oe = —" —— ae re a ange ———_ ale ® “"Phis is tene Liberty, when Preeborn Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.**---Euripides. Vol. NIV. “4 FINE CHANCE FOR) SPECULATORS AND EN DERPRISING NLEEN. 11 UNDERSIGNED has been instructed by the owners to offer FOR SALE, or RENT, several VALUABLE FREEHOLD and LEASEHOLD PROPERTIES and FARMS in| BELFAST and other parts of the Island, in good cultivation, well wooded, and possessing other advantages; and for which good and valid tithes aud immediute possession can be given. | Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Monday, August j } i SUMMERSIDE. ‘IS64 New Goods. 1864 | zi Kx ComMoperr and W. W. Logo, from LIVER- POOL,--Cot,. Exuswortrnh, ArGonaut, Peart, Comer, Mary Creavetann, and Steamer Commerce from UNITED STATES. LITERATURE, REVELRY IN EAST INDIA. | . “ae | The following remarkable poem appeared oriyi ' i nally, it is believed, im the St. Helena ‘ Maguzine,’ }and wasufterwards copied into the Londéit ‘ Sp@ | tator’ and other journals. It will be new to most Atse—FOUR LOTS, being the residue of thirteen Building Lota (the ether nine having been (PXHE Subseriber has reecived a large and | renders. Jt relates to the early service of Enylish sold the present season) in that most advantageous mercantile situation known aa SUMMER HILL, | adjoining MONTAGUE BRIDGE, ten wiles from Georgetown, where close on to 150,000 bushels ot produce are annually shipped, and nearly all paid for in cash. Auiericans and other speculators rehaee here, and ship for Great Britain, the United States, &c. A number of Storea, Wharfs, a evting House, Post (Office, aud Temperance Society have been established for some time, with many Grist, Saw and Cloth Mills in the vicinity; where also any quantity of all kinds of Lamber ean be had in trade at low rates. SUMMER HILL property is the only Freehold Property tor sale well- selected STOCK OF GOODS, | by the ubove vamed vessels, Direct from the Manufacturers in Eng- land, and from first Houses in the United States, officers in India when the urmy was mowed down | by pestilence. | the effects of small pox in England is remembered, las it describes the separation of brothers, sisters lined lovers, it wUl be seen that this poem gives, with wonderful effect, what is far nobler, however When Lord MeAulay’s account of in the place, which renders it most desirable for all classes of artizans, wow so much wanted in this | Which he will sell at his Store, SUMMERSIDE, rising town. A SPORH, aud Dwelling in it, capable of holding 15,000 bushels of produce, with a | 17 cush, orupproved eredit, consisting, in part, of — double Wharf and aite or Lime Kiln, will be suld cheap or leased on reasunable terms. | Caburys, Lustres, Alpacas, Delaines, Lamas, Plans, particulars, or any other inforyation can be obtained by calling at the office of Messrs, } ree Hey aah Wile Cchoss aaa Rall & Sen, Land Surveyors, Charlotictown. Reference can also be had from W. Sanderson, F.P.| peatick scarlet, blue, white and fancy printed N orton, Thomas Anneur, Georgetown; Jas Broydrick, Campbeltown, Lot 4; F. W. Hughes, | Flannels : Manties, Shawls, Bonnets Hate ib E caminer Office, Charlottetown; and to the subscriber at Orwell, who is also Agent for the sale of) bons, Flowers, Cap Fronts, Parasols, Cinbrellas Manny's Mowing Machine, the celebrated Yarmouth COOKING STOV Kh, | Gloves, Hoisery, Hair Nets; a large assortment of aod alse fur the Pulling Mills of Messrs Bourke, Mall View, the Hon. Jas. McLaren, New Perth, | teadyanade CLOTHING in Coats, Jackets, Pants, Finlay W. MeDonald, |inette; where Cloth is received and returved with despatch. } Vests, Flannel and Cotton Shirts, Paper und Linen | Shirt Collars, Neckties and Haudkerchiefs, Scarfs RICHA RD oi CLARKE. ludia Kabber and Cotton Braces: Black and Fancy Doeskins, Blue aud Black Broadeloths, Tweeds, 4 | Cussimeres,Stocs nett, Russell Cord, Linen domestic, . = j Jean, Velvets, Canada bagying, Osnaburgs, Dack. THE IMPORTATIONS Curpeting, Blankets, Counterpanes, Sheets, Veroua, | Serge, Oil Clothes, Ladies’ Collars, Handkerchiefs, | Neckties, Stays and Corsets, Carpet Bags, White and Orwe)) Store, Angus! 15, 1264. ~~ FARM FOR SALE. HE leazehold isterest of 50 acres ‘of! Covers, Sad Trous, Gunpowder aud Shet, Shot painful, the very poetry of military despair, but still the dying together of brothers in arms :— We meet ‘neath the sonnding rafter, And the walls around are bare, As they shout to our peals of langhter It seems that the dead are there. But stand to your glasses steady, We drink to our comrades’ eyes, Quatf a cup to the dead already ; Aud hurra! for the next that dies. Not here are the goblets glowing; Not here is the vintage sweet; ’Tis cold, us our hearts are growing, | And dark as the doom we meet. Bat stand to your ylaseea; steady ! And swoon shall your pulses rise,— A cup to the dead already ; Hlurra! for the next that’ dies. itevature, and Alews, 22, 1864. | habits of this people in his time; but here ing his enquiries in the neighbourhood ot | we have before us their very surroundings, | the Temple of Isis; one day inside a house even the food they ate — the corn, the bar- amid fallen roofs and ashes the outline of a ley, the oats of which they made their human body was perceived, and M. Fiorelli bread, the very bread itself, and the remains | soon ascertained that there was a hollow! |of wild duck, roasted, and looking as though ‘under the surface. In accordance with a it had been only just cooked. The folding-| plan he bas adopted of taking casts of any | ch-irs of the present day may have been | hollow he may find, he made a small hole| ' copies of the one to be found in this section into the