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POETRY and her words less thoughtless
: was same bright, sparklit Kat
omemamnpnioma ne iliac sci ie ciiisinediiaadeiaaoananni
THE 1% SU. e
cinaiastina "
A little eas a litiie Tas Ja
A little h ay
A littie caught, a as
= a t W away i! VOX part
\ \ ul
A iitlie a i yes ul I P p part rie
AX little wish tw nay , Pr eci f inte
X little weeping tt ight ââ
" tane . t {
2 ruus tee wer d away Kitcnher st wa
| â i â
A little wind, a 3 .
â : it i
A littie 1@ bo S$iay
ry ttie tt ght yea | y sa ty 4 ihe s 4
So runs the wi vay \ lames H y Arnold
- â ' â ,
- â_ $3 agoin J i
TAE OMNIBUS HORSE. lesarves tol cordinâ I
: ; â ao. > sisi ust „ _ = ge ' â a . A Wa
A poor o : S890" bs tha aD al a ae f that they $a\ 1W k on '
Not much less than bc sand sk ae ke Ws iat
l jog along, week out, *k in â achin t
Kicked and cursed, and meaniy fed, and fetched it to s emen to look at t
Jammed in the side and ked by the hea what d tha but jest won 2
And the thing that I t at all make out nae An en
| 1ent ames H > ba
Here { go, day after day liscouraged, bless \Âą : he'd g
Pounding and $1 g down Broadway :
ii cai aes nl wit * ah ah h gr fie took it » SON par
Dragging these curious andi { things >
r : , â | â t
With the fore-legs gone i yel no w se e part â wan't
Where they ell go tol it know Twon't take \ 1 e k at
Nor why inthe world t t vs tâ says J
Tainât t says ra il
It wasn't my fault, you see, ata â
. â e ; . - we Âą Bist Pru
Phat my joints grew fig a 1d „ muscies ( I to Dolher.
sma. Why did not ! e th
And so [ missed of a : 5 st . , red Kate, v we "I
im clumsy, crooked, st 4, slow, :
. : amused with his story
Yet the meanest horse is a horse, you knew, âą Ky
7 inâ? a hat rm
And bis ribs can ache with the kick or biow Why rt he He knew wha W
As well asthe very best that g about, James Henry did But w! vas |
m " } ' â e me po
2 nave how long will y use m a i. : Teint noth an
7 : sn. Mies. tt âwe haint t no time to bother with it
ae â
Her was mad, br in't say
LITERATURE. ak ee ek ee
âââ a ee i : :
LEARNING TO SPELL KATE ee P
Âą - â Good fay, gentiemen girs,â and walks of!
He made up his mind te go
Conclus
James Henry had listened to this tir
shame and sorrow. His faceat first so flush-
A
f
i with | and see Victoria
@d was now deathly pale. He wasnotangry. | up and took the train for England. When
though had he been less humble he would , be got there as it ha] 1 Vi y was a
have resented such interference, He answer- Walkin the garden. Now yj know
ed the scornful beauty humbly women are dreadful curu So she sees his
âIT mean to do right, Kate. Sometime mo- | machine under his arm and ask 1 him what
ther shall be rich and never have to do any- t wa
thing. What had I better do? (io through He exple all oul, 4 $ Was so
college took with it that she paid him fifty thousand
Kate laughed at the tone lollars for it, an { pow she wants himt 2
â Going through c ileg gsn's easy, James 1 England, t I donât know,â said Mar
but you can help your mother and fix up the; & audal and vhel ! 4
house and fence; and James „ ro= 4} not
wise me one thing â Kate smiled nelus but was
Anything, Kate, he answered eager! curus ug! ask Mr. Gre next
Pshaw ! she exclaime!, «I have always âime She saw him
noticed that people so ready to promise eel- What is this l ames Arnold
dom perform. going to I pe.â
âTry me, Kate ; what is it â Mr. Grey laughed heartly
âlt is this. Lea Tin 4 s So you hai heard tha
fully) untilâ He has not g Kuro}
What he broke in, eagerly âThen itis ali utrue,â said Ka
His compliance irritated hex Nota erepliel. «He has ada
âUntil you learn to spel! Kal I gc machineâjust what | Lsay, | S
that is enough to expect of you. But I st tle about s things, bt $s patented
go. Mother will wonder at my abseave,â and | 24 hig spoken of. In tT suspect
still wearing the scornfi ks tand | friend is the road to fortune, Lie deserves
Was walking away success, | is pe ia
âPlease Kate, take ! said ties that « / â $ aged a S
+) earnestly and ger that Kate, took
and safd impulsive!; . pane 4 . ;
Y ~ Rave ti » hes! iis Âź cao 3 â c 5° â
of, James. But then.â s âYou havn't y ie â "
oN ), $a i « e â i
Thea, wit : . i
she was so changeab $4 gun re sei A „ $
es 7 ¹ Z . . I ; „ i eg ] 5 .
ngs. But you will ze seems | _ "
That y are an ange No Kate s . ew aon ° .
Phshav . Wall. Âą b C39 g $ s
and she went aw eav ng James Het . 8 . â
unhapy 1 anxious ad u eer b
pri Je, it is true, nor ambition, hut what! ttle} M (i x â " 1
he had was aroused t again to be Kate sed tra "
caught napping For the st tim he rea- | ay 4 { : na ee
zed that his life thus far had not been man- Kate long May |
ly nor master! but he would change it
Kate should be p: He w } oe
win fameand honor and we -yes. and csoptar ocite onaaa .
scholarship, for her sak ody hy ;
It was no light task 2 set himsif |â wegen
about to work out, but he had perserverance oncnaateit ne ee F nage
f he lecked pride and ambition. Love for | ŸŸ'"8, 2" Kate did A if ieult |
Kate supplied the latter qualities. Hitherts o tne uguibed gentieme omni
he had never applied his mind to study, bee t night never have k â Sper
ause like so many of his class, he underated Martin said h 5 3) ed was
ts value. Now all was changed. An eduyi§ erstan tween ind t
cation he must and would have, though | neighbors said they always knew and always
realized that his poveriy and ignorance were | s t James Henry Arnold was a genius
to be be serious drawback â Ses
He applied to the Rev. Mr. Gre rad HOUSEHOLD HINT>.
the minister, seeing his earnestness, and bes engines of destruct mparigon „
ing one of tt who delighted to impart | bapbler.âSfee/
knowledge, al Âą pe -' aseisi. hid falkers aren g j-doers Shake }
tale-bearers have dena more mischief in this
tations James Henry in return, | nised world than t | sha nce ee
to keep the ministers wood) ile flourishing dace Schi
under the eaves, and he jabore over his | asked a lady of Turner, tl sltinguished
books harder than he had ever worked be~ | paint 5 replied, «1 ha el, ma
fore. But after a time, as his mind became lem, but hard work
disciplined to study. he found it more ag AG . âPrepa : ind pla it #mea
â - Qt ! } water. over 1 heat a :
able, and astonished Mr. Grey by hisimprove- | 4 al aes 4 ane . (Aeon greed
ment, which was realiy extraordinar?. ak ng. add a r Py cabbage
No one was made acquainted with this | âŹ'@4 sliced t, slices f Onio
: hange except Mrs. Arnold, whose eyes x 118- eat cies 1 roeâ Rental wit id - r if
tened with pleasure when the minister, as he | ready for the vegetables; then season, add
secasionally did, spoke of her son's success. | sweet turnips sliced, a few potatoes cut
In justice to James we must sav that M: NV iSĂ© aud a mato r two. Vhen
eng ti%
lone, ekim oul the vegetables ar
d mneatupon
Grav wood > presented a fine reas re i
âbast sal ne pile | 1 on eepoereree. | @ nislier, Âą into the both a few cakes
be neighbors wondered and speculated, as | mixed thick witl iin cold water and ft
to this one sided [rieadship, as they cken to your liking,
and atill
for
marry, for
valled it, | Th
more who he could be going to
he had newly s} ngled the he use,
SPONGE (Onn
orn-cake, delicious
and as light as sponge cake, may be made by
CAs? onl;
painted it a neat white and discarded from | ne ee ry Masten gp â_ â peer
â| teacupful of butter and one of sugar, until
the windows the old rags
Arnold had hitherto c
substituted and
The fence was
its tipsy manmuyres to swi
with which Mr
heated ster
unbroker
mended an
| they are reduced to a creamelike substance.
Add threes aggs, well beaten, one scant quart
to which has been added three teas
is, levelled, of sifted cream tartar)and
upfuls of milk (to which has been
Âą
n Winter and
f Ă© Jour
arrav o lace UUs
â \ gases ete
the gate left off |.
tl
: rea tear
g sober]:
on its! added one and one-half teaspoonfuls of soda).
hingés. A neat row ofvegeiables behind the | Strain the milk, that no undissolved particles
house evinced more cultivation sn Mro. | of soda getin, then add tne yellow corn-
' 1 meal until the mass will hold the spoon from
Arnol:! could have bestowed Certainly a al }
A pint is quite enough Stir as
long as you can convenientiy. Pour into
two long cake tins Ifthe two tins are not
required at the same time, the baking of one
may be deferred from night until morning
If sour milk
i : : Maiing
radical change had taken place in James
Henry. No wonder the people apeculated as |
to the cause
Kate noticed these « gus, and that James} Half the sugar may be omitted
Henry had ceased quareling with the moods | be used, omit the cream tartar. In @ quick
t
and tenses and evinced acquaintance with | V7 Âź balfan hour's baking 1s sullicient.
t
, ree Ot cpa ._.'n domestic t nees
Webster Stranges! of all. he} egan respects TauTws Ff ww IVES n domestic oappin i :
Liesit 6 ; the wife's influence is much greater than her
ing limself ene Was sorr more than she husbandâ: for the one, the first causeâmu-
liked to admit when he called bid her! tual love and contidence--being granted, the
good-bye. He was going away, but where whole comiort of the household depends uy
of for what purpose he did not say, and Kate | 2" *rilles more immediately under her juris
idiction. By her management of smali sums
would not enquire. There
as anew manli- he husbands respectability and credit or des
ness in his appearance that precluded a pa- troyed. No fortune can stand the
{ronizing manner, and that
which she had hitherto
manifest her
him at parting and
you wil? be
constant
was the form in
ment, and moreis spent in triflesthan women
would easily believe. The one gr
100k hands with | whatever
thought it proper to
said kindly
prosperous James
at expense
I hope fully reflected on, ere incurred
without in| prepared to meet ; but itis pennies
the least knowing whe wishes wae to , i
, , ; this the wife alone can stop, for it does not
ec ere: :
sity come within a manâs province There is of.
âThank you, Kate, he re) lied Fortune | ten an ususpected trifle to be saved in every |
helps those âwho help themse|ves, and [ mean | honsehold. [tis not in economy alone that
to help the old fellow all I can } the wifeâs attention is so necessary, but in
Oe in ae , | those matters which make a well-regulated
38) Way 400 nate more than once | honse An unfurnished cruet-stand a miss-
caught herself thinking he was ing key, a buttoniess shirt, a soiled table-
improved and rather good look
James Arnold was going |
one knew it save his mothe
who had used their
place of janitor where he could earn his tuiti.- | well-dressed mutton-chop, ora tidy break.
2a i. . ny
on. Jamesâ energy, aided by what little money aaa â fi
. } ¹ music, are e e iA. „, 7 ay.
Mrs. Arnoid could spare went some way to are often too wearied fot conver
get board and books
With such prospects he left home
|
|
fF much |
ng.
ollege, but no | sticking hard and brown about it, ara really
N ' | nothings ; but each can raise an angry word
anâ f; \ tray, | Oo cause discomfe rt. :
ntere
From | Smiling comfort. A woman may love her
| husband devotedlyâmay sacrifice fortune,
| friends, family, country for timâshe may
1 | have the genius of a Sappho, the enchanted
beauties of an Armida ; but â melancholy
fact-âif with these sho fails to make his home
the smallest beginning he had in three years
been fit for college, and Mr. Gray felt pre ur
of his pupil, and not without reason
Time went on. Mrs. Arnold remained at
the cottage, neighbors plodded on in the same
old way, to mill, to meadow to meals and
meeting, while Kate grew handsome and
Stately in her fatherâs house. Lovers she
bad and plenty, but all fearei the same, even
George Clifford, who was werthy, handsome
and talented. fer temper wae less sharp
her. And women live so entirely in the af-
fections, that without love, their existence is
a void.
tasks, however repugnant they may he to
will not run the risk; they know that their
domestic, are their first duties.
