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E. ats per inch for first insertion, and 20 ente for each eontinaation. iscount from this rate will be made on all advertisements continued ® per cent. if continued for cent if continued for 9 months; and 40 ser cent if continued for 12 month. =~ ko ee ~~ = ~~ = ~~ i¢’k ia > 892609" “ 9B'GLTO'L108'¢ 89° 12 cents 9h. 12h. 40m., a. HE following are the Rates and Terms of Advertising as agreed to by the pub- Island :—50 Ten per cent. for 3 months; ¢ months; 30 ‘ 7 ew tu ew F O8'S UW Zt Ww ¢ PSS 19'S All advertisements exceeding 12 inches rill be subject to a discount of 10 per cent. gditional, if continued for one year. Auctioneers will be allowed 10 per eent. jseount when they advertise to the amount f 330 per year; 15 per cent when to the mount of $45; and 20 per cent when to the mount of $60 per annum, and not other- per line will be sarged for each insertion of all * Special and 25 cents for notices in edi- rial or news columns. The sum of 50 cents will be charged for i¢ insertion of all Marriage and Birth no- ALMANAC FOR JULY, 1876, MOON'S CHANGES. full Moon, 6th day, 11h. 25m., a. m., N. delow horison. last Quarter, 14th day, New Moon, 21st day, below horizon. rst Qnarter, 27th day. below horizon. 43m. s. m., 8. W. wes ee 1lh,. 6m., p.m., W. | I; | Mé ! ION | HIGH DAY'S rises water len’th { A PW“ Ste Oo 9 9 10 10 10 10 11 il M 0 M ll 31 538| 5 52 31} 69; 7 S 20; 58| 8 16) 29 19 38 28 50' 9 45) 27 29/10 27} 2 58/11 9) 25 23/11 44| 23 42\A 20) 23 0} 0 42) 22 14; 1 23] 10 38i 2 0 18 46| 2 35) 16 4,3 19) 15 26; 4 19) 13 ls 38 2 ist 9 451 8 34 7 5119 46 6 110 37 4 39/11 23 2 811 57) 14 50 32M | «8 53) 0 29) 56 i} 1 6 54 20; 1 44! 42 $112 26 49 56; 3 138 7 Sr, 4 3 44 5715 20 42 57; 6 41 14 40 PRICES CURRENT. ov 27, } | sux , DAY WEEK) ! irise | sets u MH M | iSaturday |4 18,7 49 | 2Sanday | 19) 49 3 Monday 19| 48 ‘Tuesday 20 48 5)Wedn'sd’y| 21, 48 €Thursday | 21; 47 iFridsy | 22) 47 §Saturday | 28| 46 9 Sunday 23} 46 \ Monday 24) 45 lifTuesday { 25; 45 2 Wedn’'sd’y’ 26; 44 yThursday | 27) 43 WFriday =| 28} 43 wSaturday | 29) 42 Sunday | 30) 42 TMonday | 31| 40 a Tuesday 32} 39 YWeda’s’dy| 33) 39 "Thursday | 34] 38 Friday | 35) 37 RSaturday | 36| 36 BSunday | 37] 35 4Monday | 38} 34 STuesday | 39) 33 SWean'sd’y) 40| 32 “Tharsday | 42) 31 3 Friday 43; 30 ‘Saturday | 44; 28 "Sunday | 45! 27 “Monday |4 4617 26 Ch’town, June Packwheat Flour, per lb ‘our, per bbl ur, per 100 lbs fish per gtl Bierring per bbl kere] per doz. } temlock, 11 fine do Spruce do Yetmeal, per 100 Ibs FISH. 1876. BREADSTUFFS. 0.03 to 0.34 .50 to 7.00 3.00 to 3.25 3.25 to 3.50 | J. ce .50 to 5.00 .87 to 6.49 0.48 to 0.72 > SX BOARDS, “alngles, per M. POULTRY. Chick ‘ [hickens, per pair WUCKS, (each) owls, (each) dese (each ) : | “ala, pet tb “artridges, (eac th) ‘urkeys, (each) 0) feet, MEA ‘Amb, per quarter ‘ain, per lh Mutton, per Ib 3 ‘ef, (small pieces) per Ib “cef, per Ib (by the quarter) 0.81 to 0.94 1.62 to 2.40 0.97 to 1.30 2.11 to 2.48 | $0.40 to 0.60 } 0.25 to 0.30 | 0.25 to 0.40 0.00 to 0.00 | 0 80 to 1.75 8.00 to 0.00 $0.08 to 0.16 0.06 10 0.10 to"0.12 0.50 to 1.00 0.06 to 0.09 0.08 to 0.14 fork, (small pieces) per ib 0.08 to 0.12 vee per lb (by the carcass) 0.06 to 0.08 *al, per Ib 0.04 to 0.08 : MISCELLANEOUS. juice per bushel 0.00 to 0.00 —s per bushel 0.00 to 0.75 i (fresh) per Ib 0.16 to 0.22 ‘ Cute per Ib by the tub 0.00 to 0.00 ft J * ese, per lb skins, per Ib Aeese (new milk) per Ib \iover seed, per lb Legs, per doz. Feen Peas, : yd? Per ton ' He *, per Ib. i er? per Ib. { I ome Pun, (men’s wear)per yd. Hon Pa" (Women’s do) ONCspy Lard a Oats > Ber Ib » ber bush ? ar! ‘i ] ber ton Tine ber 2. ee bushel e . Flannel, per yard ¥ Seed, per bush, ber Ib Wane per bush. 0.06 to 0.10 0.14 to 0.16 0.05 to 0.08 ‘0.00 to 0.00 0.08 to 0.12 0.00 to 0.00 10.00 to 12.00 0.04 to 0.44 0.25 to 0.32 0.65 to 1.00 ver yd 0.35 to 0-48 0.31 to 0.46 0.12 to 0.16 0.46 to 0.50 0.36 to 0.40 0.03 to 0.04 0.16 to 0.20 2.50 to 3.00 0.00 to 6.00 {9.07 to 0.10 0.20 to 0.24 0.17 t0 0.25 CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, BUSINESS CARDS, COOMBS & WORTH, J0B PRINTERS & BOOKBINDERS 1 ay al wD “+ ' | WATER STREET, ottetown, - P. E. Island, Jan.17'76 ly AND GENERAL AGENTS, (77 North Side Queen Square, Charlottetown, - - P. E. Island. October 18, 1875.