cavity, through which he poured Ji- of the Museum, and the wig that once be-| quid plaster of Paris until it was filled up ; longed to an Egyptian lady of rank may, /| the result was a cast of a group of human from the brightness of its curls, bave just | figures transfixed as it were at the left the earling-tongs of Truefitt. The|very instant of their agony, and je'ri- balls, the jointed dolls, draughtsmen, and | fed for ever in the last attitudes of their | dice we see here, show that both children | terrible death, The first body discovered | and men of this ancient race amused them- | was that of a wowan lying on her left side selves pretty much as we do now. with her limbs contracted and her hands Perhaps the most frequented stall at the | clenched, as if she had died in convulsions. late International Exhibition, was the one | / He bones of the arms and legs were s!ender. in the gallery devoted to the products of | #94 from the richness of her bead-dress and Kg) pt. Among these, appearing like a| the texture of her robes, it was evident she ghost at a festival, were the famous anti-| #8 Of noble race. The plaster had given quities found in old Kgyptian tombs. No. | ‘he impression of the hair with the greatest thing s’artled the spectator so much as be. minuteness ; on the bones of the little finger ing led back by these remains to a period | f this ludy were two silver rings, and coeval with many events related in the Bible | close to her head the remains of a linen bag The well-made bronzed weapons, the gilt | of pieces of silver money and some keys ; car, in the shape of a boat with rowers, re- | She was evidently the matron of the house. presenting the pavsage of the soul to another | By the side of the Roman lady lay an elder- world, and (more interesting still to the |/y Woman with «n iron ring oa her finger ; ladies) a diadem, a necklace, and armlets of | ‘tom her large ear it was supposed that she gold. How litle the Pharaohs of that} #8 @ Servant of the family. A girl was period imagined that their old-world art | fouud in an adjoining room. She had fallen ’ Series.---No, 38. bis egress, The coins bear the effigies of the Constantines, thue marking the period of the city as about the end of the fourth century. Immediately outside the walls, upon some irregular ground being examin- ed, it was found to contain numerous ske- letons lying in all directions, and emtombed possibly as on the field of battle. There had evideotly been a great struggle at this spot, which was immediately beneath a water- tower guarding a ford across the Severn, Here there is every reason to believe Mother Karth has preserved to us, together with many implements of battle, the veritable in- vading Picts themselves, as the configuratiea of the skulls was entirely different from those found within the city itself. Here is a culminating point in the past history of Britain. Sealed and preserved to the present time—put away, as it were, under the verdant turf, and the feet of beasts, and the golden crops to be exhumed by the chance stroke of the labourer’s pick. There are countless such treasure troves as these, however, yet to be discovered. The Danes have left innumerable marks of their inva- sion of the island; not so very long ago, the skin of one of these sea-kings was to be seen nailed to the door of the Jerusalem Cham- ber, Westminster Abbey; and on some of the doors of the old Livcolnshire parish churches may yet be witnessed the epider- mis cf captured and flayed Vikings of old. LAND, at the anunal rent of one shilling | FOR | Blue Cotton” Warp, Tailors Triuuuings, Ladies r acre, situate at Sea Cow Pond, Lot 1, and trout. , a> E Nw > ee ) Dress ‘Trimmings. ing on the Galf Shore, most conveniently situated | ~ L aR i + cr 1ISG-t j la 7 - sie a ; : a. contiguous to Churches. Schools, Mille, &e. 35! 4 HATS AND CAPS, BOOTS AND SHOES. “eres are in a high state of cultivation, the re-} Leu beret ane. 3 |} Plough Metals, Cat and Wrought Nails, Pit, mainder is covered with cedar and bard wood. On NOW COMPLETED | Cross-cut, Hand,and Tenon Saws; Window Glass, the premises is a dv elling house 3024 feet, well | et thie Putty, Blister aud Cast Steel, Pots, Paus, and spare } | | finished, and « barn frame 22 «26 feet, Granary and j other outhouses, with » good well of water near | the door. j The above property is a desirable investment for | any person wishing to eugage in fishing or mercan- 3 tile business, as it bad been conducted ou the pre “CODE. war, a —— mises heretotere. The farm is well fenced with | WHERE YOU WILL FIND wod cedar, and purtitioned into fields of four Y weer ee ce Te APT PO 8 Bee. fom | An Extensive and General The subseriber offers the above property for sule 2 “ with = without the erop, stock, &c., us may be | Supply of agreed upon. Terms li) eral | Vwi f iY earRick consick, | DRITISH and FOREIGN Sea Cow Pond, Lot tl. Aagnat 15, L464 in ‘ 'f y r . Site Tok leth men.) MER CEANDIZE, A Goo! Chance eed FOR AN INDUSTRIOUS MAN. | All the requisite Articles in FPNHE Subseriber offers for sulea FARM | §t 1 having a front of |'w enty Chains on Kildare S aple and Fancy Dry Goods, River, Lot 4, now occupied by John’ Kiueh, eon- | ineluding —— taining about 120 acres, leased at is. per nere.