i ae So ean en ns Me alate Makara ) . sete amet a . cen eee ee ee games Selected Storp — LOANING A LOVER. My sister Patrieia was an heiress. | Strange enough, for we had always| been terribly poor down at Lowbridge, | my widowed mother bringing up her four daughters with the greatest diificul: } ty; but when brought up,we were worth | looking at, I believe. Healthy habits: and frugal living are apt to make good | constitutions, and Bess and Amy and | Patricia and I were as bright and} handsome girls as are often seen. born, rosy cheeks, and long, light brown curls; Patricia was a sparkling bru- Aunt betty wrote from Fairhaven : ‘“ Dear Sister-in-law ; Lam going tO | between the said Township axd Township do myself the pleasure of visiting you this Summer. I[ hear that Abel left four girls, and I want to see them. I am getting on in years, and will make one of them my heiress,” ete. Aunt Betty of Fairhaven, was worth a hundred thousand dollars if she was worth a cent. Well, in due time she came. She put up at the hotel, for our cottage at Low- bridge wasn't big enough to hold her, with her maid, coachman and carriage ; but fortunately that was close by, and) she spent the larger half of the three} days with us. We all thought Bess would be her choice, for father had named her Eliza- beth for Aunt Betty, though she had aiways been “ Bess”” with us; but it was not either of the twins, and it was| not I—it was Patricia. “ Where did that girl get her black hair?” Aunt Betty asked, as soon a8 she saw her. “[ think she looks like my brother Luke, don’t you?” asked the mother with a wistful look “The very image of him,” answered Aunt Betty, turning pale. idivined them, as [ learned after- wards, that Uncle Luke had been 4 lover of Aunt Betty's, when both were young, before her marriage, and the fact seemed to have a power over her. She looked at Patricia until the girl blushed rosy red, and would have slip- pel out of the room, when she called her to her, and, drawing her down upon her knees on a footstool before her, she put a withered hand each side of the warm cheek, and said warmly: “My dear, you shall be my heiress.”’ So it was Patricia she choose to leave her money to; but we were not left out in the cold, for she sent the twins, who were only sixteen, to a convent schoo! for two years, and invited me, with Patricia to the Hermitage. It was her home—s stately old man- sion of gray stone, gloomy looking on the outside, but luxuriously comtort- ableand beautiful within, without being in the least modern. We had e&ch a maid and the free use of the horse and carriage. Aiter making this provision for our comfort, Aunt Betty excused herself from making company of ts, and we were free as air to enjoy our- selves as we chose, provided we did not interfere with her naps. We chose to make s great many pleasant ac- uaintances, guided conscientiously by Aunt Betty’s wishes, and the result was that I returned to Lowbridge in the Summer, engaged to Mr. Clyde Sherrington. He was wealthy, hand- some, agreeable, well connected. Every- body said, “ Gertrude has done well for herself.’ That Autumn Aunt Betty died. Pat- ricia was to come in possession of her fortune in a year, when she was twenty- one—full and undisputed possession of one hundred thousand dollars. It was arranged that we were alli to! come to the Hermitage to live. We did so, and had lived there quietly, as was becoming, for nearly a year, when Patricia made the acquaintance of Mr. Gage Redmond. She met him first at a funcral—of all places!