— lh We ital me ili eee aa tte adi 4 alata A asta — es tem ——_— ia niet — a Oe Me i ee ee a Ss ee ore enters sommes ge se wars x a an “ a ee hae - a na lac jJociry. | - = = | LINES ‘IN MEMORY OF BROTHER i've breathed no sigh, Ive shed no tear, Where Brother takes his rest ; I’ve never knelt upon the sod, That lies upon his breast He sleeps afar from childhood’s home, | ‘Mid stranger’s graves, alone ; And those who pass that lonely spot, Repeat the word ‘ unknown.’ Unknown to them the Mother's hope Chat centered once in him ; Unknown to them the sister’s love That Death can never dim. { Ob! could we but have closed his eyes, Received his parting breath, And heard him speak one kind good-bye Before he slept in death. We cannot place one flowery wreath Embalmed in sorrow’s tear, ‘To breathe its last sweet fragrance out, Above the one so dear. Yet will the moonlight, soft and pure, His couch with beauty lave ; And angels, from their starry home, Keep watch o'er Brother's grave. - AN IRON WEDDING. Busby. of Trenton, celebrated his ‘iron wedding ” one day last week, and | invited about one hundred and twenty | guests to the wedding. Of course, each | person felt complied to bring a present of some kind, and each did. When Mr. and Mrs. Smith came, they handed Busby a pair of flat-irons. When Mr. and Mrs. Jones arrived, they also had a pair of flat-irons. All hands laughed at the coincidence, and there was great merriment when the Browns arrived with two pairs of flat-irons; but when Mr. and Mrs. Robinson came in, with another pair of flat-irons, the laughter became perfectly convulsive. There was, however, something less amusing about it when the Thompsons arrived with four flat-irons wrapped in brown paper. And Busby’s face actually looked grave when the three Johnson girls were ushered into the parlor carry- ing a flat iron apiece. Each one of the succeeding guests brought flat-irons, and there was no break in the continu- ancé until old Mr. Curby came from Philadelphia with a cast iron cow-bell ; and at any other time he would have treated such a present with scorn, but now he was actually grateful to Mr. Curby, and he was about to embrace him, when the Walshinghams came with the new kind of double-pointed flat-irons with wooden handles. And all the rest of the guests brought the same articles except Mr. Rugby, and he had with him a patent stand for hold- ing flat-irons. Busby got madder and madder every minute, and by the time the company had all arrived he was nearly insane with rage, and he went to bed leaving his wife to entertain the guests. In the morning they counted up the spoils and found they had two hundred and thirteen flat-irons, one stand and a cow-bell. And now the Basbys have cut the Smiths,and Browns, and Jacksons, and Thompsons and the rest entirely, for they are convinced that there was a preconcerted design to play a trick uponthem. The fact how- aver, is that the hardware stores in the iace had an over-stock of flat-irons, and sold them at an absurdly low figure. and Busby’s friends went for the cheap est thing they could find, as people al- ways do on such occasions. Busby thinks he will not celebrate his ‘ silver wedding.’ ~~ p>e-————_—— An Economical Husband AYew days ago a couple from lowa, on their way East, had to stop in De- troit, owing to the wife’s illness. They went to a hotel, and for the first day or two the husband didn’t complain of the cost, but when his wife grew worse, and a doctor was calied in and a nurse em- ployed, he began to hang on to the dol lars which were demanded. On the fifth day the doctor looked serious and said that.ethe woman would probably die. The husband consulted with the hotel clerk and with a freight agent, and going back to his wife he leaned over her and sobbed: “ QOb! Sarah Jane! you must not die $0? here! “T don’t want to leave you, Philetus,” she replied, ‘but I fear that my time has come.”’ “Don’t! oh ! don't die here!’ he went on. “Tf my time has come I must go,” she said. “Yes, I suppose so, but if I could oniy get you back home first I’d save at least forty dollars on funeral ex- penses, and forty dollars don’t grow on every bush !”’ — a A. lady who was told by her son, a pritter, that he had been sticking type all day, offered to lend him her thim- ble, saying it would make his fingers sore, “pushing a needle through them hard iron things.” Why is a parish bell like a good — etna oh itil , iia - Sees BANKRUPT SALE. The Steck in Trade of the Estate of S. KEITH &CO. WILL BE SOLD AT A TREMENDOUS SACRIFICE. Worsted Coatings, Beavers, Pilots, Broad Cloths, Tweeds, Ready-made Clothing GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS AND HATS, WILL BE SOLD REGARDLESS OF COST. Clothing Made to Order AS .USVU AL. C. V. MCGREGOR, Assignee N. B.—Coat, Vest, and Pant Makers wanted immediately. «. Vv. MeG., South Side Queen Square’ Ch’town, Feb, 5, 1878—-2m 2aw Buy the American X 6 SURREN B, WHEELS ~AND THE BAND HUB WHEELS, For Sale at W. E. DAWSON & CO’S. A GOoonD LOT OF AMERICAN WOOD STOCK, Spokes, Shafts, Ete. A FEW SHEET-IRON BODIES, | with seat all complete, at Manufacturers’ prices, at W. E. DAWSON & CO’S. an. 18 -2aw ar 31 Rims, nous eee “MERCHANTS - Mare Insurance Go'y OF P. E. ISLAND. NOTICE. NHE Annual General Meeting of the Share- holders of the above Company will be held in the Young Men’s Christian Association Hall, Charlottetown, on Wednesday, the 13th March, AT THREE O'CLOCK, for the election of Directors for the ensuing year and the transaction of other business. FENTON T. NEWBERY, Manager Feb. 9, 1878—pat taw till meeting HOUSE PROPERTY - SELL OR TO LET, the Dwelling House, corner of Weymouth and Rich- mond streets, at present occupied by D. Hodg- son, Esq. Apply to HODGSON & McLEOD. story? Because it is often toll’d. y Jan, 3lst, 1878. os KE following 00D BOOKS FOR THE Farm, Garden and Household. Valuable tooks will be sup from the Oflice of the DaILy plied ca Any one or more of these books EXAMINER, readers, on receipt of the regular price, which is named against each book : yn’s (R ~- L. F.) New American Allen’s (R. L. & L. F.) t = Farm Book, 2 50 Allen’s (L. F.) American Cattle, » 5O Allen’s (L. F.) Rural Architecture, l 50 American Weeds and Useful Plants, l 7 Atwood’s Country and Suburban Houses, 1 50 Baker’s Practical and Scientific Fruit “es Culture, . 50 Barry’s Fruit Garden, 2 50 Bommer’s Method of Making Manures, 3 25 Breck’s New Book of Flowers, 1 jo Brill’s Farm-Gardening and Seed-Grow- ing, i 1 00 Broom-Corn and Brooms, paper, 50 cts. ; ae cloth, 70 Brown’s T'axidermist’s Manual, i 00 Caldwell’s Agricultural Chemical An- — alysis, 2 00 Coburn’s Swine Husbandry, 1 75 Corbett’s Poultry Yard and Market, yaper, 50 cts.; cloth, 75 Dadd’s Modern Horse Doctor, 12 mo., 1 50 Dadd’s American Cattle Doctor, 12mo., 1 50 Dadd’s American Cattle Doctor, Svo. cloth, 2 50 Dadd’s American Reformed Horse Book, Svo., cloth, 2 50 De Voe’s Market Assistant, 2 50 Downing’s Landscape Gardening, 6 50 Eggleston’s End of the World, 1Z Kgyleston’s Hoosier School- Master, 1 25 Eygleston’s Mystery of Metropolisville, 1 50 Every Horse Owner’s Cyclopedia, 3 75 Famous Horses ot America, 1 50 Flax Culture, [Seven Prize Essays by practical growers}, 30 Flint (Charles L.) on Grasses, 2 50 Fuller’s Grape Culturist, 1 50 Fuller's Illustrated Strawberry Culturist, 20 Fuller’s Small Fruit Culturist, 1 50 Fulton’s Peach Culture, | 50 Geyelin’s Poultry Breeding, 1 25 Gregory on Cabbages, 30 Gregory on Carrots, Mangold Wurtzels, Etc., 30 Gregory on Onion Raising, 30 Gregory on Squashes, 30 Harris’s Insects Injurious to Vegetation, Plain, $4; Colored Engravings, 6 50 Harris on the Pig, 1 50 Henderson’s Gardening for Pleasure, L 50 Henderson’s Gardening for Profit, 1 50 Henderson’s Practical Floriculture, 1 50 Herbert’s Hints to Horse Keepers, 1°75 Hooper's Book of Evergreens, 3 00 Hop Culture. By nine experienced culti. vators, 30 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, Mrs. Cornelius’s