Vol. \ I V. "DAVIES & WEEKS, FLOTATION, ESTABLISHED 1820. a & Fs”? 8863: ESPECTFULLY irvite attention to| their large and varied Stock of STAPLE & FANCY , a o Barbadoes, uud “ C. M. Rich "’ I> Te yy <q x <)> © ID = ‘ ee Sea ene oe ee fo . i ne Season, Which, w . Pr 7 Ready-made Clothing, re Se uch, with stock on hand from pre vious importations, they offer for sale at their usna HAR Db WARE 9 GROC ERLES. j Low Pricer. The present importations comprise : | Whhds Burbadoes Sagar; 5 bales Cloths, 7” and Halifax steamers from LIVERPOOL * Uranus” : -— | #0 do Muscovado Mo} 4 do The Store baving beea recently opened, every. lasses, Weollens, be found filled with | *cbexts prime Congou) 4 do Paper-hangings, eee - Fresh & Scasouable Goods, 300 sacks Coarse salt, te ie : . : | 50 sides Sole Leather, ed & White Calicos which ure belling at Extraordinary Low | 6 ecuses Ready-made| 2do Striped Shirtings, Prices, at Dunesu's Brick Building, Clothing, 2 do Glazed Linings, CORNER SHOP. 9 do Ladies’ Boota &| 2 do Buffalo Skins, Y ‘ Shoes 2 hbhds Paint Oil 7 . » » & ss ’ . —Queen-sireet. Charlorietown, Dec. 28, 1953. 4do Rubber do do [111 packayes assortec M, P M & P! 3 do Silks & Ribbons, Paints, 3 do Millinery, 20 tons assorted Iron, =” BBLS. PORK of the above brands. 4do Haberdashery, 150 burs Muntz Metal, $ $ ed 12 Tubs LARD 4do Linen Drapery, ; in. Ce” Fer sale low. 4 do Cotton Warp, 6 do Printed, Unbleach j, aad j 1 do Hosiery, Butt Bolts, 6}, by } 1 de Gloves, : 2 do Shawls & Mantles, 1 do Ladies’ Furs, 6 do Dress Materials, 10 puckayes Glasgow Apply to Fur ‘ . 20 band les Spring, & Biieter Steel, WM. DODD. _ Ubarlotietown, Mare 1: 21, 1864. UNION BANK OF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. 1° accordance with a resolution passed at | the General Meeting of the Stockholders of the | shove Bauk, held at the Colenial Building, Char. | lottetown, On the Lith jogtant, acall is hereby made i of 3 per cent ou the Subscribed Stock, which lieos, Cotton Handker amount the Nockholders are hereby requested to | chiefs, &c, Ke. yy iuto the hands of the Chairman of the Board of | Masks B re Soda. Whiti P Wast Mréttors, at his office, in Charlottetown, on or | Vas o Dexing a, hiting, utty, — before re wd Mareh next. | ing Soda, Bils Jamaica Ginger, CHARLES PALMER, Chairman. \» : t c lod. DetedStnd Bebebary 2864: ee ees aa Cud ar, Powder, ustard, Boxes T a Meeting of che above Directors, held Loudon Soap, Raisins, a on Monday, the both Febrnary, instant, it was | Lozenges, Extract Logewood, Resoiven, That inasmuch as the Stock was not all | Pe GQ! B Ri ¥ P been taken up, and some of the Subscribers have | Cpper,Uiass, Days Sice, Tepper, expressed a wish to be permitied to pay up a larger | Allspice, Corks, Coffee, Coils Manilla *k chan 39 per) Rope; Dozens Pails, Brooms, &e. j Plough Metals, Winseys, Shawls, Printed Shirting,Flan- Shares, forters, Bags & Bag- Spikes, ging, Osnaburygs, Ca- Harc ware. preportion of their Subseribed Stoc cent, therefore that avy Stocxbolder paying in u larger per ceutaye sha!! be entitled to participate in | the profits of the Bank in proportion to the amonnt | of Steck so paid in. ee CHARLES PALMER, Chairman. saa ne NEW GOODS, The Great Land Commission a failure ! | FOR FALL 1863. Procure free land while you can. | AT THE VUE Subscriber ins THREE FARMS| BRITISH WAREHOUSE, on Lot 15, which he offers to sell on reason- ’ able terms. There is a portion of each of those QUEEN Ss SQUARE. nie’ Faurws cleared and undercultivation; they front or | "(THE SUBSCRIBERS HAVE JUST | the suore, Where abundance of sea manure can be RECEIVED trom LONDON, per Uranus, { had ° A Building fot or twe iu Charlottetown hed trom LIVERPOOL, per Theresa, trom GLAS. | Summerside would be taken us a payment. Por! GOW, via Pictou, per Cabot and other arrivals | ; , { farther particulars apply to the Hon. W.W. Lown, | : rs Charlottetown; Mr Baows, Sammerside, or | "0" the States and Halitax, i Pees ies : a Their usual extensive Supply of =| Brown's Teer BRITISH § FOREIGN | can! Ae renner Valuable Leasehold Farm MERCHIANDIZE, | NEAR THE CITY. | comprising all the requisite artic tes in STAPLE ro be sold by PRLV ATE CONTRAOT & FANCY GOODS, among which will be found ; he leading styles and novelties uF the season : the Leasehold luterest in | Plain & Faney Dress Goods . 7 ' 100 Acres of LAN D, Shawls, Mantles, and Furs, at One shilling per acre rent, lease go years. front Bounet Fronts, Hate & Cape, ing on the Royalty Road. near to Wright's Mill, 60 | tie ante Send t cia one Liack & Colored Silks, acres of which are cleared and ina high etate of Hosiery & Huboodacbers, Ke. D. G. & 38. DAVIES. Charlottetown, Dec. 7, 1863. | } cultivation ; the remainder is eovered with Lonyers ; : c ; ' > ne : Collars, Lies aud Searis, ae Gassamg athe AQ! - Seis Figemions-« feet. f " Plain and Fancy lannels, | coutuiuing Nine Rooms, ali well finished, with a | Shirts, Skirts & Skirting good Cellar and Dairy, 7 feet deep, with a stone Serges, Oil Cleths & Baize wall; BARN, 42 « 2 feet. witha horse and cattle Boots, Shoes & Rubber Goods Stable underneath, supported by a stone wull of 5 Clothing, and Gents’ general outfits, feet: » quad Well of Waser close to the House. | Cloths, Doeskins, and Trimmings, ; 24 Tous of Hay was cut off the place last year, be- | Hardware, Ironmongery & Cutler sides other greeu crop-, and the greater part of the _ rey y e e | 7 Bea y nal > 2 Dp. » Laud hax been manured with Lime quite lately. | Nails & Horse Nails, Roouw Paper, As the owner is about to make an alteration in his | Blankets, Rugs, and Counterpa