wv Feat ' SCO OS ES NET a SESE ET VOL. XXVI Ui \ i ry a r Art idee : Bor Liecee te a Le AAV LI UtiA LOTT ETOW \) PRIN im OnwaD Oran : a bAbEsl Lit N, RAL ul LDV Al AN DAV TAVOMDE Hog ae ' 4 iA AD! Wis | iy ry ve : a re RST ET es SORES Ora ; ? , ° A 9 i i 2 i 18 (6 —-_ ~ ° > 7 no a Seta eo “ 3 r % Gr a0 * a4 4 46 . An ante omar Tw ~ sali ihiteeaeaeteinieelind ened ’ 5a o ues So a Es @ue CHAMTAC — seven denna ST. LAWRENCE LITERATURE. | and his 61d aerg | : ’ \ HASZARD BROS : Vi ari | ni > pent | keep sapling Meena Tt was not easy to/ The Captains knife and fork had been so | the vast s Printed and Prblished every Monday Porenoon 2 SP ON Oy iV mivtmhinAsae : J order amongst the men, | laid tl ¢ : 3 : ‘ ”. Is Printed a nf AvGAY Porenoon ents & hialhenes ivi ine nsuran ce U0. WENDERHOLME. they quare e2 and fought durin aie . * ; rat _ had Pull view of these men as! Eur BY Ul Haus & ANC neers and it b z arch ; | He satat tnble. They had been smokin . es — Uy UUUOUL: . or | and it became necessary to arrange th fe Ni PEE William iu. Co FORWARDING, MANUFACHRERS a | as to kee ' ge them so | for each had a brilliant copper pittoon by | ernment is not een. = De PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND CHAPTER XIX.—Cnntinued otk ‘ah ine as a distance from each | the side of his arm chair . ' : AND 7 : ' : | Other. Still, by the time they reached the | his ow : OFFICE: €Jencral . se o BOAR pe al *7y a But | dont ane how you are going to do| precincts of Whittlecup rte of the ae | there : sit. ane" Serna aA het! Opt at Lente Aaenor ine a i ee “agents, }OARD OF DIRECTORS: without a full uniform, Howawill yon man. | Were adorned with black eyes, and roo nero tahetee smoke in the | there for Rus Corner Queen and King Strocis. Gl WATER STREET, A. Kennepy, fise., President. age on field-days, and how will you go to few had been knocked d ’ as & ni, or any present intention, apparently cunset ter bien Pebkdlebieela bs x Joun ¥: Rendarenn. | church on Sundays? , ‘ own and tumbled | of creating it. For the present the tro} Pablisher, $1.40 in advance: $1.62 if pa Verchants Bank, ArteMas Lorp, Bey se ccnp | in the dust by their comrades, the company | contented themselves with sippi within the year;.$8.00.if not peld ¥ ithin| Charlottetown. - - -~- — e Tuomas Morris. ; ee e of absence on all such occa | presented rather the appearanceofarambble | and water i : sipping brahdy the vear eS. a - £8 1. Georae D. Lonaworru. | sions, said the doctor; ‘so long as | hav-| after a roit than of soldiers in her Maj ’ a nen» Clb ee ies CLUB RATES: J. E. Haszarp, | Honack Haszarp. = - ev Ene an, ~- a full uniform | have a good excuse,”’ | service. Philip Stanburne’ ee = esis ctbad aie eth grey hair, and fue Examiner will be forwarded to PR tpn oi = i - SrewaRe. Che fact was that the doctor's aversion to | was white with dust: but roe’s uniform whiskers of the same oolour, only a little Clubs at the following rates per year ies : “y : oo daily at their oMice, Exchange | full dress came quite as much from @ dislike | alighted on his face noted casero aa and met under his neatly shaven ayment strict n advance : , S n < ©... Montres AaNS CASS . ‘ ; ; . y acdiva Ttatriag R si ntreal, — a : | to public ceremonies as from an objection it did . y perspiration, chin ; the other was a tall and vigorous les, one address, - - $ 6.00} } ao. oe os ini dins RED. W. HYNDMAN, ia ead : : Y | 1t did not there remain a lightcoloured | ™4n, apparently at leat fi red. 8.3 w & Co., Boston vtown, April 24, 1876.—ly Secretary scarlet and silver in themselves. He had | powder, but beca i ; : y 9 hepatinen poem young. * i ont cs wson, Esq., Halifax, N. 8. ' | youthful assistant in the regiment who paste Redeed Soe Se eae a companion, with « bushy head fon. e) Davies, Cha shorn}. ee te a Ln ie MEO aad . o : ; ; 8 May 'P.E.1.) The Isolated Risk & Farmers |", Periectly willing to represent the | of Stanithburne the truth, the owner / of red hair and » very florid complexion. It S| ; ee thburne had never been so dirty in | was the red as - conten | medical profession in «!! imaginable splen- | his life. 7 man who spoke first, = Wii TIAM NOANnN . ‘ ‘ | dour, and who had alreac : i ‘ ; Re LO LE TES WILLIAM DODD, insurance Co. ef Canada. Daleeana mt ie _ ready passed three | Now there was a river at the entranea to | BNGLAND AND CONSTANTINOPLE. ALMANAC FOR NOVEMBER, 1876 Commission Merchant and aii | Cvenings in full uniform, surrounded by his | Whitecup, and over the river a bridge, and | Sr 7 es Caami and deiaiiiai others and sisters and a group of admir- | oi tin bridge. or in .advance of it he | [From the Toronto Mail. } MOON'S CHANGES UCTIONEER Vv i ; m1 EXT, me Avex. McKexeug, | ing friends. | stood a crowd of about three the : d sa WP E. J, Reed, ex-Chief Construct f Full Moon, Ist day. 7h. 15 nD. 1 Ww a ViCk-PRESIDENT, - GkorGe GrEIG, Esa. | “he ‘ . ; . usand op- eS . structor 0 Fell Moon, 1 td t. Sm., p.m 8. Y aa @ EEN $l ARE, ~ REIG, Esq | [hey had turned down a lane by this eratives awaiting the arrival of the sailitis the British navy and now member of Par- New Moon \ ain a 7 CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. CAPITAL, #860 time that gradually led out of the town—a | men. | liament for Pembroke, has been addres- . below iINSURA NOE ? . 