} z : About 40 acres are under cultivation, and the ba- | mp novelties oe the Season, lanee covered’ with fencing aiid hardwood. The a ayn Muildings consiet of a Dwelling House, 14 x 20 feet. | oe upe rior Et ea, with a Kitchen attached, 14x 14, finished outside,| And other GROCERIES, and a Frame Barn W feet square. Auy quantity ’ of Sea Manure, wars) vud maesol mud, can be ob- Gents General Outfits, txined close by. Terms cusy r x <EIp > y For further parties! _ uppls to } HARDW A RE and CU ] LERY > GEORGE W. HOWLAN. | Cascumpec, July 15, 1564 isl Seu ' Iron Bedsteads, Ta. AND PREE LAND | FURNISHING GOODS, - - - At Egmont Lay, Lot 15. Purchased on the Best ‘ierms, and selected with ied 5 the preatest cure, and NOR SALE, 125 Acres 20 scree upland Sold at the Lowest remunerating Prices. cleared, and 20 acres Sault Marsh, fronting 19 % . chains on the Shore at Kocky Point Fishing Cove W : ee. BROWN. , Ch'tewn, June 2), Uk64 The rear bute on the wainu road. ALae—~S0 vers of Laud, 26 acres cleared, lO acres | “lahat un the sore. “ive suis tal tants JUSt the things you want. liveky Point runs through thir farm ls ridle of wbenutifal river, asthabot Wier chard Call at Boll’s Clothing Store. © of whieh are auder crop CP Abound wice of sex manure can be had ov the shore af the farme. The terms — which these \ turn Will be sold are very libern Pleuse ajyply QUEEN STREET. JHERE you can purchase at MODE- tATE PRICES— ’ r . r fat s «rT i] Pe "th otle . . * , . . . 1 ear EY: Heauks, Exauiuer (Mee. Charlotte | teaver CLOTH, Felt, Tweed und Straw ITATS ee . ce Se ga : Cloth aud Tweed CAPS, Shirts, Ties Searts, Meuwm'e Mart. Eauent Une Anzast 8, oi Collars, Gloves, Braces, Underelothing, Socks. Oil Clothing, Sow westers, Over Not a sigh for the lot that darkles; Not a tear for the friends that sink ; We'll fall, midst the wine-cup’s sparkles, As mute us the wine we drink. Bays, Powder Flasks, Gan Caps, Percussiou Gans, Fishing Reds, ‘Troutand Vod Hooks; Hoes, Shovels, Spades, Grillin Scythes, Scythe Stones and Kitles, | Codlines, Mauilia Rope, Frying Pane, Gridirous; a | ange assortinent of Hinges and Serews, Viough Traces, Leading Harness, Halter Chains, Mullen ) Bitts, Backbands, Watering Chains, Rings, Buckles ; with a large assortment of Harness Mounting of every description; Steelyards, Door, Pad, Chest, Capboard and Chest Locks ; Carpenter's Rules, Squares, Tandsaw Set Latches, Sewing and Peyy ing Awla, Shoe and Stove Blacking, Bed Screws, Copper Naila, Pump and other Tacks, Jewshurps, Black and White Coffin Furniture, Spoke shaves, | Slide Bevils, Suoothing, Juck and Trying Planes, Screw Bitts, Gimblets, Firwer aud Socket Chisells Drawing Kuives, Thompson Screw Augurs, Ameri. | lean and Buglish wade Horse Nails, Coil Chain, | Paint Brushes, Sash ‘Tools, Whitewash and Serul bing Broshes, Har Brooms, Horse and Shoe Brushes, Sheep Shears, Preserving Kettles, Fine | Tooth and Dressing Comhs Shoe Kuives,Steel Pens, Table Knives wud Forks. Carvers, Pocket Kuiver, Table and Tea Spoons, Salt and Mustard Spoous Razors ind Straps, Tooth and Shaving Brushes. | Looking Glasses, Sheathe and Belts for e#ailors’ | knives, Chalk Lines, Shoe Thread, White and /| Yellow Closing Flax, Scissors, Violen Striuge com rlete, Oyster Kuimes, Sail Needles, Curpeuters’ | } Brads, Trays and Waiters, Saucepans, arse Rasps, Mill Vit. Croes-cut hand imd Tenou saw Files,Wood Rasps, best Boot Web, Whipe and Whip Thongs, Slates and Pencils, Clench Riugs, Spikes, Weavers | Reed's Paints. Oils, Red and Yellow Ochre, Blue, | Glue, Borax. Washing and Baking Soda, Cudbeur, | Extract of Logweed, Alum, Log and Red Wood, | Annatto, Indigo, Olive and Castor Oil, epsom Salts Seva, Seidlitz Powders, Sulphur aud Brimstone, Pimento, Rosiu, Raistus aml Currants, assorted | Candy and Lozenges, Cloves, Nutmegs, Lemon | Syrup, Walnuts, Pilberts, Almonds. Dried Apples, | Ginger, Pepper, Mustard, Vineyur, Suutl, Salt- | petre, Cuudles. Soap, Tex, Tebaccu, Cheese, Crack ers, Pilot Bread, Ginger Snaps. seed Cake, Matches. | rious eyes of a nation that in their day had not even begun its move westward, borve on the surges of the great Caucasian wave. Uf all the remnants handed down to us by intiquity, the most wonderfully preserved are articles of pottery, ylass, and gold; the first are almost absolutely indestructible, and gold, in consequence of its unoxidizable na- ture, is almost as everlasting. In the [talian Court, for instance, we al! of us saw the old Etruscan jewellery, necklaces, and bracelets, as pertect as the day they heaved upon white bosoms, or cla-ped the idelicate wrists of maidens of a race about whom history i'self is silent. Io our own \:useum again, the Etruscan vases, as perfect as when they came from the hands of the artist, are to be seen by the haudred. The mind can scarcely be- lieve that these precious works were made iong before the appearance of Christ upon earth, They look rather, in their modern glass cases, like the stock in trade of Min- ‘ton’s shop, especially the Greek rhytons, or lniuking bores, terminating in an @nimal’s j head, one of which, shaped like a mule, is probably oue of the most delicately designed jand the most perfectly preserved work of jart of ics kind in existenee, So stand to your glasses, steady ! "Tis this that the respite buys, One cup to the dead alreudy ; Hlurra! for the next that dies. Time was when we frowned on others; We thought we Were wiser then; Ha! ha! let them think of their mothers We hope to see them aguin. No! stand to your glasses, steady ! The thoughtless are here the wise ; A cup to the dead elready ; Ifurra! for the next that dies. There's many « hand that’s shakiug : There's many a eheek that’s sank ; Lut soon, though eur hearts are breaking, They'll barn with the winewety k. So stud to your glasses, steady ! ‘Tis here the revival lies ; A cup to the dead already ; : Hurra! for the next that dies. There's mist on the glass conyealing, "Tis the boarricane’s fiery breath ; And thus doth the warmth of feeling ‘Turn ice th the grasp of death Hou! stand to your wlasses, steady ! For a woment the vapor flies | [t would seem as though Nature treasured A cp to the dead