e | i ry A Ser — a Se ee acinar xa 2 =3 a. re nor a? terranes oa: a $23 Se eS = vs —. a i a , Ee, aa Sa nn Sn oO EL nS re a ee comma eiinie caauemmeetanrtial f . Fs z Pe eee ee eo C «th 4 snl tnrnamaasansteteiilipaselnte Ew ne — _ rs Pi o , . c i e D | tense that she could expross it only by "My Boy.” A little crib in ‘‘ Mother's room; A little face with baby bloom ; A little head with curly hair ; A little tub, a little chair ; A little while for bumps and cries ; A httle while to make ‘* mud pies ;” A little doubting wonder, when A little pair of hands are clean ; A little ball, a top to spin; A little ‘‘ ulster” belted in ; A little pair of pants, some string ; A little bit of everything ; A little blustering, boisterous air ; A little spirit of ‘don’t care ;” A little tramping off to school ; A little shrug at woman's rule ; A little odor of cigar ; A little twilight taik with ma ; A littie earnest study—then A little council grave again ; A little talk about ‘‘ my girl ;” A little soft moustache to twirl ; A little time of jealous fear ; A little hope the way to clear ; A little knowledge of the world ; A little self-conceit down hurled ; A little manly purpose new ; A little woman, waiting, true ; A little wedding gay, at eve ; A little pang the home to leave ; A little mother lone at dawn A little sigh—‘*my boy” has gone! THE WIDOW GRANT. (Concluded. ) ‘They are unique,’ said Miss Minnie, and straigntway the word ‘ unique’ was in the mouth of every one of the troop of followers. The widow was seriously in danger of becoming the fashion. In the meantime Rath dropped: in to sce her whenever she came to town on errands for her household. The child-like woman and the womanly child grew to love each other very soon with no common lover. The confidence grew stronger be- tween them, and soon Mrs. Grant felt as if she had known about the minister’s family all her life. Many were the visits that she made to Harry’s grave. Often in the bright May afternoons she took a trifle of work and sat by the green mound, now purpling all over with spring violets. ‘ He shall be my soldier,’ she said to herself. ‘On Decoration Day I will come here with the loveliest flowers I can find in the early morning long be- fore the town is stirring.’ She kept her word. At dawn she stepped out into the rosy light, with a basket full of roses and pansies, verbe- nes and mignonettes. Through the silent streets she hurried, meeting no one, thinking only of the love and grief throbbing in the country’s heart for her dead sons. The cemetery lay serene in the glow of anew day. Birds were flitting about here and there among the new gravel, and now and then a gush of music quivered through the air, A shaft from the rising sun shot athwart Harry’s grave as the lady approached it. She smiled as she saw it. ‘It’ agood omen,’ she said—‘ A sym- bol of the ligbt in which the spirit dwells.’ Once by the grave, she sat down and began weaving her roses into a wreath for the young soldier. The pansies al- ready bound ina dainty boquet, were placed upon his breast. Sitting there, twining the white blos- soms with the dewy leaves, she mur- mured a prayer—the Litany of Decor- ation Day : ‘God have mercy upon all mothers who weep to-day; give them the true blossoms of consolation, the lilies of peace, the roses of triumphant faith.’ ‘Amen,’ said a deep solemn voice at her side. She turned quickly, blushing searlet, and saw a tall, grave man standing near. His hands were full of flowers, and it was plain that he, too, had come to deco- rate the grave of a soldier boy. The man and woman looked into each other’s face, and then moved by the same impulse, they clasped hands with a close, cordial pleasure. ‘You are the lady who has been so good to my little Ruth?’ said he. ‘You are Harry’s father ?’ said she. It was a strange introduction ; but five minutes’ conversation there in the fresh dawn, by Harry’s peaceful grave, brought them nearer together than days of society intercourse would have done. It touched the weary aching heart of the father very deeply to see this sweet stranger bringing flowers to his soldier boy, and the widow was inxpressibly cheered in return by the sympathy and tenderness to which she had so long been a stranger. Mr. Fredericks told Mrs. Grant that he should bring Ruth and Sally to town later to see theceremonies. Thereupon the invitation was accepted. The baby wore her new cap, and looked for all the world like a meadow daisy. Mary Grant feli in love with Sally at first sight, and, after