—ly WILLIAM DODD, Commission Merchant and AUCTIONEER QUEEN SQUARE, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND __ - CARVELL BROS. AUCTIONEERS, Commission Merchants, AND GENERAL AGENTS, Lower Queen St. Charlottetown, P, 3.1. HASZARD BROS., Commission Merchants & Auctioneers, FORWARDING, MANUFACTURERS, AND General Agents, Gl WATER STREET, Opposite Merchants Bank, Charlottetown, - P, E. I. J. E. Haszarp, | Horace Haszarp. omens, ( See REFERENCES: Messrs. Greenshields, Son & Co., Montreal, | Messrs. W. & R. Brodie, Quebec, | Messrs. J. S. Farlow & Co., Boston, | Henry Lawson, Esq., Halifax, N. S. lon. Daniel Davies, Charlottetown, P. E. I. | May 3, 1875. REVERE HOUSE, ADJOINING THE POST OFFICE, ALBERTON, P. wT. The subscriber has fitted up the above House in good style, and wishes to inform his friends, and the public gene- rally that he prepared to accommodate Transient aud Permanent Boarders, Good Stabling on is Charges moderate. the premises. RICHARD GLADNEY, Proprietor. Alberton, Sept. 13, 1875. iui Summerside, P.E. Island, JOHN MCKAY, PROPRIETOR. | | | PIVEIIS HOUSE, second to none on the Is- land for beauty of situation, comfort and convenience afforded, commends itself to | the patronage of all who may visit the | Island for business or pleasure. Choice Sample Rooms to let. Conveyances from Cars and Boats. Ladies and Gentlemen will find it to their advautage to patronize this Hotel. Feb. 21, 1876.—tf INSURANCE, ST. LAWRENCE X Marine Insurance Co. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, BOARD OF DIRECTORS: A. KENNEDY, Esq., President. Joun F. Ropertson, ARTEMAS LorD, Tuomas MORRIS, GreorGce D. LoNaworrn. P. W. IyNDMAN, W. D. STEWART. Risks taken daily at their office, Exchange Building. | FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Ch’town, April 24,1876.—ly Secrelary MARIN Ei INSURANCE COMPANY PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: Robert LonawortH, Esq., President, Hon. Jas. DuNcAN, Hon. L. C. Own, Ilon. A. A. MCDONALD, Hon. J. C- Porr, Tuomas HANDRAMIAN, Esq., GreorGce R. Beer, Esq. Risks taken daily at their office, corner Great George and Lower Water Streets. F. W. HALES, Secrretay. Ch’town, March 22, 1875—ly THE LIVERPOOL & LONDON AND GLOBE LNSURANCE COMPANY Fire AND LIFE. Invested Funds, Ist Jan’y., 1874, $21,628,356 Deposited with Receiver Gener- al of Canada, ie 162,800 Other Investments in Dominion , of Canada, 867,091 FAIR RATES. Prompt & Liberal Settlements. Insurance against Fire effected upon Pri- vate Residences, Household Furniture and Farm Properties, for One, Three or more years, At Reduced Rates. Offiee—Great George Street, Charlotte- town, P. E. I. R. R. FITZGERALD, Agent POETRY. ON NNN NINN ONO LL NNN ONL A NL THE SAD LITTLE SINGER. The students thronged the schoolroom A crewd of merry girls; Bright heads bent o’er the lesson, Lovely with braids and curls. The master stood on the platform, And like a wizard he spoke, And at once the sweet young voices Into wonderful singing broke. With infinite labor and patience _ He taught them, and explained Che deep and difficult lesson Till not a doubt remained. Again rang the fresh, clear voices, And youth and beauty and grace, Anxious for his approval, Looked up in the master’s face. But one among the maidens, Desponding, drooped aside, The gifts of her happy comrades To her seemed all denied. Poor and plain and timid, Doubtful, perplexed and sad, She envied her fortunate schoolmates, Who sang so loud and glad. But the searching eye of the mastee Found her, and calm and mild, Ile questioned and encouraged, And cheered the despairing child ; And his golden moments gave her When other tasks were done, Till she could take her place at last, And sing with the proudest one. And the student worshipped her teacher: Hardly her heart could hold The reverence and the gratitude That never could be told. And as Christmas time drew nearer, Her busy fingers strove Out of her poverty to work Some token of her love. And so she wrought with patience, A humble gift and small; Oh, poor and mean it was, se knew; Poor, but it was her all. Again the lesson was finished, The singing so sweet and joud, And the grand, still face of the master Looked down on the radient crowd, And he beld in his hand the token Ofthe student, poor and plain; Astonished the young girl listened, With joy that was almost pain. For, ‘‘ Better than any treasure,” He said “ of gold or pearl, Or crown of king or kaiser, Was the gift of this little girl! ”’ Could she believe her senses ? He surely was standing there, The light full on his quiet face, And beautiful silver hair. She knew she was not dreaming, Her wide eyes shone so bright, It seemed as if Heaven’s gladness Had opened upon her sight. And the glory of that moment No future can destroy ; She found her way for once, poor child, To the topmost heights of joy. —Celia Thazter, in July Wipe Awake. LITERATURE. ~— m e ee eee WENDERHOLME. A STORY OF LANCASHIRE YORKSHIRE, AND CHAPTER II. When Isaac Ogden told the history of his backslidings to the doctor, he omitted toj tell the cause which first made him pass the bounds of what in Shayton was called moderation. te had always liked his glass and drank of all the intoxicating com~ pounds known to the inhabitants of the place, but this in a young man living in Shayton was held to be as natural and right as for horses and cows to go to the water trough; so that mothers who had lost their sons and widows who had lost their hus- bands, by the universal enemy, delirium tremens, would nevertheless have felt the utmost difficulty in tolerating anything ap» proaching teetotalism under their roofs, and would terminate the most touching lamentations for the dead and the sagest reflections on the fearful consequences of excess by inviting the hearers in the most impressive manner ‘to mix himself another glass of brandy and water,’ or whatever he had been drinking. In case of refusal, the hospitable moralist would put on an inde- scribably dolorous expression cf countens ance, and say, ‘eh, well, willn’t ye now; it'll do ye no ’arm.’ For there was always a theory in Shayton that alcohol adminis- tered in private honses, and by way of hos~ pitality, was perfectly innocuous; the truly poisonous and destructive alcohol being that retailed at the Red Lion, the White Heart, and other sinii/ar places of enter- tainment. There was also another theory firmly held by all the womankind in Shayton, that so long as a man ate heartily of their puddings and pies and sweet stuff generally, he dwelt in safety. This may partly have arisen from self-love, for we are always indulgent to those who appreciate the products of our skill; and since all the above mentioned sweet stuff in Shayton was fabricated by the the ladies in their own houses, and a pro fessional confectioner, if such a being had ventured to establish himself in the place, must have died of hunzer after eating up his own stock in trade, it naturally followed that such of the male inhabitants as were willing to consume home-made dainties of a sugary description,were looked upon witb fayor and indulgence, and was considered to give evidence of a hearty and unvitiated taste. And, indeed, althoifgh the eating of such pastry did not prove so much in the favor of the palate as the fair piemakers believed, there can be no doubt but it wa® clear evidence of a powerful digestion, for that pudding had a weight and solidity in harmony with our national character, There was nothing of French frivolity in it; it re~ minded the eater of British iron and British oak, and the granite of our northern hills. So long as his wife had lived, Isaac Ogden gave all possible proofs of his mod- eration. He hardly ever entered an ales house, and although he drank freely enough at home, and in the houses of all friends and acquaintances, he was hardly ever intoxicated—he had a splendid ap- petite—he ate heavy breakfasts with quite a natural manner, as if the accomplishment of that surprising feat was nothing to him; and by this means, and a large consump- tion of pastry in the middle of the day, he won the esteem of all who met him at the table. But after his wife’s death, as the evenings were terribly sad for him, he did not know how to pass them alone in the house that for four swift years had been brightened by her dear, sweet presence, he first went to see his friends in their own houses, and then gradually got into the way of meeting a certain set or clique of them at the tavern. The distance that separated his former habit of free drinking Ch’town, July 27, 1874.—6m from the habit of positive drunkenness was not physically and materially a very wide one, though morally it was immeasurable, He had been living for years, like all the most moderate men in Shayton, in a state of alcoholic stimulation, at least from ten a,m, until bedstime; and though this con« dition did not often betray itself to out- ward observance, it was not the less a pre« paration of the whole system for the more advanced stage of recognized intemperance. It is no doubt perfectly true, as millions of living examples prove, that moderate in- dulgence is absolutely innocuous to a sound and healthy constitution ; but Mr. Ogden’s habits at the most temperate periods of his life would scarcely have been thought mod, erate anywhere else but in Shayton, and can only have been considered so there by the effect of an overpowering comparison with the incredible excesses of his neighbors: Vermillion itself may be made not to look so very red by surrounding it with the blinding flames of scarlet; and aman in Shay ton was seldom looked upon as a drink- er until he had been seen to reel down the public street in a state of helpless and speechless inebriety. Of Isaac Ogden’s affectionate and sincere. ly-lamented wife there is little to be said in his history, She was the daughter of a farmer in a distant part of Yorkshire~a sort of gentleman farmer who had given his girls what was considered to be an educax tion; and, indeed, to do them justice, they were quite as well educated, and had quite as gentle manners, as the daughters of the smaller gentry, This young lady had come to stay at Shayton, on a visit to the parson who had formerly been vicar of her native village, and she had won Isaac Ogden’, heart from the very beginning of their ac-~ quaintance. Though a farmer's daughter, her health was not really robust, and she depended for existence, much more than she or her friends suspected, on the pure air of the open country and the routine of healthy occupation, Transplanted to the smoke-burdened atmosphere of Shayton, and having exchanged the peace of her father’s