a A WEEKLY JOU “This is trae Liberty, when Ereeborn Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.’*---Euripides. VOL. XVII. 1 FALL Use67. Halifax, N.S. Notice to Debtors. an SH & y 9 4 . W ‘ & { ‘ MURDOCH CO. pee Subseriber hereby notifi ag that a PpEU to announce the completion of complete change being about to be mode in wall} walt « tinen nell on the Business carried on at Orovell, heretofore, by : « ; of every “1 f RY te Patrick Stephens, deceased, and subse Ate os ae a . oo. o ». quently by the endersiyned a I ‘ iv i ‘ ¥ inv the ude and And thisis to vive notice to those parties indebted ~ 4 ‘ erally to Mary Stephens, Exeentrix. and to the node ; signed, by Judgments, Notes of Hand, and Book ALso oN Haxne— ‘ vonts, that auless they pay their respective c . Conyen TEA 8 li this Fall, they shall be sued witl ' sid att n the closing of the Navigation ~ ; sINDIG®O \ y Hantabie produce taken in I B Ordnance Square,2? . put ‘ ; = ’ - : < ¢ 3m R. J. CLARKE Orwe!! Chea . tl Sent . a Stove Pipe time has come. ‘ae Subscriber will sell, at his Establishment, CITY TIN STORE, A large quanti now on hand red Great Bargains! Great Bargains! Great Reduction in Prices! £7000 Worth of Goods. mus S sri intending to clos Selling off the whole seriner, bis USINESS u ty of Stove Pips, il sali ee : a 1 price for Cas and will STOCKH EN DRAB, | make to onder any quantion of Pipe and Elbows of l ' I } wud ly rwwWso , a general ass aime of a firat rate ownktv of English or Russian lron. <A Dry Goods, Hardware, Canvas, Cordage, |. oe : : eran “9 wt ae ae = : a Groceries.’ lron, &c. &C, tn te ee Subseriver caunot be sold &yY any Man , Are iy a oor tie ne , Soap-stewe cut and fitted te order. e a Liv kis A large assortmeat of COAL SCUTTLeEs. . ke ever placed His Stock of TINWARE is warranted of the . _— oO 5 best mutertia!l, geade by expericnced workmen, and : , - i. 4 eauno € SUrpNissed OV “ny IM . ark uN \ . s 8 (ri bist RED . . ‘ saan A liberal discount allowed Wholesale and i % y ‘ will Cash custumers r oe ede ve, oa beral GAS FILMMNGS and PLUMBER WORK. o no aaa On hand, a large supply of GAS PIPES and H. BASZARD. visas aod a further gaautity daily expected y frum Loudoun { x {? ‘ ‘ = we ALSO, Rents. Rents. heuts. A few Down's Deep Well and Cistern Pumps ladies W. B. ALLIN. M ’ > ’ Doo —— City Tin Stere. Ch'town, Good Crops, Good Prices, and ne Or ek asin excuse for Teuauts. - et amvohgiters Toronto Safe Works. es Subscriber. as Avreut for the under. mentioned Propricters, begs te inform: the a TENANTS. that he will mect thematthe f.llow.| THE BEST &S THE CHEAPEST, ing times and places, te receive their fespeclive REN Ts :— Ou TUESDAY, the 22th af November next. he will meet the Tenants of J A. S. MeDoaald, Esqr. of Canada, on Lot 35, as alse the Tenants vf Mwe Mary M. McDonald. of Paris, oo Lota and 36, at LANNEN’S, Tew Mile House, St. Peter s R ad. On WEDNESDAY, the’ 19th of November next, he will meet the Tenants of Lord | “ury Visewunt Meivilie, of Edina wurgh, Scolla al ALEXANDER McKAY’S, DeSable, Let 29 J. & J. TAYLOR, His Lordship’s Pevantry m Lot 33 wil pay their Rent at the Ageut’s Office, ai Lot 49 ane ere eee SO Ou THURSDAY, the 2let of November next TAYLOR’S PATENT be will et the Tenaats of Measra. Thonisons : - of Beliast, lreiand, at NOOUNAN’S, Centre ville FIRE & BURGLAR PROOF SAFES. Bedeque | BYHE only Sates that never fail to p Hoping that all will be prepared te meet early serve their covtents even in the Hottest Fires atthe Gime and places above mentioned, as all OVER 5.000 deliiquehia Wii meet assurediy be Suumuarily f +k ci . écalt with. ac euch are his iustructivus. ut em have been made and sold an j are now in : : e “se [hronghowt Che Canadas, Nova Scotia and New J. R. BOURKE, lirauswieck, many of whic have been subjected to Agent of the above Proprieto “2 Lue seVerest tests bv re of weord. several of them Mill View. Qet. 14. 1°67 { haviugy been Red Hot. from ote 10 hours, yet not — a dellar, book, or siugle scrap ef paper has ever A Wad Td THE Wi SE been destreyed in one of them oc We, a : a i ¢ ulee mmaunuafacture every description ef Bank I Hk usvers gued Wishes to wollly ati Securities, sach as [rou Vaalte, Vanit Doors Saat these whe are indebted to him by vod, | tlar Proof Steel Safes, Coubination Bank Locks, Note, Bouk Account, Reat or Purchase of Land, | &<- © that u weir fespective obligations, which are Seud fer a Price List overt dUt, ads aise liete Which Urlay ieteaite VANUFACTORY, cum du ire bet peid ou their coming to atu Nos. 193 aud 200 Palace street rity—aod which bave been so offen renewed —ar Toronto, C. W not paid, cvercive measures will be resorted to) 2 Pattern to be seen at the Sture of WM. for the recovery of the same, without dis ‘tie McutILhL, Charlottetown, Ageut. of pers «+. as * party iari¥y Wises Oli vule aud Ser mber 2, 18 ing debta t be: igh + & Close ™ ? rt * stificie fet . - ~ wane Hoping coat this will be sufficient autics for School Books! them te keep out of the Lawyer's hands, trea Whew they may expect bu wercy, as Luey uust du Cheap for Cash, J | - ~ v4 R. BOURKE | View, Oct. 14 { 4. uutai l2, a () | ALTERATION IN BUSINESS, ST, DUNSTAN'S COLLEGE. {/ the patronage of His Lordship of Unde F be Charlottetown. Bishop FANGS INSTITUTION is siruated on the Prineetowa Road, a mile and a quarter north of Charlottetewn Ihe site is peculiarly beantifal, healthy, and far remov from the distractions and moral danvers of the eitv Phe halls and rooms of the building are spacions, airy, aad comfortable Phe College Grounds are large, affording umple room for mes aud athletic exercises Phe ft studies embraces all the branches hecessaiy to prepare vou men tor the study o the ul 1 profe