Examiner -- 1876-02-07 -- Page 01

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    — nee a Rae,

    SF tee

    POSTAGE PREPAID

    HE HXAMINER

    ; Se a et a a a

    VOL. NAVEL.

    ChE RLO'

    RELI

    UTETOWN,

    rei

    PRINCE EDWARD ESLAND,

    CO lie. i BS de RE

    MONDAY

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    Cheese ew | yer Ib 0.14 to O. 1
    { rome ‘ : O.05 to OUR
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    I THihu-
    ! f i manuel nd
    !
    R a . t . { tg
    sona bh mateé S,
    '
    . cits j onage of the
    g pub
    JOU CARTER
    I = s D ‘ a 7D
    ADJOINING THE POST OFFI KF,
    ALEBRtr —
    wad oe _ + - “ >) 7
    ee P. E. I.
    1 iDscriber has fits Lup the above Hous«
    i Z0od sty ©, and wishe to inform
    his hileuds, and thye public gene-
    Faby that he is pr pared
    lo accom sn)
    in

    Fausiert a Fermenent Boaiders
    ’ 8 Hoderate, Good Stabling

    "RICHARD
    Alverton, Sept. 13, 1876.

    on

    GLADNEY,
    Prvuprictor.

    PC TORN,

    'Prompi

    COONSS & WORTH

    IVD

    a

    PORTRY,

    ee ee ee

    A PSALM OF LIFE.
    HEART OF THE YOU

    rHE PSALMIsT.

    NG MAN SATII

    ~ * yas . ‘ Fell me not, in mournfal numbers
    Sk WATER STREE'L ce ghee a ane ‘
    0 * Life is but an empty dream!
    ~* P . ] ) ' - h ay] abt-nb na, P > @ £5 For the so tr is dead that slumbers,
    Waastaewe w VV oa? : Se ade . nX
    ar island, phe things are not what they seem.

    Life is real! Life is earnest!

    , & NELSON, And the grave is not its goal;
    * Dust thou art, to dust returnest,”
    IMPORPION & REPAIRER Was not spoken of the soul.

    SEWING | MACHINES.

    MacKENZIE & ie saa

    AND

    nN :

    Anctiqnee?s

    Se Antes
    wiharsd ee. ee

    on é » 7 a ama
    ” ts meen’

    eto . 1s iy

    8 ge ae le Gite ne TA Ci TAT)
    WILLIAM DODD,
    Commission Werehnnt
    LUCTIONVEER

    - QUEEN SQUAKLK,

    ant

    Cae iia

    Commission i
    GENERAL”

    ee
    a ea er Www wee WD ws Waste savewes

    F. M. CAMPBELL,
    (f#emerrmt Mierehnanzt
    Is—1LON AGENT,

    AGENTS.

    Re ee eee
    Wile Se a

    4

    ee). Bo
    MUCTLIONEER & BROKEN
    TRIMTY CORMER, GLORGETOWS, P. BL.
    AGENT FOR TUR
    Standard Lilie Insarance Ce.

    Sept. 1, 18738 ly

    HASZASBD SROS.,

    ‘oumisson Merchants & Auctionesrs
    FORWARDING, MANUFACTURERS,

    AND

    (eneranl Agents,

    Gi WATER STRUE EI".
    O ite Merchanis B ,

    Alan) até at acer ‘ Be a: a
    waoarsOvistown, ye aé* do
    J. BE. Haszanp, Honace Haszarp.

    I xZXCES
    I 3 Qu
    Teosrs. P s Farl \V KX Co ° Boston,
    i ry Lawson, Esq , Halifax. N. 8S.
    lon. Daniel Davies, Charlottetown, P. E. I.
    May 3, 1875.

    INSURANCE
    IMA TEULTIN Es

    JOURANCE COMPANY

    OF

    EDWARD ISLAND.

    OF DI]

    ours

    PRINCE

    BOARD RECTORS
    Bernt LonGwortn, Esq., President,
    ii Jas. DUNCAN,
    l L. C. Owen,
    lion. A. A. MCDoNaLp,
    } J. C- Pors,
    Puomas HaNnpnrattan, Esq.,
    GroKGE R. BEER. Es
    KISKS i AG Cf (
    Ce « i | ver W ‘ @
    vo we Ae Ss y
    W Ma 99 1875 y

    ST. LAWRENCE
    Marine nian 30.
    ARD ISLAND.

    PRINCE ED

    .
    atte

    Authorized Capital, - - $300,000,
    Subscribe Capital, - - 443,950.

    OF DIRECTORS
    President.

    BOARD
    ARCHIBALD KENNEDY,

    Jour F. RoBeERTSON,
    ARTEMAS LorD,
    Pr. W. Hvapean,
    Ravn B. PEAK#,
    Thomas MokRRIS,
    GreorGE D. ona RTH,
    en daily at their office, Exchange

    Risks tak

    “Pk EDER ICI W. HYNDMAN,

    Ch’town, March 22, "1875. ly Secretary

    IRIPERIAL
    Fire Lasurance Company

    OF LONDON.
    \ubseribed & Lnvested Capital.
    i a ™ if oO.
    The above Office being of UNDOUBT
    ED YSTAN DING, guarantees pertect

    and Prompt Paym nt

    HDETACHED DWELL IN .GS insured for
    Three Years on SPE-
    ADVANTAGEOUS
    TERMS.

