OB ris stats ik Nei ———— a as: ah a, a cn, een, (EA sin ce i: ne mart itl Bag 20,\Wean'sd’y| 50) 57,8 54M 7 21 Tharsday | 51} 5310 17,0 13 + _22iFriday {| 53; 5311 29,0 52 0 23,Saturday | 54) 51,A 36,1 2911 57 2%4\Sunday | 54) 49 24/2 15 55 25 Monday . 66] 48| 2 23'3 6) 52 %iTuesday' | 57| 468 44 7 49 27\Wedn'sd’y| £9) 44.3 34.5 14 45 2iThursday |6 0| 42,3 59 6 34 42 Friday | 1) 40,4 19,7 38 39 2\5 38} 4 84,8 2811 36 ae VOL. XAVII nth Ae Che Examiner — «Printed and Published every Monday Forenoon d ' BY William i, Cotton, s OFFICE: Corner Queen and King Streets. rERMS—Per Annum, Postage prepaid by iblisher, $1.40 in advance; 31.62 if paid within the year; $2.00 if not paid within gle Ve ar. CLUB EXAMINER Will be following RAT Es: forwarded to THE , races per year— Clabs al the ayment strictly in advance :— : h copies, one address, ----- 8 6.00 10.00 i ee * 3 14.00 oy) “s “< we oe 18.00 Clubs may bé made up atany time, but net for a shorter period than a year. RATES of ADVERTISING MULE following are the Rates and Terms of Advertising as agreed to by the pub- lisbers of newspapers in I’, E. Island :—50 cents per inch for first insertion, and 20 cents for cach continuation. Ten per cent. discount from this rate will be made on all Advertisements continued for 3 months; 90 per cent. if coutinued for 6 months; 30 per cent if continued for 9 months; and 40 per cent if continued for 12 month. ) +s se “ a iat ‘ er | Pt > ~ é axl 86 GLO oI 10 eT ’ - ‘ fo 9Z.Re O | 02/9091 Z| 18°83) oe'e 182 WAL em Pest lo? ro itt m grim ¢g) m9 6 All advertisements exceeding 12 inches will be subject to a discount of 10 per cent. additional, if continued for one year. Auctioneers will be allowed 10 per cent. discount when they advertise to the amount of $30 per year; 15 per cent when to the amount of $45; and 20 per cent when to the amount of $60 per annum, and not other- wise. The sum of 12 cents per line will be charged for each insertion of all ** Special Notices ;” and 25 cents for notices in edi- toria! or news columns. The sum of 50 cents will be charged for the insertion of all Marriage and Birth no- tices. ~ ALMANAC FOR SEPT, 1876, MOON'S CHANGES. Full Moon, 3d day, 5h. 1m., p. m., E., below horison., m Last Quarter, 11th day, 12h. 8m. a. m., E. New Moon, 17 day, 5h. 42m., p. m., W. First Quarter, 25th day, 7h. 5lm., a.m., N. below horizon. os wut om MOON | HIGH |DAY’S M | lrise | sets| _ poner Bom th ae \M |. M. liFridsy (5 256 34,5 55,9 4/13 9 2\Saturday | 27| 82,6 9/9 46) 5 3 Sunday | 28 30' 6 29:10 20) 2 4\Monday | 29! 28 6 44/10 57\12 59 5/Tuesday | 30) 26) 6 59/11 24) 56 6;Wedn’sd’y; 32; 24 7 16/11 58 52 7) Thursday ssi 2317 waa: 3 49 oer” (| Ce Ts hmm CG 46 9/Saturday | 37, 19 8 34) 1 43 42 Jolsunday | 37\ 17,9 24) 2 33) 40 11}Monday 38} 1510 17|3 48) 37 l2\Tuesday | 39) 13,11 35,5 15) 34 13|Wedn’s’dy 41} 11M | 7 1) 30 14;)Thursday| 42; 9,1 108 21) 27 15)Friday | 43, 7/2 85,9 18, 2 16\Saturday | 44) 5,4 8 9 59, 21 17, Sunday 46) 3/5. 17/10 36) 13 18 Monday 47; 1/6 3311 11) 14 19’ Tuesday 485 59'7 4911 39 1] —— rday | | i i | all ieee —_—— PRICES CURRENT. __ Ch’town, Sept. 5, 1876. BREADSTUFFS. Buckwheat Flour, per lb 0.03 to 0.34 Flour, per bbl 5.50 to 7.00 Fiour, per 100 Ibs 3.00 to 3.25 Vatmeal, per 100 Ibs 3.50 to 4.00 ; FISH. Codtish per qtl 3.50 to 5.00 Herring per bbi 4.87 to 6.49 kerel per doz. 0.48 to 0.72 BOARDS. Hemlock, 100 feet. 0.81 to 0.94 ne do 1.62 to 2.40 8pruce do 0.97 to 1.30 Shingles, per M. 1.50 to 1.75 POULTRY. Chickens, per pair $0.40 to 0.60 Ducks, (each) Fowls, (ea: h) Partridges, (each) Turkeys, (each) 0.25 to 0.30 0.25 to 0.35 0.00 to 0.00 0 80 to 1.75 Geese (each ) 6.00 to 0.00 MEAT. Beef, (small pieces) per Ib $0.08 to 0.16 Beef, per lb (by the quarter) 0.06 to 0.10 Ham, per Ib amb, per quarter ib, per ib Utton, per ib Pork, (small pieces) per ib Pork, per lb (by the carcass) 0.00 to 0.00 eal, per Ib 0.03 to 0.08 MISCELLANEOUS. Apples per bushel arley per bushel tter (fresh) per Ib Batter per |b by the tub 0.10 to 0.12 0.00 to 0.00 0.06 to 0.10 0.06 to 0.11 0.08 to 0.12 0.00 to 0.00 0.60 to 0.75 0.20 to 0.24 0.16 to 9.18 SEO | BUSINESS CARDS. COOMBS & WORTH, JOB PRINTERS & BOOKBINDERS WATER STREET, Charlottetown, - - - Jan.17°76 ly | | | oH | | E. GC. NELSON SEWING MACHINES. Oct. 25, 1875.—ly " MacKENZIE & STUMBLES, Auctioneers, Commission Merchants GENERAL AGENTS,. Charlottetown, - - P. E. Island. October 18, 1875.—ly ‘WILLIAM DODD, Commission Merchant and AUCTIONEER QUEEN SQUARE, CHARLOTTETOWN. P. E. ISLAND. CARVELL BROS., AUCTIONEERS, Commission Merchants, GENERAL AGENTS. Lower Queen St. Charlottetown, P, &. I. HASZARD BROS., Commission Merchants & Auctioneers, FORWARDING, MANUFACURERS, eile gents, G1 WATER STREET, Opposite Merchants Bank, Charlottetown, - - - - BP. EL J. E. Haszarp, | Horace Haszarp. —_—:0:-—— REFERENCES: Messrs. Greenshields, Son & Co., Montreal, Messrs. W. & R. Brodie, Quebec, Messrs. J. S. Farlow & Co., Boston, Henry Lawson, Esq., Halifax, N. 8S. Hon. Daniel Davies, Charlottetown, P. E. I. May 3, 1875. REVERE HOUSE, ADJOINING THE POST ‘OFFICE, ALSepeee, -— = - - EL The subscriber has fitted up the above House in good style, and wishes to inform his friends, and the public gene- rally ®t he is prepared to accommodate Transient and Permanent Boarders. Charges® moderate. Good Stabling on the premises. RICHARD GLADNEY, Proprietor. Alberton, Sept. 13, 1875. INTERNATIONAL! CENTRAL STREET, Summerside, P.E. Isiand, JOHN McKAY, PROPRIETOR. pur HOUSE, secofid to none on the Is- land for beauty of situation, comfort and convenience afforded, commends itself to the patronage of all who may visit the Island for business or pleasure. Choice Sample Rooms to let. Conveyances from Cars and Boats. Ladies and Gentlemen will find it to their advautage to patronize this Hotel: Feb. 21, 1876.