Saeiaaiinnaiaiie a ke Tally White's Christmas. ' smoother. BY CHARLES F. HURD. It was the 24th Decomber. A sharp stinging sort of a day that made the boys on their way to school put their caps down tighter over their ears, and stick their well-mittened hands deeper into their pockets. The icicles which hung from the eaves were brittle with ! cold, The snow looked whiter and the ice in the meadow bluer and There was nota breath of air stirring. The smoke rose straight up from the chimneys. and the half- dozen withered leaves that clung to the shaggy limbs of the maples in dea- eon Washburn’s door-yard hung as still as if they were only parts of a painted icture and had never moved at all. On the front steps of the Washburn mansion stood a sturdy little fellow of four years vigorously kicking the lower nels of the door and endeavoring by shouts to attract the attention of the inmates. He was well protected from the cold; his warm fur cap and heavy woolen comforter showing hardly more than the tip of his little nose, which the sharp air had painted a bright pink color. “’Emme come in! ’Emme come in!” he shouted, impatiently, as he ceased kicking for a moment, to rattle the door knob. The door suddenly opened. “ Now, Taffy White, go right away from the front door this minute. Your feet are all over snow, and I ain't going to have you stamping through the front entry all day. There’s enough to toin the kitchen without keeping a girl to run ‘round after you witha broom. Ifyou want to come in, go ‘round the other way.” “But I want to come in this door, Gran’ma Was'burn. I got some busi- ness.’ “Your business ain’t very driving, I guess. Why don’t you go and stay with Silias, in the back kitchen? Its nice and warm there, and may be he'll tell you astory.” “] dont’t want any story. I want to come in the front door, and I want my papa's letter.” ‘J the boy,” said Mrs. Wash- burn impatiently, “he will have his own way and there can’t any of us help it. Come in then, and dont keep me standing in the door with my bare arms, all day.” Taffy’s point was gained, and he marched bebind his grandmother into the kitchen, conscious that he had achieved a single victory. Such a delicious whiff of mince meat and spices, and plum cake, and hot pies aud doughnuts as saluted his nos- trils as he entered the room! There was flour over everything; raisin stems and apple parings were scattered about ; and paper bags, with myster- ious contents, fresh from the grocery, filled the side table. Piles of plates stood in the chairs, and the great brick oven set forth its hot breath every time it was opened for the in- spection of its contents. “There,” said Mrs. Washburn, wip- ing the flour from her fingers on her apron and taking down a letter from behind the clock. _ “*There’s your letter. And now what are you going to do with it ?” « * Keep it,” replied Taffy. But you can’tread it. L should think you’d want to keep it nice, to show papa when he comes.” “| want you to-read it to me, then.” “|’veread it to you, over and over, and so has everybody else in the house. I can’t spare the time. Go and. get Silias to read it.” “T want you to read it,” and Taffy’s chin quivered and his voices grew louder. “Don’t cry. Merey on us, child, don’t you see how busy everybody is ? Your papa ’ll be here to-morrow, per- haps; and that’Il be ever so much ter than your letter.” But Taffy insisted. «“ Well, then, do read it to him, Jane. It’s the quickest way to get rid of him. We thant have any peace till you do.” So Jane stopped chopping mince- meat for a moment, leaning on her knife while she read the letter aloud ; My dear little boy—I shall leave Ualifornia by the first of December, and hope to be with you Christmas. I send this inside Grandma Washburn’s letter so it will go safe. I hope to find Tatiy w good boy. Yoa must come witit! grandpa to meet me at the sia oo Christmas Eve. With ever so many kisses. Papa. Tati'y listened as intently as if he had never heard a worl of it before, and as soon as it was through demanded a second reading of it. - Jane was obstinate. “Well, read on the outside, then. You didn’t read that.” “Taffy White, Esq. That's all. Now don’t plague meany longer. Run out, like a good boy.” To be continued. baa