ies, busi_ess, the Terms of this Property to a good pur. | Good ludige and ether Dye Stuffs. chaser will be made easy—for which and any other ‘ ‘a Me inforumtion, please apply to the Subseriber, at his GROCE aa bis, | Consisisting ef Choice ThAS and SUGARS | RAISINS, CURRANTS and FIGS, &c. Isl ' SPICES, &c. &ce. _— —a _— di abet te” Personally selected with care—purchased Fd Ty : | ou the best ternis—and will be found to compare ROY ALTY LOTS. | tavorably with other Stocks in the market, pe oe “pu LET, for such term of years a8 may | fur style or value. be agreed on, and either in whole or in part, | : W N. that BEAU PIFULLY SITUATED FARM, be- | Queen names & A. BRO louging te the Subseriver, fronting on the Mount | . FARMERS! LOOK HERE! Edward Koad, and ty ag about @ mile from Char- | lottetown. Lt coptsius about 70 acres, 40 of | ra ytity Subseriber has received, Ex Lavy Despas, direct from the Munufacturers, a which are improved aad in a bigh state of culti- | LARGE ASSORTMENT OF ALL KINDS OF vation. On the premises are two large baras. Goods generally kept in Stock. For terma, &e., apply to | Newly Invented Patent PLouGus, for land 2 horses, Uifice, Queen Sqiure. WILLIAM DODD. March 7, 1864 JOHN LONGWORTH. Do do do Threshing Machines, for | Charlottetown, Oct. 26, 1863. | Horse, warranted the best on the Island, and can VALUABLE perform as much work as some of the two Horse FREE H 0 L D PROPERTY power by other makers ; Crsenag © wav pesousy lof lubour both of man and horse, and avoiding the AND MILL STREAM, great injury and loss of Straw under the permease or to I e weather until it is left useless for fodder for cattle. For Sale ase. New Putent Root and Straw Cutters, for saving "EXO be Sold, or Leased for a term of! Hay and Oats vyeure, as may be agreed upon, that VALU- | Churns, to make excellent Butter in AULE FREEHOLD PROPERTY formerly ocen- | 10 minates. vied by John Ladner, situated on the Bannockburn | Cultivator and ee Extractor, to md, Lot 31, cousisting of One Hundred and} |. . ruise 10 tou by two oe sas ‘Twenty-five Acres of very superior LAND, fifty of Fotatoe Diggers,—just wanted, — with whieh are in a high state of cultivation, the re | several other improved Farming luiplements. mainder covered with an exeellent growth of both | és 4 The above Machines will now be sold at low Hard and Softwood. There is on the property «| prices, in order to prove the advantages of them xvod and commedions DWELLING HOUSE | over the old fashioned ones, by which such expe- JU & 41 feet, together with numerous out-buildings. | ditious and excellent work is now performed. A There is also on the property a SAW MILL. in | vast benefit to the land has been effected by the use good working order, with plenty of water to drive |of those newly invented CY NDAR MOULD- one or two Mille all the year yound. The above | ROART PLOUGHS, of Samira Fiewp, Green- Property is so well kuown, that it is almost un- | field. Masa., who have obtained Gold Prizes fecessary to remark opon it, being siteated in one | for the diseovery they have m ‘reducing cost, of the most thriving settlements m tke Irland, it labor, and the @ruft on horses, to nearly one-bualf offers an excelleut op portunity for individuals, with | that of the old Seoteh and Jrish Ploughs. of without capital, © muke mouey- Purties wanting any of the above vuluable and annennn S688 tethben low priced Machines this season will oe to A very superior Frame got out for a Grist Mill, order them on an early day, having mew Smty P few bat which would answer well for a Church, Ware- left on hand for specimens, at Oaw ELL Cumar house or other large Luildiag. For full partieulare Store, cheuper thau the cheapest, from a NEEDLE ) Subseri rO AN ANCHOR. b. STEPHENS. apply to the Subseriver FREDERICK DOUSE. | _ Orwell, Sept. 14, j863. Ch'town, March 2), 1964. 4i to eee A CARD. SALE OF Valuable Freehold Property, TEXU be Sold by PUBLIC AUCTION, wo his numerous customers in ‘Lown and Country hour of Twelve ovlock, neon, by virtue of a Power of Sale contained ia a certain Indeutare of Mortyuge, duted the Tenth day of December, 1860, and made between the Honorable William Forgan, of the Koyuity of Churlotigtoyn, and Susan Kemys, bis wife, of the one part, and Damel Hodson, of Viz: Charl rn. af _ of the ott . and by } ® ° it anal tialoea adnaned to mee Ail thowe | House, Sign, Carriage & Sleigh 12y Pieces or Parcels of Juand, being Pasture | “is Numbers Ninteen (19), Twenty-ajy (%) , Thirty- four (34), and Forty-two (42), in the Joyalty of | Pisain Charlottetown, aforesaid, ae the same are delineated and laid down on « certain Map or Plan of the said } Royalty made ani now kept in the Office of the | Wegietrar of Deeds and Keeper of Plans for the | eaid Asiund, reference being therewnto had will | Painting, per-hanging, Imitation of Wood and Marble, And every thing connected with the trade more fully and ut binge siypear. | Aud by punctuality and moderate prices, he solicits For farther parvcrlars wud terms of Sale, &c., | apply to the Sabseri ver or bix Solicitor. Dated at Charlottetown this 3let August, A.D.1 a share of public patronage. WILLIAM HM. HOBKIKK j and LATEST PASHIONS. Joarru Mexscer, Solicitor. | commodation of permanent and (runsient boarders HE above Sale is POSTONPED until) with large «tabling accommodation. With mode WEDNESDAY, the 15th day of June next, | rate charges, he hopes to merits shure of patronage. | bition, c | It was upon this night, five years ago, I to speak, while Kent Street. | gat in my study recalling it all, staring /ranuing over me. A.D.1864,at