    FEVTON T. NEWRERY,

    AGENT,

    security

    Cine = Wo, Or

    CIALLY

    S74. ly

    LIVERPOOL & LONDON
    AD C’.OBE

    USNURAMCE CORAM

    AND LIFE.

    Jan. 18,

    itiE

    FIRE

    , Ist Jan’y., 1874, $21,628,356

    er Gener-

    fuvested Funds

    Deposited with Receiy
    al of Canada,

    Other
    of Canada,

    162,800

    Jnvestments in Dominion

    367,091
    AIR RATES
    & Liberal Setilemects.

    Jusut ance
    vate Residences,
    Farm Proper

    Que, Three or more years,

    Household Furniture aud

    ies, for

    Fates.

    Street, Charlotte

    At Reduced

    -Gireat George
    . &

    R. R. FITZGERALD, Agent
    | Ch’town, July 27, 1874.—6m

    Ottice
    Lown, l

    tOWD.

    Soria Side Queen Square.

    against Fire effected upon Pri- |

    Not enjoyment, and not sorrow,

    Is our destined end or way;
    But to act, that each to morrow
    Find us further than to-day.
    Art is long, and Time is fleeting
    And our hearts though stout and brave

    Still, like muffled drums are beating,
    Fuueral marches to the grave.

    the world’s broad field of battle,

    In the bivounce of life,

    s¢ not like dumb, driven catt
    Be ahero in the strife!
    > z eel pl san

    ! ead } st | yits de

    i ? » T it ¥ r ' ies li

    I Wi ra God o’erhead!
    Lives of great men all remind us

    We can make our lives sublime,
    And, departing, leave behind us

    Footprints onthe sands of Time ;—
    » that
    ling o’er lif

    A forlorn

    perhaps another,
    main,
    and shipwrecked brother,

    *s solemn

    Seeing shal) take heart again
    Let us, then, be up and doing,
    With a heart for any a
    } Still achieving, still pur suing

    Learn to labor and to wal.

    L ITER RATU RE.

    SONAR MAA

    MARO U" S
    |OR, THE

    ARL. 1 IND ;
    SPRING,

    LONG
    CHAPTER XI!

    | She released her arms and fell
    A sudden,
    | relieved the tension of her brain.
    an infant, He
    difficulty in lifting her,and seating her

    MOSS

    forward,
    weeping. violent gush of tears
    now passive as

    the window-seat by his side, his

    | surrounding her. While she lay, weeping
    i
    | sobbing on his bosom, ‘ark and stormy

    thoughts swept through it. All his own

    dreams of happiness were fled with hers.

    Che tlow that severed her from Marcus

    must sunder the bond that bound hm to

    Katy. This would be the inevitable re.

    ult. Then his friendship, his ardent, dis-

    interested, trusting friendship; what a

    leep, deep, irremediable wound it had re
    Never more could he trust in hu-
    man Virtue or truth, Never more
    ip his heart in the heart of another.

    ceived !

    garne:
    His
    ot southern blood boiled at the thought of

    passive endurance of the most ungallantin-
    Peliam was right. The
    was unworthy to

    sult. son of a
    ferryman
    mate with them,or any honourably descend

    Then

    and overseer
    ed individuals
    led him.

    that letter?
    he grasped it as the drowning

    He seized hold of this doubt,

    man the twig
    tbat floats on the stream.

    Suddenly, as if ty a simultaneous emo

    tion, the expression of Florence’s counten-
    ance Changed.

    ‘Brother!’ she exclaimed. ‘Let me
    | think moment. Wariand !
    Jan he be the man who has thus cruelly.
    ight throught the heart ?
    Brother,

    one Marcus

    pitilessly cut me!
    (his cannot be his handwrighting
    never did.

    he never wrote it. I know he

    How could 1 believe him guilty of

    such a
    I have done him injustice.
    | know

    | cowardly blow ?
    | Oh! I bave greatly wronged him;
    { feel I have.’
    tier countenance lighted up gloriously as
    she spoke.
    I do

    incapable of

    believe you are right.

    this

    * Fiorence ;
    Wark
    Whe
    togethe

    ighter and purer, | feel with you, the im-

    ind is baseness.

    r, during which his character grew

    found no}
    on |

    . ’
    rms stiii

    ‘ould be indeed have written |

    ,

    |
    wild frolics of writing
    |

    ]
    }
    }
    |
    }

    | Was a mere C

    Se

    feelings towards

    mind the ré inism of thought. By a

    public

    public act of vengeance, he would only
    blazon the affur to the world, and make his
    sister's name a byword, to be bandied from

    lip to lip with mockery and reproach. Blood

    would not effect the impression. It would
    only give ita more hideous

    ‘Yes to himeelf
    right.
    be avenged
    der he looks down

    glare.
    , muttered he
    There are some wrongs that cannot
    and this is one
    upon us,
    | worshipped him as if he were some eastern

    It is no wone

    another: *! Liberty of

    she is

    a4 [ent Swe

    her tuilette. Though her head throbbed

    almost to ed her tires

    lation of her

    bursting, she allio

    womin to twist the wild undu

    tre-ses around her finges,

    to do, When she looked in the glass and

    saw her pallid cheek and altered connten

    ance, she blushed, indignant at her own

    the life came back to her
    Delaval met her at the,

    weakness, and

    cheek and eye.

    | door of the breakfact room with a brotherly |

    when we have |

    upon her.

