a oe OT enw am & nace. uininen nes ais Soo Re ct we A. D. SHIRREFF, Anciioneer, Cemimissio: TE2ORK ET AND GENERAL AGENT. CHATHAM, ~ NEW SK CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED. ‘YARVBLL BRO'THERS, Commission Merchants, AND GERERAL AGERTE. BANK BUILDING, QUEEN Chariottetown. P. E. Isiand JAMES BRENAN, j 4 amiona Paintop House, Sign, ald Carriage ralnier, Paper Hanger & Glazier SOURES WIEST. . 4 ? fs receive prompt attention. Vv i// H. R. MUHLICS’ Kitchen & Galley, Furnishing Depot. DEALER IN ALL KINDS OF Ship Work, “CUPPERS and Water ¢ set. Pi; : s Lead, Figures, Deep-sea and Hand Le ids, L vl ( made, and VW ter Closets fitted up at the shortes ti CREIGHTON STREET: OPPOSITE UNION IIOUSE, FiIcToU, XN. & ALSO tert iste rus noti VULCAN FOUNDRY G@eoRGHETOW N. STOVES, wholesale aod retail VINDLASS aud MACHINERY CASTINGS general al- : Cash Paid nite POR ALL KINDS of OLD & SCRAP IRON. J. A. RUTHERFORD & Co, June 2, 1873.-—1 y G g tT { Boanpd or | ARCHIBALD KENNEDY, Joun F. Ropexrrson, E Anremas Lonp, Esq. Ratru B. Prake, Esq. P W. Hynpmayn, Esq THOMAS Morus, Esq. W. D. Srewarr, Esq Risks taken daily at theiroflice, E Building. FREDERICK W. UY edd hale’ IMAN, Ch'town, March 16, 1874.—ly Secretary See eee _— ei CAJAL: so . Vietoria Mines, Sydney. ’ HE above Mine S are Geiverin?g a Ss perior article this season, quite free from slate. ‘ - *s ' . ‘fom a depth of 135 feet below asy previous year. We can recommend this COAL to con- Sumers and dealers, and feel confident that it will give satisfaction. The Company are enabled to deliver largely 19 €xcess of previous years. Vessels will have G0 delay in getting their cargo v : lac} ? Fives 33 for Round, $1 for Slac!} : Terma, sixty daya or 24 per cent discount for Casb. HYNDMAN — Agents for P. E. I. Cb town, June 6, 1874 —ar pa re INSWICK. STREET, i ) : PLEASANTLY SITUATED ON Nerth Side Hing’s Square, St. John, - - - New Brunswick. | J H. RUSSEL, PROPRIETOR. HERMANS & SOR, J fTaneny ft an ilin_aonith | Aner Wh Alf eCity bbi-ndlgels, Ul duit jal SUITS, QUEEN STREET, j VATSON'S DRUG STORE, Rx to return their thanks to the general >, ublie for the li sinre eral patronage extend- their commencement in int the and ask for a continuance of same. They keep constantiy on hand:- A NEAT ASSORTMENT O}1 iINWARE, KITCHEN UTENSILS ae, ae. de. All rd rs in the above business Wiil De punctually attended to, Having lately made large purchases in the Cheapest Markets, intended for House Builders, st Gas Filfing, Water Closets. Bell Fitting, &¢.. &e., red to sell tf Rates as ) dint city i Will fit g \ i] style to with despatch. first-class WATER COOLERS savers Crystal Blue sold ¢ iper than ever. Nov. ll, 1871.] Commercial College. WELSH & OGWEN’S BUILDING, 2 a Charlottetown Wwe. WLC oad LU UES UU VV des Tih | au! pl ! DPADL UE TAD LALA, PRALLE iv RE AGL, PROPLILTORS, DESI. NizbD Io> ROOK-KEEPING in allits branches, both | vy SINGLE and DO , thoi ugly taug BLE ENTRY and Col- iteral subject j tught and prac- ti plied by means ofa Complete Cour engared il y ali the scr . Ss se of Actual Business, nts. Particular €nlion Biv CORRESPONDENCE, SPELLING, CSsary hist Hay — rule : Taaght her branches. mpi List Eaton & Frazee’s ARITHMETIC (revised ‘© ey HOHOaAnNY par 9 constantly d. A liberal discount to the trade. interested are aud examine our Paili KS to ACCOI ness men and others cordially invited to call system. Hours and 74 to 94 p. m., until the opening of the Evening Class, Oetober Ist. Circulars containing full particulars will be sent free to any address, on application to T. B. REAGH, Principal. Clvtown, Jan. 5, 1874.—tf 10 AGENTS WANTED—Maleand Fe- male, forthe ‘* Transmission of Life,” and the * Physical Life of Woman, ” both by Dr. Napheys. Agent’s profits, $150 to $250 a month. ‘Testimonials from most eminent Divines, Physicians and Editors in America. Immense sales everywhere. VE J Send for Terms and Circulars to C. W MITCHELL, St, John, N. B Jan. 12, 1873. 94 a. m. to 12 p. m., from 2 to 4, | } | | | ' | , Eaton & Frazee’s BOOKKEEPING | | | | | my uncle had given me th hat he could not but believe to be a wilful falsehood, ‘ This strange denial is scarcely consistent with your repeated refu-als to give any ins such obstinacy ergucs a f warmer interest ’ than ene usually feels rhays never saw him be- jualntance A flush of angry shemo aly} ' } x . alihough you £16Ce. G:owe a i Kate's pale cheek at this but mastering the imoulee to make a pass nsclent innuendo, sionate reply, she said quietly ‘Nay, sir, I think my has been perfectly coneittent; I have, as you say, been repeatedly asked if I knew the man who had robbed me, and I have constantly answered, 2s I do now, that I never saw him befor-, and bave never seen him since.’ ‘Do you know this pockst-book?’ asked cenia! the course! euddenl; + For.’ ‘Oh, indeed; you do know that? Then perhaps you will havo the goodness to say whose it is?’ ‘My unele’s.’ ‘And pray how may you know it?’ * By the clasp, which my aunt ara I have} Sewn on many times,’ *‘ When did you ses it last?’ * Upon the night of the robbery.’. § Did you give it to any one?’ ‘If you mean, cir, dil I give it to the robber—no.’ * Now pray be calm, Miss Nugent, and do not jump to conclusions, they are alwaye Cangerous. No ove would suspeet you of giving the book to a thief if you bad not put it into our heads, and so compelled me to When the man entered your room and attempted to rob yor, lid yoa make any resistance ?' ‘I did! ‘What did the book contain, a , ask you another questicn. nd where was it? ‘ The book containcd the mceney of which charge, and | had put it in the front of my dress.’ ‘Then bow did you loss it?’ ‘It fell feom my drees in the strugyle.’ itthen?’ r. ‘And what became of ‘[t was seized by the robb You saw it?’ ‘Yee,’ ‘Whatkind«f a om?’ ‘A faint one from a rushlight.’ ‘ Was it strong enough to allow you to light was there in th “ distinguish persons? ’ ‘ Yes.’ ‘At this moment the experience] turnkey, who knew that the important question was coming, ros» suddenly, and appeared to be questionins his eolleagee upon something in the paper he had been reading; but ia reals ity the movement wes to evab’e him to ap- proach nearer to the spot where his part was to be performed. * Then b2 80 goo! as to lock at the pris soner, and te'| me if you saw him in your room that night?’ Kate turned ber head quickly as she had been wained to do, but that moment, short us it wae, etfficed tc put Mr. Asbley’s plan into action. Between M’Evoy and Kath» srin> now Idened tho figure of the huge turnkey, and after gazing upon him mtently for a minute, Katharine, whose mind was set at ease by the strange mistake which she for a stranger, but | improv d the acs | up yn | | people, and afforded his escort. By his aid | Katharive speediy reached the room int | whieh her uncle had been earried, and where | she found him lying i } jand eurrounded 2 sensible upua a couch, strangers. A rurgeon who fortunately happened to be in Court, | had promptly attended, and was, when Kat enterec, endeavoring to bieed the suierer. Heavily, senselessly, ikea huge block o! | wood, lay the miserable victim ot intempers ance, and as Kate, kneeling by his side, chafs | | feel nor return her tende:ness, and wetched eagerly fur the fiist oozing blood whiel; would tell of returning life, she wept bitterly All neglect, cruelty, and s:Ifishn-es wer: lorgotten, and nothing now remsined in her enjoyed, and the slight act of disobedience to his wishes which she had just consummated which fell from her eyes she was yet calm and selfypossested, able and ready to assist quick to res what was wanted, and prompt todo it, while Mrs. Grove and Jane, who svon pushed noisily into the room, screamed and cried, addinz to the distreesea and dis- | turbance ofevery one. ‘ Pray be composed; I entreat you to he calm |’ said the surgeon, earnestly. *Shou'd Mr. Grove revive, the conscquence ef this ex~ | citement would have a fatal effeet ipon him’ Bat this assurance, which ooght to have | been euflicient to induce rational and unsel- fish people to make at least an effort to be calm, bad just the coatrary effect upon those to whow h2 was addreased. The more the | surgeon remenstrated, and dwelt upon the | danger of hia patient, the more usimanages able they became, and although at first the bystanders coull not help pitying the frantic griei they witnessed, they at least bes came disgusted at the selfishness which could take no thought for other, but which sought They | to gratily its own feeling at any cost. were indignant, tco, at the manner in which these selfish peop’e treated Kate, and with- out being able to enter into the merits of th case, decided that the ruds, hardsvoiced screaming woman, so ready to i: sult ber niece, and the showy, noisy, vioient geri whoseemed to have neither common sens n recommon feeling, must be in the wrong and the patie: t, gentle victim in the right. It certainly does sometimes happen.—by way, 1 suppose, of showing us thatthe mcs unlikely thineg may come to pass—that vv | pu'ar opinions are fonnded cn reason. And | one of thesa unusuaily correct judgments was | . passed by the crowd in the present instance. Gradualiy, owing to etlorts of the surgeon, the sufferer uvclosed his eyes, and tieir balf- senseless gaze restel upon Kate, That he know her was evident, for a ray of intel- lect brightened the lusterless orbs for a mo- ment, and Kate fancied that a tri!l of hf | ran along the almost powe:less hand whic lay in bers. Her eager questioning glance: sought the surgeou's, a8 these indicat.ons of recovery greeted their (Xertions, and it was ‘vith a strange sinking of the heart that che real the arswericg expression in his face. Meanwhile, the stranger who had protects ed Kate through the crowd, stood silently by, but neither useless nor unmindful of what was goingon, Accustomed to prom; t word: or deeds, he had already dispatched hie se:- vant for the needful carriage and at endanty, came forward, 2nd courteously offering h's carriage to Mrs. Grove, enireat’d permis~ sion to accompiny her husband and bi medical man, first, however, securi: g a cen- vevance for herself ad daughter. f ‘I may go with my uncle, may 1 not? whispered Katharine eagerly to the sorgeon. * he seems to kuow me.’ + Yes, it will be better that you should, i you are certain that you can commend your- self in case of any sudden emergen'y—l scarcely anticipste any, but it may be. ‘] will promise,’ replied Kaie, quietly ; and, taking hor seat in the carriage, the pa- tient was lifted in sud his head rested wpon her snoulder, : To be continued. | great interest, forced his way through the | ed the deathslike hands which could neither | | respondent, sketch the scene as he, looking on aghast from the heights above, saw it. ‘“‘Their’s not to make reply, Their’s not to reason why, Their’s but to do and die.” “At ten minutes past eleven. our light cavalry brigade advanced. ‘The whole bris gade scarcely made one effective regimer.t As they rushed towards the front the Rus- sians opened on them from the guns on the redoubt on the right, with vollies of mus. ketry and rifles They swept proudly past, glittering in the morning sun in all the pride and splendour of war. We could scarcely believe the evidence of our senses! Surely that handful of men are not going to charge an army in position? They advanced in two lines, quickening their pace as they Dut deep as was her grie’, and bitter the tears | hissed the deadly balls. | | | | waves. closed with the enemy. At the distance of memicry but the few kindnesees she had once | 1,200 yards the whole line of the enemy belched forth from thirty iron mouths, a ficod of smoke and flame through which Their flight was marked by instant gaps in our ranks, by ; dead men and horses, by steeds fiying wounded or riderless across the plain. The first line is broken, it is joined by the second, they never halt or check their speed for an instant ; with diminished ranks, with a halo of flashing steel above their heads, and with a cheer which was many a noble fellow’s death cry, they flew into the smoke of the batteries, but ere they were lost from view the plain was strewed with their bodies and with the carcasses of horses. Through the clouds of smoke we could see their sabres flash as they rode up to the guns and dashed between them cutting down the gunners as they stood. We saw them rida ing through the guns as I have said; to our delight we saw them returning af- ter breaking through a column of Russian infantry and scattering them like chaff, when the flank fire of the battery on the hill swept them down, scattered and broken as they were. At the very moment when they were about to retreat, an enormous mass of Lancers was hurled on their flank. Colonel Shewell, of the 8th Hussars, saw the danger and rode his few men straight at them, cutting his way through with fearful loss. The other regiments turned and en- gaged in a desperate encounter. It was as much as our heavy cavalry brigade could do to cover the retreat of the miserable remnant of that band of heroes. Out of 670 men who went. but 198 returned !” So ended the famous ‘ Balaklava charge,’ but not so ends its memory. The vision of that deadly plain, with its compact little handful of troopers galloping without a thought of flinching, ‘Right to the jaws of death Right to the gates of hell,’ though it may turn some hearts faint and sick with its horror, cannot fail to send a thrill through veins that boast the blood of old England. It is all very well to cry with coward Falstaff; ‘ What is honor ?—a word! What is that word? Air!’ but his is not the stuffof which were made those who fought for ‘England, home and du/y’ on that Balaklava plain; who have made her grand old flag honoured wherever it It is a hackneyed old Tine that on | England’s flag, ‘The flug that braved a breathes is not yet, thank God, dead on the in which it placed themselves. | gentlemen viz.: Messrs. F. Grant, John Fraser, David O’Keef and M. Curran at Mr. George 0 Neill’s, on Tuesday at noon, when they informed me thet Mr. Phelan had been misunderstood as he did not mean to advise his people to disfranchise them- selves, and that in theevent of neither can-~ didates agreeing to support the claims of Catholics, they were at liberty to vote for the man they perferred on other grounds. They informed me further that if 1 would support a petition and draft bill, which they would produce, the Rev. Mr. Phelan would take means to remove the impression that had been createdon Sunday, and secure for me the undivided support of the parish. | replied that if l approved of every word contained in these documents, I would not subscribe to them, that my canvass had been made in the Protestant districts and that I would act in good faith with my Protestant supporters. I added that unless I received the Catholic support I was assur— ed of before the preceding Sunday. I would immediately withdraw from the contest, They replied that they would endeavor as far as they were able to remove the ims pression that had been made and with that the conference ended, it being clearly understood that the Catholic support I was to receive would be given on other grounds than the Education Question. 1 fearlessly challenged any man, friend or foe, who was present at the Pisquid Road meeting or at Mr. O’Neill’s, to deny false reports which were carried to Brack« | ley Point and other places, had been obs tained by honerable means. In conclusion, I wish to say that I do not throw any re- flection on the Catholic gentlemen who met me at Pisquid Road or Mr. O'Neill's, They acted towards me with the utmost candor and courtesy for which they have my hearty thanks. am, gentlemen respectfully and truly yours, DoxaLp Fencusox. 1874. — Di. m ~ | ast iver, Uct, ol ~n -- en ser I met these m i SincuLaR Case or Deata,—The wife of | Vr. Philip O’Brien, merchant tailor, MeGill Street, died very suddenly at his residence | |in Juror street, at 6 o'clock last evening. | The coroner being notified, postponed the | inquest until this morning Verdict : | ‘‘ Death due fo anourism of the internal iliac artery.’’ Hearing her child cry, she | | had run out upon the street ; the tempor. ary excitement thus produced was the ex« citing cause,~-- Montreal paper. the buildings in which we keep our cows | several months. ho ke ‘aot, were published in Lon» lines on the suv, 8.96: don more than a centuiy . i The laws of the road are a paradox q.'t# or when you are travelling along, If you keep to the left you'll be sure to be right, if you keep to the right to be wrong. i he officers of the Stock Exchange, Lon- don, have discovered that four hundred clerks of members have been clandestinely dealing in stocks among themselves for ‘There was some excites ment over the matter, and probably all the clerks will be expelled, A singular application of the lex falionis has recently been made in connection with the grasshopper plague which during the past summer has proved so destructive in some of the Western States, In alluding to the fact that the Governor of one of these States (Minnesota) had called upon the general governmont for aid, owing to the fact that through the ravages of the grasshoppers many thousands were suffer ing for food, one of the editors of the Amer- ican Naturalist enquires , ‘ Why should not the grasshoppers be eatenin turn?’ After urging the fact that the grasshopper or locust of the east is universally eaten in portions of Africa and Asia, he goes on to say that he has himself tried the experi- ment in the case of our own insects of a the | like kind and found them ‘at least as accuracy of the above statement of facts, | and I leave you to judge whether my des feat which is, most undeniably owing to the | palatable as many articles of food eaten by civilized people.’ This is certainly an idea worth pursuing and, where actual starvas tion is imminent, may be the means of saving many lives. The further sugges« tion, however, that they should be thorough- ly cooked as ameans of providing against parasitic worms, is unpleasantly suggestive, and would probably leave those dependent upon such diet to order their grasshopper steaks * well done.’ Morat Sense 1x Horsms.— In selecting a horse or mare for breeding, speed and form are notall the qualities to be looked to, Never breed from a vicious or ill tempered horse,no matter what may be his pedigree or antecedents ; and suspect at once any horse lacking a sprightly intelligence. There are as many degrees of intellegence in a horse as in the human race, and without j intelligenoe a horse is always sluggish stupid and awkward in his movements. the thoroughbred Arabian horse has gen- | erally the capacity necessary for learning any useful lessons, le and all his work and | labor for man are a pleasure to the owner and apparently to the horse. We like to see a man proud of a noble horse, but more ci ae : | especially does it fill our heart with delight -It isa lamentable fact that so | to see a hores proud of his master. There little attention is paid to the condition of | are clowns among horses, and they are always & Vexation to the owner. Some will Ventilation is something that is entirely | plod along the road, never looking where | overlooked, not so much, I hope, from the | | inattention und negligence of the owner, as | from his ignorance of its necessity. Warm they step, and just as likely to step on a | stump or in a hole in a bridge as any other lace. But the intelligent horse takes | ill ventelated stables will save food, but at | heed to his steps, and if anything happens cow: and Better the cold, the expense of the health of the | the quality of the butter. ly enables us to remedy both. Tive._y Tuoventr. open barn, but there is no need of either. | the accident. A little study and application will general- | with a large development of socia! and ins | tellectual powers, whiles away It is too late to prepare and weary hour of the lonely traveller, or dangerous to life or limb to himself or his } g master, his judgment frequently preventa And a gentle, kind horse, any a lonely and the moment the surgeon expree@! a wish } that his patient should be removed laome, be } ] | | | aa - . | thousand years’’— but the sentiment it i | dear old shores, nor while Cathcart’s hill with its poor modest graves, lit by the | beams of an alien moon, tells its story of the past, will hearts fail to respond to the | Simple call ‘England expects every man to do his duty.’ But here in Canada, sympa- | thizing as we do with al! that makes the old land great and honored ; sharing as part | of herself in the glory she gains and hon, | ored with the honor she has gathered by | land and sea, we too can feel our pulses | beat quicker with the generous sympathy | of kindred blood when the ring of such an noble story as this is sounding in our ears, ‘When can their glory fade, 0 the wild charge they made ! All the world wondered. Honor the charge they made, Honor the Light Brigade, for the rigors of winter when cold weather | lightens the labor of the long days of the isupon us. The first storm of the season j tiller of the soil. In selecting breeders, is most injurious, and the one from the! great care should be taken relative to the effect of which stock that may be exposed | social morals of both horse and mare, to it does not readily recover. Itis al. | Like begets like, and in no case more than ways harder to regain what is lost than to| that of the horse. A bad and vicious keep upa steady progress , and, 1f we would | temper ina horse may be checked, but not lose ground by and by, it is necessary | never eradicated, and he will always be un- to look ahead. Sheds and buildings should | pleasant, dangerous, and his fretting and be put in good order, ready for occupation fuming will unnecessarilywaste his strength, when the first rain-storm arrives. in Oc- | Form and action have claimed the closest tober this’should be looked for, and at that | scrutiny, and those qualities have been time the feed has fallen off, and the system | given their full importance, but the social is already weakening and cannot stand the | morals of the horse have been lost sight of shock without a serious check. It is now | in the strife for speed and strength. Vici- that this event should be foreseen and pro. | ousness is almost invariably transmitted to vided for, lest it come unaware and the the progeny, more certainly than color stock, most especially the young stock, | or points, and should bea serious objection should suffer ata time when it needs al] | to any horse as a good breeder.