> ‘ FE sty + 2 Wie Si Qe a A Ne GE ile et ee ae tee dedley iia. OPEB 6S ie Be ae apy Se oe em, fe OE arti ss Ee ie irs dle ie tinatbing aun oo a AE le a =" at Oe Wt es, real ‘ er mea —— apace : : : : .e | «Because, Dame Theresa, no one loves me.” | replied Jacques, sighing. ‘Ungrateful!’ said the good woman, draw- POF ERY. HAPPINESS, Oh, happiness! our being’s end and aim, Good, pleasurs, ease, content—whate'er thy name: That something still which prompts th’ eter- nal sigh, For which we bear to live, or dare to die, Which still so near us, vet beyond us lies, ing him towards her, ‘to say that no one loves you, while every one in the village | | takes care not to let you want. | worse clothes or less food than the other | Have you | children?’ ‘Oh, no, no, Theresa, that is not what I} mean; you are all very kind, and pity me O'erlook'd, seen stouble, by the fool = Wis®: | because my parents died when I was soj § @ agg a cis Flee yes a to | young that I can’t remember to have ever | w? seen them, Pity! it makes people give you ead a -Oup ciothes and tire; but : sses a eSSil iddéd the poor child, is be sts hard tu rcsirain the tears wich | : | trickled down his pale checks,— | already only mothers give (dura s\ t Wii In her litlie night-gown And kissed me again and again, On forehead and cheek, On lips that would speak, But found themselves shut to thei: no |} | these, and I have mother. said Theresa ‘Well, 1 will be one to yo l, ' gain. tenderly. | ‘That would be could | | never love me as much as your own boys.’ ‘Ab, that | much,’ ‘Itis not | who ask it, Dame; thing that I feel within me—something that} Lcant describe, burning my head and my heart; it half chokes me,and makes me wish | to cry, and to be alone, so that the other | boys may not laugh at me.’ | can If that’s all, said Theresa, who, although | | kind and well-meaning, did not at all enter | | into the child’s feelings—‘ you will get over that by degrees. Good-bye Jacques.’ ‘Goed-bye, Dame Theresa,’ replied Jac- | impussible—you Chen, foolish, absurd, To utter a word, : I asked her the question so o!d, That wife and that lover Ask over aad over, Asif they were surer when told no; would be expecting too ik iS SOMe?— j There, close at her side, ** Do you love me,” | cried, She lifted her golden-crowned head A puzaled surprise Shone in her gray eyes— “ Why, that’s why I Kiss you,’ she said. —Anna C. BRACKETT. MODERN LOGIC. ANONYMOUS j An Eaton stripling training for the Law, A Dunce at Syntax, buta Dab at Taw, One bappy Christmas, laid upon a shelf, His cap his gown, and store of learned pelf, With all the deathless bards of Greece and Rome, i'o spend a fortnight at his uncle's home. Arrived, and past the usual How d’yedo?”’ | Inquiries of old friends, and College news— | porore long,’ said Jacques to himself, as he ‘Well Tom, the road, what saw you worth) dal a discerning, walked along. And raising his eyes towards | And how goes study, boy—what ist you're the sky, where heavy clouds were gathering, learning?” | he added,‘ The sea is getting rough— I'll * Oh! Logic, Sir—but not the worn outrules | japog row.’ Of Locke and Bacon—antiquated fools ! ee | And moved by some sudden impulse, the boy began to run along the shore, until he ‘Tis wit and wrangler’s Logic—thus d’ye see, ay reached a small and very light boat, moored ques, as he went away. | Passing the path that led to the ramparts, | he turned bis steps towards a lonely part of | | the beach, in order to avoid encountering the | noisy troop ef his merry companions. ‘ The airis very hot; there will bea storm Ull prove to youasclearas A,B,C, That aneel-pie’s a pigeon :—to deny it , > . » *k’s , ie, te idee | ™ a - tony > snties |} toa Stake. He leaped into it, cut the cord, zetus try it. ape tale | et ok : An eel-pie is a pie of fish.""—* Agreed. ; and the little skiff once set free, and impelled “A fish-pie may be a Jack-pie.””—*‘ Well | by a light pair of paddles which Jacques proceed.” | found in it. bounded gaily over the swellin “A Jaek-pie must be a Johnspie—thus ‘tis | ae Ce eo . done surge. With a proud and dauntiess air the Forevery John-pie ioust be a pi-geon ! Bravo !"’ Sir Peter cries, ‘‘ Logic forever ! It beats my grandmother and she was clever! | But soundz my boy, it really would be hard, ‘That wit and learning should have no reward, lo-morrow,‘for a stroll, the park we'll cross, boy looked around at the treacherous ele- ment which threatened every moment to in showers cover his head, his eyes sparkled, and an unwonted expression of joy lighted | grocer kept stuffing the wood into the stove, while poor Seth sat bolt upright, back against the counter, most touching the red hot furnace before | est, avoid quacks, and there will bea savs | him. | were warm! Why don't you take your hat| one part of atown, or even at one partofa swallow him up; and as the while foam flew — a - a Sa ee 4. aoa Smoke Chimneys.—In nineteen cases out with his | Of every twenty, a smoky chimney is curable. | Ascertain the cause, and the and his knees al-| more than half done. Set about it in earns be : | ing of money and of patience. The defeat is ‘Very cold this night,” said the grocer, | almost always local: the remedy must there- . : a "| fore be local in its design, and in it applicas Whvs , j rou | ;: . . ete, ies PI | Vhy Setu, you seem to prespire as if you) jign That which will aaswer perfecty at ; house, may be useless at enother. If the chimney be too low, have itraised. If the | throat of a chimney be too large, let it be | | contracted. Ifthere be not suflicient air ad- | ping both hands upon his hat,‘ No!