W Hs ‘sThis is t EKLY JOURN AL OE: rue Liberty, POLIEICS, LITERATURE: a eens eget a AN ———————— when Freeborn Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.’---Znripides. Se ee ee a NEWS. _ _ -: <<peeeememyee SSS eee oe * — a ——— = = : eee = = VOL. XXU.2 CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, APRIL 8, 1871, INO. 14 SS Fe . o Joho’s exertions that your school was so him abused, and of being told that every- of the reigning S i GRAM: ed ° a ° * . ’ y- : signing Sovereign as the lands of a PARAGRAMS. _ * ry: | | rn ‘yy ellann orderly for e0 many years, but do you for- thing he said or did was wrong, even by Private person are his property, have been — & hi t & Yawn t v Husiness Gar ls, lise a get whatit cost Joha to do all he did for | parties in his own class, that 1 aupposed q Rome - - — on eondition nae Among the Fees no nations be-Presideet TEI) EVERY MONDAY BY! ~~ “a ‘aah ; tal te ; el Ome arliament should mike proper provision for Grant is that of aM. D eres Bae it. ROWERS, the gosee of the schon! # Thiting, sehr eur tr that teen na roemen Be the maigtenancs of the alone aaa dignity diana, as U. , 0 a at PB lei . HENRY J. GAFFNEY, M. 0. | PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, OFFICE IN ’ P. it. BOWERS, AT HiS OFFICE, DORCHESTER STREET, A few doors east of the Catholic | ‘ i ae Cathedral. Des Brisay’s Block a ‘da too-tatsibeeseenesienaien (nex! Apothecarie’s Hall,) viper teltes. samy ibrar: QUEEN STREET, per annum, in advance} or iitings when not paidia advance, PosTERS AND HANDBILLS 40 PAIS OLLIOR. Lannannnnnnnww~ee-| PROFESSOR CF MUSIC, Ten Shilling Twelves Restpence.—North American Hotel. | Charlottetown, Aug 3, [870. | MR. Ae SMYTHE, ; PRIN £77 P eee wr eee and challenged William to figh'. ; h ‘fight, and Louis got the worst of it; aod oho—tor Lknowtbe boy well, aud like} Louis was ina great rage even after Wil- M s Europa thought that John ought to have | him for bis rough ways—has got wiser thao | liam had said thathis c2usin should not take | | interfered and prevented their fignting, and | that now, und does net see why he is to be| that spare garden, and pretended to be insulted. | telling him he was so se’fish and so JOHN JUSTIFIED. A REPLY TO THE FIGHT IN DiME EUROPA'S SCHOOL . BHU WING THAT ‘There are always Two Sides to Every Question.’ *“FLOREAT JUSTITIA,” PREFACE, A brochure, in which Europe is the School | kept by Dame Kuropa and the five great | Powers, Monitors under the name of Louis, | William, Aleck. Joseph, and Joba, whose business it is to keep order in the School, they have built summer-houses, and too!. allewed to sell the produee to each other William is accused of having long coveted | two small plots in Louis’s garden, and of | [0 cross over having put himself in training, and having j . . j | : ; ay Me rel ltaken lessons in boxing; and when he | Join interfere in their quarrels and fight of having tried ta place a cousin of his in @ garden adjoining Louis’s which seemed to belong to noone just then (bat which he ‘knew Louis would not allow), for the ex |8‘bly, when he had wora bimse!f out by be!-| be aware that ever since Nap’s time his press purpose of picking a quarrel with him ; , : : a . and although Wiliam on being remonstrated | Syme of the others, who had t.ken it easi y, | course that runs through a part of Wil, ' } ° | liam’s garaen, aod that Louis has long been | |the French manufacturers aod factory-hands 0 Reading Room Proprietor | y th, forbade bis cousin taking this spare | Would come on and pitch into him, and ev- Louis thought himszif insulted garden, They did rated him soundly for not baviog done so fond of his money as you say he does, you can- bave done him wrong, and been hard upon not deny that be spent it I:beraily ther, and him, and so L will tell him to-morrow before , seattered it in:ll directions, wherever he/all the other boys, and I will make what thought it might be ot use; sod, in fact, amends to him | can by placing him in his throne and say, * We will not make provision | ‘that be did not hesitate to -get greatly in o ‘former position, if not tha‘, then at all, debt, so reckless was he of what he spen';|events one of the most honest, ‘but he did it with a good will, and took | guished, and well-meaning monitors in toe ‘cuffs and blows with a good will, too; and schoo! ; for, as you jusiiy observed, my ‘what did he get forit ? Not much thanks, dear friend—' ‘the other monitors soon forgot what John question,’ ’ bad done for them, and began to envy him! ¢ Now,’ said her friend, ‘since you have | his good name and the pos't?jn he bad right-|done justice to honest Jo%n, there is one! 'y earned to bo'd among them, and they! diver little point ia the story you told me) abused him and wanted very much—atleast|on which L wished to say a word to you, | of the Crown cut of the public revenues, If Parliament resile from the bargain entered into with the Queen when she ascended the for your family,’ Her Majesty could well property belonging to the Crown, and I will make provision for them myeelf.”’ The out ery that hasbeen raised against the payment | : ; of the Princess Louise's dowry is neither just | [ imagine ; for whenallthe row was over,, ‘‘ There are always two sides toevery not generous, She is about to marry a British subject. The money is not togo into the hungry pocket of a “ German Lairdie. it will be spent et home Moreover, the Princess is a most amiable girl. Why, then (even if there were no question of riglt in in the matter); make a distinction between The five Moni ors have gardens, in which} one ©! them did—totake his garden trom|You ssid that Walliam sad long coveted | her and her eisters as regards adowry? We o¢ | Tre bridal dress of the Priucess Louise is of white Trish poplin, with veil and trim- mings of Honiton lace. Que day in Spring, Sir Walter Scott and dis:.n- | Tetort by saying, “Then give me back the strolled forth with Lady Seott to enjoy a walk round A'botsford, In their wapder- | jugs they passed a fivld where a number of ewes were enduring the -rolies of their lambs ‘*Ah.” exclaimed Sir Walter, “tis no wouder that poets from the earliest ages hs va made the lawb ‘he emblem of peace and ir- |mocence.’’ “They are indeed delighiful ‘anima!s,’’ returned, ber ladyship, ‘*eepevially with mint sauce.’’ Ketock’s Mills, regularly worked his Jt: uim; but they were afraid of bis buildog, | two little plots in Louis’s gardea, and that! sincerely hope that Parliament wil! mark it8, Cyocmer between the Shih end, shenbeaie ts * ‘ , | . . . ; |houses, and which they cultivate, »1d are | Who began to show his teeth when he saw almost from the time when Nap gave him contempt |them stalking about on the otber side of his | such a licking, he had put himself in train, | #21 ation by voting the money by acslama | ¢;...¢, ‘stream aud maktg a8 thougg they wished ing and takea Jessons in box’pg, so that be Now, just thiok, m; good | migit take these two coveted plots by force /Mrs Europa, was this the way to make| whenever be fe't strong enough to do so. and that he had put bis cous n up to take (of bis money that he and bis class work so} press purpose of picking & quarrel wits. hard for, and get more cuffs and knocks,| Louis, Now, I don’t quite know how you aa then be abused jor his paing,and pos- have fourd that out; but surely you mu-t| |ping others, and became weak and tired,| class have always coveted a little water-; |e perhaps try and get intohis garden and| weiting for an excuse to quarral w.th Wil- | rob nis too'-house and his money box? No, | liam and take it from him? You say that |always interfering in other boys’ quarrels | Of course he was in a rage, becaus? William | ; c : i + he awe + > jand get no than«s for it, He is wiiling to had taken away the cause of offence, and 3 | Louis feared that the opportun'ty of quarrel for thie wmiserabie anti-dowry tion, POPULAR. FEELING IN ALSACE. Herr Von Wickode of the Cologoo Gazet- tbe German dominions, is sangu ne with re- |gard to the annexation of Alsace. Deseril-, ing the best mode of dealing with thia prov- , }ipee, be saya: The Protestant peasantry in Lower Alsace will bear union with Germany most easi'y ; in Myhblbausen will be the least willing. Many a serious obstacle has still to te re- moved, it is true, beforethese untoward el ements can be united in a harmonious whole, Thus few of the real agricultural population, but many huadreds of the youag meu amon z TIE RING Tew Ifas Removed his Academy to Water St,; +3} + 4 * a OL Jbol Aa RA +50 (Opposite the late Telegraph Office.) Wwe° will ocad the e Examiner” par ae Pianotorte and Melodeon Tuning punce oa ae d aay one o, Se sOuOw INE peg tually attended to. jea'ls at the aanexed rates, payadle in & July 25, 1870. ly wancs : Me ; sisisontsaitiiclatensattaailles inicidhacig ten ote £01" § CARVELL BROTHERS, d atl ah ’ . ‘ ; Harper's Magi cine, : : z AUCTIONEERS, * Gal xy a } a i ’ | a Biackwood's M wazine, 2 =e 5 a Wi % Dublin Univers ty Magazine 3080 oOMmmiussicn ercnants, * Leader Review, Q 30 0 AND | ¥ oe a ee? GENERAL AGENTS, | m Pdinbargh « « : Westuinster do, 13 0 BANK BUILDING, QUEEN STREET, ‘ North British dia, 2 © Charlottetown, P. E. Island North American doa, Ai 1 eee bt a mt Rh i ————— | Svery Saturday, Uiustrated it 8 9 wm aeekaate Ie ae cam 2 A. McNEILL, Harper's Week'y, 2 Harper's Baxzor, ae af .e arn. 7°) Pe? AWS Prant Leslie. (justrated Newspaper, 2 6 0) GOMIMISSION MERCHANT | Hoston Piet, ] me AND y , Ye z . er l 3 u - - . ati heat ie 1 30 AUCTIONEER. do, Herald, a8 CHARLOTTETOWN, ao ar ‘, » 2 Of Marah 21,1870. iyr We can any any of the English. /.mertean. { ai or Colonial Fublieations, et the lowest east SETH D. SHAW, tes, j ~ r r . oe P. R. ROWERS. | Attorney -At-Lav 9 ae. ee ———— OFFICE—Corner of Great George and Dorchester streets. ‘of bis money, amassed by selling things he | tuke his share in keesing the school quiet, ' made in his too!