aa eee a * oe j : ft : | : is 3 . deta sy ee eee it ntti. Ce <a es i eo. * Pan — ~ 2 ee. “ence = Re emi APS Ae . ae iiss a x esos HR BEY O* St Te a Lee tee 1“ . Ss a> “ -_ ee \ ; wn Oe ( From Chamber's Journal. ) : A Cast of the Net. T4E STORY OF A DETECTIVE OFFICER. CHAPTER-1fV.—ConcLvsion. Fdmund Byrle was never caaght, and, so far as we were concerned, was never heard of. And if it hadn't been for his father, I should never have understood a lot of things that puzzled me. [had given a pretty good guess as to how Miss Doyle came, in the first place, to inquire about Mr. Byrle and the detective, a very clover idea in itaelf, but, like many other clever things, it lost her the game. Mr. Byrle bad talked with his friend about em- ploying detectives, and Miss Doyle knowing about the Bank paper, and being always ‘on the watch, had gct hold of just enough to mislead her. She went out with Edmund Byrle to Turkey, I think, and was married to him, and old Mr. Byrle sent out & friend to see them, And it was in this way I got the particulars. It appears she knew me again—only as the limp- ing laborer of course when she saw me talking to Tilley, at the ferry. But she knew him as the detective at the Yarmouth Smack, and she thought, that although it might be all right, yet a detective was a dangerous customer, and his acquaintance might be danger- ous also. Consequently she tried to persuade Edmund to put off his journey, bat he wanted the money for the paper, and wouldn't listen to her. But he agreed, at last, to go aboard in another boat. which satisfied her, as she felt so yertain the skipper’s boat would _be dttaeked. As 1 have exclaimed, her peceantion saved him from fi! 2en years “nenal,’ which is the least he would gave had. Tke skipper was sent for life, having icilked a man in his arrest; but he didn’t live six months in prison; he never over the tremendous blow he re- ceived from Barney. All the reports spoke of his being # receiver of “stolen gvoods.” The Bank paper was never mentioned, for the authovities did not want to ansettle the public again, or +t them see what 2 narrow escape they had had. And now comes about the queerest part of my story. Call me names if 1 «iidn’t stop the thieving at Byrle’s factory as well as recover the Bank paper, killing two birds with one stone Jt wee all through my catching the bony ferryman. Finding that things was going hard with him, and hoping to make them easier, and being dis- appointed that those who were con- cerned with him did not come forward with money to provide for his defence, he “rounded” on them; he split on them all, and owned how he was. the means of taking the metal over a fence on his side of the water, the things being stolen by a mechanic and a watchman who were in league. (I see I have used the word “ fence;”’ this means a receiver of stolen goods ; but though I have been warned by the editor of this magazine, we can’t do without some slang words.) Peter Tilley got a tidy present, and was noted for promotion through this business. I was glad of it, for Peter was a capital chap—never wanted to play. first-fiddle; and I admire people of that disposition. ‘ I tell you what | did; I got the newest five-pound note of all what the Bank had gave me, and they were all very clean and crisp, and TE-wrapped old Bob the gatekeeper’s own sixpence init; and I went to the factory and I stood a pint of ale and says: ‘ Bob, here's your sixpence! ’ He hadn’t known exactly whol was till then, for I had made excuses as usual; and there I’m_ blessed if he didn’t quite cry over his. luck. Mr. Byrle, too, thought a lot of Bob’s kind- ness, for I told the old gent about it; and I heard that on that very account he put six shillings a week on Bob’s wages, and I was glad to hear it. They couldn’t keep me off the detec- tive staff after this; and though I am free to admit—now I am on my~pen- sion and nothing matters to me—that L only stumbled upon these discoveries by. aceident. I was praised to the skies’ by those for whom I worked. However, it all died away, as such things do; but I had managed to get my house at Pentonville, as I have hinted; and a pleasanter neighborhood I don’t know, or one more convenient for getting about. I had some rather edd adventures since I. haye lived in my street; you can’t. help seeing strange things if