—lowa State Noble six hundred,’ the strength extra care can supply. Register. alii , RNA we Noa STEER STR LL AE Se — Pon crieeniehemenieniiaainiel SENNA LE PTE RNS PENNY a EON RAUL TPS SRA Tg CE SS Se Sei EE KS we NE - caus ia " 7 \ 4 ) — ’ . | aad ss -AND. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 9, 187. NO. 45 e . a | Cy > rrr aaw rT >y> — ih P, 4 >W AR i) wy aS ye ee 743A b “a ©, / 4 \ #4 4 tod me a . e - te 4 os - Memes | | i? R ~ 3 pa i hy J Rid Bud A. % oe “ . “ wey ad Paee a a sty rR! a ) =e erE S972 Te¥ £ LES LICE ICL a le a a Pe ie ee ee Si SR Bld ORT ORT TTT SALES TEL NN REE DE [CRISES IE DE NN CTR EERE SR MESSY SRT ‘sree anaes — a s re hh we ME EOCOIETE T hare eure THE GRAND OLD FLAG CORRESPONDEN! HISCELLANEOUS. ri ASING AN} ARRIV . ne PRATLS DALENE TY | fancied had somehow arisen, and which had | THE GRAND OLI LAG. CORRESPONDENCE. | HISCELLA) " BI ae oe aw rae . | sat i | " beter emia ub iinet tent taine | r near und nD sirname eae elie “J Be aun EB: FURUERE Tak we SVORUE cate & Rees sas place] the wrong man af the bar, turned | [From the Toronto Mail.] | 70 THE ELECTORS OF THE SECOND) Joseph Arch is seriously ill. av rr? ; rapa 69> {F ory we VAY AT XP naa ey i, wie Ric aay . id shore | i 4 oa Sits dill od poate caged wk : ie ss VW POEMS By) {LEFRED TENNYs-\her head back sazain, and 1 put d che | “Prom battle, murder and sudden death LEGISLATIVE COUN( 17, DISTRICT The Chillian Minister of the Argentine 7 i SON. | fully, —good Lord deliver us!” Duty doing cons | OF QUEEN'S COUNTY. Republic has demanded his passport. en nn ‘| —- LIN a ‘ch he cabinet editio1 * No, tothe best of my belief I never saw | gregations by the hundred, sie fort Kersten nck fie at bo The mother of Kullman, the would-be Ate T OF FI¢ E U H ARI OTTE i Q Y \ P,E IS] A N t) l < just published in Lon- | that man before. . Lam certain he is nof the | earsand responseless — : ‘ort to the effect that I had at Vernon | sssin of Bismarck, is said to be incurably ry FUINLY 4 TT USS 0 & Be OM Ee Shee : : ca winewitinl pane | solemn words en Sunday. with no emotion | Pe . . : “pn + of | insane don, ¢ s two 1 UNpUoHUsHeG | 7} bbed moe.’ atecnayer . Sa ) River, pledged myself to the support of | *Meane. ; . , camdan at | Person Who ropoed me. i save that of nominal weariness ; but unfelt, uve } " : ann — : " ws 6 FT ER Wi OD 4V itth Wit poems Phe first is “in th inden at | The Barrister, w standing far below | “e ni E “ie for the few they had Separate Schools, having on the night pre The English Earl of Chareville die ast ‘ c ' : ~4 é § ister, k sn e Tal v shims v ‘ , I . 3 auc ie . ; . é Ge MURAL, tith MAL. in 1d is as follow sachin : N | Caaers PE ee Set G d ch cause | Vious to the late election been carried to week at Castieo, Staten Island, of consump- } led wit t tke level of the dook and witnessbox, could | » terrible oe ~ eg 5th | the Protestant polling places, and used to tion, Ae ENE ec eres ee - — ae ‘ - N negates warbled with . > : ° y ay £ ay—the coth si : ° peneeneenremmenen ' ; vented | t 2se to remember that day ia tae me “ A ‘ : _-- . \ ag not see how entirely Kate was p shan a | of re «Hae pee twentieth auniversary of | My very _ prejudice, I ages it —— The ae of the Sandwich Islands poged MAILS > rT the turnkey {rom seeing tha prisoner, list i hattl bala lclav: he twentieth | myself, as well as to you, to make 2 } sidering the entire reconstruction is ' attle of Balaklava, the twentie J ‘ wy hat. ring Walked na ed like one uttely bewildered, but brfore he | mn et of the “Chaves of the Lizht | statement of the manner in ¥ iich the | cabinet. Pb anion egonccange al ap .d men. - ear he a i, a8 r ar] a “Charg a School Question was drawn into the contest, | ‘ Matchiees sanid,’ is the way 0 peosumant } ut \ And thou was of the three cong recover 5% seer oe | brigade. | laavine vou judge & whether I have —_ _ —e ‘4 N [ \ inv. \\ s l ¥ ii Aw r ” , "9 raf irth sr atta i a bs stla and a ory in the There is in Eng and a any rate one = ee ef one pata wi © he: a uous young man addresses a lady of very I Er { _ pier aarmianistcnati cies. ety sibs Sy ‘ i ‘% ireful days are marked, and | @Cted as: rabie man, aon. ; : : ae | where these direful days are marked, 4 ; , uncertain age, , { ' M r bench ist above him diverted his atten» | fips . gays > neaeior tio = ‘nite ) New ) \ { We } ‘ 68 JOSE i | that with red stones—Chelsea Hospital, the | On the Mond ay previous to the Electi yn, Dacia the pest pear she eles ike ) S ee ) tion, and that of every on» elie. | living witness to the care and love of Eng-| while canvassing on the Monaghan and seein re 19.864. 