-bouse, and he thought of | and that is al! you have a : right to ex-| ‘nothing else aud took no care now of the | pectof him, asd he was willing to do so ' ; ih 99 | peace of the School, and was so taken up intsis last quarrel ing with him would pass away; for it so hap- pened that Louis bad also been in training, aud thought he had found out some wonder ful new way of hitting, which was 89 severe the factory veop!e of the towos ia Upper Alsace, leave home secretly to bear arms against us asFrane-tireure or Mobile Guards, run of theee miles, during the whole of the Pert of the distance has a rising gra- ‘dient of 1 in 10, and the Road Steamer hauled |a load of seven fons wp this incline whea ft | was compietely covered with solid ice. Hence | these engines mizht be used in hauling trains cf sledges with every prospect of success, and <a . | . i are is? py - ° . : Bet | thought himself strong enough to fig it Louis, | er battles for thera again, and spend more} that spare garden near “Louis’s for the ex-! te, while strongly impressed with the folly |it appears not unlikely that all kinds of Bes of annexing essentially Freneb provinces to | he could be carried oa with far greater exuse aud speed over the snow than over the odi- ‘nary roads.—London Times. A somewhat novel branch ofindustry for 'Trelend bas been developed at the potreries ‘of Belleek, S:atuettes and other art works ‘of unusual beauty are produced there, | Much praise is bestowed by Kagleh critics ‘upon a copy of Fontana’s statue of « The | Prisonar of Love,’’ executed in procelain jat the Bel'eek pottery, and the floral aud |other devices produced by the artists of the jestablishment are eaid to be exquisite \for fancy and execution, Belleck is a ‘small towa in the Cousty of Fermanagh. | situated on ths beautiful River Erne, and ‘containing a populative of about three thou~ | sand, Tuomrson’s Roap Srgimer.—Mr. vee . aud dreadful that no one could stand up ayainsg Al! severe measures are useless, aud the Cone; H. HASZARD- Coumnission Merchant, Opposite City Hotel, ‘Formerly occupied as | « Law Office by Charles Palmer, Esq., and recently by H, J. Cundall, Esq. with bis money-making as tohave forgotten how to fight, so that none of the Monitors! Dame cared for bim, or feared him, so the libreatened to take his Monitorship away ‘Then why didn’t he? tell me that’ + He did try to persuade them not to ‘fight, bu: Lous told bia it was a Private | | quarrel of long standing between bim and it. He was so proud of this, so certain of its | iseations of property carried out against deadly effects, and 8) afraid that the secret |them are wholly usele-s, for thes3 peop'e would leak out, and that William wou'd hear jbave no more to lose. As, hesides, most | Anybody can soil the repu'ation of any individae', bowever pure and chasie, by ut- | tering a su<picion that his enemies will be- thariottetewn, - - - P.E. I. May 31,1869. tf ~ WILLIAM DODD, . Comission Merchant and GENERAL AGUNT, AUCTIONEER Uppe. Queen Street, Charlottetown, - p.E. I. ‘from him ; but some of the litte boys beg-| William, and bad uothing to do with the ged her uot to do so, asJohn had been very | rest of the schoo!, and that he had no busi- kiod in acting as a sponge to both of the | Hess 10 interfore ; ' comba ants, and washed the blood off their! =‘ Yes, be did that; but when he found ‘faces and bathed their black eyes; on which | that thcy would fight, why did he not step of it and learn how to employ it as well as he, / of the factors in Upper Alsace, are st a) lieve and his friends mever hear of, A pif that he was most anxious to beyin the fizht at once, and would fisten to no reason, but cal led upon William to make a promise that he knew he would not make, and that he did not | wish him to make, Poor feilow, be has suf complete stand-still, aud thousands of work- | of tbe idle wind can take.a milion of the men are compelled to remaia in idien °ss, | seeds of a thistle and do a work of mischief veed aud wavt of work, quite as muck a8 which the busbendmao must labour lony to political fanaticism drive the people inte’ | 2ndoe, Ue floating particles being too fee ———e fered sadly ior his folly, and I pity him with the hosts of the enemy, where they ean) . Ne eountey AUCTIONEER, N.B.—O rm abroad, and the country the Dame relented, so far as to let Johncff| ia with his great’ broad buck and make all my heart.’ ; Pre ‘to be reea and too lightto be stopped Such »."