Edited Text
Ps
_ August Oth, 1862,
CORRESPONDENCE, |
âYon are of your father, the devil; and t„e de-|
tires of your father you will dé. He wus 2 Yaur-|
derer from the beginuing, and he rhode not in he}
truth: beeguee.trath is not in him. Wien be
spouketh a lie, he speaketh of bis own: fir le is a|
liar, and the father thereof.""â~John viii. c. 44 Vv.
To THe Lprron or Tut EXAMINER.
DEAR Sin,âThe â Monitorâ of this week attri- |
bates to my âpen an articie, or a portion of it,
which appeired in the âExaminerâ of the 21st!
ult, The assertion, that the said article owes its |
paternity te me, has, [doubt not serprsed you}
net lose than it bas surprised myself, tor ne person |
huows better than you do that f have got written |
One line of this er any other editorial attributed
te me by the *Moniter.â The wriferi this paper |
s* â
ee i
ââ
ress, and theâ
SS
âthe gove t, the p
, xee boat; mends to â the governinent, te :
Bh omni saogle ot both countries, by enlightened counstl
large toleration, and wise forbearance, to hoe
â_â 7a. ââ- Oe - -
Pusuc Meets Ap Lot 38, Cross Roaps.| spoils, one lucky individual having not loss | Rang! goes a gun at th i s hats
âPursnant te potice a publie meeting was held | than six ehronometers ticking in his pocket Great Western, while one from ber por Se oe or
in the sched] house, fer the purpose of giving the| atone time. Asa general thing, more money | tery at the rams, who ure leaving in aa f rather than stimulate existing irritations. a
tillage ane school District in connection &@ mame wag found on the dead on the field than any | direction, She now passes the Richmond, | vod asserts unqualifiedly that the Queen
it being salted Barrattâs Crovs, T | ; - . nine-i isle : â n dispatches
igh on gy < Anwe -! eS ee *, hos.) other of which we have heard. Clothing in| whose splendid ey | * ogee era pet the House of Cominons ee P
: diene a8, stoi 44 . gle See âe "9 © WOâ ahundance was scattered about, and immense | grens is held quiet by the ve ne y ate and resisted unfriendly legisla . vat
. Tule delholviak Gaatha wees waeabeied: Kensing- piles of new uniforms were found untouched. | iays just oppomte. ye ! a : Pusitiee LoutsviL_e, July 20.â bp Rag adh oye Friday
bepreity ans tee ee ke , âlight re guns at the ordnance boat. ? © | to Nashville were thrown off the trae Sh
i âlitton, Stantord : CairviewâKensington| Oar men seemed to take great delight in| more g â _â to Nashville ot of ES
wok naa we inch aan ° = sithed : assuming Federal officersâ aniforme, and | down she puts two balls mto the ok ar evening, between c poeege and Re ogee seme
e v Vv a ma) i noe > } necting J I 3 : * aa : : atter is ogi % oo of the passengers,
then dispersed after giving three cheers for Queen i strutted about serio comically, much to the! while in the meantime a Pi ehea dil tne killing oe oo ra: Selly p eid the latter
Victoria and three for iN nsington. jamusement of dusty, powder begrimmed | busy with Farragut s f eet. rn J, « ing ââ - i eet fi peng Obie ae pes
JonN Donation, Seeretary. | youths who sat lollmg and smoking i the | pursues ber way, nothing daunted, 14 Hing | was Âą oe - ee
Censington, August 21 Bu â : . : i ro | cheeke She i â â ay | since died at Nas: . ;
Kensington, August 2nd, 1802. ishade. Every conceivable article of clothung | checked. _ She is now > roe an at i ev hietdbah, Sel inated a
be veh dae ico 4p ate paarers ada band bees scl = i a lik tl e Rich-|N a ille with Gowrequcal forage and wagons.
| lawsiii i ate o - ashv , b : 6
| quite apropos to our needy suldiery, scores of noble old Gag-ship's wena cts , he â ; id i pn âthe Falls this evening. Nobody was 1n-
whom took a cool bath and changed old for | mond, for the same bro dside wry 1 â eure ied The boat ia a total loss. The cargo will
uew underelothing, many articles being of have hailed on the Arkansas woul ae Ro. | probably be saved, but in a damaged condition.
: . ; } he endi â it: ry o- ae) Ă©
costly material and quite unique. be | aihilated the spendid hospital boat Red Ro-}}
â _ââ â
â a <â- faâ â_
Tracapit Tracurrsâ Li Institute
: Lily meet of t! Metitutie wai
| Tracadie $ iotse, on Saturday,
duty last, when the following Officers w
a rth se nee yoy rans ph A re ona re 3 Gea bee v\ Th ha i r ye eh} sh ' a i : âamount of amingnition found wus consider- jver with ber cargy ol ââ. se WASHINGTON, July 25.â-Great reptgs 2
âwunds,â then he says ot the il â words" :â| MeAulay, > d Treasurer. Comniiiiee adie, and proved of very superior qualiby and | Oneida hits her with 4 er ⏠; ve as tee en thon af drafting continues to ee parr,
â This language aayors of the Rev. Mr. MeDonal ames MeAu » Mc us id, John MeSwain,/ manutacture. The Âą Xact amount captar sd ! the | onderous micele prodaces ye ey â aed in ofSainl circles b EB ne aaniners |
himeeli;" and finally he cals these â words "| tyr : ai ecacieth sign oo er 'we have not yet ascertained, but from the} W inopa and W issalickon engage her, 24%) Presidentâs call for 300,00) at thdudbout the|
* Priest Medouald a dk nunciation.â ih POL ENO Cecera, ANG Arran } Sie Passss their fire unharmed Can nothing | is already being responâ : - â
The article in the * MoniterÂź headed Eceie- |
StasvicalL Desporiss, â savers very much of |
te" Hon Edward Palmer â Shonld 1}
be wrong in my âsurmise,â T trust that the Hon-
eranie * gentleman wiil disclaim the charge in the |
colamnne of theâ â Moniter,â which I understan
is, er at least sometime was, very much under
bux control.
The assertion that T have been going about th
eouatry preparing the peopie for the cleetion,-is
4jute as UniTde as tie weg Inemuation that thi
tee papers to have been
' nperer tor the purchase o
books for the Rustico lashiute was in re ality mtend-
ed to aseist in repairing St. Dunstan's College.
Should the gentiesneu who eenduct the â Moni-
torâ b> decidesâ te coutinue their
Civistian career of untrathful insi:
abuse aed cabid searcility, | would recommend te |
heir serous conatderatiou the text of Scripture
44.98 Civeu, ad Wea as the following from Lccie
Si eS oom
âA lie is 9 foul blot ina man; and yet it will
be continually in ihe mouth ef men witheut dis-
Âąisline. A thief is better thas a man that is al-
ways lying; but beth of them shall ivherit des
truction. The manners of lving men are without
hover; and their confusien ms with them withuu
ceasing Sx. c. 26, 27 & WY
Yours very truly,
A. McDGNALD.
St. Dungianâs College, Aug. #th, Isux.
- coo
To Tus Eorror or Tee Exavrsce.
Sin, â I beg te inform the public, threuch the
m@iium of the â Examiner, that the mz.a with ihe
*âvoclean handsâ has been âdown souiirâ here
rough this district @ few weeks ago, no doubi
lusell,
ineney Said by tone of
given by the French E
onorable am
untions, low ;
oB some mission of impertauce to the interests ot |
«Ur present Gevermuent. Hut âithough nothing
@3 yet bas transpired suflicient to ealiehten the
Uniutiated regarding the ture of his mission, i!