    ;

    divinity. Graciaus, Florence !’ he exclaim
    ed, walking backwards and forwards, like |
    ia caged lion, ‘I wouid pive Wood Liwn
    pe all the lawns in creation, if | owned
    them, thit i had never abetted you in your
    those foolish letters,

    and stil more do | mourn your infatuation

    in assuming that romantic and unheard,of

    | disguise,

    | for not proving a better guardian to your | through, which she scarcely
    | 5 - } -

    reckless youth

    gant and presumptuous; we have forgot-
    ten our own selfrespect.’

    ‘Do not say we, George,’ said Florence
    ina tone of deep and touching humility.

    ind mine alone be

    Most bitterly have I

    ‘ Mine alone is the folly:
    the punishment. res
    pented for my girlish forwardness ;
    hild then, a creature of impuls.
    and passion. Alas! 1 am still the same

    impulsive, impassionate being, untaug

    | experience and undisciplined by reason.’

    | ness,

    Master experience

    i
    }
    {
    }
    |
    i
    |
    j

    |
    |

    '

    |
    j
    |

    sudden doubt start- |

    | imprudent girl that I am.

    n I think of the years we have passed |
    | not caution y

    !
    possibility of bis having committed an act |

    like this,
    him. Where are his letters? Let us com-
    pare the handwriting, word with word, let
    | ter with letter. If it b-
    tect it at once.’
    With an eager hand, Florence opened
    precious rosewood cabinet, and drew

    forgery, I can de~

    her
    forth the packet, bound with a cerulean
    ribbon, She shivered as she handed it to
    him, and her touch was like contact with
    ice,

    ‘Wait one moment, brother,’
    this
    in doubt

    for the word.

    she cried ;
    is an awful moment.
    Doubt! how I desire mysel!

    | waver.’
    Delaval, impatiently snatched a letter
    ; from the parcel, unfolded it by the side of

    and carefully compared them word with word |
    letter with letter. Florence leaned over |
    | his shoulder, bending her head lower and

    darker, as the irresiste

    growing darker and
    ible conviction forced itself upon her, that
    they were written by the same hand. De-
    laval raised his eyes one moment to hers)

    stern, yet burning glance.

    ‘No, this is no forgery,’ he cried.
    circumstances to which this letter refers are
    known only to him, Patterson, and myself
    Even if the characters did not prove it with
    fidelity, the contents would be suf-

    such

    | ficient.

    |on this very subject. Here are the very |

    versed with him. I never breathed it to
    another human being.
    repeat the same to Patterson. these
    are my own words, and this is his own hand-
    And, look Florence, the self-same

    Yes;

    writing.

    it. He got it at the North. We visited |
    the paper mill together where it was made |
    and both of us ordered some with our in-
    itials pressed on the corner of the sheet.
    Florence, he is a villian.
    a doubt is swept away.

    He is a@ most con-
    summate villian.’

    recall my own rash words.
    ed his naked heart to another not to me.
    I, I have done the whole.
    his delicacy, alienated his affection, and
    with my own hand destroyed his love. And
    yet, she added, with a kindling counten-
    ance, ‘ how dare he attempt to transfer me
    to another? How dure he insult me so
    coldly, so deliberately? This I never, nev-
    er can forgive.’

    {
    | While Florence was speaking, the truth
    | of what she had previously said came forc-

    ibly into the mind of Velaval. This was a

    private letter, not intended for their per-
    rusal; it was the expression of one man's

    words I myself uttered the last time I con- |

    I requested him to |

    | have outraged |

    We have the power to vindicate |

    | no one else in the

    }

    Leave me stil] | self in darkness as with a mantle.
    | knew not when night came on, for Dela- |

    My faith in him shall not |

    | Lewis was absent ona visit to a

    ‘Experience !’ cried Delaval with bit

    but I never could dis-
    cover his merits. lle warns us of the past
    but we know that already; His |

    I want

    imp throw:

    ill its rays backward a guide for
    the fut

    Cicero!’

    ure; and such a
    Delaval threw himself on the windowseat
    thoug
    ind deliberate op the course he must adopt

    and ende:voured to compose his hts

    Che only way was for Florence to retur

    ht by

    n the }

    ]
    }
    }

    I ought to be shot this moment,

    We have made him arro-



    but I}

    }
    |
    j
    }
    }

    ter, | into the open

    }
    ‘Moralists boast of the great world |
    | yore returned to its former
    }in her bosom.

    j
    {

    future? Shade of |

    '
    }
    }

    '
    '

    letters of Marcus with every memorial of his |

    false love. with a haughty and po itive re-
    jection, without any allusion to the disgr \

    ful letter which had providentially reve z
    ed his
    modest

    character.
    gentle,

    true 3ut moty sweet.

    loving Katy!

    j tachment;

    |
    -}
    |

    }

    ‘ow could |

    tie tear her fron his heart—that warm.noble

    generous heart, where she was so sacredly
    The sister of that

    would

    enshrined
    ed brother
    His !

    as that perfumed bluesbound packet was

    false, reject-
    never consent to be
    letters would be returned

    wife. just

    ibout to be; the rings with which he had
    the
    had clasped round her snowy arms —they

    encircled her fair fingers bracelets he

    would all come back, mocking him with the
    memory of his past happiness, the thought

    of his brightest hopes. Wood Lawn would

    | had thought would remain on her finger

    |

    | emit

    henceforth be a desert to him, the whole |

    world a wilderness
    ‘You are unhappy, brother;

    taking his hand in

    ge nly

    you so,’ said Florence,

    beth of hers, and laying her cheek
    upon it

    me. ]

    this on myself. I feel
    late.’