, when a inale domestic
chanced to enter the apartment, and, misâ
fellow-servant,
gleefuily wet both his hands. and, stealthily
approaching âHie Eminence, gave the latier
so tremendous a slap, ona part that shali be
leakages of extravagance and mismanages | \
| Coffee House
he had fallen in with the drinking fashions
it may be, is turned over and care- | of the day so far as to have a glaas oi spirits
the income is | ,
imper- |
ceptibly sliding away which do mischief; and |
| Fletcherâs usual night-dram.
| cloth, a mustard pot with its old contents |
| morning.
Depend upon it, there |
to gethim the | i+ a great deal of domestic happiness in a |
Men grow sated cf beauty, tired
sation (however intellectual), but they can |
always appreciate a wellsswept hearth and |
| without a tumbler of toddy, it
comfortable, his heart will inevitable escape |
Better submit, then, to household |
your tastes, than doom yourselves to a loves | gets entire control
ess home. Women 6f a higher order of mind | s
| habits which are svre to ruin us,
RA\DOW READINGS.
Phe alaw n Boston, Mass., called
he Gambl
Why a bottle tied to a dogâs tail like
thor of the wrassh pper's waltz, has
t with his life from lowa.
~) yr. A | Th ce hetween
id another iof so much intaient
\
Reyuolds, is denied well
/ { it to be obtain-
;wW {
Notl Mirabea mpossible
t 1 W r? | only
iW
An ( Lnie I i b nh tabls
â i i hope of
\ List to tt
Will ] i gt th
I tiy
| fa pretty w settled fact
ith ha terrors for a man who
Nautica Phere was a maiden lady who |
ad su 1 bad opinion of the male sex, that |
he cou iot even t st her safely to a life- |
bivy
Lady „ My dear, do you know if
your mammais engaged?â Little girl of the
â i-' Engaged! Bless | why she's
ia {
Johnson in w be alt 11 the labor
â felime, | i t e purchased
by a pe
Phere is b l says Sydney |
s h, âand that is hard Jabor; and a man
who will not pay ut opr tor distinction |
had better at once dedicate himself to the
suitofthe Fos
A Scotch country minis bad been in
ted, with his wife, to dine and spend the
night al the house of one of his lairds, The
host was very proud of one of the very large
is which had just ceme into fashion, and
n the morning asked the lady bow she had |
siept init. â O, verra weel, sir, but indeed,
[thought I'd lost the minister aâthegither.â
Have you entered a cottage, ever travel -
coach, talked with a peasant in|
th ld, « yitered with a mec al the
om,â asked Sir Edward Bulwer Lytion, and |
not foun {that each of those
ent you had not? The most useful creas
ture that ever yawned ata club, or counted |
the vermin in his rags under the suns of |
Calabria, has no excuse for want of intellect
taient, this purpose
ther words, not he powel to achieve
but » âmA. Working Peo-
A ma who had 1a
yajor of militia, and vas not overbut
dened with brains, t 2d oO
morning olf i ee
ngail, i ; $e {
pose was! wo artim
rear rank, t pa ma
{ ed « â at ) .
saying, â M
Go awav, woman, aid t
De. We | |
PHATE AND f â ( < F an
Nutrit j 1 â ab
prey at >
| bpyr 4 1Z
the apy \ and ass
1
3 Vs a
( ts
N I i {Gen ]
exe , :
aie
3
| t K
. ve â avo. asa
$4 ng ! pws t 7
oS i I
. } i he wa
i PS ring !
$ . Stin lt isa
Ps which { : h ii
| wa ied: *i'sa
; et vy. âand don't she
a W > g, said the ejder
I Id call touder than an
girl > =i and Pll try if 04
can't mak me With this, a shout
We t i eld soul that ma
gain rhe answer came
back louder than before. The calling c
t ad, th ni g as much as pos-
- t e note f the * lost one,â
: i â had travelled, cam
t » res ig that wa
g the taack Sot Che laugh t
W \ 3 i iuest ra the | i
some time {
fir Fox Tai A e © daughter
f own the house, was addressed by |
a young! , though agreeable to hb
was «is al if fath (if irsa
W rot consent to tl lion, and she
lete l to elo The g was fixed
t low, and nents t
gg vasin his arms, They mounted
a I 8°. 4 vere soon some distan
i thel A 1 W > ady bro
hy saying \ u see W
i f { % rng n % of my affection: I
make me a good husba
ie sas feliow, and grufily anawerrd
Pre s | may, and perhaps not Pal
de rey afte a silence of s
n tes she niv exclaimed: * Oh, what
shall we do? I have left my money behind
ein om.â âThen, said he, âwe must
go back and fetch it They were soon at
A i bel i d ce
rad | g a } \re i :
he t { wind and said
a â ! Rl ps not
then shut dowr e ng I
{
}
Anecdote i Caridina lo ate ai
name of the subject f itâmore especial!
eta i
when that name is be found amc
most illustrious on re
of absurdity in no ordinary
personage, however,
a French Cardinal, and
equally reverenced as 4
prieet
ing a spell of uncommonly warm weather)
â His Eminence,â quite early in the morning
and in the lightest
ordââseams
;
ne, we
gÂą 0d
gined he could entice the breoze.
purpose be was leaning out of the window
in & position the most comfortable and eas)
taking the Cardinal for a
nameless, that this illustricus and most am
able son of the Church at once jumped t
his feet, assiduensly rubb
he encountered before him, on
the domestic aforesaid, tremblipgly exclaim
ing, âPlease, your Eminence, I thought i
was Georges.â
â
the soothing operation, remarked, â Weil, ;
t had been Goor ineed uot have struck
so hard
Jenge Fiercara.ââMr. âWletcher, when a
man, boarded
nna
ou
n
Without much consideration
and water brought to his room every pight
to bg taken on going to bed as a ânight cap
One night an unusual press of company pre- |
up}
es juire |
vented the bar-keeper from carrying
The
didnât regard it as quite the thing for him
| to go tothe barand get his grog, and Âąo he |
went to bed without his
ânight cap.â But
to sleep he could not,
drink, and, as he did so, his active and dis-
crimigating mind worked most diligently.
The fruit of his reflections appeared next
when on getting up weary
worn by his hard and restless night, Mr.
Fletcher went to the bar-keeper :
âMr. ââââ you didn't bring up my brandy
and water last night, and as a consequencs
I bave slept little or none all night.â
The bar-keeper was very sorry.
lect should not oceuragain. â
â Not so,â rejoined Mr. Fletchor.
The neg-
P
der it. If it comes to this, that I canât sleep
is high time
that [ stopped drinking, and broke up the
dangerous habit.â
The above anecdote 15 worthy the atten
tron of ali young men. F
countable power over us,
hould stop before he becomes a slave to
Journal.
TT
men had a ta-j
1 Pond, James
mg ihe
to sevor
degree The
to whom we refer, was
believe,
man and a
On a certain occasion (it was
costume imaginable,
sought a room adjacent to his bedroom, from i
the open window of which he fondly imas
For such
of the establishment
ng the part, „ hen
his knees,
t
he Cardinal still engaged in
Âą
in the old Exchange
All night long he
tumbled about for lack of his accustomed |
and |
| Best half barrel Mackerel, Island, W. Hf
* Never |
bring me another drop of liquor unless | or- |
In many cases it | Best do White Flanne.
and every young man |
en att
PRINCE
COUNTY EXHIBITION.
he following is the list of prizes promised
in our last issue. Itis from the Summers
ide Progress â
HORSES.
Best Draft Staliion, Thomas Hall, Summers
side
2nd best do, John Kelly, Somerset
Best Carriage Stallion, Thomas Robins, Be-
deque
znd best do Henry Croseman, Bedeque
Best Carriage Mare, Dr. Beairsto
2nd best do, Russel VcCallum, Bedeq:
Best draft Mare haying reared @ Foul (ais)
season, Wm. Major, Bedeque
2nd best do, Wm. Glover, Kingston
Best Entire Draft Colt under 3 years old
George Sinclair, Malpeque
2nd best do George Compton, St. Elea-
nors
Best Entire Carriage Colt, under 3 years
old and oyer 2, Chas. MacNut, Darn,
ley
ând best do Chas Andrews, St. Eleanors
Vest Draft Filly under 3 years, Lewis Henry,
Malpeque :
2nd best do John }.ullin, Kensington
Hest carriage Filly under 3 years, R. Hibbit,
Summerside
| 2nd best do R. Murray, Linkâr Road
Judges â Patrick McCabe, John MacNutt,
Murdock \ cKinnon, James Heffield
CATTLE.
Best Bull, over 3 years, Jesse Wright, Be»
deque
2nd best do Wm. Darby, Lot 17
Best Bull under 3 years, Dugald Currie
Best do do 2 years, Robert Glover, Sum,
merside
2nd best do G. W. Carr, Lot 17
| Best Mileh Cow, Newton Lee, Summerside
znd best do Henry Clark, Bedeque
Best Heifer under 3 years, Jas S. Lee, Lot
17
2nd best do Robert Glover, Sâside
Best Heifer under 2 years, M. Wright, Be»
deque
2nd best do Robert Giover, Sâside
Best Bull Calf, H. J. Campbell, Lot 25
Best Heifer Calf, P. McNutt, Malpeque.
JudgesâFrancis Henderson, Benjamin
Schurman, George Sinclair, Harry Dawson, |
Donald Meâ illan
SHEEP.
Best Ram any age, R. Glover, Sâside
2nd best do Wm. |efurgey, do
3rd best do George Crosby, Freetown
| Best yearling Ram, (seorge Linkletter, Link- |
letter Road
2nd best do Stewart Burns, Freetown
3rd best do Albert McCallum
Best Ram Lamb, Wm. Lefurgey
2nd best do James Hall
3rd best do Robert Glover
Best pen of 2 Ewes having reared a lamb
this season,R. Glover, Sâside
Best pen yearling Ewes, Robt. Glover, Sum-
mereide
2nd do William Mills, Indian River
Best pen of Ewe lambs, Robt, Glover, sum
merside
2ad do J. \:cNut:, Darnley
Judges â John Beer, Caleb Schurman,
Francis MacNutt, John
man
PIGS
Best pen
ville
2nd best do Richard Wood, Lot 19
Best breeding Sow, C. Howatt, Lot 17
2nd best do George M. Price, Sâside
Best Boar Pig, any breed, Wm. T.
Indian River
Beet pen of 2 Pigs, under 6 months, Robt.
Glover, S'side
2ud best do Robert Glover, S'side
Judges â John Beer, Caleb Schurman,
Francis MeNutt, John Muttart, Willkam
Schurman
»
a igh,
POULTRY.
Best pair Turkeys, cock and hen,
Green
Best 3 Ducks, Charles Tuplin
Best Cock a 2 Pullets. Arthur Calhoun
JudgesâArch Wright, W. â. Lea, Wm.
VacNutt.
GRASS SEEDS
Best bushel Timothy Seed, John Cairna,
Freetown
rs. Jesse
2nd best do Cornelius Howatt, Lot 17
Jest 20 lbe. Red Clover, Wm. Laird, Lot
2nd best do Thomas Dalton,Tryon
Best 10 lbs. Alsike, Cornelius Howatt
2nd best do Nelson Howatt
Judges -Alex. Howatt, John MacDonald,
| Ralph Schurman, R. Tuplin.
POTATOES,
Best half bushel Jacksons Whites, James
MacNutt
do Calicoes, Hubert Compton
do of any kind, Arch. McIntosh
Judgasâ Alfred Craig, Daniel Walker,
John P. Mackellan.
FRUIT,
Best basket Cooking Apples
Sinclair, Malpeque
do
do
do do KEatingdo A. Sinclair
do do Winter Keeping do Wm. Mills |
do do Siberia (rab do Mrs. James
Tuplin
do do Plums, 1lfred Craig
do do Damsons,-James McQuarry
Judges âMajor Wright, Ralph Schurman.