Je the opinion of @ good mapy that the individua!
with the âuncleas handsâ was only endeavoring
te work his way to a seat in the next House o
Assembly, through the suffrages of the good peo-) and began the ascent of the hill uuder a ter-| toward White House, wits terrific grandeur,
ie ot Belfast. Thix opinion is, to sowe extent.
borne out by the following factsâtbat during ;
conversation with a gentlewan, residing net many
mules from the Woed Tefauds, whom he tock foi
eueef the ârighteort,â he ef the â unclean hands
appeared to be extremely anxious to kuow the
number of Orangemen in that part of the district
and also the strength and induence of the Lodges
On being asked if a general Election would take
place this summer, he replied that no derisive au
ewer couid be given wot after the beth of July,
When the Orange Lodges threnchout the « ountry
would be able te aseertain Ujeir strength
nt t hi or to the Georernment saceo
Phat then, if the Gevernment could come out
Wilh geod prospects ef success, there would be a
General Kiceton in Septenber,
Phe avove facts were commatilâŹated to me by
a peru whose Cerecity mey be relied upon. It
dn, shen five, quite Dkiiy
vy will he
etnced upon wilh a G
that the eount
ert | âpte
Prusting that this hint will have the effect o
puiting the friends of liberty on their cuare
sgainst the wicked machinations of a wily anc
#errupt igction,
{ remain, yours most truly,
A BELFASTER.
Buliazi, Aucust Sth, 1@c2.
âeerenenn> @ Ep <<
THE MAN WiTHil THE « UNCLAEN movuent in seores,
HANDS.â
MR. Wrretax â Dean Si, â People ar
enxfous te know whether the man with â nneleas
seit. Perhaps you will be kind enough to give
the public some miormation ou the subject.
@us rumours are afleat regarding th
Beme say that when he lately ma
individual
» hits appear
Snee in the Council Chamber His Execllency and
advisers could net help regarding him with jook
which were anything but cneouragiag to him, an
that ia a short time the indeseribably disagreeabh
efuvia which emanated from his digital extren:i
several other matte
. nye Lodges will encourage| drew their pieces and took up a fresh posi-|
Deul Mekiovermment to do en.
handsâ has yet made any attempt te purify biin-
fri
Vari-
i >? > ~ alle fleas of } e - Ty hroug! he â4 a
"i ae i lie alee: Tia immense piles « ft oxes seattered thro ig thie promises to secure |
â i si : eed a a : . es ie - * nohtar at
iute, Mr. dames MeDounld, Teseherof the District, | camnps, We conjeeture that the enemy bad | burst the rebel munster ? A dubious shake) country with an ulacrily thes teay was recently |
d ih! | expccting to of the bead is the only response, as ball ater) the whole number in less time Le "|
livered att ily a@bhie and bighlv instrnetive lecture lard in quite an unusual sapply,
wer Sir. MrDeonald dwe it & #04 | use it, doubtless, upon our devoted men, and | ball drops from her side into the water. | anticipated. a ae » eeveral |
. we : ech preg Por Eaicws a a ;, | 80 they would did our troops stand, as they Steadily but surely she keeps on the way,| Barrimore, July ed raed a ouch the }
ste wi rapt ate nes te seis vd. | do, at ** lovg taw,ââ and not come to ** close | firing one broadside ut the transports, and thousand men paced rg he de © end gape â so
son the Colony \fier the Lee-|quarters.â? The cannon and arms capture! | the other at some vesse] on the otuer side. | health of the arm} aan ees enh ah
1 peo ed debate took place | ig this battle were numerous and of very su-| She has vearly run the gauntlet. | Jaimes ee om â Sain, my ne weeky diy |
tmeeting will take pince oa Friday t â Ove more boat only to dispute her progress, | of troops. ap hepsi spe ot tes & âa
TL } ky anship. Ti > twent r-Six nieces ° â â7 ar}
when Re Stame Wide wih: aetivet | E eS ; aot aacill i ; | ie . a l for the enemy to open new batteries ou the ether |
i were 1@ mos youutiua ye ave eve een,
and that the Cineianats, which far below the!
wean * reseut an t : ne river. Rebels are visible at all Lintes |
i rpou bhe prevent 3 Peet couction Âą } â â . . er. â , | side ot the river. Rebels a th. P ~
e earth James McAULex, Secretary, | While imuiense piles of guns could be seen on | rest of the fleet is doiny picket duty pear -_ oa the opposite side, but are never interfered with |
August 9, 1562 every hand, many searcely having the waau-| point. All eyes are upon her, and a repett-| ss they appear in large numbers, when our gua-|
The enemy | tion of her Port Pillow experience seems in- |
ad quite willing to throw them away on evitable. On comes the Arkansas,seem'ngly |
brest pretext, dozens being found with | like Anteus of oja, picking op new strength
ouds siiil undischarged. The number of | at every step. She is sure of her prey and |
Stuall arms captured, we understand, was not jis making straight for it, Tie Cinemnati |
every calibre! bad not st-am suilicient to tackle on her or
- facturer s finish even tarnished.
are beiug seat in but none are granted except to
those who are worthless.
New York, July 23.âCol. Charles, of the
Tammany regiment, has been released by the |
| rebels, atid is here. He saw the iron clad ram and |
even hardly enough to hold her head up| also a small iron gunboat at Richmond, and gives |
shell them out. Many resignations of officers |
The Civil War in the States, | tic
Oe ee een nn ee eee
CONFEDERATE ACCOUNT. @F TUE (5° t! Gitcer
LAT ; > . = S lees nan i wae â
. â ge S BATES _ fand make. The Federal wounded were col-
_ From the Bichwond papers we select the! jected tozether, and tormed a very large field
following incide ata of the late
thousand o
Sie slipxed her cable however, and | a description of the former. He says the revel
headed for the Mussissippi shore, drifting | Governme nt tre at out wounded the same as the -
lown. Rebel officers admitted that their own anc
our wounded were dying so fast that they could)
siream.
engagements +) hospital. The eourt yard of a farm house |
It now beir g3p.m., and the head of our! was selected, and scores cou'd be seen re-| down stream all âithe time, her own motive
column m view of the Pederal gamwps, Geoe- elining on the grass, and expert surgeons, power being insufficient tu stem the current. fore Pubeip-sedh
ral Prvor wes sent forward with his brigade operating with much skill aud zeal. By| The Arkansas discovering her intenth n\* â °
to drive away the heavy mass of skirmishers | mutual agreement, surgeons are not con-)| beads for ber, when the gUBoOas Op nod aI
post âd to our rear to. annoy the advance | sidcred prisoners ef war ; hence at the close brisk and galling fire on the advancing i ae. Jane. Aneuhiheds tn ndelins
Phis being accomy lished wita great success | of the late battles many Federal soldiers re- | at short range. the rifled t â_ apparently Payor pe eck Gos, & @ emmmeed 1808
and with little loss to as, Pryor reterned and | mained behind, and their services seemed very | ierving her, the other shot dropping baru \it was intended to entice the Federal gunboats
a*sited orders. Meanwhile te Federals.) much appreciated by the men. As many as) lessly off. Lhe ram fires heavily as she RO) Stim James River, all of them being at present |
âfrom their camps ands» veral positions oa the | could be were conveyed to town and attended | vances, and is rapidly gaining on her OPP | above Harrisonâs Landing, in order to let the new |
âhigh grounds swept the whole face of the) to, good conveyances being furnished, and | nent, when just as all were expecting & COMI-) Confederate irou clad vessels out. The British |
} cuuntry with their namerous artiliory, which; much care manifested for their weliare. sion, the Arkansas suddenly checks ap heads | screw propellor -* Memphis,â eight hundred tens, |
'would have annihilated our entire force i! | _
not serecned in the dips of the fund and in| _A correspondent of a Northern paper
guilies to our left Advancing cautiously ee oes
bat rapidly in the skirts of woods and im ti: At Savage's Station 10,000 stand of bran
dips to the left, Wilcox and Pryor deployed | new arms were harned up; and piles ol
their men iuto bine of ba tle â Featherstone | biscuit m buxes, the size of a tolerable house, |
being in the rearâand, suddenly appearing | We e set fire to. Ă© An engimeerâs method was
jon tne plateau facing the timber covercd, adupted to get rid of p wider and ammunition
' yaitl, rushed down into the wide gulley,cross-| A train of cars was fifled with it, and then
ved it, clambered over all the feiled timber. | the train was fired, and the locomotive start-
il stormed the timber breastworks beyond it.,ed. 16 is said that it rashed along the road
LATEST BY TELEGRAPH.
