——— a. ~~ | Tally White's. Christmas, RY CHARLES E. HURD Concluded. ‘Boy’ ll call for the basket in half ap hour,’’ said the porter, and went out. i As soon as the door closed the tall gentleman moved the basket to the side of the open truok, Thea he took off ‘ the eotton covering and threw it on a chair. Then he lifted the top blanket but no sooner had he done so than he let it drop again—not back in the basket, but upon the floor—ani stood staring with all his might at what it had covered. There lay ‘Taffy, his arm under his head, his brown curls knotted and tangled, kis eyes shut, sleeping away as peacefully as if he had been in a real bed and under the direct eye of his grand mother. Tho longer the tall geatleman gezed the more he wondered. “How on earth, he thought to him- self, did that little chap get mixed up with my purchase’ He coulda’t have been packed in by mistake, and I cer- tainly don’t remember buying a boy. Hie may be able to tell me something about it himself, Here, Tommy, Jacky, Billy, or what’s-your-name, wake up!” Taffy opened his eyes—not very wide at first: but in a minute or two, becom- ing conscious that he was no longer in the store, but in a strange room, he wrew wide awake, and sat up in the basket. ‘Then he felt for his boots, and very deliberately drew them on, keeping his eyes all the while fixed on the tall gentleman, who, in return, watched him with a sort ot amused astonishment. Then he put on his cap and wound his comforter twice round his neck. “Well,” said the tall gentieman in a very pleasant sort of voice, “and what are you joing to do now ?” “Pind my pp.,”’ said Taffy, stout! - “Your papa? What's his name ?” “Papa. ‘At’'s all his name.” ‘‘But where is he ?” “Califarnia.”’ ‘You ve got some way to go, my dear! fellow, before you find him, then. Where did you come from ?”’ “Gran’pa Was’bun’s.”’ “What!” said the tall gentleman, quickly. “Say that ogain. What's your name ?” “Taffy White.” The tall gentleman caught him up under the arms and held him up under the gaslight. “Are you sure you're Taffy White ?”’ he asked earnestly—so earnestly that Taffy thought he was scolding and began to ery. ; “Where were you going? LIlow came you here ? What were you doing in that basket” “[euess I ran away. I just peeked in the cars, and then they kept going till I got to California. ’Kao me get down Papa! I want my papa! He pulled his little handkerchief from his pocket as he fouod his feet, again, and with it came his treasured | caught | letter. The tall gentlemea sight of it, glanced at the inside, and then snatched up Taffy for the second time ; not, however, to examine him by the gaslight, buf to hug and kiss him over and over again. “Don’t you know me, my dear, darling, precious little boy ?” he said at last. “Don’t you remember papa! Of course you don’t, but I am your papa, for all that. How did you get here in that basket ? I can’t understand it.” Taffy was too much bewildered at first to make any explanation, and it took some vainutes to make him duiy appreciate the fact that he had found his papa; or rather that his papa had found him. Then when he had, little by little, related the main facts of the journey and his subsequent adventures, there was more kissing and hugging anda little cryiog ; but itwasn’t for sorrow. + We'll send Grandpa Washburn a dis- patch right off, Taffy, boy,” said his father ; ‘‘ for I have no doubt they have offered a reward for you already. Then we li have supper, for you must be as empty as atin can by this time. And after supper,if you're not too sleepy,we’ il take aruo around among the toy stores. They won't shut up till late, and it’s only nine o’clock now.” It wasn’t too late, and they did takea tour among the toy shops, Taify came home so londed down with brown paper parcels and packages that he looked like a mina- ture St. Nicholas; but no more sw sn the lad who toiled on behind, « d from view, all but hislegs, with a cnvice selection of rocking-horses, go-carts, hand- sleds, and other miscellaneous articles, to set him up in a very respectable business. That night the little hotel bedroom was a chamber of peace; and when the church belis rang in the blessed Christmas, no heart within their sound felt the benign influence of the time more deeply, or swelled with a purer gratitude towards Him whose birth it commemorated, than that which beat against the tired little | head of the wondering Taffy. °°. =e 2> Susscripe for the Weexry EXxaMIMER Only ONE DOLLAR a year in advance, ,D. 