an hour's acquaintance, the little one followed her new friend round as if she had known her all her life. RE TP affectionate looks and actions—now stroking her father’s cheek and kissing him, now leaning on her friend’s shoul- der with her arm around her neck. The visit was the first of many. Un- der the new inspiration of loving and friendship, the minister’s sermons and the miliners bonnets prospered alike. After a hard week’s work, it was & delicious rest to walk to the little coun- , try church and sit in the pew with Ruth | and Sally, listening to the gospel of faith and charity. And so it fe!l out, that, by and by, they concluded that it would be wiser on the whole to make one family. There was x milliner needed at Hunt's Corners. as well as a_ wife, mother and housekeeper; and Mary Grant undertook, with remarkable cheerfulness, this fourfold relation. The machinery of the household began running with great regularity and pre- cision from the day that the minister married the widow. The new wife made dainty bonnets and pretty trifles of lace; a new housekeeper ruled the kitchen, the minster worked in his study, and Ruth went to school. ‘It was my children who brought us together,’ said the minister, on next Decoratien Day, as the two stood among the graves with their offering of flowers. ° : ‘ Yes, little Saily’s Normandy cap| saved me from despair, and Harry’s grave brought us face to face.’ d r s 3K = = i ee a ‘ > . Ne 3 Siete 4 iPox a Se leaned PALI GCAEACHLDt po OUSIBEAS SO The Greatest Medical Discovery sines the Creation of Man, or sinee the Commencement of the Christian Era. Thoro never has been a time when the heal- ing of so many different diseases has Deen ‘eaused 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 Capsicum Porous PLASTERS are acknowledged by all who have used them, 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 reguire to be worn continually to effect a cure; but with these it is entirely dif- ferent: the ‘nstant one is applied the patient will feel its effect. Physicians in all ages have thoroughly tested and well know the effect of Capsicum; and it has always been more or less used as a medical agent for an outward application; but it is only of very recent date that its advan- tages in a porous plaster have been discovered. Being, however, convinced of the wonderful cures effected by Dr. MELVIN’S CAPSICUM Porous PLASTHRS, and their superiority over all other plasters, they now actually prescribe them, in their practice, for such diseases as rheumatism, pain in the side and back, and all such cases as have required the use of plasters orliniment. After you have tried other plas- ters and liniments, and they have failed, and ou want a certain eure, ask your druggist for Dr. MELVIN’s CAPSICUM POROUS PLASTER. You can hardly believe your own convictions of its wonderful effeets, Although powerful and uick in its action, you can rely on its safety or the most delicate ,pecnon to wear, as it is free from lead and other poisonous material commonly used in ths manufaeture ef ordin- ary plasters. One trial is a sufficient oe of its merits, and one plaster will sell hundreds to your friends. your druggist for Dr. MELVIX’s CAPSI- cuM Porovs PLASTER, and take no other; or, on reeeipt of 25 cents for one, $1 for five, or $2 for a dozen, es mailed, post paid, to any address in the United States or Canadas. MANUFACTURED BY THE NOVELTY PLASTER WORKS Lowell, Mass., U.S. A., G. E. MITCHELL, Proprietor, Manufacturers of Plasters and Plaster Compounds W. R. WATSON, Agen December 7 1877 ‘ Salmon Angling. DrraRTMENT oF Marine & FISHERIES, FISHERIS BRANCH, Orrawa, 24th January, 1879. RITTEN OFFERS will be received to 30th April next, for the SALMON ANGLING PRIVILEGES of the following rivers :— River Kegashka (North Shore.) ‘* Washecootai do ‘* Romaine do ‘* St. John do ‘* Corneille do ‘* Agwanus do ‘* Calumet do ‘* St. Margaret do ‘* Trout do ‘* Escoumains do ‘* Portnenf do Dartmouth (Gaspe) little Cascapedia (Baie des Chaleurs.) Malbaie (near Perce.) Grand River do Kedgewick (Restigouche. ) ** Magdalen (South Shore.) ‘¢ Jupiter (Anticosti Island.) ‘* Salmon do Rent per annum to stated: payable in ad- vance. Leases to run for from one to five years. Lessees to employ guardians at private cost. By order, W. F. WHITCHER, Commissioner of Fisheries. Feb. 12, 1879, UBSCRIBE for the DAILY EX Ruth was in a state of delight so in- MORTCACE SALE. To be sold, by Public Auction, at the Court ~ House in Summerside, in Prince County, on Tuesday. the