aes os A Ne a ake eee ae NNN ci tami ii Nila co Cl a lal: iia: ann, a ee es ll THE VOL. XAVILI he Eraminer Is Printed and Published every Monday Forenoon, BY : William Li, Cotton, OFFICE: Corner Queen and King Streets. rERMS—Per Annum, Postage prepaid by Publisher, $1.40 in advance; $1.62 if paid within the year; $2.00 if not paid within the year. CLUE RATES- fue EXaminer will be forwarded to Clubs at the following rates per year— payment strictly in advance :— 5 copies, one address, ~- - - - - & 6.00 10 . ” —e een a € 10.00 15 = "+ ee 14.00 _— Ol “ wii teen 18.00 Clubs may be made up at any time, but not for a shorter period than a yesr. RATES of ADVERTISING ‘J\HE following are the Rates and Terms of Advertising as agreed to by the pub- lishers of newspapers in TP. E. Island :—50 cents per inch for first insertion, and 20 cents for each continuation. Ten per cent. discount from this rate will be made on all Advertisements continued for 3 months; 20 per cent. if continued for 6 months; 30 per cent if continued for 9 months; and 40 per cent if continued for 12 month. on ot ot DOD DNAMMEHY/! T oa | - ant DRaeeeeaee6e8205 i 6 PPT ereor(f(fr.r Sr Se Se ie a ee pens oe aeeeeewresr S| minomoeoeoetoan| q Besssssssosoi” enrnanpeswrns | enoOvaSeoeae=fa! s — ss Secamnsasenwrs| © peoSmiioOeaeanweei gq SSSSSqSSqoqsqocoo: “= Bee eases | * io OS nrUISASeeHe SSSs2zsssssss' 4 —— os ome pend oi ore COVN OAS mironeH Rae eooe SESSSSSSSSSS' 4 Te — oe a e BAMAXBBWOVCNA Sh Szxoevreoueoevozer SSssssssssssi 4 noe ee ee on SDA OWA ’ eSuSvetvnaurren SS2e8sssesssss'* en el a no mowers woe OI HAto- wSiromizptieeeranee] gs S$SSSSSSSS5SS5i"| swisha —=Sasonmaworay| © tome hR De roOeena| 5 ee ee a an ea af os Oo = oe hee = SSSSSESaacn: ~ Ri raweoaoeseowl s SSSA B HK aaeSesee: = BE: CS © a os SESS SeSanee| @ aQuabmewoewten~=-Oo] & SRSRSSSRSaSS = ‘awe Gnawwnee-— . See SnSSinzoe a SeSote& @eoanwaee| 5 SSSSSSSSSSSS } — Sounmeaewvnin-— -— | Sisa~ noe anwrana| ©} SwWuUSwROBROAS \SHSRSSRRSSSSIE ow 65 “3 2S St Ge So tS — Sp DIS mIRC | PP Neo ek sa > 35 cocoa tests awa Porro nrmnonrann: B All advertisements exceeding 12 inches will be subject to a discount of 10 per cent. additional, if eontinued for one year. Auctioneers will be allowed 10 per cent. discount when they advertise to the amount of $30 per year; 15 per cent when to the amount of $45; and 20 per cent when to the amount of $60 per annum, and not other- wise. The sum of 12 cents, per line will be charged for each insertion of all “ Special Notices; and 25 cents for notices in edi-~ torial or news columns. The sum of 50 cents will be charged for the insertion of all Marriage and Birth no- tices. — ——— ~ ALMANAC FOR JULY, 1876. MOON'S CHANGES. Full Moon, 6th day, 11h. 25m., a. m., N. below horison. Last Quarter, 14th day, 9h. 43m. a. m., S. W. New Moon, 2!st day, 12h, 40m., a. m., N. below horizon. First Quarter, 27th day. 11h. Gm., p.m., W. below horizon. i | t p.! ‘MOON | HIGH DAY’s Decehtibiiethiesistdbabidl aehetirinan teat BUSINESS CARDS. COOMBS & WORTH, 51 WATER STREET, Charlottetown, - - - Jan.17°76 ly E.G. NELSON, IMPORTER & REPATRER SEWING MACHINES. Appress :—I. O. Box 303, Charlottetown. Oct. 25, 1875.—ly MacKENZIE & STUMBLES, Anctioneers, Commission Merchants, GENERAL AGENTS, 77 North Side Queen Square, Charlottetown, - - P. E. Island. October 18, 1875.—ly WILLIAM DODD, Commission Merchant and AUCTIONEER QUBEN SQUARE, CHARLOTTETOWN. P. E. ISLAND. ~ CARVELL BROS., AUCTIONEERS, Commission Merchants, AND GENERAL AGENTS. Lower Queen St. Charlottetown, P. &. 1. HASZARD BROS., Commission Merchants & Auctioneers, FORWARDING, MANUFAC URERS, AND General Agents, G1 WATER STREET, Opposite Merchants Bank, Charlottetown, P. &. I. J. E. Haszarp, | Horace Haszarp. —_—:0°- REFERENCES?! Messrs. Greenshields, Son & Co., Montreal, Messrs. W. & R. Brodie, Quebec, Messrs. J. S. Farlow & Co., Boston, Henry Lawson, Esq., Halifax, N. S. : Hon. Daniel Davies, Charlottetown, P. E. I. May 3, 1875. REVERE HOUSE, ADJOINING THE POST OFFICE, ALBERTON, P. EB. . The subscriber has fitted up the above House in good style, and wishes to inform his friends, and the public gene- rally that he is prepared to accommodate Transient and Permanent Boarders. Good Stabling on Charges moderate. the premises. : RICHARD GLADNEY, Proprietor. Alberton, Sept. 13, 1875. INTERNATIONAL: CENTRAL STREET, Summerside, P.E. Island, JOHN McKAY, PROPRIETOR. YHIS ILOUSE, 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 advantage to patronize this Hotel. Feb. 21, 1876.—tf INSURANCE. ST. LAWRENCE Marine Insurance Co. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: A. KENNEDY, EsqQ., President. Joun F. Ropertson, ARTEMAS LoRD, THoMas MoRRIS, GrorGce D. LonGwortn. P. W. HyNDMAN, W. D. STEWART. Risks taken daily at their office, Exchange Building. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Ch’town, April 24, 1876.