    Delaval drew her closer to him. She had
    been rash and imprudent
    that before; but he could not sige he:
    now.
    lire a love, too intense a compassion,

    He felt too deep a tendernes

    ~at thus in silence—she weary and exhaust-

    |
    ed by her passion and her tears, thankful, | be half of the Opposition,

    ia her abandonment and delu-ion, th. ¢ one

    friend was left to -ywpathise with and care and accepted with gr

    for her, one breast on which she could pil

    low her aching head and solace her wound-
    ed heart.

    ‘You had better go to your
    ence,’ said he gathering up her dishevelied
    hair and smoothing it back from her shou!
    ‘Some one

    ders might come in.

    lie down. Your bead must ache. I need

    yu not to reveal the cause of

    your agitation, You have too much pride
    to betray “ay

    ‘Thank you for the
    by it,’ said she, with a sudden flish of spirit

    and thank you for your tenderness, your

    » warning ; I will profit

    sympathy, and your promise too—dear dear

    George—oh ! how I love you for it!
    world to love but you
    now, for I cared but for one besides,’ she

    added in a low voice as she
    ment,
    Alone in
    self on the bed, and drawing the fringed
    curtains closely around her,

    She

    val had told Letty not to have her dist
    Mrs.
    friend —a

    as she was ill and wanted nosupper.

    | fortunate circumstance for Florence and the

    lower, her lately illumined countenanance |

    and she read the same conviction in that |

    |
    ‘The |

    |

    the crumpled paper he held in in his hand | mystery of her grief.

    ‘Is that you, Letty ?’ asked she, hearing
    | footsteps entering, and perceiving the

    glimmer of a light through the curtains.
    ‘ Yes, Miss F.orence, it’s me, shall [ bring |
    your supper?’

    ‘No; come here Letty.’
    down the light, and came softly toward the |
    bed, peeping through the curtains.

    ‘Letty,’ said Florence, ho'ding out her |
    hand, ‘I spoke crossly to you, I did not
    know what I was saying; you must forget it.’

    ‘Oh Miss Florence,

    | had no business to stick my ugly nose in
    | your matters, any way—that I hain’t. |

    I knew that he was to address him |

    }

    }

    |

    paper, too, with his cyphers stamped upon | letting them drip over her black

    wish I pull out my tongue, I do—saucy old |
    | thing. :

    ‘Undress me Letty, and let me sleep,
    You don’t know how sick 1 am.’

    Tenderly, as if she was fondling an infant,

    night’s repose, which she fe:red would not
    visit her pillow
    her rich, tangled, tear-moistened Iccks, |
    fingers,
    in blacker, shining curls.

    ‘Thank you,’ said Florence, suffering her |

    | head to fall languidly on the pillow. ‘That

    | is soothing.
    Every shadow of | Letty.
    | again.

    He has reveals |
    | distance remained perfectly still.
    It has the torrent’s smooths |

    |

    | she cried out,

    You
    L will try never to be cross to you
    Don’t say anything.’

    are a good creature,

    Letty placed the lamp in the chimney,

    ‘ No,’ she replied, with bloodless lips, ‘ 1| where it could not shine on the face of her |

    young mistress, and seating herself at a

    too was still.
    ness after ithas dashed over the rocks--
    the lull of the tempest after its fury is
    spent. She slept—but it was not rest.
    Every now and then she would start up with
    a faint scream, look wildly around ker,

    close her eyes and fall back again.

    that letter !’
    Letty sat in herskaded corner, and pon-
    dered these things in her heart,’

    |

    She is not to blame ; Lonly am. Rash, |
    | have brought
    it now when it is too |

    |
    }
    }

    | the neck of Rosa,
    }
    | ite gem.

    nis |

    '

    '

    | ~

    i tere wane} ler task was finished; the few decisive

    «| and shuddered
    ‘You must not give up Katy for | a

    He had told ber ance,

    | sigh and pine, for an ingrate, unworthy

    | her

    kiss. He was rejoiced to see her look so |
    much like herself, and his own stern. joy,
    less countenance brightened as he grzed
    But after the first greeting was
    over, and she believed heraelf unnoticed,
    ie remarked the gradual subsiding of her
    spirit. The colour all went away from her |

    cheek

    and she sat with weeping lashes, |

    that threw a deeper pallor on her pensive |

    fuce,
    ‘Come and take a ride on horseback with

    me, sister,’ said he when the breakfast was |

    j
    }

    touched. 1}

    unt to show you what wonders I have done

    on the plantation since [ have taken the

    reins in my owa hand. ‘That fine jaunt

    had with Arnold’s negroes was an excels

    nt apprenticesh Pp for re. They thought
    [ was a jewel of a master.’

