pete bd a’ én ™ : Lint aS ¥ 5 he | I D | ole SO ek RPE ERE Oe TN DT EE RTE OT eee ee i ¢ ews Oo Pha; 7A \ 3 eK tiaks taken on all descriptions of P ‘Oo erty at LOWEST RATES. writing bad books surely cannot be bonest, hariottetown, Feb. ] Y td 5 cere “our ow. wr to advise the Public, may speak wee ee we ee Oe were ee Er GT aETr enone onan aia — PEKTOWN, Pi ET ET ET OCTETS Se rE ore INCE EDWARD ISLAND, WEENESD:Y, FI . a wre ~~ ad fen a 79 i+. i IFCCS. i,URKTPIDES. SINGLE CuPlEes iwo CENA. » + Zz IBRUARY 8 1882. «- YOL. 10.---NQ. 68. ee? : BS | ee 8 5G tue & eS a. | | that z gay pu r t $ muc ‘ »2@ lamented : nine ot. AS abu EVLdy 9 elle «a Pree dt 2c slgenas. 4 <2 a wise choice Im their reading fee Darty EXAMINER. ¢ . vow OUR BOOKS. i:matter he ereagt tenrcenc of the read- £ ~ Sur SS ESE EREBSS py 8 zR tee ER 3° ©. BE @ gh Reo epg ling world of the present day is to pornse La A REE EB CG % ~ — 45 25 ee es, , anything, everything, in the shape of novel i jor flash paper that issues from the eor- ‘rupted press of the United States, and to lthrow aside books which are really valu- lable. The wheat is cast away, and the ” . re TT? : Hing AgoTIPAanLA l'nmnan nie rniy Lie i. tre nM ic ur . i eee Apsul Miuyg UULL pad ' 0 ’ Oi 0, Py Os ehafi | gathers ‘ up. Lhe ec} lee, pure, eryata gems ¢ the creat old Bnyiish e j ~ Ss - ’ ’ 7 rT% oe PAS sé re io 7 ei il aes oo ; CAPITAL. £2.50 OUD ST (y. } Scottish and lrish writers, jewels : tthat have survived § the wreck « aves, are neglected, and their place teil «Fire Asstraneé~ Company, of Toronto, Ont, js, supplied by a useless snd us literature that only creates aa unsi {4 TTA Qos vi ‘loaning for something yet more exci Carita re =S00.000.00 ‘lone a fe mething y ‘ c 3 }something that shall etill further debase the mind and ho'd fai: elayed in eT iain m TES on A cece ee tos , pee : 1 F ; ' eet . hy itish America Fire Assarancs Gomnany. of Toronto. Ont., Se restsset comuption, There are hun. ~hV2UEL BDLAILVA AU £iU Fatstyts mYU U daa bY ads ; 4 are ds ana thousands to-day who cowld rot YA DITA I > 4 CAPITAL, $500,000.00. ‘tame the writings of Spenser, Milton, 'Sh.kspeare, or Byron; but who are per- i‘fectiy familiar with half the flash novels ante Ham: f Mont: a ‘pubhshed in America, There sre hun- , i} , i! 7 3 : 7 + Mahuy UUs Hany, o { Ul, dreds of men in the United States who ~ ve n-ver wrete or published a page w rch ‘ Ke : oe ; 900,000.00. ‘reading, but who have made independent \fortunes in deluging the land with a litera | ture that is leadirg its youth deep into the ~ imire of slang and impurity, irom which VWarine Insnrance Also Effected. ithey vill reap a harvest of crime. It < ener (}° OO CAPITAL, <fo ———:0: ' would be better for these men had they re- — itmained humble hut honest--to use a harsh expression—for a livelihood gained by . an the ruined livesand souls cf those jwho will one day rise to confront them iwith their blood, will be a terrible retmbu ition, The words of Curran would suit » Sees ‘them admirably. Curran was arguing a LOLI case before Judge Rebinson, a man who had written a great many bad aed worse ———— 0: —--_— (Rice—Corner of @uecn and Lower Water Streets. Ti 4 v7 4 ; aa } >} than useless books. Curran at that time eA SS Ry a) was very poor, and anxivus to make his BS ‘S tes 8 z Rad s mark He had deciared, in combatting rome opinion of his adversary, that he had leonsailied all his law bocks, and he could i not find a single case in which the prin- ‘eiplecontended for was established. “I isnepect, sir,” said the heartless blockhead ‘Rohinson, ‘‘ I suspect that your law hbrary ‘ig rather contracted.” Curran eyed the i judge a moment in the most © @t wp ucus igilence : ‘‘ It is very true, my lord, that I am poor, and that circumstance has certainly Eilat § Sea. 