Win. Brown, Rev. R MeDonald, Edward
Holland
BUTTER AND CHEESE,
Best tub or crock of butternot less than 24
ibs , Mrs. Keating. Miscouche
2nd best do Mrs. Melsaac, Irishtown
3rd best do Mrs Donald Gillis
Best Cheese, not less than 12 Ibs, Benj
Beairsto, Malpeque
2nd best do Peter McNutt, Malpeque
3rd best do James F. MeNutt, do
GRAIN.
Best 2 bushels wheat, Benjamin Cole, Be- |
deque
~nd best do Benjamin Bearisto, Malpeque
Best 2 bushels two rowed Barley, Donald
Steel, Lot 19
2nd do John McLure
Best 2 bushels foursrowed Barley, Robert
Crossman, Bedeque
Best 2 bushels Oats (Black), Wm, Cairns,
Lot 17
2nd do Thomas G over, Summerside
Best 2 bushels Oats. (Norway), Philip Gau-
det, Miscouche.
2nd do Hubert Gaudet, Miscouche,
JudgesâRenben Tuplin, John McDonald, |
|
Alex. Howatt, Joseph Schurman.
ROOTS AND VEGETABLES.
Best 20 Swede Turnips, Russel MeCallum,
Redeque.
mes (weight) field earrota Charlea
ves.
Jest dozen table Carrots, Charles Ives
do Beets, do do
do Cabbagees, Hubert Compton
do Paranips, Charles Ives
do Onions, Russel McCallum
do 2 lbs Shallots âs
test half dozen Roots Celery, Francis Hen- |
deren
do Mangel Wurtzel, Chas. Ives
do Cucumbers do
do Pumpkin, Caleb Schurman
do Squash, Charles Ives
do Citrons, Ida Crabb
Best 3 Cauliflowers, Hubert Compton
Rest eollection of Horticulture, the growth
of the Exhibitor, U. Ives
Judges : â Alfred Craig, David Walker, J.
TP. McLellan.
FLAX MANUFACTURE.
Best half dozen Towels, Miss McRae
do Table Cloth, Mrs. D. Gillis
do Linen Sheets, Mra, J. Rogers
do. e sample Flax hackled, Mrs. D.
THAIS
HONEY.
Best Pot Honey not less than 10 Ibs. G.
Tanton
2nd do âWilliam Pickering
Judges-âArch Wright, W. C. Lea, Wm.
Pound, James MeNutt
FISH
Baker, South Shore
TEXTILE FABRICS IN WOOL.
Best 10 yards black full dressed Cloth, \irs.
H. Holland, Port Hill
2nd Mrs. J. Waugh, Lot 19
Fest do grey do, Wm. Jamison, Lot 19
_ Best do womenâs wear, plain, Msr.Ben, Beair-
| From that day Mr. Fletcher became a!
thorough-going temperance man.
sto
Best do, mixed, Fabric, Miss Sarah McKay
| 2nd do Mrs.G M, Price
flabit has an unae- |
Miss Wright
twilled, . James
Lot 17
Best do Fancy pie.
,
\
Waugh
Best do plain, Wm. Lai
Laird,
pel Chnpeting, Waugh,
Bedequ
eq
t 2nd do
' LONDON QUARTERLY
-uttart, Wm. Schur. |
âIsaac Ledstone, Centers }
Milla,
Archibald |
, may have one of the â Four Reviews â for |
| 1873; subscribers to all five may have two
| discount to clubs can be allowed unless the
| money is remitted direct to the publishers. |
'No premiums given to clubs.
: 3 Cases âCigars in Victoria & Flor Gertrude.
â
sce aaah t
2nd do Miss Stephen Black
Best Gentlemenâs plaid wool, Mrs. &. Cairns
2nd do Mrs. W. Newson
Best Ladyâs do Vrs. R. Cairns
2nd do Miss Sarah McRae
Best Horse Rug, Mrs. Ralph Schurman,
Bedeque Ă©
Best pair blankets, Mrs. Russel McCallum.
Bedeque
Best Hearth Rug, all wool, Mrs Caleb Taylor
2nd do Mrs, Jas, Ramsay
Best do any material, Caleb Schurman, Be-
deque
David Reid, Lot 19
Best door Mat, Miss Mary McPhail
JudgesâD, J. MeNutt, John McKenale,
George Crosby, L. B. McMillan.
FARMING IMPLEMENTS.
Best Threshing Machine and Shaker, John |
Dickieson, Bedeque |
Best iron Plough, Henry Saunders, Darn- |
ley
Best Moulding do do
Best Cultivator for growing crop G.
Muttart, Cape Traverse :
Best do prepare jand for crop, John Dick-
Best Set Harrows, Henry Saunders:
Best improved Fanners, John Dickieson
ieson
|
Best PotatoeâDigger it calculated to collect
potatoes in rows, A. Lockhart
JudgerâGeorge Compton, J.T. Murphy, |
Isaac Schurman
LEATHER.
Best Side Neatâs Leather, John McLennan, |
Bedeque |
Best Side Grain do do
Best Calf-skin do do {
Best Harness do do !
JudgeâGeorge Crabbe, Thomas Friazâe,
Peter Larkins.
CARRIAGES AND SLEIGHS;
Best Wagon, Wm. Tuplin
2nd do Wm. Pickering
Best Single Sleigh â
2nd best do John Hillman
FURNITURE
Best bedroom Furniture, George Doull
Best half dozen chairs do
JudgesâA. M, Wright, W.C. Lea. Wm.
Pound, James \cNutt
KNIT GOODS.
Best pair Menâs drawers, Miss Ives
â undershirts do
â 3 pair socks, Mrs B. Beairsto
â3 pair stockings, Mrs RK. Sehurman,
Bedeque
â 3 pairs winter mitts, Sirs.
Lot 19
â Collection Knit
Crosby, Freetown
Best piece of bead or needle work, Miss
Broad
2nd do Leon Gandet, Miscouche
Best Crayon painting, Miss Broad
est painting in water colors, Miss Hacker.
Goods Miss Louise
TRE BRET
D. |
}
Davia Reid, |
Quarterly Reviews |
EDINBURGH REVEW, Âą Whig.)
REVIEW, (Cor
servatine.)
WESTMINSTER REVIE\
. (Liherat.)
| BRITISH QUARTERLY REVIEW, (hean
qalisal.)
ANI
Blackwuoiâs kalugargl wagazine,
REPRINTED BR citi
x
Leonard Seatt Publishing Co.,|
140) Funron N.Y.
ee |
By arrangement with the English publish- |
ers who receive a hberal compensation.
These periodicals constitute a wonderful
| msicellany of modern page pt research,
and criticism. The cream of all European
books worth reviewing is found here, and
they treat of the leading events of the
world in masterly articles written by men
who had special knowledge of the matters
treated. The American Pnblishers urge
upon all intelligent readers in this country
a liberal support of the Reprints which
they have so long and so cheaply furnished
feeling sure that no expenditure for
literary matter will yield so rich a return
° that required fora subscription to these
the
Leading Periodicals of Great Britian,
TERMS .
About one third the price of the originals.
For any one Review, $4 00 per annuny
For any two Reviews, = i Ae a tame a
For anythree Reviews, 1000 â &
Foa all four Reviews, vo * «*
For Blackwood's Magazine, 400 â *
For Blackwood and one
o -gune
Review, |
Yor Blackwood and two
Reviews, 060 4 «6
For Blackwood and three
Reviews, 1300 « &
For Blackwood and four ,
Raviews, boo « &
PREMIUMS - i
New subscribers (applying early) for the
| year IS74 may have, without charge, the
| last volume for 1873 of such periodicals as
| they may subscribe for.
Or instead, new subscribers_to any two,
three, or four of the above penodicals,
of the â Four Reviews,â or one set of Blacks
wood's Magazine for 1873.
Neither premiums to subscribers nor
Circulars with further particulars may be |
had on application.
LEONARD SCOTT PUBLISHING Co.,
140 FULTON STREET, NEW YORK.
Dec. 17, 1873.
FIRE AND MARINE
INSURANCE.
IMPERIAL
Hire Lusurance Company.
OF LONDON,
Subscribed and Invested Capital ÂŁ1,965,000
Sterling.
| MONTREAL
Marine Assarance Company.
Capital and Cash Assots over $1,000,000
The above OFFICES being of UNDOUBT-
ED STANDING, guarantee perfect security | Deir 6.
and prompt payment of losses.
FENTON T. NEWBERY,
Agent for Prince Edward Island wot Quarter of 24 lnmons.
Chitown, Som, 2, 1878.
Aâ
Dr. J. Walkerâs California Vin-
egar Bitters are a purely Vegetable
preparation, made chiefly from the na-
tive herbs found on the lower ranges of
the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor-
nia, the medicinal properties of which
are extracted therefrom without the use
of Alcohol. âThe question is almost
daily asked, ââ What is the cause of the
unparalleled success of VineGArR bBir-
TERS?â Our answer is, that they remove
the cause of disease, and the patient re-
covers his health. They are the great
blood purifier and a life-giving principle,
a perfect Renovator and Invigorator
of the system. Never before in the
history of the world has a medicine been
compounded possessing the remarkable
qualities of Vingaar Birrers in healing the
sick of every disease manis heir to. They
are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic,
relieving Congestion or Inflammation of
the Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilions
Diseases.
The properties of Dx. WaLxkrnâs
Vinegar BITrers are Aperient, Diaphoretic,
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic,
Sedative, Counter-lrritant, Sudoritic, Altera-
tive. and Anti-Bilious.
Grateful Thousands prociatm Vix-
EGAR Birrens the most wonderful In-
vigorant that ever sustained the sinking
system. ,
No Person ean take these Bitters
according to directions, and remain long
unwell, provided their bones are not de-
stroyed by mineral poison or other
means, and vital organs wasted beyond
repair.
Bilious, Remittent and Inter-
mittent Fevers, which are so preva-
lent in the valleys of our great rivers
throughout the United States, especially
those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri,
Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan-
sas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande,
Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ro-
anoke, James, and many others, with
their vast tribytaries, throughout our
entire country during the Summer and
Autumn, and remarkably so during sea-
sons of unusual heat and dryness, aro
invariably accompanied by extensive de-
rangements of the stomach and liver,
and other abdominal viscera. In their
treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow-
erful influence upon these various or
gans, is essentially necessary. There
is no cathartic for the purpose equal to
Dr. J. WALKERâS Vinecar Brrrens,
as they will speedily remove the dark-
colored viscid matter with which tho
bowels are Joaded, at the same timo
stimulating the secretions of the liver,
and generally restoring tho healthy
functions of the digestive organs.
Fortify the body against diseasÂą
by purifying all its fluids with Vinecar
Bitrers. No epidemic can take hold
of a system thus fore-armed.
Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head-
ache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs,
Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour
Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Tast
in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpit:
tation of the Heart, Inflammation of th
Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kid-
neys, and a hundred other painful symp-
toms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia.
One bottle will prove a better guarantee
of its merits than a Jengthy advertise-
ment.
Scrofula, or Kingâs Evi], White
Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck,
Goitre, Scrofulous Infammations, Indolent
Inflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old
Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc.
In these, as in all other constitutional Dis-
eases, WALKERâS VINEGAR Birrers have
shown their great curative powers in the
most obstinate and intractable cases.
For Inflammatory and Chronic
Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit-
tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of
the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder,
thase Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases
are caused by Vitiated Blood.
Mechanical Diseases.âPersons cn-
gaged in Paints and Minerals, such as
lumbers, Type-aetters, Gold-beaters, and
Miners, as they advance in life, are subject
to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard
against this, take a dose of WALKzERâs VIN-
âGAR Bitters ocoasionally.
For Skin DiseaseÂą, Eruptions, Tet-
ter, Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples,
Pustales, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring-worms,
Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch,
Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors
and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name
or neture, are literally dug up and carried
out of the system in a short time by the use
of these Bitters. c
Pin, Tape, and other Worms,
lurking in the system of so many thousands,
are effectually destroyed and removed. No
system of medicine, no vermifuges, no an-
thelminitics will free the system from worms
like these Bitters.