the other way, fircs a parung broadside, and | has been captured while attempting to run the}
rapidly leaves the Cincinnati behind her. | Charleston bluckude. She had fifteen hundred |
The gunboat had drawn her into too shallow | bales of Sea Island cotten on beard, and had pre- |
jeaught in. The Cincinnati, assisted by! the | Care ef ammunition for the Confederate army. |
non: snt ar Incessi i t he d
Winona, kept oe Senne ate wnti} ap The Federal gunbeat â* Adirondack â
rounded the point, aud was in the arms of
her friends
âThe Fe-
probably never take place again. In broad} are very troublesome to the Unionists. |
rific fire of sharpshooters and an incessany| disebarzing siecils, bombs, and all kinds oi) daylight, im the very teeta of a hundred | deral fleet ia the Mississippi will be abliged to
' discharge of grape and canister from picers | missiles of destruction along 108 fiery track. | guns, this eraft slowly and deliberately made, drop dow u ray bs trea, ay achaburg, owing ~
posted on the brow of the luligaad from bat-| | will not go ipte details, yet L was amused | her way, selecting her own victime and hurl) rie ear ge pees wallet AA scam âead id we
teries in their cumps to ther iit on the pigh | at one of tour corresp mdenisâ eatin tting theling the glove of defiance at the combined | ?Oâą 6) â : â
. ; . her ae . eas) 38 F pig gees enen | Waking a movement on Chatanooga and Nash-
| dat lands. Such a position was never stormed âon ee Miho Hoase, at $9,000. | Geet. it i9.n6 example of Cool daring courage ville. Prices of FlourâSuper. $4.50 to $5.00.
elore. In descending into the deep creek | Two locomotives, at least, and a long train
onexatm pled and the name of * Catesby | Extra $9.20 to B.30 per bbl.
the infantry and artilery fire tit assailed | of cars, were destroyed at the railway ter- | Jones â* ber commander, wiil be awarded by | :
. the three brigades was the most terrible on | minus, and a large pile of lumber for building ail men as deserving a place among the list)
-reeord. Twenty-six pieces.were thundering | 4 bridge over the Pawunkey, at the least ooe of those ** who know no fear.ââ
at them, and a perleet hailstorm of lead fel: schooner load, and that too just landed tne |
thiek an] fast around them. One of „ ii-|¹sy before. The five that commenced at that}
-| coxâs reciments wavered ; down the General | pornt blazed fierceiy (or hours along the tine |
rushed furiously, sword in band, and threa:-| Of the Pamankey shore, at White House
Larer.âA formidable ram has been completed
lat Savannah. Confederates in taking soundings
ior bringing her duwn, came within range of Fort
|
|
|
Pulaski. Commedore Dupont making prepara-
tiuns to receive her. Geieral Wailace joined
General Curtis at Helena. Taree thonsand Con-
SOUTHERN WAR NEWS.
A copy of the Mobile advertiser of the 11th has
â , 2 i - â a eh tit rete anes eq yo ees eal
the position Ain 1 ee bubthrough tim-/ Suis siraiegic retreat. ; no more suri nde ra of $ peers Semen Sseer) UAT ier pine months, um hd MELEE
Desert over felled trea, Foatherstoeatan | one ik aes } rere BAS tinct hed â outhera | to be raise d immediately by draft. Pope's corps
1 ° : Weimeyerie Pawn Cin Oo TOD Pp lbatred of Yankee rule. We mean to fight forour eccupicd Orange Court-house. Reeonnoisaace
Quickly the Federals with-| GRAFT cic ATT OUNT.OF THE BOLDi. ; sill dad tt ds ; s God and nature } i: â â ; are
. ND SUCCESSFCL DASH OF âTHE | {{PeBeenes A suc eans as God sad pature}pmade from MeClellanâs army within fourteen
A. ' ,BUce HDD: U JASIL OF TUE j uave put iute oar hands, as if intervention was| miles of Petersburg, Va. Regiment of cavalry
CONFEDERATE. RAM ARKANSAS. out of the question of hope. t
!) perfect line of battle from the woods and up- Correspondence of the Chicago Tribune.
driven in, all their tente, equipage, &e., burat.
i ' oe ; âoustitutionalist says our Govern- | Health of MeClellanâs army mproviag.
â+ on the plateau. Ufficers had no, horsusâail | U.s s
"| were on foot; brigadicrs marched on foot. | pcliay
ds several hundred Yankee |
i sword in hand Pe rezim ânte were comman led jcc ed . us sources te nd to confirm the belief that the
ibe captarns, and comyanies by sergeants: | sted by the misereant | pay : / : : :
âyet saluaad they Met ro with J Hg and ev-| ke a pali for the last two weeks over our) 3,7) cau ~ to @s| 7. op eeealyge a â â sare
lors fying, and backward and stil backward | leet was most effectually broken yesterday | mand reiribation inariyved eed yor en ut ii "this Ao abe pb anes oi
i fell the Fede rals, their men tussbling every | âą wning, anda rather uapleasiat beeak iC) Mumford. His death cries to heaven for vea-| ae wr Ca on Pas OY.
But whata sight met the | *#4- But to facts: About 3.5) a.m. the! eean is Let twenty or thirty ; priconers | ,,
eyes of these three gallant brigades ? In) sembvats Caroadelet and Tyier and the Ram ie i re rauk as Bee porte ge din eo apie
» front stood Pyderal camps, siret suing to bbe Queen of the West got under way, steamed | Sariuent, â â9 oe a ae i my
North-east foe miles; drawaâup im fine of MP the river a short distaice, turned and | &P, ef antl by the chances of 8 ge thee dire otc
battle were more than three foil divisrons, | headed up the Yuxuo. si a ala - i â | quota, General Robestsonâs cavalry force is be-
commanded ty Sethi, _Porteb-lletienck. for several days that the Arkansas was pre- Sr. Low is, Ju y 3.â yeneral f chofield has ie heved io have been withdrawn from the Shenan-
: paring to come out, bat a large majority | sus da general order for the iminediate organiz-| dosh Valiey.. A reconuoisance from Pope's corps
ovted it down and seoffed at the bare iden, | *tion of all able bodied men in Missouri, for the encountered and defeated them (Robertson's
ae A oEe Th a lt seems, however, that chose in authority | âXSCTeBation of Gueriht ae [@pers) on Saturday, taking the Orange Cour:
er heavy u . : rate pre . . Every man inust bring to the nearest military) House, killing eleven, capturing filty-twe, and
on our left through the woods to tank us piccod ated ss â in the report, and con- | post what arms he can procure. Those having) destreying communication between them and
Yet onward came Wileux to the right,Pryor | SG" ety the two gunboats aud ram were | none will be supplied by the erduanee depart-| Gordonsville.
t â seni to luok up matters. Upon entering the| ment. All arms and amununition net ia the bands
: â been reevived. Tr makes a flattering allusion tea iederate prisoners arrived at Fortress Monroe for
' ened to behead the first man who hesitated. Landing, and iis fury was fed with costly portion of the populations of Louisiana. Ft says} exchan Burnsideâs corps embarked and mov-
: Pey or steadily advanced, but slow ly, And by material. Lshould sity hat §2.000 000 would bie lues of New Orleans has aroused the Southc ti fing. Gunboats and mortar beats under orders.
the time that the three brigades had stormed | Rt Cover the loss of material destroyed inj cities. The word has gone forth that there will] President coils for three hundred thousand more
i ved:
-| far in advance.
i tion to assail the three brigades advaneing io
| The Augusta {
Gunpoat Froritna,
Wednesday, July 10, 1862. officers, some of h
tion. Now is th:
The monotony and ennui which has hung
> how is the
fur the blood of the
putation urging the acceptance of negro regi-
tents, President Lineola said be could not accept
them unlers offered as labourers.