alreudy ; i : : up the features of the past in her bosom, in Hurra! tor the next that dics. Clocks, Pitch, Tur, Qakuia, Round aud Flat bron, | } a = Publes. Chairs Nedsteds, Wasi elas Rex le , , order to siow to the children of the present, Chairs, Settees, Cradles, Sole Leuther, Bibles, | Who dreads to the dust retarning ! | that our toys aud geegaws are but reproduc- Pestuments, Cutechisum, Prayer aud other Books, | Who sinks from the sable shore? Stitionery, Buckets, Brooms, Hay Rakes. Seythe | , ie os Valet shty veartiine a: Snewths, American Hroad wud Narrow Axes, Adzes | Mine Mie 7 ' : Bere ae { \V e should recommend all those who seck tchet Poul ards . ‘ i dt the soul ebail stung be Divre i ; : : : Haichets, Wool Cards, Huop Shirts, Cane tur | ie P ae ets \odive deeper into ancient history to stady lloope, &c. Ke. | No! stand to your giasven, steady ! Sell bef tt ” h h it - 2 + . ~—aLso- The world is a woeld of lies ; pee ere LUCY wie, ee, ee 1900 Barrels SUPERPINE FLOUR; and hous A cup to the dead:already ly expected S00 barrels EXTRA FLOUR: 100! Harth, Can ue be denied that Mr. Leyard Hlurra! for the next that dies. would be exhumed and laid befure the eu-!| | tions of thoge of the most remote generations. ; brought forth from the depths of Mother | io ber terror, aud it was evident that sbe | was running with her skirts pulled over her head. Pliny the younger, in his account of | the catastrophe, tells us that the inhabitants jpn with pillows bound over their heads, |in order to protect themselves against the shower of stones that poured upon them. | Tuis poor girl wandering in the total dark- | ness of that day, having taken the like pre- |cau'ion, must have been suffveated as she | tried to escape, The other personage was a tall man lying at full length. The plas- ter had taken, with the utmost minuteneas, the form, the folds of his garment, his torn sandals, and his beard and hair. The fa- mily appear to have remained within the shelter of the house, hoping that the dread- ful fiery tempest would soon cease. I[n this hope they remained until the fine dust, which penetrated everywhere and complete- ly filled the interior of the house, sufocated them. The dust continued to fall, however. and completely buried them, hardening in the course of ages into a perfect mould, the impress of which the Italian savant took two / thousand years after it was made, and pre-| sented the world with such a pusthumous group as it had never seen before. In another house, just uncovered, a!) the furniture was found in a very perfect con- dition, in the triclinium or dining-room But may we not go back ages and ages, and yet fiod Mother Earth preserving for us the story of the past ? was she not busy in mak-~ ‘ng the moulds, and taking off the delicate impressions of a chain of life that was not destined to reach to the period of man’s ap- pearance cn this globe? The many pages of the great stone book preserved ia the geological department of the Museum come to our recollection as we write. What tex- ture 80 delicate or perishable, the iapres- sion of which she has not preserved to us by means of soft mud which afterwards gradually hardened into sione? The scales of fishes, the forms of the softest insects, as well as the skeletons of the most tremend us creatures that crawled, and swam, and walked the splashy earth, ere yet it was fit fur the foot of man, are to be found in this museum, and may be dug out any day fiom the lias of the Weald or Kent. Nay, the earth and the waters are yielding up the relics of man himself of the stone period, which it is estimated must have beer at least teu or twelve thousand years ago. On the banks of many of the existing Swies lakes have been found the indications of the pile- built habitations of these ancient people. Like many of the South American races at the present day, they built over the water, and the soft mad of the lakes has preserved a 10 pletely served tub’e, covered with the remuants of dishes filed with food. Ono adorned with gold and s'lver, several skele tons reposed. The guests had evideutly been suffocated by some noxious gis, while partaking of the meal, aud thus we have preserved to us a dinner-party of the antique world. Elegant statues adorned the board, and many precious jewels were scattered to us their skulls and skeletons, the rem- \nants of their food, including even their the table-beds around, made of bronze and} pred, the scone implements of the chase, _and ovhers of domestic life. The further |that science examioes, however, into the | Secrets of our great mother, the more qucint jare the records she” brings forth frout her bosom. In the limestone caves of Belgium, the bones of man have been discovered, to- wlls, Jumpers; ‘Pranks, Valises, Um brellus, Water proof COATS aud LEGGINGS, and a GENERAL ASSORTMENT OF Ready-made Clothing, , * lari! ’ aN ME velber i 4 - A i reeholi i a ri weg ” een ene together With a great va FOR SALE. ( YONSISTIN(G of 175 acies of FRONT 4 LAND, ina bigh «tute of enttivation, woth a SH” The highest price always paid in Cash for | OATS, EGGS, WOOL and SHEEP SKINS. | JOHN ANDREW McDONALD of all sizes and patteris, suitable for wood and | : coal; among which are the celebrated WATER-| LELLAN gives 16 beautifal Photographe for calling at eed DWELLING HUUSE, BARN, COACH OUSE, THRESHING MACHINE, and all other equisites suitable fora Partin. Also, One hundred acres Of WOOD LAND. ia the reur, situate on the | South wide of Elliot Kiver, nbout seven miles from (yarlottetown, and quite near two Public Whuarves, | for shipping Produce, &c. The above property is weil worth the notice of any person wishing to purchase a good Freehold Property, being the Ex