—ly Secretary MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: Ropert LONGWoORTH, Esq., President, Hon. Jas. DUNCAN, Hon. L, C. OWEN, Hon. A. A. MCDONALD, Hon. J. C- Pore, Tuomas HANDRAIAN, Esq., GeorGe R. Beer, Esq. Risks taken daily at their office, corner Great George and Lower Water Strects. *F. W. HALES, Secrretay. Ch’town, March 22, 1875—ly THE LIVERPOOL & LONDON AND GLOBE INSURANCE COMPAM FIRE AND LIFE. Invested Funds, Ist Jan’y., 1874, $21,628,356 Deposited with Receiver Gener- al of Canada, 162,800 Other Investments in Dominion as of Canada, 367,091 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, Office—Great George Street, Charlotte- town, P. E. I. R. R. FITZGERALD, Agent 4 {| sUN ee | rises |water |len’th a |rise | sets} \ | \H Mju M|A |M 11 31 1 Saturday |4 18\7 49) 3 58) 5 52) 31 ¢/ Sanday 19} 49) 4 59) 7 8) 20 3 Monday 19} 48 5 58) 8 16 29 4\Tuesday | 20) 48/7 1/9 : 28 5) Wedn'sd'y| 21) 48) 7 50) 9 45 27 6 Thursday 21; 47,8 2910 327 26 7\ Friday 22} 4718 S811 9 25 8 Saturday 23} 46/9 23)11 44 23 9| Sunday 23; 46; 9 42;\A 20 23 10| Monday 24) 4610 0| 0 42 22 11;Tuesday 25} 4510 14/1 23 10 12}Wedn'sd’y| 26, 4410 38) 2 0 18 13'Thursday | 27| 4310 46,2 35) 16 14| Friday 28} 4311 4¢)'3 19 16 15/Saturday 29; 4211 26,4 19 13 16|Sunday 30} 42M 5 38 2 17|Monday 31) 40:0 17 2 9 1s'Tuesday | 32) 39/0 45,8 34) 7 19, Wedn’s’dy| 33) 39/1 51/9 46 6 20'Thursday | 34) 38) 3 11/10 37 4 ai\Friday | 35| 37| 4 39/11 23 ’ 22/Saturday 36) 86| 6 811 57) 14 50 23 Sunday 87} 35| 7 32|M 58 24 Monday 88; 34; 8 53,0 29 56 25'Tuesday oo 3600 ° 673° 6 54 26,|Wean'sd’y, 40) 3211 20) 1 44 42 27\Tharsday | 42) 31A 31/2 26 49 28| Friday 43} 30} 1 56,3 18} 47 29, Saturday 44, 28) 2 51/4 3 44 30, Sunday 45} 27|3 57|5 20 42 $1\Monday (/4 46/7 2614 57/6 41) 14 40 PRICES CURRENT. Ch’town, July 4, 1876. BREADSTUFYFS. Buckwheat Flour, per lb 0.03 to 0.34 Flour, per bbl 5.50 to 7.00 Flour, per 100 lbs 3.00 to 3.25 Oatmeal, per 100 lbs 3.25 to 3.50 FISH. Codfish per qti 3.50 to 5.00 Herring per bbl 4.87 to 6.49 Mackerei per doz. 0.48 to 0.72 BOARDS. Hemlock, 100 feet. 0.81 to 0.94 Pine do 1.62 to 2.40 Spruce do 0.97 to 1.30 Shingles, per M. 1.50 to 1.75 POULTRY. Chickens, per pair $0.40 to 0.60 Ducks, (each) 0.25 to 0.30 Fowls, (each) 0.25 to 0.35 Partridges, (each) 0.00 to 0.00 Turkeys, (each) 0 80 to 1,75 Geese (each) 8.00 to 0.00 MEAT. Beef, (small pieces) per Ib $0.08 to 0.16 Beef, per lb (by the quarter) 0.06 to 0.10 Ham, per Ib 0.10 to 0.12 Lamb, per quarter 0.50 to 1.00 Lamb, per Ib 0.06 to 0.09 Mutton, per !b 0.06 to Jo.12 Pork,(small pieces) per 1b 0.08 to 0.12 Pork, per lb (by the carcass) 0.06 to 0,08 Veal, per lb 0.02 to 0.08 MISCELLANEOUS. Peet Apples per bushel 0.00 to 0.00 Barley per bushel 0.00 to 0.75 Butter (fresh) per Ib 0.16 to 0.20 Butter per lb by the tub 0.16 to 0.17 Calfskins, per lb 0.06 to 0.10 Cheese (new milk) per lb 0.14 to 0.16 Cheese, per Ib 0.05 to 0.08 Clover seed, per Ib ‘0.00 to 0.00 Eggs, per doz. 0.01 to 0.14 Green Peas, 0°28 to 0.30 Hay, per ton 10.00 to 13.00 Hides, per lb. 0.04 to 0.44 Money, per lb. 0.25 to 0.32 Homespun, (men’s wear)per yd. 0.65 t+ 1.00 Homespun, (women’s do)per yd 0.35 to 0°48 Homespun Flannel, per yard 0.31 to 0.46 Lard, per Ib 0.12 to 0.16 Oats, per bushe. 0.46 to 0.50 Potatoes, per bushel 0.45 to 0.50 Pear! Barley, per lb 0.03 to 0.04 Sheepskins 0.16 to 0.20 Straw, per tom 2.50 to 3.00 Timothy Seed, per bush, 0.00 to 0.00 ‘Tallow per 1b {9.07 to 0.10 Turnips, per bush. 0.20 to 0,24 Wool, per Ib 0.17 to 0.25 Ch’town, July 27, 1874.—6m CHARLO JOB PRINTERS & BOOKBINDERS ror oth tae P. E. Island, | PLETOW N, PRINCE § PORTR Y Wrink. i i ee ee ee eee ee ee ee ee | FROM LIFE WITHOUT FREEDOM. ee t freedom, oh, who would | freedom, oh, who would not | die? | Hark! hark! ‘tis the trumpet! the call of the brave, The death-song of tyrants, and dirge of the slave. Our country lies bleeding—oh, fly to her aid; One arm that defends is worth hosts that invade. In death’s kindly bosom our last hope re- mains— The dead fear no tyrants, the grave has no chains, On, on to the combat; the heroes that bleed For virtue and mankind are heroes indeed. And oh, even if freedom from //is world be ‘driven, Dispair not—at least we shall find her in heaven. LITERATURE. ARAMA RAAAA ALLS WENDERTIOLME. LALO LOOP DNA AL CHAPTER IV. Mrs. Ogden’s desire to bring about a re~ newal of the acquaintance between her son Isaac and Mr. Prigley was not an unwise one, even if considered independently of his religious interests, Mr. Prigley, though by no means a man of first-rate culture or capacity, was still the only gentleman in Shayton—the only man in the place who resolutely kept himself up to the standard of the outer world, and refused to adopt the local dialect and manners. No doubt our friend the Doetor was in a certain special sense a gentleman, and much more than‘a gentleman—he was a man of high attain- ment, and had an excellent heart. But,so far from desiring to rise above the outward ideal of the locality, he took a perverse pleasure in remaining a little below it. His language was a shade more provincial than that of the neighbouring manufacturers,and his manners somewhat more rugged and abrupt than theirs; Perhaps he secretely enjoyed the contrast between the common~ place exterior which he effected and the elaborate intellectual culture which he knew himself to possess. He resembled the house he lived in, which was, as to its exterior, so perfectly commonplace that everyone would pass it without notice, yet which contained greater intelectual riches and more abundant material for reflection than all the other houses in Shayton put to- gether. Therefore, if I say that Mr. Prig- ley was the only gentleman in the place, | mean externaly—in language and manner. If wealth be the standard adopted, the best gentleman in Shayton was a certain