the same ee en} kK. H. MARTIN, ” Dated the 23th Fubruary, A.D. 1864, ives WILLIAM H. HOBKIRK. | Josep Hexsiey Solicitor. PASTURE LOT FOR SALE. ¢ be sold by PRIVATE SALE, that beuntifully «it ated PASTURE LOT, No. 42, im the Koyalty of Cvarlottetown, having a front of Six chaina on the Western side of the Mount Ed- ward Ktoud, and extending back by parallel liner Ch. Town, April 27, 1863. ts 1&y¥ GOLD! GOLD! Gold Ear Rings, Broches, Links, Lockets, Pencil Finger Kings, Pins, Studs, Keys, Chains. Atso—Some nice Watches, consisting of-— florizontal, four holes jewellec, in silver LONDON HOUSE. from London, “ Helen Davies’ from from Boston, the 50 sets Wilkie & Gray's Goods, in Gala Plaids,100 Wrought Iron Plough 1 cas@issorted Cutlery, : ; nels & Shirts, Com-/100 pachagrs Nails and | therefore, and sipped and thought, a Weekly Hournal of Politics, Literature, and Slews. in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Monday, April 4, 1864. Pt LITERATURE. | THE DOCTOR'S STORY. | _, tired and exhausted with my day’s labor ; and as | threw myself into the great arm- ebair before a blazing fire of bituminous coal, and felt the cozy comfort of my room, the ' luxury of the warm dry stockings and slip- r j ‘pers, the grateful fumes of tea and steak Carpets and | standing before me on the table, I could not | | but feel great happiness in the thought that | [ bad nothing further to draw me away from -} the house that night. I had lett each and 7 jeould be dispensed with | This is a circumstance so seldom enjoyed by || physician in good practice, that when it! 'does occur it is looked upon as bo common | | holiday. », wind, aod the tapping of the frozen snow) Cast | against window-panes, almost with eajoy-| ment, or rather with a feeling that added a) zest to what J was partaking of inside. A blazing fire is provocative of thought, | and a cup of tea is no preventive; I sat, 1 was | | staring into the blaze, and recalling a hun- | 50 do L-onmongery and} greg days in the past—a hundred incidents, | having a chain that led invisibly from wy | first thought. I recalled the night whea | sat in my humble lodging the first day of my jarrival in New York, fresh from the emai | town where [ was accounted of some import- ance among my peers, aud how my self-' | eotenen was lowered from my one day's ex- | | perience of the great eity. I recalled my | ‘first entrance into the Medical School, my | ‘disgust, and my ambition; the gradual | ‘sloughing from the half-rude country lad to | |the rather stylish city-dressed young mao. | | The going into society, and the first aad last | /real passion of my life, Marianne Graydon, | | that more than sacred memory to me of | | twenty years—that memory for which 1 sit |here a solitary, solemn man, wifeless and | | childless at forty-five—I sat befvre the blaz- | ing fire that night and thought of it all. . ~~ | When I asked what the man wanted. all of my patients in a state that wy services | till morning. | Kegs | 1 could listen to the mutterings of the| sits by the:bell, stove warming; biguelf, | lif the last could by any means be avoided the lapse of a few moments she raised her- in peienhe dae — Sa ttn eam at eee lS: | brief night in the great panic of '37. I! and what have I to sel) or give for it but | by the power she may osivean of tossing’ I opened le t Load ‘knew also that herself aud husband bad left | my body, worthiess to myself, and only good down bumpers of champagne, and pusteliag| setillention eae Rober : seen |New York immediately after—I knew not } for the purpose I would give it to? It is the half or wholly drunken men with whom call at the office of Graves & Hendrick, at- | where, nor would I suffer my pride to ask.| money, doctor. Promise me that I shall she meets to do the same. A touch of paint _ torneys, as svon as possible, either in pereoa ' But upon this very cold night in November | have the value of my body paid after death |to hide the ghastly palor of the cheek; a or by attorney, on busi of insportanes. | One cold, blustering, snowy night in No- | : png be ; 7 a Sas : cininsie ° &° ull this past came back to me, and | review-|to a source I sball designate, and I will |little opium to brighten the eye; satin in| ‘ Graves and Hendric - Y the “ GAZELLE,” “THERESA? | vember, I had reached my home utterly | og the life that had, without my seeking,| worship you—I will bless you as a dying| gorgeous folds over the corroding beart; torneys for the father 0 Bays Pag Nar brought me reputation, wealth, and calm,| woman here and hereafter. You shall take jewels to flash under the glare of the gas; of them? I shall , quiet content, more perbaps, than | should/it from hence as soon as the spark of life at ‘ouvert, Saar and you have a woman, doctor—a woman, Feel my pulse. i i have achieved as the husband of Mariaune | has passed away, aud I wil) believe you /|a creature with an immortal soul, made op janelle ee a — Graydon. 'when you say that its value to the medical | for sale, and thrown out io the market to but live to koow. How long shall I live + Doetor. there’s a man in the hal) says|school shal! be paid to the one I shall| the highest bidder—sold for what will pay | doctor ? : ‘he wants you.’ | designate.’ | for her satin and silk, ber jewels aud gold, _—‘I begged her to be calm, that all excite- 1 did not much like this interruption in| There was something in this too dreadful | and bread. ment would but hasten ber ond that it would “my reverie, Lt came from my bouse-kecper | for contemplation, however familiar I might} ‘ Bad enough, bad enough, is it while the be several hours yet before anything could ‘I have no doubt [ spoke rather petulantly | be with the details of misery, 1 had never| poor intoxicated wretch is surrounded by be known concerning it, promising to renaia yet known an instance of one bargaining splendour and plenty; but beauty cannot with her till that time, aad to call myself ‘ He says he wants » doctor.’ before death for her own body. There wa: | last always—she most come ove step down, | on Graves and Hendrick, and imroediately ‘Cannot he find one somewhere else?” =| a dreadful earnestness about the woman as to the dirty drabby house, and the faded iatorm her of the result. : Very quietly she ‘So I told him; but he says he wout go/|she sat there with her face turned towards grasping landlady, to the streets, aod the lay for several hours, only rous ng herself to any other this night—he bas been to; me, repesting each few moments, ‘ do this,| theatres. Ob, that terrible uowrittes | cocasionally to ask the time. The bours three without sucecsa already. And there | doctor, for a dying woman ! | history ! |Slipped by, and I set by tae pedside reeall- | What did she want this money for ? _* Aud further still, if imagination can | ing all my life, and musing Over the strange quite comfortable like.’ | What want could there be afrer death? A | Pi¢'ure anything worse. The garret and the | chance that should have brought me, of all ‘Send bin up to me,’ very perceptible shudder rao over the woman | corner gin shop ; the cellar, aud the eager | men, to sit by the death-bed of Marianne I did not like to be interrupted, and when [ asked the question, and she dropped, | gasping literally for bread. All these Graydon. Nine, ten o’clock came, and { much less [ liked the idea of ging out ; and | apparently exhausted, on the bed. After; 1 have known doctor —all these I have | spoke to her, announcing that I would now ‘known in their bitterest way. I have! go to Messrs, Graves aud Hendrick. be I was ready to do so. The man was usher- | self again upou ber elbow, she threw back | been beaten, spit upon, kicked, and starved. felt for and caught my hand eagerly, and ed in, A miserable, squalid louking wretch | (he matted hair from her face, and said,--| ! be law has no protection for the abandoned speaking ia a calm tone said— he was, over whom my bouse-keeper stood | +] would tell you all if [ dared, though | ¥o™aD- I am blind from the blow of a ruf-| + Dear triend, permit me to call you so, guard, not seeming disposed to trust bim | what sympathy could you bave with me— | 4a, who laughs when he sees me. + Blind though I have done you great wrong. For- alone with we. | poor, degraded, fallen creature that I am ? |Mag!’ 1 have been taken from the | give me all. I have been sorely chastened ‘What do you want? I asked, 'Palse wife, false mother, and false friend || Streets at night, to be pardoned in themorn. | in my sin. When you return I shall be ‘A doctor, to be sure; what else do you! But, oh! docor, I was once good--[ was ing with haif a hundred fallen, shameless dead ; but something tells me allis well, and think I came for ?’ once rich-— learned to love wealth, and [ | creatures like myself, before a brutal magis- “my son is safe, Fur the sake of the wretch- This was not a very encouraging beginn- | grasped at its shadow instead of the reality | 't4te and a jeering crowd. I have known ed mother extend over bia your protection. : '[ would tell you all; but first you must | the prison walls and the prison fare. Aad) Farewell for ever!’ ‘ For yourself? ‘promise me that you will find a bayer for |°%!——thank God! Lam dying. Bat for | ‘He! be! be!’ grinned the man ; ‘ d'ye | all L have to offer. My wretched soul was | 9? thing L would thank God! [tis formy |, think now J look as if 1 wanted a doctor?! jong since sold. Only my body—only my child, doctor, my boy, my grand and beau-| No, sir-ee! Blind Mag’s the one, at wants/ body. Promise me that its price shall be | tiful boy, who knows not of his mother's de- : , paid, and 1 wall tell you all.’ ee ae is for “oe rise [ am : . | pleading. e pittance for which [ would | tl : more bate Geode tabviily hardened in sel! myself coll be his great need. For ie trials of my profession if I could say cok Witte le fn Ib “No” to the dreadful appeal of this SS AS Seen meee woman. I told her that her request should —— and. cteives: 5 havadeguiond eiptety be gratified ; but she must tell me to whom etn Agen Pong cr ety and for what purpose this woney must be ty Spdndied Gem OEE gree, TH Re pit, :Bbe ciught my dnind onddealy,:and might remain at his studies, usknowing his : ; ; . origin, That trifle will complete t kissed it several times in rapid succession ; | © h Seite, will. Soengiane. Sve. Ses necessary to ensure his stay at college tor I pasved forth upon my errand to hear, the office of Messrs. Graves and Hendrick, that Mr. John E. Stewert had died in the city of Paris, leaving all bis property, real and personal, to his son by Marianne Gray- don, bearing the same name as himself, thea residing in New York, These gentlemen attorneys had ably performed their duty ia tracing the wretched woman throagh all her haunts, until they had discovered her, only the day before, at the establishment of Bully Dick. Through her they hoped to get trace of the son, not for a moment believing that, ‘Who is blind Mag ?” ‘Why, she’s a woman, of course; she says so anyhow.’ * Where is she, and what is the matter 2’ * Down here to Ba'ly Dick’s, dying.’ ‘ Dying! what of ? ‘Ol! what’s the use of asking a fe'!ler | such questions? 