0,000. | re lane of coalashes,betweenthorn | The Lancashire operatives is not accus | sing his constituents on the subject of the irst Quart » y ‘ \ wie’ vii Vlie acs i : |; hec ges, whose young leaves were al : f i > aki : iain Deposited with Dom. Govt., = $100,904. | covered with soot. After een ae tomed to restrain the expression of his possible acquisition of Constantinople by t . ii, N sin i DAY's eo ( ETS Comnany 3 a | : DAY WEEK il . : THIS Company insures Farm Property, | ®t the parade « 7 2 . : q : e i rise sets a a7 A netioneers Commnissig | Merchar is A Dwellings and conte nts, cca i a ia i 1, which was nothing | have when islolated diminishes with the dread, apd that it would not be worth while | ts . | ee 1UuL)), UiLIHIOMIUL PGE GUGUL »| Se |houses, and other isolated risks, ee = fo a - arge pasture that had | number of his companions. Three factory for her to risk @ great war to prevent it. \ , AND e ‘Three «u Sestem at log ! j é =] ( oO =) : ae aan | aa eS ee lo 54 ' = tes. hed cakes eee | <li eehe a a de 450 - : lads may content themselves with exchang- She always .eeps a large fleet in the Medi- ae * | sek Seh vu dal 18 os GENERAL AGENTS ce... Taye ail Losees.cnmeed by lighteing, | uy sen: Sim epee Wane ere Wien inert’ Sent ae rae Pees ae | terramean, larger than is necessary, he 4\Saturday | Si} 36) 6 1LA ae 13 | oe we bog iaving been transferred to the per io aa material, eb,Captain Stanburne ? | pearance when you are out of hearing, thir. thinks, unless the object be to snoustoun 5/Suecay 63} 35) 722) 0 46 42/44 horth Side Qu CCR Nquare he is prepared to take risks and renew « ut- rae mpeaherne was certainly eurprised, | ty will make them in your presence ‘hikes the worid to the spectacle of English power : Monday Bi) 348 43, 1 30 : ae 9} standing policies on most favorable terms, | Rather more than a thousand ragamuffiins | hundred will jeer you loudly ; and f in that quarter. Russian Pposeession of 7) Tuesday S6 32:10 7i 22% 36 Charlotte‘own: - - P. ©. Island. FENTON T. NEWBERY, were scattered about the field in ir b i J ie C i 4: : - siWedu'’s'dy 57 381! 11 28! 3 25 34 en ee » 2818NG April 24. 1876.—1 Gen'l Agent fur P.E.I , irregular | thousand, if once you are unlucky enough onstantinople would, it is said, threaten giThursday 58 yM er 7 October 18, 1875.—ly ul Agent fur P.E.I. | groops, and the bright scarlet of the serge- | to attract their attention, there will come England's communications with India, but 10] Friday 7 Ol 28) O46 6 3 cs em 5 mos ED a> —————— } ants’ new jackets, which was sprinkled | such volleys of derisi : to this he replies that C sealeiatas-4 isang aol oes) ¢ 9 * 1 IMPERIAL | P *h volleys of derision as nobody but a pliss that Constantinople is ut Batardey 1 a) 2 1 7 is : CARVELL B ROS., t amongst the mass, only served to make the | philosopher could bear with equinamity not on England’s road to India, but out of - “) “ « is 1 23 “unas .re er : ¢ 7, y re . . ° 13/Monday 3) 23! «26, 8°57 19 EUSTIONEERS, PID i, , rags of the men look more ragged, and the | Not only was the road lined on both sides the way by ® considerable distance. A 4! Tuesday 6}. 22) 5 39, 9 39 ela ; : tit h A Ck OMPANY dull colours of their old clothes duller. with workpeople, but they blocked it u Russian naval force free to pass the Dar- eee . “ 7 a 10 lt 4“ FLOM mission Merchants, i ‘ Didn’t you say that you had got num.-| in front, and made way fo; the wiilfitieiane danelles might indeed sweep down upon A ¥ 5 Q 2 2 10 56 12 ie j ; ‘ 72? ce ‘ ; . “a 17) Friday 9} 19 9 9 1133) 10 AND >t London, a a oeemenee F: SNe ee Oar» Memabes Slowly, that there was ample time for | °”" Mediterranean communications, but to ee s -° 7M 7 GENERAL AGENTS | it’s the very worst of the whole lot; it’s | Philip Stanithbure to hear every observation do so with success it would have to be 9 ‘ 7) 10 0 16 ,ENERZ : NTS. s cae r : : , ; : 20) Monday 15} 16) 21 33 a ; 7 ve [ESTABLISHED 1803] | composed of Shayton chaps and low Irish. that was directed against him. Amidst the | °UP@"@" 0 our own. But so also might are i 184 of 1832 ~ Lower Queen St. Charlottetown, P. EB. . “ this moment the Adjutant called ina | 47S of laughter which the appearance of the fleets of either France or italy, or of o!Wedn'sd’y) 16) 15° 024 21219 ;: eli | see : oud voice for ‘ Cuptains of Conipanies;’ and | th men gave rise to, a thousand -.) | both, provided that eith bo carThusadie’ | ..36 Rall Subscribed & Inves ; [eae , panies ;’ an . , & tho special ; er or both had the paetieg dk caelctal toch ma oe] |. he WE, BTEWART, fed Capital, | pritip sunbume, with the other eaptaine, | commentaries might be distinguished. _| *UP#rios foree to render the attempt fens inemiac. | al an 6 ot 2 oe formed a goop round hm. He, ina| ‘Th haps -soldi ible. To object toa F 25 Saturday 21) 13) 114] 4 47 52.) Disediee ' ie ¥ S8 B5 gop roan m. He, ina em chaps-soldiars! Why, there's Jec a@ French or Italian oF oa, 22 12 1 30; 5 35 50! L Todt? COMMISSION Merchant > ae. speech which it is not necessary to repeat, but one soldier in the lot that I can see.’ dest in the Mediterranean would be a geo- 23Tuesday | 24° 11 Sire A & : Las *| INSURES at MODERATE RATES Stores, | a) ct explanations to the captains, ‘Where is he? 1can see noan at all,’ | &*@Phical absurdity, but if England toler- SelWedn'sdy| 26) 1i| 231] 8 44 " COLONIAL MARKET, Warehouses, Dwellings, Churches, Mer-| chiefly relat'ng to billets, and then called| ‘Cannot ta see the tellow with the red ates the naval armaments of these powers 3o/Thursday (7 27410 3 3, 9409 4: ie a : ch indize of all kinds, Produce, Vessels on the sergeants, telling them to get the com- jacket?’ in the great inland sea, why object to that oo ——— ——.-- Halifax oe ova Sc tro the Stocks, and other Property. i 22. @ . ‘ j . ore ee e : : HOVA coud. DETACHED DWELLINGS taken fi ponientogethes,: Ebi Stenithharne found 5 | DAs Seay. ee! nao eee eae ae RATES of ADVERTISING c ousignmeats solicited. Guarantee Sales | ONE, TWO, and THREE YEARS at ire. | that his sergeant was a tail wiery old sol. ‘They'll be right uns for fightin’, for | “™® hope to match England’s Mediterra~ a = a ae a in — than oe rates. dier who had seen service in India; and there’s four on ’em ‘us gotten black een to nean fleet, any apprehension on this score ee arged. Prompt) Losses Adjusted d Settle " | when the company was start with.’ is undless. !n vi i : UETURNS. (pusle and «+ ttle d IT romptly. pany assembled, he found rt with, gre 7 {n virtue ef her despotic = oieeies are the Rates and Terms __ BP. S.—Always on had, to fill orders from FENTON 7 NEWBERY "| that the doctor’s account of it was only too| ‘ Where’s there guns?’ Government, and the military inclinations ubdee of G2 bepabart o> nt = I > ie ry : Bran, Shoris, Middlings, Feed, . ‘ - : | true—it was certainly the worst looking ‘They won't trust ‘em wi’ guns. They'll of the half-savage hordes that form no sma)! gents per inch for first insertion, and 20 + oe Mar. 20, 1876 Agent tor P. E, I | Company in the field. When the roll of the be shooting one another.’ part of her population, she can put many vents for each continuation. Ten per cent - se <= | regiment was called over some odd inci ‘There’s one of them wi’ a sw nt . : “ ord,’ THE LIVERPOOL : discount from this rate will be made on al! Advertisements continued for 3 months; 20 per cent. if continued for 6 months; 30 per cent if continued for 9 months: and 40 per cent if concinued for 12 month -7 nnnea3n44464468 —Sae ee aes aaes , | | ol 1 0 {Ms x1 009 | *« o¢g 00g | oor i j oa w—o|* ite ie Sia be hk a ooo: * -_ t2 i See = | 22s sEeSiz —— = } ~~ ~ g== 2 Tt - | tO rF & ¥ ' } A’i advertisements exceeding 12 inches | will be subject to a discount of 10 per cent. giditional, 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 io the amount of @45; and 20 per cent when tothe | amount of $60 per anoum, and not other- | wise. | The sum of 12 cents per line will be | charged for each insertion of all * Special | Notices;” and 25 cents for notices in edi- | torial or news columns. The sum of 50 cents will be charged for tie iasertion of all Marrisge and Birth no- tices. “PRICES CURRENT. {Ch’town, Oct. 21, 1876. BREADSTUFFS. Backwheat Flour, per Ib ¥.oar, per bbl Fiour, per 100 Ibs atmeal, per 100 lbs FISH. 0.03 to 0.34 | 5.50 to 7.00 3.00 to 3.25 3.50 to 5.00 4.87 to 6.49 ‘odfish per qtl Herring per bbl Mackerel per doz. BOARDS. slemlock, 100 feet. 0.81 to 0.94 x ine do 1.62 to 2.40 Spruce do 0.97 to 1.30 Shingles, per M. 1.60 to 1.75 | POULTRY. i 20.3 to 30.50} 0.20 to 0.30 | 0.20 to 0.20 i 0.20 to 0.25 0 59 to 1.80) 6.40 to 0.50 | Chickens, per pair Ducks, (each) Fowls, (each) Partridges, (each) ‘Torkeys, (each) Geese (each) MEAT. Beef, (small pieces) per lb Heef, per Ib (by the quarter) lam, per lb Lamb, per quarter Lamb, per ib Mutton, per lb Pork,(small pieces) per 1D Pork, per Ib (by the carcass) Veal, per Ib $0.06 to 0.12 00.5 to 0.09 | 6.10 to 0.12 | 0.44 to 0.09 0.06 to 0.10 0.05 to 099 0.08 to 0.12 0.06 to 0.07 0.03 to 0.08 MISCELLANEOUS. Apples per bushel Barley per bushel Butter (fresh) per Ib Watter