    Florence appreciited ber brother’s mo-
    She

    She would |

    tive, and gladly accompanied him.
    wanted to get away from herself.
    have gone to the world’s end if she could
    luuve reached it. It

    was astonishing how

    ner life came back to her, when she went |
    air on a light-footed pony. |

    Phe haughty spirit that sustained her of |

    dwelling-place
    She would not weep, and

    {a woman's generous, self.
    rgetting love. She

    though al

    uncalculating,
    would rend him from
    her heart, \l of the quivering nem-

    were torn away with the image it en-
    shrined.

    She had one task to perform which she
    lreaded

    mementoes of

    but would not defer. To gather

    ill the her ill-directed at.~

    to return his letters und pledges
    to destroy the faded flowers she |}
    She took
    from her finger a ruby ring, the token of

    ot love;
    had been treasuring as holy relics.
    his plighted faith, and drew through it the
    golden chain which he had passed round
    The ruby was her favour,
    [ts glowing hue heightened the
    iark splendour of her beauty,
    ippropriate emblem of love.

    looked for

    and was an

    Now, as she }

    the last time on a pledge she |

    9}
    even under the dark coffin-lid, it seemed to

    a bleeding radiance, and she could al- }

    most fancy ut t owed its crimson tint to drops

    of blood. he letters she would not read. |

    lest a nas ir of pages so fraught with

    fascination should soften her purpose, and |

    untit her for the stern duty before her

    words written; the packet sealed directed

    ind ready to be sent. Ther she sat down

    at the blank before her,

    THE PEOPLE'S ANSWER.
    Tur victory at North Renfrew c ial
    certainly be exaggerated as to its import.

    It was probably as straight a fight |

    | between the two parties as has ever been |

    too en- |
    Phey |

    | upon the fact that this policy

    wrapped her- |

    don't say that. 1!

    room, Flor- 5

    (-o and |
    |

    fought. The electors had the advantage

    at issue discussed
    and by Dr. Tupper on
    and

    bound to say that the issue was presented

    of having the questions

    by the first Minister

    we are |
    ‘eat frankness :—‘* We |
    are here toxni ght,’ ’ said Mr. McKenzie, in
    achburg —‘ Dr.

    being

    his speech at Bre

    “ and

    Tupper
    a distinguished |
    of the Conservative party, I the
    the Government—to
    ‘discuss in your presence the great public
    be

    which

    myself—he
    leader

    “leader of reform

    ‘‘questions of the day, and it will for
    ‘you to judge in the coming contest,

    ‘ of the gr

    at political parties has the best
    ‘right o: is the bes
    ‘the a And as if |
    to localise the issue more directly. the first |

    tqu lified to administer
    ffiirs of the Dominion,”

    Minister entered into an elaborate defence |

    'of his railway policy, dwelling especially

    | have
    through which the railway is to run,

    left the apart. |

    her own room, she threw her. |

    }

    |

    urbed, | Kenzie would to-day give something

    would ma

    county of Renfrew,
    and
    apparently concious of the strength
    appeal and the

    terially benefit the

    then,
    of his certainty of its suc-
    cess, he said :--‘ I have placed before you
    ‘fully and fairly the policy of the Governs

    ment inregard to the railway, and upon |
    ‘the merits of this policy I ask the electors
    ‘‘to pronounce

    We

    approval by voting for |
    no doubt Mr. Mc-
    if he |
    could but withdraw this bold submission |
    of his policy to the arbitrament of the }

    ‘ Murray.” have

    | people of North Renfrew. Taking the
    issue as placed before the electors by |

    | himself,

    | approval.

    The negro put |

    |

    stands condem-
    ned as unfit to govern the country, and his |

    his Government

    is pronounced to be unworthy of |
    Two hundred and ten of a ma-
    jority for White, is the crushing answer to |}

    policy

    the Premier's appeal. We await anxiously
    to see it accounted for upon some other

    | hypothesis than the influence of Ultramon-~
    tanism:— Montreal Gazette.

    _-_om +

    INDIA’S VICEROY.

    Loudon Letter in New York Tribune.

    Lord Northbrook has shown ability in
    but not ability of the highest or}
    a very high kind, He is a good |

    , India,
    even of a

    /man of business, laborious, occupying him- |
    self far too much with details, and withs |

    out ¢

    Letty prepared her young mistress for the | away without leaving a mark on the great |
    'an entire change from soft, succulent food

    She combed and brushed |

    }

    | lyre in his eal and

    / many and has dwelt everywhere excepting
    | in the land of his birth—if indeed England

    Florence |

    | when his uncie, then Sir Henry Bulwer,

    ‘rapidly and finishing his subordinate career

    Once |
    ‘the letter—oh! Marcus— |

    , matic service, embassador excepted, though

    capacity for great things. He will go}

    Empire he has ruled for four years.