—I| mitted to the house when the doors and win- | ut—I | dows are closed, for supplying all the fires. | oo! \ greasy cataract was now pouring | provide for an additional quantity, Instead ' ’ ° | of allowing cold air to traverse the passages | off? , No,’ exclaimed poor Seth at last, witha pasmodic effort to get his tongue loose, and Here let me put your hat away.’ i clay must go—let me ain't well—let me dow: ihe poor fellow’s face and neck, and soaning into his clothes, and trickling down | and rooms before it reaches the fire~places | and stoves, convey it, by air-drains, under- | | neath the floors, to the places where it is most required—in front of the fires. The recent case of death by strychnine | his body inte his very boots, so that he was literally in a perfect bath of oil. ‘Well, good-night, Seth, said the humor-| 7 "™., : : . i ae itil . " ee | poisoning from taking Syrup of Hyphos- | us Vermouter, ‘if you will go; adding as| phites, noticed in the Montreal Daily | i eth got out on the road, ‘ Neighbor, lreckon | Wilness, of August lst, renders great cau- | Sthe fun I got out of you is worth sixpence; | tion necessary, not to confound Dr. | on: Kdben't aie wan tr desk tee Wheeler's Compound Elixer and Calisaya oe ar eee vat hall-pound | with Compound Syrup of Hysphosites. Ob- of butter. | serve well the difference in ortohgraphy. eam ene = | and bear in mind that medicinally there is RANDOM READINGS. | no similiarity in action or effect. IS i C Phosphates are absolutely neeessary tu | sustain life, being an element of every solid and fluid of the body, and they are incap- | able of injurious results at any period from | infancy to old age, or under any possible | condition of the system, a.d no more harm | can result from taking more than the pre- | scribed dose than from eating too hearty | a dinner. you speli consent in three Jetters?/ Promrscvovs —Mrs.Alice Robinson, of Will |iamston, in the county of Annapolis, and | Province of Nova Scotia, deposeth and saith | C | thatin the year 1840, she was fearfully and distressingly aMicted witha combination of of complaints, which altogether rendered her almost entirely helpless, during which time she was treated by one of the ablest phy- sicians residing in the County, and part of the time by two physicians for about a year, and he earns, we are inclined to suspect that he | still was not sensible ofany material benetit does not always earn all he spends. | orrelief. And after a time she was recom- The difference between a dishonest debtor | mended to a medicine at that time prepared and animportunate creditor is, that the one | by Mrs Gates, of Wilmot, which in an in- isa‘ do’ andthe othera dun. credibly short time acted like a charm upon ‘Mary, have you given the gold-lish fresh | her whole system, and she was entirely cured water?’ ‘No, ma'am. What’s the use ?| fall her various difficulties and complainst, They haven't drunk up what's in there yet,’ | and remained, as she considered, a a The man who has noi anything to boast of | nn oo ee i . . ata 1s cuieaia sede ged eden cle ry Mrs. Robinson further states, that in the ground 4 st | autumn of 1869, she was taken ill, and was : ; ea : | under the doctor’s hands all winter, and in | Steward—‘ Breakfast is ready, Georgie.’ | the spring ensuing she was taken with a most Heavy yachtsman (aged 9)—* My name is | obstinant and distressiug cough, which the | George, Mr. Steward. What would you! doctor was unable to cure. She was also | think if I called you Stewy ?’ } Mrs. Partingten writes to say that she| plaints. atlength she resolved to apply to | can’t make out why all the ‘help’ she gets | Dr. Caleb Gates for assistance and help, and are so stupid, when she is always particular | soon found them all yielding to the power and to obtain them from an intelligence office. influence of his justly celebrated medicines, ‘Please mister, my father’s dead and my | #24 Says she is now completely cured of all | g | mother’s runned away, aud would ye let me | thos: various difficulties, through the kind— | | and me sister suck cider through a straw out | 8s of Dr. Gates, ant the efficacy of his most | | excellent medicine. A nod feillow—Morpheus, Light-headed—A street lamp. It is better to be flush in the pocket than in the face. Cicero said, ‘The pursuit of all things should be calm and tranquil. Can Y-e-s. Public spirit—Readiness to do anything which is likely to prove lucrative. Punch hag discovered that the friends of the unfortunate live a long way olf. A man cannot expect half a ‘loaf when he | loafs all the time. When we see a young man that spends all | b l¥ ect TALE RX AMIN ER DOMINION & FOREIGN NEWS, Selections from the raciest and most im- | | Editorial Articles on Political, Industrial | i If paid in advance, 1 copy, I year, $1.40 | ing number affords a fresh pleasure to its | For Blackwood aud 2 Reviews 1000 | if paid within the year 1.62 | friends, and the real value and beauty of the | For Blackwood aad 3 Reviews 13 00 “ If not paid till after the end of year, — 2.00 ALDINE will be most appreciated after it is | For Blackwood and 4 Reviews 15 00 —« | ment always in advance -— not for a shorter period than one year. person obtaining for the EXAMINER a Club of | Five or more subscribers, will be entitled to | ™ NOW IS THE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE. he is a busiress man, and his advertizing pro- claims that he is‘not above business, but anxious to do it. | and flock where they see others go. | | else were engaged in the same business, it would | afflicted with piles and othertroublesome com- | be important to tradesmen and dealers to adver- ) tize in the paper, because they are tempted to in the same business, and even if they do ad- | todoso; if they do not advertize it becomes ee REPRINTS. oF THS BRITISH PERIODICALS The political terment among the nations, the strife between Church nd Stes. the discussion of Science in its relation : of Mere ee re \4 REPRESENTATIVE AND CHAM- | PION OF AMERICAN ART TASTE! Prospectus for 