per ib by the tub | the 2.75 to 3.00 | 0.48 to ¥.72 | a \ 3 POSTAGE PREPAID. AMIN_ER. ok oR NO, 52 & LONDON AND GLOBE [ASURAVCE COMPANY I iinvga INTERNATIONAL Summerside, P.E. island, JOHN MCKAY, PROPRIETOR. I land for beauty of situation, comfort and aver Mn | convenience afforded, commends itself to patronage of all wno may visit the Island for business or pleasure. ’ Choice Sample Rooms to let. | Invested Funds, Ist Jan’y., 1874, $21,628,356 | Deposited with Receiver Gener- ee from Cars and Boats. al of Canada, _ 162,800 Ladies and Gentlemen will find it totheir | Other Investments in Dominion advantage to patronize this Hotel. of Canada, 867,001 —_ — i FAIR RATES. REVERE HOUSE, is & Liberal Settlements. ADJOINING THE POST OFFICPF, } ALBERTON, - - - - P- BL The subscriber has fitted up the above House in good style, and wishes to inform his friends, and the public gene- rally that he is prepared to accommodate Feb 21, 1876.—tf Insurance against Fire effected upon Pri- vate Residences, Household Furniture and Farm Properties, for One, Three or more years, At Reduced Fates. OMfiee—Great George Street, Charlotte- oils i i town, P. E. I. - Trausieut and Periganent BOaiGers. | cows, suiy 2f teem Established 1I8Gi. 2 Park’s Cotton warp. Railway. “White, Blue,Red, Orange & Green ; Pee COTTON WARP made by us-for | the past fifteen years having proved 60 very satisfactory to consumers, we feel justified ip recommending it to all who use the article as the best ia quality and actually | the cheapest inthe market. We warrant every bundle to be full | jength and weight and to be numbered cor- | rectly. Charges moderate. the premises. a. 1X Proprioter. i Alberton, Sept. 15, 1875. P. E. Island SPECIAL RUNNING ARRANGEMENT. N and afier MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, | a Special Steamboat Mail Train will | ran as follows :— GOING WEST. Good Stabling on) GOING EAST. A. M. P \ap aay Fenaiion ee eo ois | : Our name and address is on the label. Huuter River 7.09 County Line 7 4¢ | For sale by all dealers. Counts Line 7.46 Huffer River 8.25 | Wm. PARKS & SON, Kensiagton ce 8.17 RozaltyJhact. Me oe | New Brunswick Cotton Mills,John, N. B. a. r. On Sammerside Ch'towa | August 14, 1876.—3m Numbers 3 and 4 Trairs will resume ran- | - as per Time Biil No. 5, (1H Per Ti io, superintendent. | CHOIGL PERIODICALS FOR 1876. | Ch'town, Nov. 6, 1876.——Island pap. [Sins | } TIE | Leonard Scott Publishing Co., IRCHITECT Ui, ———— | £7 Barclay Sireet, New York, | | MVE undersigned, being relieved from the Continue their ——* reprints of Public Service, will resume his former 3 ‘ i Four Leading Quarterly [eviews : occupation of furnishing Designs, Plans, EDINBURGH REVIEW (Whiz), Specilicat iovs.and estimates tor Dwellings, Stores, Churches, and School Houses, of of | LONDON QUARTERLY REVIEW (Con- servative), the most modern and approved style i opinions from motives of delicacy, and any ele a i. : 2 ee perithe. hregn ngland has much reason to { | bleck lane nearly a mile, the officer arrived | consideration for your feeling which he may , andaciaypipe on free trade fancies j ‘| comune region stretching from Thina to opean Turkey into account. We have , | to remember, too, that the Russian Goy. hampered in bis policy by . To keep English goode Asia, and to make a market sikn goods, is its steady aim »; and it may be doubted whether military Conquest is sought by Russia any more for ite own sake than for the commereial results which follow it. Let us glance again at what British commerce might suffer from a [tussian seizure of Coustanti nople. In the Manchester Chamber ” Commerce, recently, it was stated that, whereas British exports to the vast Empire of Russia were last year only tbree millions sterling, exports to Turkey were eietoats millions. Give Constantinople to nmia, and this large trade with Russia would witber and disappear under the ‘scovite authority. This argument,if not is One that must tell even with men, nd it suggests to us that ladstone is not likely te cirry the the | Mr ot ee the other } : } Mancheste; | Mr. G rcia! classes with him after all his attack upon the Government policy. If he depended upon their influence te feules | tain his “ttack, he has probably realized | ore now that itis not forthcoming in his favor. When patriotic sentiment and com- mercial ambition combine to support the Goverument, asin the present Case, Oppo- sition will make but @ sorry show: and we may well believe that the first gun lired j | | dents occurred, ‘ James Mulligan !’ shouted the Adjutant; ‘ Why that’s the officer.’: ‘Eb! captain,’ said a factory girl in and as there was no answer, he called ouf| Philip’s ear, ‘I could give thee a kiss, but ‘James Mulligan!’ a second time. There | thee’s got sueh a mucky face,’ was a brief pause, but a man in Stanith,; I would’nt kiss him for five shillings,’ burn’s company made an awkward sort of | said another. sign that he wished tospeak. This caught! ‘Eh! but | would,’ said a third, ‘he’s a the Adjutant’s eye, and he anid ‘Naacane | nice fallow end Wl ice him tosnight when body know anytu® CHAPTER XX ‘ Know him, sir; don’t know him, that’s} Captain Stanburne never precisly eee all? He was the friend of my youth !’ how. he .nenched hic.inn.en thet mamanble ‘Well, can you tell me why he isn’t day. He had not passed the bridge betore here? his company, undistinguished from the ‘ Alas! sir, | would greatly prefer to res factory people by Jress, was broken up and yeal the justification to your private ear.’ mingled with the crowd in aad ‘ Out with it man; youare keeping the| fo, the present, irremediable disc ae whole regiment waiting!’ Eureton was be~| 4 midst the jeers of the populace the ginning to get angry, and everybody else | captain arrived at the principal equare on was beginning to be amused. open place of Whittlecup, and seeing high ‘It’s @ grievous necessity, sir, that has) spovethe head of the rabble, the painted prevented James Mulligan from baving the image of an enormous bell, of that ome honour to signify his respect for you, sir, | fy) but somewhat crude nana in pe by his corporeal presence on this auspicious | tained by the liberal mixture of Prussian cocnsion," _ | blue with whitelead, he knew it to be his The Adjutant was aware that the regis! 59» pillet, the Blue Bell Inn, aud did ment was in a state of suppressed laughter what he could to arrive at the door thereof. and his notions of military propriety was so : : : strict that he would have greatly preferred _ ee _ a the possible explosion of a bombshell in fully confirmed by an i tion of a the the midst of it. Eureton got very angry. looking-glass His face became as red as a sergeant’s . cai trren tchenahgiied 308 Poor Itish=| tear nee metianteans toot at ake ers of his rhetoric as a whirlwind the blos~| gormed tiatee hide there slots for the eaies soms from an apple tree— _ keepers were expecting the militiamen ‘Why is not Mulligan present? Tell me | gs guests, and though they were certainly, at once, with none of your damned fine | of a)] imaginable arrivals, the least likely to speeches |’ be profitable to the innkeepers of Whittle- ‘ Because he’s on a sea voyage.’ cup (ber Majesty giving one halfpenny per ‘ He has deserted, then. Put him down | peaq daily for lodging) they were received as a deserter.’ nevertheless without any appearance of ‘J protest agin that,’ said the Irishman ; unwillingness. As the s t distrubed ‘James Mulligan is no deserter. He’#®| the billets, and called the name of the ale~ sowl above it. He’s faithful to his colours!’ | pouse written upon each, the keeper an- ‘ Then, why did he leave the country 4 nounced himself in some such phrase as, ‘ Because he was transported |’ ‘that’s me, ’or ‘ them’s my chaps,’ or * come Shortly afterwards, when another man’s | my Jads and I'll show you the road ; > and name was called, and he did not answer,2| ina very short time the men were ‘all friend of his passed a note to the Colonel | housed. When the captain inspected the written by the absentee himeelf, in which | pijlets, he found every mess in a state of he very politely expressed his great regret | advancing conviviality. The inn-keepers that he should be unable to take part in | were treating them without any hope of the first year’s training, owing to the fact | payment—a too liberal hospitality, which that he was confined in the Preston House | afterwards proved a most serious impedi« of Correction share with gentlemen in the | went to discipline. House of Commons the privilege of absence Philip Stanburne had had so much to do frova their regiments, the excuse was accep | shout his company that he found no time ted as valid. to dine; and on returning to the Blue Bell everybody except the Adjutant, who shouts | was nearly ten o’clock. His portmanteau ed till his throat was sore, and the sergeant | had been sent after him from Soetyborn, The day was a tiresome idle day for| he ordered supper instead of dinner, as it would put it eut of i t public appearance a gether, ; he ~~ CONSTANTINOPLE We find the following description of Con slanuinopie in the Rudder, The sketch of the city and its surroundings is of interest at the present time, as the probabilities are that it may, ere long, become the scene of stirring events:— « Constantinople is about thirteen miles round and is enclosed by walls on the western or land side, The ‘Harbor’ or Golden Horn, on the north, divides it from Galata and the Bosphorus divides it from Scutari, These are propers ly but suburbs, but make up together the city of Constantinople. It would be quite impossible