Sprague, of Rhode Island, calls upon the evigred
| Cigens te form a regitnent as part of the State's
z â Vey â
> ' Âą âfied OomT ans.
Ruarers had been rife |e ONT had
&e.; banoers darkened the air; artiliery vo
mited forth incessant yolleys gf grape, ean-
t
S8us Were moving
to the left, and Featherstone in the eenire
i
j
j a a ZS â
-jone grand, matehless lime of battie, almost | f„er toe Queen shot up auead of the rest, | of loyal militia will be seized.
ties soon filled the room with a vapor so noxieus| consumed by exploits of the day â vet on- f°? Carondelet following, while the Tyler) Capt. John Culb ee ee ee a eet G | (s Y i
that his presence was dispensed with. Others! ward they advanee. to the heart of the Fede- brougnt up tue rear. : | sylvania toserves, one of the w ounded prisoners | & iÂą VAMC,
say that several of the Councillors fear that a! ral position, and, when th: Pirey had proceeded about five miles only | from Richmond, says that while he was in Ricb-
pertion of the uncleanness of this man will be
transferred to themselves, and that they are ft
. - 2 ae + â
quevily seen examining their digits. It is «:
that the man with â unclean handsâ has gene ot
! . t
the Ieland. either to look for a patent soap Ol Ppe-
I
euliar porperties to chance hiniself, or to aveik
for a time the jnet wdiguation of a!
Charlottetown, Protestant and Catholie.
believe, generally understood that avy fet
is seen speaking, either in publie or priv a
man with âunciean bands,â
having lost her character. J hope this cou
will nut drive the wretched mai t
cali him to turn his pistols aguinst binuself.
Hoping that you will give turther intormatio:
regarding the âuncleanâ man,
Iam faithfully yours,
ENQUIRER.
â
the ladies o
fs Âą
, OLS
1 to despair, anc
(For the Examiner. )
GONGS FOR THE CoLon?...... bY W. H. ADAMS.
TIE EGGS.
OF IMITATION OF âTHE BELLS
Xo. I.
Tent the cackling about eggs,
â
Golden eges
What a world of clamoring for putting them in kegs
How the geese do serenm aud eackle,
Tn a fierce and warlike tone
"Gainst t
Aud restrain them with their tackle,
veir lords who would them shackle,
Frow providing for their own,
And continuing their race,
To the very latest days,
is, ]| brigaces of Jucks nâs army bave flanked the S0TUY after a long, low, mud evivred eralt,
e who
wil be regarded av
senemy bud fairly }
suceveced in almost flanking us on the lett. .
ereat commotion is heard ty the woodsâvol-! the ap pearance of the Queen coming fall
leys upon volleys are heard in rapid eees- | Speed down tic river, with evidently every
sion, which are recognized and cheered by pound of steam she could make at work on
âTt is Jackson,ââ they abu It, âon her shaft. She flew by the Carondelet with
vos
jour men. 7 ; : eiet
(their right and rear!â Yes, two or three| Se words, © The Arkansas is coming,
when those on tie gunbuais were startled by | ond,
new Le
fight of Friday with {500 men, and that
his loss out of that number was 860 killed and |
wounded, and 16 missing |
The official list of the killed, wounded and miss- |
ral MeCat!âs division in the battles be-|
le Po | } » * : eli vearae ., silt -
| fore Richmond, shows the following result:â
8uce
ing in Ge
ama
enemy and are getting inthe rear. Now the | WitÂź @ short, thick, biack smoke ssack in her| Killed, - - - -. 95 240
fighting was bitter aud terrific. Worked up middle puffiag out large voluuies of biack| Wounded, - - ° - 70 1iv4
poem 52 1 oP ae wil CTrac. , A â = Ă© j ERS re Koo
to madness, Wileox. Featherstone and Pryor | â@208e. Came swiltly wuround the point and Missing, - . â Bip Âą 1528
. Âą sade f the Caronde | eared âome
"t dash forward at a run, and drive the enemy | 46? for the ⏠drondelet. , | Total â â « 343 2942
i -.| Tue river was too narrow to tarn back, | ha wins
with irresistible fury: te our left emerge a ae Bye
Hioodâs Texan Brigade, Wintingâs comes af-| C„e" if Capt. Walker had so wished 5 but the!
ter, and Pender follows. The fine is now | c2ptain is one who knows no such word as
| cui plete, and âforwardâ? rings from one end âback cut,ââ and swinging a8 mind Be ae we
lof the line to the ta avoid raking sliote, the Curondelet belehed
Tue latest reports at Richmond from Fredericks-
: burg indicate a Union stampede thence. A num-
and other means of transportation were being ueed | violent splutterâwe fancy we see him kuawing his
other, and the Yankees. in removing Vast amouuls of stores from that
over thirty t! ' :
| Wheeling their artillery from the front, the | Y8eetg erait. Imagine the consternation) The Despatch believes there are fears in the | out like one possessed. He hardly knows who
i 3 4 C ery » vs â ? * . dn aa i Mi . âseâ . | : ÂŁ * >
| Federals turn part of it to break our left.and produced when the balls were seen to sirtke | 1 ederal capital of a change of policy in the future | to abuse most savagely for the advice referred toâ
save their retreat. The very earih shakes and fall harmlessly in _ water. â ine rhe he rsd ba at Âą vinweelllleretention f| sometimes Edward Whelan is honoured in this
â ar! N PRO i | again,â was the ery, and another broa : oe eee: MiG 2 Yee Qire~ nes :
| nd se: a yi _ âtee pare St Sore ban gee was , ored int ry ' i ae t Bitty ; âry the war against McClellan, the invaison of Mary-| Way, but most frequently the Reetor of St. Dun-
led vet! ed yet âthas been done with bullet and pia. âa fapegens AF : âJ Mbp | land or marching against Washington direct. â A | stanâs College. That gentleman, we are informed.
bayonet ,and onward press our troone throug) TPge, but with no more effect than if so/| : ti P an 3]
| ; I ee tyre | 7 peas had t hiechar vigorous prosecution of our present successes,â | writes part of our editurialsaâat least, we are po-
camp epon camp, capturing guos, stores, | M4aUy per sad been dise larged. j it says, âwe know to be the design of our]... |. : a me
larms, clothing. &e. Yet, like bluodbounds True Arkansas now ran inte the Caronde- | authorities, and the ignorance that exists in the tively assured that he wrote a portion of the
This
lon the trail, the six brigades sweep every-| '@Âą5 starboard quarter with a tearfal erash, | public mind as to where the campaign will pot | article which contains the obnoxious advice.