—the occasion caused by the death of our next neighbor, Gen. De Lacy, Gage Redmond being a neighbor of his. He was well-connected, but poor as a church-mouse, people said; so of course he was after Patricia’s for tune,” mamma declared. * Patricia is rich and beautiful. Pray don’t let her marry a fortune hunter, mamma,” said I, looking up from a letter 1 was writing to Mr. Sherring- ton. “JT would not, if I could help it; but what authority have I, Gertrude ?”’ said my mother. “Ina few months Pat- ricia will be in undivided possession of her fortune. We are here only by courtesy. The hermitage is her home. Ihave no right to control her what- . - : iship Number Twenty-one, in Queen’s County, Bess and Amy were twins, with eyes |) cnded as follows, that is to say: By a line as blue as the sea near which they were | commencing at a stake fixed in the north side old Malpeque Road, in the western boundary hil at menting. blonde of fifty acres of land in the occupation of Alex nette, while [ was as perfect & Dionee, | sider McSwain, junior, and ranning thence by with crinkled hat, like molten gold. the magnetic meridian of 1764 north seventy Great had been our excitement when] chains, or the rear boundary line of farms front- brother | south five chains, to a jog in said division line, ‘MORTGAGE SALE r Sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, on | THURSDAY, the 4th day of APRIL} next, at the New Law Courts Building, in| Charlottetown, at the hour of TW ELVE)| o'clock, noon, under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained in an Indenture; of Mortgage, bearing date the Sixteenth | day of December, A. D. 1873, and made | between Alexander McSwain, junior, and | Guliema, his wife, and Alexander Me- | Swain, senior, of ‘Township Number | Twenty-one, in Queen’s County, of the) one part, and George Peake and Ralph | Brecken Peake, of Charlottetown, Trus- | tees, under the marriage settlement, of | Fanny Leigh, of the other part. — f LL that Tract, Piece and Parcel of Land, A situate, lying and being on Lot or Town of the road leading from Morris’ Mill to the ing on said first-named Road; thence west four chains and nine links. to the division line Number twenty-three; along said line thence along said jog west seventy-five links ; thence south seventy-six chains to the old road; thence along the north side thereof northeastwardly to the place of commence- ment, containing thirty seven and one-half Acres of Land, a little more or less ; together with all Buildings and appurtenances thereto belonging. For further particulars, apply to Messrs. ANTED . an —} | 1000 MEN to bring their Cloth and Trimmings to Joseph A. MeDonald’s TAILORING DEPOT aud have ther FIRST CLASS STYLE, and Save Mfomey, as we will allow 10 per| cent. discount for cash on our former low prices for Tailoring during the next three montlis. FIRST CLASS FITS AND WORK | ~ MANSHIP GUARANTEED. ——-~———— ’ Ladies’ Sacques and all kinds of Gentlemen’s Garments cut at very reasonable prices by Mr- Nicholson. JOSEPH -A. MACDONALD, Sidney Street, one door east of the late : Hon. D. Brenan’s. Feb. 23— 8in tues & sat. + ee en en eee ee nee ern nnn eee — ; HODGSON & McLEOD, Solicitors, Charlotte- town. Dated this Twenty-seventh day of February A. D., 1878. GEORGE PEAKE, RALPH B, REAKK. Febrnuaay 28, 1878-—till sale Greenbacks & American Silver TAKEN AT THE FACE, in exchange for goods at usual prices. FENTON T. NEWBERY & CO. Ch'town, March 20—pat 3i eod ar 2i ~——— BOOK & JOB PRINTING! neatly and expeditiously executed, AT THE “EXAMINER” OFFICE under the careful supervision of J. W. MITCHELL. We are now in a position to execute orders for al! kinds of Printing, such as LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS, CIRCULARS, CARDS. PAMPHLETS, DODGERS, HANDBILLS, POSTERS, AND ALL KINDS OF Bank and Legal Blanks, are. ce. AT MODERATE PRICES. fice :—Iings’ Old Stand, (lorner Great George and Water Streets. BLANK - BILL HEADS, BLANK