to imagine a site better fitted for the building of an Imperial city on. Nos thing would seem to be wanting; and it is no wonder that the eye of the world is every now and then fixed on it, The popu- lation of this Impepial city is about balf a million and is madeup of a somewhat mothy group—of Greeks, Armenians, Jews, Araos, ‘Europeans,’ and Turke ; the Turks soldiers in the field, perhaps without any|™*king up, as it would seem, about very large supply of ready money. But | °"¢ half of the population, It must be the building up of a great fleet, with all | Me@dless to say thatthe city stands on the the expensive vequisites of modern naval | Site of antique Byzantium, founded 656 B. warfare, is a very different affair—it is|- But long before Byzantium even, there something that many years are required | Must needs have been a colony of some to accomplish. Russia has nothing like a | 8°rt in such @ spot of earth as this, and the fleet fit to cope with that of England now, | fist building on it of human habitation and it aS 4 = , np ~~ ~--- Ltn tniams age? smd by awa soe the necessary funds, to create such | "de men who have left no record The nrffiana wd ngnt té keép tie iusstans out | Moor ae ae of Constantinople, seeing even were they the sunset. An-hour after sunset is one there and in possession they would be un» o'clock. It is at sunset, therefore that the able to make successful attack apon her ‘cail to prayer’ is made from the galleries - Mediterranean communications with In- of the mosyue minerets,and notat any one dia, Such is, in brief, the view of the stated or eet bour, and is thus not madea Mediterranean naval situation which Mr. | little significant, he absence of churches Reed presents to the British public. and clocks, therefore must make the city On the question as to the comparative strange if nothing else did so. Then there naval strength of England and Ruesia, Mr. | is what, indeed, was to be expected—the Reed speaks with authority, and those who | narrowness and tortuous character of the differ from him on this point will have to | streets and ways where anything in the pick their way very cautiously should they | way of plan and arrangement never could assail his position. The practieal conclu- | have crossed the minds of those who built sion at which he arrives will not, however, | thehouzesordwellings which line them, They command general assent. All that he says | can only be compared t> an irregular way respecting Russia’s inability to match Eng- | across an uneven field, with cottages built land on the Mediterranean may be admit- | close to the edge of it, and the traffic across ted, while it may still be held that we can | got year by year to be thicker and thicker. not safely ullow Russia to seize the Turkish | Each street of the city is a perfect zigzag, capital, There are more things in heaven | and a streight line is act te be found. In- and earth than are dreamed of in Mr. | deed, there is a total absence of ‘ planning’ Reed’s philosophy. There are such things | in any sense. From the east to the west as national spirit at home, and national | the city is about three miles and a half, Could Englishmen sifo?d@ tne seucw ~. 1 | hile from north to so th it js shout three tional, aye, even of personal humiliation, main part of the city from — that would come over them, were they north; while the Bosphorus divides it from tamely to assent to the seizure of Constan- | Scutari. As to the streets of Constantis tinople by the great Robber Empire of the nople, they will but just bear the name— North! Could England afford such loss | they are rather long and crooked Ianes, of prestige in the eyes of Europe as that | with lcw timber-built honses;and contraste event would bring upon her? More imme- ed with like streets here, with straight diately important still, could she afford and uniformely built lines of brick~built such loss of prestige in the eyes of two smsll houses which look but poorely. hundred millions of the native races of Much is sacrificed, doubtless, to the pic» India? To sneer at merely sentiments! tureeque in the at eets or ways of Constan- iderations is not wise; it is frequently tinopie. An Oriental * bazaar’ is but little by outbursts of popular sentiments that else than a covered-ia street, with goods | empires are established or ov erthrown, and exposed on either side of it. that mighty revolutions are brought about. Ia our own time a sentiment has recreated the Italian nation, and @ similar force has bound together the great German Empire ; while another sentiment, that of religious loyalty to the Pope, brings heavy trouble to Bismarck’s waking dreams. ‘he shadows that struck to the soul of Richard on Bosworth eve were but poetie licence for the representation of the revulsion of