—tf TS ——— INSURANCE. ST. LAWRENCE Marine Insurance Co. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: A. KENNEDY, ESQ., President. JOHN F. ROBERTSON, ARTEMAS LORD, THOMAS MoRRIs, Georce D. Lonaworrna. P. W. HynpMAN, W. D. Stewart. Risks taken daily at their office, Exchange Building. FRED. W. HYNDMAN, Ch’town, April 24,1876.—ly Secretary MA RIIN ES INSURANCE COMPANY PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: Rosert LonGworthH, Esq., President, Hon. Jas. Duncan, Hon. L. C. OWEN, Hon. A. A. McDonaLp, lion. J. C- Pore, Thomas HANDRAHAN, Esq., Grorce R. Beer, Esq. Risks taken daily at their office, corner Great George and Lower Water Streets. “F. W. HALES, Secrretay. Ch’town, March 22, 1875—ly — THE LIVERPOOL & LONDON AND CLOBE INSURANCE COMPANY FrrE AND LIFE. Invested Funds, Ist Jan’y., 1874, $21,628,356 Deposited with Receiver Gener- al of Canada, on tenieiini 162,800 Other Investments in Dominion of Canada, 367,091 FAIR RATES. Prompt & Liberal Settlements. Insurance against Fire effected upon Pri- vate Residences, Household Furniture and Farm Properties, for One, Three or more years, At Reduced Rates, Oftice—Great George Street, Charlotte- town, P. E. I. R. R. FITZGERALD, Agent Calfekins, per lb 0.06 to 0.10 Ch ese (new milk) per lb 0.14 to 0.16 eese, per Ib 0.05 to 0.08 Over seed, per lb 0.00 to 0.00 SEs, per doz. 0.12 to 0.16 ween Peas, 0.08 to 0.12 Wa per ton 7.00 to 9 50 ides, per th. 0.04 to 0.44 How? per lb. 0.25 to 0.32 omebun, (men’s wear)per yd. 0.65 t 1.00 nea (women’s do)per yd 0.35 to 0-48 Spun Flannel, per yard 0.31 to 0.46 ote’ per = 0.12 to 0.16 Po. . bee bushe. 0.50 to 0.66 pe per bushel 0.25 to 0.30 _ arley, per Ib 0.03 to 0.04 gekine 0.30 to 0.40 eer ton 2.50 to 3.00 Y Seed, per bush, 0.00 to 0,00 Torni per Ib 0.07 to 0.10 W PS, per bush 0.06 to 0.00 ol, per Ib 9.17 to 0.25 Ch'town, July 27, 1874.—6m Avos Pars a P. E. Island, IMPORTER & REPAIRER AppREss :—P. O. Box 303, Charlottetown. 77 North Side Queen Square, PORTRY. —_— ee Se eee Written for the Examiner. NIGHTFALL. Pensive in the western sky, Low the languid clouds repose, Copse and field in shadow lie; Where the far horizon shows Dark against the dying light, Loom the woods like wards of night. Jarring sounds of life are still, Labor’s hands are folded down; Faintly wafted o'er the hill, Murmurs from the distant town Up the haunted valley creep, Soft as voices heard in sleep. If the pale-eyed ghosts can hear O’er the icy waves of death, Listening troops are hovering near; Every sigh that wandereth Up from earth, for evermore Floats along their lonely shore. Nature now her awful form Robeth in mysterious shade, Stronger than the strength of storm, In her silent might arrayed, Casting through the failing eye Shadows of futurity. Ch’'town, Sept., 1876. LITERATURE. eee ee WENDERHOLME. CHAPTER IX.—-Continued. The doctor found Lady Helena in a draw- ing room; a little woman, who semetimes looked very pretty, and sometimes exceeds ingly plain, according to the condition of her health and temper, the state of the weather, and a hundred things besides. Hence there were the most various and con-~ tradictory opinions about her; the only ap~ proach to unanimity being amongst certain elderly ladies who had formed the project of being mother-in-law to John Stanburne, and failed in that design. The doctor was not much accustomed to ladyships—they did not come often in his way ; indeed, it the truth must be told, Lady Helena was the only specimen of the kind he had ever en- joyed the opportunity of studying, and he had been rather surprized, on one or two preceding visits to Wenderholme, to find that she behaved to nicely. But there are ladyships and ladyships, and the doctor had been fortunate in the example which chance had thrown in his way. For instance if he had known Lady Eleanor Griffin, who lived about ten miles from Wenderhoime, who came there occasionally to spend the day, the doctor would have formed quite a different opinion of ladyship in general, so much do our impressions of whole classes depend npon the individual members of them who are personally known to us, Lady Helena asked the doctor a good many questions about Shayton, which it is quite unnecessary to report here, because the answer to them would convey no infor- mation to the reader which he does not al- ready possess, Her ladyship enquired very minutely about the clergyman there, and whether the doctor liked him. Now the verb ‘to like,’ when applied to aclergyman is used in aspecial sense, Everybody knows that to like a clergyman and to like goose- berry pie are very different things; for no- body in England eats clergyman, though the natives of New Zealand are said to appreci- ate cold roast missionary. But there is yet another distinction—there is a distinction between liking a clergyman and liking a layman. If you say you like a clergyman, it is understood that it gives you a peculiar pleasure to hear him preach, and that you experience feelings of gratification when he reads prayers. And in this sense could Dr. Bardly say that he liked the reverend in- cumbent of his parish? Certainly not; so he seemed +> hesitate a litthe—and if he said yes he said it as if he meant no, ora sort of vague neutral answer, neither nega- tive nor affirmative: ‘IT mean,’ said Lady Helena, ‘do you like him as a preacher ?’ ‘Upon my word, it’s so long since I heard him preach that I cannot give an opinion.’ ‘Oh! I thought you attended his church. There are no other churches in Shayton, | suppose.’ ‘No, there’s only one,’ said the impru- dent and impolite doct>r. Lady Helena began to think he was some sort of a dissenter. She had heard of diss senters—she knew that such people existed —butshe had never been brought into contact with one, and it made her feel rather queer. She felt strongly tempted to ask what place of worship this man did attend, since by his own confession he never went to his parish church; but curiosity, and the natural female tendency to be an inquisitor, were kept in check by politeness, and also, perhaps, a little re-~ straint by the perfectly fearless aspect of the doctor’s face. If he had seemed in the least alarmed or apologetic, her ladyship would probably have assumed the functions of the inquisitors at once; but he looked so cool, and so very capable of a prolonged and vigorous resistance, that Lady Helena retired. When she began to talk about Mrs. Prigley the doctor knew that she was already in full retreat, A little relieved, perhaps (for it is always disagreeable to quarrel with one’s hostess, even though one has no occasion to be afraid of her), the doctor gladly told lady Helena all about Mrs, Prigley, and even narrated the anecdote about the hole in the carpet, and its consequences to Mrs. Ogden, which put Lady Helena into good humour, for nothing is more amusing to rich people than the ludicrous consequences of a certain kind of poverty. The sense of @ pleasant contrast, all in their own favour, is delightful to them; and when the doctor had told this anecdote, Lady Helena be. game agreeably aware that she had carpets, : and that her carpets had no holes in them two facts of which use and custom .had made her wholly unconscious. Her eye wandered with pleasure over the broad soft surface and dark pomegranate colour, with its large white and red flowers and its non, description ornaments of imitated gold, and the ground seemed richer, and the flowers seemed whiter and redder, because poor Mrs, Prigley’s carpets were in a conditien 80 lamentably different. ‘Mrs, Prigley’s a relation of yours, Lady Helena—rather a near relation— perhaps you are not aware of it ?’ Lady Helena looked, and was very much surprised. ‘A relation of mine, Dr. Bardly ! You must be mistaken. I believe I know the names of all my relations !’ ‘T mean a relation of your husband—of Colonel Stanburne. Mrs. Prigley was a Miss Stanburne of Bayfield, and her father was brother to Colonel Stanburne’s father, and was born in this house.’ ‘ That’s quite a near relationship,indeed,’ said Lady Helels; ‘I wonder I never heard ’ ——_s POSTAGE PREPAID. THE EXAMINER. of it, John never spoke to me about Mrs. Prigley.’ ‘There was a quarrel between Colonel Stanburne’s father and his uncle, and there has been no intercourse between the famis lies since, I daresay the Colonel does not even know how many cousins he had on that side, or what marriages they made.’ On this the Colonel! came in. ‘ John, dear, Dr. Bardly has just told me that we have some cousins at Sbayton that [ know nothingabout. It’s the clergyman and his wife, and their name is Prig— Prigley——’ ‘ Prigley,’ suggested the doctor. ‘Yes, Prigley, Isn't it curious, John? Did you know about them ? ‘ Not very accurately. I knewone of my cousins had married a clergyman some- where in that neighbourhood, but was not aware that he was the incumbent of Shay- ton. [ don’t know my cousins at all. There was a lawsuit between their father and mine, and the two branches have never eat- en salt together since. I haven’t the least illxwill to any of them, but there’s an awk< wardness in making a first step—one never can tell how it may be received. . What do you say, Doctor? How would Mrs, Prig— Prigley and her husband receive me if I were to go and call upon them ?” ‘ They’d give you cake and wine.’ ‘ Would, they really, now? Then I'll go and call upon them. I like cake and wine —always liked cake and wine.’ The conversation about the Prigleys did notend here. The doctor was well aware that it would be agreeable to Mrs, Prigley to visit at Wenderholme, and be received there as a relation; and he also knew that the goodsnature of the Colonel and Lady Helena might be relied upon tomake such intercourse perfectly safe and pleasant, So he made the most of the opportunity, and that so successfully that by the time dinner was announced both John Stanburne and day to Shayton from Sootythorn, and lunch with the doctor, and call at the parsonage before leaving. Colonel Stanburne’s conversation was not always very profound, but his dinners were never dull, for he would talk and make other people talk too, He solemnly warn, ed the Doctor not to allow himself to be entrapped into giving gratuitous medical advice to Lady Helena ‘Shethinks she’s got fifteen diseases, she does, upon my cause you are the regimental doctor she has a claim on you for gratuitous counsel and: assistance. Now I consider that | have such a claim—if a private has it, sure- ly a colonel has it too—and when we come up for our first training I shall expect you to look at my tongue, and feel my pulse, and physic me as a militiaman, at her Mas, jesty’s expense. But itis by no means so clear to me that my wife has any right to gratuitous doctoring, and mind she doesn’t extort it from you. She’s a regular screw, my wife is; and she loses no opportunity of obtaining benefits for nothing.’ Then he rattled on with a hundred anecdotes about ladies and doctors, in which there was just enough truth to give a pretext for his audacious exaggerations. When they returned to the drawing room the Colonel made Lady Helena sing ; and she sang well. ‘he doctor, like very many inhabitants of Sbayton, kad a very good ear, and greatly enjoyed music. Lady Helena had seldom found so attentive a listner: he sought old favourites of his in her collection of songs, and begged her to sing them one after another. It seemed as if he never would be tired of listening. Her ladyship felt pleased and flattered, and The doctor, though in his innocence he thought only of the pure pleasure her music gave him, could have chosen no better means of ingratiating himself ‘n her favour ; and if there had not unhappily, been that dark and dubious question about church attendance, which made her ladyship look upon himas a sort of dissenter, or worse, the doctor would that night have entered into relations of quite frank and cordial ladies are very kind and forgiving on many points. A man may be notoriously im< moral, or a gambler, or a drinker, yet if he be well off they will kindly ignore and pass over these little defects; but the unpardons able sin is failure in church attendance,and they will not pass over that. Lady Helena ed this spmptom of heresy, and would have been delighted to find a moral screw of some kind by which the culpable doctor might be driven churchward. Ifthe law had permitted it, I have no doubt that she would have applied material screws, and put the doctor’s thumbs into thumbscrews, or roasted him gently before s‘ow fire, or at least sent him to church between two policemen with staves; but as these means were beyond her power, she must wait un~ til the moral screws could be found, A good practical means which she had resorts ed to in several instances with poor people had been to deprive them of their means of subsistence ; and all men and women whom her ladyship’s little arm could reach knew that they must go to church or leave their situations; so they attended with a regu~ larity which, thoagh exemplary in the eyes of men, could scarcely, one would think (considering the motive), be acceptable to Heaven. But Lady Helena acted in this less from a desire to please God than from the instinct of denomination, which, in her character of spiritual ruler, naturally exer« cised itself on this point. It seldom hap~ pens that the master of a house is the spiri- tual ruler, naturally exercised itself on this point. It seldom happens that the master of a house is the spiritual ruler of it; he is the temporal power, not the spiritual. Col. Stanburne felt and knew that he had no spiritual power. This matter of the Doctor’s laxness as a churchgoer had been rankling in Lady He- lena’s mind all the time she had been sing- ing, and when she closed the piano she was ready for an attack. If the doctor had been shivering blanketless in a bivouac,and she had had the power of giving him a blanket or withholding it, she would have offered it on condition that he promised to go to church, and she would have withheld it if he had refused compliance. But the doctor had blankets of his own, and so could not be touched through a depravation of a blanket, But she mightdeprive the old woman he had recommended, and at the same time give the doctor a lesson indi~ rectly. ‘I forgot to ask you, Dr. Bardly, whether the old woman you recommended for a CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18; 1876. blanket was a Church-woman, and regular in her attendance,’ ‘Two questions very easily answered,’ replied the audacious and unhesitating doc« tor; ‘she is a Wesleyan Methodist, and is- regular in her attendance,’ ‘Then l’'m—very sorry—Dr. Bardly,but I cannot give her a blanket, as I had promis-~ ed. I can only give them to our—own people you know; and I make it essential that they should be good Church people— I mean very regular Church people.’ ‘Very well; I'll give her a blanket my- self.’ ‘The opportunity was not to be neglected, and her ladyship fired her gun. She had the less hesitation in doing so that it seem. ed monstrously presumptious for a medical man to give blankets at all, What right had he to usurp the especial prerogative of great ladies at all? And then to give a blanket to this very woman whom, for good reasons, her ladyship had condemned to blanketlessness ! ‘ 1 quite understand,’ she said with much severity of tone, ‘that Doctor Bardly, who never attends worship himself, should have a fellow-feeling with those who are equally negligent.’ It is a hard task to fight a woman in the presence of her husband, who is at the same time one’s friend. The doctor thought, ‘Would the woman have me to offer premiums for hypocricy as she does ?’ but he did not say so, because there was poor John Stanburne at the other end of the hearthrug in a state of much uneasi- ness, So the doctor said nothing at all and the silence became perfectly distress~ ing. John Stanburne, whose good nature and hospitality were both suffering grieyous~ ly, at last bethought him of an outlet. ‘Why, hang it, Helena,he said, ‘of course he gives her blankets; he'll give her a bed too, or half a one—he’sin love with her. Everybody in Sootyhorn says he is going to marry her, You oughtn’t to look so sour at him, Helena—you oughtn’t todo so the appwoaching nuptials, you ought.’ * Why, she’s an old woman and a pauper, and her name is Nanny Pickering.’ ‘She’s not 4 girl, that’s true; but they say she’s very rich, and her name be Mrs, Bardley in & month or six weeks,’ The doctor vainiy endeayored to defend himself, John Stanburne overwhelmed him with evidence till the victim half te- lieved he was going to marry Nanny Pick- ering. Lady Helena laughed and laid aside the black mask and the black inquisi. torial robes, and,thanks to John Stankurne’s nonsense, went to bed in a more liberal in part to the fact that she had relieved her conscience by her bitter little speech, CHAPTER X. ‘I say doctor,’ said John Stanburne when her ladyship was fairly out of hearing and half way in her ascent up the great staircase—‘ | say dector, | hope you don’t mind what Helena says about you not being—you know some women are so—in- deed i believe all women are so. They seem laudably anxious to keep us all in the right path, but perhaps they are a little bit too anxious.’ ‘the doctor, who had fully apprecia the kind motive which had cngeroted the Coionei’s badinage about Nanny Pickering said he believed Lady Helena meant to do good but—then he hesitated. ‘But you don’t see the sense of bribing poor people into sham piety with blankets,’ ‘Well, no I don’t.’ ‘Neither do I, doctor, There’s 2 Roman Catholic family three miles off, and the lady there gives premiums on going to mass and still higher premiums on confession. Sne has won a great many converts: and there’s a strong antagonism between her and Helena—a most expensiye warfare it is too, Ll assure you, this warfare of souls. However, its an ill wind that blows nobody good, and the poor profit by it, which is a consolation, only it makes them sneaks and hypocrites. Doctor, come into my study, will you, and let’s have a weed ?’ was a cozy little room, with oak wainscoat sang with wonderful energy and feeling. | that his grandfather had painted white. It contained a small bookcase, and the book- case contained @ good many novels, some ing. The novels were very well selected, and so was the poetry, and John Stan- burne read all these books, many of them over and over again. out of that bookcase; and though he had no claim to erudition,a man’s head might be worse furnished than with such furniture as that. There was a splendid library at backs of books as the other rooms were lined with paper or wainscoat; and when Stanburne wanted to know something he went there, and disturbed his ponderous histories and encyclopoedias; but he used the little bookcase more than the big library. He could not read either Latin was very much above the usual average of English French—that is, he spoke fluently, and would no donbt have spoken correctly peculiar Gallic sounds. He had been taught Frenchin his childhood by a Ger. man governess—for his mother was anxious that he should learn the best pronouncia- tion, and therefore took care to engage a foreigner—so that when Stanburne went to Paris, the people were exceedingly puzzled for he was visibly and unmistakably an Englishman, yet he spoke French with an accent so wonderfully German, that the evidence of the ears contradicted the testi-~ mony of the eyes. But Mrs. Stanburne was perfectly satisfied ; he spoke French as foreigners in general seemed to speak it, and she listened to him w th conscious pride. It was decided that he was to be learnt French first and German afterwards, but when the time for beginning the latter had come, the time for the inevitable Latin had also come, and the German governess was dismissed ; so that the only advantage that John Stanburne had derived from her nationality was a fine Teutonic accent with which bis French was ever afterwards ad- orned, The society of ladies is always charming, but it must be admitted that there is an hour especially dear to the male sex, and which does not owe its delightfuiness to their presence. It