~_ ——— —— a a a Se ae a eS i, len: as ne it iil ras a ices atten is eas aR: erred 7 ~ GLOSING AND ARRIVAL OF MAILS, AT oT CFFICE, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, AFTER MONDAY, tith WAY, THE | ave + = = _ MAILS CLOSE DUE yovs se “ ~ Wedne s ¥ and Monday, Wednesday , and | . lay.9 p.m Friday, 6 p. m yetarto, Quevec Ne w Br'us- } Mond., Wed., & Frid., 9 p.m. Mon., Wed., and Friday. | qekend United otates, >. : 10-30. p. m ad &very alternate Friday, com mencing on Friday 15th . May at ¥Yp. m About every alternate Suat- | vest Britain vee Laliiak, | Supplementary muilevery al- uiday, commmencing Sat- ee ternate Sunday, 2-50, p.m urday, léth May, 10 p. m. commencing Suuday 17th ; May greet Britain, via Qu , Monday, 9 Pp. Friday, 10-30, p. m Gest Britain, via United ? Monday Weduesday and Mond.. Wed., and Friday, | States. ‘ Friday, 9 p. m. 10-30, p. m. | gewfoundland a West? Same as Great Britain, viaSameas Great Britain, via! indies, : ; oe Halifax. genmerside and intermedi- 2 Daily, Sunday excepted, 9 Daily, Sunday excepted, 2 gte offices ie. p.m. georgetown an di- ? Daily, Sunday excepted, 9 Daily, Sunday excepted, 2 we aifices fia ym waters — Tignis Alber- 2 Wednesday Saturday, 9 p.m. Tuesday, Friday, 2 p. m. ton, & ? . ; : jastern—St. Pe ss Ss,’ Monday, Thursday, 9 p. m Wednesday, Saturday, 7 p.m. &e. 5 ‘ goutbern—Murray Harbor 2 Monday, Thursday, 9 Wednesday, Saturday, 2 p.m, | elfast, &c.. 5 pedeque— Try Crapaud, 2 Monday, Wednesday, Friday, Monday, Wednesday. Friday, aa ‘ ip. m 2.30, p. m prackley Point ead, 2 Monday, Thursday. 8 a. 1 Tuesday, Friday, 9 a. m, ac.. 2 Pieqaid—Johns s River, 2 Friday. 12-30, p. n Friday, 10 a. m. Se., ) } Letters t Regis i st be posted by 8 p. m., both postage and Registratio® | fee must be prepaid The Postag transient Newspapers, and o tte.s for City delivery must be pre- said Letters may be posted in the Letter Boxes on mail Steamess up to the time of their geparture 4. A. MACDONALD, Postmaster. Post Ofice. Ch'town, P. E. I ALMANAC FOR SEPTEMBER, 1873, AaNGES , 9th May, 1874. .... BUSINESS CARDS. en cee a, dm. om.) WILLIAM JAMES HENEY, ver Moos, sayin sooo SW. AUCTIONEER, GENERAL BROKER, Som. pm. E. AND COMMISSION AGENT, Pell Moon, 25th Day. 6h os ~ \eoest| mene pays DEALER IN CHOICE “paY WEEK ih Hehe tales ; vee eubena me einen . rise ‘sets, “Water lemth PAVIL GROCERIES, TOBACCO & PANCT GOODS, i™MuH™ se a se es PRINCE ST., COR. OF DORCHESTER, i i 5 23.6 34; A Si; Al | Toesday ae. 18 8 fae gWedo'sd'y 27. 32, 220 2 44 ; Charlottetown. - - - P. B. Island | JTharsday 8 3 3S 26 52 ? - ‘Friday 2 28; 438 & 21 12 & ARCHIBALD LADNER, SSaturdsy 30 26 512 653 56 Cc Ts M estar) «3 as 44 ss 22 Commission Merchant, . * Monday $5 327 6 9 85 y re aa pais he tueshar sj; 21; 632; 9 3 4" ACCLIONELR, 9Wedn'ed’'y 37 19 6 44 1014 42 [nS dl G | Sterne ss i: psoas ao LDSOPANCE and General Agent, aw tien = = 37 Queen Street, 12 Ssturday a 7 2 11 43 } lle Sinden” | es) inl 7 47 Me go Charlottetown. - - - P. EZ, Island. 4 Monday 4% nem eo 27 ae si Tecedsy — 4 » 42 a4 WILLIAM DODD, } sd & s 9 3 17 21 : el + mabey ee oa Lat) i; Commission Merchant and Wiriday | 48 11046 2 40 i4 AUCTIONEER a yen Et gs i 11 QUEEN SQUARE, #1 Monday 53| 53| 056 631 ‘ ‘HARLOTTETOWN. P. E. ISLAND 1 Toesday Si 6s) «2:16 7 47 v ne ene $ Wedn sd r + Si 339 48 45 11 59 F. M. CAMPBELL. ' # Thursd ss 4 & 3 9381 55 SFridy co us 6a toi s General Merchant, Soom” | os wi bili | Com==nenON aemrr, | @Monday § 1 42102 A9 4A0C7IONEER € BROKER 9 Tuesd 1 40 it 8 «O05! “ADY ann mp Weduni’ys 2538 412) 1s 13s TRINITY QOBNEB, GBOBERTOWY, P, F. 1 AGENT FOR THE Siandard Life Insurance (Co. Sept. 1, 1873. ly BUSINESS CARDS. ++" tee 6 ee eB HH A. D. SHIRREFF, a ae JOSEPH CREAMER, ductineer, Commissioc Merchat!, physician & Surgeon, BROKER C12Y HOLEL. AND GENERAL AGENT. CHARLOTTETOWN, CHATHAM, - NEW BRUNSWICK. patients attended to at all hours: and con- Suitations given to poor gratuitously on MONDAYS, from 1 to 4, p. m. April 20, 1874.—t¢. ——! (i CONSIGNMENTS : Aug. 3. 1874.—4m Mr. C. BYRNE. y Vv. wb. Be Veterinary Surgeon, SOLICITED. BANGOR HOUSE, PLEASANTLY SITUATED ON North Side King’s Square, St. John, - - - New Brunswick. J H. RUSSEL, PROPRIETOR. — HERMANS & SON, LONDON. GREAT BGS to isto rm at he istes BRITAIN. be inhabitants ot » Ee | pac onne Bel Haugen, Gin and Tin-swiths, ee trusts that by prompt attention a de ot charges tw give satisfaction to those wae UCEEN STREET, ee ee | « OFPORIEE WAGNON’S DRUG STORE, Char! tetowe, Juse 22, 1874.—3m JEG to return their thanks to the general ao. : public for the liberal patronage extend- CARVKLL BROTHERS, ¢¢ to them since their commencement in business, and ask for a continuance of the . ‘ . ‘ ’ ame Thew y n t] “ A U C J ION ‘ ERS, same. They keep constantly on hand :— Commission Merchants, TINWARE, KITCHEN UTENSILS AND ke, be be. GENERAL AGENTS. A in the above business wil! be rders std a ae punctually attended to BANK BUILDING, QUEEN STREET, wing lately made large purchases in the Charlottetown, P. E. Isiand : House Builders, such as ’ “say “el Gas Fitting, Water Closets. Bell Hise, Sign, and Carriage Painter, a : Weare prepared to sell them at Rates as Paper Hanger & Glazier Low as can be had in the city, and will fit lo a generous public we would say, that i a eeiiodan a\\ orders in this branch of our business will Cheapest Markets, intended for JAMES BRENAN, Fitting, &e., &e., r r ‘ them up ir roo orkinan) rie. SOL RIS W KS them up in a good workwanlike style e attended to with despatch. Orders will receive prompt attention. 