'S UNDERCLOTHING. NIE. irs Tw 8 see Bi emma, ee t rath ailed mv library: 1 books ar ‘rather curtaiied my llorary 3; iy Pooks are fUSf RECEEVOD Vid CEORGETOWN, not numerous, but they are select, and | s “ Ara ‘study of a few good books than by the) ‘composition of a great many bad ones ”| 4 CASKS HARD AND SOFT FELT ILATS, wn ‘By Ww? TANGY ¢ 1 died almost unknown to the ortside world. i CAS BEN ~ FANCY COLORED SHIRTS, Be‘ore d sensilliian agion what we should AA BTreaAws — e ™ hope they have been perused with the OO £ Saly daw P fe i 5 Meet dispositions. Phavé prepared my-) 8 i What wonder that Curran rese to be the 1) DO IW’Se TN] yT read nust earnestly efttreat the youth of 20 DOZ. MEN’S- UNDERCLOTHING. read, I must earnestly emtrest the youth ef tor this high propery rather’ by che (REWEST PATTERNS,) ornament of the Irish bar, while Robinson ithis country not to degradetheir minds and > ——— from every shelf the relics of the worthless chaff they bear. What did our fathers read? On ao little shelf near the fireplace lay the Bible, hymn book, prayer book, a few religious and ecieutifical or biographical works, with per- haps a poet or two—and who will say they were not better than we? As the world grows older it grows worse, and when in ihe viden time one youth forsook the path of rectiinde, we now see scores following him, until the roads of sin are well beaten. “hy so many defaulting cashiers, so many failing firms, so mavy lunatics, so many murderers, so many losing themselves in the sloughs of the eity? Cannot much of it be directly traced to the sensational mat- t-r parents permit their children to read ? Yellow-backed novels form the staple read- ing matter of some happy home. The son becomes enamoured of them, and seeks in city life the pleasures thus conjured up in his mind. Step by step he falls. They fascivate the daughter; she eees the phan- tour, Fame, beckoning her before the foot lights; and in imagimation bows her thanks to the applauding multitude. She, too, seeks the city, and finds her pleasant dream was but a chimera. Disappointed and cejected, the fall from virtue is easy. Tuere were none of these dark pictures m the ‘‘good old days gone by,” when flash literature had not been called into exis- t nGe What shall we read? There is such vast range of standard werks in every depart ment of literature, thet it is not difficult to make a selection of choice books, and he who has a few volumes of esch, with some first-class periodi cals, possesses a library of which he may well feel proud, and by adding to it year by year, he need never turn for plea- sure or amusement to questienable liters- ture. We shovld peruse attentively standard biegiapliies, and learn from them some thing of the good and noble who have left behind them * Footprints on the sands of time.” It is there we may find medels after whieh ty mould oer own characters, examples we may wellimwitate, and thus become better men, and when we, too, “shuffle off this mortal coil,” leave a name that will not be forgotten. Do we wish to know more of fereign lands? Then we can take up the travels and adventures of brave men who have penetrated to the very heart of those coun- tries, and whose works have a charm that we cannet resist; that carries us through strange scenes, and under strange skivs, with a delight that goes straight to the soul, and a'most unconscieusly we become fami- liar with the wonders and beauties of nature and art. Do we prefer history? There is not the lenst Oificulty tn providing ourselves with. truthful mirrers of the past, with works that lead us, step by step, from the dark shades of the night of barbarism, through the morning light of chivalry, into the hright and glorious day of civilzation. Throngh this faithful lens we see the cur- tains of the past unrell, and gaze upon the men and deeds of bygone ages, and make them our own. Do we delivht in the mysteries of Science? How many u di-puted au horities are there to introduce us to this region of wonders, to show us a world in every atom, @# nation in cvery leaf and blessom, to throw open to Tis like the trail of a serpent through aius the limitless majesty, and glery, and bed of flowers, the sliniy track rema'ns: the se lender ef that vast firmement of worlds ting has done its work, the poison hae! that glitters above us, till we are lost in ‘ved the stem, and innocence droops admiration at the infinity of His creative dies. Let us shun this trash, as wel power who holds the mighty waters in the Are we fond of poetry and the drama? We have such an exh-ustless mine of liter- ary jewels, so many gems, 8@ Meuy pearls of the first water, that we are eimoet be- wildered when we sttempt to choose the best. All the passions of the huwan heeft, ae eerien 4 . 7 1 ’ . ‘worse than waste their time in, Ba: - Will be sold at a small advance on cost for Cash. ‘reeding the accureed trash which has! P t reading aot ‘flooded the land, the wretchedidinie novels. 