you keep your eyes open in London. But Ididn’t begin to tell about them. I have finished my account of the robberies at Byrle & Co.’s and my story finishes in consequence, nent ay ? i4 A Burlington man has invented a anethod of bottling up sunshine in the summer, which he proposes to sell at the price of a dollar a quart in the and Save Money, as we will allow 10 per FIRST CLASS FITS AND WORK- WANTED | FIRST CLASS STYLE, cent, discount for cash on our former low prices for Tailoring during the next three months. + ee MANSHIP GUARANTEED. Ladies’ Sacqnes and all kinds of Gentlemen’s Garments cut at a reasonable prices by Mr- Nicholson. JOSEPH A. MACDONALD, Sidney Street, one door east of the late Hon. D. Brenan’s. —S8in tues & sat. on aT Feb. ————— Clothes Cleaning Depot, Above Mr. D. Farquharson’s Store Y > Renovating and Repairing Clothes, N R. PATTERSON guarantees that no i i matter how badly faded or stained gar- ments may be, he will restore them to their original color. a JOHN PATTERSON, Feb. 9—~ RINGS! A Lot of Weavy 15-Caret PLAIN GOLD RINGS (assorted sizes and prices) received to-day. W. W. WELLNER. April 15-—31 DR. WILLIAM GRAYS -‘SPECIIIC MEDICINE, The Great English Rom- % m edy is an unfailing cure & & for Seminal Veakness,Spcr- jee my meiorried, Jnpotency, 1.00 pas jy all diseases that follow as@w n sequences of Self-Abuse; as Loss of Memcry, Univer-g EVAR cat Lassitude, Pain in the Sa VA tae Back, Dimness of Vision = VE br BeforeTaking, Premature Old Age, and After Taking. many other diseases that lead to lnsanity or Con- sumption and a pena a. ae $1 per par cage, or six packages for mail free of postage. an particulars in our pumping, which we desire to send free by mailtoevery one. Address WM. GRAY & CO., Windsor, Ontario, Canada. s@” Sold in Charlottetown by W. R. Wat- son, Dr. Dodd, C. D. Ravin, P. G. Fraser at Apothecaries Hall. and by all Druggists anywher. EVERYBODY'S PAPER. The BEST and CHEAPEST in the World ; for City, Village, and Coun- try, for Men, Women and Children in ali Stations : The American Agriculturist, so-called because started 36 years ago as a SHIP'S GEA Ch’town, March 25—4i eed Corner oF QuEEN & DorCHESTER STREETS. } Mm ON CONSIGNMENT : 1 Complete Octagon Windlass, 16 in. les 2 © © IML Hi IN 2 6s ‘6 6s 14 in. ' to bring their Cloth and Trimmings to 1 Capstain, No. 3 size. Joseph A, McBonald’s 6 és No.2 “« REPOT ‘8 No. 3 Atlantic Cabooses and j Wtensils, : —ALSO-- ave iy Clothing Made to Order in 5 psp von -0 (ee G Complete Sets Tireshing Mill Gear. =e < CARVELL BRO'S, Agents Pictou Iron Foundry, = 6 een Bo Af | cl : ms ‘mm A gy pet FOR SALE AT OUR STORE: QUINTALS No, | CODFISH, 20 Quintals POLLOCK, 80 Boxes Smoked HALIBUT, 50 Boxes Preserved LOBSTERS. HASZARD BROS, AGO Ch’town, Feb. 25 M - ecueiuns Het ele GUSBEF be we. Vien \ The Greatest Medical Discevery since the Creation of Man, or since the Commencement of the Christian Era. ea ae! a Ld > ' By Ne There never has been @ time when the heal- ing of so many different diseases has been caused by outward application as the present. Tt is an undisputed fact that over half of the entire population of the globe resort t0 the use of ordinary plasters. - DR. MELVIN’s CAPSICUM Ponovus 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 mdre real service than a hundred of the ordinary kind. All other plasters are slow of action, and require to be worn continually to éffeet a cure; ‘but with these it is entirely dif- ferent: the instant 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 mor’ 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 havo leen discovered. Being, however, convineed of the wonderful eures effected by Dr. MrLyin’s CAPsicUM Porous PLAsTers, 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 baek, and all such eases as have required the use of plasters orliniment. After you have tried other, plas- ters and liniments, and they have failed, and you want a certain cure, ask your diuggist for Dr. MELVIN’s CAPSICUM POROUS PLASTER. You can hardly believe yourown convictions of its wonderful effects. Although powerful and uick in its action, you can rely on its safety or the most delicate person to wear, as it is free from lead and other poisonous material commonly used in the manufacture ef ordin- ary plasters. One trial is a sufficient guarantee of its merits, and