4 ioe of First-class WATER COOLERS duly 7, 1873. ly oohand. Sayers Crystal Blue (Nov. 11, 1871.) H. R. MUHLICS’ ~ gold cheaper than — Kitchen & Galley, Commercial College. , WELSH & OWEN’S BUILDING, Queen Street. Charlottetown. PATON, PRAREE & REAGH, PROPEIETORS. Furnishing Depot. DEALER IN ALL KINDS O Ship Work, 4LSO Qctrrsss and Water Closet. Pipes, P nr rt bn od nd- -—— ay Lead Figures, Dee} og end Ha oemanmED TO Leeds, Lead Cisterns made, anil Water vee —-Rencate CREIGHTON STREET: OPPOSITE UNION IIOUSE, PicTol ae Cloeete fitted up at the shortest nm : Donets fived ap at the shortest Young Men for Business BOOK-KEEPING in all its branches, both SINGLE and DOUBLE ENTRY and Col- lateral subjects, thorougly taught and prae- t cally applied by means ofa ( omplete Course of Actual Business, vu LCAN FOU N DRY engaved in by all the students. Particular GRrORGETOWN. attention given to STUVES. wholesale acd retail. WINDLASS BANKING ARITHMETIC, eet MACHINERY CASTINGS is genera! BUSINESS CORRESPONDENCE, Weys on hand, or supplied at the shortest notice SPELLING, &c. liaving obtained the necessary instruments, Cash Paid TELEGRAPHY will be ‘Taught POR Al. KINLS of OLD & SCRAP IRON creafter, in addition to the other branches. J. A. RUTHERFORD & Co, Save 2, 1973.1 5 Georgetows Eaton & Frazee’ s ARITHMETIC (revised lition), Eaton & Frazee’s BOOKKEEPING | “. Ch’tewn, June 1, 1874 . ie I 8t- Lawrence Marine Insur- ance Co, af P, Ey Island. Me d Blauks to accompany same, constantly Boanp or Directors ou hand. A liberal diseount to the trade. Agcuipaty Kexvepy, Esq. / ’ Business men and others interested are Joux F. Komarrson, Ex cordially invited to call and examine our ystem. Hours—@4 a. m. to i2 p. m., frem 2 to 4, nd 74 to 94 p. m., antil the opening of the Taomas Moxeis, Esq veuing Class, October lat. W. D. Srewarr, Esq Circulars containing full particulars will | taken daily at theiroffice, Exchange be sent free to any address, on application to | FREDERICK W. HYNDMAN, T. B. REAGH, Principal. | ows, March 16, 1874.—ly Secretary Ch’town, Jan. 5, 1874,—tf | Agremas Loxp, Esq Retrn B. Peace, Esq P W. Hrspwan, Esy ~~. 1A TALE . else to do just now, and she'll go in a mos | ment, She’s vot ill, on'y a little headache —go, Ketharine,’ ‘Not on my account,’ said Mrs. Joilie, | rather sternly, as she caught the menacing glance directed by her sister.in‘law towards her niece, and clasped the burning, trembls ing hand she had taken, ‘I am an old wo. POETRY. LORNA LBA LO LLL 4 SONG FOR SEPTEMBER, BY THOMAS WILLIAM PARSONS. September strews the woodland e’er With many a brilliant color: Phe world is brighter than before- Why should our hearts be duller? Sorrow and the scarlet leaf, Sad thoughts and sunny weather! Ah me! this glory and this grief Agree not well together. man, and so epoiled by baving my own way always, that you must indulge me in it now. Let this laseie go to bed, and then you and [can surely endure each other's eompany Phis is the parting season—this ) ; : alone until my brother comes in. The time when friends are flying ; And lovers now, with many a kiss, rheir long farewells are sighing. Why is earth so gaily drest? This pomp that autumn beareth A funeral seems, where every guest A bridal garment weareth, We have much toask of each other,’ she added, sor- rowfully. ‘Aye, that we have,’ said Mrs. Grove, taking the cue from her visitor, and sizhing deeply, * and I shou'd be glad to oblige you, Each one of us, perchance, may here, I'm sure, and send the girl to bed, bet she’s On some blue morn hereafter, something to do that must be done tos Return to view the gaudy year, night But not with boyish laughter. _— ‘Those frills? Ah! well, uevcr mind! We shall then be wrinkled men. Our brows with silver laden, | They sha'l be ready io time, if you wil! | truet to me.’ And thou this glen may seek again. ‘But F But never more a maiden! a * I have a singie i rk Will tonch that seeming bosom, : pe soem a sores net And that a few brief months will bring | works wonders,’ interrupted Mrs. Jollis, Phe bird, the bee, the blossom; |‘ You may safely trust fo it, only let the Ah! these forests do net know lassi +e : : ’ assie go; : f beg ¢ i. Or would less brightly wither- vel - whe eh tS abe . The virgin that adorns them so the good Katie who nursed my darling, Will never more come hither! whatever is lacking from her neglect, I will a “= | pay for, and get done, twenty times over.’ As she spoke, shs draw Katharine to her, ani while the tears coursed rapidly down her face, kissed her solemnly, saying— ‘Good night, Katie, God bless you! I will not ask ycu anything to-night; tosmors morruw we shall both hava much to hear, ' and afew hours rest wlll be good for each. Nature, perhaps, foresees that spring eo — LITERATURE. OS Nee AAAS KATHARINE. OF WOMAN'S TRIALS.| CHAPTER V. Upon Mr. Grove, the tendervess, patience was not one of her sieters who bore the faintest resemblance to the deac—or whom, with any prospect of happiness, their aunt could receive as an inmate. This onve as- certained, Mra. Jollis would havea left Bir- mingham immediately a‘ter the funeral, to escape her sister-in-law's broad bints and sugzestionsin favor of Jane or Lucy, but for her hops of Katharine. her brother upon the subject of her wishes, plan for improving h's niece’acondition; nos thing, therefore, remained but to be satisfied | of Kathirine’s integrity. In the hope,there- fore, of establishing this, she took her darinz the evening into her own room, and when uizht of Mary’s life, she said, suddenly— ‘Ihave a strange idea, Kate, that you know something more «bout tha! robbery than you have yet tuld us.”’ ‘Have you? Why?’ asked Katharine, hurriedly, stooping to hide her confusion. *Because it is the only subject I have spoken upon to you myself or heard others speak, on which you were not perfectly | prompt, frank, and open.’ ‘Lam very sorry ’ tezan Kate ‘ Nay perhapa there is no cause for sorrow ; only be as candid upon th’s matteras | think you arg upon every other, and al! will be right.’ ‘What do you want to know?’ ‘ All that you do.’ | ‘TI have told you all that I can.’ ‘ How can that be, while anything remains untold ?’ *I can say no more than I have done; ins deed I cannot. * shown to | fatally — ; and dutifulness cf hs lost child had made a strong impreasion, sion which, faulty as he was, she had eyer and the earnest, though gentle opposition she had vainly made to the journey which had-ended so s neglect of her entresiies to be taken hom, and deafuess to Katherine's urgent representations of the danzer of de- lay—ahis own ill-employed albserce on the night of her death—all oppressed him now, bis wiebes, and with a strange kind of remorae, he sought | to atone for all by conveying the insnimate body baek to that home which, in the last days of life, the spirit had been so Icath to leave. In vain were a'l Lis wife’s remous Strances against the expenee and uselessness Tho respectful sub nis- | } } | mind you’rs up early in the morning.’ You will I-t ber go for my sake—will you ‘Then you acknowledge there is more to | Say 7” ; only| Kathsrine romained silent, with ber eyes | fixed upon the floor. The expression of her face puzzled Mrs Jollis, it was so resolute, not Mre. Grove?’ *Oh, of coures, if you wish it With a grateful heart Katharine left the She had sounded | and felt assured of his acquiescence in any | thera, leading the conversation to the last | | your name upon steel by a proc: | etching. | (nitric acid) ; ; OF with a@ s | but I discovered OWN, PRINCE EDWARD..ISLAND, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1874. AGRICULTURAL. Wiyteine Carnace.—To keep cabbage through the winter, pack in sawdust in the barn, and allow the whole to freeze, the sawdust being such a non conductor of heat that once it becomes frozen through, it will not 1 well into April, thaw out until and cabbage will c me out almost as nice as when put in SsMoke vor GRaAssHOPPR ’s A write 1 the Prei Farmer; speaking of graszhops pers. says :—‘ It was no use to fight theza, that a little smoke drove them away. It is not a large fire, but | smoke sends them off. Had I known this | four days ago I could have saved £500} worth of plants and fruit. It ticable ona iel but acres.’ large field, bn few i on le 7 a YY lark }? ‘ 3 Caled Mark your Toots.—You can eas Coat the tools wi laver of wax or hard tallow, by fi ing the steel and rubbing on the warm until it flows, and let it cool. hard mark your name through the wax with a graver and apply by aquafortis over the acid thoroughly witk water, metal enough to melt the wax, and wipe it ft rag. The letters will } found etched into the steel. Sart as A Feriitizer.—An inquirer of ithe New York 7 wants to know how much salt can be used per acre with bene- fit, to which Prof. S. W. Johnson gives the scientific answer as follows :~—“ Az to the quantity that may be applied per acre, that depends upon the crop and the climate. On asparagus several hundred bushels may be used without harm. On sugar beets and tobacco, large applications will often | and the tobacco will not make goo room , although the intens* agony she wes | @ndatthe same time eo innocent That | suffering seemed to bave du'led her faculties | there was a secret, wasevident: but that it | somuch that she eearcelry knew how hor! wae one for her share in which Katharine | of this plan; he bad taken a dogged reaoles | ticn, and if it had cost him half his fortune, /entreaty, and when Katharine went to the | | felt that ebe had no cause to blush, was, release had been eff-cted, er who the powers | | Mrs. Jollis thought, equally evident. ful visitor was. The next time they met was by Mar.’s| coffin, It had besn opsned at he aunt's | her own thouchte. sail— ‘Mary told you the ead atary of Kate; did she not—and its ruinous end?’ * Yes, answered Kathrine, io a low voice. room as uausl, unconscious that any one ber secret, was there, or that any change bad becn | made, she found Mrs. Jollis kneeinz and! weeping by the dead. A terrible shock, as the uncovered f.ce you, you stil persist in following the same she had thoug!t :ever again to sce on aarth | met her eye, thrilled through Katharine. | ‘Aud yet, with auch an example before | hold it ap.’ | wickedness, | and became aware of the presence of a lady, he wou'd have persisted in it. For 4 few minutes sie could neither speak nor wove; bat at last, with a suddeo burst of tears, =he threw horsaf upon the eoftin, After much unbecoming discussion, theres | fore, the body was removed to Birmingham; | and when it arrived in Great Charles Street, Mre Grove became at once reconciled to and sobbed bitterly. the whole proceeding by finding a letter ‘ Poor Kats,’ murmured Mrs. Jollis, ten- from Mrs. Jollis expressing a with todefray ‘erly; ‘ [ did uot mean you to have seen | all the cost, and a request that the funeral should be delsyed another day, to enable ber to be present. | fallen upon you. You were vary kind to In the satisfaction and hopes excited by _ ber,’ she added, weaping. this welcome letter, all grief for the loss! ‘Ob Mary, Mary!’ sobbed Kate, ubhecds which had oceasioned it sexmed banished: | ing. ‘ Why did you leave me—what wil! bes and ful! of schemes and plans, Mrs. Grove come of me row? Oh, that I could die eet busi!y to work to prepare for the due re~ | to>.' ° ‘Hush! Kate, hush! such wishes arse | ception of the important guest Harraseed and worn out by bodily fatigue, as Well asthe despest giisf it was possible , for 80 youag a girl to endure without sink~| 3° $0 her. ing, Katharine, for the fret time, wa:un- ‘Det! caonot be psiient! She was my able to obey the spur of ber aunt's unceas- only friend, the only one who loved me; ing demands. It was not, however, unti] 9¢dnow that she is zone, I have nothing the last nigh'—the ene preceding that upon !e!'- bich Mre. Jollis was expecte’, that Kath-| The tove of desolation which these arine suffered hersel{to com isin. She had words whre utterel pierced the listner’s been working hard all day, faint though she beart, and, rising from ber knees, she strove was for the want of the nourishment she wes ‘0 comfort the poor broken-hearted girl, toe exhausted to take, aud sick from the agony of an inteuse headache. She bore up bravely, however, cntil evecing, when. re- fusing with a taunt her entreaty to be allows sinful; we must bear patiently, and work | earnestly, that in Goi’s good time we may in than her own. For a time the words of ususua! kindness only increated Katharine’s tears; the floods ed to lie down. her aunt desired her to ga'e# of ber misery were unloosened, and finish the bombazine frills Jane had re-| "ot being terrified inio silence, her griet | was poured forth uurestrainedly. Atier a whie, however, ste became calm, and was able to answer with tolerable composure al! the anxious inquiries made by her compan- linqaished ‘I cannot, aunt: indeed, | cannot! I do not say so ‘rom: idleness; but I cannot sre. My head aches so badly, that I can ecarecly jon. jliness, almost: every thought and hope she had expressed, were dwe't upon with a loys ing ,earnestness which tovehed Mra, Jollis deeply ; there was no concealment of ans- thing ontil the history of the ‘ast nizht came, ani then she observed thet Katharine be- came cautious and reserved in her replies. + Oh, nonsense, tit @ wet cloth round it) then. My bead bas ached all the week bad enough, axd iny beart too; but l've gone on, andso must you. Hers, take the work.’ ‘Indeed i cannot do it. I would not re- fuse if I could; bat I canxot to-nizht, I should on'y epoil it. I am very sorry.’ ‘Sorry won't hem the frills, and bemmed they must be, so you'd better take them at once and get on; the sooner you'll begin, the sooner they’i! be don-.’ Scalding tears of pain trickled down poor Katharine’s pallid cheeks, and her eyes burned with a blinding agony. She really eould not seo, and as she extended her trem» bling band to take the work, she ujset her This struck her be more, from Ka‘harine’s previous openvess, and the remembrance of Mrs. Gr ing ‘Katharine knows m ve’s remark of the preceding evens re about thes ros bery than she choosre to tell, l’m certsn her speak, she may depend upo: it.’ To look in Katharine’a ingenious face, gun's well-eresmmed cup of tea over the darkened though it was with sorow, and bombazine. suspect ber of collusou with thieves, was ‘You careless, good for nothing, lazy impossible ,; snd yet euspic.oa, once suggest- thiog !’ cried Mre. Grove, stariing up and ed, there was something singular in the shaking the drops from the frills; ‘you evasiveress of her answers. There was no deserve to be made sit up all night for your Firet you pretended to be ili, to get of doing what you're told and when | you find that won't do, you try to spoil the | werk ost of spite. Bot I’mnot to bs cheat- ! ed in that way; you ehall work til! the things are finished, I'm determined.’ As she spoke, she tursed sharply round, more of the robbery and robbrr than she told; but if she did not, why did she eo evade the eubject? and when questioned upon it, so hurry and curtail her replies? It was strange ; avd Mrs. Jollis, hoping to obtain a satsfactory explanation, wisely thoughts and mnds of both were calmer. who stood a few peces within the door. She bad taken a strong fancy to Katharine, *Your servant announced me,’ aaid the stranger, edvancing; ‘but you were too much occupied to bear her. My aoame is seeing how unkind y she was treated, re- solved to take her back to Scotland, it the Jollia! ’ | careful watch she should keep upon ber ‘Mr:. Jollis!’ stammered the horrified | actions was satisfactory. Of these inten» tormagant tions, however, she said nothing. A bleak aud lowering day dawned that of the funeral; like the ooz ng of great waters, the slow rain dripped unceasingly—the leads eo sky was uchroken by «@ single gleam— and even the wind sas ctill. Wuithbia the damp, dark church the ;ent heavy air wrap. ped the mourners as ia a shrocd, and the foul smell from the opened vault, unable to escape through the thick atmosphere, made those who breathed it shudder: It was a terrible day in Great Charles S:. ‘I am sorry to have taken you by sur- prise; but leaving Scotland some hours earlier than | had hoped todo, I arrived thie evening, instead of to-morrow, and being of course very anxious to see you, I merely took some refreshment at the hotel, and came op at once. Is my brother at home, and bow is he?’ * Very tad, poor man—he frets bimseif to death; but I think be's at the factory to~ night, though I’m sure be wouldn’t have) gone outon no account if he bad known of you coming, Ren down Kathbarise, and send for your uocle—look sharp, now!’ - visit of death among them, were silent and i : : aD , ‘lie and Katharine, if ‘Ne, ro!’ eried Mrs. Joilis, stretching | "FOSS; aod Mrs. Joli as es out ber band to impede Katharine, ‘I can wait. Pardon me for contradicting your orders,’ she ea:d, turning courteously to her astonished bosiess ; ‘bat I should be grieved if you distressed this young lac- on my account, and I am sure,’ sbe added, looking stesdfasily into Katharine’s blanebed face, *ehe is suffering too mech already, to be able to make any greater exertion than that fidence, make her the offer of a home with requisite for going to bed. [ will wait my ber. Mr. Grove’s family had pained aad brother's retors with pleesare.’ ‘disappointed ber; in vaio she had looked *Ob, | coulda’s think of such rudeness! | yet eorrowed bitterly. This mutual grief drew Mrs. Jolis aad Katharine still closer together; and upop | the evening of the second day alter tue fo- neral, Mrs. Joilis determined at once to re- this; you have borne a great deal a’ready, | poor child, and this addition shou'd not have | whose so-row seemed so much greater even | Every circumstance relative to Mary’s| bot after to-morrow L'il Gnd a way to make | reasor, of course, why she should koow | deferred all further interrogations until the” both for Mary's sake and for her own; and | —even Mrs. Grove was subdued and tearful, | while the children, awed by the first solemn. not mourning with those who have no hope, solva ali her doubts o! her favorit=’sintegrity; and if sbe found thet she deserved her con-| | sinful s-cret always ende! Do wot think that | L spenk unneceasarily harsh words, Kate. I | would not willingly do eo. Bet what other | than a éinfu! secret can that be, which is con- nected with the conceelment ef a theft ?’ ‘ Allthat I can tell you, i have told you,’ replied Kate. ‘ Anything more, I iave pro- mised never to tell; anderen in saying this to you, | have said more thaa I have to any one e!ge—-and more p*rhaps than J ought.’ ‘Ought ? Promised? Katharine! what is the meaning of this? How came you to be leagaed with people whose deeds reyui ¢ such promises? and if you sre innocent of any share in their guilt, bow dared you, with yger | poor couei.’s example before your eyer maks euch a promise ?’ | ‘I aocent! Mrs. Jollir, what do you | mean” asked Katharine ivdignantly. | ‘Simply whatI said. It may be painful | for you to hear, but you must expect to bear | thatand a thousand times more, if you per- sist m kespng bad people’s secrets. arins, you surprise and grieve me! 1 did | hope to have found you so very, very differs ent The tone in which those words were utier~ ed brought tears teas in‘o Kate's eyes, and she looked mourofally at the speak-r, who, moved by the singular beauty of ber plead-~ | ing earnest face, exclaimed— ‘I cannot think you a bad girl, Katharine, however appearances are @zainst you; and | although I think that whet is rigbt should al- | ways be done from eingls, unselfish motives, yet We cannot always judgs the temptations which lead others wrong —nor estimate truly che influence of example. | i 3 will therefore to offer you, if you will g ve ep this mys- tery. ‘T am, as you know, childless, and ths place in ny home which Mary filled is now ; vacant. I came here hoping to tind among | her sisters one whom I could jove and adopt, | but I cannot see such aone. You were her chosen friend, and I owe you much for the | tenderness and unselfishness with which you noréed her, therefora I ofer you the home j which I le isve she would have wisbed you t> share. You know how she bow she earned ber sad and early fate—be wars- ed then by her fate, and reflect, Katharine, | that as I could not pardoa deceit in her | whom I loved so well, neither shali I in you. | I wil mot ask you for your anewer or confide | ence now; think over my proposal toxnizht, aod give me pour reply in the morninz.’ Oh, whats host ofthoughte and feelings chased their suadows over Kathariue’s face | during thie speech! Hope, fear, doubt, as- | tou'shment, joy, aud bitter disappoistment, | alternately appeared and vanished, until at | Jast the the former died out, and left the eager eyes and coustenace blank and sad. Mre. Jollis watched the changes with a | painful ‘interest. Until this cbstacle was | thrown in the way, she did not know how | mueb her own beart was bound up in the loat it~ } ! ' } | proof of Katburine’s innotence—how much she had begun tolove ber. Nothing, theres | fore, could exosed her moriific:tion | when the young girl said, in a low and hus- | ky voice. | leaves and most everyihtng else _. | IT thought I would A long ptuse ensued; each was busy with | ve sutat last the elder lady | unhappy course! forgettinz that, in migery | of one k nd or the other, the Keeping of a! | deep as | could get, on account of a ledge. | I then took a section of cement pipe, two feet in diameter and three feet long, this I placed on the ige, and filled it in on the outside with cobbles, as high as the top of the large pipe. I then covered the pipe with a flat stone in the centre, the size of athree-inch pipe, and piped it to the top of the ground, then filled the dirt back again. ! then put in acommon deep well pipe; the whole costing me when done just thirty dollar l now have the cleanest, coolest, and che pest we ll al here.” Feevixg Vatts or Ryre.—The ¥ Farmer says :—“ The use ot growing rye for feeding sheep, cows and calves, may | be very advantageously availed of when it | | i | *Thank you for what you have said, and | believe me, that altbongh | cannot comply with your eondi'ious, [ am neither so uns | gratetul nor so unworthy as I may seem.’ | ‘Ob! Katharine what madness is this! Why will you persist in doing wronz against | your better judgment?’ | ‘Because I have no alternative—I have promised!’ | ‘But ao eril promiee it is a sin to keep; | nothing osn excuse or justify it. Ob, Kaths | arine, think what you are doing, think what you lose, persisting in this obstinacy.’ The poor girl buried her face in her bands, while the tears oozed from between them; 'and Mrs. Jo'lis, pursuing ber advantage, went on eazerly— * Ob, Kate! think what rou will exchange, | —a life of toil, dependence and misery, for one of love, happiness, and peace—a home in which you will te cherished and beloved, for one where you are wretched—a——’ ‘Tempt me no more!’ cried Katharine, springing up hastily—and in her agitation almoet throwing off the hand Mrs. Jollis had Jaid laid spon ber arm. ‘1 bavesworn—l have promised, and right or wrong, while I live 1 will keep my word.’ ‘All is over then,’ eaid Mrs. Jollis, coldly. ‘Lean urge you no more—you must take | the consequences of your own act; bat | wara | you that they will aot ead here; evil seeds | bear no heaithy fruit. | And, with a gesture that airuck poor Ka- | } } | i j i } j | or from both. | tharine t> the heart, she waved ber haod to. “among them for a fit successor to Mary; re | the door. | You're very good, but Katharine’s nothing dellious, seltisb, insolent, and deceitful, there To be ontinuecd, Kaths | promote growth, sometimes wonderfully; but the beets will not yield their sugar, 1 smoke. els per ities have y employed seasons than In dry. y the happy medium fiftec n larger quantiti On grain crops, five to acre, and in England been used. More can be safel in moist climates or fen bushels is perhaps adapted for an experimental trial heat A Cuzar Wett.—A correspondent of the Massachusetts Plowghman writes >—** Hav- | with toads, bugs, worms, in my well, n for a wel! ing been troubled try a new pla I dug a well about eight feet across the top, and twelvo feet deep, that being as It would be well to give the fall and winter growth, when the ground is is necessary. crop full chance ‘or but towards spring, i dry enough, it may be moderately grazed | until the 10th or 15th of April. The manure of the stock if fed to any extent with grain at the same time, would amply atone for any diminution of the mass of green crop. generally appreciated, except by profes- siona] graziers. They well know that few weeks of green feeding in early spring tells largely on the profits of the whole year’s giazing. In the raising of spring | lambs especially, the value of l ITs age to give to the ewes af k will be apparent. Wister Srock Foop.