@ the reeds of sander, so easily sown, 80 QUEEN SQUARE, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND @il'* e j atte ou Apr % BUFFALO ROBES. NO. 1 WHOLE SKINS, For Sale Cleap at . LONDON HOUSE: A. HERMARS, G: &S. DAVIES , pein Bel Hanger, Gan and Tin- Smith, WY ool. &Y ool. Dorchester Street, — : : : (Next to “* Examiner” Office.) for WOOL, on delivery, at EGS toreturn histhanks to the general CALLBECK public forthe liberal patronage extended oe, ae oe Ie to him since his commencement in business, | —_—- - — |andasksforacoutinuance of the same. He ERSKIN’S seepsconstanty en band nn ” NTT + DA TAT TRQ r i {} A neat Assortment of BRAHEE SUGAR POW DERS anual o eenien Trea | Al nd Unfailinettemedstor | PENWARE, KITCHEN UTENSILS Rheumativmof allhinds, Veuralgia ass: ps | Le PERO. PANES. ALL ORDERS in the above BUSINESS | Cass y the Sto Hs d. Ch town, Mav WW, 1870. oar .amke ai a se : As pois niet sc fur TH AGH E. will be punctually attended to. o |. a featineatiimemeliad ier | Having lately made large purchases in the ee a | Cheapest Markets,intended for tiouse Builders {HP See Lancet, under Mepicat PatnesaGe ae ” WM.Rk.WaATson |" ** b ——————— | Gas Fitting, Water Closets, Belt Fittings, &.. &C., lam prepared to SELL THEM at RATES AS LOW AS CAN BE HAD LN THE CITY, and will fit them up in a good workmanlike style ‘To a generous public, | would say, that all (Orders in THIS BRANCH OF MY BUSI | NESS will be attended to with Despateh A LotorFirsrciiss WATLR COOLERS or ' hand. SAYER’S CRYSTAL BLUE, Sold Cheaper than ever. Fuly 12, 1869 —_—~ Tron Bedsteads. FEW Su>erior fos Ba beap for NEWSON'S., iron. berste ads, Bentembes 18 T8760 Choice Retailing Sugar. 20 Tih de. Porto Rico SUTAR: (Strictly Prime.) For Sale Low. MACEACHERN & CU, “Ttalian Warehouse,’ é im Mareh i 3, 1871 ——————— ———————$—$ MARINE INSURANCE. CANADA INSURANCE UNION, MONTREAL ASSURANCE COMPANY, Inco: porated 1840. Capital and Cash Assets, $1,099,540 BRITISH AMERICA ASSURANCE CO.. GF TORONTO, 7 Esta>tished 1833. 500,000 Joint Policies, binding both the above Offices, issued on Vessels, Curgoes aod Freights, to and from all ports of the commereial world $10,000 covored on First-class Risks. RATES MODERATE. Losses promptly adjasted aud Paid in Cash. FENTON T. NEWBRRY, Attorney. FIRE O£PARTMENT. IMPERIAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. Head Office, 1 Old Broad Street, Loncon- Subscribed and Invested Capital, - £1,965,000 Sterling. HANOVER FIRE INSURANCE (C0. | Head Office, 45 Wall Street, New Yorx. Capital and Cash Assets, upwards of - $400,000 00 Paid Up Capital, © - - - - Surplus, o - - . .,. - - 326,399 94. Total Assets, 1st Jon'y, 1870, + + © $726,899-94) Risks against loss or damage by Frne-accepted on every description of property. Apply te with a good lecture. But this reply shows, that ‘bere are two sides to every question,’ That same evening Mrs, Europa had io-| vited an old friend and ccnficante to take tea with berin her privatercom, The good Dame was so full of the events of the mor- ning. that she fidgeted and fidzeted until a break in the conver atiou enabled her to ur- burden ber mind and enter into a minute detail of a!l that was passing ia the 3+: col, butashker friend wade no remark, Mrs, Ku- ropa seid, *L see you think I was to len- rent to John.aud ought to have taken the Monitorsbip from him. or ever: to bave ex- pelled him from the Schoo). Do say what, ia your opinicn, 1 cught to bave doue ?’ ‘Well,’ said ber triend, ‘as you ask me for wy opinicn, 1 will give it to you; tut | before doing so, 1 should like you to ans-| ‘bat he was supposed to care only fur his| wer One or two questions, Liave you not found Joho honest and trurhul aud true to any engegement be makes ¢”’ ‘Well’ said the Dame, ‘I must allow that beis what you say, and even when tbis quarrel between Louis and William be- gav, be manfully took the part of a very lit- le boy who was in danger of havieg his yarden run over, if sot takea from him by William or Lou's, ¢ Exactly so; and does he notalways take the part of the weakest if he thinks him in the right? and when be does inte: fere, does he not do so heartily, never sparing the mo- ney you say be is so fond of, or caring tor hard knocks and kicks, of which he man- ages to get pleaty, although [ must say he geuerally g ves as good us Le gets? ‘ Yes, that is verytrue, and | remember now, that when some years ago there was a terrible scamp in the school, who tock pos- session of the garden that Louis now has, and set bimseif up for a monitor and not content with that, wanted to make all other monitors obey him, and made such a disturbance in the school that | was nearly driven wild, he also attackéd the monitors who then held the places that William aud Jcseph now have. aud so drubbed them tha: they cou'd noi shew themselves for a long | time. He then cesta longing eye on Jvhn’s garden, but found he coud not get across the water to it, apd even if he could be saw plainly that be would never be able to ge’ back again for Johnis, | must own a star dy tellow, and he keepssuch a fi:rce bulldoy shat every one is ufraid