ms or Stthem for mereantile pursuits, such as History, Geoyvraphy, the English, Frene! Latin, and Greek Lai myges, Rhetoric, Mathematies, P} liosophy, Chenustry, &e. Music, Vocal aud instrumeutal—is also tanght SSCsses a large at d well se le eted The Colleze po Librarv, as well us an extensive Philosophy Ap paratus. The Professors and Teachers reside iu the In stitution, forming but one family with the students, uaa eXernasing a constant superwisiou, favorable to discipline, decorum aud gi od morals, Catholic stnde ts are carefully and frequently instructed tn their holy religion, which they are equ red 40 practise Phe most solicatous atte ntion Is paid te the morals of all; and whilst within the College enclosure, they are constantly nader the Watchiul eve of one of t Yeachers or Prefects Pertect discipline is strietiy but kindly enforced Students when enterin st produce salisfactory testimouhiis of rod Churaclet The College is visited regularly ance a week by TERMS Per Quaeres or Ll Weeks. a Physician. Board and Tuitien, £6 0 0 Use of Libr; i ee Physician's Fee, ee ee iyments to be made half-yearly in advance. The Coll fer the ure mishes bed-steads and mattrasses; students must provide their own beds and id v brushes, Wusins, towe 6, &¢ Lhe Scholastic year commences on the first * W suay lh Seplember atid enas adout the middle ol ily Mudents are requested to enter the {ollege on the lirst day of the opeulug of the For further partieulars apply to “A. McDONALD. St. Danstan’s Cullege, Aug. 19, 1867. isl Gin * The classes will be re-ope : ned this year on the september PUBLIC LANDS. i = & 5 4 at, 20, 2 Towns hips Nes. 0, 5, 14, a5. and 27. Notice to the Tenants on the above named ‘Lowusbips, and all persous desirous of turchasing Wilderness Land thereon, VFRNHE Commissioner ot Public Lands will attend at the following piaces, for the due on the Purchase of Public Lands, sale of Wiideruess Land :— on the days if 4IWOULLS uud tor the hbereltaltet slated recel} ot all On Thursday, the 31st day of October next, at 9, a.m.; andon Friday aud Saturday, the ist ud days of November, at Mr. Johu creston’s, Tiguish, Lot 1, tor the Tenants on Lot aha sl aud 2 the Sth day of November, at 9, a. th day ot Lit On Tuesday, m-; and ou Weduesd ty, the 6 at Mr. David Huater s, Alberton, le Novewber, +, lor the Dauts ou Lote 4 and o On Friday, the Eight day of November, at 9, a. m.; abd ou Saturday th day of November, ut Mr. MeNauy Wesiern Koad, for the Peuants | on Lots 6,5 and Ll. the t's, Ou Paesday, the Cwelfth day of November, at . a. w; and on Weduesday, the Lsth November, at Mr. Allen's, Weilingtou, Lot 15, fer the Tenants ou Lots 14 and Lo. o dav «af On Friday, Sie loth day of November, at 9. a. m ; and om Saturday, the loth day of November, at Mr. Carrut Kensington, Lot 19, for the lenants ou Lots 20, 27 aud north portion of Lot 21 ers, On Mound iy, the Eighteenth day of November, at -andon Tues iuy, Cle L9ti day of Noveuiber, tm, at Mr. Bagnall s, Princetown Road, Lat 22, for the Tenants on the south portion ot Lot 21. NOTICE.—Those Tenants who have not accept- (2.8.0 “use NEW GOODS. ed the provisions of the Land Pure Act, and have ouuttea tu pay their rent, are Lere by tinally notified, that unless payment js wade Lo the Com missioner at the time aud place above nawed, dis- traiuts Will be issued for ils recovery. HARVIE'S BOOKSTORE, STREET. i POLITICS, no-aectigns sestnmeniineeinintntriitiliiantaitchanantttantiiait tin dntaensshtitinpeeancinimncanetteannatnnts L ~ POETRY. — SON IR PRIN RR IS RIB IR IRIN IRIN AIRLINE LE LOL LL OLA LLOL KING AUTUMN. Come not with sudden rage, With flying leaves from straining woodlands furled, No windy conflicts wage, Rather with clouds in fleecy phalanx curled, | sort of oppression fell upon all men’s spirits | Cone, deeply-musing, sage, To reign, nich Autumn, o'er a peaceful world Come like the friend we love, Like sleep, like evening from the unknown west; Our eyes are raised above, Far off we see thy skirts in splendor drest ; Watch where thy tootstepe rove, What forest depths or glades will piease the it. best. Lo! deep in yonder wood A throne of gold th’ umbrageoaus linden shines ; And, drenched in Summer’s blood, The chesnut blazes next the tall dark pines, This first thy onset stood; So wou its crimson stains its gorgeous lines. Adown this vale thy breath Flushes my cheek, I bear thy soft faint sigh: Is it for Summer's death Thy sorrow, dove like, thus would make its cry? Or that thy purple heath Ere long itself "neath winter’s snow must lie? The wheat-fields shake their spears Where uplands reddew in the sunset glow: The valley far below Red as a mighty battle field appears, W bere thick the poppies blow: Glitter o’er yellow turze some joyfal tears. ' What stream of amber light Pierces my dreams and leads the reapers home ? isi Tis harvest moon te-night ! The starry host rides high in heaves’s blue | parched and dry: dome, Earth kindles at the sight, Now know I Autuwu aud its joys are come! King of a peaceful land, Or by the brooklet stand Aud hail the scatt’ring o'er the year's ripe | grave Fruits with a lavish hand, Tbe last red rose thy loving care could save. Past hours return once more, Old voices haunt us by the forest’s side, And from the Eternal Shore Dear forms and faces te remembrance glide ; We love those days of yore: Best dost thou to their buired treasures guide. | gengibility in which I had lain during the ed freely on those humiliating occasions of Ask, then, ‘neath Autuinn’s spell, What fruits our lives bear as the years grow old? Else harvest rings our knell, Base metal we when all around is gold; Yon dead leaf, as it fell, Warned us how svon our working days are