1 don’t kuow what people | dies ot. They dies—that’s al! I know.’ I met her first at a musical soiree. Be- | and then, with a short, hysterical sob, sank fore | saw Marianne’s face | beard her yoice I had got on my over-coat and boots as away azain upon the bed So still did she She was surrounded by a crowd while she! the nan delivered this last addvess, and in a | lie that [ thought ber dead, and to ascertain was at the piano, rolling out, with a care- | few minutes he my ae a trotting | this L placed my hand on the region of the ess abandon, one of the popular ballads of | °° nt ateps st vance, down dark streets. heart. She raised herseli quickly. the day. 1 was not eufficientiy critical to | 4P alleys, through blind entrances, over 2 | ‘Lf am not dead, dvetor, I caunot die heap of rubbish, groping up’some flights of | until I tell you all. Mine is a common know whetber her voice was a sOprano,| ~~~ : : my | stairs, and we stood iu some room, in one! story, though it bas remained lucked within mezzo-soprano, alto, or contralto, but [ did | , : know there was a spell in it to me that | COPMer of which was heaped a parcel ol me, untold. Where can one find sympathy seuds its tones even now, at a distance of dingy, dirty bed-clothes, a chest, a chair for her own misdoing ? I have been loved, almost a quarter of a century, ringing without a back, an old table, a pitcher with-| ductor—loved for myself alone—and ] through my heart and brain. I stood with out a handle, and a few pieces of wood, | have thrown that love away like a worthless the crowd about the piano, and saw her completed the furniture, the whole illumin- | thing. I have been a wife—a faithless handed away from it. A blonde, of middle | **ed by one tallow candle burning from the| wife. I have been flung away by him for height, quiet in appearance, save only when | ueck of a bottle etanding on the en : whom | lost heaven itself, as he would cast she raised a brigit, flushing blue eye tomy | On the bed wag re ees. ae ucec | off a loathsome reptile. I have gone down, face as she passed slowly up the room. t vo + og Se a ee step by step, uatil T have wanted the very felt strangely that some portion of my soul |, ’ W ake or * Mag! bere 8 the doetor | bread for which [ would have been willing had gone with ber—-a particle that beld at- | Chat’s blind Ma, doctor.’ With this he) to have sold myself to my shame, but there were vo buyers—no buyers for the wretched, traction for the great body. It must have | disappeared, f , been su; for reason as | would with myself) Phe woman turned in the bed as I ap-| wanton womau who cried herself for sale. the few months more until he shail graduate. Oh! my brave boy, who will never know of | his mother? They give such prais:s to his | progress, doctor, | am sure of his success in |life could he bnt graduate. For the sake of jay boy, doctor, grant my request. When life shall be fled, take what was once a wo- man, and send the sum you would give to this address,’ She had till this moment kept herself raised in the wretched bed, with her blind face turned eagerly toward me. Now she fell exhausted, with a heavy groan, as L took the paper from ber hand aud stooped toward the light that 1 might read the name : ‘ Joho Kdward Stewart.’ | read the name aloud, and the wowan turned in the bed and re- peated it after me. ‘ Aad your name is ‘and I hesitated that she might answer my question, through all her shame and degradation, the mother had secretly supported the child. It was true. When I returned to the room where lay Mrs. Robert Wharton, [ fuund her cold in death. Two or three wreiched-looking women, who rise like vu'< ‘ures on all occasions, stood over her, quat- | relling among themelves for the division of the few miserable rags of clothing lying | about her bed. A plain white slab in Greenwood marks ‘the spot where lie the remains of * Mari- anne. '-—Her son is with me. He will make a good man. Though he is rich, still be | regarés a profession as a necessity, aud | wries M, D, after his pame. He is a great relief to me in my practice. I find | am To day I /Hot so young as’ once was, | have made my will. Ihave no one to leave my little savings to who so well deserves | them as Stewert. He is a five fellow, and T E SUBSCBIBER, in returning thanks venerully, begs to inform them that he has removed his residence to Kent-street, East of Mr. Jons atthe Colouis! Bailding, in Charlottetown, | Hocman’s, bateher,and nearly opposite the residence ou the Fourth day of MARCH next (1864), ai the }of Jony Scorr, Esq., Carriage Builder, where he is prepared, WYEH INCREASED FACILITIES, to execute all orders entrested to him in his line of business with PROMPTNESS AND DESPATCH, ON THE MOST MODERATE TERMS. and Ornamental Pa- worn gaiment, | 8g Always on hand, for sale in season, WAG- | GONS and SLEIGHS of the BEST MATERIAL ‘through the next bour, 1 could not exercise | | the strength to deny myself watching her w jevery movement, and fivally seeking her. | [ left the room with the great problem of | my lifesolved. I loved deeply. passionately \ loved one whom I felt and acknowledged | as my superior. Though I bad seoffed at | belles, and put no faith in brilliant women. | Marianne Geaydon was a be!le—w brilliant | belle—and yet she was vot beautiful—and » blonde should be beautiful if she wouldbe a veile, She bad five eyes, a wealth of very j light brown hair, aud then all was told. | Nor was she rich, though she was the best dresser in her set—-and the most extravagant, but dressed with most exquisite taste. The | \seeret of Marianne Graydon's great