tte Rial a tet di€SS | | CELEBRATED FOR Goods Adapted to the Season, Wes, fox the Coming’ Winter, AN IMMENSE = siuck Men’s Overcoats, Reefers, Ulsters, Coon Coats Fur Caps, Undershirts & Drawers. Blankeis, Flannels, Buffalo Robes, &e s® All Selling at Extraordinary Low Prices for CASH. CEO. DAVIES & CO. Nov. 18th, 1878. Tho Greatest Medical Diseevery since the Creation of Man, or since tho Commencement of the Christian Era. There never has been a time when the heal- ing of so many different diseases has 9 caused by outward application as the present. It is an undisputed fact that over half of the entire population of the globe resort to the use of ordinary plasters. Dr. MELVIN’s Capsicum Ponovs PLASTERS are acknowledged by all who have used them, to act quicker than any other pilaster they ever before tried, and that one of these plasters will do more real service than a hundred of the ordinary kind. All other plasters are slow of action, and require to be worn continually to effect acure; but with these it is entirely dif- ferent: the mstant one is applied the patient will feel its effect, Physicians in all ages have thoroughly tested and w+ll know the effect of Capsicum; and it has always been more or less used as a medical agent for an outward application; but it is only of very recent date that its advan- tages in a porous plaster have been discovered. Being, howevér, convinced of the wonderfal cures effected by Dr. MELVIN’S CAPSICUM Porous PLAsters, and their superiority over all other plasters, they now actually prescribe them, in their practice, for such diseases as rheumatism, pain in the side and back, and all such cases as have required the use of plasters orliniment. After you have tried other plas- ters and liniments, and they have failed, and u want a certain cure, ask your druggist for yR. MELVIN’S CAPSICUM POROUS PLASTER. You can hardly believe yourown convictions of its wonderful effects. lthough powerful and quick in its action, you can rely on its safety for the most delicate cag to wear, as it is free from lead and other poisonous material commonly used in the manufacture ef ordin- ary plasters, One trial is a sufficient guarantee of its merits, and one plaster will gell hundreds to your friends. Ask your druggist for Dk. MELVvIn’s CAPstI- CUM POROUS PLASTER, and take no other; or, on receipt of 25 cents for one, $1 for five, or $2 for a dozen, they will be mailed, post paid, to any address in the United States or Canadas. MANUFACTURED BY THE NOVELTY PLASTER WORKS Lowell, Mass., U.S. A., G. E. MITCHELL, Proprietor, Hanvfacturers of Plasters and Plaster Compounds W. R. WATSON, Agent December 7, 1877 COAL. COAL. OUND AND NUT COAL cheap for cash, by W. W. CLARKE, Agent. Head Lord’s Wharf, Charlottetown, Nov. 23. NOW READY Great National Work | ART ILLUSTRATIONS By C. R. TUTTLE. pn new and only ILiusrratep Hisrory of the DomriniIon OF CANADA. Just pub- lished. The most wer and saleable Work of the day. In2 Magnificent Grand Quarto Volumes, 600 pages in each, or in monthly numbers at 50 cents. Beautifully illustrated and handsomely bound, with 28 fine Steel Plates, 20 cviginal Wood Cuts, and 200 Photo ‘Lithograph Engravings, on stone, of our promi« nent public men. ; at once. D.. DOWNIE & CO,, Sole Publishers. The Auburn. M, E., shoe shipments for the week ending, Nov. 23 were 1072 cases, Box 1964, Montreal. iHlqyge NEW GooDs } AGENTS WANTED in every town and WN ce county in P. E. I. Send for terms and outfit : Cw G rl? may ‘* - — eee NEW Goons! steiiegeneaapieens’ (8 meme - OOD Robert Orr & Co. HAVE JUST OPENED A VERY LARGE AND WELL-SELECTED STOCK OF STAPLE & FANGY DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, MILLINERY, Etc., Kte., ; ] » ton vv . > i which they are selling, wHonmsatk and Rerat., at the lowest prices ever offered in Charlottetown. We solicit an inspection from chasing elsewhere. wll Cash Buyers of our Goovs and Prices, before pur- ROBERT ORR & CO. Charlottetown, Oct. 4, 1878. —2aw mon thur wkly ECONOMY & SECURITY. UN MUTUAL LFW AND ACGLDRNT LAURANCE COMPANY OF MONTREAL. - eat tents A SOUND AND RELIABLE HOME COMPANY. Investments All Within the Demimicn. 