd that my eyes were exactly on a level with the opening. On looking through, my glance traversed, first, the oar | of the passage, following the thread of water, and tracing it back by degrees to the door of Jacoby’s room, which, as stated before, was opposite mine, at tae other end of the passage, and which, I now saw, as I followed the stream with my eyes, was standing wide open. Having traced the thread of water till it was lost behind the angle of the en- trance to the pediar’s room, my glance fell on a small dressing table standing in the room egactly opposite the door; and from the dressing-table went up to an oval look- ing-glass placed thereon, and then stopped, suddenly transfixed with horror at seeing the reftection of a ghastly face staring in- tently at me from the glass. It was the face of Jacoby without doubt, so much I could clearly distinguish; but although the eyes were wide open, and staring with grim fixity of purpose ; and al- though the half-open lips seemed grinning at me in bitter derision; it was none the less the face of a dead man. That my poor friend had been foully murdered [ could no longer doubt ; but how did it happen that I had escaped a similar fate? There was the white face, changeless and speechless; but beyond that all was conjecture and vague surmise. I got down gently from my post of observation, feeling very sick at heart, and more overcome just then, [ think, with pity for the sad fate of my friend, than with apprehension for what might happen to myselt. Still that same death-like and oppress've silence, so that’ the buzzing of a fly on the window sounded in the stillness unnaturally loud and intrusive. More impressed than ever with the ne. cessity for immediate action, | began, as soon as [ had in some measure recoyered | from the effect of seeing the face in the glass, to cast about in my mind again for some means of effecting my escape. Pick- ing up my knife from the floor where it had lain neglected for some hours past, I at once set to work to try to cut away one of the minutes, and then gaye up the attempt in first strangeness of the discovery, I had flung aside my broken knife, and [ now felt an utter and invincible disinclingtion to rise from that far corner, search for it on the floor, and resyme my laboyrs on the door. How suddenly the evening had darkened ! Was that a hand which touched my cheek in the dusk? Whose hand? And, bush ! was not that a whisper — a rustle close be- side me? Would the floor creak so loudly unless some oné whom [ could not see were walking across it ? Above the loud howling of the wind, I heard wild shrieks of demoniac laughter. There were creatures abroad that night, such as the daylight never looked upon. They called me by name—they shouted to me to join them ; and far away, along the flinty high-road, I beard more of them coming with a quick tramp. They were mounted on their demon steeds, and they would carry me away with them out of that terrible house, and we should gallop all night with the storm. Be still ye throbbing pulses! Grant me a moment's respite — give me time fcr one last prayer, ere sense and reason desert me altogether ! Louder and louder came the tramp of the horses ; no demon steeds thase, but veritable animals of flesh and blood. A minute of terrible suspense, and then I heard a loud knocking at the front door, and the confused sound of several voices all talking at once. The first knock dissipated all those weird cobweb fancies of an over-wrought brain, which had held me powerless but a moment before. I sprang to the window, flung the casement, and cried aloud for help. I xuow not what I said, but next moment, as it seemed to me, I saw myself surrounded by half-a-dozen kindly faces, and felt that I was safe. My rescuers proved to be a party of jovial farmers, returning from a distant fair. In a few brief sentences, I gave them an out- line of my story — a story which received a ghastly confirmation when they entered the pediar’s room. Both Jacoby and the treacherous landlord lay dead—the latter in a corner of the room, close to an overturned water-jug, with a buliet through his brain ; holding im one hand a long, sharp bowie knife, and a dark lantern in the other. Jacoby was in the bed, in a half sitting pos- ture, stabbed to the heart; holding firmly clenched in one band the pistol with which, in the one last moment granted him on earth, he had wrought such swift vengeance on bis murderer. When we entered the room, the face of Jacoby was invisible-— hidden from us by the Iqosp, dimity curtain, which hyng from the head of the bed, and which the wind, when it burst open the badly-secured casement. and rushed into the room, had lifted up, and flung tenderly over the dead man’s face, as if in reverent pity at so sad a spectacle. The bed stood just behind the angle of the entrance into the room ; and from the position of the body, the face, when uncovered, was