told! _—_- DEAD VIOLETS Let them lie—ah, let them lie! Plucked flawers—dead to worrow ; Lift the lid up quietly, As you'd lift the mystery Of a buried sorrow. Let them lie—the fragrant things, Ail theic souls thus giving; Let no breezes ambient wings, And no useless water springs, Mock them into living. | Reekie than during nearly four months of that year. The high winds, to whieh we are gene- | rally subject in winter, seemed to have ceased laltogether; the smoke mstead of rising beat | down upon the city ; and notwithetanding its elevated situation, and fine mountain air, the streets and houses were so murky dark that there was little difference between ¢he short dim day, and the long and early might. A which was inereased by the floating rumors of the awful ravage of disease in the town, brought home to us every now and then by the death of an acquaintance, friend or re- | 'who loved me so well, and was so dearly they will even in temperate England—the loved.” lation. Gradually the fever increased in virulence. and extended far and wide, tall it became almost a pestilence. self to no clase or age. PTE RATUR [t confined it- | Judges, lawyers, | the step paused atthe door. physicians, were smitten as well asthe hum-|see her, pale and trembling there. The Kk AND N ig et EWS. { NO. SI living, longing to see and know if mg fiesh | his task at some spare hour to twist into was actually currupting- -fancying that [ felt loops. A ¢urn of the pliers, and one of these the worm. The morning broke ; a dim, grey | loops is twisted over the cork and secures it. light found its way through iny closed eye- | The bottle is passed on to some one else to lide; and about an hour after I beard ‘the | be labelled, te some one else to be packed, step of the undertaker and another mas in and so en—and so on—until dozen after doz- the room. Qne of them dropped something | cn, gross after gross, are completed, and the | heavily on the floor, and a minute after they | eye grows weary of watching the process came close te the coffin, and the undertaker | From daylight to dark, as long ae asked his assistant for the screwdriver. It) the warm days make us call for cooling was the last instant of hope, and all was drinks, the workers at these factories pursue agony. Suddenly [ heard my wife's step their labor without intermission, yet seldom ‘quite at the foot of the stairs. *Oh God!| doing more than meet the daily demand. she will never let them!’ Lthoaght. ‘*Ste,Agd when a few very het days occur—as |supply falls short, and the workers cannot ‘She came very slowly up the stairs, and secure the day of rest which should be theirs { fancied L could | once ip every seven. But as the chilly nights approach, the ble classes; old and young fell alike before undertaker asked, in a loud voice, for the trade begins to slacken, bottlers to abate a taken away. It assumed the worst form of iall, however, in the prisons of the city, and the account of its ravages within their walls was tremendous. As the minister of the to attend the prisons; but L heard that two ‘of my brethren had died, in consequence of their zealous care of the poor souls within those walle. {t was with difficulty that a sufficient number of the clergy could be found to attend te spiritual wants, and [ yol- unteered to visit the prisons daily myself. For nearly a fortnight I continued in the per formance of the functions | had undertaken, without guffering in the least, except men- ‘tally, from witnessing the sufferings of others. | But one Saturday night, as 1 returned home |through the very gloomy streets, I felta lassitude upon me, and utter prostration of strength, whieh forced me to stop twice, ‘in order to rest, before I reached my own | door. | attributed it to excessive fatigue, for ll looked forward to the coming When{f reached home {f could Bat that L |neverat @ | calamity. /noteat; my appetite was gone. lattributed also to fatigue, and went to bed. | now. j . ° e | During the night, however, intense pain in | | the back and forehead succeeded ; a burning | heat spread all over me; my tongue became | my mind wandered slight- | ily; and. instead of rising to preach, as I in- | tended, I was obliged to lie still, and send for a physician with the first ray of the morning light. His visit is the last thing 1 recollect for several days. | causing saueers filled with 8ome disivtecting | j fluid to be paced in different parts of the 'room, in ordex to guard my wife and children |against the infection. I then for the first) time discovered that I had caught the fever. | { remember tittle more—for violent delerium set in soon—till suddenly after a lapse of several days, I regained my consciousness, | |and with a conviction that 1 wasdying. My | wife was kneeling, weeping, by my bedside, | | two physicians and a nurse were present; | | and it was strange, after the dull state of in- | or the coldness of the day, and | | last twenty-four hours, how completely all | | my senses bad returned, how keen were all | my perceptions, how perfect all my powers | of thought and reason, In my very health- | iest days, I never remember to have had so | /complete command over all my me: |ties as at that moment. But Il was reduced | to infant weakness; and there was 4 sensa- | tion of sinking faintness, not confined to auy | one part, or organ, but spreading over my whole frame, which plainly announced to | me that the great event was coming They | gave me some brandy ia teaspoonfuls ; but it had ne other effect thaa to enable me to ut- ter a few words of affection and consolation | to my wife, and then the power of speech departed altogether. The sensation that suc- ceeded [| cannot describe. Few have