cotton a million, and had six illegitimate children, to whom he never gave one farthing—and a first cousin, a paralytic old woman, in a state of utter destitution. If knowledge is the standard, who can be compared to the Doctor? And if moral worth be the standard of true gentlemanhood, as perhaps it may be in the eyes of the angeis in heavs en, than the best gentlemanin Shayton was a poor, pale operative, denying clothes to his back and food to his belly that he might keep alot of poor children who had no claim upon him except that their father had helped him ten years ago, and received, in consequence, a solemn promise on his deathbed that his little ones should not be forsaken. The living of Shayton was a very meagre one, and Mr. Prigley had great difficulty in keeping himself above water ; but there is more satisfaction in struggling with the difficulties of open and avowed poverty tban in maintaining deceitful ap- pearances, and Mr, | ed to think about appearances at all, rigley, had long ceas- The only luxury they clung to at the parsonage was a degree of cleanliness considerably be- yond the ideal prevalent in Shayton; and their washings were considered extravagant and were no doubt heavier than the narrow income warranted. Uncle Jacob used to say that Mr. Prigley could not possibly know the luxury of a clean sbirt, because he ngver felt the delightfulness of the tran- sition from a thoroughly dirty one; but Mr. Prigley considered clean linen so pleasant in itself as to be beyond the necessity for contrast. In his earlier life he had beena fine swimmer, and passionately fond of taat amusement, but there was not a place with- in many miles of Shayton where he could indulge in it. The love of cold water re- mained with him, however, and he tubbed himself winter and summer, with heroic regularity. He had heard of the pond at Twistle Farm, and during the whole of last summer had longed to go and bathe in it but as Mr. Ogden never came near the par-g sonage, a feeling of delicacy had always re-~ strained him. Soap and water are cheap, and therefore rich people are apt to conclude that people may always be clean; but when a family is poor, and there are five children besides the parents, it is found in practice that if the household is to ke kept up to any strict rule of cleanliness it must be at the cost of considerable sacrifices. The Prigleys could no doubt have managed this more easily if their residence had been situated in the pure air of an agricultural neighbourhood; but in a manufacturing town or large vil’- lage like Shayton, where a number of tall chimneys are continually filling the air with black smoke that descends in solid specks of carbon like perpetual rain this taste of theirs was found to be an expens sveone. Now it had happened sometime ago that the carpets showed grievous signs of wear, and in fact were so full of holes as to be positively dangerous, They hac been patched and mended over and over igain, and an ingenious seamstress employed by Mas. Prigley, and much valued by her, had darned them with variously-coloured wools in continuation of the original patterns, so that (unless on close inspection) the repairs were not very evident. Now, however, both Mrs. Prigley and the seamstress, notwith~ standing all their ingenuity and skill, had reluctantly come to the conclusion that to repair the carpets in their present advanc-~ ed stage of decay it would be necessary to darn nothing less than the whole area of them, and Mrs. Prigley deciared that she would rather manufacture new ones with her knitting needles. But if buying carpets was out of the question, so it was not less out of the question for Mrs. Prigley to fabri- cate objects of luxury, since her whole time was taken up by matters of pressing neces sity—indeed the poor lady could only just keep up with the ceaseless accumulation of things that wanted mending; and when-~ ever she was unwell fora day or two, and uvable to work, there rose such a heap of PO ET a a OAL TLS spinner, who had just reached his quarter of | - ELS IOP EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, JULY 17, 1876. them as made her very heart sick, In this | perplexity about the carpets, nature was | left to take her course, and the carpets, | were abandoned to their fate, but still left | upon the floors; for how were they ever to | be replaced? By a most unfortunate co- incidence, Mr. Prigley discovered about the same time that his shirts, though ap- parently very sound and handsome shirts | indeed, and became deplorably weak in the | tissue; for if, in dressing himself in a hurry his hand did not happen to hit the orifice of the sleeve, it passed through the fabric of the shirt itself, and that withso little dif- ficulty that he was scarcely aware of any impediment; whilst if once the hem were wevered, the immediate consequence was a rent more than a foot long. Poor Mrs. Prigley had mended these patiently for a while; but one day, after marvelling how it happened that her husband had become so violent in his treatment of linen, she tried the strength of it herself, and, to use her own expressive phrase, ‘ came in two like a sheet of wet paper.’ It was characteristic of the Prigleys that they determined to re- new the linen at once, and to abandon car- pets for ever, Shayton is not in France, and to do with- out carpets in Shayton amounts to a cons fession of what, in the middle class, is look. ed upon as a pitiable destitution. Mr. Prig« ley did not care much about'this; but his wife wasmore sensitive to public opinion, and long after that heroic resolution had been taken, hesitated to put it in execution. Day after day the ragged remnants remains ed upon the floor, and still did Mrs. Prig- ley procrastinate. Her husband used to say, ‘ Well, Sally, aren’t the carpets taken up yet? 1] thought our parsonage was to have adopted French fashions by this time, and that the dining room was to bea salle a manger, and the drawing room a salon, and the parson’s study the cabinet de mone You needn’t think the house will look wretched without carpets; the floors are very good, and I'll stain them like dark oak, and rub some linseed oil into them, and they’ll look as well asa French para« quet**™ But though the resolution had been taken in theory, the great step from theory to practice seemed very diflicult to Mrs. Prigley, and her old patched carpets, even with the holes in them, were dearer to her than any bare boards ever could be, how- ever disguised by Mr. Prigley’s oak stain and linseed oil, So they remained day after day. Whilst things were in this condition at the parsonage, the conversation took place at Milend which we have narrated in the preceding chapter; and as soon as Mrs. Ogden had seen things straight in the kitchen, she ‘ bethought her,’ as she would have herself expressed it, that it might be sicur. a step towards intercourse between Isaac Ogden and the clergyman if she could make little Jacoh take a fancy té the par- sonage. There was a little boy there nears ly his own age, and as Jacob was far too much isolated, the acquaintance would be equally desirable tor him. ‘The idea was by no means new to her ; indeed she had long been anxious to find suitable play- mates for her grandson, a matter of which Isaac had not sufficiently perceived the im. portance; and she had often intended to take steps in this direction, but had been constantly deterred by the feelings of dis- like to Mr. Prigley which both her sons did not hesitate to express. What had Mr. Prigley done to them that they should nev. er be able to speak of him without a shade of very perceptible aversion or contempt? They had no definite accusation to make against him; they did not attempt to justify their antipathy, but the antipathy did not disguise itself. In an agricultural district the relations between the parson and the squire are often cordial ; in a manufacturing district the relations between the” parson and the millowners are usually less intimate and have more the character of accidental neighbourship than of natural alliance. It is difficult for the poorer clergy not to feel a little unconscious jealousy of the enor mous incomes netted by men whose edus cation has been confined to writing and arithmetic ; and, on the other hand, it is equally difficult for the cotton spinner, whose signature is a very lamp Aladdin, not to feel slightly jealous of the social and in~ tellectual (or at least educational) superi- orities of a class of men whoin many in- stances are actually struggling for the very necessaries of life. Tne contrast between the temporal and spiritual powers is seen here in its very strongest and crudest form ; but the violence of it is greatly miti,ated when (as frequently happens in the rising generation of manufacturers) the industrial chiet is a highly educated man, and when the clergyman has sufficient private fortune or'a sufficiently comfortable benefice, to re~ lieve him from painful comparisons. The intercourse between Milend and the parsonage had been so frequent that Mrs. Prigley was quite astonishing when Betty, the maid of all work, announced Mrs. Og- den as she pushed open the door of the sit- ting room. But she was much more aston- ished when Mrs, Ogden, instead of quietly advancing in her somewhat stiff and formal manner, fell forward on the door with out- stretched arms and a shriek. Mrs, Prigley shrieked too, llttle Jacob tried manfully to lift up his grandmother, and poor Betty, not knowing what#o say under circumstan+ ces so unexpected, but vaguely feeling that she was likely to incur blame, and might possibly (though in some manner not yet clear to her) deserve it, begged Mrs. Og- den’s pardon. Mr. Prigley was busy writ- ing a ‘sermon in! his study, or rather learns ing one by heart that he had written, for he was supposed extempore ; and being suddenly interrupted in the midst of what seemed to him an uncommonly eloquent passage on the spread of infidelity, rushed to the scene of the accident in a state of great mental confusion, which for some seconds prevented him from recognising Mrs. Ogden, or Mrs. Ogden’s bonnet, for the ladys’s face was not visible to him as he stood amazed in the doorway. ‘ Bless me?!’ thought Mr. Prigley, ‘ here’s a woman in a fit!’ And then came a dim and somewhat unchristaian feeling that worfien liable to fits need not just come and have them in the parlour at the parsonage. ‘It’s Mrs. Ogden, love,’ said Mrs, Prigley ; and, oh dear, I am so sorry!’ By the united efforts of the parson and his wife, joined to those of Betty and little Jacob, Mrs. Ogden was placed upon the sofa, and Mr. Prigley went to fetch some brandy from the dining room. On his way to the door the cause of the accident be~ came apparent to him in the shape of a yawning rent in the carpet,which was draggs ed wp in great folds and creases several XAMINE pt NS a inches high, He had no time to do juss tice to the subject now, and so refrained from making any observation ; but he ful- ly resolved that, whether Mrs. Prigley liked it or not, all ragged old carpets should dis» appear from the parsonage as soon as Mrs, Ogden could be got out of it. When Mrs, Prigley saw the hole in her turn, she was overwhelmed with a sense of culpability, and felt herself to be little better than a murdress, ‘ Betty, run and fetch Dr. DBardly as fast as ever you can.’ ‘ Please let me go,’ said little Jacob; ‘I can run faster than she can.’ So little Jacob bounded out of the par- sonage, and ran down the main street of Shayton Hea hare before the hounds. Some durty little boys that were playing at marbles saw him pass, and called out after him, and so raised a hue and cry that was taken up bya straggling population of juveniles. At last half a dozen of them closed the path before him, and when he tried to make his way through the ranks of the enemy, our hero dealt several very hearty blows with his small fists, which was returned with equal heartiness ; and indeed so irritated did the little mob become that little Jacob would have had his legs varie- gated by kicks from their heavy clogs if a powerful ally had not come to his assistance. It happened that the battle took place just before Susy Tattersal’s shop, which, as everybody in Shayton knows very wel! (though some strangers in London and elses where may not be aware of the fact,) is in the main street of the village just before you turn up to the Doctor’s, Susy is a strong woman yet; but at the date of the present narrative she was an uncommonly powerful one, and loved and hated as ener~ getically as she drove the scouring stone along her sanded floor, or wrung out her check aprons on the washing day. Her trade was of a miscellaneous description. She sold the Manchester papers ; she sold shilling novels, and religious biographies, and atheistic pamphlets, and pious tracts ; she sold sugar plums and children’s toys, including whips of various descriptions, with whistles and without whistles. She dealt in tarts also, One of her most regular patrons was Master Jacob, who had lots of pocket money (more than was good for him), and seldom fail to look in at Susan’s when he passed that way. The woman had had a little son exactly of Jacob’s age but the child was dead ; and every time Susy saw little Jacob, the maternal heart within her said that her own Isaiah would have been about such another if he had lived ; so she often kissed our young hero, who ra- ther wondered at these attentions, to which, however, he had no objection, as they were usually followed by gratuitous sugar plums and tarts. And when the lad’s back was turned, and Susy was left alone in her shop, the check apron would go up to the corners of her eyes, and the next customer would wonder what had been the matter. So when the scuflle took place at Susy’s door she rushed out, and perceiving that her favour was surruunded by enemies, threw herself valiantly into the thick of the combat,open- ing a way with her big red arms. and scat- tering her foes at the right hand and to the left. The little dirty urchins had all of them a great awe of Susy, and vanished before this stalwert maintainer of the right. She drew little Jacob into her sanctuary of tarts and lollipops, and questioned him in rather an overwhelming manner. So soon as she had gathered that Mrs. Ogden had fallen down in the parlour at the parsonage, and that her young friend had been sent to fetch the doctor, she set off with him to Dr. Bardly’s house. Martha opened the door. ‘Eh, Susy! what are you comed about ? Is somebody noan weel?’ and then per. ceiving Master Jacob, ‘ What! is there sum» mat wrong at Milen or up at Twistle Farm ? Without giving Jacob any time to answer. Susy Tattersal whispered in a grave and breathless manner, ‘it’s Mistress Ogden; who’s fa’en down ja fitt at th’ parsonage, and who’s ’appen deead by neaw.’ Whilst the Doctor and little Jacob are going to Mr. Prigley’s—the doctor walking as fast as he can and asking questions, his young friend running by his side and do- ing what he can to answer them—Susy stops to have a little chat with Martha, and then goes back to her shop, where, to her confusion, five customers are waiting for her. It is very natural that, by way ot appology for her absence, she should nar- rate what she knew of Mrs. Ogden’s acci. dent, with her own comments, Soon af- terwards Mr. Isaac rode into Shayton, and just as he was turning into the yard at the Red Lion, one of his tenants, who stood bareheaded in the doorway with a long clay pipe in his mouth, came suddenly forward beckoned, and in a grave low tone, with an expression of muchsympathy, communicat-~ ed the news that Mrs. Ogden had just had a fit of apoplexy at the parsonage, and that Dr. Bardly was with her, but that it was be~ lieved lite was not yet quite extinct, About the same time his brother Jacob at the mil} received the news that Mrs. Ogden had had a severe fallat Mr. Prigley’s, and that she had broken her arm, but that Dr. Bardly had set it, and she was doing as well as could be expected. To be Continued, Tur Yacat Countess or Durrerin.