—h says of winter st food Repon m mo t portions of the Northwest represent the outlook for winter food for stock as riunateiy the anything but promising. F\ reports from i I are D one way,’ else there wou great cause !for alarm. As a rule, however, upland hay, including the product of wild and | cultivated grasses, Is light, while the pro- duct of the | the bogs and marshes is very much below the average of former years, Theseason is now too lar advanced, and the ground is toodry to expect any improvement. There is little hope of a . } »W lands fram {erop of aftermath f meadows brown and sear,’ as mostof them < The same causes that have resulted in a short crop of iell you whit I intended, and stilido intend | grass have caused the straw of spring sotvn grains to be alsolight. In most sections |the extreme dryness of the season pre-~ vented the ordinary amount of Hung and millet from being sown. { length of stocks and fulness of foliage Imps ‘VIN Wa It has been xteen or eighteen years t 1 i for seed over avery c eer as tosow none but the very largest kers nels. By so doing | have improved r wheat sd that have sold nearly wheat at home for seed. But in Is72] hit upon a new plan. I had a piece of Treadwell wheat that was injured by insects in the previous fall and killed by freezing in the winter worth cutt few scattering , occurred to me that there was wheat that so that there were ’ ' heads of unusual siz had withstood the ravages of the insects and the rigor of the winter. I gathered enough to sow one rod square, from which I realized twenty pounds of w! usually large even berry, wi ratio of over fifty bushel harvest I bad twenty bushels which weigh~ ed sixty-six pounds per bushel. It is my opinion that we realize the best crops from the best and most perfect seed in the veg- etable as well as the a | kingdom VaLve oF Br a late number of this } fact that E. Dillon& Co., of Normal, Ills., had sold four colts, the produce of one brood mare, for $5,500; and we now allude to it ‘ +} for the purpose of stating that this Is no by any means, an exceptional case. the contrary, it has been demonstrated over and poss Hla y kind of st ‘uniformly pro nstances are over again, that it is scarcely } the general farmer to keep ar on his farm that will prove so fitable as a good brood mare. numerous where a single bro and fashionably bred, and co t series of years with popular sir has, by her produce, made a handsome fortune for her owner ; and in almost every neighbor. hood can be found mares of more age value. The prudent, wider awake far. im that aver- mer will be on the look-out for su . and whenever he can purchase them at rea- sonable prices he will not fail todo so. Such ah investment can not fail to do better than money at compound interest, if the mares be coupled with the right sort of stallions. Good horses always finda ready sale at high prices—the scrubs are only a d: market-—and a colt can be raised as cheap-~ ly as a steer. To make horse breeding pro fitable, you must start right. Horses are not sold at so much per pound in the mar- ket, like cattle or hogs, it is the Ne in Ae 640 the toe juality that determines the price, and quality is a thing of inheritance, derived from the sire or dam, If the foal, when d d, has not inherited those characteristic which give value toa horse, no amount of afte care and attention can compensate for the lack of organic quality. It costs no more time or money to raise a good co't than a poor one, excepting, perhaps, in the origi nal investment—the diilerence in cost of a good brood mare and a poor one, the ser- vice of a first class stallion and a scrub—and herein lies the secret of success. — Lire Stock Journal. is not prac- th a thin | y first warm- | wax, } When | after a few moments wash off | warm the | Paints iv Butrer-—A New England agri cultural journal calls attention to the pre. vailing carelessness in the manufacture of dairy products among the rural population of the Eastern States, especially butter. | These remarks sre applicable in the west as well as the east: We have had occasion lately in visiting farm houses in different localities, to inspect | the accomodations for the dairy, and in very few 3nstances, indeed, were proper means taken to secure a proper ventilation and se- | curity of the production of sweet and mar. ketable butter. In several cases the milk was set on shelves in cellars in which heaps | of decaying rcots and vegetables were lying, anything but agreeable. In one case a tub half filled with dirty | clothes was standing in the cellar in close proximity to the milk shelves, and in ano- ther cellar was a petroleum or kerosene barrel which sent forth its peculiar odor very | perceptibly. these taints with whica the air was burden- almost unmarketable quality of butter was | churned when a good sweet product might | with proper care have been secured. Farmers often speak, sometimes sneering- | ly of ‘gilt-edged butter,” meaning that ; Which brings the highest market prices, | but complain when perhaps a third or half of the gilt-edge price is offered them for The high price is simply the return theirs. ley . . | for the exercise of proper care and attentis | | on which they in preparing their butter, | failed to give. There are m*ny more cus- tomers in town and city who wil! pay almost any price for the best quality of butter that can be supplied, and there is no excuse for the production of an inferior juality. ve Your Own Seep. ~— Every intelligent tiller of the soil admits that “whatever a man soweth that shall he also reap.” If one sows or planta inferior seed, he cannot | expect a bountiful crop of either root or and the odor which arose from them was | Of course the milk absorbed | ed, and the consequence was that a poor, | NO. 38. MISCELLANEOUS. re iets Freiburg The Old Catholic Congress at has been dissolved. Black Eagle, the last chieftain of the Irequois, was lately run over and killed by a circus waggon, The consumption of the flesh of horses, mules, and asses is decidedly on the in- crease in Paris. Returns show that the | flesh of 2,111 horses, asses, and mules was | sold to the Parisian public during the first _ quarter of the current year, against 1,275 in | 1872, and 980 in 1870. Negotiations are still proceeding between the Chinese and Japanese Governments | upon the Formosa question. Chine is stated to have given the Japanese 90 da to withdraw from Formosa, and is i immense preparrtions for war in the event of Japan refusing this ultimatum. The | newspapers are confident of a peaceful sola ution, but among the Chinese there is a prevalent opinion that war will ensue, Sydney Smith was once visiting the con- | servatory of a young lady who was proud of | her flowers, and used (not very accurately) | a profusion of botanical names. ———. said he, “have you the Septennis psoriasis ?’ “No,”’ she said very innocently, “{ had it | last winter, and | gave it to the A | of Canterbury, and it came out beautifully in the spring.’ Septennis psoriasis is the medical name for the seven years itch, The L’opolo Romane states that the Vati- can has given instructions to the | Nuncios in France, Austria, and Port j obtain a declaration from these | | to to the effect that they renounce their right to exclude candidates in case of the election ofa Pope. In return the Vatican would be willing to allow a revision of the present concordats. The Papal Government de~ sires also to enter into negotiations with | Spain. At the opening of the International Corn-market on Wednesday, at Vienna, grain. Small and half-matured kernels of | L j wheat, oats, rye and corn, cannot be ex- | Herr Leinkauf, in the name of the Bourse pected to yield large panicles and ears fill. | Committe, read a report on the harvest, ed with plump and heavy kernels. If one ftom which it appears that the wheat crop plants the seeds of carrots, parsnips, turn- | in the Austro-Hungarian Nonarchy will ips and cabbage which grew in small pods, | Most likely be five millions of quintals above and the half matured panicles on the slen,| the average. an amount which would per- der stems, he cannot produee large roots, | Mit an export of 12 milKon quintals. Should even if the soil has been brought to an ex. | the estimates, be realized there will also be cellent state of fertility. three millions of quintals of rye, and the Chis sugges s the great importance of rais- | Same amount of barley available for expor- | ing seed of the choicest quality. It will } tation. cost no more to raise one thousand bushels| Grear Men.—Cardinal Wolsey was the of beets or turnips, per acre, than three|son of a pork-butcher. Oliver Cromwell | hundred if plump and heavy seed has been | was the son of a London brewer. Whitefield | properly saved. | was the son of an inn-keeper at Gloucester. In ord r to produce large, heavy seed of | Columbus was the son of a weaver, and a | garden vegetables, select a few large car- weaver himself. Boliver was a druggist. rots, a few turnips, parsnips and beets, and | Mehemet Ali was a barber. Virgil was the plant them in rich soil early in the grows | son of a potter. Milton was the son of a | ing season. They should be planted about | scavanger. Horace was the son of a > | thirty inches apart that the tops may have | keeper, Demosthenes was the son of @ ample room to spread. When the blos-|cutler. Robert Burns was a ploughman of soms begin to appear, clip off all the small| Ayrshire. Shakespeare was the son of a side branches, leaving only four five cen, | woc!.stapler. tral stocks, which will yield seed of a much t} planted, will produce a large root. The value of an early supply | of green food for stock of every sort is not | better quality than one can usually pur- Every kernel of such seed, when Turn- ij l carrots may grow in close proxim- ity, but turnips and carrots designed for } seed should be transplanted several rods chase. apart. One cabbage will yield as much vs one family will care to plant,unless seed crop is grown for market. A superb head should be transplanted as it grew. rhe top of the head should be cut open, so that sprouts or seed-stalk may readily up through the centre As soon as the panicles of carrots snd parsnips begin to turn brown, and when the the pods of cabbage and turnips begin to lose their green color, let the stalks be cut off close to the ground and hung up in some outbuilding. When the pods, leaves and stems are quite dry let them be spread on & clean floor, or on a large blanket, and the seed thrashed oil either with a flail or one’s ieet. In order to have large and early tomatoes the first ripe fruit should be allowed to hang to the vines until the seeds are fully ma- tured. By selecting seed in this manner for a few years, tomatoes will come to ma- | turit; way, and fruit i rop spring every stalk will be loaded with The melon, squash, cucumber and pums kin that ripen first should be left on the vines until the stems are gnite dry then when they begin to decay remove the | seeds, spread them on a-board or canvass to dry. juently destroyed by too much solar heat, ? or by being scorched beneath the kitchen ove. Fiowers will be maturing their seeds at diflerent periods through the entire grows | ng season. The seeds of some flowers will ripen in June, while others will not ripen till September or October. It will require but a few minutes to attend to the cultiva- tion and gathering of all the seeds one may need, if he will attend to the little matter ! at the proper time. Fi se on Slonsee.— The Journal of Chom y gives the following simple recipe for | —Take trro or three | the prevention of flies small handfuls of walnut leaves, upon which pour to or three quarts of cold water; let t infuse one night, and next morning pour the whole into a kettle and Jet it boil fora iarter ofan hour. When cold it will be| No more is required than to | 1A SJ out of the stable, let ige, and before the horse goes those parts which are smeared over with the een and about the ears, the neck, the flanks, Not only the the lady and gentleman who rides out for pleasure will be benefitted by this, but the coachman, the waggoner, and all others who use horses during hot weather. irritable be namely betw : . } ‘ + I t i eu. LLL LOE IO LT EN ED Dean Stanley preached to the volunteers it Wimbledon, fight with the giant of Gath. In the course of his sermon the Dean remarked that what gave sucha charm to Biblical incident from *, which he took his text was the fact that David, ‘‘a young volunteer, sneered at by the regular army, redeemed the honour of his country.” A Speciixe Lesson.