bc ai emt el me a a ll a en a em + LRN NN NN lt Nl ctu . TRE oi ceed ea i aN, al, ail i THE BE; Ces TT SE A REE Ee AE, VOL. XAVII cana ER ET Che Examiner is Priate i aud P| Lise d every Moadsy Forenoon, BY William Lu, Cotton, OFFICE: Queen and King Streets. ERMS—Per Annum, Post isher, $1.40 Manway Wwe seve ge prepaid by ulvance: &1.62 vithin the year; $2.00 if not paid within CLUB RATES: lum EXAMINER will forwarded to ( s at the following rates per year— iyment strictly in advance :— » copes, one address, - - - - - $ 6.00 a ee a 10.00 i OM OPE CR le ew ow 14.00 ee 18.00 | { s may be made up at any time , but a year, RATES of ADVERTISING 7a> following are the Rates and Terms of Advertising as agreed to by the pub- | lishers of newspapers in P. EK. 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 al! 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. Se Ske fate See Se Ss Soe See Dl — - 6 ~~ wee weue we we = = 100°9 |} ° | LOG'6 oe’ Ol OF's ws | Sesesooococosc: % rt’ } | | O9 SHUG GEIZE Telos ’az’or-os ul . e HOP SECO PF uw 9 FO'LL'O2 O8 OOF FORE j OROOR’ Le i} eb } Gth Savidinntiltinainments Ul ZI al ¢ rove vo 4 é | | All advertisements exceeding 12 inc hes | will be subject to a discount of 10 per cent. additional, if continued for one year. Aactioneers 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 pér 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 al] Marrjage and Birth no- tices. | - ALMANAC FOR SEPT., 1876. | | MOON'S CHANGES. Full Moon, 3d day, 5h, 1lm., p. m., E., helow horison. | Last Quarter, 11th day, 12h. 8m. a.in., E. | New Moon, 17 day, 5h. 42m., p. m., W. First Quarter, 25th day, 7h. S5lm., a.m., N. | beiow horizon. oe!) ae MOON | HIGH |DAY’s oct 1. rises water |len’th | rise sets H MHMA iM H. M. | WFridsy (5 2516345 55,9 4113 9] 2 Saturday 27; 32); 6 99 46 5 3 Sunday | Ze, 3.6 210 2 2 | 4,Monday | 29) 28) 6 4410 67/12 59 5\fuesday | 30, 26 6 S911 24 56 | 6|Wedn’sd’y; 32; 24; 7 I611 58 52 | 7\Thursday | 33) 22; 7 35)A 28 49 | Sifriday | 35] 21/8 O11 4 46 | 9Saturday | 37) 19; 8 34; 1 48 42 | 10\Sunday | 37% 17; 9 242 33 40 I1}Monday | 38) 15:10 17) 3 48] 37 | 12iTuesday. |. 39} 13)11 35) 5 15 34) 13|Wedn’s’dy| 41, 11\5 7 ia) 30 | 14)Tharsddy | 42) 9) 1 10/8 21) = 27 si\Friday ~~ | 43|°° 7| 2 35;'9 18 24 | 16\Saturday | 44) 5/4 819 59 21 | 17\Sunday | 46) 4 5 1710 36 17} 1s\Monday | 47/ 1 6 3311 11) 14 | 19 Tuesday | 48/559 7 4911 39) 11] 20,Wean'sd’y| 50), 57 8 54M 7} 21,Thursday | 51) 55:10 17,0 13 4 | 22) Friday 63) 5311 29 0 52 0) 23/Saturday | 54; 51/A 36 1 2911 57} 24 Sunday 54; 49' 1 24123 15 55 | 25\Monday | 56{ 48) 2 23/3 6 2] 26;Tuesday | 57) 46 $ 4:4 7 49 27, Wedn'sd’y; 69 44 3 345 14 45 | 28,Thursday (6 0| 42,3 59 6 34 42) Friday | 1) 40,4 19|7 38 39 | 30 Saturday | 2:5 38/4 84 8 2e)11 36) j i | i i PRICES CURRENT. Ch’town, August 29, 1876. BREADSTUFFS. Buckwheat Flour, per tb Flour, per bb! Flour, per 100 Ibs Oatmeal, per 100 Ibs FISH. 0.03 to 0.34 5.50 to 7.00 3.00 to 3.25 3.50 to 4.00 3.50 to 5.00 4.87 to 6.49 0.48 to 0.72 Codiish per qtl Ierring per bb! Mackerel per doz. 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. | $0.40 to 0.60 | 0.25 to 0.30 | 0.25 to 0.35 | 0.00 to 0.00 | 0 80 to 1.75 | 0.00 to 0.00 MEAT. $.08 to 0.16 | 0.06 to 0.10 | 0.10 to 0.12 | 0.60 to 0.00 | 0.06 to 0.10 0.06 to 0.11 | 0.08 to 0.12 | 0.00 to 0.00 | Chickens, per pair Ducks, (each) Fowls. (each) Partridges, (each) Turkeys, (each) Geese (each) Beef, (small pieces) per Ib seef. per lb (by the quarter) Ham, per Ib Lam), per quarier Lamb, per Ib Mutton, per Ib Pork (smal! pieces ) per ib Pork, per lb (by the carcass) Veal, per Ib 0.03 to 0.08 MISCELLANEOUS. Apples per bushel Barley pet bushel Butter (fresh) per Ib Butter per Ib by the tub Calfskins, per Ib Cheese (new milk) per Ib Cheese, per Ib Clover seed, per Ib Eggs, per doz. Green Peas, Hay, per ton Hides, per |b. 0.04 to 0.44 Honey, 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 tb 0.12 to 0.16 | Oats, per bushe. 0.50 to 0.60 Dtatoes, per bushel 0.25 to 0.30 Pear} Barley, per ib 0.08 to 0.04 Sheepskins 0.30 to 0.40 Straw, per ton 2.50 to 8.00 Imothy Seed, per bush, 0.00 to 0.00 allow per Ib 0.07 to 0.10 Won: per bush. 0.00 to 0.00 9ol, per lb 0.17 to 0.25 6.00 to 0.00 0.00 to 0.75 0.18 to 0.24 0.16 to 0.17 0.06 to 0.10 | 0.14 to 0.16 | 9.05 to 0.08 0.00 to 0.00 0.11 te 0.16 0.08 to 0.12 7.00 to 9.00 Eta SR if paid | Auctioneers, Commission Merchants, (77 Nerth Side Queen Square, we S So ORMIS Cm Ie | 7 | ' ! W heels | Summerside, P.E. Island, | i the BUSINESS CARDS. COOMBS & WORTH, (JUB PRINTERS & BOGKBINDERS 51 WATER STREET, P. E. Island, MV, ae] . i Att At Aere wWiLAliOuLeLown, Jan.17’°76 ly E.C. NELSON. _ IMPORTER & REPAIRER SEWING MACHINES. AbppREss :—P. O. Box 303, Charlottetown. Oct. 25, 1875.—ly MacKENZIE & STUMBLES, AND GENERAL AGENTS, Charlottetown, - - P. E. Island. October 18, 1875.