fields for a house with a wretched little garden surrounded on all sides by roaring cotton mills, poor Alice speedily lost her bloom, and her frail life ended ite self a day or two after the third anniversary of her marriage. She had had two children ; the elder, our friend little Jacob, had been easily reared, and enjoyed perfect health ; but the second, owing probably to the en- feebled constitution of the mother, was a poor weak little thing, and they lost it. Since his wife's death, Mr. Ogden had had very little intercourse with her family, He had gone On one occasion to stay a few days at their house in Yorkshire, but the rumor of his unfortunate habits had preceeded him and was only too fully confirmed by his conduct under his fathersinslaw’s roof. He had his weeks of excess and his weeks of comparative moderation, and the week that he spent at Eatherby was unluckily one of the former. Every day he got up in a state of nervous ill-humour and ungracious~ ness, sO that it was positively disagreeable to sit with him at breakfast; but by dinner time it was still worse, for then he was drunk and dogmatic, laying down the law upon all sorts of rural matters that he did not understand, and keenly wounding the feeling of the whole family by speaking about their poor Alicé in a manner that seemed coldly contemptuous; The truth was that he adored her memory, and would have given his right hand to bear her dear voice again, if only for one hour; but these better feelings were hidden in his own breast; and as’ during the lifetime of his wife he had acquired the deplorable habit of speaking contemptuously of women to his friends, and making no exception in her favour, the habit now revived with him when he was drunk, and he said things which, to people who did not see very much of him, conveyed a most erroneous impress, sion of his sentiments, Like many other people in Shayton, he had a stupid love of banter, not much controlled by delicacy or good taste; and when he left Eatherby it was resolved that all intercourse with him should be at an end. Another local peculiarity of character is that of cherished feelings of all kinds for a much longer time than any feeling lasts in a metropolis, A coolness, sufficient to chill intercourse between families without put- ing an end to it, has been known to last conscientiously for forty years in Shayton, and to be continued afterwards from habit and tradition ; but in justice to the in. habitants of the place it is right to add that better feelings are equally permanent, and that a stranger who had visited the neigh- bourhood at the age of twenty, and made a favourable impression there as a well-be~ haved and good-looking young man, might, if chance led him to revisit Shayton at sixty, fully count upona kind reception on the strength of his former success. The sym« pathies of the Shayton people were of very limited range, and consequently stronger and more enduring than the scattered in- trests of larges societies; and so also were there hatreds and antipathies. Their tems per was at the same time perfectly faithful ships lasted for generations—lasted,in short until violently shattered by some catastrox phe; but, once broken, neither party ever made the least advancement towards com~ mencing them afresh, and the degree of separation established by the accident itself remained permanent. Like two ciiffs once united, but which, separated by some vio- lent convulsion of nature, gaze at each other for ever across a wide chasm without advancing or receding an inch from their respective positions, except in so far as the slow operation of rain and frost may insen~ sibly widen the interval between them—two Shayton households, once divided by a quarrel remained in sight of each other year after year without the slightest ad» vance on either part to a reconciliation,and without any conscious widening of the breach, though time no doubt was wearing it year by year. The breach between the two brothers, Isaac and Jacob Ogden, had been established on that fatal day when Isaac struck Jacob at the mill; and after the dissolution of partnership, each of the brothers cast his eye, as it were across the chasm and measured the breadth of it as a fact henceforth inevitable. Men of another temper might have felt uneasy about the chasm and anxious to fill it up or hide it from their own eyes; but these brothers felt no such uneasiness, and were not in the least anxious to conceal it under false appearances. It was not understood to be necessary that intercourse between them should cease ; and it did not cease, but it took, and kept, a new and peculiar charac ter, Jacob lived with his mother at Milend, Shas 2 and perfectly unconciliating. Their friend. |- MONDAY, JULY 3. I, 1876. }and Isaac went there from time to time, his mother, except on those occasions when Isaac wished to consult his brother about his money matters, when Jacob always lis. tened very attentively, and gave the best advice he could, The most marked change in their intercourse was that they were now scrupulously civil to each other, whereas in the old brotherly days there had been much mutual criticism, often bitterly se- vere, For instance, in those other times, if Isaac had got drunk, Jacob abused him for it withtunrestrained energy; but since their quarrel, Jacob was as reticent on that subject as if he had been educated in habits of delicacy and tact. When they met in the street before the quarrel, Jacob would often say : ~ ‘ Now, Isaac, con ta walk reight? And Isaac, by no means eflended at the allusion to his failing, would answer by an insinuation that Jacob acted the unmanly part of his mother’s darling. ‘Has thy mother given thee a treacle buttercake ?’ All banter of this kind, as well as all frank and earnest remonstrance, was for ever at an end between the brothers; and when they met in the street,even at the very door of the Red Lion; there was no al- lusion to Isaac’s failing, and Jacob was in no danger of being saluted at ‘ Milend pet.’ The brief colloquy was usually as follows :— ‘Well, Jacob, and ‘ow’s mother this mornin’ ?’ ‘She's quite well Isaac; and ‘ow’s little Jacob?’ * Very well, thank ye.’ We have seen that Isaac’s occasional visits to Milend were supposed to be in- tended exclusively for his mother, except when he wanted Jacob’s advice on matters affecting his interests ; and therefore Jacob never went to his house at all. He did not even go to see the new building at Twistle Farm, and though he shot over a moor a mile of the place, scrupulously avoided it. An extensive moor in that region had be- longed to the two brothers in common, or at least had been so considered by them ; but after the quarrel a line of separation between the properties, which had before legally existed, ceased to be legal fiction, and was recognized as a frontier. Isaac, of course, when he built Twistle Farm, took care that it should be at some distance from the boundary; and as the brothers shot no longer together, Jacob had never visited his brother's hermitage. Their mother went to wistle occasionally, per- haps once in three months, but had never been induced to sleep there, for she had a firm belief that if she left Milend for one night Jacob would be sure to need her. As Isaac Ogden had all the character of a native of Shayton, it was of course im-~ possible for him to attempt any closer com. panionship with his brother,or any renewal or intercourse with the family of his wife. He had few relations on his own side, and most of these were poor people, operatives in cotton factories or small farmers in the country. There was no false shame in the Ogdens, and they acknowledged these re- lationships, inviting some of their very poorest kinsfolk annually to Milend, and feeding them substantially with roast beef. But it will be understood, without imputing any foolish pride to Mr. Isaac Ogden, that he found little pleasure in intercourse with these relations. He had,it is true,but little culture of any kind, yet the little he pos- sessed was enough to create a difference between him and these poor people, wide enough to make much intercourse between them irksome to both parties. And bes sides, the mere possession of a certain degree of wealth had already separated the Ogdens of Milend from those ranches of the same family which remained in pov- erty. Various sums of money had been lent and not repaid, or slowly repaid in uns certain and irregular instalments, so that the sense of inequality, already strong in the presence of the substantial comforts of Milend, was still further increased by a feeling of obligation. To do the Ogden’s justice, it was not in their nature, or in the customs of Shayton, to treat poor rela- tions unkindly, but it is difficult to main- tain agreeable intercourse with people who have little to talk about but their perpetual struggle for existence, especially when one has an uneasy feeling that these struggles would cease to be necessary if one would only resolve to sign a few annual cheques, In justice to Mr, Isaac particularly, it may be added that old Sarah, his housekeeper, was a relation of his, and not a very distant one, and that both she and he regarded her permanent on that account. He would have made it easier for her by giving her the help of a young servant woman or girl; but as old Sarah was still remarkably vigor- ous, and much too proud to accept wages without fully earning them, she would not hear of such an addition to the establish= ment, and worked far harder than she need have done to satisfy the most sensitive cons science, To be Continued. THE EXTRADITION TREATY. 99 Lonpon, June —The London journals generally express regret at the termination of the extradition treaty, The Standard hopes that President Grant's message does not express the settled determination of the American Government, and says, ‘ The feeling between the two countries is now we trust sufficiently good to allow the dis- cussion of such matters in the common belief that neither is trying to over-reach the other.’ The 7imes says the termination of the treaty is a calamity, and further says, ‘ We emphatically repeat the hope that no considerations of pique or punctilio will be allowed to interfere with the negotiations of a new treaty.’ The Telegraph supports Earl Derby’s position on the extradition question, and says it is better that there would be no treaty at all than that England should yield to any power her immemorial right to know upon what ground and for what offence the meanest refugee is sur- rendered from her soil. hat is the prin- ciple which dominates British action in this matter, and Lord Derby has the whole nation behind him in the policy he has followed throughout the present complica» tion. Notice has been given in the House of Commons of an intention to bring the subject of a new extradition treaty before Parliament. -_- The Kingston ‘‘ News” says: ‘‘ Mr. Robs ert Shannon, of Richmond, is the possessor of acalf which is covered with fine wool, the ofispring of a Galloway cow. ‘The legs are shaped like those of asheep. This is certainly the calf for Gal(loyway. The poor thing must feel sheepish.” but it was understood that the visit was to | | CAUGHT IN HIS OWN TOILS. [From the Summerside Progress, | ‘‘ Look before you leap ” says the adage: read before you condemn might be sub- | stituted sometimes. In the Patriot of June 22d, we notice a letter addressed to the | Editor of the Exawiner, and bearing the | signature “Isaac Murray.” One naturally | expectssto find scholarly precision and | learned criticism in the productions of a D. D. We trust the Rev. Dr. will not | take it amiss if we submit that he has con- demned one Catechism, at least, without cause. He says, “the Bible teaches the duties of rulers to their subjects ; of subjects to their rulers, and citizens to one another. Can this much be said of Catechisms ef the sectarian type? Have we passages like them in these found in Rom. 13th chap., 1-7; 1 Pot, 2; 13, 14,16; Mat. 5;41? We infer from this that a Catechism which would contain such passages would not, in Mr. Murray’s opinion, be dangerous to the State. Moreover, we suppose that he would call Butler’s Catechism “sectarian.” This being granted, we may claim Dr. Murray as an advocate for the teaching of Butler’s Catechism. Never was writer so helplessly bound by his own admission as is the learned Doctor. We give a few ex. tracts from that Catechism, whose teachings secularists so much abominate. We advise our readers to invest ten cents in one of these Catechisms, and their eyes will open with wonder as they peruse it. Instead of fomenting rebellion, or of advocating tyr. rany, or of inculcating hatred of Protest- ants, it contains the following submissive and charitable sentiments : (. What are the duties of subjects to the temporal powers ? A. Yo be subject to them, and to honor and obey them, not enly for wrath but also Jor conscience sake; for so is the will of God. —1 Peter; Rom. xiii. Q. Does the Scriptures require any other duty of subjects ? A. Yes; to pray for Kinys and all who are in high stations, that,we may lead a quiet and peaceful life.—1 Tim. ii, Q. Is it sinful to resist or combine against the established authorities, or to speak with contempt or disrespect of those who rule over us? A. Yes; St. Paul says, Let every soul be subject to the higher powers; he that resisteth the power resisteth the ordinance ef God: and they that resist purchase to themselves damnation. —Rom, xiii, Q. What are the chief duties of masters to their servants, apprentices, and others under their care ? A. To lead them to God by word and ex~ ample; tosee that they be exact in their religious duties; to treat them with justice and humanity, and correct and reprove them when necessary. Q. What does St. Paul say to masters ? A. Masters, do to your servants that which is just and equal, knowing that you also have a Master in Heaven, —Col, iv, I, Q. What are the chief duties of servants and apprentices to their masters ? A. To be obedient, respectful and faiths ful to them, to be diligent in their work and services, and not to suffer their masters to be injured in their property by any person.—Ephes. vi; Col. iii. Q. And who is thy neighbor ?—Luke x, 9S A. Mankind of every description, ang without any exception of persons, even those who injure us or differ from us in religion. Q. Howam I to love my neighbor as mys self ? A. As you would, says Christ, that men should do to you, do you also to them in like manner—Luke vi, 31. Q. What particular duties are required of me by that rule? A. Never to injure your neighbor by word or deed in his person, property or character, to wish weil to him, and to pray for him, and always to assist him as far as you are able, in his spiritual and corporal necessities, Q. Am I also obliged to love my ene- mies ? A. Most certainly; Love your enemies,says Christ, do yood to them that hate you, bless them that curse you and pray for them that persecute and calumniate you.