success | was earnestness, which, whether it be affeet- ied or real, rarely fails to achieve great ends. | I Joved her dearly. In one month I had \lived years. Lt was this love that caused me, after graduating, to eatablish mysel! for practice in New York, rather than re- turn to my native place. I would fight the baitie out upon the spot where she could see the struggle 1 would make to rise for her sake. 1 am told that [ am undemon- strative. To this, perhaps, may be at- tributed many of my failures in my life— | failures to make myself understood, to at-| tach those to me for whose affection I would | have made every sacrifice, If this was so in ordinary, I am sure it was not with my approaches to Marianne Graydon. If [had naturally any timidity, it was laid aside, and | with every wild word that passion could utter i pressed my suit. | I am sure she Joved me. It did not resi alone upon ber telling. But the years wen! | quickly away, aud [ still remained a poor, physician, working among the thousand who | possessed all the requisites of myself, with | more ability to make them known ; and, as | a matter of course, we could not marry. 1) knew it must be so. I could not bring ber) down from her position to mine. Even, were I willing—which God forbid! — 1) knew well that she would never consent, | My best friends told me that she was mer-| cenary, and I drove them away in derision, | They said she never thought seriousty of me | for one moment. | think now, perhaps, they were right, and I was blind. They said | Marianne Graydon only waited a wealthy | wooer to throw me away as she would a | In this | knew they were | jright too soon. ‘The wooer cawe; and) treaties, retrospective recalling, and curses | upon my side, we parted, she to ’ before the world for whieh 1 had lost am- -4 (Rue Subscriber offers for sale, at his was since that time I had lost all desire I not sell my body alt shop, Great George-stree:, a splendid lot o| for society, and never should look with eyes * of love agaiv upon woman. Years evough had rolled away to bluut the memory, and lower and lower I have fallen, Marianne Graydon was now nothing but a Twenty ebair the pre ; . W. Deblois, . A Roquite, Safa) ihe, pergarty 00 3 hoe of the CABOB, «0-2 ee eee en etn eter cece eeees £3 - 0) myth to me. L had not even sufficient Honourable Coloni:! Secretary. It will be sold to- Ladies size, - - aqfl0.----- GO... esse reer eeees 31 ‘curiosity to express @ silent wish that l ether or in Acre |ote to suit intending purehasers. | In Hunting Cass,...---------+--+-+--+-+- 430 9 cu y b te *Bhould the abowe not be sold by Private before | Levers, Thirteen Jewels,..--.. cnet eee eese: 6 0 0) might know what had been her u timate the 2d day of MAY NEXT, it will then be offered A. PURCHASE. Watehmaker. | doctination, or whether she was yet living, Ch. Town, Nov. 30, 1863. by Public Auction on the premises. Smardon's Corner. I kuew that the wealth for which she had A Pinan of the Property ean be seen at the Office of the Hou, De. Youne, or at the Office of a WILLIAM FORGAN. Buy 7, 1364, rw mou & pro INGS, at ) February 22, 1864 sue broadway, N.Y¥. | W lUSe aD iu Bi 4e6 vic Wala, ‘TESHRESHING MACHINE CAST- gaorifioed herself aod me bad within one rities to be thrust rudely iwto the grou er | year goue to the winds of heaven in ove the public expense ? | want money, proached. could see that her hair was gray, and the spo' | Jove the world should have some charity in where once were the eyes was deeply sunk- its condemnation-- for the guilty wife nove. | en, and the lids entirely closed. out her baud with the peculiar manoer 0! | have [ been cursed. j | the blind. bless you for coming to me, though you can «he tempter—and here | lie dying, wretched do me no good in this world, save to smooth | and penniless. He took me to Paris, and | my path in the next.’ though I could uot realize that she should | [ would drown all thought, and become only be uble to full lower in poverty than | he light woman of the world, embarking no found her, She was dying, in the last stage | fecling in any argosy not my owa. LI to of cousuwption, hasteved by foul air, bad | make resolves !—1, who was a slave to the | food or no food, aud exposure. are ulike to me vow. am blind. Yes, yes! I have been blind now for years—I do not know for how many you," still. ‘could be so base as to act any deception umidst many tears, protestations of lasting _shadow passed over friendship—amidst pleas tor pardon and , moment recovering, regrets that we had ever met—amidst en- |‘ Doctor, do you become | Mrs. Robert Wharion, the wife of a wealthy | doctor. Lp’ ‘The Subscriber also wishes to intimate that railroad financier, and [ to plod awey on ‘nothing the matter wit te has opened a BOAKDING HOUSE for the ae- my daily round, aud build up that position that is nothing } [ said, as sternly as I could gather courage | aid in her downfall. ‘meanwhile in the blazing firehght, and think- | : ‘ing for the thousandth time how strange it! * Ah! doctor, listen to me. ‘Is it necessary, doctor, that I should |, this ‘at : : speak a name that bas been dead many | = ty oy tae . ppt Ay ate years lence of him since that memorable night ' : ‘It would be better, my good woman,’ 1) p- She put! Let her be cursed eee as “answered, calcicig tier thet a kindly we Five Years Ago. jeould, ‘that I should know it for many — ‘married—wealth that escaped my grasp.) ... ' ; “ RT TLANROT Pure Moy :God | it: was for wealth. that 4. peaned away, with coped _Perbaps I shall be able to serve MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. ‘Oh, God