STATEMENTS, —AND - BUSINESS CARDS, urnished promptly and cheaply, to order, at the EXAMINER OFFICE, INGS’ BUILDING, Corner Great George and Water Streets. we ‘STADACONA Fire and Lite Insurance Company. N° PiCk is hereby given that the Board of Directors of this Company bave made a further call of Four snstalments, of Pive per Cent. each, on the Subscriped Gapital of the Company. payahle at its Office, Ne. 92 Si Peter Street, Quebec, as follows :-- Five per Cent. on or before the Tenth a y of August, 1877; Five per Cent. on or before the Tenth day of November, 1877 ; Five per Cent. on or before the Eleventh day of February, 1878 ; Five per Ceat. on or before th of May, 18/8. By order of the Board CRAWFORD LIN DSAY, Secretary » Hieventb day June »is?7 Fresh Halibut and Codfish - RECEIVED at the Fish Market. ‘ Cc, HALL ever.” Te ha Continued, Ch'towp, March 222i now OS | The Promoter and Perfecter of) | Assimilation. | | The Reformer and Vitalizer of the Blood. _The Producer and Invigoraior of Nerve and Muscle. | The Builder and Supporter of | Brain Power. . - Fellows’ Compound Syrup is composed of Ingrediants ideatical with those which consti tute Healthy Blood, Muscle and Nerve and Brain Substance, whilst Life itself is directly dependant upon some of them. y its union with the blood and its effect upon the muscles, re-establishing the one and toning the other, it is capable of effecting the following results :— It will displace or wash out tuberculous matter, and thus cure Consumption. By increasing Nervous and Muscular Vigor, it will cure Dyspepsia, feeble or interrupted action of the Heart and Palpitation, Weakness ef Intellect caused by grief, weary, overtax or irregular habits, Bronchitis, Acute or Chronic, Congestion of the Lungs, even in the most alarming stages. It cures Asthma, Loss of Voice, Neuralgia, St. Vitus Dance, Epileptic Fits, Whoopin Cough, Nervousness, and is a most wonderfu adjunct to other remedies in sustaining life during the process of Diptheria. Do not be deceived by remedies bearing a similar name ; no other preparation is a substi- tute for this under any circumstances. Look out for the name and address J. I. FELLOWS’, St. John, N. B., on the yellow wrapper in watermark, which is seen by hold- ing the paper before the light. Price $1.50 per Bottle, six for $7.50. Sold by all Dec. 6, 1877. ruggists, t the Creation of Man, or since the Commencement of the Christian Era. There never has been a time when the heal- ing of so many different diseases has been eaused by outward application as the present. It is an a fact that over half of the entire population of the globe resort to the use of ordinary plasters. DR. MELVIN’S CarsicuM Porous PLASTERS are acknowledged by all who have used them, to act quicker than any Other plaster they ever before tried, and that one of these plasters will do more real service than a hundred of the ordinary kind. All other plasiers are slow of action. and require to be worn continually to effect acure; but with these it is entirely dif- ferent: the instant oue is applied the patient will feel its effect. Physiciansin all ages have thoronghly tested and well know the effect of Capsicum; and it has always been more or less used as & medical agent for an outward anplication; but it is only of very recent date that its adyan- tages in a porous plaster have been discovered. Being, however, convinced of the wonderful eures 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 you want a certain cure, ask your druggist for R. MELVIN’S CAPSICUM POROUS PLASTER, You can hardly believe your own convictions of its wonderful effects. Although powerful and quick in its action, you can rely on its safety for the most delicate person to wear, as it is free from lead and