felt it. have experienced the same, and I never) language, coald convey any notion of it. | me, all was over. | 1 was without the slightest apprehension and | 1 remember his | We linger charmed where thy corn-crops wave, | ordering all the windows to be opened, not- | :tal facul- er, and the skill of the maker; and the trade But I have conversed with one or two who|round and round, whose busines is ‘o turo the fly-wheel of the machine—and every where | found one who, either by a figure or by direct | else, bottles. Many good men in the ministry were |coffin-lid. But the door opened, and Isabel-| little of their consequence, ang the tired ‘la’s voice exclaimed, half choked with tears, horses to enjoy longer rests in the stables; | ‘Oh, not yet—not yet! Let me look at him by Christmas it is in a very quiescent state, ’ Love and sorrow spoke in only awakening into brisker condition on the once again! My spirit thanked her, and sever eve of a ball, or some other seasonable festi- every tone. Kirk I was not absolutely called on | had I felt such ardeot love for her as then. | vity. But the idea of living burial was still pre-| Thus it will be seen that the trade is a pre- eminent. Itshe took that last look and left! carious one; a cold or wet summer greatly My anguish was beyond diminishes the average profits. But despite aildescription. Is seemed to rouse my spirit | the fact that the takings of the season cannot to some great, tremendous effort. I tried to always overbalance the slackness of the winter groan, tu speak, te cry, to move, even to it is a rapiniy increasing trade; a sign of the breath. Suddenly in that great agony, a! times which must be hailed with pleasure by single drop of prespiration broke out upon | all who remember the days when hard drink- my forehead, Itfeltlike molten iron pouring 10g was the rale, not the exception. through the skin. But the deadly spell was In every village, however secluded, at brokin. My arms struggled within their every way-side inn, however humble, the covering; | partly raised my head, and) aerated waters are beginning to stand side opened my eyes wide. | by side with the treble X of the brewer; at A loud,long shriek rang through the room, club feasts and wakes, the consumption is and my wife cast herself upon the coffin, | generally large enough to satisfy any but between me and the hateful covering the man the rampant teetotaller ; and our operatives, held up in hie bands. ‘adopting that middle course whieh steers ‘I need not tell you all that followed—for | clear of all dangerous excesses, or prejudices, here lam alive and in perfect health. Buti qualify their half pints with the retreshing have never recovered my original color, and bottle of ginger beer --a mixture technically have ever remained as sallow as you see me | known by the oid name of shandygaff. The event,bowever, has beena warning A sore subject with the proprieter of the In many cases, previously, I bad | mineral-water works is the loss he suffers in calmly seen people hurried very early to the bottles, at which we have been exclaiming. grave; but ever since wherever I had infu-| He tells us that this is a serious drawback, ence, | have prevented the dead from being | for the bettlee are— comparatively —expen- buried before some signs of corruption pre- | sive articles to purchase, and are subject to sented themselves; for | am perfeetly con-| more uses and abuses than Horatio in his vinced that those signs are the only real tests philosophy—even if sodawater was known in of death’ Elsinore—ever dreamt of. Lazy footmen and busy barmaids will not ineonvenience themselves to collect them; and & peep into their eupboards might find them Since thoee days when the Greek advertis- retained to hold old compounds for which they ed for sale in London the new drink called | certainly were not originally intended. coffee, there have been many pretentious Antiquated dames of the Sairey Gamp beverages concveted to please the palate of | order covet them, as convenient in size for the public, some of which have died out of | fetching vinegar: the delinquent husbands. all remewbrance, while others are only of sorrowful wives shivering at bome till the known to us by name. sma!! hours, carry them away filled with Bat the demand for aerated waters has) propitiatory cordials, and forget to bring been for some years rapidly inereasing. It|them back. They may be eeen in stable is not so very long ago since potass, soda, yards and skittle alleys converted into candle- and seltzer waters were scarcely known Sticks, after which they are of little use to beyond the upper classes, and only patroniz-| any one; while hotel-keepers and pablicans strongly object to be charged for those booked which the lese we say the better. Ginger | againet them as missing. beer was then retailed in podgy brown stone| Perhaps the most laborious part of the trade buttles, and in nige cases oat of ten was not is the delivery of the mineral waters to cus- worth drinking; €0 much depending on the | tomers ; especially where, as in country yeast with which it was fermenved, the weath- districts, the rounds are long, and the roads billy or sandy. The outward load is always and old|@ heavy one ; nor is the returniug one, em- gromen. bracing a6 it does, boxes, baskets, and ag Now the greenish glass bottles of the | many empties as can be collected—consider- wholesale makers are to be fouod in every | ablylighter. This also involves great e house; their gaily paiated vans are hourly | ees in horses and horsekeeping. / rumbling along our streets, and a peep into | And now we look our last at they ottles the mysteries of the mineral-water works) on which the setting sun is gleaming, for the may afford the reader amusement. /quiet pony which has heen plodding round 4 dingy place—large, lofty, with not an) and round at is monotonous task, is amhar- ineh of its space sacrificed to ornament. Here, nessed—the bottler has laid aside his leathern the simple apparatus in which the gas is gen- | apron, the attendant imp is ruefully examin- erated—there, the gqulet pony plodding \ing the scores upon his thumb left by the | wires he has been so continually handling ; the van is leaded with stuff (technical) to be In racks, in boxes, in baskets, | delivered in the morning ; the work for the and on the ground; long and narrow, short day is ended, and our nete book must be to me. THIRSTY. += FOR THE A CHAPTER was in the hands of a few publicans, DeD- bt . 