best: We hope the Reetor will take a
A large quantity of cloathing has been sent to |
| thing beâore them, presenting an unbroken, | POUTIOg In broadside after broadside into the | we consider our best indication ef success.â
i | â . A } :
!/ solid front, and closing in upon the enemy, guubuat, which, passing through the wooceu | hoeer | hint from it, and give us a â liftâ now and then, by
keep up an incessant succession ef volleys| Cesements, raked the vessel from stem to | Braggâs army Pete (Goch ve uteraeeate
upon their confused masses, and unerringly |StÂąâą!. The Arkansas showed no intention ot | | General Beauregard has gone to Columbus, | Writing an article in full for our editorial columns,
di i âus as 3, i wey iia. } ore ho rd abs , âae Lis ce ae are te i ies a » . "
slaughtering them by tundreds and thou- leaving her vietun, bat remaining along ber | og to juin lis wife and recuperate his | as Mr. Edward Palmer and Mr. Donald Currie
lsands. But * where is Jackson ?ââ ask all. | pe ere quarter raked her tore and att with | /°O"âą | occasionally do for the â Monitor.â But we don't
| He has travelled fast, and is headfAg the re divisio a a fe i hoses âwi ae paepee M(t) Some young men in bathing in the lake, near| Want the Reetor, or any one else, to pateh any
| treating foe, and as night closes in, all is an-| - â âee ee PORE viteries: â% Up BO ID- | Chieago, the ether day, had rare sport riding a/ aritcle of ours by pieces of his own. When we
| xiety for mtelligence trom him. jcessant fire; but the huge solid shot flew off | drove of horses brought down to water. The|
ny : » Tedia-rubbe i There wz : / commence an editoriul w ways take care
| âTis now about seven p. m., and just as the! bike Indva-rubber balls. There was no tan- | sport grew rarer, when one of the youths found : : o Mareee tone 'ente ty
| is news to us,
Thut they ne'er may want snecessors, unfettered in| rout of the enemy is completeâjust as the gible spot to be seen ; and avery small round | himseif naked ov a runaway animal, who took him | 48h it without assistance. If it be any relief to
} ? * .
Wings and fleys,
To lay exys, eggs, eas, eggs,
Tae source of their posterity and fortunes,
@ellien eggs!
2.
lear that old goose, save and gray,
Martial Gray !
What a world of wisdom doth his sombre mien dis
play !
As hi: flock he doth advise
To depute him to apprise
The disposer of the mead,
Where they feed;
What reforms doth Gooseland need,
That bis Grace may send an umpire who will heed three Generals (Reynolds, Sanders and Rank-/ deck, but could fiud no possible way of get-
How the mead
And its oceny ants sueceed ;
Whether on their luscious eggs their birds too freely
feed ;
And declare
Their just share
Of what eggs may bappen there.
But the umpire has appeared,
And all grievances bas heard ;
Yet their lords continue robbing
Geese of exus, egys, exyus,
Eggs, egys, egys;
And the umpire has not settied
To which should belong the eggs,
To the geese or merchant kegs !
New London, August 7th, 1862.
Note.âOne may easily conjecture that the â Old
geose, martial gray,â weans the gallant Colonel of
that uame, and the geese which lay the â yolien
egus,ââ or coins, the Tenantry, whom he and tis col
leayues treat us if they were so many âyees?, if not
Asnes.
Exratem.âtin the verees, published last week,
respecting the Tea Party ou St Dunsian's College
, ut the end of the firsi line of the sixth verse,
tor â eloquenceâ reud ELEGASCE ~âSiA.e.
-~
>_>
ARLOTTETOWN DPeraving CLun.âAt a
meeting of the Ciub on Prday evening last,
Cw
| jast volleys are sounded in the enemy's ear, | #22, Just large enough to admit the gun, | through the #treets of the city, regardivss of Lis| the âMonitorâ to know who really did write the
ithe distant and rapid discharges of cannon | C°M%tituted her ports, and on elevating or de-| want of attire, or of the astonished citizeus who| hole of the
ree âi I , . | diaenens ir liva on a bende in
tell that Jackson has tallen upon the retreat- | Press'ng the porthole moved with the gun. | thought him Lard:Godiva ou a bender.
} ae 2nag | â : : ice.| Congress has adjourned! What a reliet!â
ing column, broken it, and captured 3600) Finding his guns were doing no service, | at ode Megas â sei
Bee... > 6. s , â - er > . 5 we? | Nin tha sation ta. has 3 aah re misehies| Government, â under any pretence "âw Ww
| prisoners. Par in the night bis insatiable) Capt. Walker had his boarders eailcd away, | Now ae » a ig â â4 it done more misehie!| ved: ee tee -iy fie wom,
|troops hang upon the enemy, and for miles| and into the rebel crafs they poured ; but not ae â people and the army can repair !âÂą fa- | thatit was Edward Whelan; and he did so without
} 9 kel . ° . pal | cago wes.
j}upon miles are dead, wounded, prisoners, | 4 nan of a passuge-way could be found. The | ape : Ana , f â
wagons, cannon, &c., scatiered in inextrieable | voarders now returned and the guns set to Pia ee dahidacll, dn thea hero 0 mingical ap-| We hope this will be a suffi-
niusion upon the road. âous for four! work, bat it was co muc sr wasted, | P2ratus attached, on the snit of ten of his New! 77 pete belt â obit
cu pon the 1. âTous for four | we ky ut it was so n uch powder waste de York ballet girls, to whom he owes $320, and who | Cl@8t answer to the nonseuse bout â ecclesiastical
hours did ovr inferior force, unaided by a The Carondeletâs stern was now perfecily |... Ht daw âae : ine,
| x : ; bora J have made affidavit that he is insolveat and unable | despotism.
single piece of artillery, withstand over thirty | riddled, ail the officer's quarters shot away, to pay them | ; :
a ieee seeds fend oe rota : ; | to pay tem, | âThere is another statement in the âMonitorâ at
;) thousand of the enemy, axsisted by twenty-, and everything literally torn to pieces. Act| â ee
| six pieces of artillery. | Which we have been no less surprised than at the
article under consideration â who
son, lay or clerical.
Ă©' ; ; The recent hard fighting is sai ave scared |
In total we captured lenzt! a shot cut away the steam pipe, and Bide" the 5 litical *t bulitic pete) oy toa ciey
< â4 - r . . pe - i. si 1 F oa ae acai Ps j : : WIC 2 al , aTigadie yxEeDCTAIS ee i a iil
| many ye gs thirty piece 8 of artillery the scalding vapor spread to every part of and other officers. and they are resigning their | Bleee of information above adverted to.
jup to o p.m. riday, and in the battle oi the boat. Many of the men Jumped over- commissions as fast as possible. They want no| follows :â
| Gaines Mills captured twenty-six field p:eces, | board. At this juncture of affairs, Capt. | more dangerously earned glory.
| 15.000 stand of arms, six stand of colors,| Walker ied a boardmg party ou t.e rebeiâs|
It is as
â Tt has been for some time in the minds of many
Poe TING.âReer ing i oe } 7 22. - °
ReCRUTING.âReeruting in Boston is progress-| of the adherents of the present Government a
in) en over 400) sdlanhinie; Saeteediied Biakns ting bulow. Ww W though more naines could be taken each
of officers of every grade, froim coluneis to) ture or hole was nowhere to be found. Phis | The mint is coining two hundred thousand! any amount of support at the next General Elee
lieutenants of the line. MeCallâs, Porter's discovery, the party returned to give up their | nickle cente-s' dav and will probably continue tis | tioa.ââ â
ard Sedgwickâs âcrack ââ divisions meited | boac only when the bottom of the river called | as long as the demand ew! sant ytd id pel wet CYP
away beivre our advance, however, and had} for her. The flag whieh still floated trom Lerrer FROM THURLOW Wrev.âThurlow | We can well understand the â perplexityâ of
the fight lastea one-half nour jonger, not one | her stera was never to be struck to the rebels! Weed has wriiten an interesting letter in reply to! the Government. It is that which causes the de-
| whole regiment would have survived it. Me-| us long as one board fluated to hold it Op. some complimentary resolutions respecting his | lay in holding the election.