is the hour of retires ment into the smoking room. When the lady of the house has a tendency to make her authority felt (and this will sometimes happen) the male members of her family and the guests feel a schoolboyish relief in escaping from it; but even when she is very genial and pleasant, and when every- body enjoys the light of her countenance, it must also be confessed that the timely withdrawal of that light, like the hour of sunset, has a certain sweetness of its own. There are subjects to be talked about that cannot politely be talked over in her pre- sence. ‘The scholar wants to talk over the subject of his study ; men of business want to discuss the matters which affect their interests; and men who are addicted to field sports, or yachting, or other amuse~ ments not quite so innocent as those, feel the need of that intercommunication which enhances the pleasures of memory or of hope. it is not simply the cigar which is a necessity. It is, the good, a great luxury—perhaps the greatest of luxuries— but itis not a necessity. The necessity which the smoking roora provides for is that of masculine conversation, without which men cease to be truly men, and which, if they cannot have in their own homes, they must seek in the club, or the alehouse, or the cafe, THE P, FE. ISLAND ELECTIONS. (From the Watchman.) It is now some weeks since the Press of P. E. Island gave us the details of an elec- toral struggle in that Province, resulting in a ‘grand triumph’ for the non-sectarian school party. ‘The leaders on the oppos-~ ing sides were Hon. J.C. Pope and Lon. L. H. Davies. Mr. Pope is a veteran poli- tician, but not an intriguer. There is pro« bably not in Canada a public man more open, candid and straightforward in his course, He was the first to advocate rail- ways for the Island, on their merits, and for his large minded views and policy he had to encounter the violent opposition of such men as Hon. David Laird, Mr. L. H. Davies and the leaders of what by a sad misnomer was called the ‘ Liberal Party.’ He also advocated Confederation, in which cause he also encountered the fanatical opposition of Mr. Laird, Mr. Davies and their party. But he lived to see railways connecting all the principal points of the fertile Island and to witness his countrymen prospering under Confederation. As a merchant, a ship-builder, a ship-owner, a farmer, a fish- erman, a steady friend of progress and lib» eral measures,he stands head and shoulders above any other man in Prince Edward Is-~ land,—first in commerce, first in friendship and first in the esteem of his countrymen. Mr. Pope is a strong, convincing, but not an eloquent speaker. Mr, Davies, his op- ponent, is a younger man, of good abilities, with principles modelled on those of Mr. Laird, whose faithful follower he is content tobe. Heisa good speaker and debater, courteous and prudent and wholly unprin- cipled. On the school question Mr. Pope never changed or wavered, but Mr. Davies was found two or three years ago working hand in hand with the Roman Catholic Bishop of the Island and the Bishop’s can- didates, when Mr, Laird, Mr. Davies (father of Hon. Davies) and other ‘Grits’ owed his wife had promised to drive over some | indeed; you ought to congwatulate him on | their elections mainly to Catholic votes, while in this year 1876, these same Davies- Laird Grits were working with might and main to defeat every Roman Catholic can- didate that oftered for an Island constitu- ency ! So much for the leaders. As for the question at issue, it is easily stated. During the last session of the Island Leg- islature, a committee on educational af- fairs was vppointed, and this committee brought out some very startling facts. It word; and she’s a sort of notion that bey| frame of mind. Perhaps this may be due} was found that the Island schools were literaily taking care of themselves. Inspec~ tors and Visitors aud the Board of Educa- tion were giving them precious little atten-~ tion. One half the schools were closed for want of teachers, Of those open many were ina wretched condition. Teachers were underpaid and inefficient. Boys, in« stead of men, had the education of the country in charge. Each teacher did what he deemed right in his own eyes. A large number of the schools had been turned inio sectarian institutions. Ina consider- able number the Presbyterian Catechism was taught as part of the school exercises in others the Roman Catholic Catechism was a@ class book. The best schools there were those which were not under Govern~- ment control, private and denominational schools, These revelations led toa gene~ ral demand for an improved system of public schools, and the question was, what shall the system be? Several years before, Mr. Pope had declared himself in favor of ‘ payment for results,’ which meant that in dealing with existing denominational schools, or those which might grow up, the denominational authorities should be paid ing to attendance, He entered on the recent school campaign on the same text, modifying it, however, so as to make it ap- to appeal to the religious sentiments of the people, taking as their motto, ‘No aid in , Such literary educa- | any shape to