bless you for those words, doc- Avpaciovs Ropeny anp Murpexin Rome,— tor! Though I do not know your wame | A letter from Rome gives an account of Tt was there ia the| ‘et 72 ;’ and she clung to my hand, and ee nee oe im ene of the : | pressed it to her lips. ‘1 will tell you the} Sy eng a aon heal — a. |game that for many years bus not passed my | shop ia > Come. tae ied a cae rm lips—a dead name. My husband's name | tance, has long been in the habit of removing was Robert Wharton; my childhood name | his specie to tus dweilirg house after business Marianne Graydon,” hours, in a hackney couch. On the evening Marianne (iraydon! How I sat that of = seas — two clerks were convey- hour by the bedside of that woman whom ne Oe Ny ea a eens Ape | Sto in the Via Lucina b once I had loved better than life, and not | of ages. elk ile camera Aeon kaown it instinctively? And was this | poniarded the clerks, seized the money, wretched, fallea, blind, and degraded crea- | amounting to 10,000 seudi (53,000ir), and ture before me, the memory I had cherished | 89 clear off. One of the clerks was killed so many years? It fell upon me worse than | °? ~e a agen the next morn- ’ ; | ing. 16 coachiman, Whose complictty a the shock of death. I was speechless and | pease probable, hee beanie bes ~ deathly cold. She must have known the | ;.),here have not been discovered. As soon as change, perhaps heard the groan I could not | Gen. de Montebello was informed of the suppress ; and once again she Was sitting up- | crime, he istrueted the commander of the right in the bed. French gendarmerie to lend every assistance ‘What is your name, doctor? Let me|‘o the Koman police. The general impres- hear the name of him who will befriend my |" '8 that the perpetrators belong to the when he tired of my fashion, give me to hi- | son.’ ite the ste Rellwe “Con ee with a dying woman. I like the sound of | yalct, as he would his worn coat, My lor! Should I tell her to whow she appealed ? | agrmmasiggs gy tyes Dy ong : ‘ eo an oe ro persons, however, seem to think that both your voice; there is something in it that | was not singular. He was tired, he wearie] | *°*. yong these roberies were committed by political assures me you will serve me. Will you) of my discontent —of the discontent himself ‘Walter Hall.” She repeated the name | desperaducs belonging to the party of action, do me a last service, doctor ? had ereated—and he peusioned me off with in the same manner she had repeated her | to raise the 500,00uir. which a recent mani- She had raised herself in the bed, and | ;je same iiberality be would have treated a son's; then for almost a minute ehe was si- | festo of Mazzini declared to be necessary for was sitting with her eyeless face turned | servant. He sent me bome. ent. At last there came u long, deep sob, | the success of the revolutionary cause.— towards me. ‘Home! Where was wy home? By’ The light was imperfect, butt) ¢ Por the poor girl who yields to a first ‘Where are you, doctor? i there [ forgot, in the mad whirl of my ais The woman spoke well, and I knew | yipation, all shame. lirectly had once been in a good position, | yaiety and pleasure I determined to stay. ,caprice of the man who found me in gold enough to aid me in all my dissipations, but not enough to make me inpepeodent of his will! And then came my husbaud—he from whom [ bad fled to guiity shame— and claimed me before all the world. Ob! gold is a mighty conjurer, doctor. He was poor; we were rich; and it was thus he be- I said something entreating her to lie| came suddenly blind. It was thus be went For a moment she was silent, and) away quietly, after seeking me through all then biesking out again, she said, — the world, ready to dabble his hands in my ‘ This world will soon close on me, doctor. | blood. Aod 1 was bought—bougit for and fallen and degraded as I am, [ still) gold. A slave, a bauble to be worn as long believe in man enough to think that none | ys it pleased my bayer to wear me, aud *[ do not know you,’ she went on, ‘ but [ sent for a physician—al! of that profession You see, doctor, I Draw nearer, doctor; 1 wish to speak with ‘your own body ?? me here. ‘ ead ‘place upon my eyes for closing. : eel a raate becomes of my body and gilt, a ‘ ¢ ‘after death 2? Can it matter to me whetber | beauty and frivolity, wet ‘it goes into the hands of the surgeons by my round of intoxication aud glare — where and then called: 3 ‘own will, or into the hands of the autho- | thought is debarred, and tears are treasonable = * Doctor, 1 eannot read this. i od at| —where she is the most worthy who isthe ‘Shall Z read it for you.’ doctor ; , most sivfal ; and tulent is acvorded to her, ‘ Yes.’ She spoke besitatingly. and then she lay very still. This time it (ialignans. lumpaiessze-juppeis ‘ If it’s in my power,’ I aacwered. ‘evurtesy the land of my birth. I came, ~eemed to me she must be dead. so slightly | Peograr Miniraky Pusisouent.