fully reflected despair. There was a dreadful fascination about that face in the glass which I found it impossible to resist, and standing on the chair, I again looked through the opening in the door, and turned my eyes slowly to- wards it, halfexpecting to find that it had disappeared. But it was stil] there, as grim, ghastly, and immovable as before. The pallid lips seemed to stir with inaudible words as I looked; but the wide-open eyes stared steadfastly into mine with a glassy changelessness of expression that chilled my blood to jook upon. Gathering heart somewhat after a time, I again went to work on the door with my broken knife ; labouring on, hour after hour, with wearying persistency, but making such small progress that had [ not felt that my life depended on the success of my efforts, J sboyld haye giyen yp the task a hyodred times in despgir. Noon came and went. A dal! gnawing pain began to make itself felt, which [ knew proceeded from the want of food, though hunger, in the ordinary sease of the word, L did not feel ; I began to get weaker, too, as in the oval glass, which stood on the dressing- 'table, nearly opposite the foot of the bed. |A further exemination revealed that both |the pedlar’s box and pockets had beew rifled of their contents. This, evidently, could | not have been the work of the landlord ; his ,carcer had been cut short too soon for that, whatever his ultimate inteution might have | been, The robbery was, therefore, set down as the work of the mulatto woman avd ,the young savage, and steps were at ounce ,taken to procure their arrest; which desir- able consummation was effected some weeks later at Liverpool, as they were about to embark for Australia. Some of the pro- /perty of the murdered man was found in | their possession. The woman's version of the affair was as follows : _ She stated, that she was awakened some- time in the night by @ loud ery of * Mur- der !’’ quickly followed by a pistol-ehot, and a heavy fall. That being too frightened to ‘get out of bed, she lay trembling and listea- ing for more than a hour, after which she suginoped sufficient courage to creep steal- thily out of the house, and make her way to the loft over the st:ble, where the young sa- | last horror was more than [ could bear. A lthe afternoon advanced, and to labour like _vage slept ; that together they had, after a 'sickness, gs of death, crept over me; my | senses left me; and J fell te the ground. When I regained my consciousness the room was still quite dark ; but the outline of the window stood oyt, a faint gray square from the surrounding blackness, aud I knew that the blessed daylight was at hand. With a shudder 1 drew myself farther away from the door, away into the farthest corner of the room, and there crouched up against the wall, sat, expecting I knew not what. The terrible stilloess which had oppressed me 80 heavily before, still reigned through the house. Not the faintest murmur of a yoice, not the lightest footfali on the floor, anywhere to be heard. Why had [ been fastened up in that gloomy room? Did they intend to leave me there to starve? ‘rible house. daylight and mg full strength, it would have a man in a dream. I thiok that after a time [ myst have fallen into a kind of stu- por, induced by weariness and exhaystion, as I sat before the door with my head rest- jng in my bands, When I came to myself agai, I found that the wind had risen, and that the first shades of evening were beginn- jng to creep into the room. I stood up, weary, sick, and faint at heart, and asked ‘myself how it would be possible to live through another night all alone in that ter- I calculated that even with been a work of several hours to cut my way out; and now both daylight and strentgth were failing me rapidly. A dull lowering evening, with rain and heavy wind. Hark! what a blust was that! it seemed to shake the ricketty old But for what purpose? What was to be house to its foundations, making the floors gained by such a step? What bad become ‘creak, and the windows rattle, and the time, ventured up-stairs, where they foynd both Jacoby and the landlord dead. ‘This must have occurred while I lay ingensible in (the room. That, thereupon, they had Joad- ed themselves with the property of the dead man, and absconded together. As there _was no evidence to prove any complicity on their part in the murder, their version of the affair was taken as the correct one, and punishment meted out to them accordingly. _ I may just say, in conclusion, that it was afterwards discovered by the police that the landiord of the lonely igo was a notorious forger of whom they had long been in search ~——a man originally of some education and breeding, but whose numerous misdeeds bad at length made his ordinary haunts so hot for him, that he found it advisable to with- draw himself for a year or two from public notice, and bury his talents in the distewt wilds of Cornwall,