a 7 Mi as ree ge ~w 3 i ae a IN IE Ee pp a _ : es — ewe an ines ale — ~ y \; i Selected \ -- — THE DROVER'S STORY. —-- —— we CONGLUDED. Tho murderer paused in his work for an instant, a3 if to satisfy him selt’ that life and then moved quickly irom the room, As soon as the sound of his footsteps had died in the distance, the horror stcicken drover escaped through the window, and ran with all his speed to Marquise, where, arousing the people of the hotel, he told his tearful story. A crowd soon collected about him, and accompanied him to the scene of the was extinet ; fearful murder. All about the house was still, but on eapproaching the stable a light was dis: covered within; and, moving roiseless ly to the door, and peering through the cracks, the two_murdere:’s were found in the act of digging a grave beneath the flocring. A rush was made upon tthem, And they were arrested. At the sight of the drover, who was the first to confront the guilty wretches, . the landlord uttered a shriek of-terror,, and fell to the ground, while his-accom- lice, as pale asa corpse, gazel upon Pk With aight, no d subt it Was the ghost of the murdered man who stood before him. e.Lhe party now proceeded to the Hiduse, dragging the murderers along with them. Lights were procured,and still, keeping the prisoners with them, the speople entered the room whie¢re lay tae body of the man so strangely murdered instead of the horse dealer. The wife and d&ughter followed. When the,covening was removed from the face of the corpse, and the ful! ht of the candles flarel upon it, a wild cry burst from ihe lips of the lan llord’s w:fe. “My son—my murdered son! Whi has done this?” wAnd with a hysterical scream she fail to the floor. > 7 “ No, no! it can’t be so, mother!’ ex- elaiined the daughter, as she strug- gled to reach the bed. Bat the terrible truth burst upon ber as her eyes fell rpon the mangled form of her brother. ana she also swooned upon the ‘body. The cries of the broken-hearted femalos seemed to arouse the old man fox a moment; and gazipg wildly at the sight before him. he realized also the terrible truth. (He had murdered his own son! O.: invest gating the facts before the mazistrate on the following day, it wa: awertain.d that the son of the inn- k cr, wWLowas adi.s pated young man hig viouiel Marquise the previous even- ing, Where, with some of his associates, he had becn eogaged in drinking and gambling till a latS houc; and Leing too much intoxica ed to remount his horse. and ashamed to meet his family, somc of his tellow gamblers had accompaniec him hoine; and supposing the room it, which the drover Lad been put to be vacant, they assisted the drunken man into the window. It was their voice. the lodger had heard; and thus it wa: that the hapies: youth met his death ardour friend escaped. A accomplice of the landlord proy- to be his own son-in-law, Heari Le- grand. Prom that awful hour th2 wietele- mothe, ot that murdered boy, marder edy by his father’s hand, remained 2 raving maniac. ¥t is only necessary to add. in econ- cluding this tule of horror, that the drover recovered his money; and jus tice, claiming her due, the two murder- ers, paid the jfenalty of their crime upon the guillotine. Shortly after tho. last event, the people of Marquise, to whom the scene of the unnatural murder had become an eyesore, assembled and level- ed the building to the ground, The spot is now covered*with brambles and this tles,,and pointed out to the stranger as a place to be avoided; for the ignorant thagf:it is haunted by the ghost of the murde:ed son. * 22 e- > A touching incident is reported from Chattanaoga. An utterstianger called on awrespectable fa: mer last week, and asked him if his house had not Leen robled during the war. The tarmer replicd that it had. ‘1, said the stran- ger, ‘was one of the marauding party that did it. T took a little silver locket.’ ‘That locket,’ said the farmer,’ had been worn by my dear child. ‘Here it is,’ replicd the stranger, visibly affected ; | ‘LT am-vich ; let me make restitution. | Here @:¢ twenty dollars for your little son.’(- He wage the farnier 2 $50 bill and received $50 in change, .He then wrung the farmers hand warmly and left. ‘The farmer hassince. dried his tears-and loaded his shot-gun. The $50 bill was a bad one. Five of the foreign commissioners in Philadelphia have become engaged to girls.in the city. It proves to be a city of more than * brothorly love,” —_— = Ge —S | +REAT Sirp. (Ot BANKRUPT SALE. amen 8() 3 The Stock in Trade of the Estate of S$, KEITH & CO. WILL BE SOLD AT A TREMENDOUS SACRIFICE. Worsted Coatings, Baavers, Pilots, Broad Cloths, T weeds, alymad3 Clothing AND HATS, WILL'BE SOLD RECARDLESS OF COST.T AS USUAL. C. V. MGRECGOR, Assignee Makers wanted immediately. cC. Vv. McG., Cl’town, Feb. 5, 1878—2m 2aw Buy the American X C SURREY 2, WHEELS —AND THE-- BAND HUB WHEELS, For Sale at W. E. DAWSON & CO’S. Ly FOOD: L.0282 OF" AMERICAN WOOD STOCK, Rims, Spokes, Shafts, Ete. A FEW SHEET-IRON BODIKS, with seat all complete, at Manufacturers’ prices, at W. E. DAWSON & CO’S. an. J&---2aw ar 3i ——— MERCHANTS | Marine Insurance Co'y OF P, E. ISLAND. | NOTICE. NHE Annual General Meeting of the Share- . holders of the above Company will be held in the Young Men’s Christian Association Hall, Charlottetown, on Wednesday, the 13th March, AT THREE O'CLOCK, for the election of Directors for the ensuing year and the transaction of other business. FENTON T. NEWBERY, Manager Feb. 9, 1878—pat taw till meeting HOUSE PROPERTY -™ SELL OR TO LET, the Dwelling iu House, corner of Weymouth and Rich- mond streets, at present eccupied by D. Hodg- sol, Usq. Apply to ” ‘readers, on receipt ot the GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS flothing Made to Order We Be —Coat, Vost, and Pant South Side Queen Square’ ~ 009 BOOKS FOR THE— _,pliel from the Otfice of the EXAMINER, will be is named against each book :- Allen’s (R. L. & L. F.) New American Farm Book, $2 o ANlen’s (L. F.) American Cattle, 2 50 Allen’s (L, F.) Rural Architecture, 1 50 American Weeds and Useful Plants, 1 Atwood’s Country and Suburban Houses, 1 50 Baker’s Practical and Scientitic Fruit Culture, 2 50 Barry’s Fruit Garden, 20) Bommer’s Method of Making Manures, 2 20 Breck’s New Book of Flowers, 16 Brills Farm-Gardening and Seed-Grow- ing, 1 00 Broom-Corn and Brooms, paper, 50 cts. ; ; cloth, 75 Brown's ‘l'axidermist’s Manual, — 1 OU Caldwell’s Agricultural Chemical An- alysis, 2 0 Coburn’s Swine Husbandry, 1 7é Corbett’s Poultry Yard and \Market, — paper, 50 cts.; cloth, vt Dadd’s Modern Horse Doctor, 12 mo., 1 5 Dadd’s American Cattle Doctor, ]2mo., 1 St Dadd’s American Cattle Doctor, dSvo. cloth, 2 5. Dadd’s American Reformed Horse Book, 8vo., cloth, 2 5 De Voe’s Market Assistant, 2 Downing’s Landscape Gardening, 6 dt Eggleston’s