000 pounds Of ten trem l es uot - ance PS : . = sii. porter 7,8 . s « ; F : Mr. Grove had fallen from his seat in a| jand towards those who have bled for her. | Pisquid Peer ‘tong the a esa t aah Ji nn | , \ | : : T ler r onl ssingly in- | principally Catholics, I was surprised to find | "“r'""- . ' ‘ Fea Paki r \¥ singly in princi 7 © ’ f : co | alt Sut t 2 excitement and disappeintment of | There, indifferent or only pas , | : als ie , over Syris ; I , , Cvery « oe at. The aRepieaeD ; es, east terested as the outside world may be, the | that while almost every man was in my The Governt: of Syria has been ordered | 4 B asia Ae Pie che or | the day, following as they did upon a night em} ty sleeve, the missing leg, the cruel | favor, scarcely any one would promise to | to supprees all Protestant schools in his , a tf) j VY Bi ve, tu pee Ts ro 5) 24 oid : om >t yee e... Sunday, ‘ Ve i< ard drinking, b reved too much. eg insthia ramiindes a bi ,| yote at all. This strange indifference was | province 4 . bug of hard drinking, bad mue"* | white scar,are forcible reminders ofa bloody | V te S al BIS Son “teh aa? ea Ha 3 plaitiaibeat We aii Alani | nf “ | Tbe strong man, 8ubdued by drink, lay dying | hye-gone, and among its inmates many a| utterly inexplic: ne, i : s Sti ui Aly as 0 _ cl Pea salt if ths fl gray moustache can tell, aye and show too, | gentleman on my way to a meeting to be ed the destruction of trains and shooting of > M ' bac oh vane ep bdien te cisco what curious patterns a * Rooshian’” bullet | held on Pisquid Road, who informed me railway Officials. B . i; Phi lead met 1 have I lo l r enffaret's relationshi Kathorine i . viclll saue put apdbe alee | : TRE, Sle Sa a aS ae hisetahs Sheil ie i i i & { : te sp on “ scshgh . rt uffer ; 8 re. “ yee so Bane or sabre can work in human flesh, Other th it the Rev. James Phe lan, Par i h Price hg Che city of New York has the only school 12M W Mond... W 1 deuce ; was soon proclaimed by her aad ery. lenots there. are dotted here and there | at Vernon River, had on 0m ile day, | in the United States for the practical teach- § s a , I I \ | the Peak.’’— ‘My uncle! ob, my poor uacle,’ l through the length and breadth “3 a9 jin the : cn oo gg hae ne. ij 4 bf ing of the veterinary science. New West ) : & l Ss ( ( v ‘I y ! h in ucht Fora few minutes there was a pavs f | country, where the d ly Was oe ¢ gee ; —e sak wadasaiand 4a be oppaned teil Dueling is so_prevalent in the Prussian I ‘ a x x Sl a For that brief space homes were the scanty hope left y the} vere
I } We $ Frid But thou wert sitent in heaven— i f Sat , Karharinnts | Virtue of its natural situation—a high ab- | ed to explain Oe ee - oe nage hie ” © 80 Above thee glided the stat ee ee ee rupt mountain range overlooking the Bal- | question. In reply, I said that I considers Manitoba, or Manastupo, as the Indians ; " ’ ¥,9 plaintive cry, ‘My unc'e! oh, may I go to | akiava valley —aided by judicious engineer- | ed myself unfairly dealt with. I was en- | cal} it, means, “ God's dwelling place.” It }> i , - i \ Se | i : URL: aliecy « yu 5 ae - e) i 138 ne “a 4 . i sey Jee etn, rf Hast thou no voice, oh 91 |; -as deemed almost impregnable. ‘To | couraged into the field by Catholics in | jg one of the finest wheat growing countries : ‘ rb ; h ling. was deemed almost impreg & ! op A eepeaty . g £ wae ‘ \ oe pophte aa fal entreaty at last attracted | turn this position was the object of the} Vernon niaver, Wieout “eae pe mare | in the world, £isqu $ > sbi ¢ “ " . the at ’ i 3 mourul . Cary & . Ts Sar i ct we . EES } a ye ols » the » Ne ol Questio as »> be > ae ” . t ’ Rigen : ." | chs: | tyine the agony of the | 2ussian force. The night previous had been | anybody that ‘i ee hy “ Pip : a °* | Recent information confirms the rumor — a Hatratto? see : oped ae » PD . 6 yd | a busy one with them, but so well laid were | randy veneer oe wa (Ny wal’ | mentioned in our columns a short time ago | ‘ tegis st ’ 7 4 sand ¥ $ go etitioner, whose clasped hands and strains | the plans of Menschikoff and Gortschakoff | two days of t gaat ase and le - that Hugh W. Blackadar was appointed @ rn l'o north, south, east 1 wes g eyes were turned sppealingly to him, | that at half-past seven on the morning of | ‘ime, asked ve-Sheesiegge iain 7 5 most | POst-Master of the City of Halifax. s oI ¥ . { . . Sa Jara Owever } st j i . . : rhey ve ghts ana are t | recalled the attention of Mr. Beauchamp, by | the 25th news was brought in that a strong tion 4 dech red, howeve r, im the most 1t wase couple from Danbury Conn., who wasl ve k in tl S ; recai‘ed the altentioa of ar. siesta uated ae “age 2 A) eves der General | explicit and emphatic manner, that l was ” . ‘ : ’ : At yan a uk Im ba ee, } force of some 30,000 men, under General | eX] ut : ¢ | borrowed a two year old child when etart- I ‘ siedhan . | saying, ia a tone which that learned gentle> | ig sonsisting of infantry, cavalry, | opposed to the establishment of separate | ° . Gh ‘ - ins ‘ ‘ oe | . it : thet oe aprandi, consisting 01 antry, é prt a ie. sie" chat taie olech antl bs ts ae ing on their bridal tour, in order to deceive j “ae LCD ea ; ser | man perfectly understoc ) i land artillary, had crept up one ¢ the | Sch heir e : ; endl the inquisitive crowd as to the nature of Lue > ywers sis esi, oe “Tes tin mw ae “| te = Pek. sot ric: les 17 fran rive inorities of the beneht of education | : . a . 