7 j a Hi] bet] ' ; e« | Tbe utmost I can say ie, that it was a feeling and rotund ; swelling out into — for | of extinction. Fainting is very different. | the draught of the parched East lodian, or This was dying, and & single momeat of per- diminishing into the small half pint of the tect unconscicusness euceeeded, ‘confectioner; in all shades, from a dingy elosed. > — DANGLERS. NE Sabseriber has lately receiv sd a QUEEN | LARGE ASSORTMENT OF Worcester’s Dictionary, Dry Goods and Hardware, wh Auct Cam pbe'l’s Geography, i ymaght at ms, au \ne Advanes i “d Reader, suid Very low GEORGE HOWATT. | 4 set OO 1 GOODS! NEW GOODS Lenuie’s Grammar, | Crapand é eee Thompson's Arithmetic, | NEW ! _ Grey's Arithmetic, VANE Subs ver would intorm the Inhabi a ; ; lauts ? ky is bd, thal, on the are a Spelli Books in variety, the Brig ANN, trom Liverpool, G. B, be will The New Serivs of Schoul Bovke, Ofier Wholesale and Retail, The Irish National Series of Du. For Cash or gvod Juint Notes of Hund, Nos. 1,2 & 3 WHITE LEAD, iu 56, 25, & 14 ihe Webster's, Johnson's and Walker's Dictionaries, Copy Books, Slates, Pens, Peucils, &e. &e bar Remember the Cheapest School Books Black, Red, & Yellow PAINTS, in 23 & 14 lbs.; BAT Bem Builed aod raw LINSEED OILS; are lo be had at Chance’ s Smethwick GLASS: TT’ Ss PUTTY, Black and White, in Biaddera 23 and HARY IE S BOOKSTORE. 14 iba.; September 7 [at7. CUT NAILS, and CUT SPIKES; Diamond Head DECK SPIKES; Insurance! Insurance! | Bais Retiaed and Common IRON, assorted sizes —— Barrels and Kegs COAL TAR; * £ Barrels Black and Bright VARNISHES; FIRE & LIFE Coila HEM? and WIKRE CORDAGE: Royal Insurance Company, ~ Bolte Extra and Navy Boiled CANVAS; Bars YELLOW METAL, é to §; YELLOW METAL BUTT BOLTS, 7 ~ 3; CLINCH KINGS, Lren and Yellow Meta Crates and Casks GLASS, CIIINA, and EA RTH- ENWARE,—Crates assurted tor country LIVERPOOL, G. B. Capital, $10,000,000. Annual Income exceeds $5,000,000, rapidly increasing. Agyregate paid in Province of Nova Seotia and losses ANEW MIXTURE for Bottoms of FISHING BOATS, much approved of by English during last 12 years, @ guarter tishermen. of a million dallars. Parties wanting any of the ahove artielvs will | General Agent for Nova Scotia and Prince Edward do “ by calling aud inspecting them, atthe) Islaad—HUGH HARTSHORNE, sy Llalifax. OLD 8s] AND, fortaertly eceupied by W WwW —_— Louw & Co., Sabseriber having been authoriz-d HEAD of LORD'S WILARF, (QVe to accept Risks fer this Office, in all parts of respecttully intimates that oposals in both branclies Water Street. ARTEMAS LORD. Prince Edward Isienud is pre pared t e sive pr rituz Poli les Oet he 29, 1566. from parles des : v EUROPEAN EXCHANGE, | i" eiyaracter for prompiuess and this Office il- know i possess i by isthe best guar a autee to Lusurers Rates bat) application. The arr NEW Per “ Lotus,” from Loadon ; ** Empress,’ from Glasgow ; ° L. C. Owen, Pe Une dine,” and “ Helen Malcolm,” jrom Liverpool. © = BALES and Cases DRY GOODS, Pe 4 Biles White and Colored Cottoa Warp, 100 Boits Bleached Navy Ca ys) b ite C pper Duck, tor Boat Sai 8, Sh ls i Kurt per’s G fi, 4 Casks BRANDY, GOODS Lv ARRIV E, | every information farnisived on Cc will be transinitted ou request . post paid , to pierate, au \ Mmapany & Vales and proposals wuy be seut, F. ELLIS, General Com. Merchant aud Iasurance Ayent, Pictou, a. &. JOS 6 mos ivias, i) ~ seen at my Office, Colomal Building. fare propelled by a powerful stream ; CASCUMPsw POINT. The Commissioner of Public Lands will sulmpit to puolic competition, oo Tuesday, the Sth day ot November, at 12, a. m., at} ‘ir. David Hunter’s, Alberton, certain tracts or portions of Land, being a part of Cuscumpee Point, a plan of which may be } | JOUN Land Office, 26th Sept., 1867, ALDOUS, Cotmmiissioner. Prince Edward Island. IN CHANCERY. Re Mark Nathaniel Wright. George Dudley Wright, Margaret Theododia Wright, Matilda Ann Wright. Martha Maria Wright, and Isabel Christiana Wright, Infants, by Betsy M. Wright. their Guardian. i* pursuance of a Decretal Order, made by His Honor the Muster of the Rolls, in this the 20th day of August last, BLIc AUCTION, on the in Prince County , in tuis canse, beariuy date there will be sold by Pl l’re at leunk River mises Islund. on WEDNESDAY, the sixth day ot NOVEMBER next, at the hour of 12 o'clock, noon, all that valuable Freehold Farw, or tract of Land, mn To vuship N 26, containing 125 acres,a hier more or with the Messuage, Mills, Buildings and «ppurtenances to the same belonging, ot whieh George M. Wright, the father of the ubove named infants, lately died seized und pos- situule « liet sessed. The Farm and Premises above mentioned are situated on the Main Kead, between Somerset formerly Seuth-west settlement) and Freetown, Bede que ; having a froutage of l2o chains on the suid Koad, and being LU chains in breadth, a little more or less. Vhe land is of superior quality, abont