to venture into bis gerden agains! his will, Now Nap, for that was the uname of this bally of a boy. finding John’s gardev was not to behad, suddenly s'arted off and attacked a big, burly, bea'- ish boy. who beld the gerdea Aleck now has; butthere be burnt his fingers, for the big boy sat fire to his ermmer-nouse rather than let Nap have it, and so singed the -camp that he was never worth much after watds. Al this tiae-Jobo had teen hel- ping the other monitors withal) bis might: jhe gave and lent them hs money and at- tacked Nap so fiercely, pamwmelling him in the back todraw him off from his attacks | upon tbe others, and then Gighting bm face to fzee and giving him such a drabbitg that Master Nap had to ran from the sshooi and never trouble it again; ob! I remem- ber it all well now, and John certainly did behave like a man then.”’ Aud wasnot your.school quieter afier that than it-had been fer many long years before? Aud did it not keep quiet until Aleck’s suceeseor in his garden wanted to bully thac litile dark boy, when John came forward and with the help of Lous gave that rough cub cfa boy sucha lickiog as has kept him quiet ever since, though | hear he is beginning to get unruly again ?”” ‘Yes.”? card the Dame ‘thatistrue al-o,’ Then,’ rejoiwed her friend, * you wust admit that you owed the qu et that reigned in your school for so many years, and wich saved you from so much trouble and enxiety ebiefly to John did you not ? ‘lam willing 10 admit,’”? replied Mrs, Europa, “ but why did he a'low the dis ur- banee i the school to bresk out again now? the | > . 2 . ? oe Woy did one te this ? + Bat, if Wailliom, bas. beaten him, ge -and ‘ Why, dot * Sila | panished him 80 severley, why is he not sats | y, John, (0 be sure; WHO Cls€ WAS fied with the drubbing he has given him? and todo it 2? |}not go on hitting him now he is down?’ ‘Qa! [thouzht there were five monitors,| ‘Well, you see it stands thus. William | and that onsy two of them were fighting,so | did not wish to fight if he were let alone. He} there must bave been three locking ov,’ had plenty to do just new putting his garden | ‘Well what of that? in order, so he had said if he was to fight! «Why. it the vas tameteeeh et?” he would fisht soaeto eecure his not 5, ere were three MONIOTs 109K~| benz attacked again by Louis of any one of ing on, of whom Jobn was one, Why were! his class, Between the water-course in Wil the other twe not to intelere as weil as/liim's garden there are some high and stroug Joba? ; walls, which belonged to~ Louis, and which ‘Why why why——because, of William has now taken from nim, and which : . { »% ato ine e ‘ . ouia vet. | course, it was John’s business to interfere ; | he is determined to keep to prevent Louis get he always did so belure, and the others! {ine over them and maki tis water rouse at ld have been sure to have done 80 now!:y) vou sive an eee rte a | woul 7 cs Ifyou give me permanently those wails, I iif be had set them the example | wil stop beating you; as I cannot tuke your | ¢f think UL bave heard you say” replied | word that when vou are well a 4 strong again | the Dame’s friend, * thar for some time past | you will not wish to fight me once more, I | Jone had fost all his inflasnee io the sehool; , 2Ust have some ‘material guaraatee ° such as |these walls, that von will leave ma in peace : : ° for the future.’ Poor Lovis had, however | 1s ‘ . < a ° . ? turuiog-lathe and his money box, that he bed | before this tire been so mauled that be had become sluggish and stupid, lost all his s0- | Koon carried away ; bat those who now keep itivity, and got fat and fl.bby and quite un-! his garien say, ‘Ne, wewill not give you ! fit to fight {although they wou'd fad their) one stone of these walls,or one inch of ground |mis'ake if they dared to molest him, for he | on which they stand’ So what isto b= . ; . ’ iliam has been terribly bruised and lean fight as well asever sf forced 19 do go)| done? Witham y Dratsed an i )) hart in bie fight,.end now thas he bas beaten : t ° aq) | and ra aa = other mon:tore cared Louis who wes the aggreesor,ke cannot be ex- pOr'OF SeEreS Sis pected to let him off scot free, or net to se- ‘Yes I have often beard them say 80-’ | cure himself from being again molested, or ‘Then why was he t> put bimse!f more! from having hig water-course, and that part | forward than others in this instance? IL!