hee poisonous material commonly used in the manufacture ef ordin- ary plasters, One trial is a sufficient guarantee of its merits, and one plaster will seli hundreds to your friends, Ask your druggist for Dr. MELYrN’s CaAPsI- 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, te any address in the United States or Canadas. a, IH f MANUFACTURED BY THE NOVELTY PLASTER WORKS | Lowell, Mass., U. S. A., | G. E. MITCHELL, Proprietor, Manefacturers of Plasters and Plaster Compounds W.R. WATSON, Agent — | Deeamber 7, 1877 i oe vai ance ae a met ceemmenes ae ee erpeees TAS NN en . bate e ‘ORK MAN, M. P., T. JAMES CLAXTON, Esqnir j rao ean Vice-President, ’ SUN MUTUAL LPL AND ACUHDENT ENSUANGE COMPANY EF MONTREAL, Ciotiing Made to Order in’ AUTHORIZED CAPITAL. d. $1,000,000. HEAD OFFICE: ST. JAMES STREET. M. WH. GAULT, Esquire, Managing Director. CHARLOTTETOWN P. £. ISLAND HONORARY DIRECTORS: HON. L. C. OWEN, ‘© DANIEL DAVIES, Missrs, JENKINS & McLEOD, R. MACAULAY, Sec’y. .<O~“— HON. J. F. ROBERTSON, OWEN CONNOLLY, Esa, Mepicat Ex AMUX ERS. te eee 0 ieee This Company issues Policies on all the Aprrovep Meruons of Life and Accident Business, Its Motto is *‘EcoNoMY AND SkOURITY.” HORACE HASZARD, Agent P. E. Island, Jan, 31, 1878— A000 BOOKS FOR THE- Farm, Garden and Household. TYNE following Valuable Books will be sup. plied from the Office of the Dairy EXAMINER. Any one or more of these books will be sent, /’ost-Paid, direct, to any of our readers, on receipt of the regular price, which is named against each book :— Allen’s (R. L. & L. F.) New American Farm Book, $2 Allen’s (L. F.) American Cattle, 2 Allen’s (L. F.) Rural Architecture, 1 American Weeds and Useful Plants, ] Atwood’s Country and Suburban Houses, 1 Baker’s Practical and Scientific Fruit 5 Culture, 2 Barry’s Fruit Garden, 2 Bommer’s Method of Making Manures, 2 Breck’s New Book of Flowers, ] Brill’s Farm-Gardening and Need-Grow- ing, i Broom-Corn and Brooms, paper, 50 cts. ; cloth, Brown’s Taxidermist’s Manual, i Caldwell’s Agricultural Chemical An alysis, 2 Coburn’s Swine Husbandry, l Corbett’s Poultry Yard and Market, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, Dadd’s Modern Horse Doctor, 12 mo., Dadd’s American Cattle Doctor, 12mo., Dadd’s American Cattle Doctor, 8vo. cloth, Dadd’s American Reformed Horse Book, Sva., cloth, De Voe’s Market Assistant, Downing’s Landscape Gardening, Eggleston's End of the World, Eggleston’s Hoosier School-Master, Eggleston’s Mystery of Metropolisville, Kvery Horse Owner's Cyclopedia, Famous Horses ot Annerica, Flax Culture, [Seven Prize Essays by practical growers], Flint (Charles L.) on Grasses, Fuller’s Grape Culturist, Fuller's Illustrated Strawberry Culturist, Fuller’s Small Fruit Culturist, Fulton’s Peach Culture Geyelin’s Poultry Breeding, Gregory on Cabbages, _— on Carrots, Mangold Wartzels, itc., Gregory on Onion Raising, Gregory on Squashes, Harris’s Insects Injurious to Vegetation, Plain, $4; Colored Engravings, Harris on the Pig, Henderson’s Gardening for Pleasure, denderson’s Gardening for Profit, Henderson’s Practical Proriowtare; Herbert's Hints to Horse Keepers, Hooper’s Book of Evergreens, Hop Calture. By nine experienced culti- vators, Hunter and Trapper, Hussey’s Home building, Johnson’s How Crops Feed, Johnson's, How Crops Grow, Lakey’s Village and Country Houses, Loring’s Farm-Yard Club of Jotham, “irs. Cornelius’s Young Housekeeper's Friend, My Vineyard at Lakeview, Nichol’s Chemistry of the Farm and Sea, Onions—How to Raise Them Profitably, Our Farm of Four Acres, paper, 30 cts. ; cloth, Parsons on the Rose, i Phin’s How to Use the Microscope, Phin’s Lightning Rods and their Con- struction, Quinby’s Mysteries ot Bee-Keeping, 1 Quincy (Hon. Josiah) on Soiling Cattle,’ 1 l l _ a