sixty acres of which are cleared and in a good state for calti- vation, the residue being covered witha fine growth of hard and soft wood Fhe principal Dwelling House, a (2 storey building, is 30 by 28 feet, with a kitchen iu the rear 20 by 18 feet; contiguons to which are Weed House, Carriage Heuse Stables, Workshop and Barn, the latter 40 by 30 feet, The Mills. comprising a very superior Grist Mill (with Mills, and their 3 pairs runners), Shingle, saw and Carding situntion for busiiess purposes is cousidered to be unequalled in the Island Phe preperty will be ottered in three separate lots or Secthons One lot comprising the alilis, with a Cottage 20 by 18 feet, ; 15 feet, dor the u ota of Land attached. The the Farm proper, consist- ing of about 79 acres, Dwelling House Buildings and 25 acres, being the rnertheru section of and a Workehop IS by Miller, with 25 acres second jot widl comprise with tie and other above deseribed ; the remaining the tract. and all cleared, will ferm the third lot. 6 Casks Scoteh Whiskey, 44 Chests and half chests TEA, 12 Kegs Bi-carbonate Soda, 6 Caske Washing Soda, 6 Bbls. and Cases CONFECTIONERY, 6 Kega and 3 Cases Coluan’s Mustard, } I Keg Cream Tartar, { Cask Epsom SALTS, } Case Nutmege, 3 Bilis. Currants, 1 do Indigw, i Bb) ALUM, | Bbi. Saltpetre, 1 do Copperas, J. LONGWORTH, Master in Chancery. | Hodgson, Solicitor. [sep 16] Sentember 16, 1867. lel July 10th, 1867. Cheap Goods! New Goods! cone i 7 | HEARTZ & SON | property will be sold in one Hot. AVE just received by Java. direct) TeRus—Ten per ceut. of the purchase money to from ENGLAND, a further supply of be paid down at the time of sale, and the residue of "9 , a one-third of the purchase money, 234 percent, upou DRY GOODS, the execution of the Deeds. The remaining bwo- } : 73 » de » i Yotto »y will | thirds to be secered by Mortgage on the premises, we. ir air daenaien oe” . jin mauner more detinitely to be expressed in the than the Stock imported this Spring. | conditions of Sule. GOODS :—Consisting of Grev, White, Striped, : end Painted Cottons, Ginghams, Grey and White | tember, 1867. Sheeting, Striped Bedding, Cotton, Union and | 30 Boxes Raisins, 1 Bag Pepper, Lianen Ticking, Towels and Towelings, Cheese 8 Ones Coe Cloth, &e, &e. T. x Crates KARI H ENWARE. oe will DRESS G‘ ODS -—Freneh Merino, Circassians, a oe ae s eye he peo proved Poplius, Covurgs, Lustres, aud Faucies. wn LOW’ “ e ade to P credit. ' c a vm LARGE STOCK of the above, received | Bok cee regi, Dose, | ex * Lerus,” from LONDON, of the newest 7 } hye >a : PS : P. W. HY NDMAN. | SUNDRIES:—Buagle and Straw Trimmings and STYLES and SHAE a ‘ Ch’tewn, May 6, 1867. Ornaments, in Black, White & Mixed; oe Good Silk = aeaee S has —_-.-— | Trimmings, &c.; Buttons and Clasp Dewdrops, Paris Velvet do, 208 27s 6d. ONCE MORE. | Feathers aod Saag caeetie yo vod i Townend’s best dv, 32s 6d. . : : , | Boots, Geute’ Hats, Collars, Lies, Braces, . Jent’s. FELT HATS, in greet PeRsons owing Mr. Wu. H. WILSON | mn ots, dec, de. . Sa g of their | ‘ : ; session ppumetel. 3° wae —, ciate | P. 8.—The above, along with Stock on ‘hand, A large Stock of Tweed and Cloth CAPS, unpaid on the 1ath November next will be sued for | will be sold, wholesale wud retail, eheap for) and alsoin Ladies’ STRAW HATS. &e.&e. to close up the estate. ate tai i | Cush. HEARTZ & SON. | G. £5. DAVIES. Ch'town, ¢ ane oe ee, Saly 15, 1867. Charlottetowe, June 7, 1367. at Should intending purchasers prefer it, the whole | | Dated at Charlottetown, thie 10th day of Sep | TOWNEND'S HATS AND CAPS. | } They have lived—they live no more; Nothing can requite them For the gentle life they bore, Which to up-yield in full stove, It did sv delight them. Yes, I ween, flower-corses fair ? *Twas a joyful yielding ; Like some soul heroic, rare, That leaps boldly forth in air For its loved one’s shielding. Surely, ye were glad te die In the band that slew ye; Glad to leave the open sky, And the airs that wandered by, Aud the bees that kuew ye. Giving up a small earth-place, And a day of blooming, Here to lie in narrow space, Smiling in this smileles« face With such sweet perfuming. O ye little violets, dead! Coffined trow all gazes, We will also smile and shed Out of heart-flowers withered Pertume of sweet praises, And as ye, for this poor sake, Love with life are buying, ‘Every one believed me dead. My eyes were closed, and weights placed upon them. The lower jaw, which remained dropped, was | /bound up with black ribbon. My wife was | hurried from the room, sobbing sadly; and lthere I lay, motionless, veiceless, sightless ; growing colder, and more cold, my limbs be- | |nummed, my heart without pulsation, dead, | all but in spirit, and bet one corporeal faculty lio its original acuteness. Not only did mg | | hearing remain perfeet and entire, but it | seemed to be quickened, and rendered ten | | times more sensitive than ever. T could hear |sounds in the house, at a distance from my | lehamber, which never reached me there be- fore. The convulsive sobbing of my wife in a distant room; the marmured conversation of the physicians in a chamber below; the | little feet of my children treading with timid | | steps as they passed the chamber of death ; land the voice of the nurse saying ‘Hush, my jdear, hush,’ as the eldest wept aloud ip | ascending the stairs. | «*Trere was an old woman left with a light 'to watch with the dead body, and I cannot tell | you how painful to me was her moving about ithe room, her muttering to herself, and her | heavy snoring when she fell asleep. But} ‘more terrible anguish was in store. On the following day the undertaker came to measure | me for my coffin. Although, as { have said, { was