—Luke vi. ; Mat. v. We trust that Dr. Murray will be candid enough to admit that the above teaching is not injurious to anyone; putas it is ina catechistical form, it is easily learned and remembered by children. Hence the anx-~ iety of Catholic parents that their children should be instructed in the catechism. —_—_—_—— THE SITUATION IN TURKEY. Lonvon, June 24.—The Turkish atrocities in Bulgaria is to be the subject of inquiry in parliament. It has been agreed to instruct the foreign representatives at Belgrade that Servia must not expect any assistance or even a benevolent neutrality if she com~ mences war with Turkey. At Constantix nople great uneasiness prevails and is in- creasing. The palace of the Sultan Murad is surrounded day and night by pickets ot cavalry. Russian residents are sending their families away. Ibrahim Pasha is un- der arrest, and it is rumored that he is im- plicated in Russian intrigues, and assisted Abdul Aziz in disposing of his treasure. The government is fast becoming unpopular and will speedily fall if it does not abandon its undecided attitude, Itis reported that the Sultan is sick. The Challenger, which lately returned to England, after having traversed nearly 1V0,- 000 miles of open sea, has a whole cargo full of specimens, the whole time of ab- sence having been devoted to trawling, dredging and scraping. These specimens are to be jealously preserved for scientific examination and discussion, ‘To the ordi- nary public the collection will be toa cer- | tain extent devoid of interest. A starfish | or a rotifera from the bottom of the Pacific | differs very little from the starfish and roti- fera to be picked up everywhere between | high water and low, and however great may be the interest attaching to a hitherto un- known species of sponge or madrepore, a live elephant or a tank fullof some new species of fish makes a far more appealing bid for public sympathy, The London Ob- server says that the real value attaching to the discoveries made by the scientific staft of the Challenger belongs to the measure-~ ments which they have taken of the bottom of the ocean. We now havethe deep sea depths practically mapped out, and know where the ridges lie and where the great hollows. Between Japan, for instance, and the Society Islands a depth is reported of nearly five thousand fathoms—a depression equal as nearly as may be to the height of the Himlayas. By thus mapping out the bottom of the sea an enormous step will have been made towards ocean telegraphy, and the expedition of the Challenger, apart altogether from any results which it may | yield to the scientific world, is likely to) prove of the greatest value to commerce and civilization. Foote, the actor, patronized Brighton, and for mimicking the good parish priest was cornered by the parson’s fighting parish- ioners, cane in hand, Foote apologized by saying ‘l imitate everybody, Why, | take off myself; I willshow you.’ Atthe same time stepping slowly behind a gate he shut it in their faces and hastened away with a ' city has been in CORRESPONDENCE. net Hatesthipatnratlarnge tira tiddistidaPitatarnpia, OUR WASHINGTON LETIER. Wasmxoton, D.C., June 7th, 1876 For some days past or rather since the meeting Of the Cincinnati Convention, the a state of high fever; but n o'clock last evening, the news of the nomination came like a potent anti- febrile, and had a magic effect. In one short hour after its reception, even the booming of the cannon in Judicary Square, ceased to elicit any comments, and all seem- ed as quiet as can well be conceived. The nomination of Mr. Hayes of Ohio for Presi« dent, and Mr. Wheeler of New York for Vice President, seems to meet the cordial approbation of the Republican party,though of course, it was a disappointment to the numerous friends of Mr. Blaine. Buta few days more and we shall know who the Democracy will offer us. The coming cam- paign will be, perhaps, the most warmly contested one we have had since the days of Whiggery and Democracy, and if it should result in placing in the White House as fair a man 2s more than one we could name as furnished by either of the old parties, we should be content, The Senate yesters day, continued the impeachment trial. Mr. Black, of counsel for the ex-Secretary, offers ed in writing, a reply to the ruling of the Senate, a statement setting forth at some length, the facts that while a majority of the Senate could order the trial to proceed there could be no conviction, as over one third of the Senate had declared the re spondent not amenable, on account of hays ing resigned before action was taken, and that it would require a fuil two-third vote to carry it. Quite a sharp discussion took place between Mr. Edmunds and Mr, Black, in the course of which Mr. Edmunds called Mr, Black to o:der for using lans guage disrespectful to the Senate, and the chair admonished the counsel not to ins dulge in such language. Mr. Lord, on the part of the managers, moved