1875, Eighth Year. THE ALDINE, RVERY WEEK Contains the la‘est Local, | a4 | ology, and the constant publication | Works on these and kindred topes, will THE ART JOURNAL OF AMERICA, | “xusual interest to the leading foreiga during 1875. Nowhere else can the j IssuED MoONTULY. | reader find, in a condensed form, the f | arguments necessary to guide him to a conclusion. Full and Aceurate SHIPPING AND MARKET REPORTS, A Magnificent Conception, | carried out.” Somest The Leonard Scoit Publishing Gg, 41 BARCLAY ST., NEW YORE, contioue the reprint of the four leadiog Re Viz: | EDINBURGH REVIEW—Whig. LONDON QUARTERLY REVIFW. servaisve, WESTMINSTER REVIEW—Literal, BRITISH QUARTERLY REVIEW —# gelical. wonderfully | stein | The necessity of a popular medium for the | representation of the productions of our great artist, has always been recognized,and many | | attempts have been made te meet the want. The successive failures which so iavariably followed each attempt in this country to | establish an art journal, did not prove the in- | difference of the people of America to the ciaims of high art. So soon asa proper ap- | preciation of the want and an ability to meet proving Literature of the day ; and Social Topics. —:0:— THE EXAMINER PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY FORENOON, | | it were shown, the pubiic at once rallied with AND BY THE | enthusiasm to its support, and the result was BLACKWOOD'S EDINBURGH MAGAZINE | ii br p : tin g Pablishin (‘9 | a great artist and commercial triumph—THE | si Ly ALDINE. TERYVS. 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Thus: fout 15 I { y | 1 20 * “ “ 17.00 | paper and engravings in any other shape or | le of ee $1 of one Review will be ret : see ahaa Be ‘ost - | Sut to one address for $12.80: four eopies of the ~ ai oe . » but | Bumber of volumes for ten limes its cost ; ee . i : Crabs may be made up at any time, | and then, there is the chromo besides ! | four Reviews and Blackwood for $48. and 0 on The national features of THE ALDIYE | PREMIUMS. must be takev in uo narrow sense. True } are ils cosmopolitau. While THE ALDINE | is a strictly American institution, it does not confine itself entirely to the reproduction of native art. Its mission is to cultivate a broad and appreciative art taste, one that will discriminate only on grounds ef intrinsic merit, Thus, while placing before the pat- rons of THE ALDINE, as a leading charac- teristic, the productions of the most noted American artists, altteation will always be given to specimens from foreign masters giving subscribers all the pleasure and in- 00 application struction obtainable from home or foreign : sources, The artistic illusration of American scen- ery, original with THE ALDINE is an im- | portant feature, and its magnificent plates ertize, it becomes the more important for you | be are ofa size more appropriate to the Satisfactory treatmemt of details than can afforded by any inferior page. The judicious j interspersion of landscape, marine, figure, | and animal subjects, sustain an unabated in- | terest, impossible where the scope of the work Any ae ay Saag spplyieg early, for the y 75, may have, without charge, the ber : copy of the paper one year free of eharge. the last quarter of 1874 of such periodieale.@@ they may subscribe for. or four of the above periodicals. may have ope _ of the - Four Reviews,’ tor 1874; subscribers to all five may have two of the ‘ Four Reviews,’ or one set ot Blackwood s Magazine for 1874, Neither premiums to subscribers nor discount - to clubs can be allowed unless the money be re- mitted direct to the publishers. No premiems given to clubs. —3 0 i—— ADVERTISEMENTS. When people see a man advertise they know If nobody THE LEONARD SCOTT PUBLISHING ov, 41 BARCLAY S8T., NEW York. Se: | Customers, like sheep, are gregarious, | | i uy what they read of. But others are engaged “A Repository of Fashion, Pelasure,and Instruction.” HARPER’S BAZAR. oubly important.—Anox.” * Or instead, new subscribers to ary tyro, three Circulars with further particulars may behad And then I'll give you"’—* What? "— My | Chestnut-horse.” “ A horse!” cries Tom, “ blood, pedigree and paces ! Oh. whata dash I'll cut at Epsom races!” Me went to bed and wept with downright | sorrow, | To think the night must pass before the mor- | row ; | Dreamed of his boots, his cap, his spurs, and | leather breeches, | Of leaping five-barred ditches ; Left his warm bed an hour before the lark, And dragged his uncle fasting through the park :-— Each craggy hill and dale in vain tucy cross, To find out something like a chestnut-horse : | But no such animal the meadows cropped : At length, beneath a tree, Sir Peter stopped ; | look a bough—then shook it—and down fel | A fine horse-chesinut in its prickly shell—} ‘‘There Tom, take that.’ Well, Sir, and} what beside?”’ « Why, since you are booteu, gates, and crossing } saddle it and} ride! “Ride what?-—A chestnut!" «Ay; come] get across. I tell you Tom, the chestnutisa horse, And all the horse yeu'll get ; for I can show As clear as sunshine, that ‘tis really so— Not by the musty, fusty, wornsout rules Of Lecke and Bacon—addle-headed fools ! Ali Logic but the wranglers’ | disown, And stick to one sound argument—your own Since you have prov dto me. I dont deny. Phat a pie- John’s the same as Johnepie; What follows then, but asa thing of course, That a horseschestnut is a chestnut horse?” LITERATURE. THE FORTUNES OF JACQUES CARTIER. One fine day, about three hundred years ago, a joyous group of children were amus~ ing themselves on the ramparts of St. Malo. Built on the rock, these fortifications, flank- | ed by their massive towers ani bastions, | form, from the beauty and extent of the land- scape spread beneath them, a most delight- ful promenade. At the moment in which our tale coms | menees, one child, of about twelve years old, sat aloof from the others, leaning his back | against the principal tower. There was | something sad and almost wild in the ex- pression of this boy’s countenance, as his blueeyes painfully followed the active move- ments and merry games of his companions. After some time a few of them, half wearied with play, approached him. « Well, Jacques,’ said one. ‘ won't you come and play ? * No, thank you, Bernard.’ ‘Oh, let him alone,’ said another, ‘he al-~ ways likes to be sulky and keep to himself.’ ‘Because | feel that I am alone in the world,’ replied Jacques, a tear rolling down his cheek. | ‘But you have no right to feel any such thing,’ said a tall lad, who had just come up; | you know very well that ever since your father and mother died, you are welcome to a bed and a bow! of soup at every house in St. Malo.’ ‘Yes, but that is only for charity ; no one thatreally cares for me.’ | ‘ The good God in Heaven does; He cares for even the little sparrows, as our curate told us last Sunday; and I'm sure we're all ready to love you if you would let us. Just now my mother desired me to bring you | home to dinner, and not on any account to come without you, so come along, my boy.’ | Jacques, without speaking, took hold of the outstretched hand of the good-natured | Jean Penalto, and accompanied him to his | father’s cottage. This, like all the fisher en's dwellings at St. Malo, was athatched wooden hut. The floor was of clay; trusses of straw served for beds, and there was little furniture hes sides @ table and some rudely-fashioned stools; on the walls hung fishingsnets. As the boys entered a savory odor met them, proceeding from the well thickened [ have | | | vegetable soup which the mother of the} family was lading into bowls for her husband and five sons. ‘Good morning to you, Jacques!’ said Theresea, smiling pleasantly at the sad. looking boy. Why did you not come to us yesterday.’ Then, without waiting for a reply, she bes stowed a hearty kiss on her two youngest children, who just then entered to dinner. The last night's fishing had been success- ful, and the little party were very merry. The father related anecdotes of his youthful fishing excursions, and she children of the recent ones in which they had assisted, while the good mother listened to them all with complacent love. When the recital, how- ever, involved any idea of danger, she would turn and kiss the forehead of him who had escaped from it; whilst at the detail of any courageous deed she would raise her head and jook at the hero with heightened color and sparkling eyes. Jacques alone did not speak or smile, and ate very little. The repast ended, every one rose" the el~ der ones to return to their varions employ- ments, the younger (o their sports. Jacques also was going out, but Theresa detained him at the door. «What ails you, my boy?’ she asked, in a slightly reproacbful tone. *‘ Why are you sullen and moping? You don’t seem to love up his features. | drowned one stormy night, and his mother shortly afterwards died of grief. was thus left an orphan in early infancy ; | and his parents, who had noother riches but | | | afishing net, bequeathed him as a legacy to| 1) ' | the charity of their fellow-villagers. | | ed. |a third lodged him by night, taught him to read and write, and he took | every boat in the port. jhe could find, he Cartier, the father of Jacques, had been Their son In no respect had the charge been neglects | One clothed the child, another fed him, | The curate | lossons in fishing and seamanship on board | Yet this Doy, ena- dowed with a mind of rare aculeness, and a| Miss, | | heart of uncommon. sensibility, could not | Man; : : sure, I don’t mane to. content himself with the supply of his meres | ly physicial wants; he pined and yearned | for that love which he poured forth by mothers on their children ; and the feeling that he was not understood, | saw instinctively | that he was not the primary object of any human heart, was gradually rendering him | | that anomalous being—a misanthropic child, | After some time began to fall} heavily, and Jacques with much difficulty } returned the The storm | increased afler having | moored his boatin the most sheltered spot | turned his steps towards the rain towards sbere every moment; and Penallo’s cottage Conclusion nerl week | MELTING MOMENTS. (New Orleans Picayune.) One winter evening, a country storekeeper in the Mountain State was about closing his doo:s for the night, when while standing in | the snow outside, putting up his window} shutters, he saw through the glass.a loung- ing, worthless fellow within, take a half- pound of fresh butter from the shelf, and | hastily conceal i. in his hat. The act was no sooner detected than the revenge was hit upon, and a very few mo- meats found the Green Mountain storekeeper | at ence indulging his appetite for fun to the | | | | fullest extent, and paying off the thief with a facetious sort of torture for which he might | have gained a premium from the old Inquisis tion. i “Stay. Seth!" said the storekeeper, coms | ing in, and closing the door after uim, slap- | ping his hands over his shoulders, and stamp- | ing the snow olf his shoes. Seth had his hand on the door, and his ha, | upon his head, and the roll of butter in his | hat, anxious to make his exit as soon as pos- | sible. ‘Seth,we'll have a little warm Santa Cruz,’ said the Green Mountain grocer, as he opened | the stove door, and stuffed in as many sticks | as the space would admit i “ Without it you'd freeze going home such | a night as this.’ Seth felt very uncertain; he had the buts ter and was exceedingly anxious to be off, but | the temptation of ‘something warm’ sadly | interferred with his resolution to go. This hesitation, however, was soon settled by the right owner of the butter taking Seth by the shoulders, and planting him in a seat near the stove, where he was in such a manner cornered in by barrels and boxes that, while the country grocer sat before him, there was no possibility of his getling out, and right in this very piace, sure enough, the storekeeper sat down. Seth already fellthe butter settling down i closer to his hair, and he declared he must go. ‘Not tili you have something warm ; come I have got a story to tell you, Seth;’ and Seth was again pushed into his seat by his cunning tormentor. ‘Oh! it’s too hot here,’ said the petty thief again altempting to rise. ‘I say, Seth, sit down; I reckon now, on such a night as this, a little something warm wouldn't hurta fellow; come sit down. ‘Sit down—don't be in such a plaguey hurry,’ repeated the grocer, pushing him back in his chair. ‘But I’ve got the cows to fodder, and some wood to split, and Imust be a-going, cons tinued the persecuted chap. * But you mustn't tearf yourself away, Seth, in thismanner, Sit down; let the cows take cure of themselves, and keep yourself cool ; you appear to be fidgetty,’ said the roguish grocer, with a wicked leer. The next thing was the production of two smoking glasses of hot rum toddy, the very sight of which in Seth’s present situation would have made the hair erect upon his head,had it not been oiled and kept down by the butter. ‘Seth, I'il give you a toast now, and you ean duller it yourself,’ said the grocer, yet with an air of such consummate simplicity that poor Seth siill believe:i himself unsus- pected. ‘Seth, here’s—here’s a Christmas goose, well roasted and basted, eh? I tell you it’s the greatest eating in creation. And, Seth, don’t you use hog’s fat or common cook- ing butter to baste a goosewith. Come, take your butter—I wean Seth, take your toddy.’ Poor Seth now began to smoke as well as to mell, and his mouth was as hermitically sealed up as though he had been born dumb. Streak after streak of butter came pouring from under his hat, and his handkerchief was already soaked with greasy overflow. Talks of that ’ere barrel'o yourn ?' presented with a neat little jeweled alarm clock, to wear in his coat pocket to wake up by when the hour for going off duty ar- | rives, An Indianapolis night-peliceman has been | E The difference between a fooi and a looks ing-glass is said lo be that the fool speaks | Mrs. Avice ROBINSON. ebruary, A. D, 1872, before me, Jas. Wuextock. J. P. | | Swotnto at Williamston, this 9th day of | WILL FIND CUSTOMERS FOR THEIR 1 | liicnaaisniaiiereienant ieccenianaiiiaaininionnine SALE OF Without resection, and the looking-glase re- flects without speaking, crowd of boys, and mentioned having been | in five engagements. ‘ That’s notbing,’ broke in a little fellow, - | engaged eleven times. | worthless. | was the answer. idleness?’ | grateful heart exclaimed, | Only come to my house and I will cheerfully | The above sale is postponed until Monday, | pull outevery tooth you have in your head | days and his nights in the water for years, | | and—’ ‘ Why, uncle! FREEHOLD PROPERTY. A veteran was relating his exploits toa | WE WILL Sett By AUCTION, THE COLONIAL BUILDING, CHARLOTTETOWN, my sister Agnes has been | AT ‘Well, Dennis, how are you getting on ? | ON By Advertising in the EXAMINER. | BY THE YEAR. ILLUSTRATED. Notices of the Press. The Bazar is edited with a contribution of ta ; and talent that we seldom find in aay journa. * and the jourual itself is the organ of the greal ~ world of fashion —Soston Traveller. The Bazar commends itself to every memberof the household—to the children, by droli sad pretty pictures, to the young ladies by its fasion ag in endless variety, to the provident masoa y its patterns for the children's clothes, to terfamilias by its tasteful designs for embroider - ed slippers and luxurious dressing-gowns. But the reading-matter of the Bazar is uniformly of great excellence. The paper has acquired a wide panera for the fireside enjoymens it af- tords.—_ ; Evening Pest. MERCHANTS | confines the artist too closly tu a single style of subject. The literature of THE ALDINE . . D |is a light and graceful accompaniement, O worthy of the artistic features, withenly such k AL G O S technical dispositions as do not interfere with the popular interest of the work. PREMIUM FOR 1875, | Every subscriber for 1875 will receive a | beautiful portrait, in oil colors, of the same | noble dog whose picture in a formor issue | attracted so much attention. “MAN'S UNSELFISH FRIEND ” | will be welcome in every home. Everybody | loves such a dog, and the portrait is execut- | ed so true to the life, that it seems the veril- The usual reductions to those who ADVERTIZE ADVERTISING RATES. lg ye ee gg toy ; — ‘Tha Uy SS ~~ ta : : | able presence of the animal itself. The Rev. Terms : igeanpiee es a very excellent ine DA « | Until further notice, Advertisements will be | 7, DeWitt Talmage tells that his own New- you can't do too much for him.’ ‘An | j ing “48: Fe : ; : ’ POSTAGE FREE TO ALL SUBSCRIBERS IN THES ‘NITED , ‘ inserted at the following rates : | foundiand dog (the finest in Brooklyn) barks eben THE 15th OCTOBER NEXT, There is no human being who 1s utterly | 4! the hour of Twelve o'clock, noon, a very | Even the man too lazy to earn 2 desirable Farm of Land, lately occupied by sixpence by his own industry will work hard | Charles Alleyne, Esq., of Hillsboro’ Cas enough when he gets a piece of oyster shell | te, ereene weak the flourishing village of between his teeth. Mount Stewart. bounded and described as ii nS ; follows: Commencing at the south-west Recent Statistics sho w that tailors, not-! anele of a tract of 50 acres of land, the pro- withstanding the cross-legged attitude, are perty of the heirs of the late George Doug- longslived. This is evideatly in accordance | las; thence running, according to the mag- } With the Dat winian theory of the survival of | netic meridian of the year 1764, south | the « filtist seventy-seven (77) degrees, cast seventy- | ‘What do you sell these fowls for?’ in-| six (76) chains, thence south twelve chains quired a buyer. ‘I sell them for profits,’ | and fifty links [12.50] thence north seventy- | ‘Thank you for the in- | seven [77] degrees, west seventy-six [76] | furmation that they are prophets,’ responde! | chains, and thence north twelve chains and the querist. ‘I took them to be patriarchs.’ | fifty links [12.50] to the place of commence- ‘Did your teacher chasten you fer your); @eMb— . cl ?’ asked a father of sis taentiiabis | NINETY-THREE (93) ACRES OF LAND, | ‘Nosir’ said the boy, ‘ he didn’t chass | a little more or less, and is situate in Town- | ‘How was that?’ | ship number 28, in King’s County. For further particulars apply to E. J. HopGson, Esquire, Charlottetown, or to | J. S. CARVELL, W. H. AITKEN. Ch'town, Sept. 21, 1874.—till sale son, fen but he chased me.’ ‘Why, he came for me witha strap, and I broke and run.’ A dentist was recently saved from drown- | ing by a laborer, and from the depths of his ‘Noble, brave. | How shall I reward you. | gallant man! the 15th day of February, 1875. and not charge you a sixpence.’ lg =x ea : ; : | 4 f 4 ‘Lonce knew a child of the sea,’ said | i S a7 Zi ; uncle Nehemiah. ‘who literally passed his | « 7 @ NEW GOODS exposed to all the inclemency of the weather, Please don’t tell such | BOOK & JOB PRINTING. ‘THE NEWEST STYLES OF TYPE, THE EXAMINER OFFICE, 1 square, one insertion, - - - $81.00 | at it! Although so natural, no one who sees Each Continuation, - - - - - 00.25) this chromo will have the slightest fear of Special Notices, ** per line,” - - 00.12) been bitien. | Besides the chromo, every advance sub- scriber to THE ALDINE for 1875 is constitut- ed a member, an: entituled to all the prives leges of a ee eal : An extra copy of either the Magazine, W. PHE ALDINE ART UNION, | or Bazar will be supplied gratis i every ont : The Union owns the originals of THE | of five subscribers at $4.00 each, in one remite ALDINE pictures, which, with other paint-| tance; or six copies for $20, 00, without extra — | ings and engravings, are to be distributed | Copy: postage free. | among the members. To every series of 5,000 | Back numbers can be supplied at any time. | subscribers, 100 different pieces, valued at | over $,2,500 are distributed as soon as the | series is full, and the awards of each series as made, are to be published in each sueceed- | ing issue of TUE ALDINE. This feature | only applies to subscribers who pay for one , . i f | year in olehine Full sanlenlats in circular | | © quvestionably the Lest sustained work ‘ sent on application enclosing a stamp. of the kind in the world.” , ; TERMS. Harper’s Magazine. One Subscription, entitling to THE ALDINE ~~, . one year, the Chromo and the Art ILLUSTRATED. Union, Harper's Bazar, one year... ..... by the publishers. —:0:-—— to one address, for one year, $10. 00: or, twoot | Harper's Periodicals, to one address for 1 year, — $7.00: postage free. ‘ # HAVING IMPROVED POWER & GORDON PRESSES, And a good varicty of . ound in green moroceo cloth, will be seat by ex- press, freight prepaid, for $7. 60 each, _Address HARPER & BROTHERS, New York, # years 1868, ‘69, '70, ‘Tl, "72, "73, ‘74, elegantly we are prepared to do all kinds of BOOK ARD JOB PRINTING on the Lowest Terms, at = ’ 4 - oe ’ i \ \7 " S| iS | fe > cu aS da) BS @ ae aes ; | Specimen copies of TIE ALVINE, 50 Cents. THE ALDINE will, hereafter, be obtain- able only by subscription. There will be no reduced or club rates ; cash for subscriptions must be sent to the publisher direct, or hand- ed to the local canvasser, wilhoul responsi- Notices of the Press. $6,00 per annum, tn advance The ever increasing circulation of this exel- ‘ent monthly proves its adaptation to populagde sires and needs. {ndeed, when we think sate how many homes it penetrates every month we must consider it as one of the educators as well as entertainers of the public mind, for its vast popularity has been won by no appeal! to stupid prejudices or depraved tastes.—Bosion Giobe, he character which this Magazine possceses for variety, enterprise, artistic wealth, and liter- (No charge for postage.) QUEEN SQUARE FURNTIPORK a ’ oss" >-sasneoel #4 00 includes prepayment of U.S. postage ‘eee a Subscriptions to Harper's Magazine, and a The seven volumes of /larper's Bazar for the — whoppers! broke in little May. ‘I speak | sia aa Aoafeah ; Iture that = awith, ic 3 the sober truth, my child. It was the har- | AT THE bility lo the publisher, except in cases where le the claves, Aud ie couhaceaas ta bor buoy.’ Silence fell apon the domestic | the eartenenne. 3 et hearing the feo-cienile gard it with justifiable complaceacy. It alse : aren. BRITISH WAREHOUSE | WAREROOMS ! | signature of James Surron, President | entitles them toa great claim upon the publis f A Mississippi boatman with immense feet, | . — ) | CANVASSERS WANTED. evil all or wine Brook ~“ i copes ata — — = the ere q> ueen squnre, Any person wishing to act permanently as | on ee Se | ed the porter for a boot-jack to pull off his i i me .q | @ local canvasser will receive full and prompt all boots. The colored gentleman, afler ex- aay Our premises have aes quently nant informention by applying to oom Terms: ; amining the stranger's feet, broke out as fol-| ,, 4 4 : : and are now the THE : ee >aNY POSTARS RES TO AL SUREORIEED IS THD CHEE lows: ‘No jack big nuif for dem feets.