all benummed, yet | had a faint rem- nant of feeling, which made me know when anything touched ime, and a conseionsnes as in the highest days of health. You can ‘affected—there they are in dogens, grosses, | deained. Amongst the many trials and troubles which the | mother of daughters is obliged to undergo before she can dispose of her charges, there is no greater ei told that the manufacturer | Ztievance than that which arises frou ccies eee as of = stock by thousands, | °! male which may be fittingly described woe ; : | the above heading. Of course, in the ordinar, — and is constantly making fresh purebases, a * van loaded with reclaimed ‘empties’ drives | },. anticipated irom the very nature of the pursuit, up the yard, and we stand aside to see the | put the dangler is an impertinent and unreason- | process of unpacking and refilling. | able obstruction, for whose existence no sound | Carried by two stout fellows into the wasb- | reason ean be assigned, and whose mission, if he ing shed, the bottles are seized by lads who, | has any, would seem to be simply to thwart the with pliers in hand, dexterously twiet off the best Jaid schemes of match-making women. joose wires banging around the necks, and| The dangler generally gets into a house as pass them on to the women who stand at/ mysteriously as a black beetle. Like other large tubs, ready to receive them. Each domestic nuisances he comes with some one else, bottle undergoes @ careful examination, tor | 4nd it is to a friend of the family that most ove the purpose of ascertaining whether it bas the adinission of this disturbing creatureinto their been put to any illegitimate uses. If such) dining-rooms and confidence. The dangler is & . os cemetines| Se not eligible, but who appears eligible, owe been = ae “wd foe ‘ils osid tenth and who pretends to a desperate sensibility of se 1appens, bas bee 0 i brown to the greemish white most commonly and hundreds, And while we gage and ex- : contagious a character that the best trained it 1s put aside to undergo « more deliberate qaughter in the world will sometimes share the cleansing. The rest are washed, rinsed, and complaint with him. He bas, however, no serions | intentions, and no visible or attainable prospects. Naw they are ready to be carried to the When the has been discussed and inquired inte, factory, where they undergo the further and the verdict passed upon hit as tnatrimonially processes of corking and syruping. As the undesirable, there is as much difficulty in shaking strength and flavour of the aerated water hin a as there is in getting rid of a bad habit. will, in a great measure, depead upon the He om: wt ” ee nae re fitting of the corks, this is attended to with he wil enavecuer te ae We : { d aiid supper-table, and bis perseverance muy not oviv great care, and a cork is rarely used a second 4) fit, but deter men of the required eapital time. , and standing who are only waiting an opportonity While one pair of busy hands is thus em- | of bidding for a partner in the business of going ployed, another pours into each bettle «| through life. If the dangler was ence allowed to certain modicum of syrup flavoured with dangle in the Row, he will continue to do so a singer of lemon; or in the case of soda water, considerable time after that permission has been And he does this without a notion husband-chase there are many blinks which vars ' Ee \, a ¥ ' , ‘ ° , : ie hich communicate to withdrawn ; Go, 1 deubt wit: One wih wake ea = paso asngrbcn deh ety a a f thd ; ii of coming to the point, even if he were challenged ay - 1 as I felt the man’s measure ran over my body | the fluid the peculiar taste from which dt wi ding ‘bt hi = ine we All our gathered flowers to take - i ; . i. Lea : J tu doso. Nothing frightens him more than being @ © | We : to tuke the precise size for the awful recep. | derive its name, / formally accepted. He regards a rejection as a . Richer scerts though dying. itacle that was to carry me to the grave.| After this operation, each bottle, with the simple “ not at heme,” but as no more. He hes , { ae ‘Then came the discussion of half an hour be- | cork lightly fitted in, is passed se the man made up the little he possesses of mind to a deter- Ci \ THE VOICELESS. tween him and the old crone inthe chamber,in seated at the machine, the most important |) j,,ation that hanging around the skirts of girls, Fy saa regard to the black gloves and hat-bands. I) personage to the factory—one who in the ¢riffing with their duties, and distracting them , We count the broken lyres that rest am really ashamed of myself when I re- season brooks no interference aad dewands from their main pursuits, is the = delightful ‘ ‘ a ; } mations f exneri , rf ache teupatio Jer the sun. He will ron anywhere fiom thie eeent weil ill Bi alls member the sensations Lexperienced. [ never | high wages, and when the wigter approaches, occupation unc | ' a | : : ; Nn a a ae A > epnagaegg {elt so unchristian in my life as I did then, | andthe trade falls off, disappears none knows te dangle afier a woman, He will even sooner rif a ee when lying to all apperance dead, and the where, and lives nu one knows how—the ote ee ree a mg to coon. ee : . Phe wild Rowers who will stoop to namber ? worst of it all was, | could not maeter those | bottler. re gia apse: ipanne-otitehi dog, A few may touch the anagic spring, leensations. Will seemed to be at an end, On him devolves the most dangerous part a oy ward will bine ae or run. seats 4 3 And noisy fame be proud to win them; even when consiousness— remained entire. of the work, and those of the lraternity who ing to divectines. The dengiet ts edidew Sate r Alas, toc those who