Eighteenth day of February nexté, at the hour of one o'clock, in the afternoon, under a Power of Sale in an Indenture of Mortgage, dated the fifth day of October, 1878, made between William Thomas Mill, of the one part, and John Brecken, Frederick De St. Croix Brecken, and Robert Robinson Hodgson, trustees, of the other part, — All that tract, piece or parcel of land, situ L. ate on Lot Kighteen, and bounded and described as follows : Commencing at a stake fixed on the shore of Indian River; thence by a line running south twenty degrees west until it meets the boundary line dividing Lots or Townships Numbers eighteen and nineteen; thence running due east on said division line for the distance of thirty-two chains; thence by a line running north twenty degrees east until it reaches Indian River, aforesaid; thence following the course of the River to the place of commencement, making and including fifty- six (56) acres of land be the same, a little more er less, in Prince County, aforesaid. 2. Also, all that other tract, piece or parcel of Land, situate on Lot or Township Twenty- five, in Prince County, aforesaid, and bounded and described as follows, that is to say : Com- mencing at a stake fixed on William Mc- Murdy’s eastern boundary line at the south. east corner of Joshua Harding’s Lot; from thence running south for the distance of forty- four chains; thence east eleven chains and fifty links; thence north forty-four chains; thence west eleven chains and tifty links, to the afore- said stake or place of commencement, making and including fifty (50) acres of land, a little more or less, being the southern moiety of one hundred acres of land; and being bounded on the north by the northern moiety thereof, known as Joshua Harding’s lot; on the east by ——Gay’s land, onthe south by Keefe’s land, and on the west by the said William MacMurdy’s land. 3. Also, all that other tract, picce or parcel of land, situate on Lot or Township Number Nineteen, bounded and described as follows, that is to say : Commencing at a square stake fixed in the south-west angle of land in the oc- curation of Peter Gillis; thence running north six degrees and forty-five minutes, east four- teen chains and two links to division line be- tween Lots Nineteen and Eighteen; thence along said line westwardly twenty-six chains and sixty-nine links to the entrance of Barbara Weit River; thence along the course of the said river to the place of beginning, containing twenty-nine acres and forty perches, be the same, a little more or less. 4, All that tract, piece or parcel of land situate on Lot or ‘Township Number Eighteen, and bounded and described as follows, that is to say : Commencing at a stake set on the shore of Richmond Bay in the centre of a road on the line of Lots Eighteen or Nineteen; thence northwardly along said shore sueha distance as shall make fifteen chains and sixty- five links (15 chains and 65 links) at a right anglefrom said division line; thence north eighty-nine degrees east or _ parallel with the said division line forty-eight chains and fifteen links (48 chains, 15 links) or to lands the property of the said William Thomas Mill, thence south twenty degrees west to said division line to the stake at the place of commencement, containing seventy- eight acres of land, a little more or less. 5. Also aH that other tract, piece or parcel of land situate on Lot or Township Number Twenty-five (25), ia Prince county, and bounded and described as follows, that is to say, commencing ata stake set in the north boundary line of land in possession of the widow Keiff or Lawrence Malone, being the southeast angle of fifty acres of land the prop. erty of William T. Mill, from thence by a line running north twelve chains and fifty links, thence east nine ehains and fifty-five links or to the east boundary line of land in possession of William Gay, thence south to the first mentioned land, thence westwardly along said land to the stake at the place of commence- ment, containing eleven and nine-tenths acres, a little more or less. 6. Also all that other tract, piece or parcel of land situate on Lot or Township Number Nineteen, in Prince County, bounded as fol- lows, that is to say, commencing at the southeast angle of land in the possession of Neil McDonald, from thence running west along said land twelve chains and twenty links (12 chains, 20 links) or to the southwest angle of said land, and from thence two points running two parallel lines south thirty-one (31) chains or to the south boundary line