Cleilan, prisoners say repeatedly Was present, | What men were left stood by what guns | eervices abroad. He admits that he and Areh-| to, ;
and directed movements, bat when the three could he brought to bear, and worked them bishop Hugues and Bishop Melivaine were invit
brigides to our ieft emerged from the wo ds, | until the Arkansas, thinking she bad about | ed by our government to visit Eurepe, and expreas. |â
| such confusion and havoe ensued that he gave | finished ber victim, pushed along, passed | his regret that some other citizens whe were | iutend to offer the Government any umount of
| ther the Catholics intend to offer the Government
. as i duty assigned to them, as their influence wou!
âDe best | â : ome &: 42 hn the Carondelet throuch t! ee duly assigned to them, as their influence would! : - : :
escaped as best he could. Some say that he, by ne ot delet through the whole fight. | have been of great value. Mr. Weed explains the | PO the Catholics are fools, or contemptible dogs,
was severely wounded, avd many officers) The Tyler discovered her motion, and gnow- » of
(prisoners) believe the report that he wes on! ing her thin frame would stand no chance éxistine in Es : ; fig :
7 P , : peer , rs xistin uulrepe aguiast us, which be attributes | w : â
the field is undoubtedly true, for everything | when brought in contuet with the enemy 8) to the 8) wat ey eee alw ays shea with ef | whe abape thamnt
had been previously arranged for a grand! inva!nerable sides, headed down the strem, forts for the overturow of moaarehs, our alacrity | {2 te serve any seeret or ecclesiastichl purpose.
ficit at Gainesâ Miils, McClellan even pro-| keeping just elear of the Arkansas, and firing | in recognizing ihe independence of such natious | but tomake some of them better and truer Liberals
| mising to capture our whole force should we | her stern battery. This chase was kept aa-| as struggled successfully, the Morrill Tariff, which | than the
j are | til th. var Ww rac} ren | is mach disliked in England and France d to:
j attempt to storm his camps, Resalts were! til the mouth of the river was reached, when | is mach dishi Eng rf unce, aid t02 | out te them the foll ,
| different, and so the fates reward che greatest| the Tyler, her boats shot away and badly | belief in Hugiand that we desired a war against | : frets y of supporting a party who are
lr of hisage. -There was but one *âcharge,ââ| eat up otherwise,came into view of the whole | perk reser? : : e | ready to spit in their faces as soon as their votes
and Unies the coouieht the werd of command} Heck. | nile Bngland, France, Belgium and Germany | are polledâa party who have outraged their feel-
yas given, * Fix ba i th aren ve,» : Vi | seriously feel the loss of cotton, Mr. Weed does | ing th â
was given, ** Fix bayonetaâforward!â Gur} Nota vessel in the whole fleet, from some! not apprehend, immediately, that these povern.| âS* the moat sacred and delicate subjects; and
advance was never stopped despite the awful | strane fatality, bad steam enough to wove. | ments will intervene, though with the two former) W280 have reviled them as an inferior race,
| reception which metit. Our troops received | fee Louisiana shore was lined with od | the subject has been considered. France is even âscarcely fit to be hewers of wood and d
tie command but once, and if Sitaa and ali| transports, ordaxnce boats, &e., while di-| more impatient than England; not. however f waterâ W. ee
his hosts had confronted them, instead of | rectly opposte them, three or tour abreast, irom untriendliness, but because the Emperor as âs bare i We repeat, that a Catholic would be
mortal Yankees, the result would have heen! lay Farragutâs and Davis's fleet. scarcely | sumes, in the absence of employment, to supply incomparably mean and spiritlessâonly deserving
the same. There was no repulse--al! ar-| two of which could fire without pouring their | #is people with food. Bat we have nothing to| of contempt and disrespect â if he did not prove |
We did not offer our advice to
y have been on former oecasionsâto point |
the following gentiemen were elected-otfice bear-
ers in reom of C.C. Vaux and W. Surphy, Esqs., |
have resigned:âA. H. Yates, Esy., VPresi-
dent; J.C, Catbeck, Esq,, Vice President.
âMembers of committee in room of ye geu-
ranzements worked like a charm. Money, broadsides into some of their ows vessels. Aj} !*at from Europe, if we are successful in the! pj se e i i ; ;
was fuand quite abundintly among the aise | 6yee were strained to seo the cause of the | Prosecution ofthe war. Fort Donelson, Nashville, ie ps BE a on ens 4 calum-
Some men, in imterring the dedd, often Tylerâscommotion. The ram fleet whieh lay | a 7am Osienne Sad Mensphin are our) oO et a ery eee near,
searched the pockets, &e , one man fieding| near the mouth of the Yazo are sontvering | "sve tvnonte that det against intervention with | But we now believe there was no necessity for our
pot less than 3150 in gold; anotier fistied in every direetion. A moment more and the tary imma all questioas by mili- | admonition. Catholics, not as a religious, but as
ont i some oid clothes not less than $500 ;| long dreaded ** Arkansas ââ steams into fall t 4 political body, will be more united at the bust-
i vinced, than the overthrow of the Government;
Tiie vessel and carge have arrived at New York. | and trembling.
recently | true; and shews how well qualified Mr. Laird is
| chased the British steamship Herald, whieh had) | be an âevangelical witnessâ fo any fect. In
i r {ran the Charieston blockade, into Nassau, N. P., | a e yang oe ee aif
Phis unparalleled audacity and boldness | 644, ing considerable excitement at that place.â | his own language we askââ What credence can
It is re-|
ame
Str. JowN, August 5th âInformation from va- |
derates have evacuated Richmend, and ta-!
In answer to a!
(rovernor |
really did advise the Catholies not to vote for the |
| any recommendation or suggestion from any per-
> . } : | anesiion, levoil rs rplexity.s ering
The swaliest kind of an aper-| day, if offered. | Question, not devoid of some perplexity,as to whe-
But we are ainazed | Pope would be disposed to ceusure them ; or, that
o think that any intelligent persons should have | the Proprietors themselves would have resisted
raised the âquestionâ âwhether the Catholics | near ly all the important measures passed by the
; ietin podewh ene eee | Liberals, including the very Bill which, the
orders to retreat, slipped off his corse, and! her and stood for the Tyler, which had stuod |" ited to go Gut unofficially did not accept the | support,â &e. Why should they? Do they sup-|
jcaitse and orgin of the prejudice and antipathy | te suffer the vilest abuse, and then support those decided hostility has always existed between the
by attempting to shew that there was some con-
thelr elese union has ne other object, we ate con-
and Mr. Seeretary Pope, together with the aad
high official patrons of Orangeism, are sr ~
the eredit of having brought about this devoutly
wished-f ummation,
a â Protestant,â we have only space
reply at present, The article in
Saturday's No. is evidence of great fear - eed
safety of the Government of which the edi âa i
father is a memberâfrom whom the son bas 4 ;
tolerably good patronage a3 a Reporter, and as â .