never sing Atter that what | most distinctly rememem- are provident, secure themselves in Some | 5. an office of this kind, and he never voluvteers* Alas, 1 ae a sa the ber, was a long dull blank. I fancy the | degree from the consequences of the accidents 4, help ou any occasion except it fits with hie | i Hut die Wah SS en eeR Te room was left vacant for | bad no perceptions. to whieh they are expored, by insurance. yyy proper convenience, comfort, and favourite 7 © i Was ‘evios for the dead alone The spirit was Jett to itself its only remain- |The gas, generated, we believe, by poering amusement. Then he is a perpetual source of i ' 2 oe oe we - | ing organ of communication with the mate- sulpharic acid upon pounded chalk, 18 foreed irritating euriosity te these whem he inveigles — Where song has to!d their heart’s sad story, rial world had nothing to act apon, and \into a reveiyer, and from thence by a tap into inte being concerned about hin. = bey never © Weep for the voiceless who have known thought was all in all. But thought was the bottles. The filling iseowetimes effected quite determine how to deal with ‘him. If he is + The cross without the cjown of glory ! intensley terrible. Troe, thought was con- by means of a smal) machine; but the regu- ty - ane oa Oe : j Not where Leucadian bree" sleep | eentrated altogether upon one subject. Every lation of the quantity nanny a r — as aan os ieaae ale : O'er Sappho’s memory hauit’ed pillow, ' man bas much to repentof. Every man who upen the skill of the workman, whoca ee the very asenciation of his name which remains | : : is believes, bas much to hope and to fear) with extraordinary exactitude the seconds of after bis flitting interferes with the market : But where the glistening eo ‘in the presence of another world. But re- time required to a a pre value of what he has touched. The or U'er nameless eurrow’e chara, hed willow. | pentance, hope, fear—I tell you the plain that preciee quantity, which shall neither be j, 4 maseule flirt of a puny ‘kind. e- ; ¥ | truth—another world itself, never came into to much nor too little. dna the latter case is as unnatural as a male dancer and a8 — O hearts that break and give no ae, _my mind. They seemed to have died away the article will be vapid and tasteless—in the worthless. He is without courage er principles” : Save whitening lip and fading /resses. from memory, with that extinction of will | former the bottle bursts, and the fragmente of eA = he pone a either. oe has ~ ni , ; : : ; i ’ ety is responsi Till death pours out bis cordial yeine, | with whieb { havespoken. All I thought of glass are violently Bung in all direetions. ne Pe ee ye eee . f h , , : ' ‘then was, that L was lying there living, and | lo guard against the consequences of suc oe ’ We Slow dropped from misery’s cyushing presses, , ‘ ! hick { ¢ He was eriginally kept in bands for his ow ¥ Bf ciewine beeath hoi | was about to be buried with the dead. It | occurrenees—whichn are frequent—some o | enkk, thee tolerated, or eeed ee @ fells Sane . ae eo Hints —, was like une of those terrible dreams in which the bettlers shield their faces with masks con- prow perversion at privileges he enjoyed To every hidden pang was give, we seem grasped by some monster, or some structed fur that purpose ; bat others ture ‘assume a distinct rele of his own, and to eet What endless melodies were pour}ed, assassin, and struggle to siriek or to resist, careless, or fearless, encounter the chances 4, jt were on lis personal account. The d As sad as earth, as sweet as Hefaven ! but have neither power to utter a sound nor to | of @ serious wound, with no other protection js petovly a terror and a torment to move a limb. than the thick glove or cloth, in which they but he is often an abomination fo married ~ re | +L will not dwell upon the farther particu- grasp the bottles as they present them at the with young wives. It is from the stuff of which MISCELLANEG} 8. | lars. The coffe was brought mto the room; tap of the machine. : he is composed that the cavalier os < the ann '] was dressed in’ my grave-clothes: { was, This process goes on with astonishing ra- Continent is made. In nine cases on ot id HE 3 bed, stiff. and rigid as|pidity. The workman dives into the basket the perplesities which engage the judge é THE FEELING OF TRE\DEAD. moved in that narrow bed, stuf, g poerey- ; ‘Divoree Court arise out of the manners and cu i f d which | thought. of bettles beside him, and seizes one by the D ee a atone, with agony of mind which I thought |o ; fe toms af dangiers. The dangler is move danget- ‘In the winter of 1857,’ eaid Mr. ——— ,| must have awakened some power In the cold neck; one, two, three—the water efferves- |. ty gay wives than to lively spinst The ‘there was a great deal of ¢ypilys fever in dul mass which bound up wy spirit. One | ces as the gas entere it—with a smell mallet former use him freely, and find a certain pleasure ye | Edinburgh. It was a gleomy 4 winter, | whole night i lay there iathecoffiin, Learing which he holds in his band the cork is quick-| in keeping him by them; but the latter ate a | changing frequently from kard fed t to warm the tick of the clock upon the stairs—filled ly keacked in, and the bottle is Beng into the either bewildered and purzied, or half angry and - TAIDy, Oppressive weather; and apver did my | with strange and wild im preesions—doubting | lap of a boy who site close by, provided with | halt os at vege That — a 5 nat i dese ds r whether J wae a bundle of the thin wires it hae beer we never forgive wheu is discovered, ¥ ; |natwe ity better tre the nafmeof Auld, whether J were really dead o her com F ye a DS eA ae Cen s ‘ - $ . Sid