1878. CHANGE OF TIME | ™) Suit English Mail at Halifax. | | A rENHE STEAMERS S77. LAWRENCE and PRINCESS OF WALES will, during remainder of season, leave CHARLOTTETOWN for Prcrow LANpING every Monday, Tues- day, Fhursday and Friday mornings, at seven o'clock, connecting there with day train for Halifax. Returniag, will leave Picrov LANpING for CHARLOTTETOWN on arrival of morning train from Halifax, on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday. No change in Steamers from Summerside, KW. HALES, Ch’town, Nov, 26, 1875 IRON BEDSTEADS UST RECEIVED. ex “Prince Edward”— @F cheap. JOHN NEWSON, Nov. 22—lm Mortgage Sale. To be sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, at the Court Ifouse in Charlottetown, Queen's County, Prince Edward Island, ou Friday, the Tenth day of January next, at the hour of twelve o’clock, noon, under a Power of Sale in an In- denture of Mortgage, dated the twelfth day of October, 1876, made between Johu Meickle and Mary his wite and Peter Meickle, of the one part, anc Daniel Hodgson, of the othes part,— A& LIL that tract, piece or parcel of land LX situate on Lot Twenty-three, bounded as follows, that is to say: Commencing at the stake fixed on the north side of the old Tryon Road, at the commencement of a reserved iine of road: running from thence west seven chains, forty-six links ; thence north, according to the magnetic meridian of 1764, eighty chains, until it meets the south side of a reserved line of road (running east and wes!); thence east along the south siue of said road seven chains, forty-six links, to the west side of the first-mentioned reserved road; thence south along the west side of said road to the place of commencement, containing, by estimation, sixty acres of Jand, a little more or less, together with all the build- ings and improvements thereon and appur- tenances thereunto belonging. Dated the Seventh day of December, A. D. 1878. (Sa) D. HODGSON, Mortgagee. Ch’town, Dec. 7, i878—eod t sale MORTGAGE SALE. To be sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, at the Court House in Summerside, Prince County, Prince Edward Island, on Tuesday, the Seventh day of January pext, at the hour of twu o'clock in the afternoon, under & Power of Sale in an Indenture of Morigage, dated the 3rd day of December, 1875, and made be- tween John Young, of Summerside, in Prince County, Prince Edward Island, blockmaker, of the one part, and Daniel Hodgson, of Charlottetown, in Queen’s County, said Island, Esquire, of the other part— LL that piece or parcel of land situate A in the northern part of Summerside aforesaid, and described as follows, viz.;: Commencing at a stake fixed in the northeast angle of James Brazil’s lot; thence running eastwardly one hundred and eighty feet (180 feet), or to land lately held by Henry Tuplin; thence northwardly on said Henry Tuplin’s western boundary five (5) chains, or to land lately held by) Angus McMillan; thence westwardiy along the said Angus McMillan’s south boundary, one hundred and eighty feet (180 feet) ; thence soathwardly five (5) chains, to the point of commencement, containing, by es- timation, one acre, one rood and nineteen poles, a little more or less, and is part of a piot ef land purchased by Thomas Crabbe from Patrick Brown Also, al! that tract, piece or parcel of land situate in ihe northern part of the Town of Sammerside, and bounded as fol- lows, viz.: Commencing at a stake fixed at the north edge of St. James Street, in the south angle of Town Lot Number ‘Twenty (20), running thence northwardly ninety and one quarter (904) feet; thence east- wardly ninety feet (90 feet) to the west line of Town Lot Number Twenty eight; thence seuthwardly tothe street aforesaid ninely and one quarter feet (90} feet); thence along said street westwardly ninety feet (90 feet), to the place of commencement, and known as Town Lot Number Twenty- four (24), sold by Very Rev. James Mc- Donald by Auction, on the first day of May, One thousand eight hundred and sixty- three. Also, all thet tract, piece or parcel of land situate, lying and being in Lotor Township Number Seventeen, in Prince County, Prince Edward Island, and is bounded as follows, that is to say: Com- mencing at a stake fixed on the south side’ of St. James Street, running westwardly ninety feet (90 feet); thence southwardly ninety feet three inches (90 feet 3 inches) thence eastwardly ninety feet (90 feel) ; thence nortuwardly ninety feet theee inches (90 feet 3 inches), to the