End of the World, lg Kyzleston’s Hoosier School- Master, 1 ~. Kuyieston’s Mystery of Metropolisville, 1 5 isvery Horse Owner's Cyclopedia, 3 7! famous Horses of America, 1 St Flax Culture, [Seven Prize Essays by practical growers}, 3f Flint (Charles L.) on Grasses,} 2 5 Fuller’s Grape Culturist, 1 5 Fuller's [ustrated Strawberry Culturist, 2 Fuller’s Small Fruit Culturist, 1 di Fulton’s Peach Culture, 1 & Geyelin’s Poultry Breeaing, 1 2: Gregory on Cabbages, 30 Gregory on Carrots, Mangold Waurtzels, Ete., 3t Gregory on Onion Raising, ot ow Gregory on Squashes, Harvis’s Insects Injurious to Vegetation, Ch’town, Feb. 14, 1878— Farm, Garden and Household, TWXMIE following Valuable Books will be sup- { DAILY Any one or more of these books sent, Post-Paid, direct, to any of our, regular price, which 75|M. Wi. GAULT, Plain, $4; Colored Engravings,} 6 50 ilarris on the Pig, 1 5 Henderson’s Gardening for Pleasure, 1 5 Henderson's Gardening for Profit, 15 Henderson’s Practical Floriculture, 1 ot Herbert’s Hints to Horse Keepers, l 7 Hooyer’s Book of Evergreens, 30 Hop Culture. By nine experienced culti- vators, 2. Hunter and Trapper, 1 i Hussey’s Home building, 5 0 Jobnson’s How Crops Feed,¥ 2 OW Johnson s How Crops Grow, 2 Lakey’s Village and Country Houses, 5 ti Loriug’s Farm-Yard Club ot Jotham,, — 3 ot Mrs. Cornelius’s Young Housckeeper’s Friend, 1 c¢ My Vineyard at Lakeview, i2 Nichol’s Chemistry of the Farm and Sea, 1 2: Onions—How to Raise Them Profitably, 2 Our Farm of Four Acres, paper, 30 cts. ; cloth, 6. Parsons on the Rose, 1 Phin’s How to Use the Microscope, 7: Phin’s Lightning Rods and their Con- struction, Ef Quinl.y’s Mysteries of Bee-Keepity, 15 Quincy (Hon. Josiah) on Soiling Cattle,” 1 2. (Juinn's Money in the Garden, 1 dt Quinn’s Pear Culture for Profit, 1 Piley’s Potato Pests, a., 00 cts.; cloth, {7. Roe’s Play and Profit in my Garcen, 1 & Stewait s@rrigation for the Farm, Gar- den anf Urchaad, 1 & Stewart’s Shepherd’s Manual, 1 5 Stoddara’s An Egg Farm, paper, 50 cts., cloth, 5 Thomas’s American Fruit Culturist, new edition, 3 75 Thomas’s Farm Implements and Ma-} chinery, 1 £0 Tim Bunker Papers; or, Yankee Far- ming, It Tobacco Culture. By fourteen experi- enced cultivators, 2E Waring’s Draining for Profit and Health, 1 &€ Waring’s Elements of Agriculture, I Weidenmann’s Beautitying Conntry Homes. <A superb quarto volume. 24 lithograph plates, in colors, 15 O€ White’s Cranberry Culture, 1 2 White’s Gardening for the South, 2 Wright’s Brahma Fowl, ; 2 5 Wright’s Practical Poultry-Keeper, 2 06 EXAMINER. Dominion, on receipt of One Dollar. rE WEEKLY EXAMINER, — Per- sons having relatives or friends abroad, ani desiring to keep them informed concerning P. E. Island, cannot do soin a better or cheap er way than by subscribing to THE WEEKLY Sent, postpaid, to any address in Great Britain, the United States, o the SURGEGN BENTIST, (LATE OF OTTAWA). Office, « « « Office Hours: 9a. m. to 6 p. m. an. 12, ’78—10i eod DR. H. A. PARKER, St. Lawrence Hotel. constantly being received by mail, at February 23, 1877—2i HEW SCHOOL BOOKS: BREMNER BROTHERS. TENDERS. No. 1 Wharf. Bros. & Co’s Uffice. the contract. est or any tender. - HODGSON & M D. Jan. Slet, 1578, es | Ch’town, Feb. 22, '78-—~Sw 3i why. EALED TENDERS will be received at the Office of the undersigned, until the 15th day of MARCH next, for the erection of a Warehouse and Coal-Shed on Peake's Plans and