For Female Complaints, in young
or old, married or single, at the dawn of wo-
manhoed, or the turn of life, these Tonic
Bitters display so decided an influence that
improvement is soon perceptible.
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when-
ever you find its impurities bursting throngh
the skin in Pimples, Exuptions, or Sores;
cleanse it when you find it obstructed and
sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is
foul ; your feelings will tell yon when. Keep
the blood pure, and the health of the system
will follow.
R. H. McDONALD & CO.,
Drnggists end Gen. Agts., San Francisco, California,
and cor. of Washington and Cheriton Sts., N. „.
Sold by all Drugaists and Dealers.
R. H. McDONALD & CO.,
Druggiste and Gen. Agta., San Francisco, California,
and cor. of âââââ and Chariton Sts.. N. Y-
, Beld by all iggists and Dealers.
August 25. 1873
TO THE LADIES!
A CARD.
connection
my with the
Arrangemen s
the
will perform
Appheation
as a limited number
first Quarter will commence on Monday,
TYRMS WILL BF as FOLLOW
Ii strt
mental Music per half hour's
duration, 0
mental Music, 1 hour's dura
TOBACCO & CIGARS 7 nana T io aS
_â
HE Sublscrib: | flers for sale (in Bond
a choice Lot oi
SMOKIMG AND CHLWEMG TOBACCO,
and three Cases CIGARS.
74 Boxes Tobacco, in Solace, Sanshine, Vir- |
ginian, Navy and Black Diamond.
i
}
i
Samples can be seen at Sale Raom
N. RANKIN,
Corner Water & Pownal Sts
Ch'town, April 13, 1874.
BOSTON STEAMERS,
SEASON 1874.
Organs, ard the
guaranteed.
1G
tion,
i â
Leasous in Vocai Music only roo
Instrumental
Lessons of an hour's
duration, with the first rudiments
of thorough Bass and Transposi-
i tion &c., 15.00
} Vocal and LIustrumental. half hour's
duration, 7.00
Lessons on the Organ, 20.00
Cabinet Organ and Melodeon, 15.00 |
No Pupi] will be taken for less than six
| months.
Orders taken for the
utmost
best Pianos and
Satisfaction is
S. N.
Ch town, June 29, 1874.
Wanted,
AT THE
ISLAND PARK HOTEL-
EARLE
s pe
irl
=
THE Steamers â Alhambra â 782 tons, and | Ten Girls as Waiters and Chambermaids,
* Caroll,â1372 tors,having both being thoroughly |
overhau'ed, aud fitted with very su Scler por
modation for passengers, will leave Boston during |
the season tigen every Saturday at noon, |
and retrroisg will leave Charlottetown alter-
nately every Thursday at five p. m., calling at
Halitax and Canso both ways.
For freight or passage apply to
i CARVELL BROS, Agents |
Châ'town, June 1, 1873.âa p is
Boone Bay Herring!
200 BBLS. split BOONE BAY HER-
RING. in prime condition.
FOR SALE BY
FENTON T. NEWBERRY.
July 18, 13, 1874.âtf
&e. Referencerequired, Wages, 8&
to $88% per month.
J. L. HOLMAN.
ummeraide, June 1, 18S74.âtf
JUST ARRIVED.
ER 8.8. Somerset, from Boston, and Sebr
Bonnibell from New Yorâ,
2,900 Barrels Flour & Cornmeal
\w
very cheap for cash, or at 3 months on approv-
ed paper.
hich will be sold in quantities to Traders,
OWEN CONNOLLY.
Oktows. a ute old stand, Dorchester St | St John, N.
wu, May 4,
100 bbls,
1 GREEN. BLL,
ÂŁ hae
SERVATION,
' vy:
Health, Strength, and Vigorous Old Age.
| Address to the Nervous, the Sedentary, the
Dyspeptic.and all those whose constitutions
| arid rem
} published by Dr. Laâ Me
Wesleyan |
Academy ceases at the expiration of
the Vacation, I purpose taking pupils dur-
ing the hours recently given them, vit:
from 9 a. m., till 2 p. m
ean be made sce that hours can be given to
suit the convenience of all pupils. t
end of every Quarter, pupils
before parents and friends.
must be made at once.
only can be taken
| APOTHECARIESâ HALL,
es
cumpee P. ket.
âOvVeCrmnment Service
THE fast-aill
: naa "S Schoon
py WinniÂą will run fortnightly
+3 auring tae present Se â4
E : : âeason, be.
»- twee } â 7
fi iy ââ W 1 Charlott Wh and Cag.
cum . Calling at Shedis
THOMAS COSTAIN Own
spacial "â er,
AgentsâHon. G. W. H I
} Pe nh. . . Wian, C .
ae â
». Forster, Shediac:
â
i
Carvell Brog.
Châtown, June 15, 1874
THA ROSH!
W LANDING,
Tea Rose Flour,
ON CONSIGNMENT.
FENTON T. NEWBERyY.
July 8, 1874.âtÂą
M
IS ANTTAY =
aS COTTOY WARP!
RL, ORANGE AND Wing
o's 3's to 16's.
JARRANTED to be FULL LEN
\ and weight, STRONGER AND oe
TER in every respect than any other E if
lish or American warp. i ang:
BEWARE OF IMi7T4TIONS. None is ge
! b 2 ls geny.
ine without our name on the labelsâ
sale by all dealers. -
WM. PARKS & SON
New Brunswick Cotton Mills, St Jobn N. B
Feb. 2nd, 1874. 1s
. Charlottetown Cenetery Compaay,
NOTICH
AS the Act of our Legislature, passed
ÂŁ& in June, 1872, enacts, that from and
after the first day of January, 1874, it shall
not be lawful, under certain penalties, to
| jute: any dead body in the Protestant burying
Ground, on the Malpeque Road, ip
the fifth ward of this City ; and as
the New Cemetry is now ready for
interment, application for burials there.
in must be made to the undersigned,
at his residence in Kent Street.
Plots for interments, 15 by 20 feet, equal
tol share of the CompaRyâs ground, ayail-
abie for $50,0n payment of two-thirds of
the purchase woney, and subject to another
call of $10.
Plots for individual interment $2 each.
Persons desirous of obtaining allotments
in the Cemetry, will please apply to
William Cundall, Esq., the Treasurer or
'
| the Company.
By Order
JOHN LEPAGE, Seceây.
I) 29, 1873.
HEALTH STRENGTH & VIGOR.
Just Published, Price One Shilling Stg.
SCIENCE OF LIFE; or SELF PRE
A practical Guide to
have become debilitated or relaxed from ig-
regularities of life, climate, age or disease,
or from over-taxed or abused energies,
whether of body or mind; with the Instruc-
tions fur the Treatment of all Disorders re-
sv'ting from the Logs of Nervous or Physical
Ă© 37 BEDFORD SQUARE, London.
An excellent { all who may
nanual for
â
e rn how to use life and not abuee it.â
f l State Gazelle
O su s of diet and the regula-
iofthe functions the advice throughout
On. LaâMert is the only regularly-qualitied
v icioner , for thirty years, has de-
} voted his entire attention to the cure of these
disorders
Colonles can be
correspondence,
led in secreey
Patients residing in the
successs t
fully treated by
lie will } âi
ules Willi be lorwar
and safety to any address.
THE SCIEN E OF LIFE may be had,
price one shilling stg., in Halifax, Nova
Scotia, J. H. Woodrich, Drug@ Store; Yar-
mouth, H. A. Parr; Pictou, Henry Ellott;
St. John, N.B,H. Chubb &Co., and in
CHARLOTTLTOWN, P. E. J., of Messrs. Brem-
ner Brothers. 44 Queen Street.
IMpoRTANT CatuTion.âThe public are
earnestly warned against a piracy of the
above work emanating from a so-called
âPeabody Institute.â Boston, which unblush-
ingly appropriates the titles of two works,
rt for thirty years
1874. ly.
JOYFUL NEWS
FOR THE AFFLICTED!
March 30th
LiFe of MAN BITTERS
~ANDâ
S40 7RRRA SEED 86PEEL PSEC EU NES,
CURES
Drops ! ! nu; Liver Complaint;
aundice ; Sv g of the Limbs and face;
Asthma what 1; Dyspepsia, Bili-
isness, Spitting of blood,
Bronchitis, * tleadsa Running Sores,
; | Stoppage of the Menses, Kidney
ind Grave! Complaint, MĂ© isels, Fevers, Sea
yess, Heert dise Pleurisy, Piles,
i > | ul i Bs o} ili s (iweedase, or Atl.
ae S; Coughs, Golds and
( , Dintl and Sore
, Pains Stoma Diairhaa,
ty Cho} { era Merbus, Tooth
ind Ague, & ns, Strains, Felons
is, f is, Bruises, Sore Eves,
B S Cuis and Cracked
Hands, &c.
hist 4 > e Pamplets, which
j ile by i generall
Agents at Charlottetown, T. DesBrisay;
lesale Agent, Wm. R. Watson.
BGA ~~ & (0
j ton lis, Co. N.S
D i
F978 WA âąâ TT ADT s5 0 *» As
ONZE BOX OF CLARKEâS B41 PILLS
3 arranted » all discharges from the
: Urinary Oryane 1 @ther sex acquired or
tutional ndâ Pains in the Buek.
sold in Boxes, $!.50 each, by all Chemiste and
i ut Medicine Vendo
le Proprietor, F. J. CRARKE
APOTHECARIESâ ENGLAND
EXPORT AGENTS.
and Co Ce
â 37 NewWwate Str
and Sous, 95 Farrip
na Sov
et I Sons
i a :
HALL, LINCOLN,
leman St.. London
eet, London.
don Street, London
i street. London.
ndallibe London Whelesale Houses
AGENTS IN CANADA.
real* *â1 Hiott sud Co,., Wholesale Draggists
Shapter eud (wen,
ltou. â~Winer and
jatho,N. BâH, I velcel
â, B, own and Ce.
ctober 13, 1873. ly
S..Avers, |
Rk THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.âSee
Deuteronomy, Cap. xii., verse 28.
bo oe
CLARKE Eâ
Yorld Famed Blood Mixtare.
Trade Markâ âBlood Mixtureâ
GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER & RESTORER
For cleansing and clearing the blood from
all impurities,cannot be too highly recommended
Lor Scrofula, Scurry, Skia Diseases, and Sores
of all kinds it is a never-failing and permanent
Tun
; cure;
It Cures Âą
Cares Utcerated §
Cares Ulcerated Sore
Cores Binckheads
Cures > rvy s ree
Cures Cancerous Ulears
{
(
(
âures Blood and Skin Diseases.
âures Glandular Swellings.
Nears the Glood from all impure Matter.
From whatever cause arising.
» this mixture is pleasant to the taste, and
warranted free from anything injurious to the
most delicate constitution of either «ex, the Pre
prietor solicits suflerere to give it a trial to test
its value
Thousands of testimonials from all parte,
Soldin Bottles $ 1,00 each, and in Cases, con-
tuining ix times the quantity, $4.00 eachâenfficien
to effect a permanent cure in the great mapority ot
long-standing cases, LY ALL CHEMIsIS and
PATENT MEDICINE VENDORS (throaghon
the world
Sole propric tor, F. J. CLARKE, Chemist,
LINCOLN, ENG-
LAND.
EXPORT AGENTS.
Cargoyne, Burbidges ard Cc., Coleman st. Loudon
| Newbury and Sons, 37 Newgate et., London}
' Barelay & Sons, 95 Farringdon st , London.
Sunger & Sons, Oxford at., London,
And all the Londou Wiolesale Houser
AGENTS IN CANADA.
Torouto.â Elliot & Co, Wholesale Druggiste
â Shapter and Owen.
'
| Hamilton. â Winer and Co.
Bb. âH1. L. Spencer.