part compiler of a worthless little book about
Land Commission. We know it won't be plea-
sant for him to witness their destruction; but he
should rather subinit to the hard fate than com-
his character for piety, by inserting inthe
religious part of his paper statements in support
of which he cannot bring a particle of proof. He
says, alluding to our advice to the Catholics to
promise
eet
atacand ath a EPA Soot J
ee ba ee ah ee an Ds a A
âUl wo pew â platform ââthe eve upon whick
they stood for nearly eight years is quite as good
as new; and every plank in it ia tasuiliar te the
eyes of the country, We all knowâthe Tories
know quite as Well as we do, and every week
they partially admit the fuct in ali their papersâ
that the Liberals are on the eve of coming inte
power, the porsession of whieh by them ix, indeed,
the only remedy the country bea of saving itself
from positive destrietion,âwhat right, then, hate
the CONDEMNED GOVERNMEN? Co ask what shall
be the poiicy of their successors! Jt onght to be
enough for them to know that they are nearly en
gulphed in aa overwzhelaing torrent of publie epra-
ions and they should have the deceney to yetive
before that farrent grows stronger, if teyâard
sensible to shane, from vlaces whieb they hete set
been able te fill with honour to themselves, or
service to the country. If they have done eves one
good deed in their time, let it be made known. We
shall help to publish it to the world; and if it be
vote against the Government :ââ* Here is popieh
combination threatened ; and knowing that where
Roman Catholics obtain the ascendancy a wither-|
ing influence pervades the community, we warned
Peotestants of their danger.â
Seericty Pepe gave the â warning,â pet Mr.
David Laira 20e8 not deny it. As toraâ corbi-
âatholies for any ether than a
athing of the kind exists.
~ed this point. And
Catholies seek
nationâ amongst
purely political cbject, :
We have already fully expla:
as regards the assertion that the .
for âascendancy,â or, having obtaineâ it, they
cast âa withering influeneeâą over âtho couna-
nity,â it is well known to be one of those stupi!
lies in which fanaties and unprincipled politicians
love to indulge.
Again, he says: â The recent instructions of the
Romish organ to the people of that communion
show that for a certain purpose, or purposes, it Is
resulved among the âiathers of the Churchâ that
no effurt sball be left uutried to overthrow the
present party in power.â
The â certain purposeâ we have already clearly
stated. It is âto overthrow the present party in
power ;â but whether the â fathers of the Churchâ
have come to any resolve on the subject, we nei-
| ther know, nor care toknow. What we doknow,
however, isâthat they did not dictate nor autho-
rise the âinstructionsâ which appear to have filled
: â » ondie ran the whade } âhurlestu t a} .
|water, which she had no intention of being viously ran the bieckade into Charlestun with oT editor of the âProtestantâ with so much fear
The assertion is, therefore, un-
H
elicits the unqualified admirati n ot all Such) About two thousand guerillas are in North East- | [now ] be given to any of bis statements igs
a thing never teck place before, and will) ern Missouri, and their operations in that quarter | :
| Mr. Laird lectures us upon having vivlated, as
| he says, a promise made by us in January, 1869,
| to the effect, that our paper should not meddle in
any sectarian disputes or differences. While we
| repudiate the pretensions of the editor of the
| â Protestantâ to set himself up as our censor, in a
| matter which relates to our own proper busmess,
| we are nevertheless willing to join issue with bim
on this point. We contend that we have not
| meddled in âsectarian disputes or differences.â
| We have never yet written one line that can be
| considered a violation of our pledge. Our advice
| to the Catholies is cited as proof that we have
âdone so. Only a very stupid person would regard
âit in that light; and only a very stupid or very
post tes
| of our meddling in âsectarian differences.â We
| admonished the Catholics to unite for a political
| abject, because we do net think they can do other-
wise withouta serious compromise of their honour
âand independence.
}alleged as an intermeddiing with âsectarian dif-
ferences,â by which we understand, disputes or
controversies en poiuts of doctrine.
The â Protestantâ states, also, that we allowed
ithe Rev. Mr. McDonaid to violate our pledge, by
| the publication of certain letters in the EXAMINER.
The letters referred to
| Wa dany the charge.
| were addressed to the * Protestant,â but they were
| kept froin the public so unreasonably long, after)
| they weve sent to the editer, that the writer had
| no alternative but sending them to our paper.
They did not, however, meddle with â sectarian
| diieroncesâ in the slightest degree. They were
| Written to refute an infamously libeliens charge
| made, we believe, hy the âProtestantâ itself, to the
| effect, that Catholics everywhere were sunk in
ignorance and immerality. Mr. McDonald proved
the very reverse of this on the testimony of disin- |
| terested Protestant writers; but he never sought
| to controvert any doctrine or principle of Protes-
tant faith. Had he done so, we should bave felt
Tur Editors of the â Monitorâ and âProtestantâ! it our duty te reject the coutroversial part of bis
i ââseem to be a good deal exercised,â to use a} writings. However, the best proof we ean ad-
MHicers. Privates.! phrase of the latter, about our honest and can-| duce in support of the correctness of the course | religious institution. But the mest amusing fact
| did advice to the Catholies net to vote for the | we have pursued, is the greatly increased confi-/ is, that the Government seem te make a regular
|Government at the next election, on account of! dence and patronage with which we have been | business of spreading Orange Lodges; and returns
| the many and unprovoked insults heaped upon them | fayoured by all classes, and we believe all deno-| of the number of members are received at the
iby paid officials, and evidently approved of by minations in the community. We are not aware | Secretaryâs Office with something like the system
the Government. The ease of the â Monitorâ man j that we have lost even one Protestant subscriber | Which is observed at the Adjutant Generalâs Office
ber of vessels had ascended the Rappaliannock, | Âź ludicrous oneâhe has worked himeelf into a) by the publication ef Mr. McDonald's letters, | in regard to Volunteers. This is certainly a new
while we have added to our list several hundred
| THe EXAMINER in January, 1860; and in eon-
| clusion, We must say to Mr. Laird, that we hepe
| the day is far distant when our paper will be con-
| ducted in such a manner as to meet his views and
| please his taste.
ae es
| âTuar the real editor of the â Islanderâ is again
| on his travels, mayhap searching for a wreck in
| the Gulf whereon to speculate, or engaged in
, earning a good name for the Island by his gentle-
manly deportmeut in a neighbouring Provinceâis
very clearly shown by the two last Nos. of the
| Government organ. His geniusââevilâ though
it beâdoes not lend the slightest glimmer to its
/ columns... The new editor, whoever he may be,
| is a most. unworthy successor. He, no doubt,
| hates the Liberals quite as cordially as Secretary
| Pope does; but he does uot know how to express
| bis hatred; and he has neither intelligence nor
brains enough to give birth to a new idea. The
| two short articles which he has written for the
last â Islanderâ may be very summarily disposĂ©d
(of. The first is only a clumsy copy of Mr. Pope's
| silly falschood about the Liberals having attempted
| to assist the Proprietors to collect their rents,
| even at the point of the bayonet, when they passed
| the Rent Roll Bill in 1855; and the second is a
| tiresume repetition of the questionâ What plat-
form de the Liberals propose to act upoa when
j they get their majority at the next election?
| â* What do tiey intend to do for the people?â
With regard to the first matter, it would be a
| Waste of tine and space to repeat the arguments
with which we demolished Mr. Pope's falsehood
_abont the Liberals being in secret league with the
| Proprietors to oppress the tenantry. No man ef
;
j
We said that Mr. ;
Me,
h Would ofier such a thing as proof
Surely this cannot be fairly |
really a good deed, we shall ask the public for a
âmitigation of that paaishment which their peliti-
âcal sins deserve. As te making out a case for
themselves, the notion, if it were ever entertain-
jed, is quite abandeaed. The â platiomâ upen
| which they strutted their brief hour, has crumBled
to rettenners under theirfeet. But, thenâknow-
ing that their day of doom has come, how can
they seppuse that their meniory will be respeeted,
even by their most enthusiastic admirers y ho
witness their humitiation, when they ture reand,
whiningly aud svivcllingly, addressing their ih-
âtended sucecssurs: â We leave the Government
| in your hasdsâpray tel us how you are going te
carry *t onâand how you lend to repair the
disastrous es TOPs We hate committed 1â A Govern-
ment who had the pusaphernalie of a pultary
organization unlet their ehargeswhe tall
tremendously âloudâ abort things that eaghd tu
raise the courage of the most Âąs#poadingâhail
the members of which are warlike en, Without
counting supernumerary Clerksâand with wioed
chief officer the practice of the revulrer is
considered the first religious dutyâshould not set
an example of cowardice when the Fates otder
them to retreat from a ficld whieb they have
shown ne Âąapacity to held.
