ae 2 a ( From Chambers Journal. ) A Cast of the Net. THE STORY OF A D™TECTIVE OFPICER. ~_— ae CHAPTER U1 The bony ferrvman, in his tarpaulin coat and hat, was’t there this afternoon ; and very sloppy and miserable all the boats looked ; and as the tide fell lower and lower, the great broad bed of viver-mud grew broader, and the path to the ferry-boat grew longer, and still I kept my watch, and meant to keep it. 1 must own, however, that I did not expect to see anything worth notice, for what could there be? But some- tixaes, you know, in our business, it is as necessary to watch to make sure there is nothing being done, as it is to make sure that some important move- ment is going on. There was an oyster-smack not fifty yards from me that was left on the shingle or mud when the tide went down; and there was a man smoking his pipe on the deck of that oyster- smack, just as I was smoking mine in the arbor, and when night came, and the river got dark, and you couldn't make anything out of it but a great black space, with a hollow sound of the wind moaning over it and of the water lapping on the shore as the tide rose again—then there was a lantern burning on the deck of that smack, and there was a similar lantern burn- ing in my arbor; but the light was shown open on board of the smack, and mine was a dark-lantern (so was the other) with the light hid. But [ was perfectly well aware that the man aboard the smack never took his eyes off me while it was light, and that after dark he watched me to see if | eves my lantern. I didn’t show it; but if ] had, there would have been a Thames police galley and five armed constables alongside of that hard in a couple of | minutes. CONTINUED, CHAPTER LY. Long after it had grown quite dark, all remained quite, and at last [resolved upon making a moye. I had deter- mined upon fetching Peter Tilley. I had plenty of assistance, but I thought I should like to have Peter with me. So I went down to the ferry; a gas- light which burned at the cornei showed me before | left my post that the bony ferryman was not there; and choosing a pretty good boat, with a strong young fellow to pull, I got in. ft was a most unpleasant night; as dark as pitch, which was bad enough, |: but every now and then it lightened, which was worse, as if dazzled my eyes, and made me think we were running smash on board some great vessel which | bad not seen a moment before, and couldn’t see a moment after. How- ever, the boatman was used to all kinds of weather, | suppose, and knew the river thoroughly; so, through the darkness and the rain, which never left off fora moment, we reached the other side. T left the boat to wait for me, and ran up to the Yarmouth Smack. I looked in, and saw Peier leaning against the bar and smoking a short pipe, as a laborer ought to do; and he was talking in a friendly way to some rough-looking fellows. I slipped in, and using the name we had agreed upon, spoke to him. He knew my voice of course; but seeing me so changed, for my make-up was really splendid (it was, although [ say so that shouldn’t,) it gave him such a shock that he was obliged to put the pewter down he was going to ion from and look steadily at me before he answered. “T’m a-coming,” he said at last, and we got outside; when, as we walked down to the ferry, I gave him a sort of idea of what was going on, and how I expected to make a great catch that night. Peter of course was very giad to be in for such a big thing as this for he had never been mixed up with anything so important. Not to trust the boatman too much, I kept Peter back a few yards from the water while I finished my story, stand- ing # little on one side, so as to be out of the way of the people who came and went to and