7 Bas f i} M ALCDON A | D ‘and flash papers which are arranged in a) ¥ ; 423 © ‘Oe 3 oy. BD. IVA L ANd, ‘ tempting — on the e ag + and in| 2 3 ' . J r windows aimest every ORSTOTY. ; : + . ‘ 2 z i} 2 Brennan's Old Staad, Queen Street, january 20, 1SS2—wkly pat pres ne the windows °« most every ORS “ - , 3 3 ‘ ;% i s porwr ne a ae EE ET eiiiadientatiicsenstintmanntentnniinatiedl oihamianennatinmemielieans ae ¥ he . » % ‘ 2 . % s . 8 er ‘sp «Seoteh and English Tweeds or Worsted Suits, ene I 3 ¢ pa Uh pou Bud Bok a vv i VUUULD bw Udy . : vi Th 7" f fs <1). jana ¢ : Li 5 a i? Li VF IL Ft it : ‘ r ws Si would shun the fangs of the serpent, for} palm of bis hand. pm 4 he ‘ a ’ . ih « iw a Sve Pred , $9 - « - =uran 4 » . 4 _ no $ Z | f Oy ‘ anacian we ra Suits, ‘both end in death Let us not contaminate! 7 ee lourselves by venturing to read one sen- a. ii BD, - > us 'gsational vel, lest we take a viper te our s nz € breare € ‘ { 265 a 4rQ ® sational novel, lest We tee a VI} 1 i SPF Ne V-S S Oats O1 ail ivescriptions (bosom. If we could to-day see before us ‘ all the harm, the crime, the ruined inves, 1/ I — TTir” j . . o . : re “GO DO- 'we could hear the wail of despair from . ? | : ; hundreds who have been enticed by thie W st R il m >: ez Fy ae 4 (i literature from their comfortable penny " . em ¥ homes to tha cess pools ef tre large Clitles, ; c ry . a ; , a4 we would never suffer it to soi! our fingers : 2 J , ° + . ting ; ( ~ | i i 13 ' : ee 3 Idleness, Rationalism, Atheism, -Crime, ‘ ; 7 7. Pe 7, sa i , A) 2 i « bk ~ o~ oR > T ifollow the frequent pernussl of such htera- . 4 > > = y QU EEN ST REE 5 ture, a3 sure ly as sunset f« llow § EuuTIe J b~~) have seen enough of such results to know o.- —— - ‘ LATO ™ rT TN > WC ’ that a2 i. oO fa —_ hut st n realliyv CWO DOORS ABOVE APOTHECARIES HALL CORNER thst this is no fancy, but « stern reali My object in this essay 18 to craw the - . : ; aa . . : attention ef the youth of owr iand—as far : » . is . 3 There you w i} find the iarzvest and best assortment of Cloths in the ni ag ae : you aa 5 anal eeal ’ SAR io =f a. A ; , The heat: worl aahte d fj . 23 | may be able—to what is really good in Sus ° * . innate inant on bh eet rorkmar ‘ yay . —- ei ee 3 Island. | 6 very moderate. ~The vem Weramauey see * AU our literature, to what is truly emnobiin,, suaiunteed. ie the grand old works that cen never : —ALSO— perish, and to the lighter works, with whieh | os ‘heavy reading must be relieved, that we mnplete line of Gents’ Furniehings and Felt Hats, cheap,&c. &c. ae ee are A complete line of Gents Furniehings , cheap, may not run the risk of becoming too preey, Pr P - ; e. . ib firs’ © : roe C pro s 5 # mri asy Brits CO RF » ; . bree . + ~ & GUA PLee FR iaiue Guariettetown, Get. il, 68: T's : ~- Under the Garetul and dkilfal Supervision of Mt. ds Wi Mitehell, sisi*nccrarure, and ptange into BILE, EEADS “member the address, two doers above Apothecaries Hall Corner that, in avoiding Seylla, we may not strike t jupon Charybdis. ‘The hours we s end ‘amoug our books should be to us a time of |Pi asure, profit, and instruction, and when =] 7 ’ . Fy |we lay them aside, we should do so fevling 5 ‘2, |more refined and ennobled, better fitted to |phil sophicaily endure the trials and crosses , ‘of our daily life. We should think wel! a eS g 3 | upon the words we read, close our be ok, Bel 43 isbut our eyes, repeat them to ourselves. F) 3 ‘digest them thoroughly, aod let them s:nk , z : ; Ht ’ ; - ideepl f 8cu's, itis vy into our initellectusl “ Ving he ee a larticle is written in the humble hope that it may be ahelp im teaching others so to read, that it may asgiat in winning our wo » > ® fy ' eimai - / 0 — om the r iin aa i er Oy mater at " Reyes ; young men and women from the pernicious bagi Ui UL f rik iE i} nes al ih Pid, literary taste which is subily ds royi» MiGieU uy ay BL i ijp ' racy pe Seow Se byt ” j their talents, and in directing their atientlon : 3 o | a better order of books, and that it miay 7 fee ke € © rsr@rn . a ZIRE ‘st > 7 toa 4 3 ; cae be} G bb & LATEST gy} KS Tidy A 1D BEST DESCRIPTION, awsken parents to the necessity of looking more closely io the reading matter cf then ichildren, to see that, when their sens leave ieollege, and their daughters leave bvarding ‘achoel or seminary, they do not cast asice HAS LATELY BEEN REPLENISHED WITH ‘ . AND WH: ART NOW PREPARED, s ex of novel reading; for it is a well-established at” One he ee fact that the consent reading of novels, the craving psrusal of the imporsible buc in LETTER HEA BS. igenious