of plot G containing thirty-seven and one-half (373, acres of land, be the: same a little more or less, together with all buildings and improve ments thereon and appurtenances to the same belonging. For further particulars apply at theoffice of Messrs. Hodgson & McLeod, Solicitors, Char- lottetown. Dated the 13th day of January, A. D 18 9. JOHN BRECKEN, : FREDERICK De Sr. C. BRECKEN. R. R. HODGSON, By E. J. HODGSON, their attorney. Jan. 13—law ts prog HAVE YOU SEEN I? 3 SEEN WHAT ? BOREHAM’S New Boot & Shoe Store, OPPOSITE THE MARKET HOUSE. JUST OPENED, MEN’S, WOMEN’S, BOYS’, MISSES’ and CHILDREN’S BOOTS, SHOES & RUBBERS ! IN GREAT VARIETY. COME and have your feet PROTECTED. COME and have your feet kept WARM. COME and have your feet kept DRY. W. R. BOREHAM, SOUTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE, AMINER the Cheapest and most newsy Paper published in the Province, : CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E, I. Nov. 26—3m wed & sat Te arnt atamnaitienasaneene erga “AILS will be closed daily at this Office, M (Sundays excepted) at 5 o'clock, p. m., and forwarded via Cape Traverse, to all laces abroad. : ' The British Mail for Canadian Packet sail- ing from Halifax on Saturdays, will close here at $8 o'clock, p. m., every W ednesday ; and for the fortnightly packet sailing from falifax on the first and third Tuesday im February, it will close here on the previous Friday even- ng at 8 o'clock p. m. ‘Mails for all places West_of Charlottetown and Summerside receiving Mails by Railwa train or Postal Car, will close here at 7 o'cloc .m., daily. ; Mails ro Georgetown and Souris Kast and all places on the route to those points, will close daily at 2.25 p. m. Post Office closes at 8 o’clock, p. m. A. A. MACDONALD, * Postmaster. Post Office, Ch'town, 2ist Jan’y. 1879. lm GENUINE NEW YORK SINGER SEWING MACHINES TILE BEST IN THE WORLD, — Buy only the GENUINE. Teware of COUNTERFEITS. None genuine with out our Trade Mark stamped on the arm of the Machine. THE SINGER MANUF'ING CO. 1877 SOLD 282,512 Machines. being the iargest number of Sewing Machines ever sold by any Company in a single year. Machines sol:i on monthly payments. Rorert Youne, Sole Agent of P. E. Island, South Side Queen Square, Charlottotown. Nov. 30, 1878—2aw tf “THE GNAMORADO A DRAMA IN V. ACTS, —BY— BHUNTEHR DUVAR HE above interesting book is for sale at all the Bookstores on the Island. Col. Duvar is happy in having selected for the theme of his drama, one of the most ro- mantic incidents of a romantic and soldierly ‘time. ‘The scene is laid in Spain, amid all the accessories of grave and gay, love and chivalry, poetry and song, with room for the display of many types of character,—knights and ladies, priests and soldiers, courtiers and peasants, cooks and clowns. Many lyricsin the author’s best style are interspersed in the dialogue, which is, in general, quaint and sparkling. Price: Paper cover, 50 cents ; in cloth, 75 cents. Summerside, Jan. 25, 1879— “GET THE BEST.” 1879. 1879. THE MOBNING HERALD anne h HALIFAX, N.S. Daily, Tri-Weekly, Weekly, $6.60 $3.00 $1.25 POSTAGE PREPAID THE MORNING HERALD publishes the fullest and most reliable SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE, Arrivals, Clearances, Reports, Disasters, Freights, &c., &c., in parts of the world. Also—a complete list of Vessels in Halifax Harbor, with destinations, &c., prepared by an experienced and competent Editor. THE MORNING HERALD is the leading Financial Newspaper, and pub- lishes a coe weekly review of Financial Affairs, Business troubles, &e., &e. THE MORNING HERALD publishes the very latest detailed TELEGRAPHIC NEWS FROM ALL PARTS OF THE WORID, Great Britain, East and West Indies, Austra- lia, France, Germany, Austria, Russia, Turkey, United States, Sovth America, &c. ~~ Also— the very latest despatches from all the _ Chief Cities of the Dominion, Ottawa; Montreal, Toronto, Quebec, Hamilton, London, St. John, &¢., &e. THE MORNING HERALD’S FREEHOLD FARM Te en eneinet arenes FOR SADE. BE SOLD, by private contract, that valuable FARM of 50 acres of excellent Land, situate at Graham’s Road, Township No. 20, now in possession of Aineas Brenan, This well-known Farm is eligibly situated in the immediate cicinity of Churches, Schools and Mills, and is in a good state of cultivation, For terms and particulars apply at the offiee of Longworth & Shaw, Solicitors, Ch’town. F. 8S. LONG WORTH. Ch’town, Dec. 23, 1875-—- AUCTION! To be sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, on TUES