ell ole ol) mom ere ESE 8D CS et ee et ee ~~ OD ON BD HO CT & 88 SUSSHSS USS BENS SSSSSSe SUSSSES See BReResse ENERESES SB eee US eu =S BYES SugEE Wuinn’s Money in the Garden, Quinn’s Pear Culture for Profit, Piley’s Potato Pests, pa., 50 cts.; cloth, Roe’s Play and Profit in my Garden, 1 Stewart's Irrigation for the Farm, Gar- _ den and Orchard, I Stewart's Shepherd’s Manual, 1 toddard’s An Egg Farm, paper, 50 cts., cloth, Thomas's American Fruit Culturist, new edition, 3 75 Thomas’s Farm Implements and Ma- chinery, i 50 Tim Bunker Papers; or, Yankee Far- ming, t 30 Tobacco Culture. By fourteen experi- enced cultivators, Waring's Draining for Profit and Health, 1 Waring's Elements of Agriculture, 1 Weideumann’s Beautiiying Conntry Homes. A superb quarto volume. 24 lithograph plates, in colors, 1 White’s Cranberry Culture, White’s Gardening for the South, Wright’s Brahma Forwl, Wright’s Practical Poultry-Keeper, ; Ch’town, Feb. 14, 1878— SE8 SSES& ~ DR. H. A. PARKER, SURGEON DENTIST, {LATE OF OTTAWA). Office, . . . St. Lawrence Hotel, Office Hours: 9 a, m. to 6 p. m, an, 19, '78-wlQi eod WEST OF ENGLAND HOUSE, Great George Street, SELLING OFF. WHE subscriber, in returning thanks to his ( & customers for their patronage during the ‘time he has been in, business, begs to inform , them and the public generally that he intends | closing up his present buslness ard will sell gt «REDUCED PRICES, the Stock now on hand, until The First Day of May. Any person wishing to go into the Dry Goods and Grocery Business will be treated liberally for the purchase of Entire Stock & Premises with immediate possession if required. ; All persons indebted will please make im. mediate payment of their respective accounte, W. W. STUMBLES, Feb. 26, 1878. —3i SHIP’S GEAR. ON CONSIGNMENT: 1 Complete Octagon Windlass, 15 ia. ee 2 be PT} 14 ie 1 Capstain,. No. 3 size. ‘i 6 66 m3 * 3 No. 3 Atlantic Cabooses and Utensils. —ALSO -- G Complete Sets Threshing Mill Gear. : CARVELL BRO’S,. Agents Pictou Iron Foundry. Ch’town, March 25—4i eed International Hotel ! (FORMERLY RANKIN HOUSE) Corner of Pownal & Sydney Streets, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. L Private and permanent Boarders can be a@ commodated on very moderate terms, during the winter season, at the International D. MEISAAC, Proprietor. Dee. 19, 1877 - 2m ere Ts WEEKLY EXAMINER, — Per- _ sons having relatives or friends abroad, and desiring to keep them informed concerning P. E. Island, cannot do soin a better or cheap- er way than by subscribing to Tuk Wkesus Examiner. Sent, postpaid, to any address in Great Britain, the United States, a the Dominion, on receipt of One Dollar. DR. WILLIAM GRAY’S SPECIFIC HEDICISE, T ish Rem- nee of Self-Abuse; | 083 Of Memery, Univer WA Lack, Dimness of ing. Premature Old Age, and After ™: miany Other diseases that lead ; P sumption and a Premature = % a noe, Ri per package, or six packages for $5, by mail free of postage. Full particulars in our pamphlet, which We desire to send tree by mail to every one. "hadress WH. GRAY & CO., Windsor, Ontario, Canada. saz Sold in Charlottetown by W. R. Wat son, Dr. Dodd, C. D. Rankin, P. G. Frase at Apothecaries Hall, and by all Druggist any wher. NOTICE. PP MHE Subscribers, intending to make a change + in their business, would notify all persoms indebted to them that their accounta must be settled by the 15th of APRIL, next, as all amounts remaining unpaid after that date will be handed over to their attorney for colleg. tion. HASZARD BROS. Ch’town, March 19, "78. 1m 3 taw FISH SALE! FOR SALE AT OUR STORE: 40 QUINTALS No. 1 CODFISH, 20 Quintals POLLOCK, 30 Boxes Smoked HALIBUT, 50 Boxes Preserved LOBSTERS. HASZARD BROS, ' Chitown, Feh, 28-—dy pat ln 2 ES ———_ eomnaesemansoen ee