—The Canadian yacht Countess of Duflerin, which arrived here on Friday night, as reported in our last, sailed at 7 o'clock yesterday morns ing for New York. She was visited on Sunday by many persons interested iu shipbuilding and yachting, among whom the general opinion was unfavorable. She has been constructed on principles different from those commonly received here, and as she was turned out in a hurry she is ina rough state, which can hardly fail to pro~ voke smiles from the New Yorkers who are used to seeing yachts finished to perfection. The commander and prssengers frankly admit that the Countess is not much to look at, but they smile in a self-satisfied way and say that she was built fora specific pur« e—to win the Queen’s Cup; that her lack of finish does not effect her sailing qualities; and that ber performance in the race with the Madeline will be the best test of her soundness of her builder’s ideas, If the strange-looking craft earries off the Queen’s Cup in the coming contest, there will be a revolution in yacht building in New York.—Hz. Chronicle, The following isa cablegram to the To- ronto Glube:—‘The Merchants’ Shipping Bill has been amended in accordance with the cable despatch of last Saturday. The billas arhended will be reported to the House of Lords next Friday. As the bill now stands, the decision of the House of of Commons allow three feet deck loads and makes other concessions to Canadian interests. ‘The bill, after passing the Lords, must be referred back to the Commons for approval of the alterations msde.” POSTAG CORRESPONDERCE. OUR WASHINGTON LETTER. a Ss Wasuineton, D.C., July 3, 1876. We may not sing the exact words of that good old hymn: “Lo! whata cloud of wits nesses encompass us around,’ but by chang-~ ing theword witnesses to visitors we muy sing it to our heart’s content, and truthfully too, for the city is full of them from all parts of the country. They all seem to be « ing themselves, and look extremely happy, and we NiDY 2j0F the soberssided citizens the in thought that they are so, are pleased it should beso, The public -buildings, the Smithsonian, and Agricultural bureau, re~ ceive their due share of attention, and then Mount Vernon claims their regards. The numerous steamers making daily excur- sions to that place afford ample opportunity for the exercise of their reverential emo- tions, and the delightful trip well repays the pilgrim to the Mecca of America. The ‘*down-east ” style of answering one ques- tion by asking another obtains here just now toa limited extent. To the question, what do you think of the St. Louis Conven- tion? The reply frequently is, are you going to the Centennial on the Fourth You may observe from this that politics and the Cen- tennnial Fourth divide the public attention between them. Just now there isa “ dead lock” in Congress, on the subject of appro< priation. The house feels economical,and thinks too much money has been spent by the Administration, and has therefore re- duced the amount beretofore deemed neces- sary. The Senate feels generous and wants the amount heretofore supplied, and have s0 amended the House bill as to obtain this result. But the House will not agree to the Senate's amendments, and commit~ tees upon committee of conference have been appointed, they too have utterly fail- ed to agree, and the state of affairs produc- ed by such actions has, or will cause much embarassment in the transaction of public business. It is probable, however, that the House will agree to a proposition made by the Senate to let the appropriation for the last fiscal year, ending June 30th, run over for thirty days, hoping by that time to ar. rive at some satisfactory adjustment of the differences now existing. If they make no better headway than the experience of the past thirty days would leads us to look for, they might safely have given thems selves sixty, and at the end of that time been no nearer a satisfactory settlement than they now are. No matter how this may be, they (that is Congress) can find time and money enough to flit over to Philadelphia to spout “ Buncombe” in In- dependence Hall on the near approaching Fourth. But in accordance with a resolu- tion passed by the Senate, the President of that body will select fifteen poor old victims to be left behind to eat pudding and sip wine with Doctor John B. Blake and his venerable confreers yclept, the Association of Oidest inhabitants. I suppose that they (that is the fifteen ‘left behind ”) will see and hear just as much to interest and amuse them here as they would had thef gone with the rest to the city of fraternal affec~ tion, and doubtless the many interesting incidents (many of them existing only in the imagimation of the relator) connect~ ed with the early history of Washington will, together with a sip or two of fine old wine, make them feel like singing ‘Oh, would | were a boy again. Mr. Rink of Wisconsin, from the Committee on Invalid Pensions, has reported a bill which, if it pass the Senate and become law, should be at once published throughout the lana so that those interested mzy avail themselves of its bene- fits. The bill provides that any person who has lost a limb in the service of the Unit- ed States shall receive every five years an artificial limb, and, if I mistake not, the bill provides