one plaster will seli hundreds to your friends, Ask your druggist for Dr. MELvrn’s CAPSI- cuM POROUS PLASTER, and take no other; or, on receipt of 25 cents for one, $1 for five, or $2 for a dozen, they will be 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. f. WATSON, Agent Rural Journal—hence its name—but greatly enlarged in size and scope, without change of name, until it is now a large splendid, /élus- trated Family Journal, adapted to the Wants, Wishes, Pleasure, and Improvement of eve member or of every family in City, Village and Country—full of PLAIN, PRACTI. CAL, USEFUL, INTERESTING, RELI ABLE, and HIGHLY INSTRUCTINE IN FORMATION, It has departments helpful to mensckcepers and for Youth and Children, both /nteresting and Instructive. Every volume contalns 550 to 650 Ori* ginal Engravings, finely executed and well printed on fine paper, which are PLEAS ING and INSTRUCTIVE. - sme No one can read a volume without get ting numerous hints that will pay back many times the cost of the paper, TERMS, $1.60 «@ Year, (sent post-paid). Four copies $5.20 ($1.30 each). Ten copies $12.00 ($1.20 each). Try it, in connection with the Werexkzy EXAMINER, for-one year. ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, Publishes, 245 Broadway, New York FRESH SEEDS A SMALL STOCK of Vegetable and Flower Seeds, of Extra Superior Quality, for Hot Beds and Early Sowing, just received and for sale at HASZARD’S SEED & BOOKSTORE. March 28—2i mon & thur STADACONA Fie and Life !nsurance Company, N? fiC& is hereby given that the Board of Directors of this Company have made a further cal) of Four insialmenis, ot Five per Cent. each, on the Subscribed Capital of the Company, payable at its Office, No. 93 St. Peter Street, Quebec, as follows :— Five per Cent. on or before the Tenth d. y @o! August, 1877; Five od Cent. on or before the Tenth day of November, 1877 ; Five per Cent. on or before the Eleventh day of February, 1878 ; Five per Cent. on or befora the & of May, 1878. : By orderof the Board. CRAWFORD LINDSAY, Secretar levenih day December 7, 1877 —— :0:-——— The Promoter and Perfector of Assimilation. The Eecfermer/ and Vitalizer of the Blood. _The Producer and invigorater of Nerve and Museie. The Builder and Supporter of Brain Power. Fellows’ Compound Syrup is composed of Ingrediants identical with those which consti tute. Healthy Blood, Muscl# and Nerve and Brain Substance, whilst Life itself is directly ? dependant upon some of them. By its union with the blood and its effect upon the museles, re-establishing the one and toning the other, it is capable of effecting the following results :— It will displace or wash out tuberculons matter, and thus cure Consumption. Da ce il Rea ee By increasing Nervous. and Muscglar Vigor, it will cure Dyspepsia, fecble or interrupted action of the Heart and Pa!pitation, Weakness of Intellect c2 used by grief, weary, overtax or irregular habits, Bronchitis, Acute or Chronie, ; ere Yrs Congestion of the Lungs, even in the most/ alarming stages. It cures Asthma, Loss of Voice, N curalgia, St. Vitus Dance, Epileptic Fits, Whoopin Cough, Nervousness, and is a most woude adjunct to other remedies in sustaining life during the process of Diptheria. _Do not be deceived by remédics bearing a similar name; po other preparation is a substi tute for this under any circumstances. Look out for the name and address J. I. FELLOW Do, st. John, N. B., on the yellow wrapper in watermark, which is seen by hold- mg 8 paper before the light. rice $1.50 per Bottle, six for $7.50. Sold by all Druggists, Dec. 6, 1877. & place te get your Printing done is at winter, soa Dae erat i NS IRE tem Oe une 91877 ] the EXAMUENER Printing Rooms. Sen R. DAMASKS,: SPRING OODS | Ex §. §. Northern Light, AL Dae W Lito BE SHOWN ON MONDAY the 4th March. 200 PATTERNS CANAHIAN TWEEDS —ALSQ—- BLACK & BLUE BROADCLOTHS, Worsted & Fancy COATINGS! a SINGLE GARMENTS and SUITS made upin the best styles and at the shortest notice. OU F&F TAILORS & DEPARTRIENT A GREAT SUCCESS. A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT _ Men's and Boys’ Hats.