national feeling—sentiment. let it be called | ttle. Origin of the fire unknown. —that hurled him from the throne. It is} Two women heve beew ccurt~martialied through underestimating the power of | at Haranneeand sentenced, the one to death sentiment in the affairs of nations that the | and the other to banishment. The cause am en dn —— ——= — MISCELLANEOUS. A Rome's special says the Pepe's condis tion has suddenly become very alarming, and his desth may come any momeat, In an secident on the St, Louis, Iron Mountain asd Southern Railway Friday, 28 passengers were wounded, but none Billed, A farmer named Follonsbee was turned to death at Eset Medway, Mass.. Thursday night, with hig barn and thirteen bead of —_— Architecture, at short notice and reason- able costs. Having had a long experience in building, he feels thas he can give satis- faction. RICHARD WEEKS, Late Supt. Pub. Works. | Ch'town, Oct. 9, 1876.—times sj tf MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY PRINCE EDWARD SLAND. ‘BOARD OF DIRECTORS : President, —— r Rosert Loxaworth, Esq., Hon. Jas. DUNCAN, Tlou. L. C. OWEN, Hon. A. A. MCDONALD, Hon. J. C- Pore, Tomas HANDRAIIAN, Esq., Groroe R. Brrr, Esq. Risks taken daily at their office, corner Great George and Lower Water Streets. F. W. HALES, Secrretay. Ch’town, March 22, 1875—ly prtcll AND FELT! The only Reliable Roofing. 500 ROLLS Beehive Brand FELT, 100 Bbls. PITCH, 100 Rolis TA RRED PAPER, 50 Rolis DRY PAPER. i Cheap. are selling these Goods Very a DODD & ROGERS. Ch’town, July 17, 876. Calfskins, per lb 6.06 to 0.10 Uheese (new milk) per ib 0.14 to 0.16 Cheese, per Ib 6.05 to 0.08 Clover seed, per Ib 0.00 to 0.00 Eggs, per doz. 0.17 to 0.20 Green Peas, 0,00 to 0.00 Hay, per tou 9.00 to 10 00 , per lb. 0.04 to 0.45 Honey, per Ib. 0.24 to 0.26 Homespun, (nen’s wear)per yd. 0.65 & hae Homespun, (women’s do)per yd 0.35 e = Homespun Flannel, pet ¥ 0.81 to 0.46 Lard, per Ib 0.12 to 0.16 Oats, per bushel 0.40 to 0.42 Potatoes, per bushel 0.19 to 0.22 Pear! Barley, per Ib 0.08 to 0.04 Bheepskins 0.40 to 0.60 Straw, per tor 2.50 to 8.00 Timothy Seed, per bash, 6.00 to 0.00 ‘Taliow per Ib 0.07 to 0.10 ; ps, per bush. 0.14 to 0.16 Wool, per Ib 0,17 to 0.26 on whom fell the real work of the compan | and as the military duties for that day were ies. After lunch, the important matter of | at an end, it was a pleasure to resume his billets had to be gone into, and it was dis~ ordinary dress. It is true that there was covered that it was impossible to lodge all | an eyening costume in the portmanteau, the men inSootythorn. One company, at | consisting of a shell-jacket of the brightest least, must seek accommodation elsewhere, possible scarlet and a pretty dark-blue the junior captain must submit, for the | waiscoat, with silver braid and buttons; training, to be banished from the mess, and | put Philip Stanburne’s instincts were not sent to eat his solitary breakfast in some | of the kind which leads a man to sport outlandish village, or, still worse, in some | gcarlet when he can avoid it—and especial~ fi'thy and uncouth little manufacturng towr. | |y did he dread the idea of blazing by hims His appetite, it is true, might so far benefit | self, like « solitary peony, in the quict by the long marches to and from the | parlour at the Blue Hall, e ground that the beefsteak might be| [fit had been possible to have a private WESTMINSTER REVIEW (Liberal), BRITISH QUARTERLY REVIEW (Evaa- gelieal), Containing masterly criticisms and sum- maries of all that is fresh and valuabie in Literature, Science & Art; also, Biackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine The most powerful Monthly in the English language, famous for STORIES, ESSAYS, and SKETCHES, of the highest literary merit. Zerms, Jacluding Toslage. Payable Strictly in Advance. OVE Wy ccceeeeee £4.00 per annum ta o ee nr : do eater with the best of sauces; but the ors sitting room, the Captain 14 have Por aay three Reviews, i dinary exercises of the regiment would have | ly preferred it. Like all men who are ac- hed Ar exe mageaiee, besuse 4.00 de been sufficient to procure that, and the | customed to solitude, he had learned the For Black wood and one Review 400 ae great efforts of Mr. Garley at the Thorn | art of being happy with his own thoughts, For Blackwood & the 4 Reviews 15.00 do it. So tbat junior captain was ordered to| thor, On the other bani, he had never take his men to Whittlecup, a dirty little town, of about six thousand inhabitants, Lfour miles distant from Sootythorn: and the junior captain was Philip Stanburne. Behold him, therefore, marching at the head of his ragged rabble on the dusty turn~ acquired the still more valuable secret of interesting himself in men and women especially when they were not of his own class; and the parlour cf