that all expenses for going and returning, in having the limb fitted; shall be defrayed by theGovernment. The proper way to get all the information neses- sary would be to address the Commissioner of Pensions. I will ascertain the facts, and give them to you in my next letter. SAXON, A SINGULAR MURDER: AN ATTEMPT TG SAVE A MAN BY USING ANOTHER MAN'S BLOOD, [From the Georgetowu (Col.) Miner, June 17.] Last week we mentioned briefly the cuts ting of Frank Grey in the neck by Thomas Kerwin, on Monday, the 15th. At the time we penned the brief paragraph it was gen- erally supposed that the woundel man would recover, The event, however, has proved that the aftray was destined to terminate ina tra- gedy that was not at first anticipated. The wounded man is dead and in his grave, and the murderer is safely locked up in jail. Last Sunday night Gray, who was sleeps ing in an upper room in the Doyle House, was seized with a fit of coughing, and a fearful hemorrhage ensued, He was alone at the time, and started to the door to give the alarm and have the physician sent for. The blood spurted in torrents from the him, nearly a gallon of blood, it is estimat- the carotid artery. was almost lifefess. most part lay in a semi-unconscious state. blood into his system. de Voort. surprised at the result. the same decision was given by the pbys words addressed to him, the temperature of which was regulated b a thermometer. Lemon, an incision made in a vein of th cision vein through a small syringe. Abouf. four ounces of the blood draw wound, and before Dr. Lemen could reach ed, had been pumped by the heart through | The result was that he | During the day (Mon-~ day) he was gradually sinking, and for the The attending physician determined, as a last resort, to try the effect ot transfusing Kerwin agreed to supply the blood, and shortly after dinner the experimemt was made, Dr. Lemen operating, assisted by Drs, Todd and Van We were present during the operation, and are free to say that we were The poor fellow seemed in the very grasp of death before the operation commenced. We could de- tect no pulsation whatever at the wrist, and icians; his hands and feet were cold and clammy, like those of a corpse; the eyes had only a vacant stare, betraying no intel ligence, and when spoken to he appeared | entirely unconscious of the import of the | fou! Blood was drawn from Kerwin’s arm and kept at the temperature of the body by | immersing the bow! containing it in water, | The fibrine or clot of blood was then carefully removed ty Dr. | right armi, and the blood forced into the in- | i PREPAYD, a 29. frora Kerwin arm were injected into Gray's | end ina shori time the pulse was quite | perceptible, the extremities resumed their | normal condition and became warm, con- | sciousness returned, and although he did | not attempt to speak he evinced a know- | ledge cf what was said to him and replied | to questions by manual signs. The strength | given him by this accession of biood prob- |ably prolonged his life some hours, but | about one o'clock Wednesday morning he | breathed his last—another victim to deadly weapons in the hands of passionate men. Upon learning the fatal result of the traged, Kerwin who had been out on bail was promptly arrested by the proper officer and committed to jail to await the action ot the Grand Jury summoned by Judge Stone to investigate the case. NO, ESI DEN ILE ONT = aia iT T MISCELLANEOUS, The first railroad in China, from Shang« hai to Woon Sung, was opened on July Ist. The famous Castle Garden immigrant station at New York, was, last week, burn- ed down. By an explosion in a colliery near Metz, Germany,42 persons were killed,47 serious~ ly injured, Lord Dudley is reported to have lost £30,000 by backing Lord Dunplin’s horse Petrarch. But that is less than his income for a month. Russia has addressed a circular note to her representatives abroad,announcing that she will not support Servia but remain a simple spectator. Owing to depressed trade, a reduction of ten per cen. on the wages of the Lancashire mill operatives is proposed, The reduction will effect 50,000 or 60,000 operatives. ee A Milwaukee man made three unsuccess- ful attempts to blow his brains out,and then his wife told him: ‘ Don’t try itagain, John, you haven't gotany.’ He goes about saya ing he owes his life to that woman. Governor Hayes has formerly accepted the Fresidental nomination, and says he will accept a second term; he will encours age civil service reform if elected; he is for hard money. His letter is favorably ree ceived, The sale of Circassian girls to Turks cons tinues. A correspondent of the London Times says that a Moslem dealer makes choice of four young unsophisticated girls, imports them to Constantinople, sells them and then goes back for more. It he can achieve four such tripsin a year he can make a good living ont of sixteen women, Many of the Circassions are settled in Tur, key, and there actually breed children for sale, having no more shame about it than a fashionable English mother may feel about bringing eut her girls for the matrimonial market. Tun Bank or France has two milliards of solid gold in its cellars; it is calculated that it would require $00 drays, each with two horses, to transport this pile; the amount could settle the “soft money ”’ question in the States, enable the