plots which lend them their vee ~ m9 BLARK CHEQUES, WaGTES @f HANK, BAND BILLS, 1 } all the phases of life, al] the slternstions of love, and hope, and feary aad despair, all the joys that brighten our sguls, er sorrows and trials and disappointments that tear them asunder, all the grand and subline thoughts of which man’s mind cen con ceive, all the glowing imaginations and fancies in which one can dream sway the golden hours, all the vicissitudes we pase throuvh from the cradle to the grave, are set forth, in language sweet end pure, by those who, inspired by the chastening fires of experience, are fitted to awaken the various passions thet lie dormant in human nature. Spencer, Milton, Shakspeare. Seuthey, Wordsworth, Byron, Moore, Tenvyson, and hundreds of other true poets, have all appealed to sume chord of the heart. What more sublime than ‘* Paradise Lost”? What more chivalric than the strains of the ‘f Treubadoure” ? W bat grander than the pages of the immor- tal Shakapeare,—‘‘ Sweet Will of Avon” ,— uhose dramas shall survive the lapee of coming centuries? What more delightful then ** Queen Mab?” What songs have gone deeper into a netion’s soul than the nel dies of Moore? What more dear to the hearts of Scots than Burns’ gems, and what contsins a more wonderful wealth of wit and of human nature than his ‘‘ Tam O’-henter”’ ? What more fascinating thar. Reron’s Eastern romances or More's “Talla Rookh”? What purer than * Evangeline” ? From the ** Fay Qaeen ’ ‘o the © Ldyils of the King,” through all the wide ceean of peetry, whose tide has hcen sweeping on from from the days of Speneer to those of Tennyson, how much there is that has survived the wreck of aves, that will live to the end of time, and hat cheuld be fariiliar to us as ** household words.” While history and science are the bone and sinew of a nation’s literature, poetry forms the arteries and veins, by which we read every pulsation of its being; for as its poetry, so will ita advancement te There is no one who nerds tire of © try; for no matter what are his predom- pbafing passiens and inchnations, some ie col Nature’s singers have sent forth the his inmost soul. There is no hterature se |fascination, utterly desirey al! taste Bear s] ze VE EIPTs., |matter, and see that they do not icinseives Would that this might strike as 4 trumpe? thistorical, scientific, er poetical works awwPe ~ POS : SRS, / 9} sow the seeds from which Im iter ycuis not- from one ecean to the « r, that it | Let paren's look to their own reading PUBGERS, &¢.. K¢e., they may gather a Ss semailh oft sHrrow a Short Notice, in Good Sivie, ai Cheap Prices, to the ntlery vi on Lak ice, itt vu slyig, ai cap rices, wight goas a devouring Laue, ana aWeey iumpnelrive, av full ot bayght memory oF very words that must avaken an echo in} M i _————_—_— > oo ——————- Pe'leville, Ontario, is to Lave an Ipduse thal melon is Qe yenobling, 8° purifying, so pleasing, so! | glad anticipations, so heart-searching, and so laden with all the varying moods of jife, as the poetry that is tco often negh ced, lf our readers would only turn oftener te those golden peges, instead of se king less profitable recreation, they would find the hours flying too quickly. Is fiction our favorite} There are more standard and instructive works in this branch than any of us can possibly expect to meter. With euch a brilliant array as Sir Walter Scott,Golismith. Dickens,Carleton, WasLington Irvine, Hawthorne —** the sweet and fascinating’ — Lytton, Brooke, and a bost of others, we need never dream of reading the questionable literature pro- duced by obscure writers, and which is more suitable for the gamins of New York than for the intelligent young men and women of this new nation. If the wild and miraculous is sough®, the rich oriental imagery of the ‘Arabian Koishts,” and the marvels of * Dim Quixote” can supply the want; but that is the limit te which oue shou'd trust hi: self in «orks of fieti n, if he does not wish his lit. rary tastes to be- come vitiated. ‘Do we incline to hnmour? Ward, Twain and scores of their calibre, are witt enorgh to econvulse a whole nation dk v holesome laughter. Do we aim higher than all this, and seek in the Classics the grandest thoughts ef man, the sublimity of haman launguage? The arena is broad, and no one is forbidden to enter the lists. Around the groups ef Greeks and Romans, whose mighty genius has illumined the world of letters, stitl