from the ferry. While | was talking to him, a wherry ran in; we heard her grate on the pebbles and the seulls rattle as the men laid ’em in; but that we had heard before. It’s a partof my habit to notice little things however, and 1 looked to see who had come in by this boat. There was only one passenger, a woman, and she pass- ed us walking quickly; but quick as she walked, I saw her, and she saw me. Blessed if it wasn’t Miss Doyle! My being there was no odds to Miss Doyle, nor could it have signified to her if she had seen me fifty times; yet I felt 1) would rather not have met her just then; | it looked unlucky, and she was such an! uncommonly sharp one, too. Sharp or, not, I couldn’t see what she could make} out of my standing under a wall on a) wet night talking toanother laborer. | To be Continued. | Set mt wis we el NTED! 1.000 MEN bring their Cloth and Trimmings to ~ Joseph A, McDonald's TAILORING DEPOT end have their Clothing Made to Order in FIRST CLASS STYLE, and Save Money, as we will allow 10 per cent. discount for cash on our former low prices for Tailoring during the next three months. to IRSET CLASS FITS AND WORK MANSHIP GUARANTEED. Ladies’ Sacques and all kinds of Gentlemen's (Jarments cut at very reasonable prices by Mr- Nicholson. JOSEPH A. MACDONALD, Sidney Street, one door east of the late Hon. D. Brenan’s. Sin tues & sat. on “J Feb. The Promoter and Perfector of Assimilation. The Reformer and Vitalizer of the Blood, _The Producer and Invigorator of Nerve and Muscle. The Builder and Supporter of Brain Power. Fellows’ Compound Syrup ts composed o Ingrediants identical with those which consti tute Healthy Blood, Muscle 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 muscles, re-establishing the one and toning the other, it is capable ot effecting the following results :— It will displace or wash out tuberculous matter, and thus cure Consumption. By increasing Nervous and Muscular Vigor, it will cure Dyspepsia, feeble or interrupted action of the Heart and Palpitation, Weakness af Intellect caused by grief, weary, overtax or irregular habits, Bronchitis, Acute or Chronic, Congestion of the Lungs. even in the most alarming stages. It cures Asthma, Loss of Voice, Neuralgia, St. Vitus Dance, Epileptic Fits, Whooping Cough, Nervousness, and is a most wonderful adjunct to other remedies in sustaining during the process of Diptheria. life Do not be deceived by remedies bearing a similar name ; no other preparation is a substi tute for this under any circumstances. Look out for the name and address J. [. FELLOWS’, St. John, N. B., on the yellow wrapper in watermark, which is seen by hold- ing the paper before the light. Price $1.50 per Bottle, six for $7.50. Sold by all Druggists. Dec. 6, 1877. The Greatest Medical Disecvery since the Creation of Man, or since the Commencement of the Christian Era. There never has been a time when the heal- ing of so many different diseases has been caused 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 m6re real service than a hundred of the ordinary kind. All other plasters are slow of action, and require to be worn continually to effect acure; 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 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, convineed of the wonderful eures effected by Dr. MmLvIn’s CAPSICUM Porovos 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 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 = want a certain cure, ask your druggist for R. MELVIN’s CAPSICUM POROUS PLASTER. You can hardly believe your own convictions of its wonderful effects. Although powerful and uick in its action, you can rely on its safety or the most delicate agg 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. MeLvin’s