10: —- 55,299.51 PKOFITS ON PREMIUMS IN 1877. - SUBMITTED - wil 6 SURPLUS NEW BUSINESS, 1676, - - $1,886,598 : x Se? visi - 3,158,009 Solia Addition to Sompany’s Assets in 1877, } - 955,980.55. There is no-reserve clause, making the amount of claims under the Sun Mutual Policie vo be less than the sum assured by them, as wider the minimum system. 2% 6 Special attention is claimed to the fact that our policies are payable in full. “ea THOMAS WORKMAN, Ese., President ; | M. HE. GAULT, Esq., Managing Director ; T. J. CLAXTON, Esa., Vice-President ; R. MACAULAY, Secretary. J. M. C, DELESDERNIERS, Superintendent. Prince Edward Island Beard of Directors: HON. L. C. OWEN, HON. J. F. ROBERTSON, « DANIEL DAVIES, OWEN CONNOLLY, Esq, Messrs. JENKINS & McLEOD, MepicaL EXAMINERS. HORACE HASZARD, Hanacer, P. EL island. July 3, 1878— EE Re a TT ME Ee 2 ae. IUTFITTING — WAREHOUSE NO. 50 QUEEN STREET. A SUPERIOR LOT OF ZING & GEATHER COVERED ‘TRUNKS JUST ARRIV.si.. ————-10: —-—-~-- Solid Leather Valises! Much Cheaper than Home Manufacture. ——-—-0 A FULL LINE OF GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS | aninoaeeen Sot Tonnnaes Z#- Inspection Solicited before Purchasing Elsewhere. -@y G&G. ROBERTSON. Charlottetown, May 30— . —_—— ZT O LONGER AGENT! Our Agreement with W. H. Otive, of St. John, N. B., has this day terminated by mutual consent. In the meantime, parties desiring Machinery ¢an obtain information from us direct, or through AMOS FISHER, Truro, N. 8, or JOHN WELSH, St. Martin’s, N.B. § PRICES REDUCED! Great Improvements in our Saws [ron—Portasier Grist Mirts—Portasiz Saw MULLS. Address— WATEROUS ENGINE WORHS CO. | April 17, 1878. 0., Brantford, Canada. OTH PRACTICAL MEN WHOSE JUDGMENT AN ADVICE CAN BE RELIED ON. GENUINE ‘NEW YORK SINGER SEWING MACHINES THE BEST IN THE WORLD. Office of the Singer Manufac- turing Company. No. 281 Notre Dame Srreez, Montreal, P, Q., Nov. 9, 1878 To ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN :— Buy only the This is to certify that Mr. Robert Young, of Charlottetown, P. E. I., has been duly ap. GENUINE. pointed by us as our Agent for the sale of our é enuine *‘Singer” Sewing Machines, and that oe. he is the only Agent we have for this purpose on Prince Eward Island. = Beware of THE SINGER MANUFACTURING CO’Y, COUNTERFEITS Henry E Scorcumer, Jaen : Attorney-in-fact. None genuine with Nov, 14, 1878—Im out cur Trade Mark stamped on the arm of the Machine. ~ CALL AND SEE 7 ‘THE SINGER MANUP'G 00, SOLD IN 1877 —oUR STOCK OF— JS tii i* | 282,812 Machines, being the largest number of Sewing Machines ever sold by any Company in a single year. Machines sold on monthly payments. Rosert Youna, Sole Agent of P, E. Island, South Side Queen Square, Charlottotown. Nov, 30, 1878—2aw tf ——— a ee JUST OPENED. BREMNER BROS. Noy, 29, 1878—2w 3aw her pat 2i ‘A By-Law, Relating = to Dogs and the Taxing Thereof. | |Passed by the City Council, 4th Dee., 1878.} t Ki it enacted by che City Council of the City of Charlottetown, as follows ;-— mS The owner or keeper of any dog or bitch | within the City of Charlottetown shall re ‘in writing to the Clerk of the City Court of ‘the Stipendiary Magistrate, at his office in the said City, the name of such dog or bi in order that the same may be registered in q book to be kept for the purpose ; and, here. after, whenever a person may become owner or keeper of any dog or bitch within the gaid City, he shall report the fact in writing, as hereinbefore directed, in order to have the name of the owner or keeper and the name of the dog or bitch registered, 2. A tax of one dollar shall be annually paid for each dog or bitch within the said City by the owner or keeper thereof, to the Clerk of the City Court of the Stipendiary Magistrate at his office in the said City, on or before the first day of February in each year ; and upon | the owner or keeper neglecting or refusing to pay the tax herein imposed, he shall be prose. cuted for the same, and it shall be recovered in a summary way. with costs, in the City Court of the Stipendiary Magistrate, and on non-payment thereof, the party convicted shall be confined in the Common Jail of the said City for ten days. 3. The owner or keeper of a dog or bitch who has paid such tax shall affix thereon a collar, with the name of the owner or keeper and the registered number. 