DAY, the Twenty-fourth day of DECEM BER NEXT, at the hour of Twelve o’clock, noon, at the Court House, Char lottetown, under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained in an Inden- ture of Mortgage, bearing date the Third day of February, A. D. 1873, and made between John Henesy, of the one part, and Francis Kelly, of the other part— LL that tract of land and premises situate lying and being as follows, that is to say : Commencing on the north side of the Fort Augustus Road, at the south-east angle of a farm of land in the possession of Thomas Ceerley ; from thence north fifty chains, or to the northern boundary of the said John Henesy’s land ; thence east five chains ; thence south to the said read, and from thence west to place of commencing, containing by estima- tion Twenty-five acres, a little more or less, and being part of Lot or Township Number Thirty-six, in Queen’s County, together with all rights, members and appurtenances ,there- to belonging. For further particulars apply to Messrs. Hopveson & McLrep, Solicitors, Charlette- town. Dated this Twenty-seventh day of Novem ber, A. D. 1878. FRANCIS KELLY, Mortgagee. Dec. 2, 1S78-——law t sale THE above Sale is hereby postponed till TUESDAY, the Twenty-fifth day of February 1879, then to take place at the hour and plage above mentioned . FRANCIS KELLY, Mortgagee. Prince Edward Island, IN CHANCERY. SILAS BARNARD, Executor of the last Will and Testament of James Coles, deceased, Coniplainant. ——~-AND-- THOMAS REILLY, CATHERINE REILLY and MARY G. REILLY, by her } Guardian, Haaonah Reilly, Defendants, In pursuance of a decree made in this suit by His Honor the Vice Chancellor, i date the nineteenth day of November, instant, A. D. 1878, there will be sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, on Monday, the twenty-fourth day of February next,, A. D. 1879, at twelve o’clock, noon, at the Supreme Court House in Charlotte. town, in Queen’s County— LL that Tract, Piece or Parcel of Land A being part of Town Lot Number Kighty- ninein the third hundred of Town Lots in Charlottetown, commencing at the northeast angle of said Town Lot, on the southeast edge of Kent Street ; thence, following the course of the same, westwardly for the distance of eighty-six feet and eight inches ; thence, by a right-angle line with said Kent Street, south- eastwardly for the distance of forty-eight feet and six inches ; thence, by a line el with said Kent Street, eastwardly for the distance of thirty feet ; thence, by a right angle there- with, northwestwardly for the distance: of six feet ; thence by a line running northeast. wardly to the southwest angle of the dwelli house ; thence, by a line at right angles wi the course of Prince Street, eastward! thirty- one feet to the westward edge of said Prince Street ; thence, following the course of the same, northwestwardly thirty-one feet to the ince, of commencement ; together with tbe uildings and improvements thereon and the vdpurtenances thereunto belonging. ated this Twentieth day of November, A. D. 1878. T. NEALE HAVELAED, Nei McLeop, nee Solicitor for Complainant. nov 22 lawts NOW READY: ait Great National Wo rk! ART ILLUSTRATIONS By C. R. TUTTLE, HE new and only Itiusrrarep A of the Dommnton or Canapa. Jon lished. The most ular and saleable Work of the day. in2 Magnificent Grand Quarto Volumes, 600 pages in each, or in monthly numbers at 50 cents. Beautifully illustrated and handsomely bound, with 28 fine Steel Plates, 20 original Wood Cuts, and 200 Photo Lithograph Engravings, on stone, of our promi- enterprise in the field of PARLIAMENTARY REPORTS| is unequalled. ! THE HERALD’S OTTAWA CORRESPONDENCE is universally admitted to be the fullest, freshest and most readable of any paper in the Dominion. The Propietors of the Morning Heratp aim to give their readers a First-Class Newspaper. THE MORNING HERALD —HAS THE— LARGEST CIRCULATION of any Newspaper in Nova Scotia, and is The Best Paper to Advertise in. nent public men, AGENTS WANTED in every to o— inP. E. I. Send for fee onl Soe av once, D. DOWNIE & CO., Sol i Box 1964, Montreal. spies NICHT SOIL. FFXHE Subscriber, having obtain T tract to remove ni he soil — the Ga no one else is authorized to do so. . Night Soil only removed between 8 p- ™m. and 6 a. m.,—at 75 cents per hogshead, Payment to be made on y to me. &Z Orders left at the Police Station will be Subscribe for the ‘ Herald,” Dec, 28, 1878, promptly attended to. DANIEL GORDON, | Charlottetown Royalty, ) 3m wed & th Noy. 13, 1878, ne patm & tues ae