place of commence- ment, making and including Lot Number Twenty-three in the Town Piot of Summer side, as planned and sarveyed on land for merly owned by Jonothan Weatherbie, and said lot being marked on the said plan, nu.aber twenty-three, as therein laid out and described, containing, by estimation,’ eight thousand one hundred and twenty-| two square feet, be the same a litt'e more or less, together with all buildings and im- provements thereon and appurtenances to the same belonging. For further particulars apply at the office of Messrs. HODGSON & MCLEOD, Soiici- tors, Charlottetown. Dated this Fourth day of December, A. DANIEL HODGSON, LWP AND AGUEDEN vo be less than the sum assured by them, as THOMAS WORKMAN, Esg., President ; T. J. CLAXTON, Esq., Vice-President ; HON, L. C. OWEN, se Messrs. JENKINS & McLEOD, July 3, 1875— ECONOMY & SECURITY. StN MUTUAL ANURANGE COMPAM OF MONTREAL. —_————0: A SOUND AND RELIABLE Investinents All Within the Dominion. “HOME COMPANY. — 30 $55.299 51 SURPLUS PROFITS ON PREMIUMS IN 1877. NEW BUSINESS, 1876, - - - ee " 1877, m - a a Solia Addition to Uompany’s Assets in 1877, - ; oe SR eR, ‘There is no reserve clause, making the amount of claims under the Sun Mutual Policie SUBMITTED = - - = ~ $55,989.55, under the iminimum system. s@ Special attention is claimed to the fact that our policies are payable in full. “@e M. H. GAULT, Esq., Managing Director ; R. MACAULAY, Secretary. J. M. GC. DELESDERNIERS, Superintendent. Prince Edward Island Board of Birectors: HON, J. F. ROBERTSON, DANIEL DAVIES, OWEN CONNOLLY, Esq, . . Mepicat Examiners. HORACE HASZARD, Manager, P. E. island. 2 SO LT ES LE Vo > -* a OUTFITTING ZINC & LEATHER A FULL Charlottetown, May 30— Solid Leath Much Cheaper than Home Manufacture. acento WAREHOUSE, NO. 50 QUEEN STREET. amen SE)E A SUPERIOR LOT OF COVERED TRUNKS JUST ARRIVED.- er Valises! LINE OF GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS ! —:-0 -— ga Inspection Solicited before Purchasing Elsewhere. “Ga G. ROBERTSON. mutual consent. from us direct, or through AMOS FISHER, Truro, N. 8, or JOHN WELSH, St. Martin’s, H. B, Address— April 17, 1878. 10 LONGER AGENT! Our Agreement with W. H. Ouive, of St. John, N. B., has this day terminated by In the meantime, parties desiring Machinery can obtain information ADVICE CAN BE RELIED ON. rs PRACTICAL MEN WHOSE JUDGMENT “| PRICES REDUCED! Great Improvements in our Saws Iron—PortTasLe Grist MItts—PorTaBLe Saw MILLs, WATEROUS ENGINE WORKS CO., Brantford, Canada, We Have Added A Lot of New Material to our PRINTING DEPARTMENT, for the purpose of turning out artistic work, and have a lot of Fancy Stationery Novelties, such as ILLUMINATED BALL PROGRAMMES, MEMORIAM CARDS, The New and Celebrated Round Cornered “ACONIC” VISITING CARDS, all of which we can print in a style unsur- passed by copperplate. s@ CALL AND SEE SAMPLES, “@% BREMNER BROS. Noy. 29—2w 3aw her pat 2i TO LET. rRXHE HOUSE and SHOP at corner of Ken and Hillsborough Streets, near King Square, being an excellent business stand, oc- cupied by Mr. Cartmill; also his Residence fronting on Hillsborough Street, adjoining the residence of Mr. Bridges. Possession given lzt January next. Apply to : JOHN BALL Ch’town, Dec. 10, 1878—- 2aw till 1st jan pat The Largest, Cheapest & Best ASSORTMENT OF CHRISTMAS CARDS, Birthday and Motto Cards ever imported to the Island—the latest designs from Prang, De la Rue, and other celebrated artists—at BREMNER BROS. Noy. 29, 1878—2w 3aw her pat 2i UBSCRIBE for the DAILY EX Mortgagee. Dec. 4—2aw t sale AMINER the Cheapestand most newsy ? Paper published in the Province, HAVE YOU SEEN IT? SEEN WHAT ? BOREHAM’S New Boot & Shoe Store, OPPOSITE THE MARKET HOUSE. JUST OPENED, MEN'S,’ WOMEN’S, BOYS’, MISSES’ and CHILDREN’S BOOTS, SHORS & RUBBERS | IN GREAT VARIETY, COME and have your feet PROTECTED. COME and have your feet kept WARM. COME and have your feet kept DRY. W. R. BOREHAM, SOUTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE, CHARLOTTETOWN, P, E. I, Nov. 26—3m wed & sat a ees THE CELEBRATED “AGONIC” Thin Ivory English Visiting Cards (LADIES’ AND GENTLEMEN’S) NEATLY PRINTED AT G. Herbert Haszard’s, 18 Queen Street. Ch’town, Nov. 27—3taw pat ‘THE LATEST STYLE QUT! $1,856,598 - $,158.000 UY THE DAILY B for the latest coum-tauieaedian hone A By-Law, Reiating to : and ihe Taxing Thera? [Passed by the City Council, 4th Dee., 1878, } E it enacted by the City Council of the City of Charlottetown, as follows :— 1. ‘The owner or keeper of any dog or bj