—The most skilful gauger | ever knew was a maligned cobbler, armed witha poniard and a ferule, who drove a pediar’s wagon, using a mullein stalk as an instrument of coercion, to tyr- anize over his pony shod with calks. He was a Galilecn Sadducee, and had a phtihisicky catarrh, diptheria, and the bil- intermittent erysipelas. A certain ibyl, with the sobriquet of “ Gypsy,” went into ecstacies of cachinnation at seeing him measure out at of peas, taking up two ata time, and try to separate sacchas I tomatoes from a heap of peeled pota- rithout dyeing or singeing the ignits ible que ich he wore, or becoming par- alyzed with hemorrhage. Lifting her eyes to the ceiling of the cu- upitol to conceal her unparal- assment, making an awkward courtesy, and not harassing him with mys- , rarefying and stupefying inuendoes, fe him a couch, a boquet of lilies, and a treatise on ics, a copy of the Apocryphia in yhics. daguerrootyes of Mend- ncl Kosciusko, a kaleidoscope, a f ipecacuanha, a teaspoonful s ew fuschias, nap ux deleble purposes, a ferule for a cane, some licorice, a surcingle, a cor. nelian of symmetrical proportions, a chroa- ometer with a movable balance wheel, a box f dominoes, and a catechism. , gauzer who was also a trafficking rectifier and a parishioner of mine, prefers a woollen surtout (his choice was res le to a Vacillating, occasionally occur- licesynerasy), wofully uttered this Life is checkered ; but schism, and villany should be siby! apologizingly answered : ‘‘There ratable and allegeable difference be- isa tiveen a corferrable ellipsis and a trisyllable diseresis."’ We replied in trochees, notim-~ pugning her suspicion nor haranguing the audience. The « Gypsy” remained in the ascedant. Her ascendancy can never again , be queried by any queasy yulgar queen. ity much earlier than in the ordinary | Phe vitality of such seeds are fre | his subject being David's | It is estimated that the amount of gold obtained in the colony of Victoria in the first quarter of 1874 was 263,145 oz. The | yield is beiieved to be slightly on the des | crease, and so is the number of miners, many of whom betake themeelves to other | occupations, or settle on the land. Of the 48,169 miners at work on the 1,059 square miles of auriferous ground worked u | in the quarter, 12,934 weve Chinese. Four | mining shafts in the colony have been sunk | to depths below 1,090 ft. Accidents in the | mines are becoming frequent. An additional horror has been added to the previous position of the Cerrode la | Conception at Valparaiso, which has so | been threatening to fall into one of the streets there. The hill is the site of a | Cemetry, across which the rent of the ex- | pected slide has extended and interfered with the graves. Fetid gases have emanated | from the disturbed soil,and the remains of ‘ coffins and their contents which have been _exposed have had to be submitted to a pro- cess of cremation, to the horror of the specs tators of these bonfires. The shallow soil is reeking with human remains in all stages of decomposition, and they are threatened with further disturbance. At a recent meeting of the Swedish Medical Society of Stockholm, Dr Kjell- berg related the case of a young man who, | having manifested eymptoms of arsenic poi- | soning, Was sent away to travel. During the following year he enjoyed perfect health, but, having returned home he began to sutier shortly after in the same manner as i before. Suspicion was now directed to a green carpet on the floor of bis chamber, _and an analysis revealed the fact that there | as contained in the coloring matter a very considerable quantity of arsenie. The re- | moval of this carpet was followed by the immediate disappearance of all morbid symptoms. A famous Hungarian crimina', Boys San- gor, has just been condemned to death. etween 1830 and 1840 he committed a | series of robberies, but was at last captured, and in 1848 a incurred sentence of capital punishment He wae perdoned, however, by Kossuth, and organized a band called Esikose, who at irregulars, took part in several battles. After the suppression of the insurrection he relapsed into murder and incendiarism, and was — captured ec Em 4 } and condemned to death. however commuted, his sentence to im~ prisonment, and in 1868 he received a fall pardon, He returned, however, to his evil courses, and, as an incorrigible offender, has been a third timesntenced to death, a | penalty which will, doubtless, be now in. flicted. His companions have been ads judged to terms of imprisonment rang- ing from 2) years downwards. Tos Oricix or “‘Revergxv.”’—-The Rev. Brooke Lambert, in a short letter to the London Times, relates some interesting particulars concerning the origin of the title ‘ Reyerend.”’ ‘he registers of Tamworth, in England, daie back to William and Mary, 1556. In May, 1557, an entry is made “Sir Peter Stringer, Curate,” and the title “sir” ‘appears to have been given to all ministers down to 1657. In King James’ reign, the prefix “master” was used. (in the Jith of June, 1657, was buried one “ Reverend Pastor Master Thomas Blake, minister of ‘amworth.” “Reverend”’ in this case was used evidently asa mark of respect. ‘ Mas- ter’ seems to have been used up to Novem- ber, 1727, when there appears the baptism of Anne, daughter of “ ye Rev. Mr. Robert Wilson, minister of Tamworth,” and after that date the prefix “reverend’’ never seems to have been omitted. (ip Mais in Camva.—There was a time when “old maids” were looked upon with eye of pity, if not contempt, and it was thought that marriage alone gave women any claim to consideration. (f late years, however, there has been a change of opin- ion in this respect, and unmarried women not only rank as high in general estimation as their married sisters, but bid fair soon to surpass them. Nor is this to be wor at. A few years ago it was a rare sight to see a married woman dancing at ® bail giv- en in the London season, whereas LOW Wives dance with greater pertinacity then their sis- ters or daughters, and balls are even given expressly for married women. The char- acterot the British matron has, in fact, completely chanzed— instead of being grave and decorous, she has become « hopping, skipping creature, delighting every one by her grace and activity, but at the same time losing in weight, moral as weil as physical, what she gains inenjoyment. Inthe means time the spinster is rapidly rising—scorn- ing dirtation, she leaves vain ease to to the wife and mother. The peror of China lias set a good example in the encour- agement of spinsters. According to a Shang- hai journal, he has just decreed that special honours be paid to two old maids, one of whom lately died after a life of devotion to the memory of her betrothed, while the other, who is still living, declimed in ber youthful days to make a most tem match on the ground that she d not leave her home. Some few old ladies in England have an equal claum to recognition of their merits, and it would both elevate and appease them if they were in like man- . ner rewarded, —Pall Mell Gazette,