—ly WILLIAM DODD, Commission Merchant and AUCTIONEER QUEEN SQUARE, CHARLOTTETOWS., P. E. ISLAND. CARVELL BROS., AUCTIONEERS, Commission Merchants, AND *ENERAL AGENTS. Lower Queen St, Charlottetown, P. B. 1. HASZARD BROS., Commission Merchants & Auctioneers, FORWARDING, MANUFACURERS, AND General Agents, Gl WATER STREET, Opposite Merchants Bank, Charlottetown, - - - - PEL J. E. Haszanp, | Horace Haszaxrp. ————? ©: 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, 1575. REVERE HOUSE, ADJOINING THE POST OFFICE, ALBERTON, a 7 :. ee P. E. I, Thesubscriber 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. LVPERMATIONAL! STREET, CENTRAL JOHN McKAY, PROPRIETOR. YHIS ILOUSE, second to none on the Is- land for beauty of situation, comfort and convenience afforded, commends itself to 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. OF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: A. KENNEDY, ESQ., President. Joun F. Rospertson, ARTEMAS LORD, THomMAS Morris, GrOKGE D. LONGWORTH. P. W. IlyNpDMAN, W. D. STEWART. Risks taken daily at their office, Exchange Building. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Ch’town, April 24,1876.—ly Secretary MARINE INSURAKCE COMPANY PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: Rozsert Lonaworth, Esq., President, Hon. Jas. DUNCAN, Hon. L. C. OWEN, Hon. A. A. MCDONALD, Hon. J. C- Porr, ‘Thomas HANDRAIIAN, Esq., GrorGE R. BrEEr, Esq. Risks taken daily at their office, corner Great George aud Lower Water Streets. F. W. HALES, Secrretay. Ch’town, March 22, 1875—ly THE LIVERPOOL & LONDON AND CLOBE INSURANCE COMPANY 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 of Canada, 867,091 FAIR RATES. f Prompt & Liberal Settlements. Insurance against Fire effected upon Pri- vate Residences, Household Furniture and Farm Properties, for Que, Three or more years, At Reduced Rates. Office—Great George Street, Charlotte- town, P. E. I. Rh. R. FITZGERALD, Agent ‘ning, sir! POETRY. PAO OE ARAL WAY O THE WIND. SOAR AMAR THE ‘** Why does the east wiad always complain? Because he is married to the rain. * Why is the north wind’s breath so strong? He has wrestled with icebergs fierce and ong. “Why is the south wind’s step so light? Ought of a sleeping land in flight. ‘““Why is the west wind’s touch’aflame ? Out of a sunset cloud he came.” Lying under asummer tree, This is what Zephyr sang to me. Zephyr, with flattering words and low, Tells but half of the truth I know. Four great boys in an ancient hall, They grew up thinking their will was all. Sweet Mother Nature, the dearest dame— I fear her softness is much to blame— Loyely and quiet, year out year in, Her soft white blankets she sits tospin! Rose-hued curtains and carpets green, Broidered cushions of satin sheea. Her guests are bidden, her home is fair— Four wild rovers have entrance there. Never’s an bourso still and sweet But may be broken by tramping feet. But when from the ruin they turn away, Oh! who so gentle and blithe as they! They rock the cradles in tall tree-tops, They run with the dripping water-drops. Daintly courting, they sigh and pine Round the flower ladies so pure and fine. Well they love pleasure, but mischief best, foo swiftand subtie and strong for rést. Up and down in the world they go, And mock us with every voice we know. They pipe to the dreamers at even-song; They mourn to the watchers all night long. Then down the chimney they shout and roar, Shriek at the lattice and shake the door. The old man sighing, repeateth still, ‘“* The will o’ the wind is boyhood’s win;” The boy, with wondering, silent lips, Thinks of the sea and wafted ships; And each in his dim heart longs to find Out of his world the way o’ the wind. _ —~ Cart Spencer, in Harpers Magazine for Seplember. LITERATURE. WENDERHOLME. CHAPTER 1X.—Continued. As to the origin of the name of the place the reader is referred to the local antiquars ians, of whose acrid controversies the pre- sent writer is not competent to judge. The natural interpratation seems to be that some venerable thorn tree, having been ex- posed to much cval smoke, had become visibly blackened by it, and received the title of the sooty thorn; but this crude idea may be easily and triumphantly refuted. The town bore its present appelation, long before the fresh air of the valley was con- taminated by factory smoke. There was a theory that the origin of the name had been a seat in a large thorn tree, or seat i’ th’ thorn, thence Seatithorn, and by corruption, Sootythorn; but a powerful section of the local erudities contemptuously rejected thorn altogether, and contended that the final syllable was horn, which they proved by analogous instances, A punster declared that the whole question was a thorny one ; and, as we agree with him, we will leave it. The controversey was much envenomed in consequence of the two decided interpre- tations given by the artist who painted the new sign at the Thorn Inn, and who, not trusting, as he safely might have done, to the atmosphere of the place for the black- ening of his tree, painted it from the first of the intensest sable, foilage and all, not even diversifying that funeral hue with those reflections from neighbouring objects which, as painters affirm, do in nature modify and mitigate every colour in the universe. Into the yard at this Thorn Inn now en- tered the Doctor’s gig. Mr. Garley, who kept the inn, and owned it, was a man of substance in more sense than one, and pers haps, with an appearance of great cordiality and freedom, one of the very proudest men in the whole place. There are many dif- ferent varities of pride, and Mr. Garley’s variety was perhaps as desirable as any. If, on the one hand, he was convinced that the Thorn was the best inn in Lancashire, if not in all England, at the same time he cer- tainly did his utmost to make it so. He loved good eating and every form of com.