114 sure Ns fe) - cane ‘ the S d ra) rive minoriti “> ‘ “se vane 7 ) oe 1 1 Lor ship expec i his iyvestions t 0B a } many gorges ot the district, iea ing iY n il : | the trip Post OMice, Ch’town, P. E. i., 9th Alay, siilianiniaaie . B iey t ecp Pil Sis te Baleares af nd was then actually in the| altogether, that they would promote re- | ip. i ama i. —— ae te - i + 4 . he Maoast Oi, ANC ved ‘ email ‘ oll Shi ia *. i ee aie & : "he 4 TAITDATRED 107 1 Tre ,DNA . “i apse valley below the English position. The | liglous discord, and virtually break up the | Cardinal Cullen and the entire Catholic ALMAN AC FOR NOVEMBER, 1874, le 2 | +e Aine : : , a DO you wish to the witness any) °. once given, all was astir. Orders | educational system of the country. I de- Episeopate issued goin pe ro ag Ramee : : a : ; e det i ale pe ety . Remankesst ated na ime ys Ramen aero men a ae ee ee iad ; and never | ing late addresses of Tyndal, at Belfast, be. -—--— dette ctt ini aay ~ ae valiadibdintieadnatibentin 4 fr quest ir, beauchame it GD« 1 ..» snatched to Sir George Cathcart | clared further, that 1 was not, and never | Ing I: pcan aus arn ce i ’ cies i 7 : k ] i i were ce patcnue to SU +p | 4 eae ‘ 1: " | et “ ie wig wi WIL! Y r : i for nd ever I t that ehe has already deposed to | an 1H. R.H. the Duke of Cambridge, to | had been, of opinion that religion should | fore the British Assoeiation, as a revival of New M Da < i i _ ARAweD Aud s rain into s é Pe put their divisions in motion for the scene | be eliminated from schools where practical | paganism, rat rT 3 1} ua . 2} ’ ‘ a 1 a } pu ieir GLVis 31M MiOvyn 4: Aa Mite : . i A - : | eae " ie) i low tris bbal Oivnlr: aaa ae se a of action, while General Canrobert sent | difficulties did not exist, and that in the | The Austrian Government has informed First quar., 1 ; p-m.. W. ANT) MOMMTQATONM AaAnrnmn Not raised forev L e1 she had beticr be allowed te go down. She| Gans 3] B ysquet with one division to assist | city of Charlottetown, where the public | the Porte of its intention to conclude com- Fu M - Day aN a % X U A LLSOL ) 7 TEN iy But when the iS. 0 er, een in istreas TB T son who in : ie } ned valley \ schools had fallen into disrepute, where | mercial arrangements with the principali- Mas IN CHO Phe valley, the v ‘ ie deat | her uncle, 1 onder-| 7 » glories of the day | highly efficient schools had been establish- | ties, and considers the discussion of the Last Qa sal : , Pass, and an segunangie 4 pe Ss a would be to enumerate a grand succession|ed by the Wesleyans, Episcopalians and | subject closed. Whe i } TFA ; ttt} F 4 , ' ; ‘ tand. wou « flu ae ” Pads os | 9g : ‘ site 7 ym coat f et he : : i soncasiahioe : ~ ro ‘aly dese senidlihe speak is hicl 1 ed i nan ' | of gallant deeds shared in by all branches ; Roman Catholics, ie sey = hele whe why | Sir Hercules Robinson has informed the a oat - NCI i Hust Oe ae Sant cet at eauchamp bowed, end looki \ | of the service. How the 93rd Highlanders, | such should be deprived of public support, | t1o..¢ Government of the establishment of > : ; . ” KU GFE Abie Coo We s6dd che 12 on AS sat sii . a ' ay AP ‘ y 7.) i" op (5 Nhs nae . ° meee »* DAY WEEK sine SS eee a re ee a aA » oor Kate saw that it would be of very little | under the cool command of Sir Colin Camp. | if they were so far pl iced under Governs | . proyisionakGovernment in the Fiji Islands. i oa | seein sariOLlevow ~» shone gee" ise hk was : service to hie case to question ker further, | bell and who said he “did not think it ment controi as to Tt the age : | The annual revenue from the Islands is estis ae MA . rho ee ah he therefore timply requested her to look | worth while to form them four deep,” re-| a good, sound s¢ culat educ: : “e ¥ sn | mated at £125,000, i Sur (7441, 2 45 o 54 Y iisist Ay : belov Oe ee ee pulsed merely, with that famous “ thin red } that I was under the impression t iat no- | Speaking of the profite of cattle greasing. 2 Monday i sti PRERLENSEOS ral And a height beyond th ; | again at the prisoner. | streak, topped with a line of steel,’’ the on- | thing bat separate py prise aately | on indians journal tells of aman in Lafay~ } Tuesday 5 i 4 seed omesiged : : ‘ tring is n aring | But although Hoskins had withdrawa, | \..a-rush of some 1500 Russian horses. | Catholics, and quoted the Pastoral of last pi oe. ee ce nae Nite vo : 7 4 ~ - = oO % 32 oe : tae : ; | ward rush ¢ f son . dh ol edakee a6 aa oie 4 gentleman pres | tte. 1m that State, who has just sold, for ds : ‘ a ereee renee | end there was nothing now to intercept her | How the heavy Cavalry, under Brigadier, | winter to that elect. A g i - $50,000, a herd of texas cattle that he A ! Ht a bs wUa — | view, Kate would scarcely have recog d| General Scarlett, with one wild shout and | sent referred to a petition and rig ye gave $20,000 for last fall 6 Frida j } J SrEaAND ! ee neces j eee ee ee y si Se AE thrilling cheer rushed through the masssive | Bill that had been read in the Chapel, on © i si dl G Reict ~ Saturday ) i , I al int D raw her nearest relative, thr gh th j re | si % oh cai tha enawee’n Eneee, dhe ore | the previous Sunday, and gave a synopsis | The he s 4 Cogs teic "ete d Ss Sunday 57 . 7 The lone giow ana iong roar, j ; : “ee cy here oi ne amaeess oc, Seg Aue gee Lye ‘ike cea os ce nts. and I was asked if J | opened in Berlin by the Emperor William ly “8 i es 2 2 “ . ities sina ile ea »of dawn. | tears Wich clmmed hereyes, tar iess & per | a. of his cavalry as if they had been but | of their contents, an was asked 1 : pi - : aM o : : ‘ F. ivi. CAM PBE rhe. | Green rushing fr the rosy throne of dawn. r te sede ge if - ieee : ol : cavalry . 4 cag et + rout, | would support the prayer of the petition, | in person. rhe speech from the throne, . ' ~ “ - ~ } Son whom she had owy s§cen 1c@ In the} aste board, and ut nem bres Js |} - hy 3 A ; a or ee : .