tate of the late J.C. WVKIGHT. Ex lime will be given for two-thirds of the Purchase Money Euquire at the Office of Hexny Patmen, Eeq., or at the residence of the Sabseriber in Prince Street. | CATHERINE WRIGHT, Executrix. | Ch'town, April 25, Isi4 im Suitable fer the Season. ALSO, A choice selection of Clot! «, Tweeds, Doeskins, Oussimeres, Vestings, and Tailors’ Trimmings, which will be made up to orderat the shortest notice CUARLES BELL, Proprietor Flour! “HOUND” May 25, 1864. tf Flour! | PPER Brigantines ety “ EXPORT,” from NEW YORK hi Raitt tnd Pesnat and Doon, 200 Bbls. Suporfine and Extra : STATE FLOUR. Recommende:! by the Facuity. | Cheap for Cash. Pao } R. W. BRECKEN, Myiiiiy PATENT FOOD is so carefully | _, Water Street, adjvining the Bank and acteutitically prepared that it isimmennely | May 23, 1864. - superior to Arrowroot, Sayo, Tapioca, Breud, Bis- | ewt, Corn Flour, or any other kind of furinaceous | food for lufants, net alove frou its purity strength, | and nourishing properties, Lat also from its having | been peew iarly and thoroaghly cooked in its ma nafactore, Which renders it more easily digestible | It cannot canse Acidity or Wind. It is very uyree | able, and, from the nxtare of its composition, is | exactly adapted for all conditions of the stomach. | It can be made ready for use, without trouble, in| two or three minutes. ; Mixed in Beef Yea, Milk, or any other fluid, the! Patent Food is pre-eminently suited to Invalids, | from its wholesome and strengthening qualities. | Lt isu reul blessing, and foonh te sumarkable cheap- |} ——____-___ eenreresartt— ene wens uccemmable to all A few facts worth knowing. One trial will prove its efficacy—it will recom: ! —— sneeeteanen salamat [@s 4 Fact worts KNOWING | that R. R. MacLELLAN takes the best and cheapest Photographs in the Colony. IVS A FACT worth knowing that R. R. M« and QUEBEC PORTER & ALES, St. Charles-st. Brewery, Quebec. Thomas Lloyd, Proprietor. LES & PORTER, of superior quality, in Bowles and Wood, for sale by J. ROBERTS ECKART, Telegraph Building, Water-st. Ch'town, P E Island. Jaly 11, 1864 W. BR. WATSON. City Drag Store, Jul 18, 1864 eee eel ae STOVES! STOVES!! SOV ES. GUST received from ALBANY, NEW! @” YORK, and BOSTON, 600 STOVES, | LELLAN takes the lurgexs Photographs ever jtakew in the Culomy, plate 12 x 14 inches. its A FACT worth knowing that R. R. Mac } hand a full Steck of Chemicals and every requisite in the mrt. Irs A PACT worth knowing that no one but au Artist cun take an Artistic Photograph. 1.00 sand NIAGARA for wood, and BLACK | twenty shillings WIAMOND, UNION, VULCAN Covk Stoves | . George Street, May 23, 1864. tur coal. Se ae : anal ALSO: ‘ Parlor, Hall, Shop, and Box Stoves in great variety. Purchasers in want of good STOVES and 30 STOVES to suit them, will save 10 per ceut by FOR SALE! BBLS. No. 1 Superfine CANADA FLOUR, 150 Bole No 2 po bo 10 Paus Masxcovado Molasses, Bugs Liverpool Salt, Boxex Tobacco, 10s, Hbl#choice Bisenit, Cases Claret, ‘ Mentferrand#.’ J. ROBERTS ECKART, ‘Telegraph Building, } Dodd's Brick Store. Pownal Street, | and purchasipg of DODD & ROGERS. | P.S. Daily axpected, a large variety of Grates | ai Gifferest patterns. Dra R Charlottetown, July 18, 1964. aan Hewoe | PROURT °PLOUR* DOMESTIC DYES. | POR SALE by the Subseriber— 200 barrel# Extra State FLOUR, June 27, 64. 6m 40 Shades --~- Fast Colors. 280 de. Bapadiog.. do es ; es ao ine e - TEXIESE DYES offer the simplest and) _?ure™ tf ea in ell most perfect means of Dyeing housebold xp- | SSS | parel ever presented te the public. ‘ ! i MOLASSES wel : They embrace forty different shades, and iuclude | /INEIE Subscriber has just received, direct y . from the WEST INDES ‘ i rom the 3 a Pa, All the New ant Fashionable Colors, } 100 Punches. aud Tierces Choice MOLASSES, AND ARE | For sule low. (RRO r ! 2.5. CARVELL. PERE EC CLY FAST . Ch'town. June 13, 1864. tt EP Attention is invited to samples of colors at the | ——~—~ il . Druggiete.—sold every where. | Unigu Bank of P. E. Island. Summerside, June 27, beG4 TO EXCURSIONISTS. ROUND TRIP FO s#is3. | ‘pick ETS from CHARLOTTETOWN to PICTOU, TRURQ, HALIFAX, WIND SOR, ST. JOHN, SHBEDLAC, SUMMERSIDE. | and CHARLOTIETOWRX, or vice versa, and | GOOD for ONE MONTII from date of purchase. muy, be had of J.-S CARVELL, Agent. Charlottetown. Jane 17, 1864. ul register, ARCHIBALD McDonatp. Master, will suilfrom CHARLOTTE TOWN, tor the above Port, en or about the 20th instant LONDON the first SATURDAY in September Hae firet class acconnmodation for Passengers. For freight or paxsage apply in Loudon to Jous Pircarrn & Sone, 69 Cornhill; at Charlottetown to D.G. & 8. DAVIES. Charlottetown, July 11, 1364. Charlottetown and ‘Souris PACKE?. FANE well-known fast sailing achr. CHRISTIANA, Dominick Deagle Muster, will run between Charlottetown and Souris this Sam mer, calling at intermediate Ports. For Freight dr Paskaye please apply to W. W Lord & Co. Charlottetown; John MeLean, Souris; Ronald Walker, Graud Kiver; Thos. Cumeron, Georgetown; D R Stewart, Murray Harbor; JC MeMillan, Wood Isianda. May 9, i864. tf FOR SALE, | LELLAN is at home daily, and keeps always on | M's A FACT werth knowing that K. R. Mac. | Water-street. | ILOUSE asd LOT in Hills- borough - street suituble for xu } trndesman or a man in business: the Lotis forty bs | weventy-six feet. Also,a Nonse and Lot in Grattsn Lane, of the same description as that in Hillsho roavh street. Both Houses aud Lote will be sold } cheap, and time given for a large proportion of the | ae she money. Apply to & T. MORRIS. | June 6, 1864. i TO BE LET, With immediate Possession, (PRE commodious aud elegant DWELLING HOUSE and PRE MISES, on the north side of Rochfort Square, now in