Young Housekeeper’s SE oe crits ts © = Ch’town, Feb. 14, 1878— HE 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 THE WEEKLY EXAMINER. Sent, postpaid, to any address in Great Britain, the United States, ov the Dominion, on receipt of One Dollar. DR. H. A. PARKER, SURGEON DENTIST, (LATE OF OTTAWA). Office, . . . St. Lawrence Hotel. Office Hours: 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Jan. 18, ’78—10i eod constantly being received by mail, at BREMNER BROTHERS. Qrr >. February 23, 1877—21 TENDERS. -{EALED TENDERS will be received at the Office of the undersigned, until the 15th day of MARCH next, for the erection of a Warehouse and Coal-Shed on Peake’s No. 1 Wharf. Plans and Specifications to be seen at Peake Bros. & Co’s Office. Good and approved se- curity will be required for the piirhruatines of the contract. We do not bind ourselves to accept the low- est or any tender. PEAKE BROS. & CO, , Ch’town, Feb, 22, ’"78—3w 3i wkly. ae eel will be sent, Post-Paid, direct, to any of ours NEW SCHOOL BOOKS: chante accent THOMAS WORKMAN, M. P., President. an BL SU IN AUTHORIZED CAPITAL. (ND ACCIDENT M. H. GAULT, Esquire. Managing bbirecior. HON. L. GC. OWEN, “* DANIEL DAVIES, Messrs. JENKINS & McLEOD, Its Motto is *‘Economy AND SECURITY.” This Company issues Policies on all the APrrovED Meriops of Life and Accident Business, T. JAMES CLAXTON, Ecouire Vice-President. Esquirg MUTU AL [SURANGE COMPANY OF MONTREAL. $1,000,000. HEAD OFFICE: ST. JAMES STREET. R. MACAUL See's AY, 70% CHARLOTTETOWN P. E. ISLAND HONORARY DIRECTORS: HON. J. F. ROBERTSON, OWEN CONNOLLY, Ese, MepicaL EXAMINERS. | HORACE HASZARD, Agent P. E. Island. The Greatest Medical Diseovery since 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 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 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 plasters are slow of action, and require to be worn continually te effect a cure; but with these it is entirely dif- ferent: the instant one is applied the patient will feel its effect. Physiciansin all ages have thoroughly tested and well 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, however, convineed 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 baek, 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 acertain 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 oi po 50 quick in its natin, you ean rely on its uafety My Vineyard at Laxeview, “) for the most delicate rson to wear, as it is Nichol’s Chemistry of the Farm and Sea, 1 25 free eo ane oe other : ‘ co oat Pa... > nw commontiy used In e manutactu rain- Onions—How to Raise Them Profitably ’ 2 ary plasters. One trial is a sufficient guarantee Our Farm of Four Acres, paper, 30 cts. ; of its merits, and one plaster will seli hundreds cloth, 60 to your friends, cote whe > ie r Ask your druggist for DR. MELVIxX’s CAPStI- E aoe on the Rose, : 1 oy cuUM PoROUS neat and take no other; or, Phin’s How to Use the Microscope, io on receipt of 25 cents for one, $1 for five, or Phin’s Lightning Rods and their Con- $2 for a dozen, they will be mailed, post paid, te struction, 50 any address in the United States or Canadas. Quinby’s Mysteries of Bee-Keeping, 1 50 MANUFACTURED BY THE Quincy (Hon. Josiah) on Soiling Cattle, 1 26 Quinn’s Money in the Garden, L 50 NOVELTY PLASTER WORKS Quinn’s Pear Culture for Profit, 1 00 Lowell, Mass., U. 8. A, Piley’s Potato Pests, pa., 59 cts. ; cloth, 75 G. E. MITCHELL, Proprietor, toe’s Play and Profit in my Garden, 1 50 Manufacturers of Platters and Plaster Compeunile Stewart’s Irrigation for the Farm, Gar- den and Ofchad, 1 50 W. R. WATSON, Agent. Stewart's Shepherd’s Manual, 1 50 qecember 7, 1877 Stoddard’s An Egg Farm, paper, 50 cts., { a ll lea ar cloth, 75 Thomas’s American Fruit Culturist, new ecdlition, 3 75 Thomas’s Farm Implements and Ma- : chinery, 1 59 ' : ¢ Tim Bunker Papers; or, Yankee Far- in Connection with our ming, 1 59 Tobacco Culture. By fourteen experi- bay) ry 