| ot bis garden through which it rups, taken ‘they dd not think it their business to in- from hia et any future time ; for you ‘kaow Lterfere, end prevent Louisand William he and his class rave about their water-course, fizhting, why was it John’s business more | Mey make ee ne tee go fend ot H,thes radi ele-e08 Wheii tob-henétiebe got a { believe they would rather al} fight ull they died sooner than have it taken from them; so grudge against each other, and are deter yntit Louis’s successors find they must give in, mined to fight. fight they will some time or/or can manage to take the stone walls back other, do what you will to prevent them again from William, I fear there is no bope No, my good Mrz, Europa, i think you are of the fighting ending, orof any peace and unjust in this ease,and hard apon Jonn ; quiet far you, my good Mrs, Kuropa; for you should at least bave ealled up Aleck | here again, you see,— ‘ There are always two sides to every ques- and Joseph, and lecture them also; they ten? 7 ay ft . have been lookers-on, or neutrals, as they vall themselves, as well as John.’ DOWRY. Mech opposition has cropped up among! the werking cla:ses in some parts of Eogland | to the Jowry wrich Parliament has be@n cati- ed on to vote to the Princess Lou‘se on her marriage with the Marquis of Lorne. We have no sympathy whatever with this agita tion. Jt is exeeeding'y mean and contempt- THE PRINCESS LOUISE'S | ‘Well, but why hos be helped Louis by sending him over these stones te pelt Wil ‘lism with?’ ‘You must remember that John and his | clas are very industrous boys. So as John could not prevent the quarrel, he said, ‘| rls ; = ‘can’t stop from selling either of . 3 er stop a atte - her © ae e rbie to object to a payment in her case, | ‘hing yeu want to buy from me, merely be-| vy 4, was not objected to in the ease of ver cause you ae fighting with each o'her, it} married sisters, We are as anxious for re \would be unkind: -so either of you may! trenchment and economy as any one can be tave what you require’ Louis wanted | but if we are to have a monarchy atali, don’t some ston 8; 80 Jorn sent bima few, for | let us grudge the cost of it. Gur own Royal he bad very few at hand; and Wililiam bas, fam oo seem at ae less ade ' ery angry at this.as he eays it is, Suen that of any other Harepean hatlon 0: rer : D i —s It hi a Bu he F "S| similar extent and importance, awd it costs velping Louis ta pelt him ut it 60 hap-| och less now than it has ever done in any |pened tbat William did not want anything i at least obtain something to eat, c’sely on account of Alsace a spe dy peace and a fiim organizarion of exisiing in order that the unwhcle-ome provisioral state of things may cease, All relations are in the highest degree unsett'ed dy it, and no ove knows exirtly how he stands, When Alsace and German Lorraine are) vice united to Germuny, many welleto-do | families of Fretieh nttionality will certainly prepare themseivesto migrate inio Franve, Much disturbance and biaderaace may arise irom this at first, but, on the whole, L cov- sider it a great advantage if, as far as poss- ible, the French who heve but mizrated aith- er, afcer all should forsake us, and aguin seek ther actual Fatheriand. They do not suix us at ail and wiil form, but very stubborn | members ot ournew German realm, Al-_ sace aud German Lorraiue are distric!s so richly endowed by nature that tbe number of ewigrant Mreuch wiil soon be made up by the iuflux of Germany, * * * In spite, however, of ational hatred, the Freuch possessors of property must needs very deeply whetver they will exchange the lutare brobably very uncertain situation vf affairs io Prauee withthe securicy and order in our German domiuions, Even m:ny of the rich proprietors of spiening and weaving g4, ult to be gathered up, and yet so pertiee iors im their truits The slaoderer koows | civcumstances are earnestly to be wished, | iltat a '2Y @ Wied will catch up the piagua and Seq, “™e poisoned by his insinvations, without e Ver secking the actid te. No re. pacstion en refute a sneer, por sny bu ran skill pre Vent mischief, Merendg, ish." name of anew un‘ermen- ted malt.ligsos, Which hes been devised by M.G.H Newanan - Of Brentford, England. Mr, Newmar proda °8 this Merenda trom wait asd hops ia the following way:—To produce 100 gations by’ YSe8 one quart of malt and six [be of best hops. He ex. tracts from whole malt in four mashes, the first mash at about 166 deg’rees Fah., the second about 170 degrees, The hops aie put in cold fiquor, and are kep* well stirred under to prevent the aroma flyiig off; thy hquor is gently heated-up toabout 170 Fab,, when about three oz, of isinglass” and <he same quantity of cloves are added, the whole being strained off at about 470 de- grees, To purify the walt extreet, Mr, Newisao boris and skims it for stout two. hours, and then puts it into a eoller, brings it down to about 70 degrees, sad thea mixes the gait and hopextracte together, Tne wholeisthen put into a copper and establishmenis in Mahlbausen who now bear us so deep a grucge will be glad to re- main with us when matters areon a firmer footing. Af these g-ntlemen wish to go, bowever, we will cectainly not keep thew, for their very ex essive and unlenibie well- managed estublishments.a:e well suited for acquisition, and remuueratiye mabagement by German