« — one i 19, Tues ‘ 2 + Cteneral Mlerehanti> = : ee ‘ si a ; The nip a a. these are incidents deep- I replied that I would not promise to sup» | among other things, enumerates compre ae 2 M m « . ] ner o t of g jceath chamber, and | nese an uca ¢ il Ca a\ sv a ae } sive ‘ 2G « - : id nl « + - : roN'I I ITE Rk ATUR he | yep ok aac" ot 5 em stoi ly graven in the me morie of those who port any document that 1 had not seen. | hen: ‘ai se yr i bring about uniformity oid . a he _ on LD kA AAA AAA) | CO Oe ee eee ee utand the hearts for whom they fought. ine or two gentlemen present expre sed |} ogy ee proce ’ e i : 14 Sate: 5} 3 3 L\CCLIONERER & BLORLEN RATHARINE | *f do A0t koow him, meeed Ido not know} pur the crowning glory of the “ay was re- | themselves favorable to my Yi, Berga ;| The Congress of _ a as a 5 ee eee beth ndaetihae yp any uagry: fara Me Sens | while others disapproved of them, and said | ation has declared the republic in a state o' at | hae , f ‘ , - | i “me " . we tn Cnitloe arved for the “ Light Brigade’ under Lord } while others di ipproved © 1em, said | ation has decls ; I is . ‘ ‘ } ; ’ } os Oa ae ee ve *vm@lal) h f gre) to OUCH | serve 1 for the Light Brig We . “eg gp : ' a i ° cay a 16M \ 21M ihiliil WUbALE, | sLIVHA, fT, 8.1 4 TALE OF WOMAN'S TRIALS.| et er on gee was being Cardigan, in which s eruel error either in| that if Mr. Munn was present he would | siege, and voted the money necessary to 17 Tues¢ 2 . - AGENT FOR THE . pmsl eatnae Mia sa éi“4+ |) the figure of h unele, W seh in co ta ol 3 or their construction led toa deed probably go the ‘ whole hog,’ and the} enable the Government to crush the insure ; 18 Wedn's a ‘ Fy t > : ried out cour a 1] a er an ry which has only been equalled meeting broke up. On leaving the school-! rection. The President says he can imme- . a ‘ : ‘ 2 onc) 8 986% BO sacs i | 4 ie Ae r ’ ie ° cau Cl Gt « an iy wiv red i ALiATAL yihsCll ids aity =O ree ee ‘ i : ’ . ' " { 19. Thurs ~ ' f; Standard hie Laasziy bhi UN LW, CHAPTER VIl.—Continued, ie A , aa cmy giving uF oo el Ai sinas dofaboa of Leonidss | house, 1 informed my leading Cathelie diately mueter and arm 20,000 men. 20 Friday od Bl bt , Sept. 1, 1873. ly Mr. Ach'ey, keen and ‘ur-seeing, perceive}? © wes oom murely © mney by Ua. ~tan heroes. friends that I “sgt ly ae “gi ey ef | The statistical editor of the Times, Grand Si [Saterday ; “oa : fed at once the favorable turn affairs were | 8° °°%' and his Spa. ~ waassed to the numver | situation, and that I intended, on the re j Island, Neb., says :— 90,000,000 000,000, “ii iF - " Ea a anere — a & ice iG -aVOTaui h &iaelrs é ni ‘ ay kg Shea cE send my resignation to the ; ‘ ' 22 Su l ) i 2 4% 2 ESL (me i: \ > ; won me i. aaa he enemy ' *‘éhirty guns. to-| lowing Gay, tO send my resigna 22 1 O00 GOO.000, 000,000, 000 000,000, BOO, TTasse | #2 i : : ~ JOSEPH CREAMER, takiog, an! chuckled inwardly white Mr. | k In 551 t WeS SCars.iy accorc— } lhe enemy wero : “Mr by @uns, t oe - 7? nena le ig se ar sublish tha! yf ’ ’ ’ & i . : mi 6 i : ig : Seagamnay a efore Kate sprang down the steps fth | of some 30,000, with abour . “Sigh boy | different poiung places, ab pu e | hoppers at least, passed over here yester- i 2 14, 9 ie Physician Ry Surm@eo Grove, annoyed and mortified by this pubs e ; ee ee rt nds the head of the valley to w.. *-se | peasons which led to my withdrawal. | day. There might have been a few more, Hy yj) 31 Av ¢ ; oS | lie denial, began to chafe and fret foedoi “ee mee her way through the | had retreated, when an order was receiv, Ratore leaving the place, however, I was | oy less did not count very closely. i ads én Li - fe fe . 7 id Jat i i “rows 2a » ‘ H ’ ¢ | f . ¥ j a ' ye > wmen— "4 sup- a * \ ] CLZ2Y HOLZEL, him justice, it was not the loss of hig money on Se on undertaking; | by Lord Lucan, commanding the cavalry,| » cont . oo i sa had Le Nord, the Brussels organ of Prussia, ; 7. Ree - a aren eee yf | th b pre z the rave | which was constructed to mean tha » | informe. "sang two opponents nad) ow. tha Mon ori acres 24 0 : a CHARLOTTETOWN. | which made him so inveterate, but the cray. | %® m0 preesed ap to the very stairs, and | Which was constructed to mean that the | cng - ¢he Rey. Mr. Phelan, | "28 the Montenegrin massacres cannot be 6| 1 1 4 26 45 — ; : | filled all the passages, impediug her pro- | Light Brigade, all unsupported as it was, | porters of miu. Na et -’! overlooked. Turkey must mete out speedy 7 974 j ) 8 43) p » at all hours eee ee: ee pean, oe ene ress: and sl ia i." pro- | should charge this terrible forces and capy | undertaken to wait on . Bat id | justice to the perpetrators, and make res 4@atiz 4 - « + ‘ lili ii I at : ff i c | } sha le ay . nicl i “! i . “we % . i gs ’ i cts ; mie it vn | Whose violence hed, as he supposed, has~ | 2°° nd sho would have wasied mach] ture the suns, between which and them. | and represent to him the u. WOUlS | aration foe the Grane 1e great powera sultati to poor gratu y on} ; PE | A er , ‘ . . : . ( ~~ | paration rt me. £ } - = = from 1 to 4, } | tened Mary’s death, and whom he saw es- precious time in the attempt, had not ‘gens| selves lay a plain of a mile anda half in| which the advice given on Sunda, “ave ndlyised the Porte to take this course, i — at pions te ae ale cea ah tloms ; ad watobe niuaioil -), | lengtl +t Dr. Russell, J'imes’ War Cor-~ | operate azainst me, and the false itiu, — . BUSINESS CARDS. tin caping by w iloman, Who bad watched proceedings wich | length. Let Dr. Russell, Times’ War Cor- | operate agains positiv.. ~s ov tan Roap.— The following Ne he me & 6 hard be is ee J