    Lord Lytton, who is to succeed him, has
    been pretty much everything in the diplo-

    He was born with a. |
    mouth, a mimic
    some brains in his |
    head, Of all Englishmen he is the one of the |
    least English. He was educated in Ger- |

    he is not yet 45.
    silver-gilt spocn in his

    be the land of his birth. There may be
    people yet living in Washington who re-
    member him, for he was attache of the

    British Legation there, before he was 18,

    was Minister. He has since served in |
    most of the capitals of Europe, rising |

    as Secretary of Legation in two years in
    Paris, whence he went to Lisbon, in com-
    pany with our friend Mr. Moran, as En- |
    voy. He had been personally popular, his

    name had become known in literature, his

    Florence rose at the usual hour, and suf- | drawing-room tables; he is a lord having
    fered Letty to linger with usual care over! succeeded his father, the first Baron, in

    | poems are found upon the most eng

    as she was wont)

    ;at a later
    | Turkey is reserved,
    | saving the point of honor.
    ' in fact toa formal renunciation of the old

    | them with the sword.

    | when he acquiesced in the abrogation by

    | fairest

    | earth,

    | tans advocate annexation to England,

    | property might be carried out to the latter

    | past year in Great Britain and America,

    | shorthorns :

    | tfty-seven saies

    | remain

    ' tne number of

    | £87 each.

    | for the whole lot was £510 19s.
    ‘remarkable was a sale heid

    | thirty-four animals

    | whic

    FEBRUARY 7, 1876.

    1873; he has married the neice of an Earl,

    he is uderately rich, he is accomplished,
    he knows the routine of official duties, and
    he has given as little evidence of fitness
    for the great post to which he is now called
    as the late Lord Mayo himself; whenee,
    probably, Mr. Disraeli’s belief that he will
    achieve an equally remarkable success. It
    is just possible that the Prime Minister's
    love of paradox has led him astray.
    two men could be more alike than Lord
    Mayo, with his robust, slow-minded, com-
    mon sense, and the versatile man of the
    world who is known in literature as
    Meredith, and in diplomacy as a brilliant
    failure. As he has tailed in Europe, which
    he knows thoroughly, more

    likely than that he should succeed in India,

    Owen

    nothing is
    of which he krows nothing.
    > —- - + eo

    THE EASTERN QUE STION.
    lus latest telegram on the Eastern ques-
    tion is to the effect that the British Cabinet
    to Count
    er the name of reform, dethrones

    has assented Andrasey’s note
    which, u
    the dominant race and dissolves the Otto
    A right to consider
    stage and in conjunction with
    apparently by way of
    This

    man Empire. details

    amounts

    | policy of England on the E:stern question

    land an abandonment of Turkey to re r fate.

    ; No doubt it is in that point of view that

    the decision of the British Cabinet is con

    lemned by a certain portion of the press
    including the Morning Post, whieh in for-
    mer days was Lord Palmerston’s personal
    But it is

    organ. easier to find fault with

    ‘ the action of the Government than to show

    that it could have taken any other course
    Turkish Province-
    and what is more to

    The insurrection in the
    is evidently spreading,

    ' the purpose, it is clear enough that Austria
    and Russia have made up their minds if
    their proposals are resisted to give effect to
    fiow can England
    with barely troops to garrison her own
    shores attempt to throw herself across the
    path of two great military powers on the
    Continent? It is true that the present
    Government and their party held different
    language when in Opposition, and that they |
    are doing a sort of penance for the cons

    |tumely they heaped upon Mr Gladstone

    by Russia of the Treaty of Paris, a stroke |
    of fate which he was equally powerless to |
    So the book ot Turkish history is |

    It contains some stirring pages of

    arrest.

    closed.

    | nothing but the annals of a ont

    ' horde, corrupted but never civilized, and
    which has for four centuries cursed with
    barrenness, darkness and misery,
    and most famous

    some of |
    regions of the |

    the Western Provinces ; a party of the Cre-
    and
    it seems as though the programme of the
    late Czar for the disposal of the Sick Man's

    and the inutility of the Crimean war mark. |

    ed by the severest irony of fate. — Zoronto

    Nation.

    | sult.

    AGRICULTURAL.

    SHORTHORN CATTLE.

    Shorthorn sales are becoming almost as
    “sensational ’’ as those of thoroughbred

    | yearlings were a short time since, and it is
    |}no uncommon thing for an animal of the

    Jates or Boolk blood, each of which strain
    has its respective admirers and even cham-
    pions to be sold at a price «qual to thar
    which a Derby winner would have realizea
    a few years ago. From comparitive tables
    of the resuits of these sales during the

    which are published in the almanse of the
    Agricultural Gazetie, it appears that the
    total amounts realized at these sales were
    almost the same for both countries. ‘The
    returns refer only to the sales of “pedigree
    ’—that is to say of animals in
    seribed = in the Herd Book, which is fo;
    cattle, and the Stud Book which is for turf
    and from them we learn that while the
    sixty-five sales held in Great Britain
    yie'ded a total of £228 088 16s. the
    } in America amounted to
    £204.790 6s. 10d. Each of the American
    sales amounted upon an wverage, to £3 593
    a8 against £3,509 for each of the Engitsi,
    sales; but the advantage does not in reality
    with the American breeders, fo:
    though eight fewer sales were held there
    animals disposed of was
    within ten of those sold at home. The
    2,529 =horthorns sold in America averaged
    £7% each, and the 2.599 sold in Great Britain
    The largest total realized at
    any one sale was £42019 163., for which
    84 animals belonging to the late Mr. Torr,
    a Lincolnshire farmer, were disposed of in
    September. 'he highest price given at
    this sale was 2,168 guineas. and the average
    “till more
    in Scotland a
    week previously, when thirty-nine animals
    the property of Lord Dunmore, fetched
    £26,223 15 This gives an average of
    | £672 83s. for each animal, one of which
    |} went for 4500 guineas. At a third sale
    fetched more than
    £10,000, and several others took place at
    h the total was over £7,000 and the
    average was over £200) The most success-
    ful sale held in America was that at which |
    shorthorns fetehed £18,534 154. 5d., with
    an average of £402 19s. 9d. forthe whole
    number, One of them reaching £3225. At
    two other sales in America toials of rather