joint-stock companics, That which wou'd have most weight and inflaence is, however, the speely erection of a ther- ough y Germano university at Strasbourg. Lf the University of Preiburg could bat be transported thither! Nothing unites a die- trict so wel! with the other German countries as a good German university. ——ooo ro Or aD +o A GLORIOUS AMBITION! Sar the Seythian Awbassador to Alexander, “If your persoh were as vast as your ambition | ths world could not contain you.” We have | now in our midst a conqueror whose ambition is ; ax boutdiees as Alexander's. The vid world was | too narrow @ sphere tor iis exercise, and. be bas | sought the new. We refer to Professor Hoilo- way, whose desire to benefit mankind wnsated by the countless cures his medicines have accome | pushed, isnow actively engaged in revolutioviz-| ing the treatment of disease iu this country. | Conquest and subjugation are its objects—the | conquest and subjuy tien of thecvarious gualadies | } that afflict the human race, The trephies of his previous reizn, -** Good Queen Ann” had) ekillare to be found in every region of the earth. | was burp, and so “én brought up 189 degrees. It is afterwarde casked aud buuged down for tweive hours, then itis to be teft for twe days or more,atte> which itistobe bottled, The.boides are to be placed inco!ld jiquor, which is io be seated up to about 180 degrees, they are then to be corked aud‘iaidcn their sides for twenty-four bours, Such is Merende Tue following story is in circulation, A friend writes to another t—* Of course, you rememberethe stately Archbishop of York when Bishop of Brisiol—bis-gravdiose air—sell-cc niained and worldly-wsse—never lusing sight of the nein chemee.. Keeping | his mapper and person, then, in mind, you | relish a capital story 1 have heard of bim —thtis, if you have not beard it before; for a second telling sakes away the zest, You also know the bumorousand yivagiovs Cork- man, Dr. Magee, formerly of the Bath Prov rietary Chapel, bow Bishop of Peterborough. Magee is very guod-natwred, but the temta- tou to eay a smart thing he never could re sist, We'll, chen, tomy story: Dr Lbomp- son was telling bis brother of Pete: borough that all his Church preferments had come 10 him on the birth ofa ehild: that be wae roade preacher st Lin@@h’»inn about the time of the birth of his first child; Bighdn of Gloacester and Brists! when'the secand ‘Weill Thompson,’ "just then from John, and if he had daneso, | £800,090 per annum,and tn twelve years in- | for his reusedies ave aannipotent, and where ever saya Dr. Megee, ‘| hope You will not have ue could net have got it, for you see Louis! cugred debts amounting to £ 290 090. ' ‘has much the larger boat of the two. ani ‘obliges William to keep his boat locked up in ‘his boat-house, whilst Louis can fetch anything hé wan's ; so that had Jebo made a fresh rule now, Louis would bave com- pla ocd that he was favoring William at his expense, aud that it sould pot. be ecting his reign of a dozen years ne fell back to the | extent of £1,009,000. George JI. hac on an} average about £1,000,00 per annum, and | ded in deb: to the tune of £456,009. George UfI., “of pious memorz,”* hed at) first £800,0°0 a year, then ‘9 000, then | £960 0.10 and in tho latter part of his retrn ' fairly to‘both pansies, . Lt when this fight, £1,039,009, and yet during the sixty years | > make he eat upon the throne he {.cutred: debts | is all over, ail the monitors agree 1¢ make 4 ru! if ney ass ampvonting to £3,811,0)0. Moreover, he | MY bee eran bs 4 erp a | spent £1.4.09,000 out of the casual revenues | ree Conbers shalt SaPply eltner oF che Urown whieh had not been surrendered | of the combatants with anything they may 1) tho pasion. : , All these Livyal debts wee) want, it would be a very just rule ; but to liquidsted by Parliament George IV. and) alter an old-establishead rale now, which Witham IV. had each @ civil list of £435-| would effect one party aad uot the other,| G00 per anom, and mors ec nomical than | would not be tair aed J think William wil their predecessors, they died solvent. Let it see this when the fight is over. Bat for | be borne in mind, also, that all the Sover. one stone that John sent, those sharp boys | °'4"S of the present reigning family, with | 2 : 4 in the school across the water sent him #1 ues Frows Elanover, Resides what, they have| ‘cari-load, yet they ca!!l themselves nuetrals’ received from this country. Now the Queen's | also, ‘them; itis aiways John shou'd have done | lurzesam certainly, butwery moderate when | ‘this, and John should have dove that, Poor compared with the enormous succes javished | ‘Joho! he is aways tne one to be blamed. 