Halifax. N. $.âAvery, Brown and
Nat Sel
eee fe lame
tie
oie 2 et 4 Ct ge Se SP reâ ey
oT
te
=
SE ee
ee se
eee
>
Be PE,
ae i pte
a inde Gh Qe 4 seers Be Be ee ooo Reese qe as Sees Pe 2 tees +495. 2 ORR Bee
ainsi calc
ee â se
it otherwise
POETRY and her words less thoughtless
: was same bright, sparklit Kat
omemamnpnioma ne iliac sci ie ciiisinediiaadeiaaoananni
THE 1% SU. e
cinaiastina "
A little eas a litiie Tas Ja
A little h ay
A littie caught, a as
= a t W away i! VOX part
\ \ ul
A iitlie a i yes ul I P p part rie
AX little wish tw nay , Pr eci f inte
X little weeping tt ight ââ
" tane . t {
2 ruus tee wer d away Kitcnher st wa
| â i â
A little wind, a 3 .
â : it i
A littie 1@ bo S$iay
ry ttie tt ght yea | y sa ty 4 ihe s 4
So runs the wi vay \ lames H y Arnold
- â ' â ,
- â_ $3 agoin J i
TAE OMNIBUS HORSE. lesarves tol cordinâ I
: ; â ao. > sisi ust „ _ = ge ' â a . A Wa
A poor o : S890" bs tha aD al a ae f that they $a\ 1W k on '
Not much less than bc sand sk ae ke Ws iat
l jog along, week out, *k in â achin t
Kicked and cursed, and meaniy fed, and fetched it to s emen to look at t
Jammed in the side and ked by the hea what d tha but jest won 2
And the thing that I t at all make out nae An en
| 1ent ames H > ba
Here { go, day after day liscouraged, bless \Âą : he'd g
Pounding and $1 g down Broadway :
ii cai aes nl wit * ah ah h gr fie took it » SON par
Dragging these curious andi { things >
r : , â | â t
With the fore-legs gone i yel no w se e part â wan't
Where they ell go tol it know Twon't take \ 1 e k at
Nor why inthe world t t vs tâ says J
Tainât t says ra il
It wasn't my fault, you see, ata â
. â e ; . - we Âą Bist Pru
Phat my joints grew fig a 1d „ muscies ( I to Dolher.
sma. Why did not ! e th
And so [ missed of a : 5 st . , red Kate, v we "I
im clumsy, crooked, st 4, slow, :
. : amused with his story
Yet the meanest horse is a horse, you knew, âą Ky
7 inâ? a hat rm
And bis ribs can ache with the kick or biow Why rt he He knew wha W
As well asthe very best that g about, James Henry did But w! vas |
m " } ' â e me po
2 nave how long will y use m a i. : Teint noth an
7 : sn. Mies. tt âwe haint t no time to bother with it
ae â
Her was mad, br in't say
LITERATURE. ak ee ek ee
âââ a ee i : :
LEARNING TO SPELL KATE ee P
Âą - â Good fay, gentiemen girs,â and walks of!
He made up his mind te go
Conclus
James Henry had listened to this tir
shame and sorrow. His faceat first so flush-
A
f
i with | and see Victoria
@d was now deathly pale. He wasnotangry. | up and took the train for England. When
though had he been less humble he would , be got there as it ha] 1 Vi y was a
have resented such interference, He answer- Walkin the garden. Now yj know
ed the scornful beauty humbly women are dreadful curu So she sees his
âIT mean to do right, Kate. Sometime mo- | machine under his arm and ask 1 him what
ther shall be rich and never have to do any- t wa
thing. What had I better do? (io through He exple all oul, 4 $ Was so
college took with it that she paid him fifty thousand
Kate laughed at the tone lollars for it, an { pow she wants himt 2
â Going through c ileg gsn's easy, James 1 England, t I donât know,â said Mar
but you can help your mother and fix up the; & audal and vhel ! 4
house and fence; and James „ ro= 4} not
wise me one thing â Kate smiled nelus but was
Anything, Kate, he answered eager! curus ug! ask Mr. Gre next
Pshaw ! she exclaime!, «I have always âime She saw him
noticed that people so ready to promise eel- What is this l ames Arnold
dom perform. going to I pe.â
âTry me, Kate ; what is it â Mr. Grey laughed heartly
âlt is this. Lea Tin 4 s So you hai heard tha
fully) untilâ He has not g Kuro}
What he broke in, eagerly âThen itis ali utrue,â said Ka
His compliance irritated hex Nota erepliel. «He has ada
âUntil you learn to spel! Kal I gc machineâjust what | Lsay, | S
that is enough to expect of you. But I st tle about s things, bt $s patented
go. Mother will wonder at my abseave,â and | 24 hig spoken of. In tT suspect
still wearing the scornfi ks tand | friend is the road to fortune, Lie deserves
Was walking away success, | is pe ia
âPlease Kate, take ! said ties that « / â $ aged a S
+) earnestly and ger that Kate, took
and safd impulsive!; . pane 4 . ;
Y ~ Rave ti » hes! iis Âź cao 3 â c 5° â
of, James. But then.â s âYou havn't y ie â "
oN ), $a i « e â i
Thea, wit : . i
she was so changeab $4 gun re sei A „ $
es 7 ¹ Z . . I ; „ i eg ] 5 .
ngs. But you will ze seems | _ "
That y are an ange No Kate s . ew aon ° .
Phshav . Wall. Âą b C39 g $ s
and she went aw eav ng James Het . 8 . â
unhapy 1 anxious ad u eer b
pri Je, it is true, nor ambition, hut what! ttle} M (i x â " 1
he had was aroused t again to be Kate sed tra "
caught napping For the st tim he rea- | ay 4 { : na ee
zed that his life thus far had not been man- Kate long May |
ly nor master! but he would change it
Kate should be p: He w } oe
win fameand honor and we -yes. and csoptar ocite onaaa .
scholarship, for her sak ody hy ;
It was no light task 2 set himsif |â wegen
about to work out, but he had perserverance oncnaateit ne ee F nage
f he lecked pride and ambition. Love for | ŸŸ'"8, 2" Kate did A if ieult |
Kate supplied the latter qualities. Hitherts o tne uguibed gentieme omni
he had never applied his mind to study, bee t night never have k â Sper
ause like so many of his class, he underated Martin said h 5 3) ed was
ts value. Now all was changed. An eduyi§ erstan tween ind t
cation he must and would have, though | neighbors said they always knew and always
realized that his poveriy and ignorance were | s t James Henry Arnold was a genius
to be be serious drawback â Ses
He applied to the Rev. Mr. Gre rad HOUSEHOLD HINT>.
the minister, seeing his earnestness, and bes engines of destruct mparigon „
ing one of tt who delighted to impart | bapbler.âSfee/
knowledge, al Âą pe -' aseisi. hid falkers aren g j-doers Shake }
tale-bearers have dena more mischief in this
tations James Henry in return, | nised world than t | sha nce ee
to keep the ministers wood) ile flourishing dace Schi
under the eaves, and he jabore over his | asked a lady of Turner, tl sltinguished
books harder than he had ever worked be~ | paint 5 replied, «1 ha el, ma
fore. But after a time, as his mind became lem, but hard work
disciplined to study. he found it more ag AG . âPrepa : ind pla it #mea
â - Qt ! } water. over 1 heat a :
able, and astonished Mr. Grey by hisimprove- | 4 al aes 4 ane . (Aeon greed
ment, which was realiy extraordinar?. ak ng. add a r Py cabbage
No one was made acquainted with this | âŹ'@4 sliced t, slices f Onio
: hange except Mrs. Arnold, whose eyes x 118- eat cies 1 roeâ Rental wit id - r if
tened with pleasure when the minister, as he | ready for the vegetables; then season, add
secasionally did, spoke of her son's success. | sweet turnips sliced, a few potatoes cut
In justice to James we must sav that M: NV iSĂ© aud a mato r two. Vhen
eng ti%
lone, ekim oul the vegetables ar
d mneatupon
Grav wood > presented a fine reas re i
âbast sal ne pile | 1 on eepoereree. | @ nislier, Âą into the both a few cakes
be neighbors wondered and speculated, as | mixed thick witl iin cold water and ft
to this one sided [rieadship, as they cken to your liking,
and atill
for
marry, for
valled it, | Th
more who he could be going to
he had newly s} ngled the he use,
SPONGE (Onn
orn-cake, delicious
and as light as sponge cake, may be made by
CAs? onl;
painted it a neat white and discarded from | ne ee ry Masten gp â_ â peer
â| teacupful of butter and one of sugar, until
the windows the old rags
Arnold had hitherto c
substituted and
The fence was
its tipsy manmuyres to swi
with which Mr
heated ster
unbroker
mended an
| they are reduced to a creamelike substance.
Add threes aggs, well beaten, one scant quart
to which has been added three teas
is, levelled, of sifted cream tartar)and
upfuls of milk (to which has been
Âą
n Winter and
f Ă© Jour
arrav o lace UUs
â \ gases ete
the gate left off |.
tl
: rea tear
g sober]:
on its! added one and one-half teaspoonfuls of soda).
hingés. A neat row ofvegeiables behind the | Strain the milk, that no undissolved particles
house evinced more cultivation sn Mro. | of soda getin, then add tne yellow corn-
' 1 meal until the mass will hold the spoon from
Arnol:! could have bestowed Certainly a al }
A pint is quite enough Stir as
long as you can convenientiy. Pour into
two long cake tins Ifthe two tins are not
required at the same time, the baking of one
may be deferred from night until morning
If sour milk
i : : Maiing
radical change had taken place in James
Henry. No wonder the people apeculated as |
to the cause
Kate noticed these « gus, and that James} Half the sugar may be omitted
Henry had ceased quareling with the moods | be used, omit the cream tartar. In @ quick
t
and tenses and evinced acquaintance with | V7 Âź balfan hour's baking 1s sullicient.
t
, ree Ot cpa ._.'n domestic t nees
Webster Stranges! of all. he} egan respects TauTws Ff ww IVES n domestic oappin i :
Liesit 6 ; the wife's influence is much greater than her
ing limself ene Was sorr more than she husbandâ: for the one, the first causeâmu-
liked to admit when he called bid her! tual love and contidence--being granted, the
good-bye. He was going away, but where whole comiort of the household depends uy
of for what purpose he did not say, and Kate | 2" *rilles more immediately under her juris
idiction. By her management of smali sums
would not enquire. There
as anew manli- he husbands respectability and credit or des
ness in his appearance that precluded a pa- troyed. No fortune can stand the
{ronizing manner, and that
which she had hitherto
manifest her
him at parting and
you wil? be
constant
was the form in
ment, and moreis spent in triflesthan women
would easily believe. The one gr
100k hands with | whatever
thought it proper to
said kindly
prosperous James
at expense
I hope fully reflected on, ere incurred
without in| prepared to meet ; but itis pennies
the least knowing whe wishes wae to , i
, , ; this the wife alone can stop, for it does not
ec ere: :
sity come within a manâs province There is of.
âThank you, Kate, he re) lied Fortune | ten an ususpected trifle to be saved in every |
helps those âwho help themse|ves, and [ mean | honsehold. [tis not in economy alone that
to help the old fellow all I can } the wifeâs attention is so necessary, but in
Oe in ae , | those matters which make a well-regulated
38) Way 400 nate more than once | honse An unfurnished cruet-stand a miss-
caught herself thinking he was ing key, a buttoniess shirt, a soiled table-
improved and rather good look
James Arnold was going |
one knew it save his mothe
who had used their
place of janitor where he could earn his tuiti.- | well-dressed mutton-chop, ora tidy break.
2a i. . ny
on. Jamesâ energy, aided by what little money aaa â fi
. } ¹ music, are e e iA. „, 7 ay.
Mrs. Arnoid could spare went some way to are often too wearied fot conver
get board and books
With such prospects he left home
|
|
fF much |
ng.
ollege, but no | sticking hard and brown about it, ara really
N ' | nothings ; but each can raise an angry word
anâ f; \ tray, | Oo cause discomfe rt. :
ntere
From | Smiling comfort. A woman may love her
| husband devotedlyâmay sacrifice fortune,
| friends, family, country for timâshe may
1 | have the genius of a Sappho, the enchanted
beauties of an Armida ; but â melancholy
fact-âif with these sho fails to make his home
the smallest beginning he had in three years
been fit for college, and Mr. Gray felt pre ur
of his pupil, and not without reason
Time went on. Mrs. Arnold remained at
the cottage, neighbors plodded on in the same
old way, to mill, to meadow to meals and
meeting, while Kate grew handsome and
Stately in her fatherâs house. Lovers she
bad and plenty, but all fearei the same, even
George Clifford, who was werthy, handsome
and talented. fer temper wae less sharp
her. And women live so entirely in the af-
fections, that without love, their existence is
a void.
tasks, however repugnant they may he to
will not run the risk; they know that their
domestic, are their first duties.