the occupation of Wun. A. Johnetutie, Esq. | For particulars apply at the Bank of Prince | Edward Island. [June 6, 1864. | ee set | | FOR SALE. prok SALE, at the subseriber’s Wane- wovse, in CHARLOTTETOWN, 2000 Bushels Liverpool Salt OU Sucks Butter Salt 20 Tora 3, } & F Tron | 3 ‘Lous Navy Oakum. | JAMES C. POPE. | _ dune 13 1864. tf | Saladin Mare for Sale. \" %O be sold at Private Sale, at a great | bargain, a very fine SALADIN MARE. She \is a fust trotter, exey and gentle in harness or luaddle, and works well in the Cart or Plongh. Ishe hus no fuult or blewish, and’ will be sold at a |.Jow figure on credit, the owner having uo use for her. Applieation to be made at the ** Examiner Office.” } May 23, 1864. ==. | Horse! Horse! Horse! ee ee Lagan SEEEC REESE ——— | keeping of our Mother Eaith ? LONDON TRADER. | my soliloquy as I paseed out of the galleries t th "EMIE fine new copper-fastened | Containing the antiquities in the British}and take us to the steps of the throne of | remnants of this so-called barbarous people Darque ** LOTUS,” A 1,290 tons | Museum. Returning, will ieave | Cat off from the lind that bore as, Betray'd by the land we tind, Where the brightest have gone before us, And the dallest reumin behind Staud! stund to your glasses, steady ! "Tia all we bave jeft to prize; A cup to the dead already ; And hurra! tor the next thet dies +P --—---- - BURIED HISTORY. What are the secrets that remsin in the Such was All thiags earthly must pass uway, we kuow; but the mind is staggered us ii contemplates the relies still left to us of great empires of which history gives us }but a hazy dream. Year by year Karih, the great tom of ail animate and inanimate things, is casting up fragments which speak of the mighty past—lragments which come like a resurrection to corroborate the tradi- tions of history, and sometimes to correct or restore its lost or fuded pages. Everyihing that we see about us, from the primal granite roeks to the child’s toy which mioisiers to the whim of the moment, is, by a slow pro- cess of disintegration, passing away into a fiue dust, which goes on forever, building up the crust of the ylobe—a five dust which in the course of time becomes animated with verdant sod, and to all appearances silently obliterates the marks which humanity is ever graving upon its surface, or building or shaping with pigmy hands, To all ap- pearances ouly, however, for year by year we ure discoveiipg that beveath the smiling sod and the sad-coloured earth, lie the scat- tered remnants of the ages that have gone. The successive waves of meu that have passed over the globe nave lft traces as in- delibly ivscribed beneath our feet as the light ripples of the ocean, thousands upon thousands of years ago, have graven them- selves upon the sand-stone shores of the pre-adamite world, Let us for a moment retrace the long Kgyptian galleries that have given rise to ) these reflections, As we pass ulong, the jself-same shadows fiom the statues of the | gods tull upon us as darkened the white- | rubed peo Isis four thousand years | ayo. Ve pass the Rosetta stone which alone retains the key of that language, in ‘which the science and learaing of the early ‘ages of the world were iuseribed. Those | sculptured stones, as we proceed, as plainly |as though they spoke, yield up traces of the Greek conquest of this aucient people, and jas plainly we see succeeding these, the | rougher marks of the Romans whe followed. But time, the reader will say, has been. re- ‘sisted by enduring stone. This is true, but ithe extraordinary ciweumstance is, that the ‘most perlect records of the-e lung-past ages jure to be found associated with the most fragile materials, As we asceud the stairs, )vas made us better acquainted with the jpublic aud private hfe of the Assyrians | ithan al) the bistcrians who have written | ‘about them? low many eyes bave guzed | ‘upon the sand mounds that covered ancient @ gether with those of the larger ecarnivora around. About the same time a baker’s| and pachydermata that roamed this earth, oven was discovered with eighty-one loaves} possibly a hundered tnousand years: ago, in it. They retained their shape perfectly. | Wao shall say what a depository, thas faith. 'which ig identical with that of loaves now | fy} through such long ages to its trust, may CEQ, H.REED & CO., 67 Union St., hel “WOR SETS jfor mstapce, towards the upper Egyptian us oz “4 o r es ee ke by RA. ‘Nineveh, ia ignoranee that beneath them | "de “ selon and vane, e | |Listory itself lay buried! If the historians | TAR SHOR FO ERE: POPS: OF LOTR | who wrote in their hazy way about the na- | Italy, let us turn for a moment to the rude » . ts ; i itants of EK ime be j tions of antiquity, in the last eentary, bad | inbubitants of England ut the time of the lbeen told that Assyria lived beneath those | @¥asion of the Romans. j}m@sshapen mounds, or rather slept like the | History gives us the most unsatiafactory 4 ‘enchanred princess in the fairy tale, and that | accounts of their habits and customs. The | 'one day she would come forth and s,eak— child is ‘aught to believe that they tatooed | tell us her tale, graven on enduring marble, | themselves with woad, like the Australian jand would show us through her royal halls, | Savage ; but the earth has disclosed to us| /Seunacherib bimsell—would they not have| ¥bich lead us to doubt their being so ex. 'smiled incredulously # What Rollinof the | ‘tremely barbarous after all, Fur tustance | pen cou'd tell us a hundredh part of what | in the department devoted to Ancient Bri- | Layard has written for us with the spade ?