within the City of Pdetieten shall he in writing to the Olerk of the City Court of the Stipendiary Magistrate, at his office in the said City, the name of such dog or bj in order that the same may be registered in g book to be kept for the purpose; and, here. alter, whenever a person may become owner or keeper of any dog or bitch within the said City, he shall report the fact in writing, ge hereinbefore directed, in order to have the name of the owner or keeper and the name of the deg or bitch registered, 2. A tax of one dollar shall be annually paj for each dog or bitch within the said City § 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 betore 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 ot the Stipeudiary Magistrate, and gp non-payment thereof, the party convicted shall be contined in the Common Jail cof the said City for ten days. 3. The owner or keeper otf a dog or bitch who has paid such tax shall affix thereon g 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 large unless suiliciently muzzled, to prevent his or her biting or doing mischier. 5. Every tierce, malicious or dangerous d or bitch shal] be kept muzzled and chained by the owner 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 him 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 Jame or wound the dog or bitch. 9. Any person in possession of any dog or bitch, or who shall suffer such dog or bitek 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 larg contrary to this by-law may be forthwith des- troyed be the police. 11. All prosecutions under this By-law shall be inthe name of the City of Charlottetown, and any person guilty cf an infraction of any of the provisions thereof shall, upon convic- tion in the City Court of the Stipendiary Magistrate on the oath or affirmation of an credible witness, forfeit and pay at the dis- cretion of the said Magistrate, a penalty not exceeding Ten Dollars for cach offence, ex- clusive of costs; and in default of payment thereof it shall and may be lawful for the said Magistrate to commit the offender or offenders to the commmon of the said city for any period not exceeding ten days, unless the said penalty and costs be sooner paid. 12. The By-law intituled ‘‘A Law relating to Dogs and for the perros of taxing the same,” assented to on the fifteenth day of May, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-six ; and all other By-laws contrary to and inconsistent with this By Law are hereby repealed, v0 6'e*ows € Be W. E. DAWSON, os 08-4 6863 ee Mayor of the City of Charlottetown, W. B. Morrison, City Clerk, Dec. 5, 1878—17 ins, h 2w Mortgage Sale! To be sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, at the Court House, at Charlottetown, in Queen’s County, Prince Edward Island, on Wed- nesday, the Twelfth day of March, 1879, at the hour of twelve o’clock, noon, under a Power of Sale in an Indenture of Mortgage, dated the eighth day of Decem- ber, 1876, made between Thomas Webster and Harriet his wife, of the one part, and Edward J, Hodgson and Neil McLeod, of the other part— A LL that tract, piece or parcel. of land ! situate on Township Number Forty (40), in King’s County, and bounded as follows, that is to say: Commencing at the southeast angle of James Lawles’ farm, and running north four degrees, east forty-seven chains ; thence east for the distance of five chains ; thence south four degrees, west fifteen chains ; thence east tive chains ; thence south four de- grees, west forty chains to the Post Road; thence along the Post Road northwardly to the place of commencement, containing forty- three acres, a little more or less, and bounded on the north by William and Charles Ding- well’s farms; east by William Webster's; west by James Lawles’ farm, and south by Post Road—together with all buildings and improvements thereon and appurtenances to the same belonging. For further portionien apply at the office of Messrs. HODGSON & MciLEOD, Solicitors, | Charlottetown. Dated the ninth day of December, A. D. 1878. (Sd) EDWARD J. HODGSON, NEIL McLEOD, Dec. 10—law t sale SODA WATER FOUNTAIN! SUPERIOR 8-syphon Fountain for Sale, almost new and in good order, will be sold low, and on liberal terms. CARVELL BROS. Mortgagees. Ch’town, Dec. 3— MPLOYMENT. —-In every village and 4 townshipof P. E. Island not yet ocdu- pied, ONE active, intelligent Lady or Gentle- man can obtain a most respectable and vi profitable engagement. Address, with particulars, D. DOWNIE & CO., Box 1964, Montreal. May 25, 1878—