CAPst- cuM Porovws 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, te apy 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 Compownds W. R, WATSON, Agent? December 7, 1877 - omiesmeeet cates all eR lal, PS Ae Bet oui 5 ant et eT el | SPRIN GOOD Ex §, 8. Northern Light, AT THE London House | W Tit BE SHOWN ON MONDAY the 4th March, 200 PATTERNS CANADIAN TWEEDS West of England and Scotch Makes. —ALSO— BLACK & BLUE BROADCLOTHS, Worsted & Fancy COATINGS! SINGLE GARMENTS and SUITS made upin the best styles and at the shortest notice. | OU TAILORING = DEPARTRIENT A GREAT SUCCESS. A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT Men's and Boys’ Hats, We offer SrnczAL INDUCEMENTS in House Furnishing Go rds — DAMASKS, REPPS, CRETONNES, MOREENS, ETC. SHEETINCS, Pi LLOW COTTON, WINDOW HOLLAND, White & Grey CALICG,“ETC CARPETINGS, HEARTH RUGS, MATTS & MATTING, FLOOR Ol CLOTH, ETC j 4 CHOICE ASSORTMENT OF Paper Hangings. i j ' ? GEO. DAVIES & 60., March 2—lm 2aw, MAS WORKMAN, M. P., | ates President. ' " LUPE AND ACGHDENT AUTHORIZED CAPITAL. M. H. GAULT, Esquire, Managing Director. HON. L. C. OWEN, ‘ DANIEL DAVIES, Messxs. JENKINS & McoLEOD, Its Motto is *‘Economy AND SEcuRITY.” Jan. 51, 1878— —— . nt ‘ ~ 4 T. JAMES CLAXTO CeP resides iaire | SUN MUTUAL [\SURANGE COMPANY OF MONTREAL. 0 tictnereemenperenie ; HEAD OFFICE: ST. JAMES STREET. RK. MACAUL Sec’y. AY, ri CHARLOTTETOWN P. £. ISLAND HONORARY DIRECTORS: HON. J. F. ROBERTSON, OWEN CONNOLLY, Ese., MepicaL EXAMINERS, 0:—— This Company issues Policies on all the Approve Merions of Life and Accident Business, HORACE HASZARD, Agent P, E. Island, OOD BOOKS --FOR THE— ee ee ere TYNE following Valuable Books will be sup plied from the Office of the DaILy EXAMINER. Any one or more of these books will be sent, Post-Paid, direct, to any of our readers, on receipt of the regular price, which is named against each book :-— Allen’s (R. L.& L. F.) New Aimer caa Gregory on Onion Raising, Gregory on Squashes, Harris’s Insects Injurious to Vegetation, Plain, $4; Colored Engravings, Harris on the Pig, 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 Trapper, Hussey’s Home Building, Johnson’s How Crops Feed, Johnson’s How Crops Grow, Lakey’s Village and Country Houses, Loring’s Farm-Yard Club of Jotham, Mrs. Cornelius’s Young Housekeeper's we ee ee oD SSSSSSEQ SUSSSSS SEX wr = _ vs COUN tg Ot Friend, 15 My Vineyard at Lakeview, 1 25 Nichol’s Chemistry of the Farm and Sea, 1 25 Onions—-How to Raise Them Profitably, 20 Our Farm of Four Acres, paper, 30 cts. ; cloth, 60 Parsons on the Rose, i 50 Phin’s How to Use the Microscope, 75 Phin’s Lightning Rods and their Con- struction, 50 Quinby’s Mysteries of Bee-Keeping, 1 50 Quincy (Hon. Josiah) on Soiling Cattle, 1 25 Quinn’s Money in the Garden, 1 50 Quinn’s Pear Culture for Profit, 1 Piley’s Potato Pests, pa., 50 cts.; cloth, 75 | Roe’s Play and Profit in my Garden, Lo Stewart’s Irrigation for the Farna, Gar- den and Orchard, 1 50 Stewart’s Shepherd’s Manual, 1 50 Stoddard’s An Egg Farm, paper, 50 cts., cloth, 7 Thomas’s American Fruit Culturist, new edition, 3 75 Thomas’s Farm Implements and Ma- | chinery, 15 Tim Bunker Papers; or, Yankee Far- ming, 1 59 Tobacco Culture. By fourteen experi- enced cultivators, 25 Waring’s Draining for Profit and Health, 1 50 Waring’s Elements of Agriculture, i 00 Weidenmann’s Beautifying Conntry Homes. A superb quarto volume. 