—It je the In a balf whisper she asked me: « home, therefore, with my child—his child, | did she hold ber life. 1 thought the shock | boast of the Stars and Suripes that there is in * I have beea told thata physiciav would! | ¢ime among my former intimates to be jhad parted the thread. [ took the caudlc | their army no such thing as corporeal pun- buy a body for dissection. What is the | shuuned and pointed at. I could not bear ‘fom the floor and beld it to her lips. She | ishment. gait uae senenenorh there price they generally give, doetor # }that, you know! Then at this point, where | atill lived. ‘no T Sane taeal . Sap pore lengse sae ash ar All my familiarity with sickness and | I might bave stopped, and perhaps bave re- b eet ca the nee a ‘but American ingenuity bas not been dow deach, anatomy and the disseeting-room, | mained without further taint, [ became | °¥ the Dedsiie o re oe Ne be *|to mvent substitutes. A favorite mode of could not take from me the horror of this! desperate. They should not scoff me. [| '"€ every moment her last breath, No bu- | yunishment inflicted by courts-martial is the question. What did the dying woman! would buy my position. I bad money gre - = = ee I = \ old-fashioned mode of picketing, once used mean? From the hollow, black spots that | they should feel it. With a woman’s esti-/ "er path of the final moments, | could only in eet sty v & lng since discarded once held eyes, she seemed to gaze at me/wmaie | rushed into all schemes of p'easure. J | sit and wait, ic Lerherees OuS Gren. 5 Were me Sang } u ‘s os Cs . ry his thambs to a beam, 60 that bis toes with an intensity that was fearful. It was| was surrounded by flatterers and sycopbants.| Lt was daylight when I first heard a step | 7 on wy pieces of woud driven for the a question | eaded to answer, and yet! They lived upon me, they robbed me ; and | in the outer passage ; and in a few moments arpa into the ground, Thus he remains dreaded to leaveit unanswered. I said: | that which } had brought as the wages of | swall, repulsive-looking man, whose face |), from half an bour to an hour, av- ‘The medieal schools buy subjects, but | my guilt faded away like the mist, and | was scarred and disfigured, entered the roon,. ‘leas, as is frequently the cxso, he falls insen- not the phyaicisns. They give geuerally | again I was poor. Is it strange that a He walked over to the bed and looked at sible, and is carried away to the hospital. from twenty to fifty dollars for a good | woman should pall before poverty for the|the woman, end then turned to me with a | Aavther form of punishment, not uplike the wl ‘sake of her ebild? He was all IL had to | aod and said : | Sang of She Comaee ip San @ vee eee healthy body. pane, OF; ROE. ‘ A heavy cask, of from one to one aod a-half ‘Is that all? she auswered, and a deep care for on earth. i was maddened, and| ‘ Has she gone in, doc ? payee. weight. having an end knocked out her face; and then in a| prayed only for the time when | could tell| ‘She is not yet dead,’ L answered. | and a square hole cut in the other for a man's she stretched forward. him my faocied wrongs, and call on him to! ‘ Tere was a cove bere last night enquit- | },.ad to go through, rests with its sharp edges think I shal! be worth avenge them. For bim, therefore, 1 would | ing after blind Mag, doe. 1 told him she | on the shoulders of the culprit,. who is thus that? Lam healthy, you scee--I mean | make every sacrifice. It was thus i argued waru’t likely to be around agin for a spell ; | for many hours marched round the camp, be- bave net fallen away much. Look ut me, jin those days, doctor. False argumeut ! but he said his daty was done wheo vi gw sams a om oe ae rareoneye My ara is pretty full. There is, Ll have learned better. Poverty is uo plea her this "ere letter, though I don’t think it ore aes a 7 a roe ee h me but blinduess— for a wowan’s guilt; for, with all man's be for her, It’s got another name on the | cath hee, ates main So va te od wel ’ heartlessuess, I believe he wou!d rather aid, kiver—‘Mrs. Robert Wharton.’ | first yaork st sivas tesdiied to ion great tor- “What is the meaning of this, woman ?” | ber iu virtue if he believes her earnest, than | * Who calls me ?' caine from the bed iP ture, the suarp edges cutting deeply into the Is this so, doctor? very shrill tones, startling myself and causiug shoulders. Indeed, but few get through « shivering dread was You are # mau; can you answer? Mr. Bully Dick, who was stooping to the long punishment of thie kind, men fall ex *Do you mean to sell | ‘There are two falls for a woman; the | candle reading the superscription of the | hausted and trequently senseless, and are eac- ~ |one whore she persuades herself love is the |letter, to jump quickly toward the door. —_| ried ad the ei doe of hospital. ys Why should | cause ; the last where sbe deliberately selis; ‘ Tounder !’ said that gentleman, recover- na Ape! ecm me oer ene er death? Have 1 | herself for gold. The last assuredly toliows Ing himself in a moment, * how she skeered tem whole bubshes of aelininenah pata ‘not sold it in life? For fifteen years I the first, and is the last step in soame. me! Here's a letter for you, old Woml4t, ‘iy short stay, two men died under the in- ‘have lived a life of shame and degradation, | Whether [ ever took the first [ can leave | though it ain’t directed to you, nuther. | Gretion of these cruelties. = Dithens? © it until you see | you to judge. at ret has ee me ote * ‘ — it to a pt tee a the Year Round.” . : | Qh, that life of shame, and its gradual to a sitting posture, and stretchiug ou —_— 1 asd dying withont ey From the first where, seiidel glitier | er Kanda sonaed the man, ae at arm’s| Ir New Zealand, a wan whe neglects to few poor girls, chosen for ibeir Jength put tlie letter in them, Sle turned | fron for es Le ‘children, Pr are kept in a coatioual it over rapidly in her bands for a moment, foge, ened Ce aaa Cn ae doone ‘in two lines and be bee to run the guantlet _ between them till he is whipped into decency, land willing to do his part a8 a husband aud father. | @ PILE Ie BHYRS Yi Wan BLU, BUM OY Yu BEmIeY Rewer wee s. 4 ae oon t a : ‘ b : eh ag pene age gu Soo nit Wane tes ats