- fort, and treated his guests in every re- spect as he wished to be treated himself— a course of conduct which would have been the very relisation of at least one-half of the Christian ideal, if the motives of it had not been the love of reputation and the de- sire of gain. However, even Mr. Garley’s defects, his intense self.satisfaction and the love of good living, were to the advantage of his house,and therefore of everybody who frequented it; and our friend the doctor, who was by no means indifferent to a good dinner, always looked forward with pleasure to the flesh-pots at the Thorn, and was wel- comed by its proprietor as a man who props erly appreciated the advantages of his es-~ tablishment. ‘ Good morning, Dr. Bardley! good mor- You’ve brought the old lady with you this morning, I observe—I saw her getting down in the middle of the street ; it’s very kind of you;’ and then, with a knowing look anda wink, ‘If you would like to ask her to dine with you, you can have a private room, you know, sir.’ The doctor was quite accustomed to this sort of badgering, and rather liked it. But he put on a stern countenance, and said that he hadn’t brought Nanny Pickering to dine at the Thorn, ‘ because he didn’t ex- pect to find a dinner there good enough for her. However, when the militia was fairly agoing, he might perhaps ask her to dine at mess.’ ‘ Colonel Stanburne’s expecting you, doc- tor; he’s in the front sitting room.’ The Colonel was sitting by himself with the ‘Times’ and a little black pipe. ‘Good morning, Dr. Bardly. You've a nice little piece of work before you. There are a lot of fellows here to be examined as to their physical constitution — fellows, you know, who aspire to the honor of serving in the Twentieth Regiment of Royal Lanca~ shire Militia.’ ‘ Perhaps I'd better begin with the hoffi- cers,’ said the doctor, The Colonel looked alarmed or affected to be so. ‘My dear doctor there is not the least necessity for examining oflicers—it isn’t customary ; it isn’t legal; officers are always perfect, both physically and morally. Their physical perfection is a consequence of their moral perfection, you know. They are never guilty of those unfortunate errors and vices which deteriorate the constitu- POSTAGE PREPAID, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, SEPTEMBE © arse ME TAN ™ iad wees ae mn ER 4, 1876. NO. 36. 55 GS RRL a REN EI ee ma? SECEDE OER PEPE GPa asta a LAS A ATT LT NTA A theory of this kind came weil enough high and the picture of health, He broyght forth the fruits of good living, not as Mr. Garley did in a bloated and rubicund face, and protuberant corporation, but in that admirable balance of the whole human or- ganism which proves the regular and equal performance of all its functions, Dr. Bardly was a good judge of a man, and he had the same pleasure in looking at the Colonel that a foxhunter feels in contempluting a fine horse. Beyond this, he liked Colonel! Stanburne’s society, not precisely, perbaps, there was little or nothing in common be~ tween the two—but because he found it a sort of mental refreshment, very pleasant to him after the society in Shayton. The Colonel was a different being—khe lived in a different world from the world of the Ogdensand their friends; and it amused and interested the doctor to see how this strange and rather admirable creature would conduct itself under the conditions of its present existence. The doctor, as the reader must already feel perfecty as- sured, had not the weakness of snobbish~ ness or parasitism in any form whatever; and if he liked to go to Wenderholme with the Colonel it was not because there was an Earl’s daughter there and the sacred odor of aristocracy about the place, but rather because he had genuine pleasure in the society of his friend, whether among the splendors of Wenderholme or in the parlor of the inn at Sootyhorn. The Colonel too, liked the doctor though he laughed at him, and mimicked him to Lady Helena. The mimicry was not, hows ever, very successful, for the doctor’s Lan- cashire dialect was too pure and too per- fect for any ultramontane (that is, creature living beyond the hill that guarded the Shayton valley) to imitate with any approx- imation to success, If the Colonel, how- ever, notwithstanding all his study and effort, could not succeed in imitating the doctor’s happy selection of expressions and purity of style, he could at any rate give him a nickname—so he called him Hoftens, not to his face, but to Lady Helena at home, and to the adjutant, and io one or two other people who knew him, and the nickname became popular: and after a while the officers called Dr. Bardly Hoftens to his face,which he took with perfect good nature. The first time that this took place, the doctor (such was the delicacy of his ear) believed he detected something unusual in the way an impudent ensign pronounced the word often, and asked what he meant, on which the adjutant interposed and said: ‘Don't mind his impudence doctor; he is mimicking you.’ ‘ Well,’ said the doctor, simply, ‘I wasn’t aware that there was any. thing peculiar in my pronounciation of the word, but people hoftens are unawares of their defects.’ But we anticipate. The modest muse requests that the cure tain may fall whilst our friends is examin» ing the recruits. The British militiaman, when clothed in that superfine cloth—the perfection of whose scarlet dye is the glory of our country and the envy of foreigners— presents, no doubt, an appearance at once dignified and imposing; but the mass of aspirants as the doctor sees them, in a state of Adamite nudity, offer little to delight lovers of physical beauty, and still less to gratify the feelings of those true patriots whose patriotism consists rather in the des sire to improve the condition of his coun- trymen than in blindly boasting in that it does not need improvement. It has been remarked that the animal creation lives, on the whole, in acondition of wonderful cleanliness. The plumage of birds, the fur of qnadrupeds, and especially the bril- liant iridesent armour of the insect tribes, though each creature has its appointed par- asites, are nevertheless kept wonderfully free from all accumulations of consolidated filth. The one dirty animal is man—and how dirty he is nobody can know or imagine unless, like the doctor, he has been called upon to inspect the people when divested of those coverings which are at the same time the veil of their impurity and its cause, If they wore no clothes, the rain of heaven would wash them; and the mire of the fresh earth changed every day, and removed by the first patch of wet grass they come across, or the first rivulet they waded, would be comparative cleanliness, But we protect ourselves against the natus ral cleansers, and if we will not use the artificial ones we become the nastiest creas tures of God. The doctor, who was not particularly squeamish, acknowledged,after this inspection, that he felt disgusted ; and in his conversation with the Colonel he sugs gested that so soon as he found himself at the head of the new regiment the best thing he could do with it would be to march it into some large pond or river, having previously provided every man with three.penny worth of soap. They lunched at the Thorn with the ad~ jutant,a fair-haired and delicate looking little gentleman of exceedingly mild and quiet manners, whose acquaintance the doctor had made very recently, Captain Eureton had retired a year or two before from the regular army, and was now living in the neighborhood of Sootyhorn with his old mother whom he loved with all his heart. He had never married, and now there was little probability of his ever marrying. The people of Sootyhorn would have set him down as a milksop if he had not seen a good deal of active service in India and at the Cape; but a soldier who has been baptised in the fire of the battles field has always that fact in his favor, and has little need to give himself airs of bold« ness in order to impose upon the imagina~ tion of vivilians, People used to talk of ‘little Eureton’ in a manner which implied that they did not think very much of him ; and a man who prefers the society of his old mother in the evenings to that of all the wits of Sootyhorn assembled round Mr. Garley’s billard table can scarcely expect to be very popular in that locality. But the fact remained that this little Eureton had been in scenes far surpassing in the sub- iimity ot danger any in which the Sooty- horn civilians had taken part; and in this respect his experience was superior to even that of Colonel Hollinthrope, a neighboring gentleman who had been in the war but seen no active service. So, notwithstand~ ing Captain Eureton’s quiet ways, the people of Sootyhorn accorded hima certain consideration ; and the boys at the Gram- mar school looked upon him with deep re- spect and awe, for on one occasion, when he had asked for a holiday, the head mas- ter made a speech, and enumerated all Ch’town, July 27, 1874.—6m tion of privates,’ for intellectual reasons—-for, intellectually, | ‘I believe, Dr, Bardly,’ said. Eureton, from Colonel Stanburne. He was six feet ‘that we ara going to have an officer from | His | , ae ’ | name bas been put down for a lieutenant’s | commission.’ | * Yes, he’s a neighbour of miue,’ answer. ed the doctor, rather curtly. | your neighbourhood, a Mr+ Ogden. | § You should have brought hin with you doctor,’ said Colonel Stanburne, ‘ that we might make his acquaintance. oe afternoon. I've never seen him, you know, and he gets bis commission on your recom. |mendation, I should like, as far as pos. i sible, to know the officers personally be~ What Tell us all | for we meet for our first training. | sort of a fellow is Mr, Ogden? about him,’ The doctor felt slightly embarrassed, and showed it in his manner. Any true deserip- tion of Isaac Ogden, as he was just then must necessarily seem very unfavorable. The reader will remember that Dr. Bardly had been to Twistle that very morning be- fore daylight, and had found Mr. Ogden suffering from the effect of a fall down the cellar steps ina state of drunkenness; The doctor had that day abandoned all hope of reclaiming Isaac Ogden and saying him from the fate ihat awaited him. He had had too much experience of drunkards not to be able to distinguish between those stages of the habit in which reform is still possible and those stages in which it is not possible; and he had made up his mind to leave Mr. Ogden to kill himself in his own way. Mr, Ogden was a friend of his, and he was sorry for him; but he was also rath- er angry at him, and did not deeply pity him. The road to destruction that Mr. Ogden was following was so much frequents ed by the inhabitants of Shayton that it seemed their regular turnpike to the grave ; and if the doctor had felt deeply moved about every acquaintance of his who went that way his mind would have been in a chronic state of profound emotion altoge~ ther incompatible with his duties, and even with his intellectual health, ‘I've nothing good to tell of Mr. Ogden, Colonei Stanburne. I wish I hadn’t recom~ mended him to you, He’s an irreclaim~ able drunkard !’ ‘Well, if you'd known it you wouldn't have recommended him, of course. You found it out since, I suppose. You must try and persuade him to resign. Tell him there’ll be some awfully hard work, especi- ally for lieutenants.’ ‘I knew that he drank occasionally, but I believed that it was because he had no body to talk to except a drunken set at the Red Lion at Shayton. I thought that if he came into the regiment it would do him good, by bringing him into more society. There’s a great difference between Shayton and Sootythorn.’ ‘ What sort of a man is he in other re- spects ?’ asked the Colonel. ‘ He’s right enough for everything else. He is a good looking fellow, tall, and well built; and he used to be pleasant and good- tempered, but now his nervous system must be shattered, and I would not answer for him.’ ‘If you still think he would have suffici- ent control over himself to keep sober for a month we might try him, and see whether we cannot do him some good, Perhaps, as you thought, it’s only want of society that drives him to amuse himself by drinking. Upon my word, 1 think I should take to drinking myself if I lived all the year round in such a place as Sootythorn—and I sup- pose Shayton’s no better.’ There was a good old custom amongst the storytellers of the East, by which, having narrated a series of events in the direct manner, they narrated them all over again through the mouth of one of their drama- lis persone, Thus we might repeat through the mouth of the doctor the whole story of Mr. Isaac Ogden’s life, with an accurate ac~ count of his present position with reference to his friends and relations, telling all about his mother and his brother and _ his little boy, and concluding with a minute descrip- tion of his singular hermitage at Twistle Farm. This would be in the highest degree convenient to the writer, who whenever he felt rather more lazy and stupid than usual, might look back over the pages already in existence, and by their help succeeded in producing his diurnal quantum of ‘ copy.’ But as it may be doubted whether the mod.~ dern reader would be so tolerant of this practice as his prototypes, the audience of the storytellers of Bagdad or old Cairo, we are compelled, however reluctantly, to re- frain from it, and simply to observe that the doctor's account of Shayton and the Ogs dens need not be reported here, because it contained nothing with which the reader is not already acquainted. Captain Eureton, who was simple and even abstemious in his way of living, and whose appetite had not been sharpened like that of the doctor by a drive of nine miles in company with Nanny Pickering, finished his lunch in about ten minutes, gnd excus- ed himself on the plea that he had an ap- pointment with a joiner about the orderly room, which had formerly been an infant school of some Dissenting persuasion, and therefore required remoddelling as to its interior fittings. We shall see more of him in due time, but for the present must leave him to the tranquil happiness of diversing desks and pigeon-holes in company with Mr. Bettison, an intelligent joiner at Sooty- thorn, than which few occupations can be more delightful. ‘Perhaps, unless you’ve something to detain you at Sootyhorn, doctor, we should do well to leave here as early as possible. It's a long drive to Wenderholme—twenty miles, you know; and J always make ita point of giving the horses a short rest at Rigton.’ As the doctor had nothing to do at Sootyhorn, the Col. ordered his equippage. When he drove alone, he always preferred a tandem, but when Lady Helena accom- panied him he took his seat in a submissive matrimonial manner in the family carriage. As Wenderholme was so far from Sooty~ thorn, the Colonel kept two pairs of horses, and one of them was generally at Wender- holme and the other in Mr. Garley’s stable, where the Colonel had a groom of his own permanently. The only inconvenience of this arrangement was that the same horses had to duty in the tandem and the carri- age; but they did it on the whole fairly well, and the Colonel contented himself with the carriage horses so far as driving was concerned. The doctor drove his own gig with that tice of many years; but he had never un- He might | have gone on with us to Wenderholme this | | when John Stanburne took the reins, and they set off at full trot through the streets of Sootythorn, that particular stage of its developement, is one of the most awkward of all possible places to drive in—the same street varies so much in»preadth that you never can tell _ whether there will be room enough to pass | when you get around the corner; and there are alarming noises of many kinds—the roar of a cotton mill in the street itself, or the wonderfully loud hum of a foundry, or the incessant clattering hammering strokes of a boiler making establishment, which excite and bewildera nervous horse, till, if manageable at all, he is manageable only with the utmost delicacy and care, As Colonel Stanburne seemed to have quite enough to do to soothe and restrain his leader, the doctor said nothing till they got clear of the last street; but once out on the broad turnpike or Yorkshire Road, the Colonel gave his team more freedom, and himself relaxed from the rigid accuracy of seat he had hitherto maintained. He then turned to the doctor and began to talk, To be Continued, —_—_—————————e —— DON CARLOS. THE PRINCE AGGRIEVED AT THE CONDUCT OF SPANISH EMISARIES, A New York despatch of Aug. 25 says :-— On, Friday last Inspector Thorne, of the Police Department called on Judge Kas- mire and represented that Don Carlos, who was stopping at the Windsor hotel, wanted his protection from a band of organized and armed men who were in the habit of follow. him wherever he went, The Judge decid- ed to go to the hotel to ascertain exactly the nature of Don Carlos’ complaint. On arriving there Don Carlos refused to make an aflidayit implicating any one, although the persons by whom he was shadowed were known to him even by name through the potice, and it was suspected that they were agents of the Spanish Government, but their purpose was a mystery. The Prince was not afraid of any personal encounter, he said to the Judge, but these parties evi. dently had no good intentions towards him. ie could not leave his hotel for a moment unless two or more of these emissaries were at his heels, and if he went out ina carriage they also followed in a carriage, He was an- noyed beyond expression at this continued surveillance, and he asked that he might be protected and accorded the same free~ dom that any ordinary person travelling for his Own amusement was entitled to at the hands of the Government. Judge Kasmire said that he should receive what he des manded, and wished to know if the Prince was ready to make complaints against any of the parties who were annoying him. By advice of his friends, who were Americans, Don Carlos said he was not ready to enter formal complaints against any person. It was then arranged that the whole mat» ter should be left in the hands of Inspector Thorne, and that he should give to the Prince that protection he was entitled to as an ordinary gentleman by arresting anys one who in future might annoy him in any manner. A A I MILITARY POSITION OF FRANCE, A German officer, who has visited all the principal stations of France, gives a very favourable account in the Cologne Gazette of the military prospects of the country, The writer says that the progress since last year in all branches of the service is very great. The want of an eflicient reserve is being rapidly and completely supplied, numbers of half-pay officers volunteering for terri~ torial service. The physique of the men is admirable, and there is not the slightest difficulty in obtaining recruits, all political parties being agreed in the necessity of this reserve force. The clergy use all their ins fluence in support of this institution, which they regard as the future champion of the Chureh. ‘The priests in France do more to induce the people to perform their mili- tary duties than can be done by all the magistrates and gendarmes in Prussia.’ In the regular army the most important re, form introduced by the present Minister of War is the removal of inefficient officers and the thorough training of cadets, for which large schools have been formed,which, by 1880, will yield a sufficient supply of of- | ficers for the whole army. In France,as well as Germany, great difficulty is experienced in retaining good non-commissioned officers. Formerly many served additional terms as substitutes, realizing little fortunes during 20 or 25 years’ service; now very few res main longer than they are compelled to, as the great industrial revival of France offers better prospects in civil life. Drills are frequent and arduous, manoeuvring is taught on larger scales, and the army is kept in constant movement. Ina few years France will have 606 battalions of infantry ready for the field, and a reserve of 145 regiments forming the territorialarmy. Barracks are healthy and spacious, the men get two ex- cellent hot meals daily, and have better boots and more comfortable clothing than the German soldiers. Tie French field artillery has 2,508 guns, while Austria has only 1,152; Russia, 2,304; Germany, 1,656. The weakest point of the French army is the cavalry. —_—— > -- <P -o o —__————__—— ADDITIONS TO THE ENGLISH NAVY. While all sorts of blunders seem to be committed and all sorts of accidents seem to happen in connection with the English navy, the work of adding to its num- ber and strength still goes steadily on, and the English taxpayer has still the satisfac» tion of knowing that the Admiralty has something to show for his money. During the second quarter of this year four vessels were added to the navy, all of them iron vessels, as a matter of course, and two of them vessels of enormous size and power. Two smaller vessels, the “ Penguin” and ernment at private yards, the former at Glasgow and the latter at Hull. The two large vessels are the “ Inflexible” and the ‘¢ Temeraire,’’ the former an enormous tur. tet ship, carrying four guus, of a size cor- responding with t of the ship, with | two screws and engines to work them of 8,000 horse power, and of a tonnage at,- | 406) about half that of the ‘ Great Eastern,’ /and the latter an armour plated vessel, | carrying § guns, with engines as powerful | as those of the ‘ Inflexible,’ and a displaces degree of skill which results from the prac- ment of 8.412 tons. If the Admirality do | occasion. not succeed in sinking or blowing her up, Captain Eureton’s battles—and the list, it | dertaken the government of a tandem, and | this second ‘ Temerarie’ ought to prove no must be admitted, was @ considerable one. | felt, perhaps, a slight shade of anxiety | unworthy successor of the old ‘fighting A manufacturing town, in | the “‘ Turquoise,” were built forthe Gov | | Temeraire’ we used to read about when we were younger, But the ships launched during the second quarter of the year form but a small portion /of the additions to the navy in progress |during that period. ‘two more doubles | screw, iron plated ships of over 8,000 tons, and carrying four each of the monster can- | non now deemed necessary for the equip~ | ment of such vessels, were ‘laid down’ for construction during the same period at | Chatham and Pembroke respectively. A | 10. gun, double-screw, steel despatch ves- | sel, to be appropriately named the Mercury, is also under construction at Pembroke, while no less than twelve gunboats were contracted for by private firms of ship- builders, and are being constructed in pri- vate shipyards at Glasgow, Hull, Barrow-in- Furness, and Jarrow-on-I'yne, While such evidences of activity as these are being manifested by the Lords of the Admiralty, Englishmen may be excused for believing that England still controls the seas, and that they can make themselves comparatively easy about the vast arma- ments of Continental nations, so long as this supremacy is maintained, A costly 9.4 powerful vessel may occasionally be sunk or blown up, and more than one or two may be unfit for service, but their loss is more than compensated by the additions which are yearly made to the fleet of irons clads and turret ships now replacing the ‘wooden walls of old England,.’—Hzx. Citizen. MISCELLANEOUS. The salary of the Governor of New York is $14,000. The American Hosiery Mills at Amster. dam, N. Y., were burned last week, loss $100,000. The Miradates,a powerful tribe of Ro- man Catholic Albanians, have cast in their lot with the Turks, The cold season in Australia has proved most disastrous to the settlers, two million sheep having died for want of pasture. Five ‘‘ Molly Maguire’s” prisoners, con. victed of murder at the Pennsylvania coal mines, have been sentenced to be hanged. The engineers taking soundings for the Channel tunnel, to run between England and France, report the results as being very satisfactory. In the counties bordering on the Hudson River and other parts of New York, the drought is serious—the farmers are cutting their corn for fodder, The ship Lightning, having on buard 40) emigrants, went ashore