, when a inale domestic
chanced to enter the apartment, and, misâ
fellow-servant,
gleefuily wet both his hands. and, stealthily
approaching âHie Eminence, gave the latier
so tremendous a slap, ona part that shali be
leakages of extravagance and mismanages | \
| Coffee House
he had fallen in with the drinking fashions
it may be, is turned over and care- | of the day so far as to have a glaas oi spirits
the income is | ,
imper- |
ceptibly sliding away which do mischief; and |
| Fletcherâs usual night-dram.
| cloth, a mustard pot with its old contents |
| morning.
Depend upon it, there |
to gethim the | i+ a great deal of domestic happiness in a |
Men grow sated cf beauty, tired
sation (however intellectual), but they can |
always appreciate a wellsswept hearth and |
| without a tumbler of toddy, it
comfortable, his heart will inevitable escape |
Better submit, then, to household |
your tastes, than doom yourselves to a loves | gets entire control
ess home. Women 6f a higher order of mind | s
| habits which are svre to ruin us,
RA\DOW READINGS.
Phe alaw n Boston, Mass., called
he Gambl
Why a bottle tied to a dogâs tail like
thor of the wrassh pper's waltz, has
t with his life from lowa.
~) yr. A | Th ce hetween
id another iof so much intaient
\
Reyuolds, is denied well
/ { it to be obtain-
;wW {
Notl Mirabea mpossible
t 1 W r? | only
iW
An ( Lnie I i b nh tabls
â i i hope of
\ List to tt
Will ] i gt th
I tiy
| fa pretty w settled fact
ith ha terrors for a man who
Nautica Phere was a maiden lady who |
ad su 1 bad opinion of the male sex, that |
he cou iot even t st her safely to a life- |
bivy
Lady „ My dear, do you know if
your mammais engaged?â Little girl of the
â i-' Engaged! Bless | why she's
ia {
Johnson in w be alt 11 the labor
â felime, | i t e purchased
by a pe
Phere is b l says Sydney |
s h, âand that is hard Jabor; and a man
who will not pay ut opr tor distinction |
had better at once dedicate himself to the
suitofthe Fos
A Scotch country minis bad been in
ted, with his wife, to dine and spend the
night al the house of one of his lairds, The
host was very proud of one of the very large
is which had just ceme into fashion, and
n the morning asked the lady bow she had |
siept init. â O, verra weel, sir, but indeed,
[thought I'd lost the minister aâthegither.â
Have you entered a cottage, ever travel -
coach, talked with a peasant in|
th ld, « yitered with a mec al the
om,â asked Sir Edward Bulwer Lytion, and |
not foun {that each of those
ent you had not? The most useful creas
ture that ever yawned ata club, or counted |
the vermin in his rags under the suns of |
Calabria, has no excuse for want of intellect
taient, this purpose
ther words, not he powel to achieve
but » âmA. Working Peo-
A ma who had 1a
yajor of militia, and vas not overbut
dened with brains, t 2d oO
morning olf i ee
ngail, i ; $e {
pose was! wo artim
rear rank, t pa ma
{ ed « â at ) .
saying, â M
Go awav, woman, aid t
De. We | |
PHATE AND f â ( < F an
Nutrit j 1 â ab
prey at >
| bpyr 4 1Z
the apy \ and ass
1
3 Vs a
( ts
N I i {Gen ]
exe , :
aie
3
| t K
. ve â avo. asa
$4 ng ! pws t 7
oS i I
. } i he wa
i PS ring !
$ . Stin lt isa
Ps which { : h ii
| wa ied: *i'sa
; et vy. âand don't she
a W > g, said the ejder
I Id call touder than an
girl > =i and Pll try if 04
can't mak me With this, a shout
We t i eld soul that ma
gain rhe answer came
back louder than before. The calling c
t ad, th ni g as much as pos-
- t e note f the * lost one,â
: i â had travelled, cam
t » res ig that wa
g the taack Sot Che laugh t
W \ 3 i iuest ra the | i
some time {
fir Fox Tai A e © daughter
f own the house, was addressed by |
a young! , though agreeable to hb
was «is al if fath (if irsa
W rot consent to tl lion, and she
lete l to elo The g was fixed
t low, and nents t
gg vasin his arms, They mounted
a I 8°. 4 vere soon some distan
i thel A 1 W > ady bro
hy saying \ u see W
i f { % rng n % of my affection: I
make me a good husba
ie sas feliow, and grufily anawerrd
Pre s | may, and perhaps not Pal
de rey afte a silence of s
n tes she niv exclaimed: * Oh, what
shall we do? I have left my money behind
ein om.â âThen, said he, âwe must
go back and fetch it They were soon at
A i bel i d ce
rad | g a } \re i :
he t { wind and said
a â ! Rl ps not
then shut dowr e ng I
{
}
Anecdote i Caridina lo ate ai
name of the subject f itâmore especial!
eta i
when that name is be found amc
most illustrious on re
of absurdity in no ordinary
personage, however,
a French Cardinal, and
equally reverenced as 4
prieet
ing a spell of uncommonly warm weather)
â His Eminence,â quite early in the morning
and in the lightest
ordââseams
;
ne, we
gÂą 0d
gined he could entice the breoze.
purpose be was leaning out of the window
in & position the most comfortable and eas)
taking the Cardinal for a
nameless, that this illustricus and most am
able son of the Church at once jumped t
his feet, assiduensly rubb
he encountered before him, on
the domestic aforesaid, tremblipgly exclaim
ing, âPlease, your Eminence, I thought i
was Georges.â
â
the soothing operation, remarked, â Weil, ;
t had been Goor ineed uot have struck
so hard
Jenge Fiercara.ââMr. âWletcher, when a
man, boarded
nna
ou
n
Without much consideration
and water brought to his room every pight
to bg taken on going to bed as a ânight cap
One night an unusual press of company pre- |
up}
es juire |
vented the bar-keeper from carrying
The
didnât regard it as quite the thing for him
| to go tothe barand get his grog, and Âąo he |
went to bed without his
ânight cap.â But
to sleep he could not,
drink, and, as he did so, his active and dis-
crimigating mind worked most diligently.
The fruit of his reflections appeared next
when on getting up weary
worn by his hard and restless night, Mr.
Fletcher went to the bar-keeper :
âMr. ââââ you didn't bring up my brandy
and water last night, and as a consequencs
I bave slept little or none all night.â
The bar-keeper was very sorry.
lect should not oceuragain. â
â Not so,â rejoined Mr. Fletchor.
The neg-
P
der it. If it comes to this, that I canât sleep
is high time
that [ stopped drinking, and broke up the
dangerous habit.â
The above anecdote 15 worthy the atten
tron of ali young men. F
countable power over us,
hould stop before he becomes a slave to
Journal.
TT
men had a ta-j
1 Pond, James
mg ihe
to sevor
degree The
to whom we refer, was
believe,
man and a
On a certain occasion (it was
costume imaginable,
sought a room adjacent to his bedroom, from i
the open window of which he fondly imas
For such
of the establishment
ng the part, „ hen
his knees,
t
he Cardinal still engaged in
Âą
in the old Exchange
All night long he
tumbled about for lack of his accustomed |
and |
| Best half barrel Mackerel, Island, W. Hf
* Never |
bring me another drop of liquor unless | or- |
In many cases it | Best do White Flanne.
and every young man |
en att
PRINCE
COUNTY EXHIBITION.
he following is the list of prizes promised
in our last issue. Itis from the Summers
ide Progress â
HORSES.
Best Draft Staliion, Thomas Hall, Summers
side
2nd best do, John Kelly, Somerset
Best Carriage Stallion, Thomas Robins, Be-
deque
znd best do Henry Croseman, Bedeque
Best Carriage Mare, Dr. Beairsto
2nd best do, Russel VcCallum, Bedeq:
Best draft Mare haying reared @ Foul (ais)
season, Wm. Major, Bedeque
2nd best do, Wm. Glover, Kingston
Best Entire Draft Colt under 3 years old
George Sinclair, Malpeque
2nd best do George Compton, St. Elea-
nors
Best Entire Carriage Colt, under 3 years
old and oyer 2, Chas. MacNut, Darn,
ley
ând best do Chas Andrews, St. Eleanors
Vest Draft Filly under 3 years, Lewis Henry,
Malpeque :
2nd best do John }.ullin, Kensington
Hest carriage Filly under 3 years, R. Hibbit,
Summerside
| 2nd best do R. Murray, Linkâr Road
Judges â Patrick McCabe, John MacNutt,
Murdock \ cKinnon, James Heffield
CATTLE.
Best Bull, over 3 years, Jesse Wright, Be»
deque
2nd best do Wm. Darby, Lot 17
Best Bull under 3 years, Dugald Currie
Best do do 2 years, Robert Glover, Sum,
merside
2nd best do G. W. Carr, Lot 17
| Best Mileh Cow, Newton Lee, Summerside
znd best do Henry Clark, Bedeque
Best Heifer under 3 years, Jas S. Lee, Lot
17
2nd best do Robert Glover, Sâside
Best Heifer under 2 years, M. Wright, Be»
deque
2nd best do Robert Giover, Sâside
Best Bull Calf, H. J. Campbell, Lot 25
Best Heifer Calf, P. McNutt, Malpeque.
JudgesâFrancis Henderson, Benjamin
Schurman, George Sinclair, Harry Dawson, |
Donald Meâ illan
SHEEP.
Best Ram any age, R. Glover, Sâside
2nd best do Wm. |efurgey, do
3rd best do George Crosby, Freetown
| Best yearling Ram, (seorge Linkletter, Link- |
letter Road
2nd best do Stewart Burns, Freetown
3rd best do Albert McCallum
Best Ram Lamb, Wm. Lefurgey
2nd best do James Hall
3rd best do Robert Glover
Best pen of 2 Ewes having reared a lamb
this season,R. Glover, Sâside
Best pen yearling Ewes, Robt. Glover, Sum-
mereide
2nd do William Mills, Indian River
Best pen of Ewe lambs, Robt, Glover, sum
merside
2ad do J. \:cNut:, Darnley
Judges â John Beer, Caleb Schurman,
Francis MacNutt, John
man
PIGS
Best pen
ville
2nd best do Richard Wood, Lot 19
Best breeding Sow, C. Howatt, Lot 17
2nd best do George M. Price, Sâside
Best Boar Pig, any breed, Wm. T.
Indian River
Beet pen of 2 Pigs, under 6 months, Robt.
Glover, S'side
2ud best do Robert Glover, S'side
Judges â John Beer, Caleb Schurman,
Francis MeNutt, John Muttart, Willkam
Schurman
»
a igh,
POULTRY.
Best pair Turkeys, cock and hen,
Green
Best 3 Ducks, Charles Tuplin
Best Cock a 2 Pullets. Arthur Calhoun
JudgesâArch Wright, W. â. Lea, Wm.
VacNutt.
GRASS SEEDS
Best bushel Timothy Seed, John Cairna,
Freetown
rs. Jesse
2nd best do Cornelius Howatt, Lot 17
Jest 20 lbe. Red Clover, Wm. Laird, Lot
2nd best do Thomas Dalton,Tryon
Best 10 lbs. Alsike, Cornelius Howatt
2nd best do Nelson Howatt
Judges -Alex. Howatt, John MacDonald,
| Ralph Schurman, R. Tuplin.
POTATOES,
Best half bushel Jacksons Whites, James
MacNutt
do Calicoes, Hubert Compton
do of any kind, Arch. McIntosh
Judgasâ Alfred Craig, Daniel Walker,
John P. Mackellan.