| The Subscribers have received per Steam- | — ae my as York Harper's Magazin ery $4.00 Jackass couldn’ * d i ° , ‘ ‘ ar. 295 Maiden Lane, New Tork. P CO, OBE FORT... ....000 orerevees J Jackass coulitn't pull ‘em off, massa, widout hii Mitel The largest and best ar-| _____* Sei. Sot. | Cones eee ractring the leg. Youse better go back 5 | the publishers about tree miles to de forksin de road an’ A REW SUPPLY oF * ra 1 : tk > Cit yl ‘HEALTH STRENGTH & VIGOR. Subsesiptions to Harper's Magazine Weekly pull ‘em off dar. rangec In tne 1 y o) Published, Price One Shilling Stg, | *v4 Bazar, to one abteees fettote year, $10.00; British é& Foreign or, two of Harper's Periodicals, to one addres HOU <EH L mo] 4 and equal to any in the Lower Provinces. | 7g\HeE SCIENCE OF LIFE: or SELF-PRE | "ove year, $7.00 ; postage free, S 0 D HINTS. ME \ YT ! | RVAT oe | Anextra copy of either the Maguaine, Weekly nnn | MEROHAMMZE' | enuSERVATION. A practical Guide to | or fasar wil We supplied grat for evry Si os : : ALL WORK WARRANTED TO GIVk Health, Strength, and V igorous Old Age. | of Five subscribers at $4.00 each, in one remit Spreaving Sauce ror Pvppring. — Butter Suitabls for the Present Season - Address to the Nervous, the Sedentary, the | tanee; or, six copies for $20.00 without ext ‘, four ounces, sugar, six ounces; one nutmeg Grate the nutmeg and rub all together ; these are about the proper proportions; more or less nulmeg can also be used, or any other | flavouring in there place. This sauce is nice baked puddings, hot or cold, and, tu tell it on all,it is not bad on bread. which are now open for Inapection and Sale, at the Lowest Cash Prices. PLEASE CALL AND EXAMINE. a Supplies continually received. W. & A. BROWN. October 5, 1874. FALL & WINTER 1874, Our Fall Importations COMPRISE New Goods in every Department | LATEST STYLES 1N Ladies Dress Goods ! SUAWLS MANTLES, TRIMMINGS, MILLINERY, Hats, Bonnets, FEATHERS, FLOWERS, HOSIERY, GLOVES, AND CLOTHS, Fancy Coatings, Overcoatings, TWEEDS, GREY AND WHITE Cottons, Sheeting, Shirting, Flannels, Blankets, Ticks, Ginghams, PRINTS. READY-MADE CLOTHING, IN GREAT VARIETY. Receiving New Goods by Mail Steamers till navigation closes. To PRESERVE Smokep Mreat.—Ilow often are we disappointed in our hopes of having sweet hans during the summer! After carefully curing and smoking, and sewing them up in bags and whitewashing them, we find that either the fly has commenced a family in our hams, or the choice parts around the bones are tainted, and thus the whole spoiled. Now, this can easily be avoided, by packing them in pulverized charcoal. No matter how hot the weather or how thick the flies, hams wiil keep them packed so, for years. Bean Bread as Diet.—Millow, some years ago, showed that bran bread is an essential article of food; Magendie still further de- monstrated that dogs could live on bran bread alone, but invariably died when cons fined to the whitest French bread; Chevreul and Mourier have lately examined the ques— tion again, and have corroborated previous experiments. They find the inner surface of the scales of bran is covered with azotised principles which, like diastase, dissolve starch, changing it into sugar; bran acts, in short, according to these physiologists, as a ferment, and assists digestion in the stomach, irrespective of its other characters. Appts Dumprtinc.—Peel and core the aps ples and put them in a twosquart basin. Make a crust of either sour cream and soda or with baking powder. Put water enough to cook the apples, and cover with the crust, Put an overlapping cover on the top of the basin, and cook on top of the stove, or bake in the oven, if you prefer. A sauce made of butter, sugar, water, and nutmeg, or lemon, is excellent, as is also sweet cream where the apple is not acid ; twenty-five minutes is lon enough to cook ordinary apples. This is sometimes called a ‘Brother Jonathan.’ Peach cobblers are sometimes made similar~ ly with peaches instead of apples, and are best with cream for sauce. Gocd Water and Free Ventilation —A town house, to be healthy, should possess plenty of good water and free ventilation. Where water is impure or scarce, the incon- venience is really a very serious one, and this should be inquired into with great care asa preliminary—for no house, however suitable in other respects, can be desirable, if this grand means of health and comfort is unat- tainable. It is not sufficient that good water is to be had—that it is near at hend—it should be in our heuse; and it must bea very strong and weighty consideration in- Wholesale & Retail. deed that should induce us to overlook this epee point. The way to discover the purity of water is to fill a deep ale-glass, and then | PARK’S COTTON WARP slightest tinge of color’ to'be putetwater | CBLEN, BLU, RED, ORANGE AND WHITE No’s 5's to 10's. should be colorless. Hard water is objecs tionable, because it contains earfh and sa- line substances, which are injurious to some W ARBRANTED to be FULL LENGTH internal diseases. It is not so good for cook- and weight, STRONGER AND BET- TER in every respect than any other Eng- lish or American warp. ing, or washing, or brewing, as what is called soft water, but for washing it can be BEWARE or ImiraTions. None is genu- ine without our name en the labels. For Prices as low as any House in the Do- minion. ROBERT ORR & CO. rendered soft, either by using soda or lye; for dressing vegetables, a small teaspoonful copy ; postage free. 3ack numbers can be supplied at any time A Complete Set of Harpers Magazine, so” & comprising 49 Volumes, in neat cloth — will be sent by express, freight at expense PERFECT SATISFACTION. | Dyspeptic.and all those whose constitutions | have become debilitated or relaxed from ir- | regularities of life, climate, age or disease, I have 200,000 feet Seasoned Lumber under | 0 from over-taxed or abused energies, | whether of body or mind; with the Instruc- publisher, for 2.25 per volume. Singl tases ; 7 > aoa Se 2. oh . Single vo tions foi the Treatment of all Disorders re by mail postpaid, 3.00. Cloth cases, tor bind; ing, 58 cents, y mail, postpaid. Address HARPER & BROTHERS, New York SALE of FREEHOLD PROPERTY Situate at Mount Stewart Bridge. cover, for manufacturing purposes. Lhave 20,000 feet Gilt and Walnut Picture sulting from the Loss of Nervous or Physical Frame Moulding, 80 different patterns he. 37 salacuae SQUARE. Leoane’ a Cheap. |; ‘**An excellent manual for all who may Oval, Gothic and Square Picture Frames, in | learn how to use life and not abuse it.