99 former aan: i ln ag she is} iW : ’ abevlute mistress of only £60,000 per annum wh obec Set noted en | —the remainder going for salari-s of officials, | jaad can bear It: oe ee aes | expenses of hovseholc, bounties, special ser- quiet way, and does what be thinks right. | yi¢.s, and peasiont. Bat in reality the ‘whether he go's abused for it or not; and Queen costs the nation nothing. There are even io this cuse, although he could not in- lands and other properties belonging to the ‘terfere, he has done bis best in *nsing the | Crown, the revenves trom vey Soma Math in ‘soonew’ and binding up the wounds of both | 4869 to £458 206 more than er Mujesty Hades > : 2 oe 'reeeives from the C'onsslidated Fund, aad if vite 9°46 9S eee ' ythe Publie Parks in and about London be- ‘We'l,’ said Mes. Europa at last. * you longing to the Crown were used for building they have penetrated, diecase bas given wey to | George I had £200 v0U per anpuw, and in | (beir bygetan influence. Probably (here are oot | half a dozen newspapers in existence thal have | net borne voluntary testhneny to the wender- working eficary vl Holloway’s Pills and Quite ment. Lt has heretofore been the enivercal come! plaint against even the most popular medicines ihatthey were mere pailiatives, relieving prin lewnporarily, perhaps, but wever reaching ‘he | * materics morbig’ or eiewasent of disease ia the bleed... Moiloways Pills, on the contrary, net | specuicaily gpon the primary cause of the wala- dy in the fluids of the body, and from which they | sprivg. In external disease the Ointmetit 18 used | as an auxifary to the Puls, aud its sanitive ef-) iects are scarcely jess wondertal. We make three, assertions--bold a3 they may svenn—on eolid graunds. We haze warrant lor them in the admissions of the facu'ty—iy the statements of standard medical periodicals on both s.d-e of the Atlantiec—in the published ac- knowiedgemente of thousands of gratelul conval- sceuls—a2nd laet, but wot least so far as our psi- sonal experience and observation. To the man were profound research and i the production of sueh unegualled euratives, and wheee Qusiness, energy and enterprise have diffused them thraugh every inhabited region be- tween the 2quator aud the Poles the homage of the world is due. He has received it. Where ever be has travelled bit journeys have resem. bi d a triumphal progress, end the most haughty of Evrope’s aristocracy have been proud to aee sist at hie levees. He os now 2 resident—and we hope be wil become a cifizen—of a tind where the only titles recogn zed are the titles to resp et snd gratitude earned by public beneface tora, Atmeng that clase he has lagg stood pre- eminent, avd 20 i8 perhaps nel tow much to ray that he European and American central manu factors, Louden, and New York, are Acing | pineed on candlesticks (Lev, yxy; FENTON T. NEWBERY, Geners! Avont for P. E, Istand. Charlotte:own, April 25, 1870. ‘that’s why [ blame bim.”’ ‘have put the ease very strong for John, 1 | *Softly, my good friend,”? ssid ber com- bad no idea he bad so stausch a friend, I) ‘panion ‘+ you admit that it was owing to. have been «0 in the habit of always hearing | purposes, the revenues from them would bring the Royal income up to £1,000,000. These lands, which are ae :ruly the property more practical geod than all the Medica! Cob leges of Hurepe and Ameries cowl wed,-- New York Sanday Dispatch. any more children * * Why not # ssya Dr, Thompson. 4 Becunse there are only two wore steps left fer you—Oanterbury. and Uvcaven, and you are fic for neither, Certain books infoii a8 that cand’es and lemps for illumination hive heea employed from the earliest times. Both sfe*médth oned in the Bible; and, indeed. it Ys daft cult te understand fro Serip urs parre- tiwowh ther caniles or jamps areindiokted, laisps brraing o'sve oi) being ordered tobe LIF. referring to rushes aud to flix, deseribee parts of them as adupted for temps abd candlewicks, Adtbough this author gine utely ceseribes the process of wax. bigaghs ing. he does nots'ate what matenals mere iueed in his ti r anulacture . of the exception of the Queen, have bad reven- |vate convictions are coneerned, in ourawn por ured in bis time lor the iwanulaciure ol candles. Doubtiess, however, both wax cad taliow were used by the ancients for this Bat [ hear no complaints against | ¢'gi) list is only £335,000 per anum—a_ practical sk:!l in medical science bave resulted” purpose, indeed Apule us distinguished two sorts of candles by the names cerei and seb- acei_ In ihe middle ages wax cand‘es ct Farious sizes were made, und it is aaid in moulds—-ipough waz candies canvot be abe moulded —the Wickaleingtwistedtwo, At the command of King Alfred, ebapfaids mad: wax ca dics in such a manner that lime wus measured by ther burning; six cancies lighted in cu-cession burning exaetiy twenty-four hous, Several records refer to the trade of wax chandler as ear'y ne the sixteenth century, The first description of rushlights seems to bein White’s Na tural History of Sethorme pubtishca an 16 De aa?