    No,

    ‘ still larger supply in the lower strata,
    ' the drum and trumpet kind, but otherwise

    Crete is serving herself, as well as | -

    TODS CETL. ea

    { ORRENPONDEAC i

    CITY WATFR-WORKS

    City Pres

    :—-It is now abhor it eight
    mouths ~ince I addresss d you on the subject
    of Water Supply. It was pleasing to observe
    the unaui mity of the Press in rousing the
    public attention to a sense of our critical
    position. The effect of that appeal was

    GENTLEMEN

    manifest at the August elections when the
    advocates of a suitable Water Supply
    Were triumphantly returned, reversing the
    | decisions of previous elections. It was
    generally believed the right men were re-
    turned; that a new reyime would be ins
    }augurated; and that prompt action
    | would be taken in currying out the well

    understood wishes of the p ople) in procurs
    ing a liberal supply of water tor the domes.
    tic and public requirements of our inere
    ing population,

    Wbetuer the air of the Civ

    iss

    ic Hall is suf-

    ficientiy pure, or the Crvie chairs pOss@ss a
    sodorific hh flaence, i t pparent But
    |} there can be no doubt t}

    flat if the lea ing

    questions decided ut t e polls, had been
    the extension of the license system, on the
    levying of additional taxes, no time would
    have been wasted in the d scharge of such

    stlOns lt is believed, h wever, that
    this Worship t Mayor, and several of the
    Councillors are strongly in favor of the
    prosecution of this important public work;
    yet Ibis patent lo every one that either
    their actions as a body betrays no anxiety

    on the subject; or that the work is beyond
    their c ‘dP pe ion, or that they do not
    feel inclined to attend toit. The result of
    the wy Six months will prove the correct.
    ness of one of these infe) ences,

    It is well known that two schemes
    before the public, vz: Winter River

    were

    and

    n artesian well, Both head thei: advocates,
    Ihe former was Obj-cied to on the vround
    ofthe great engineering difficulties im the
    n the way of utilizing that vineeethie tre-
    menuous Cost as compured with the re-
    -Ources Of the city—the heavy taxation
    Which wouid surely follow and the insuf-
    lickency Of supply to meet requirements,
    fhe latter Was opposed becuse our strate
    had not been bored to ascertain if water

    could be and
    uaranlee
    gq ialities of

    rtained by

    obtained in suflicient volume
    use if suthecies could g

    its good quality. The good
    the first scheme
    anengipecr from [uifax. His estimates
    for construction had been tested by Messrs,
    Shanly & Boyd, and proved to be ridicul-
    ously low. In favor of the latter, it was
    urged that being close at hand it would
    save an enormous outlay, in comparison
    with the other, for conduit pipes, tunnel,
    uqueducts, filters, costly dims, embank-
    ments, damage to lands und purchase of
    water priviledges that Ss similar stata had

    becu it ne One

    had been asc

    | in Oluer Countries ylelded an abundant sup>

    ply of pure water, there Was eVery reason
    tv believe ours would not be an exception,
    that our abundant springs which found ae-
    cess eveyrwhere to the surface, indicated a
    and
    that to test the question 4 very small out-
    lay wouid suffice,

    Under these circumstances the path of
    duty was plain enough The first scheme

    had been experimented on, co ting the ( City

    over $900.00. If the second shouid be sue.
    cesstul the sre could be no qte-tuion as to
    the immense savings. Did they decide on
    iMporting a bore: or in advertising fora
    practical man to come at once and coms
    mence the work ? There was no necessity
    toreven this effort. Before Mayor Renkin
    left the chair, he received .an otter troma
    gentieman in Pictou offering to undertake

    the work. This information was laid before
    the new Council. Did they acee tit? J
    im ashamed to hig ar that they ‘not only
    reject: d this offer, but refused to entertain

    any propositions funhane 10 the same re-
    “onth after month was squandered
    1: doing ——— and late in the fall an Ens
    rineer was brought from St. John whose
    first and chiet work was to go out and sur-
    vey Winter River! and sub equently two

    or three streams nearer the city. It was
    then arranged that it would be necessary to
    i a-certain tie iowe-t level of these streams
    in the driest season of the summer, (as if

    no one could supply that —_ rmation on
    } the spot.) which would virt ya Emig the
    question a he months’ hoist ! and the farce
    was ended i must, however, give them
    credit tora bitof Civic Engineering. In

    order to get rid of the artesian weli ques«
    tion, it was neatly folied red taped,
    and handed over to the E iwineer to
    repo! t on, in plain words, inciwid
    an ‘ f After all this unnecessary
    delay what is likely to be his answer? but
    something in this style, * Gentlemen, if you
    Wish to a-certain the: ut ot boring I ad.
    Vise you to