an ina—which is perhaps of all places in the world the best for studying mankind at one’s ease—seeme ed to him a highly disagreeable sort of a place, where a man is liable to be intruded upon, Thus it by no means added to his prospect of enjeying his solitary repast when he perceived, on entering the par- lour, that there were already two men in it, one on each side the fire, in the polished arm chairs of ateined ash which were the orthodox furniture of the better sort of inns at Whittlecup. CLUBS. A discount of 20 per cent. will be allowed to clubs of four or more persons. Thus: four copies of Blackwood or of one Review will seut to one address for $12.80 ; tour copies of the four Reviews aud Blackwood for $48.00, aad so oB. - PREMIUMS. pike road. The afternoon had been uns New subscribers—applying early—for the cs commonly hot fur the season of the year ; 1876 may have, without change, the sumbers| and military uniform, closely buttoned for tbe last dost eribe — gee across his breast, and padded with cotton Neither premiums to subscribers nor discount wool, is by no means the costume most suit- to clubs can be allowed unless the money is re- nects ‘The coma mitted direct to the publishers. No premiums | able for the summer ea . ere given to clubs. few lieutenants in the regiment (there was not one ensign) that a janior captain could not hope for a subaltern, and all the work Circulars with farther particulars may be of the company fell upon Philip Stanburne had on application. The Leonard Scott Publishiug Co., Nov 175 41 Barclay St., New York: school of political materialists chiefly err in these modern days. Mr. Cobden thought he could crumple up Russia like a sheet of paper; and now he has bis successors who look only at the material aspect of the situ- ation. But this is pre-eminently not « safe view to take, and we are glad to know that it is not the view that prevails in England to-day. Mr. Base, M. P., far better than Mr. Reed, sreaks the mind of the nation when he says, a8 he recently did ins public speech, that ‘he trusted it would never for ove moment be thought that they were going to permit Russia, under the pretence of a friendly feeling with tbe oppressed Je, to annex any part of Turkey. still less to obtain Constantinople; and, if any such attempt were made, the national feel- ing would compel whatever Government was in power to arrest such false atterapts with the last drop of English blood, and the last penny of English wealth.’ After all, however, the political materi. alists have but a weak ease to present,even from their own point of view. Russia and England are fated to be at war eommerci- ally, though there may be Between them no war with sword and gua. Over 8 great part of Asia, north of the Hinslayas, they are close competitors and rivals, and they would be such to the borders ef the North» ern Ocean did Russian poliey permit fereign competition at all within the regions sub- ject to her away. They do, howerer, meet s rivals over half a continent, if we take of the trial was supposed duplicity in the Los Tunis aftair. Several priests have also been banished from the isiand. A recently married man seys that If there were ten thousand drawers in a room, and yon asked your wife to keep one sacred and ipviolate for your own private use, that articular drawer would be full of hair-pins ribbons, loose hair, discarded buttons, gaiters and old hose. Mr. George Dawson, whom St. John people will remember as an cloguent lec~ tarer, in a lecture at Birmingham,England, said that the office of @ man’s house was to give shelter, food, and meat, but algo to surround his children with those tair sighis and sounds by Which the sense of beauty might ve developed. There were houses in that town in which not & poem was read, nor asong sung throughout the year, ana yet people wondered why their children were valgar. The beautifying of towns was one of the most neglected duties, and one of the most deserving. Ifa town was beautiful, people took a pride in it, liked to live in it, and were sorry to leave. In Birmingham they wanted anew society, to be called the Beanty Society. Smai Pox at Sypney.—With reference to the cases of small-pox among the sailors at Sydney, the Cape Breton ** Times” says¢ The smail-pox patients atthé Marine Hes- pital were doing very well le teas ping, except William Keenan, who the Confiuent Small-pox—a& moat type. The patients are four in number:— The captain and a se@man of the bargue Amsterdam, and Keenan and Lewis, sea- man of the barque Tothatr. We are in- formed that an investigation has been hela in regard to the report that Whiteway, the nurse, been seen @bout town, end the tory Lad proved to be a fabrication. The seshaeg on ae at South Bar has been re- moved and gigas SS li: Ge Pan Sagat — ee ee