00 S Ah p enced cultivators, 25 Waring’s Draining for Profit and Health, 1 50 We will offer our entire Stock of Waring’s Elements of Agriculture, 1 00 i Weidenmann’s Beautitying Conntry BOOTS & S H i, ‘ Homes. A superb quarto volume. A id 5 24 lithograph plates, in colors, 15 00 ' : White’s Cranberry Culture, 1 25 whan we $2,000 worth, at cost to clear, White’s Gardening for the South, 2 00 § Wright’s Brahma Fowl, 2 50} ' ‘ Walli Wright’s Practical Poultry-Keeper 2 00 a Wellington Boots. en’s Leather Congress Boots, Men’s Felt Congress Boots, Men's Larrigans & Overshoes, Men’s Felt and Leather Slippers, Women’s Leather Boots, (Elastic and Laeed), Women’s Felt Boots, “ 66 Women’s Slippers & Overshoes, Misses’ & Children’s Leather Boots. COME ONE AND ALL AND CET BOOTS CHEAP J. B. MACDONALD, QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN. Jan. $—ne pat BLANK - BILL HEADS. BLANK STATEMENTS, —AND—- BUSINSS CARDS, urnished promptly and cheaply, to order, at the EXAMINER OFFICE, INGS’ BUILDING, Corner Great George and Water Streets. Glothes Cleaning Depot, (Above Mr. D, Farquharson’s Store), CoRNER OF QuEEN & DoRcHESTER SETETS.R Renovating and Repairing Clothes, M* PATTERSON guarantees that no matter how badly faded or stained gar- ments may be, he will restore them to their original color. ’ Feb, 9— F JOHN PATTERSON, Jan. 31, 1878— — ————— mean ey eens — OUR STOCK | —FOR—- CARRIAGE BUILDERS IS VERY COMPLETE. ‘Over 50 Tons Bar Iron, 40 Bdles. Tire Steel, 200 Elliptic Carriage Springs, 110 sets Axles. ASSORTED SIZES, from § to 1# inch, and a very large Stock of CARRIACE & MILL BOLTS, ‘RING BOLTS, STEP PADS, &C. which we offer to cash and prompt payi customers at better prices than ever vine: |W.E. DAWSON &CO Jan. 18—2aw ar 3i nT a American & Foreign Patents Gilmore, Smith & Co., Successors to Chipman, Hesmer & Co. } | ee procured in all Counwies. No fees | in advance. No charge for services until the | patent is granted. Preliminary examinations | ree, Our valuable pamphlet seat free upon re eipt of stamp. , Address, GILMORE, SMITH & CO., Washizgton, D.C ARREARS OF PAY, BOUNTY, ETC. Real Officers, Soldiers and Sailors af the late war, or their heirs, are in maay caes entitled te money trom the Goyer 9 ment, which has been found to be due since final pay- ment. Write full histery of service and state amount of pay and bounty received. Certificates of Adjutant General U. S. A. showing service and honorable discharge there- from, in place of discharge lost, procured for a small fee. Enclose stamp to Gilmore & Co., and full re- ply, with blanks, will be sent free. PENSIONS. PENSIONS. LL Federal Officers, Soldiers and Sailors wounded, ruptured, or injured, ia the line difduty in the late war, and disabled thereby, an obtain a pension. Widows, and minor children of Officers, Sol- ders and Sailors, who have died since discharge of disease contracted or wounds and injuries re eived in the service and in the line of duty, cay procure pensions by addressing Gilmore & Co. Increased rates for pensioners obtained. Bounty Land Warrants procured for service im wars prior to March 3,1855. There are no war- rants granted for service in the late rebellion. Send stamp to Gilmore & Co., W ashington D.C., full instructions. July24 1877. International Hotel! (FORMERLY RANEIN HOUSE) Corner of Pownal & Sydney Streets, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. Private and permanent Boarders can be ace commodated on very moderate terms, during the winter season, at the International. D. MCISAAC, Proprietor. Dec. 19, 1877 - 2m REMEMBER We are the Agents for the Cast Steel Single-ply Springs, which stood the test so well last season. Buy uo other Single Ply Springs but ARMSTRONC’S PATENT ! 60 PAIRS IN STOCK, all sizes, to carry frora 160 to 850 lbs. All. Warranted |! and sold at Manufacturers’ prices. SEND FORK PRICE LIST. W. E. DAWSON & CO. Jan, 18—-2aw pat 3w _——ee Recitation & Dialogue Books BREMNER BROTHERS. February 23, 1878, —2i