| We offer Sprcrat InpucEMENTs in House Furnishing Goods— ‘REPPS, CRETONNES,) MOREENS, ETG, SHEETINGS, PILLOW COTTON, WINDOW HOLLAND,' White & Grey CALICO,SETC CARPETINGS, HEARTH: RUCS, MATTS & MATTING, FLOGR GiL CLOTH ET A CHOICE AXSORTMENT OF Paper Hangings. GEO. DAVIES & 60., March 2—1m 2aw] London House: /Dadd’s Modern Horse Doctor, 12 mo., | Dadd’s Ainerican Reformed Horse, Book, ‘Mrs. Cornelius’s ‘Young rs m™ WEST OF ENGLAND HOUSE Great Beorge Street, : SELLING. OFF, HE subseriber, in ere thanks to hig customers for their patronage the time he has been in business, begs to inform them and the public generally that he intends closing up his present business and will sell ag, REDUCED PRICES, the Stock now on hand, until The First Day of May. Any person wishing to go into the Dry Goods and Grocery Business will be treated liberally for the purchase of Entire Stock & Premises | with immediate possession if required. All persons indebted will please make. imp mediate payment of their respective accounts, W. W. STUMBLES, . or : ri —l ‘ 2U, . 1$78 00D BOOKS Farm, Garden and Household, P @\HE following Valuable Books will be sup: i plied from the Office of the Dany Examiner. Any one or more of these books will be sent, Post-Paid, direct, te any .of our readers, on receipt of the regular price, which is named 2gainst each book :— Allen’s (R. L.& L. F:) New Amer caa Farm. Book, Allen’s (L. F.) American Cattle, American Weeds and Useful Plants, Allen’s (ft, F.) Rural Architecture, Atwood’s Jountry and Suburban Houses, Baker’s Practical and Scientific Fruit Culture, Barry’s Fiuit Garden, Bommer’s Method of Making Manures, Breck’s Nzw Book of Flowers, Brill’s Farm-Gardening and Seed-Grow- Feb. mR tORD ee to S$ skSS SESE ing, Broom-Cort and Brooms, paper, 50 cts, 5° . cloth, Brown’s Taxidermist’s Mannal, Caldwell’s Agricaltural Chemical Aan-: alysis, Coburn’s wine Husbandry, Corbett’s Poultry Yard and ..Market,. . paper, 50 ets.; cloth, ™ bo — » _— Dadd’s Aierican Cattle Doctor, 12me,, Dadd’s American Cattle Doctor, S8vo.., cloth, to Svo., cloth, oil De Voe’s Market Assistant, Downing’: Landscape Gardeni Eggleston s End of the World, Eggleston s Hoosier School-Master, Eggleston s Mystery of Metropolisville, Every Horse Owner’s Cyclopedia, Famous Eorses ot America, Flax Culture, [Seven Prize Essays by pract.cal growers], Firat (Charles L.) on Grasses, Fuller’s Grape Culturist, Fuller's [lustrated Strawberry Fuller’s Smali Fruit Culturist, Fulton’s Peach Culture, Geyelin’s Poultry Breeding, Gregory cn Cabbhages, , Gregory ¢n Carrots, Mangold Wurtzels, te. Sate a Gregory on Onion Raising, Gregory on Squashes, ae Harris's Satta to Vegetation, Plain, $4; Colored Engravings, © Harris on the Pig, OF 34 so] Henderson’s Gardening for Pleasure, Henderson’s Gardening for Profit, Henderson’s Practical ‘Floriculture, Herbert’s Hints to Horse Keepers, Hooper’s Book of Evergreens, Hop Culture. By nine experienced culti- vators, Hunter and T ; Hussey’s Home Buil i Johnson’s How Crops Feed, gone ar Crops Grow, 2s ey’s Village and Count ouses, Loring’s F. ar Yatd Club of Jotham, Housekeeper’s Friend, oseIso! My Vineyard at Lakeview, ey 92 Nichol’s Chemistry of the Farm and Sea, Onions-—How to Raise Them Profitably, Our ne of Four Acres, paper, 30_ cts. ; cloth, Parsons on the Rose, Phin’s How to Use the Mic Phin’s Lightning Rods and their Con- bet GS be et BD Culturist, —— a ome OD a= SSS" BRessess Sysssss & SSR 3s sz CO ee ee ee ee Sssssse sussss te Gt 8g orm ti SERB. a we, * Q ore hes uinby’s Mysteries of Bee-Keeping, . j Quiney (Hon. Josiah) on Soiling Cattle, 1 Quinn's Money in the Garden, 1. Quinn’s Pear Culture for Profit, L Piley’s Potato Pests, pa., 50-cts.; cloth, 75 foe's Play and Profit in my Garden, i 0 Stewart's Irrigation for the Farm, Gar- - den and Orchard, 50 Stewart's Seepherd’s Manual, t 50 Btaddasd's An Egg Farm, paper, 50 cts.,. __ cloth, Thomas’s American Fruit Culturist, new edition, Thomas’s Farm Implements. and Ma- chinery, Tim Bunker Papers; or, Yankee Far- ming, Tobacco Culture, By. fourteen experi- enced cultivators, ' ; Waring’s Draining for Profit and Health, 1 Wéaring’s Elements of Agriculture... 1, Weidenmann’s Beautitying . Conntry coe. A —— quarto volume. t ‘plates, in colors, White’s Cr: 24 a Oaltere,, , White's Gardening for the South, Wright's Brahma Fowl, Wright's Practical Poultry-Keeper, Ch’town, Feb. 14, 1878-— DR. Fi. A, of P. SURGEON DENTI I (LATE OF OTTAWA). Office, . . . St. Lawrence . Oilice Hours; 9 a m. to 6p, m>- Jan, 18, ’78—l@ieod = 5 3.78 1D . 1 50 25 ‘ . ‘ | : | sp Ie OFS Say