denominational schools.” A} y cation as he possessed had mainly been got | striking feature of the campaign, as already suggested, was the position taken by Mr. Laird and his friends, Mr. Laird, as a col- league of Mr. Mackenzie, had at Ottawa friendship with Lady Helena. English} Wenderholme—a big room lined with the proposed, introduced and forced through Parliament in extreme haste,a Bill which provided separate schools for the Catholics of the Northwest Territories, extending to all that vast territory, yet to be peopled by many millions of Canadians, denominational owns and controls in Charlottetown defend< ed the action of Mr, Laird and the Mac. Bill on its merits, and, no doubt, was the means of encouraging the Roman Catholics of the Island to expect Mr: Laird’s and the Patriot s support when a similar concession would be asked in that quarter. But, to the surprise of all who take an interest in Island politics, ina very few weeks after the Patriot had been denouncing those who could not appreciate the merits of the edu~ cational provisions of the North-west Ter- ritories Act, the same journal, with the same editor and proprietor, the same con- trolling hand, was found leading up an or- ganized and violent attack on the very principle which it had just defended with such vehemence! The two parties went to the polls; a union of sentiment on Domini- on questions did not prevent Conservatives or Liberals from differing among themselves on the school question; the chances seemed about equally balanced for a time, but of course when religious sentiment came fully into play the majority was bound to carry the day. ‘he majority of Pro- testants went one way, the great majority of Catholics the other way, and Protestants having the preponderance, took the lead. Sixteen or seventeén non-sectarians to thirteen sectarians, or ‘pay for results’ men, were elected. It is not improbable, however, that a close analysis cf the vote will show that as many electors voted on the one side as on the other, the popula- tion being nearly one-half Catholics and being supported by a very considerable Protestant minority. Indeed, it is pos-« sible that more voted for Mr, Pope's scheme, including the constituencies where a contest was found to be useless, than voted against it. Of course, whether for good or evil—let us hope for the good—the result of the election is due entirely to the position of Mr. Laird and his paper, which found everything wrong in aiding denom- inational schools in Charlottetown, Sum- merside and Georgetown, but were willing te see it established and fastened forever on the people of the North-west! The| would have been all sufficient, and far world in geneial, and not the Catholics of | better taste. P. E. Island merely, whatever people may y NO. 38. na aOR 7S | think of the matter in controvery, will be | slow to appreciate the consistency or the ? justice of such extraordinary attitude. / Meantime, a new Government, composed | of Mr. L. HH. Davies and his friends, will as- | sume the reins in Prince Edward Island. | Their first duty will be to frame a School Act in the spirit of their election platform. They have held out Aigh hopes of an im- proved educational system, and if they carry out their pledges and perfect a mea- sure which at a moderate expense will pro vide schools where no schools were before, give the Island a better class of teachers and the teachers higher pay, provide suit~ able text books, buildings and grounds, a training school for teachers, and high schools or academies for advanced pupils, they will have undertaken and succeeded in a work of nolight magnitude,one indeed, that will task their energies to the utmost, However they may have reached power, however inconsistent and tricky some of the leaders may have been, it is to be hops ed that the new Government will be dealt with in no captious spirit. system is a necessity; there are many .points on which all classes in the island can agree ; and while the Government are engaged in their arduous duties they will deserve and probably receive on this ques tion the support of all moderate and fur minded men, They must calculate, hows ever, on a large increace of local taxation. If the people want good schools they must pay for them. Buildings, teachers, inspece tors, books and other aids to education must all cost more than formerly, and the new law, which, we trust, will work well in the end, will be very unpopular for a time, OUR WASHINGTON LETTER, Wasnineton, D.C., Sept. 11, 1876. The dull monotony which overhangs the city like a pall, is in some slight degree lifted by the interest felt in the work of making the necessary discharges in the vari- ous departments. The fact that you may meet a friend to-day who holds a desirable position and is enjoying a fine salary,and tox morrow he may be out and drifting in search of employment, imparts an interest to the changes now being made outside of those immediately affected. Seven hun- dred and fifty-six was the number fixed up- on for dismissal, and of there some sixty have resigned. Quite a number were notis fied yesterday and the day before, that their connection with the departments would be finally