at Throwbridge, on the Australian coast, July 13. The pas- sengers and crew were saved, A despatch from Madrid says a politieal conspiracy has come to light at Pampeluna, and it has been deemed advisable to rein. force the garrison in Upper Navarre, The English and French commissioners on the subject of a tunnel under the British Channel, have agreed upon the basis of a treaty for the prosecution of the work. It is said that when the United States Senate reassembles in December a new Ex- tradition Treaty with Great britain will be submitted by the President for$ratification. Petroleum of excellent quality has been discovered in North Staffordshire, England, it is not the shale oil which has been known in England for so long a time, but is the genuine kind. Mr. Schyler’s preliminary report of the investigation of the outrages in Bulgaria is published. The report is addressed to the Minister of the United States at Constanti. nople, and fully confirmed the worst told of the atrocities, The Autumn manoeuvres of the German army will commence the beginning of next month. Many foreign officers, especially those of the Brit'sh army, have asked pers mission to witness the military exercises, A great many princes are also expected, It is asserted in Vienna that at prelimin. ary peace negotiations between the signor. ies of treaty of Paris, including Russia, it was proposed as a basis of argument that throne; Servia should pay an indemnity ; and Turkey should have the right of plac. ing garrisons in Servian fortresses on Turk- ish frontier. Warerspout.—St. Paul’s Island, C. B., was struck by a waterspout on the after- noon of the ISth inst., which killed one man and did other damage. The house of refuge on the island, stables, barn and out. houses, with contents, were taken and dash. ed to pieces, while the staff of the humane establishment narrowly escaped. The dwelling house was fearfully shattered, and the other buildings greately damaged, There was a severe commercial crisis at Lisbon last week, including a general run on the banks, several of which, including the Bank of Portugal, were compell- ed to suspend payment. It is said the embarrassment was due solely to the scar. city of silvercoin. The panic became so desperate that Government had to step in and decree a suspension of all engagements for two months. This will give time for liquidation, and it greatly relieved the em. barrassed institutions. A Belgrade despatch says that while Prince Milan is trying to negotiate peace, Russian officers continue to arrive in great numbers; and General Tchernayeff, by re- peated attacks upon the Turkish lines, is doing his best to make the negotiations abortive. He has hurried so far that the Porte in reply to a tender of meditation by the Powers, declined to listen to the pro- posal until Alexinatz surrendered, Conse. quently fighting continues, At Quebec, last week, a carter named McAuley met with serious injuries from a vicious attack make upon him by his horse, It seems McAuley had been whipping the horse prior to the attack, when the animal severely seized him by the shoulder, threw him down and shook him severely, and then proceeded to trample on and bite him. Fortunately the man was rescued, but not before he‘had received several nasty wounds including the loss of a large piece of flesh completely bitten out of his shoulder, Sebastapol has been in a ruined and diss mantled condition since the close of the | Crimean war. It does not now contain |qnore than 9000 inhabitants, who are scarce- ly able tolive on the remnants of the once | flourishing commerce of the port. The | life of the community shows signs of ree | viving of late, some military vessels having | been constructed on its new slips. Forts Constantine and Catherine are still stand- ing, badly battered with cannon balls. | Forts Nicholas and Alexander and the Quarantine are completely dilapidated, /some hundreds of ¢wellings having been built with the stones which once formed their ramparts, The principal public build. ings of the city are all destroyed, A letter from Vienna relates that at the Imperial opera recently the handsoms tenor Bastiano Widmann, had to kiss the soprano, Signorina Giavorano, in the opera of the ‘Armourer.’ She had at rehersal asked him to ‘make believe;’ but when the time came in the performance he kiss. ed her plumply and resonantly u her red lips. As soon as the curtain fell tbe prima donna hurried enraged to the man- _ager and entered complaint against the | tenor, whereupon the manager requested Bastiano to restrain his ardor. When the | second representation took place Signorina, | distrusting the tenor, said loud enough for the house to hear: ‘I’llexcuse you from the kiss.’ The tenor was equal to the ‘Thank God for that,’ he ex-~ claimed, ‘who wants to kiss such an okd ‘thing?’ The house was appalled. The prima donna bounced off the stage, and the tenor must apologise or leave. ’ Prince Milan should be retained on the ° £ F i & i ' pee We Allameggrsse=-