< | Gilt and Walnut. | Ghurch and Slate Gazelle. : : aa | **On the subjects of diet and the regula- A Gilt for Oil Pictures, Cheap. ee | tion of the functions the advice throughout , ' ’ | is admirable.”— Mirror. English, German, and American Looking Dr. La'Mert is the only regularly-qualified YO be sold by Public Auction, on the Glasses and Mirror Plates. Practicioner, who, for thirty years, has de- | Twenty-first dey of January next, (A.D. A few Large Mantle Mirrors and Pier Glass- | voted his entire attention to the cure of these 1875,) at the hour of Twelve o'cleck, non, es, Cheap. | disorders. Fuaiet : | at the Colonial Building, in Charlottetown, Patients residing in the Colonies can be | under and by virtue of a Power o! Sale con- successsfully treated by correspondence, | tained in an Indenture of Mortgage bearing ae — will +4 forwarded in secreey date the Eleventh day of June, 4, D. 1872, and safety to any address. and made between Cuartes W Au stare Ga ae nes LEYNe, of Mount Stewart, in Quees's County, C . alifax; Nova | j ince Edwar { aie 3. Wootack Dear se ig og in Prince Edward Island, Merdsant, ,an mouth, H. A. Parr; Pictou, Henry Eliott; St. John, N. B., H. Chubb & Co., and in CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I., of Messrs. Brem- ner Brothers, 44 Queen Street. Window Furniture, &e. Poles, Rings and Corrices, Rollers, Shades Blinds, Tassels, Cords, &c. Janet ALéyne, his wife, of theom part, anc Joux Anpovs, of Montague, in said Islane. | Esq., of the other part, all thet tract, piece } and parcel of Land, situated lying, and being on Lot or Township number ‘Thirty-eight, | bounded as follows, that is to say, commene- | ing at the South-west angle of a tact of Fifty, (50) acres of land, the property of the heirs of the jate George Douglas, thences® Upholstery Goods, Hair Seating, Bedding, &e. Important Caution.—The publie are earnestly warned against a piracy of the above work emanating from a so-called ‘‘Peabody Institute.” Boston, which unblush- : , ingly appropriates the titles of two works, Teng te, he magnets ieee ee , i “ae , 82 -S e P CS, eo ——— thirty years. | seventy-six (76) chains, thence South twelve |\—— iin erneent innate teenies 1th ee eee tifty links, thence Oe 7 WITT NVWws | seventy-seven degrees, West seventy-six (9) JOYFUL NEWS | chains, thenee North twelve (12) chains fifty (50) links to the place of commence New patterns, in Damask, Repps, Terry, Plushes, Poplins, Brocatells, Fringes, Gimps, Buttons, Tufts, &c., cheap. Bedding—¥eather, Hair and Flock Beds, Pillows and Bolsters, constant- ly on hand, cheap. ; FOR THE AFFLICTED! *'s;,°"%02... 7.08 IRON BEDSTEADS AND CRIBS, |of land, little ‘more or less, exclnsie — | the Settlement road running through the a Great Variety, Cheap. A few of the celebrated Iron Bed CHAIRS, —it makes a Bed, an Easy Chair, and in- | valid Chair.and a Lounge ina few seconds, | very durable. No house should be with- out one | same. LIFE of MAN BITTERS | AWE wuishe 1 Dwellirett | buildings are upon the préyy | ther particulars as to terms | at the office of the unders | _ Dated this Fifteenth Day ,,. | 1874. —AND— COMBINED MEDICINES. ' Our Stock is the Largest in the City, and the very Cheapst R. R. Fil ZG, Asssignee of . Vet, 19, 1874, —tll sale a a — Union Hall Meet hgs ORD'S DAY, 11, a. m., * Breaking of Bread.” =i Lord's Days, 64, p. m., Gospel Preaching. CURES, Dropsy in its worst form; Liver Complaint; | Jaundice ; Swelling of the Limbs and face: | - Asthma, of whatever kind ; Dyspepsia, Bili- ousness, Consumption, Spitting of blood, Bronchitis, Sick Headsache, Hunning Sores, Erysipelas, Stoppage of the Menses, Kidney and Gravel Complaint, Measels, Fevers, Sea Strongest CHAIRS and BEDSTEADS. Most beautiful and durable Drawing Room, Dining Room and.Chamber Furniture, in suits. It is a pleasure to have customers come and examine. George Woods & co’s. CELEBRATED CABINET ORGANS FOh SALE—CHEAP. Sickness, Heart disease, Pleurisy, Piles, Thursday, 8, }. m., Bible Readings. ection of the Spine, Coughs, Colds and | nee . oa, Whooping Cough, Diptheria and Sore | FREEHOLD FARM ney, aes Cholera Morbus, Tooth. | ache and Ague, Sprains, Strains, Felons F 0 R A L E » , Lame Back and Side, Cuts end Cracked | P Hands, &c. " \HE Subscriber Mers for sale all the Justices of the Peace, see Pamplets, which | lately owned by Joft Kickham, situate om can be furnished at the hoieuiak. TT | Township No, Fofy-four, at the head 0 Agents at Charlottetown T. DesBrisay, | Sid farm is convgiently situate to Wholesale Agent, Wen R. vZau a. weliriony; House, Grist and/aw Mills, and is worthy Worms, Itheumatism, Spinal disease, or Affe Sept. 14,1874. tf Throat, Pains in the Stomach, Diarrhea, ON LOM 44 Chilblains, Burns, Scaids, Bruises, Sore Eyes, ka@For Certificates, &¢., taken before right title, anginterests in she For sale by dealers generally. | Souris River, consfting of fifty acres. The | the attention offose who require. cynics f any one, child, nor anything.’ ing away as if nothing was the matter, the a. OT dl pans rust much sooner. ‘ws / of carbonate of soda will corPect the hard-| sale by °"' *>alers. J M ness. Water containing irog gives ~4” Ws. PARKS & SON, JOHN NEWSON. eee G’ “eS ee tional trouble in the kitchen, ~« Is, St Jobn N. B. Middleton Queen fiqu- Dec. 1, 1873, Wershipeaind ( _ * ee, SS