severed on the lUth of October, uns til which time they had leave of absence, and on that dat: they will report and res ceive one month's pay in advance, and thus end their official career: The work of dis» missal will be continued from day to day till it is completed. The Sioux commis- sion has arrived at Cheyenne. A courier who left Crook and Terry on the 20th ult., at the mouth of Powder River, has arrived at Fort Fetterman, and states that the troops had struck a trail estimated at 1,000 ponies. ‘he indications were that the sae vages were almost destitute of food, and were reduced to the necessity of feeding on raw hides. Gen’l Crook expected tostrike Sitting Bull ina fewdays. A despatch re« ceived at Omaha from Sydney, Neb., says the driver of the express which brings the mails to that place from North Deadwood, reports that the Indians killed fifteen men near that parton Sunday last. The Philas delphia papers give a ful! account of a most brutal prize fight, which took placeon the morning of the 31st ult., at Pennsville, New Jersey. A letter to the Bath Gazette says, about ten tug~boats full of roughs and sporting characters went down the river to The ‘study’ as John Stanburne called it, | for the secular education imparted, accords witness the fight. The contest lasted two hours and seven minutes, ninetyssixty rounds being fought. One thousand specs tators gazed upon the scene. The Sheriff books on poetry, a book on dogsbreaking, | plicable only to the few towns on the Island. | op ‘ , : se > Sal C ty arrived wil a treatise on driving and a treatise on fish: The opponents of Mr. Pope were not slow : Ee ee ee was atits height and demanded that it be stopped, but was laughed at. Weeden and Walker were the names of the combatants, Jalker was rendered insensible at the last round, and then the crowd broke for the boats. A young man who aided in bring. ing Walker's body to the city, appeared at police headquarters late in the evening, He says, after the fight Walker was laid on the ring and every one deserted him; that he hailed a party in a bost about putting off, and got them to assist him in placing Walker on board. Walker was insensib!e at the time, and remained so up to the or Greek. Few men can read either Latin privileges far in excess of anything asked | ji.,, of his death, which occurred when é ee q ani Greek, and of the few men who can, | on their behalf by Mr. Pope in Prince Ed- belt ws in her character of inquisitor, had discover- | still fewer do read them; but his French| ward Island. Notonlyso,but the journal he ay to the city. This is one of the des plorable results of aping foreign manners and customs to which our people are so prone. The prize ring is peculiarly an if he only could have mastered the con- | kenzie Government, and championed the yer ; , jugations and genders, and imitated the English institution, and was introduced into this country by Englishmen. Its practices are unparalleled for brutality, and should be stopped by active legislation, making it a crime of the highest order, and the punishe ment severe, certain, and immediate, thereby, as far as possible, preventing men who are disposed to make brutes of thems selves, at least regard the feelings of the community, and cease to outrage them by such displays as this. My apology for even alluding to the disgraceful affair, is simply to urge that steps be taken by the state legislatures to enact such laws as will pres scenes, Inalluding to this propensity of ours for the adoption foreign airs and mana ners, | am reminded of a most ludicrous mistake which our ladies made in this be. half some twenty-five years ago. I think it was Mr. Crampton who came over about that time as English Minister, and our fashion= able ladies were quick to perceive that Mre, Crampton, when she rose to meet a visitor had astyle of apparently raising herself, and while balanced on her toes, give her- self one or two pretty little shakes. Our ladies jumped at the conclusion that it was the latest agony, and at once adopted it, and called it ‘ Teetaring.” But what was their mortification when they found that the poor lady was slightly afflicted with St. Vitus’ dance, and really, when she saw them at it, thought they were mocking her. A recent innovation, harmless but ridicul« ous, is the use of the single word “ Thanks.” when any little favor or courtesy is shown Now this style originated with the London Snobs, and is truly snobbish. An English gentleman is not too lazy to say ‘‘ Thank you sir, or madam,’’ and this was the style used by Queen Victoria when Lieut, Hartstein delivered to her the English ship Victory, which had been found abandoned at sea{ and. was brought into N, Y., by one of our National vessels. She was put in complete order by our Government and sent to Eng. land to be delivered to the Queen in person Lieut. Hartstein who was charged with this pleasing duty had prepared a most elaborate spread-eagle international comity speech, which he duely delivered, The Qneen’s reply was simply “Sir, | thank you.” I suppose the snobs of that day thought the utterance of the single word ‘“ Thanks” SAXON, A new school ~ vent the repetition of such disgraceful —