FRUIT,
Best basket Cooking Apples
Sinclair, Malpeque
do
do
do do KEatingdo A. Sinclair
do do Winter Keeping do Wm. Mills |
do do Siberia (rab do Mrs. James
Tuplin
do do Plums, 1lfred Craig
do do Damsons,-James McQuarry
Judges âMajor Wright, Ralph Schurman.
Win. Brown, Rev. R MeDonald, Edward
Holland
BUTTER AND CHEESE,
Best tub or crock of butternot less than 24
ibs , Mrs. Keating. Miscouche
2nd best do Mrs. Melsaac, Irishtown
3rd best do Mrs Donald Gillis
Best Cheese, not less than 12 Ibs, Benj
Beairsto, Malpeque
2nd best do Peter McNutt, Malpeque
3rd best do James F. MeNutt, do
GRAIN.
Best 2 bushels wheat, Benjamin Cole, Be- |
deque
~nd best do Benjamin Bearisto, Malpeque
Best 2 bushels two rowed Barley, Donald
Steel, Lot 19
2nd do John McLure
Best 2 bushels foursrowed Barley, Robert
Crossman, Bedeque
Best 2 bushels Oats (Black), Wm, Cairns,
Lot 17
2nd do Thomas G over, Summerside
Best 2 bushels Oats. (Norway), Philip Gau-
det, Miscouche.
2nd do Hubert Gaudet, Miscouche,
JudgesâRenben Tuplin, John McDonald, |
|
Alex. Howatt, Joseph Schurman.
ROOTS AND VEGETABLES.
Best 20 Swede Turnips, Russel MeCallum,
Redeque.
mes (weight) field earrota Charlea
ves.
Jest dozen table Carrots, Charles Ives
do Beets, do do
do Cabbagees, Hubert Compton
do Paranips, Charles Ives
do Onions, Russel McCallum
do 2 lbs Shallots âs
test half dozen Roots Celery, Francis Hen- |
deren
do Mangel Wurtzel, Chas. Ives
do Cucumbers do
do Pumpkin, Caleb Schurman
do Squash, Charles Ives
do Citrons, Ida Crabb
Best 3 Cauliflowers, Hubert Compton
Rest eollection of Horticulture, the growth
of the Exhibitor, U. Ives
Judges : â Alfred Craig, David Walker, J.
TP. McLellan.
FLAX MANUFACTURE.
Best half dozen Towels, Miss McRae
do Table Cloth, Mrs. D. Gillis
do Linen Sheets, Mra, J. Rogers
do. e sample Flax hackled, Mrs. D.
THAIS
HONEY.
Best Pot Honey not less than 10 Ibs. G.
Tanton
2nd do âWilliam Pickering
Judges-âArch Wright, W. C. Lea, Wm.
Pound, James MeNutt
FISH
Baker, South Shore
TEXTILE FABRICS IN WOOL.
Best 10 yards black full dressed Cloth, \irs.
H. Holland, Port Hill
2nd Mrs. J. Waugh, Lot 19
Fest do grey do, Wm. Jamison, Lot 19
_ Best do womenâs wear, plain, Msr.Ben, Beair-
| From that day Mr. Fletcher became a!
thorough-going temperance man.
sto
Best do, mixed, Fabric, Miss Sarah McKay
| 2nd do Mrs.G M, Price
flabit has an unae- |
Miss Wright
twilled, . James
Lot 17
Best do Fancy pie.
,
\
Waugh
Best do plain, Wm. Lai
Laird,
pel Chnpeting, Waugh,
Bedequ
eq
t 2nd do
' LONDON QUARTERLY
-uttart, Wm. Schur. |
âIsaac Ledstone, Centers }
Milla,
Archibald |
, may have one of the â Four Reviews â for |
| 1873; subscribers to all five may have two
| discount to clubs can be allowed unless the
| money is remitted direct to the publishers. |
'No premiums given to clubs.
: 3 Cases âCigars in Victoria & Flor Gertrude.
â
sce aaah t
2nd do Miss Stephen Black
Best Gentlemenâs plaid wool, Mrs. &. Cairns
2nd do Mrs. W. Newson
Best Ladyâs do Vrs. R. Cairns
2nd do Miss Sarah McRae
Best Horse Rug, Mrs. Ralph Schurman,
Bedeque Ă©
Best pair blankets, Mrs. Russel McCallum.
Bedeque
Best Hearth Rug, all wool, Mrs Caleb Taylor
2nd do Mrs, Jas, Ramsay
Best do any material, Caleb Schurman, Be-
deque
David Reid, Lot 19
Best door Mat, Miss Mary McPhail
JudgesâD, J. MeNutt, John McKenale,
George Crosby, L. B. McMillan.
FARMING IMPLEMENTS.
Best Threshing Machine and Shaker, John |
Dickieson, Bedeque |
Best iron Plough, Henry Saunders, Darn- |
ley
Best Moulding do do
Best Cultivator for growing crop G.
Muttart, Cape Traverse :
Best do prepare jand for crop, John Dick-
Best Set Harrows, Henry Saunders:
Best improved Fanners, John Dickieson
ieson
|
Best PotatoeâDigger it calculated to collect
potatoes in rows, A. Lockhart
JudgerâGeorge Compton, J.T. Murphy, |
Isaac Schurman
LEATHER.
Best Side Neatâs Leather, John McLennan, |
Bedeque |
Best Side Grain do do
Best Calf-skin do do {
Best Harness do do !
JudgeâGeorge Crabbe, Thomas Friazâe,
Peter Larkins.
CARRIAGES AND SLEIGHS;
Best Wagon, Wm. Tuplin
2nd do Wm. Pickering
Best Single Sleigh â
2nd best do John Hillman
FURNITURE
Best bedroom Furniture, George Doull
Best half dozen chairs do
JudgesâA. M, Wright, W.C. Lea. Wm.
Pound, James \cNutt
KNIT GOODS.
Best pair Menâs drawers, Miss Ives
â undershirts do
â 3 pair socks, Mrs B. Beairsto
â3 pair stockings, Mrs RK. Sehurman,
Bedeque
â 3 pairs winter mitts, Sirs.
Lot 19
â Collection Knit
Crosby, Freetown
Best piece of bead or needle work, Miss
Broad
2nd do Leon Gandet, Miscouche
Best Crayon painting, Miss Broad
est painting in water colors, Miss Hacker.
Goods Miss Louise
TRE BRET
D. |
}
Davia Reid, |
Quarterly Reviews |
EDINBURGH REVEW, Âą Whig.)
REVIEW, (Cor
servatine.)
WESTMINSTER REVIE\
. (Liherat.)
| BRITISH QUARTERLY REVIEW, (hean
qalisal.)
ANI
Blackwuoiâs kalugargl wagazine,
REPRINTED BR citi
x
Leonard Seatt Publishing Co.,|
140) Funron N.Y.
ee |
By arrangement with the English publish- |
ers who receive a hberal compensation.
These periodicals constitute a wonderful
| msicellany of modern page pt research,
and criticism. The cream of all European
books worth reviewing is found here, and
they treat of the leading events of the
world in masterly articles written by men
who had special knowledge of the matters
treated. The American Pnblishers urge
upon all intelligent readers in this country
a liberal support of the Reprints which
they have so long and so cheaply furnished
feeling sure that no expenditure for
literary matter will yield so rich a return
° that required fora subscription to these
the
Leading Periodicals of Great Britian,
TERMS .
About one third the price of the originals.
For any one Review, $4 00 per annuny
For any two Reviews, = i Ae a tame a
For anythree Reviews, 1000 â &
Foa all four Reviews, vo * «*
For Blackwood's Magazine, 400 â *
For Blackwood and one
o -gune
Review, |
Yor Blackwood and two
Reviews, 060 4 «6
For Blackwood and three
Reviews, 1300 « &
For Blackwood and four ,
Raviews, boo « &
PREMIUMS - i
New subscribers (applying early) for the
| year IS74 may have, without charge, the
| last volume for 1873 of such periodicals as
| they may subscribe for.
Or instead, new subscribers_to any two,
three, or four of the above penodicals,
of the â Four Reviews,â or one set of Blacks
wood's Magazine for 1873.
Neither premiums to subscribers nor
Circulars with further particulars may be |
had on application.
LEONARD SCOTT PUBLISHING Co.,
140 FULTON STREET, NEW YORK.
Dec. 17, 1873.
FIRE AND MARINE
INSURANCE.
IMPERIAL
Hire Lusurance Company.
OF LONDON,
Subscribed and Invested Capital ÂŁ1,965,000
Sterling.
| MONTREAL
Marine Assarance Company.
Capital and Cash Assots over $1,000,000
The above OFFICES being of UNDOUBT-
ED STANDING, guarantee perfect security | Deir 6.
and prompt payment of losses.
FENTON T. NEWBERY,
Agent for Prince Edward Island wot Quarter of 24 lnmons.
Chitown, Som, 2, 1878.
Aâ
Dr. J. Walkerâs California Vin-
egar Bitters are a purely Vegetable
preparation, made chiefly from the na-
tive herbs found on the lower ranges of
the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor-
nia, the medicinal properties of which
are extracted therefrom without the use
of Alcohol. âThe question is almost
daily asked, ââ What is the cause of the
unparalleled success of VineGArR bBir-
TERS?â Our answer is, that they remove
the cause of disease, and the patient re-
covers his health. They are the great
blood purifier and a life-giving principle,
a perfect Renovator and Invigorator
of the system. Never before in the
history of the world has a medicine been
compounded possessing the remarkable
qualities of Vingaar Birrers in healing the
sick of every disease manis heir to. They
are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic,
relieving Congestion or Inflammation of
the Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilions
Diseases.
The properties of Dx. WaLxkrnâs
Vinegar BITrers are Aperient, Diaphoretic,
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic,
Sedative, Counter-lrritant, Sudoritic, Altera-
tive. and Anti-Bilious.
Grateful Thousands prociatm Vix-
EGAR Birrens the most wonderful In-
vigorant that ever sustained the sinking
system. ,
No Person ean take these Bitters
according to directions, and remain long
unwell, provided their bones are not de-
stroyed by mineral poison or other
means, and vital organs wasted beyond
repair.
Bilious, Remittent and Inter-
mittent Fevers, which are so preva-
lent in the valleys of our great rivers
throughout the United States, especially
those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri,
Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan-
sas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande,
Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ro-
anoke, James, and many others, with
their vast tribytaries, throughout our
entire country during the Summer and
Autumn, and remarkably so during sea-
sons of unusual heat and dryness, aro
invariably accompanied by extensive de-
rangements of the stomach and liver,
and other abdominal viscera. In their
treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow-
erful influence upon these various or
gans, is essentially necessary. There
is no cathartic for the purpose equal to
Dr. J. WALKERâS Vinecar Brrrens,
as they will speedily remove the dark-
colored viscid matter with which tho
bowels are Joaded, at the same timo
stimulating the secretions of the liver,
and generally restoring tho healthy
functions of the digestive organs.
Fortify the body against diseasÂą
by purifying all its fluids with Vinecar
Bitrers. No epidemic can take hold
of a system thus fore-armed.
Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head-
ache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs,
Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour
Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Tast
in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpit:
tation of the Heart, Inflammation of th
Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kid-
neys, and a hundred other painful symp-
toms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia.
One bottle will prove a better guarantee
of its merits than a Jengthy advertise-
ment.
Scrofula, or Kingâs Evi], White
Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck,
Goitre, Scrofulous Infammations, Indolent
Inflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old
Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc.
In these, as in all other constitutional Dis-
eases, WALKERâS VINEGAR Birrers have
shown their great curative powers in the
most obstinate and intractable cases.
For Inflammatory and Chronic
Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit-
tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of
the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder,
thase Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases
are caused by Vitiated Blood.
Mechanical Diseases.âPersons cn-
gaged in Paints and Minerals, such as
lumbers, Type-aetters, Gold-beaters, and
Miners, as they advance in life, are subject
to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard
against this, take a dose of WALKzERâs VIN-
âGAR Bitters ocoasionally.