Specifications to be seen at Peake Good and approved se- curity will he required for the performance of We do not bind ourselves to accept the low | ments PEAKE BROS. & CO. ° THOWAS WORKMAN, M. P., President. roar ocd 7 ~ T. JAMES CLAXTON, Esquir® Vice-i’ resident, ; SUN MUDPU ATL, Cae AUTHORIZED CAPITAL. TP, AM) ACE ESURANCE {i} J $1,000,000, HEAD OFFICE: ST. JAMES STREET. squire, Managing Birector, * ommeneams 9) R. MACAULAY, Sec’y. CHARLOTTETOWN P. £. ISLAND HONORARY DIRECTORS: HON. J. F. ROBERTSON, * DANIEL DAVIES, OWEN CONNOLLY, :Eso., SION. L. C. OWEN, Messrs. JENKINS & MoLEUD, - Mepicar Examiners. = 102 — This Company issues Policies on all the Approves Meruors of Life and Accident Business, Its Motto is **EcoNomy aND Security.” HORACE HASZARD, Agent P. E. Island, Jan. 31, 13873— The Greatest Medical Discovery since the Creation of Man, or since the Commencement of the Christian Era. There never has heen a time when the heal- ing of so many dilferent diseases has been cnised by outward application as the present. It is an undisputed fact that over half of the entire population of the globe resort to the use of ordinary plasters. Dr. MELVIN’s Carsrcum Ponors PLASTERS are acknowledged by all avho have used then, to act quicker than any other plaster they ever before tried, and that one of these plasters will do more real service than a hundred of the ordinary kind, All other plasters are slow of action, and reqnire to bs worn continually to effect 2 cures but with t)o«e it is entirely dif- ferent: tho instant ou is applied the patient will feel its effect, Physicians in ali ages have thoronghly tested ail well know the effect of Capsicum; and it has always been more or Jess used as & medical agent for an outward amplication: but it ig only of very recent date that its advan- taves in 2 porous plaster have been discovered, Being, however, convinced of the wonderful eres effected. by Dr. MELvIN’s CAPrsicumM Porovs PLastens, and their superiority over al] other plasters, they now actually prescribe them, in thelr practice, for such diseases as rhemmatism, pain in tne side and back. and all sich cases as have required the nse of plasters or liaiment. After you have tried other plas- ters and liniments, and they have failed. and you wanta ceriam enre, ask your druggist for Dr. Menyiy's Capsicum Porous PLASTER, You can hamlly believe yourown convictions of its wonderful effects. Although powerful and quick in its action, you ean rely on its safety for the most delicate person to wear, as it is free from lead and other poisonous material commonly used in the manufacture ¢f ordin- ary plasters, One trial is a sufficient guarantee of its merits, and oue plaster will selijuandreds to vour fi iends, Ask vour druggist for Dr. MrLytn’s CAPST- cum Porous PLasrren,and take no other; or, on receipt of 25 cents. for one. $1 for five, or $2 fora dozen, they will be mailed, post paid, to any address in the United States or Canadas. MANUFACTURED BY TIE NOVELTY PLASTER WORKS Lowell, Mass, U.S. A., G. E. MITCHELL, Prooprietor, Manufacturers of Plasters and Plaster Compounds W.R. WATSON, Agent. (jecember 7, 1877. OUR STOCK CHEAPEST VET! n Connection with our yhean Dry Goods Sale We will offer our entire Stock of BOOTS & SHONS of about $2.099 worlh, at cost to clear, consisting of— Men's Men’s Nien’s Men's Men's Wellinston Boots, Leather Congress Boots, Feit Ceneress Beots, Larrigans & Overshoes, -_ SOME ONE AND ALL ANS GET BOOTS CHEAP J. B. MASBONALD, QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN, Jan. 9--ne pat tne eg een BLANK - BILL HEADS. BLANK STATEMENTS, —AND— HeEMOa MAaADra ms ey Neg, Os pe Hi BUSINSS GARDS, Feitand Leather Slippers, Women’s Leather Boots, (Elastic and Laced}, Women's Felt Boots, * $6 Women’s Slippers & Overshoes, ilisses’ & Children’s Leather Boots. | | ; | | | i | | i ; | | patent is granted, ~~FOR-—— GARRIAGE BUILDERS IS VERY COMPLETE. Over 50 Tons Bar Iron, sso Seen ae Steel, i ‘Carri: . 10, cu Aue. ee pk Nt tr al a CARRIACE & MILL DOLTS, RING BOLTS, STEP PALS, &6. which we offer to cash and prompt /payi customers at better prices than ever before, ” W.E.DAWSON &CO Jan. 18—2aw ar 3i cn Patents American & Forel Giimere, Smith & Co., Successors to C bipmaa, Losmer & Co, ATENTS procured in att counties, No fe ian advance, No charge for services until Prdimiaary cCxamivations ree, Our valuable pamphiet seat tree upon re jeipt of stamp. Buy no other Addre #3, GILMORE, SMITH & CO., @ Washington, D. ARREARS CF PAY, BOUNTY, ERO. Lottie a L, Officers, Soldiers and Sailors’ g¢ the Inte war, or their heirs, are ia Cxe@s cutilec te money trom the Goy which hus bee found to be due since feel ewe meat. Write ull history of service and stays amount of pry aud bonaty received, pie Cert.ficats of Acjutant Geaeral U. SP Qe showing service aud bonurable discharge there ‘rom, in place of discharge lost, procured tor/@ small fee. tucluse stamp to Gilmore & Co., and full re ply, with biaaks, wail be sent frer.’ PENSIONS. PENSIONS. 4 LL Federal OMecers, Soldiers and se li 7 om : ie : | <& wounded, ruptured, or injured, ia the »ftduty in the late war, and disabled thereby,” 40 obtain a pension. ' Widows, and minor children of Officers, Sol- ders and Sa lors, who have died sioce discharge vi disease contracted or wounds and injuries fe eived in the service aed in the line of duty, Cas procure pensivus by addressing Gilmore & Co, locreased rates fur pensioners obtained. “ Bounty Land Warrauts procured fur service i wars ;rior t») March 31855. There are no war tants granted for service in the late rebellion. Send stamp to Gilmore & Co., Wasiungtos D.C., full iastructions. July24 187". International Hotel ! (FORMERLY RANKIN BGvSR) Gorner of Pownal & Sydney Streety; * CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. 1 Private aud permanent Boarders can be ae coinmodatec on very moderate terms, during the winter season, at the International. ‘ ©. RICISAAC, Propri ° Dec. 19, 1877 - 2m TOprIeeghs REMEMBER We are the Aventis for the Last Steel Single-ply Springs, which stood the test so well last season. a Single Ply Sorings but’ | A&RMSTRONG’S PATENT! Cy MNP am I as ll urnished. prom INGS’ Corner Great Ge (A bove Mr. D. riginal color. Feb. 9-— pily and cheapiy, to order, ab the EXAMIN ER OFFICE, BUILDING, orge an:l Water Streets. Clothes Cleaning Depot, Larguharson’s Store), CorNeER oy QuceN & Donrcuwester Serers.r Renovating and Repairing Clothes. AR. PATTERSON guarantees that no matter how badly faced or stained gar- may be, he will restore them to their JOHN PATTERSON, 1} of: +f a. Sizes, to carry from 160 to 8590 Ths. All Warranted |! and sold at Manufacturers’ prices, SEND FOR PRICE LIST, W. E. DAWSON & CO. Jan. 18--2aw pat 3w Recitation & Dialogue Books AT BREMNER BROTHERS February 23, 1878,—-2i 60 PAIRS IN STOCK, 4 4 s -