sbines, with a chaste and mellow light— scaree dimmed throngh the long roll of aves—the haloof fume, the glory of their literary achievements. and it is ours to share in the beams cf their radiance. But the greater number of onr yourg men, when their college years ave over, put aside their classics, instead of fr quently perus- ing them in after hfe, Farmers’ gens, at lexst those who intend to follow the ex- ample left them by their fathers, and till the soil, too seldom receive a claesical edu- cation, it being regirded. as unnecessary. In one sense of the word it is; butif they have the opportunity of acquiring it, they act unwisely in letting it } ass unmamproved, for the more highly a wan is edneared, the better farmer or mechanic he makes, as the consciousness of a superior education im- pels him to seek a place in the front rank of his calling, whatever it may be. Tiis leads me to address a fee words par- ticularly to farmers’ sens. Don’t throw aside your bouks as avon as you leave schov}]. You will find plenty of leisure time, especially during the long winter evenings. for improving your minds, En- deaveur to know all about the soil, crops »nad stock, and to do this you must procure hooks on Elementary Science, Chemistry, Botawy. &. Read Practical Mechanics. Read all the agriculrura! literature you ean. Supply yourselves with good news- papere, and keep posted in the events, and discoveries, and improvements of the day. Open debating societies in every drstrict, improve yourselvea in every possible way, and in a few years it will lie said that the farmers of P. E. 1, im point of i t-ligence as well as of independence, lead the world. It is yours to make the future bright, and one great means of doing so is by a careful selection of reading niatter, and by prac- tising what 1t teaches. If parents would jook more closely to thie really important ma'ter, they could make their bomes wach happier. Let them provide their sons and daughters with good bo ks, )apers, magezines and music, end they will find it easier to keep them et home; they will not be so eager to sewk in the city, pleasures found under the paternal roof ; they will not rush off so quickly to Colorado or the Northwest if heree ie made cheerful aud attractive by the means I have suggested. Home and hevee bife, thas refined, would have an in- fluence they cannot easily cast «ff Pro- vide leas of costly farm machivery, and more of the works of arr. for then you will have more willing hands and intelligent heads to assist you. There are Vory tow farmers on P. E Island who cannot afford to make their homes more |i: ht aud cheer- fal; for es comparatively smal: ontiay in the direction sbove advoceted, will yield a hountiful return; it will prevent your children frow rushing, @ soon as hey are ont ef their teens, to help build up the Republic acress the border. Make a be- yinwing, and you will be surprised to find how «easy it is ty econtipne what is once well teguo, and still more surprised at the ‘asting resulte. S. M. B, Ind.an River, P. E. I. — —_—_——- The Baptist pastors of Chicage have de- clared thewselves against professional revivalists of the usual kind, and for the following ceasons : ** They cultivate a dis- tracted, one-sided religious life. They give undue prominence to noisy and pullic efforis fer saving sou's. They produce the impression that religion is largely a matter of feeling. They savor too mach of the burlesque and bf buffoonery. They lower he dignity of the most solemn sulj ct which can engage men’s attention. They puta premium upon ignorant aud erude presentations of Gospel truth. They ineult the intelligence of the age by making the uolecrn d and the unwise its religious teachers. —_— —- 2c A new coal drift has been opened at Edmonton on the south bank of the Sas- katchewan river. The seam is iventic with one worked last winter, and about thirty-three inches thick. It is in the face of the bank of the river, eighty or one han- dred feet below the surface. The seam underlies the more thickly settled part of the town, so that the residents can be cer- tain of having fuel for at least the next one thousand years. Nothing maks the earth seem so 8] ations la: to have friends at a distance ; they make it 1» latitudes and lonci ues it hgacBincily — mC ENN A NE NTS (LL LT TT SAE ee NTT oe LTE N ET ete is ngs toncergen te sipenge apenas NE NASR tte eRe emi ta 5 mao oe En pli Spree