Sultan to build ten additional palaces, and a fleet of iron clads superior to all the combined navies of the world; it could transport all the world gratuitously to the Fancy Inter. colonial Fair of 1878, supplying them with a free ticket anda fair and square meal; the treasure of Croesus, of Solomon, of Philip II. pale before such a museum of nuggets: Spanish bondholders, the owners of Turkish scrip, and investors in Peruvian loans, are allowed to visit the cellars on the anniversaries of their dividend days, The news from Ottawa that the English and French Governments have amicably settled the Newfoundland fishery business is what might be expected. Although there has been much diplomacy, and a great deal of learned and argumentative newspaper writing on the subject, nobody at any time entertained the idea that the difference of opinion between the two Governments would result in a rupture of their friendly relations. Even the appearance of a strong French fleet on the fishing ground did not seem to cause any alarm. We hope, hows ever, that in the settlement of the dispuite the Imperial Government has not forgotten the interests of the Colonists,as it has done on many former occasions, Reports from the seat of war are widely contradictory ; but the balance of advantage would seem to be on the side of the furks. News by a Berlin epecial reports the Turks besieging Gatchar, which has a garrison of 8,000 men. All advices re« ceived confirm the onward march of Techs ernayeif., The ‘Courier de France” res ports a great engagement between Perot and Isavibiod, The Turks were disloged and the road open to Sophia. The Turks lost 200 killed and 100 prisoners at Pirot, The insurrection in Bulgaria is reported general. The Constantinople corresponds ent of the *‘ News’ repeats and quotes evis dence in support of his previous assertion in regard to atrocities in Bulgaria. He gives an instances of one case in which 40 women of the village of JIououselo were burned alive, and cites a consular report placing the number of murderf committed by the Turks at 12,000, while some estimates ran as high as 25,000. A despatch from Belgrade summing up the operations of the last eight days, says ‘Servians have fought eight actions, and lost five thousand men, During the attack of Gen. Olympio on Betina, the Turks murdered all the Christian inhabitants,” The Bulgarian insurrection is reported spreading. LIVER AND BLOOD DISEASES. RP By R. V. People’s Pierce, M. D., Author of ‘ The Common Sense Medical Adviser.’ A healthy liver secretes each day about two aod a half pounds cf bile, which contains a great amount of waste material taken from the blood. When the liver becomes torpid Gr congested, it fails to eliminate this vast amount of noxious substance, which, therefore, remains to poison the blood, acd be conveyed to every part of the system. What must be the condition of the blood when itis receiving and retaining each day two aod a half pounds of poison ? Nature tries to work off this poisen through other chansels and organs—the kidveys, lungs, skie, etc., but these organs become overtaxed iy per- | forming this labor in addition to their natural functions, and cannot long withstand the pres- sure, but beceme variously diseased. The brain,which ia the great electrical center of all vitality, is unduly stimulated by the un- healthy blood which passes to it’from the heart and it fails to perform its office healthily# Hence the symptoms ot bile poisoning, which are dulluess, headache incapacity to keep the mind on any subjéct, impairment of memory, dizzy, Sleepy or nervous teeliags, gloomy fore- bodings, and irritability of temper. The blood itself being diseased,as it torms the sweat upon tue surface of the skin, it is so irritating and poisonous that it produces discolored brows spots, pimpless, blotches, and other eruptions sores, boils, carbuncles. and scrofulous tumors.” The stomach, bowels and other organs, cannot cannot escape becoming afiected, sooner or later, and we have as the result, costiviness, piles, dro; sy, dyspepsia, diarhoea. Other sym- ptoms are common, ag bitter or bad taste in the mouth, interval heat, palpitation, teasing cough unsteady appetite, choking sensation in throat -| bloating of stomach, pain in sides or about sheulders or back, coldness of extremities, etc. Unly afew of the above symptoms are likely to be presegt if any case at one time. The liver being the great depurating, or bleod- cleansing organ ofthe system, set this great housekeeper of our health, at work, and the corruptions which geoder in the blood, and | rotout as it were, the machinery of life, are | yradually expelled from the system. For this urpose Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery; th very small doses ot Dr. Pierce s Pleasant rgative Peliets, is pre-eminently the article necded. They cure every kind of humor from y | the worst scrofula to the common pimple, bloteh, “,| or eruption. Great eating ulcers kindly heal under their mighty curative, influence. Virulent blood peisons, that lurk in the system are by | them robbed oftheir terrors, and by their per- © | severing and somewhat protracted use the most tainted system may be completely renovated and built up anew. Enlarged glands, tumors, and swellings, dwiedle away and dissappear n | uader the influence of these great insolvents.