24 lithograph plates, 1m colors, 15 00 | White’s Cranberry Culture, 1 25 , White’s Gardening for the South, 2 00 Wright’s Brahma Fowl, 2 50 | Wright’s Practical Poultry-Keeper, 2 00 Ch’town, Feb. 14, 1878— DR. H. A. PARKER, SURGEON DENTIST, (LATE OF OTTAWA). ‘Office, . . . St. Lawrence Hotel. | Office Hours: 9 a. m, to 6 p. m. | Jan, 18, "78 —10i ead Farm, Garden and Househotd, ‘WEST OF ENGLAND HOUSE Great George Street, SELLING OFF. FFXHE subscriber, in returning thanks to his customers for their patronage during the time he has been in business, begs to inform them and the public generally that he intends closing up his present buslness and will sell at REDUCED PRICES, Farm Book, $2 50 the Stock now on hand, until Allen’s (L. F.) American Daan, | 50 . American Weeds and Useful Plants, 75 Th i f ) [ VW Allen’s (L. F.) Rural Sat : > F lr 5 ay 0 ay. Atwood’s Country and Suburban Houses, | 5 s ou ‘ Baker’s Practical and Scientific Fruit Any person wishing to go into the Culture, 2 50 . Barry’s Fruit ane ge si ; = Dry Goods and Grocery Business Bommer’s Method of Making nures, 2 - tain ot , Breck’s New Book of Flowers, z 1 751 will be treated liberally for the purchase of Brill’s Farm-Gardening and Seed-Grow- : . . “i ae 00| Entire Stock & Premises B -Corn and Brooms, paper, 50 cts. ; oan . oe : ae - anc € » Pay , 7b with immediate possession if required. Brown’s Taxidermist’s Manual, — 1 00; All persons indebted will please make im» Caldwell’s Agricultural Chemical An- oe mediate payment of their respective accounts, alysis, 2 oo Coburn’s Swine Husbandry, 1 75 W. W. STUMBLES. Corbett’s Poultry Yard and Market, Feb. 26, 1878.—3i paper, 50 cts.; cloth, 75; — a ale ieee ale Dadd’s Modern Horse Doctor, 12 mo., 1 50 5 Dadd’s American Cattle Doctor, 12mo., 1 60 End | Pp S GEAR Dadd’s American Cattle Doctor, 8vo. ee s cloth, 25 Dadd’s American Reformed Horse Book, ON CONSIGNMENT : 8vo., cloth, 2 50 . : De Voe’s Market Assistant, 2 50 z omplete Octagon Windlass, 15 ia. Downing’s Landscape Gardening, 6 50) « + 14 im. EXggleston’s End of the World, 1 50|1 Capstain, No. 3 size. Eggleston’s Hoosier School-Master, 4 f = 6 és No 2 * Eggleston’s Mystery of Metropolisville, 5 seer Horse Owner’s Cyclopedia, 3 75|\3 - ee Cabooses and Famous Horses ot America, 1 50 Tens Flax Culture, [Seven Prize Essays by - —ALSO-— practical growers], 30|¢ Complete Flint (Charles L.) on Grasses, . a ue te Sets Threshing Mill Fuller’s Grape Cuiturist, CARVE Fuller's Illustrated Strawberry Culturist, 20 Agents Pi a: am nO 'S, Fuller’s Small Fruit Culturist, 1 50! Ch’town, March 25—4i eod oundry. Fulton’s Peach Culture, : 50 id 3 Geyelin’s Poultry Breeding, 25 Gregory on ete via ; 30 STA DACO NA Gregory on Carrots, Mangold Wurtzels, ' ' ite, fire and Life ‘Insurance Company, N2Otice is hereby given that the Board of Directors of this Company have made a further call of Four instalments, ot Five per Cent. each, on the Subscribed Capital of the Company, payable at its Office, No. 93 St. Peter Street, Quebec, as foliows :— Five per Cent. on or before the Tenth dy of August, 1877; Five per Cent. on or before the Tenth day of November, 1877 ; Five per Cent, on or before the Eleventh dey of February, 1878 ; Five per Cent. on or before the Kleventh day of May, 1878. By order of the Board. CRAWFORD LIN DSAY, Th Secretar une 51877 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. 4 March 28—2i mon & thur FISHSALE|! FOR SALE AT OUR STORE-: AQ) QUINTALS No. 1 CODFISH, 20 Quintals POLLOCK, 30 Boxes Smoked HALIBUT, 50 Boxes Preserved LOBSTERS. HASZARD BROS. Ch’town, Fab. 28—dy pat lm DR. WILLIAM GRAY’S SPECIFIC MEDICINE. The Great isiline Rem- Weakness Sper- Kage a7 pockaase waail free al) particulars ree nde 2 whi we desire to send free by mailtoeveryone, Address WM. GRAY & CO., Windsor, Ontario, Canada. s® Sold in Charlottetown by W. R. Wat- son, Dr. Dodd, C. D. Rankin, P. G. Fraser at Apothecaries Hall, and by all Druggists 7 ' anywher. JUBSCRIBE for th . AMINER, the Cheapest edt et wht Paper published in the Province, FRESH SEEDS. a areca ns eee lm