/ tish Antiquities, the first thing that strikes |The stranger tired with bis desultory wan-| ‘he eye is a shield of bronae, so bewusifully derings in the British Museum, at last foiters }and boldly designed that we do not believe | ‘nto the Jong low gallery ia which the spoils | 't could be better executed in the present of Assyria ure ranged. If he happen to be| day. Its centre is inlaid with different co- | of an imaginative tura, he finds fuod enough | loured enamel, It sy found a few years around him to fire his flagging spirits. | Sinee in the bed of the Thames, at Battersea; | These sculptured slabs discover to him a pic- | !t3 Owaer probably perished in some battle | ture history of one of the greatest eastern | With the homans whilst contesting the pas- ewpires. [He may see the very throne upon | S#g° Of that river. which Sardanapalus sat, and the sceptre be| But Mother Harih has preserved to us| used, and—we say it in order to show that | tokens of the aborigina) inhabitan’s of this | we need vot despair of having presented to | country of an earlier and later period than | us even the miuutest details of the past——| was the chief who owned this curious shield, | we find the very suds and but:ons, and pins | The traveller, in the lonely wilderness of | that that mighty mouarch probably wore, | Exmoor comes upon the circular fouodations | for they were discovered in these royal halls. | of the buts of the ancient Britons, of a very | Need we despair that the earth will yield|femote period, and the marks of their| up thousands of secrets equally curious with | hearths are yet observable stained with | those she has so-long kept silently in the ;smoke. Perhaps there is no period of the | stand beside the swiftly flowing Tigris?) history of our aboriginal inhabitants —at | Let us salute those human-headed winged |!east withia the historic limit — that is so} bulls, for they guarded the portals through | dark as the time which immediately succeed- | which monarchs have passed, who.e deeds |¢d the withdrawal of the Roman Legions, | and sufferings the sacred historian bas chro-| and the brief aitempt of the Romanised | nieled in the Great Book. Britons to stend alone. History confines | But what shail we say to our Mother | itself to a few lines in which they are de- | | Barth not only banding down to us the be-| scribed as attempting to repel the eavage | | \ongings of the past, but often preserving fo; | Picts, who fiually overwhelmed them. ; | our curious inspection the very attitudes of; The future historian who dwells upon \terror, and the passing actions of a despair- | this stage of history, must dig his facts, ipg people who perished long before the birth | not oucof these threadbare and untrustworthy | jof Christ? Pompeii bas been famous as/ records, but out of the ground. Fot far | ithe one starting example of a petrified|/ from Shrewsbury, on the banks of the ‘past, if we may be allowed the expression. | Severa, underveath some ficlis of turnips | | Cestroyed in a moment, as it were, by the and wheat, the very facts of which the his- overwhelming fall of dust aud ashes, it pre-|iorian was in search lay hidden. Withm | sented to us an ancient city with its full | these last few years a perfect Roman city, | tide of life suddenly arresied. The wine |(as far at least as its ground plan was con- | stains upon the couriers of the vinters, the | cerned), has beeu disiuterred, street:, halls, | bread just broken at the meal, the tools of | market-placea, baths, houses, —-a perfeot the mason and the moand of moriar beside | British Pompeii—in fact has been Jaid open | ‘the wall in the act of being built, and the | to the public eye. Among these ruins vast | mst perfect collection of the appliauges of | numbers of articles of daily use were found ; a great city, and of the furniture of bouses | half-finished stag-horu work, such as the) of every condition, have long been shown to | Germans and Swiss are so fond of making. | the public in the National Museum at Na-/|was discovered in an old workshop; a supply | ples. Amid ail these relies of the over-|of charcoal, jn the shop of a baker, the, | whelmed city, thus, like a fly in amber, so | stoke-bole sti!) covered with the soot of the , carefully preserved to as,there was, however, sweating bath, aod t-ssellated pavements, | Wanting some memento of human terror to} without number. But relics such ag these ,make the picture complete. It will be re- | are plentiful eo ugh ia the world. Tae. | satisfied in viewing a thing of art BOSTON. W.R. Watson, MW. Skinner, T. DesBrisay. oon tree Charlottetown. duly 31, :3864): Sm here the counpry caunot be imported. nr emery . ae ee ." 63 ‘erme liberal. a Cloth Wactory! | W. S. LONGWORTH, | winctan tein deme eT MPUE SUBSCRILER begs respectiully to | Commission Merchant and Auctioneer, ——-———_-——--- at the face, for Flour, and other merchandise, | | at market rates, and receive them for accounts. ' THOMAS HANFORD, WILL take the Bills of the above Bank qpue Siabseriher THOROUGH BRED CART COLT, 3 years old, of the old Champion and Clydesdale breed = Jobe. &, 8 l weighing 1500 lbs.,—16} hands high A beter Wanted Iminediztely, informa the public that be will continue to SOmTHP “" &, Thanufactare club. dee. at bis eetablidsinout in SOUTH ORI : LOT 4 ' OUK CAULKEKS. Apply to Tryon. Wool wils le received in Charlottetown | [3 Prodace bought on Commission, and stored F BENJAMIN DAVIES by H.J Callbeck, Ayeut, or at the Mill. ready for shipment. ’ July 1s64. ‘ Cioth semabigl tas Dyeing and Dressing as Boutbport, July 25, 1864. Chitown, July 7h, - heretofure. : Rum! Rum!! May 23, =e E. STANFIELD. FURNITURE ! MPURESHING MACHINE CASTINGS. atari MEER & BONS. MERARA RUM for sale by vn GEORGE COLES. Also at bis Brewery, Whiskey, Giu and Ale. Feb 