For Skin DiseaseÂą, Eruptions, Tet-
ter, Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples,
Pustales, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring-worms,
Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch,
Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors
and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name
or neture, are literally dug up and carried
out of the system in a short time by the use
of these Bitters. c
Pin, Tape, and other Worms,
lurking in the system of so many thousands,
are effectually destroyed and removed. No
system of medicine, no vermifuges, no an-
thelminitics will free the system from worms
like these Bitters.
For Female Complaints, in young
or old, married or single, at the dawn of wo-
manhoed, or the turn of life, these Tonic
Bitters display so decided an influence that
improvement is soon perceptible.
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when-
ever you find its impurities bursting throngh
the skin in Pimples, Exuptions, or Sores;
cleanse it when you find it obstructed and
sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is
foul ; your feelings will tell yon when. Keep
the blood pure, and the health of the system
will follow.
R. H. McDONALD & CO.,
Drnggists end Gen. Agts., San Francisco, California,
and cor. of Washington and Cheriton Sts., N. „.
Sold by all Drugaists and Dealers.
R. H. McDONALD & CO.,
Druggiste and Gen. Agta., San Francisco, California,
and cor. of âââââ and Chariton Sts.. N. Y-
, Beld by all iggists and Dealers.
August 25. 1873
TO THE LADIES!
A CARD.
connection
my with the
Arrangemen s
the
will perform
Appheation
as a limited number
first Quarter will commence on Monday,
TYRMS WILL BF as FOLLOW
Ii strt
mental Music per half hour's
duration, 0
mental Music, 1 hour's dura
TOBACCO & CIGARS 7 nana T io aS
_â
HE Sublscrib: | flers for sale (in Bond
a choice Lot oi
SMOKIMG AND CHLWEMG TOBACCO,
and three Cases CIGARS.
74 Boxes Tobacco, in Solace, Sanshine, Vir- |
ginian, Navy and Black Diamond.
i
}
i
Samples can be seen at Sale Raom
N. RANKIN,
Corner Water & Pownal Sts
Ch'town, April 13, 1874.
BOSTON STEAMERS,
SEASON 1874.
Organs, ard the
guaranteed.
1G
tion,
i â
Leasous in Vocai Music only roo
Instrumental
Lessons of an hour's
duration, with the first rudiments
of thorough Bass and Transposi-
i tion &c., 15.00
} Vocal and LIustrumental. half hour's
duration, 7.00
Lessons on the Organ, 20.00
Cabinet Organ and Melodeon, 15.00 |
No Pupi] will be taken for less than six
| months.
Orders taken for the
utmost
best Pianos and
Satisfaction is
S. N.
Ch town, June 29, 1874.
Wanted,
AT THE
ISLAND PARK HOTEL-
EARLE
s pe
irl
=
THE Steamers â Alhambra â 782 tons, and | Ten Girls as Waiters and Chambermaids,
* Caroll,â1372 tors,having both being thoroughly |
overhau'ed, aud fitted with very su Scler por
modation for passengers, will leave Boston during |
the season tigen every Saturday at noon, |
and retrroisg will leave Charlottetown alter-
nately every Thursday at five p. m., calling at
Halitax and Canso both ways.
For freight or passage apply to
i CARVELL BROS, Agents |
Châ'town, June 1, 1873.âa p is
Boone Bay Herring!
200 BBLS. split BOONE BAY HER-
RING. in prime condition.
FOR SALE BY
FENTON T. NEWBERRY.
July 18, 13, 1874.âtf
&e. Referencerequired, Wages, 8&
to $88% per month.
J. L. HOLMAN.
ummeraide, June 1, 18S74.âtf
JUST ARRIVED.
ER 8.8. Somerset, from Boston, and Sebr
Bonnibell from New Yorâ,
2,900 Barrels Flour & Cornmeal
\w
very cheap for cash, or at 3 months on approv-
ed paper.
hich will be sold in quantities to Traders,
OWEN CONNOLLY.
Oktows. a ute old stand, Dorchester St | St John, N.
wu, May 4,
100 bbls,
1 GREEN. BLL,
ÂŁ hae
SERVATION,
' vy:
Health, Strength, and Vigorous Old Age.
| Address to the Nervous, the Sedentary, the
Dyspeptic.and all those whose constitutions
| arid rem
} published by Dr. Laâ Me
Wesleyan |
Academy ceases at the expiration of
the Vacation, I purpose taking pupils dur-
ing the hours recently given them, vit:
from 9 a. m., till 2 p. m
ean be made sce that hours can be given to
suit the convenience of all pupils. t
end of every Quarter, pupils
before parents and friends.
must be made at once.
only can be taken
| APOTHECARIESâ HALL,
es
cumpee P. ket.
âOvVeCrmnment Service
THE fast-aill
: naa "S Schoon
py WinniÂą will run fortnightly
+3 auring tae present Se â4
E : : âeason, be.
»- twee } â 7
fi iy ââ W 1 Charlott Wh and Cag.
cum . Calling at Shedis
THOMAS COSTAIN Own
spacial "â er,
AgentsâHon. G. W. H I
} Pe nh. . . Wian, C .
ae â
». Forster, Shediac:
â
i
Carvell Brog.
Châtown, June 15, 1874
THA ROSH!
W LANDING,
Tea Rose Flour,
ON CONSIGNMENT.
FENTON T. NEWBERyY.
July 8, 1874.âtÂą
M
IS ANTTAY =
aS COTTOY WARP!
RL, ORANGE AND Wing
o's 3's to 16's.
JARRANTED to be FULL LEN
\ and weight, STRONGER AND oe
TER in every respect than any other E if
lish or American warp. i ang:
BEWARE OF IMi7T4TIONS. None is ge
! b 2 ls geny.
ine without our name on the labelsâ
sale by all dealers. -
WM. PARKS & SON
New Brunswick Cotton Mills, St Jobn N. B
Feb. 2nd, 1874. 1s
. Charlottetown Cenetery Compaay,
NOTICH
AS the Act of our Legislature, passed
ÂŁ& in June, 1872, enacts, that from and
after the first day of January, 1874, it shall
not be lawful, under certain penalties, to
| jute: any dead body in the Protestant burying
Ground, on the Malpeque Road, ip
the fifth ward of this City ; and as
the New Cemetry is now ready for
interment, application for burials there.
in must be made to the undersigned,
at his residence in Kent Street.
Plots for interments, 15 by 20 feet, equal
tol share of the CompaRyâs ground, ayail-
abie for $50,0n payment of two-thirds of
the purchase woney, and subject to another
call of $10.
Plots for individual interment $2 each.
Persons desirous of obtaining allotments
in the Cemetry, will please apply to
William Cundall, Esq., the Treasurer or
'
| the Company.
By Order
JOHN LEPAGE, Seceây.
I) 29, 1873.
HEALTH STRENGTH & VIGOR.
Just Published, Price One Shilling Stg.
SCIENCE OF LIFE; or SELF PRE
A practical Guide to
have become debilitated or relaxed from ig-
regularities of life, climate, age or disease,
or from over-taxed or abused energies,
whether of body or mind; with the Instruc-
tions fur the Treatment of all Disorders re-
sv'ting from the Logs of Nervous or Physical
Ă© 37 BEDFORD SQUARE, London.
An excellent { all who may
nanual for
â
e rn how to use life and not abuee it.â
f l State Gazelle
O su s of diet and the regula-
iofthe functions the advice throughout
On. LaâMert is the only regularly-qualitied
v icioner , for thirty years, has de-
} voted his entire attention to the cure of these
disorders
Colonles can be
correspondence,
led in secreey
Patients residing in the
successs t
fully treated by
lie will } âi
ules Willi be lorwar
and safety to any address.
THE SCIEN E OF LIFE may be had,
price one shilling stg., in Halifax, Nova
Scotia, J. H. Woodrich, Drug@ Store; Yar-
mouth, H. A. Parr; Pictou, Henry Ellott;
St. John, N.B,H. Chubb &Co., and in
CHARLOTTLTOWN, P. E. J., of Messrs. Brem-
ner Brothers. 44 Queen Street.
IMpoRTANT CatuTion.âThe public are
earnestly warned against a piracy of the
above work emanating from a so-called
âPeabody Institute.â Boston, which unblush-
ingly appropriates the titles of two works,
rt for thirty years
1874. ly.
JOYFUL NEWS
FOR THE AFFLICTED!
March 30th
LiFe of MAN BITTERS
~ANDâ
S40 7RRRA SEED 86PEEL PSEC EU NES,
CURES
Drops ! ! nu; Liver Complaint;
aundice ; Sv g of the Limbs and face;
Asthma what 1; Dyspepsia, Bili-
isness, Spitting of blood,
Bronchitis, * tleadsa Running Sores,
; | Stoppage of the Menses, Kidney
ind Grave! Complaint, MĂ© isels, Fevers, Sea
yess, Heert dise Pleurisy, Piles,
i > | ul i Bs o} ili s (iweedase, or Atl.
ae S; Coughs, Golds and
( , Dintl and Sore
, Pains Stoma Diairhaa,
ty Cho} { era Merbus, Tooth
ind Ague, & ns, Strains, Felons
is, f is, Bruises, Sore Eves,
B S Cuis and Cracked
Hands, &c.
hist 4 > e Pamplets, which
j ile by i generall
Agents at Charlottetown, T. DesBrisay;
lesale Agent, Wm. R. Watson.
BGA ~~ & (0
j ton lis, Co. N.S
D i
F978 WA âąâ TT ADT s5 0 *» As
ONZE BOX OF CLARKEâS B41 PILLS
3 arranted » all discharges from the
: Urinary Oryane 1 @ther sex acquired or
tutional ndâ Pains in the Buek.
sold in Boxes, $!.50 each, by all Chemiste and
i ut Medicine Vendo
le Proprietor, F. J. CRARKE
APOTHECARIESâ ENGLAND
EXPORT AGENTS.
and Co Ce
â 37 NewWwate Str
and Sous, 95 Farrip
na Sov
et I Sons
i a :
HALL, LINCOLN,
leman St.. London
eet, London.
don Street, London
i street. London.
ndallibe London Whelesale Houses
AGENTS IN CANADA.
real* *â1 Hiott sud Co,., Wholesale Draggists
Shapter eud (wen,
ltou. â~Winer and
jatho,N. BâH, I velcel
â, B, own and Ce.
ctober 13, 1873. ly
S..Avers, |
Rk THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.âSee
Deuteronomy, Cap. xii., verse 28.
bo oe
CLARKE Eâ
Yorld Famed Blood Mixtare.
Trade Markâ âBlood Mixtureâ
GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER & RESTORER
For cleansing and clearing the blood from
all impurities,cannot be too highly recommended
Lor Scrofula, Scurry, Skia Diseases, and Sores
of all kinds it is a never-failing and permanent
Tun
; cure;
It Cures Âą
Cares Utcerated §
Cares Ulcerated Sore
Cores Binckheads
Cures > rvy s ree
Cures Cancerous Ulears
{
(
(
âures Blood and Skin Diseases.
âures Glandular Swellings.
Nears the Glood from all impure Matter.
From whatever cause arising.
» this mixture is pleasant to the taste, and
warranted free from anything injurious to the
most delicate constitution of either «ex, the Pre
prietor solicits suflerere to give it a trial to test
its value
Thousands of testimonials from all parte,
Soldin Bottles $ 1,00 each, and in Cases, con-
tuining ix times the quantity, $4.00 eachâenfficien
to effect a permanent cure in the great mapority ot
long-standing cases, LY ALL CHEMIsIS and
PATENT MEDICINE VENDORS (throaghon
the world
Sole propric tor, F. J. CLARKE, Chemist,
LINCOLN, ENG-
LAND.
EXPORT AGENTS.
Cargoyne, Burbidges ard Cc., Coleman st. Loudon
| Newbury and Sons, 37 Newgate et., London}
' Barelay & Sons, 95 Farringdon st , London.
Sunger & Sons, Oxford at., London,
And all the Londou Wiolesale Houser
AGENTS IN CANADA.
Torouto.â Elliot & Co, Wholesale Druggiste
â Shapter and Owen.
'
| Hamilton. â Winer and Co.
Bb. âH1. L. Spencer.
Halifax. N. $.âAvery, Brown and