thatas W.W. Belknap had made default in his plea that the trial now proceed on the general issue of not guilty. At this point, it being ascera tained that a quorum was not present, and the Sergeant-~at-Arms failing, after a few moments delay, to bring in any absentees at ten minutes to one o'clock, the Senate adjourned. In the House, nothing of ims portance was transacted, the entire day having devoted to speech-making, Among the 167 witnesses summoned by Mr. Bel- knap in his defence, are Genl’s Sherman, Sheridan, McDowell, Schofield, Terry, and Hancock, together with others holding po- sitions in the army, including heads of bus reaus and staff officers, also, the principal post traders, with numerous Senators and Representatives in Congress, The ims peachment managers have summoned twenty-one witnesses, including Mr, and Mrs. Caleb P. Marsh, Genl’s Custer, Mc. Dowell and Hayen. ‘Ihe statement that Secy. Bristow hiad placed his resignation in the hands of the President, to take effect after the adjournment of the Cincinnati Convention, is incorrect. He will, however resign on or before the first of July. It is thought Mr. John C. Mew of Indiana, at present U.S. Treasurer, will succeed him, Mr. Washburne, to whom it has been ten- dered, preferring to remain abroad till the close of this administration, Again, it is thought that Secretary Chandler will be transferred to the Treasury, and a new man appointed to the Department of the interior, Mr, Wm. Penn Clark is offering, on behalf the holder, the Log Book of the Confederate cruiser ‘Shenandoah.’ The log contains the names of all vessels caps tured by her. ‘The Secretary of State re« ferred the applicant to the counsel of the United States before the Alabama claims Commissioners, One of our most promis nent merchants, Mr. Augustus E. Perry, died very suddenly yesterday morning at six o’clock,of Angina Pectoris, a form of heart disease, The deceased is universally lamented. The Grand Jury yesterday found presentments against the notorious Richard Harrington, formerly United States Attorney for this District, and of Safe bure glary notoriety. ‘The presentments this time are for receiving bribes for the prosti- tution of his office while United States At- torney. But the wily Richard is safely out of the jurisdiction of the United States, being now in Nassau, about seve SAXON, A despatch from Vienna announces the resignation of the Austrian Minister of War, A resolution for the abolition of capital punishment in France, has been thrown out by the Assembly. The British arctic exploring steamer Pans dora was spoken on the 12th ult., steering northwards, under canvass, The Chinese are the merchants in Java end where they number 300,000, rank highs er than the natives, and are generally wealthier than the Dutch colonists, They had a good deal of trouble with the Azte woman attached to Barnum’s circus, in Providence. It seems she wanted her salary raised to $7 a week, but they told her if they did it she would also be obliged to appear as the Siberian malefactor, and she said she would go back to Limerick first and take in washing at two shillings a day, and they were obliged to compromise by bringing her out as the fascinating Oda- lisqgue of the Orient.— Norwich Bullétin, On Monday, the 22d May, at about 7 o'clock, p. m., as Mr. John McKachen was harrowing in his field, a large bear came out of the woods near by, and leaned his fore paws on the fence. Word was speedily forwarded to Mr. Wm. Morrow, senr., who made all possible speed, and in less than 15 minutes had the hideoug monster writhing in his own blood. Too much praise cane ndt be given to Mr. Morrow for his pluck in capiuring this destructive animal, An in caiculable amountof damage bas been done in this locality by bevrs killing sheep, &e., and the public has by this act been rid of the perpetration ofa great amount ofinjury. We had the pleasure of seeing this huge anima! as he jay cold and dead in Mr. John J, Campbell’s barn, on the same night, and feel safe in saying that he was the largest ever killed at East Point, mea. suring at least eight feet in length.—Com, to Times. Pract !—At the recent universary of the the British Peace Society, Jacob Bright, M. P., moved the following resolution, which was seconded by the Chevalier de Scherzer, of the Austrian Embassy, and unanimously adopted : ‘ That this meeting deeply de- plores the enormous increase which has lately taken place in the military expendi- ture of the country, and that at a time when the depressed condition of industry and commerce renders taxation especially burdensome on the people. It cannot but regard the system of rivalry in armaments, which is everywhere more and more de» pressing the nations, as a reproach to the statemanship of Europe, and sincerely res joiced in the movement which has lately sprung up in Austria, having for its Object to bring about a simultaneous ropors ‘ good morning, gentlemen,’ an tional reduction of arms in slope countries,’