5, 186 ruary 15, 1864. og ATEN PUNCHEONS of superior old UST ARRIVED Schr. Caledonia, with | DS, f —_ meer ment Ot ORGE DOVGLAss. Chaslottetown, May 23, 1864. igallery, we find the walls covered with the mewbered that Pompeii was not so suddenly jruins of Urieonium have an fnterest far | brightly painted hieroglyphics inscribed upon , destroyed as Herculaneum—tiat the rolling | surpassing the possession of even these | Pupy ri born of the trembling reed. As we, waves of liquid lava did not reach the for- | curiosities ; it was eviden'ly the acene of one leuter the mumuiy room, peopled with the! wer city and destroy it at once; but that | ot those ierrible couflicté the half emasculated jsilent dead, one of the tirst coffins that | timely warbing was given by the fal! of the! Briton and the Pict who destroyed him. It |strikes Our attention is that of King Men- |fioe dust and pumice stoves, aod it is sup-| is pretty evideut that the fair and beautifu! ‘ka-re, the builder of the third pyramid! posed that the iohabitants had tiwe to es- Uriconium was destroyed by fire, and that its | And near it are the remaunts of a body sup- cape ; at all events very few human remains inhabitan's were put tothe sword. In one of ‘posed te be a portiva of that of the monarch have been found withia its walla. the hypocausts the skeleton of a man, hid- |himself. ‘Together with the dust of kings) A discovery withiu these last few months. ing 1m the corner, was discovered, and a li tle ithere has been preserved to ue, in these bas been wade which will give a ten-fold heap of money, together with tue fragments | Egyptian tombs, an infaity of articles, which ‘jaterest to that ghostly oity, which cannot: of a money-box, lay imuaediately beneath ‘ehow us bow this ancient people lived and | now be said to be deserted, at least by its’ his band. He had evidently crept into the moved and had their being. Herodotueg silent dead. The chief of the works of ex-; place for security, in the moment of peril, gives us many microscope pictures of the cavation, M. Fiorelli, bas lately beeo push- and the conflagration must have prevented not yet bring forth to elucidate the history of the past? Madame de Stael used to say that if you seratched the Raxsian, the Tartar appeared ;—it may be sand ith still greater trath:—You have but to seratch the earth, aud there you will find che records of man, MISCELLANEOUS. FLOWERS. The following is a portion of an addrese delivered before the New York Horticultural’ Society :—Fluwers bave always been culti- vated by civilized nativns in all parts of tie world. ‘The ancients spread them upon their feast tables, scattered flowers in the way of | heroes, or warriors, returning from conquest, and used them for adorning their gods. I'ney ,are our second children, and in beholding them we never tire, though the eye is svon We sur- round our homes with them, and rejoice ia the carly blooms ofspring. Besides all these they have a commercial value, and the apo- theeary’s shop is oderous with their per- fumes alone. <A single grower in Southern France sells anncally 60,000 pounds rose flowers, 30,000 pounds each jusamine and tu- berose, 40,000 pounds viviet blossoms, be- sides thousands of pounds of mint, thyme, rusemary, &c., and he is bat one out of hund- reds engaged in this branch of borticultare I'he atmosphere of some of these towns is 80 filled with fragrance that a person is made aware of his approach to them by the odours which greet him miles away. America hae every variety of soil and climate, equal to France or Italy, and she may yet rival the old world in her perfumery. Already hun- dreds of acres of peppermint and lavender are planted in this country, and the prodact ex- ported to Europe. Though the old worlds hears the balm in the perfumery line, and London and Paris, with their Covent Gar- dens and Marcheaux Fleurs, lead our own city in winduw gardening and the cultivation of flowers in pots generally, yet New York carries on a larger trade in cut flowers than either of the cities mentioned, or any other in the world. Yo show what is dune in that line, he instanced bis own sales of some of the leading flowers sinco last September, which were 50,000 Carnation Bic ssoms, 30,- 000 Bouvardias, 70,000 Chinese primroses, 30.000 Taberoses, besides over 10,000 Roses, Camelias, Heliotropes, &o., and he wae but one of # large number engaged in this business. A Pawnerokenr’s Suop.—The interior of a pawobroker’s ehop ia @ curiosity. Here every article on which a few pence can be borrowed may be found, fora peniless famiiy, whether reckless or not, would pawn almost anything that is unestable rather than go without food. And it has been observed as a fact, that when poor persons purchase cheap articles at these places they very often cast an inquiring glance at the pledgeabie quality of the thing purchased, as if making «# menta! calculation tow much they éouid borrow on it if necessity arose. Within these establishments, and generally entered by a dis. tinct d vor from that which opens inte the shop proper, is aa errapgeoent known to very tew except those whe are in the unpleasant ‘predicament of requiring a loan. A number ‘of boxes or recesses Open froma dark , to the front of a counter at the back of the shop. These recesses are & concession to pride, homage to honest poverty, a recogni- tion of the fact that persons do not wish their pawnings to be known in the world. The ‘customers quietly take their places, each im &@ recess or bog and wait their turn to be ‘served. They bring with them the articles that cre to be left in pledge tor the mone obtwived ov loan. What a medley ! it ie = moat everything portable (if got perishable) 1