4. The owner or keeper of a bull dog or bitch shall not permit him or her to go at iarge unless sufficiently muzzled, to prevent his or her biting or doing mischief. 5. Every fierce, malicious or dangerous d or bitch shall be kept muzzled and chained by the owuer or keeper, and not permitted to go at large. 6. No owner or keeper of a bitch shall suffer such bitch to run at large during the season of her being in heat. 7. Ifany dog or bitch shall, unprovoked, bite any person, on complaint at the City Court of the Stipendiary Magistrate, on oath, the owner or keeper shall destroy the dog or bitch, or remove hun or her from the said city and keep him or her so removed. 8. No person shall wantonly or maliciously throw any stone, stick or any other hard sub. stance at any dog or bitch, and lame or wound the dog or bitch. 9. Any person in posession of any dog or bitch, or who shall sutfer such dog or bitch to remain about his house or premises, shall be deemed the owner of such dog or bitch for all the purposes of this by-law. 10. No dog or bitch shall be permitted to run at large in the said City without the col- lar mentioned in the third section of this By- law, and any dog or bitch running at large contrary to this by-law may be torthwith des- troyed by the police. 1]. All prosecutions under this By-law shall be in the name of the City cf Charlottetown, and any person guilty of an infraction of any of the provisions thereof shall, upon convie- tion in the City Court of the Stipendiary Magistrate on the oath or affirmation of any credible witness, forfeit and pay at the dis- cretion of the said Magistrate, a penalty not exceeding Ten Dollars for each offence, ex- clusive of costs; and in default of payment thereof it shail and may be lawiul for the said Magistrate to commit the offender or offenders to the commmon jail of the said city for any period not ex i ten days, unless the said penalty and costs be sooner paid, 12. The By-law intituled ‘‘A Law relating to Dogs and for the purpose of taxing the same,” assented to on the fiiteenth day of May, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-six; and all other Bylaws contrary to and inccnsistent with this By Law are hereby repealed. W. E. DAWSON, Mayor of the City of Charlottetown. W. B. Morrison, City Clerk. Dec. 5, 1878-17 ins, h 2w AUCTION! To be sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, on TUES- DAY, the Twenty-fourth day of DECEM BER NEXT, at the hour of ‘Twelve o'clock, noon, at the Court House, Char- lottetown, under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained in an Inden- ture of Mortgage, bearing date the Third day of February, A. D. 1873, and made between John Henesy, of the one part, and Francis Kelly, of the other part— LL that tract of land and premises situate, lying and being as follows, that is to say : Commencing on the north side of the Fort Augustus Road, at the south-east angle of a farm of land in the possession of Thomas Ceerley ; from thence north fifty chains, or to the northern boundary of the said. John Henesy’s land ; thence east five chains ; thence south to the said road, and from thence west to place of commencing, containing by estima+ tion Twenty-five acres, a little more or less,i# and being part of Lot or Township Number Thirty-six, in Queen’s County, together with ali rights, members and appurtenances there- to belonging. _For further particulars apply to Messrs. econ & McLrop, Solicitors, Charlotte- (OWN. * Dated this Twenty-seventh day of Novem ber, A. D. 1878. FRANCIS KELLY, Mortgagee. Dec. 2, 1878—law t sale : NIGHT SOIL HE Subscriber, having obtained the Conf tract to remove night soil from the City, no one else is authorized to do so. Night Soil only removed: between 8 p. m and 6 a. m.,—at 75 cents per hogshead. Payment to be made only to me. eS Orders left at the Police Station will be promptly attended to. DANTEL GORDON. Charlottetown Royalty, } 3m wed & th Nov. 13, 1878. ne pat m & tues 4 MPLOYMENT.—In every village and 4 township of P. E. Island not yet ocdu- pied, ONE Active, intelligent Lady or Gentle- man can obtain a most respectable and ‘an protitable engagement. Address, with particulars, D. DOWNIE & CO., Box. 1964, Montreal. | May 25, 1878—