    It the City Council had really desired in.
    formation of the most reliable kind r garde

    ing the p ybable success of an artes an

    weil where could they obtain « more trust.
    worthy adviser than the celebrated Geolo-
    c+. Daweon, L.. L.. D, F. E.G. 8,

    G. 8.7 hose

    Local Govern-
    il Structure

    report to Gur

    ment, in 187], on the

    Geologic

    ind Mineral Resources of this Island says,
    page 34 ‘ The fissures of the red sand-
    stone atiord, in many paces, copious springs

    OF exceiient Water ihils
    possibiuity of obtaining a
    by boring. As

    and Suggests the
    iditional supplies
    the supply of water at

    present very deficient,
    erving Of con-ideration whether
    mizht not be advantageously
    Yhe stratigraphical
    rene in the vicinity of
    ty In favorable to success, and borings
    of moderat would be necess

    Churiottetown is at
    it is des
    this means
    Nsei to Ine
    irrany

    the c

    crease it

    it of the rock-«

    e de pth, such as

    saiy to test the quantity that could be obs
    taned, are executed in Nova Neotia at
    about $! to $2 per foot Othat the expense

    wouli be -mail, and supplies of water of

    great importance to (he com!ortand health
    of the citizens might be obtained.’’ The
    fact is patent to all, that our City Coungil

    has given the very best exempliticatien of
    “OW NOT TO DO IT.”
    In the meantime the risk
    the increase. Our soil is stil! receiving its
    quota of stagnant drainage table for
    miasmatic exbalations in the hot and damp
    weather of next summer and autumn.
    Our wells are -upplied with polluted drains
    age, and our rate of mortality is alarmi ngly

    from fire is on

    suit

    more than +10), 000 were obtained for thirty. | 0m the increase, cau-ed by fevers and
    five and for thirty three lots, the average | other diseases which are clearly traceable
    in the two cases being slightly over and | to the want of proper drainage and an

    under £300. These figures may be left to
    speak for themselves, but it is impossible
    to avoid the suspicion that purchasers will |
    not, in the long run, get tie bestot the
    | bargain.— Pall Mall Gazette.

    Seep Feepinc.—Sheep require during
    the long winter, some soft, pultaceous food
    to take the place of succulent grasses. |
    More diseases and losses are occasioned by

    to dry bay than from too close herding.
    though the latter is often very injurious.
    The best English feeders do not suffera |
    tithe of the losses of the average of ours.
    They feed roots which may be considered |
    grass laid up for winter use; they also feed

    | much oil cake, which has a very similar
    | effect on the system of most herbiverous

    animals as grass. American farmers have

    hot yet generally adopted root-culture, and

    therefore, are not prepared to adopt the

    Englisb practice in this respect; but they |

    may use 4 small quantity of oil-cake, at a

    lesss rate of cost than the English

    farmer, for we export many thousand

    tons which ought to be used at home.

    When large feeds of Indian corn are added {
    to dry hay, it only increases the difficuity,

    for corn is a very fattening and heating

    food, and thus excites a feverish state of
    the system. We would pot discard corn as

    a sheep food, but would always feed with it
    some laxative elements, as roots, bran and
    oil meal. One pound to ten sheep per day,
    is sufficient to modify the effects of dry
    food. This would only require one ton for
    100 sheep 200 G.ys, and it will lay on more
    value of wool and mutton than it costs, be-
    sides improving the heaith of the sheep. _
    Live Stock Journa’?

    George § Sand and George Elliot are both
    writing new novels,

    efficient water supply. If our © vic digni-
    taries Can Occupy their exalted po-itions
    with equanimity, and calmly survey the
    risks and de-solations which are too surely
    stesling over the community, 1 envy not
    their future reflections or responsibilities.
    I may shortly give you a statement res-
    pecting the sanitary condition of this city
    from 4 medical standpoint, and a description
    of some of the artesian wells from which
    many of our towns and cities of England
    derive their daily supply. In the means
    time, I trust you will bring yoor mfluence
    to bear upon the subject. until the public
    are fully enlightened as to their danger
    and duty.
    I retaain, Gentlemen,
    Your obd’t, servant,
    Wa. Hiazp,

    Ch'town, Jan. 25th, 1876.

    Tue Presentation Booxs.—A writer in
    the World says: * [ learn that the presen-
    tation-books which the Prince of Wales has
    taken out with him to India cost between
    1500land 1600 Yet at a late moment,
    the number of these books has been found
    insufficient. Twenty copies more of Cols
    onel SBuckles’s translation of L’ Inde des
    Raj ths have been ordered of Messrs.
    Sotheran & Co., to be sent to Inia at once,
    bound, as the previous {fifty copies were, in

    ,the most sumptuous fashion In cons
    nection with the Pvince’s t to Indiaa
    new difficulty, 1 hear, has presented itself,

    Many of those wLo met the future Em-
    peror of Hindustan at Bombay meet him
    again at Calcutta. They will present fresh
    presents, ‘The Prince will have to do likes
    wise. It is thus feared that he will have
    | nothing to give away by the time he reaches
    the Western borders of the North-West
    Provinces:

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About
Title
Examiner -- 1876-02-07 -- Page 01
Date Issued
1876-02-07
Language
English
Type
Text
Genre
Extent
1 page
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