nn ete
Tite last â Royel Gazetteâ contains a rew
proclamation, further proroguing the Legislature
until the 6th September next, We are not
surprised at this. The Government look with
fear aud trembling to the issue of a general
election, and therefore postpone as long as they
ean what will be to them an evil day. Usage,
the spirit of the law, public opinion, and every
principle of justice, evil for a general glection now
âthe proper scason for holding it is rapidly
passing away; but the greed of power, and the
overwhelming fear of deicat seem to have para-
lyzed the Governmert, The exeuse they open!y
allege. we understand, for putting off the ceetion
âis a desire te ascertain what decision the Colonial
Minister will give on the Award Bills. That is
all humbug. The Colonial Minister and the Pro-
priecters have already given their decision in
very numistakeable terme o: the whole exbject of
the Award. That measure is permanently shelved.
âoath Inatterâif they thought, for one moment,
that the Bill were likely te reecive a favourable
consideration xt the Colonial Office, it was very
easy for the Geverner to have written to the
Duke of Newcastle. urging His Grace to dispose
| of the Bills, in one way or other, without delay.
It is about four months since they were passed ;
and we are sure that if the Gevernment had any
desire to get the final answer of the Colonial
Office in regard to them, that desire might have
, boen gratified long ago. The real object of the
| delay, however, is Gait which isâ elated by our
| correspondent, â a Belfaster,â whose letter ap-
pears in another eolamn That letter is the
producti highly respectable gen I-man,
Wing in of the country from which it is
| dated, and statement it contsins ean be
| verified, if necessary, over the signature ef the
_ gentleman with whom the Colonial Secretary had
| the conversation referred to, and who is, we
| believe, a Magistrate of the County. Here,
| then, we have the open avowal from the princi-
pal officer of the Government that the authorities
| have put ofthe clevtion for no ether purpece than
âte see if their prospects will brighten while the
Oraage scrofula shall spread throughout the
| land; and it is an avewal, also, that Orangeisin is
i here, what it is elaewhere, a political and nat a
âfeature in eur governmental affairs; bet it is
: ie, one § ; a | , a a j | ret from the ke of Newcast ho
housand strong, begin t treat. | forth a whole broadside on the rapidiy ed | place | pen, tearing his hair, and jumping and tumbling! names, Protestant and Catholic, siace : we enlarged | kept a see fi the Du New ic, w
would be apt te rebuke Mr. Dundasâs patronage
of Orangeism, in this Icland, as he rebuked the
promoters of the unclean thing when on his tour
in Canada.
The Government may put in practice all their
scheming tricks, and foster as many bad secret
societies as they pleaseâand let sectarian pre-
judice be aroused in their behalf wherever ig-
norance prevailsaânone of these thmgs will save
them from politica! destruction at the polls. They
|have po honest policyâthey have no political
| principles that will stand the test of investigation ;
| and there are no useful measures of their creation
_ to be adduced as silent but effective testimony on
| their behalf. Their total discomfiture is inevita-
bleâand every day the election is postponed only
tends to make it the more certain and everwhelm-
ing. It is not, therefore, with any feeling of
dissatisfaction we witness the delay of the Govers-
in proclaiming an election ; for that delay is proof
| of the fear and confusion of mind they are in, and
foreshadows the greater confusion that awaita
them,
â_ââ- â +4 â- -â-ââ
THE RIFLE SHOOTING.
The holiday Rifle shooting for the Silver Prize
Cup, purchased with the funds of the Colony, to-
gether with some small money prizes, raised by
private subseriptionâbegins to-day. The place
selected is a very pretty spot adjoining Belvidere,
on the lower Royalty Road. A few of the Nova
Scotia Volunteers came over tu the Island by the
last Steamer; and the Adjutant General and
some of the New Brunswick Volunteers also
arrived in the Steamer yesterday morning. We
_common sense believes that if they were, Mr.| shall be glad te hear that our Island boys honorably
| âIslanderâ says, was intended to favour the
Proprietors. Every one knows that the most
landholders and the Liberals; and because the
former are almost universally detested, the
âIslanderâ hopes te make the latter unpopular
nection between them. The hope is a forlorn ove,
and clearly shews that the Government party are
in a desperate strait when they resort to sach an
untruth.
As regards the enquiry, in all its modifications,
which seems to trouble the souls of the Tories so
muchââ What is the platform of the Liberals?
What do they propose to do for the countryâfor
the Tenantry ?â we want to know what right the
oflice-holders have to catechise us upon that or
any other subject?â Who gave them a commis-
sion to establish a Court of Enquiry with regard
to our political intentions? We donât held our-
selves amenable to a Goverment, or to the paltry
acquit themselves; and without selfishly wishing
to take all the prizes, we hope they will succeed
in keeping at least the Govermment Prize and Mrs.
Pollardâs handsome cup amongst themselves.
While we have these good wishes for the Island
Volunteers, we are very far from thinking that
either the public money, or their ewn money and
their own time, are judiciously employed in thit_
shooting business. It must be a serious dra
to many of the young men engaged in it, whose
private means do not enable them to live a life of
idleness or leisure, and whose avocations must .
be neglected, to the injury of themselves as well
as to that of others, to say nothing of the expense
mary of them incur in coming to and staying about
Charlottetown. However, they may say it is
none of our business how they spend their time
and money. That may be the case. But it is out
right to object to the waste of the public money,
which, for a week to come, will be blazed away
on a painted board. We suppose there will be @â
good deal ot twaddle heard during this military
week in praise of the virtue of i
ce | ) : ; Me. Weed «ays that the English
â SAN ia Fotets! notes. Watebes,| view, and heads right for the centre of our | believed, * the Trent affair, tate desig ings than ever they wereâthat has been for some
were found among tLe fleet. wo rselves with England, be coin. ' timo a settled resolve, not
a ae eh tierce -
servants of a Government which no considerable
party in the Colony respects, To 7" ~ ">
Protect the honour of their wives and daugh-
aad the ener ar s**t
But af the Guseramieat really had âany dott
in ammunition, in attempts to hit the Bullâ e7
ee
_ August Oth, 1862,
CORRESPONDENCE, |
âYon are of your father, the devil; and t„e de-|
tires of your father you will dé. He wus 2 Yaur-|
derer from the beginuing, and he rhode not in he}
truth: beeguee.trath is not in him. Wien be
spouketh a lie, he speaketh of bis own: fir le is a|
liar, and the father thereof.""â~John viii. c. 44 Vv.
To THe Lprron or Tut EXAMINER.
DEAR Sin,âThe â Monitorâ of this week attri- |
bates to my âpen an articie, or a portion of it,
which appeired in the âExaminerâ of the 21st!
ult, The assertion, that the said article owes its |
paternity te me, has, [doubt not serprsed you}
net lose than it bas surprised myself, tor ne person |
huows better than you do that f have got written |
One line of this er any other editorial attributed
te me by the *Moniter.â The wriferi this paper |
s* â
ee i
ââ
ress, and theâ
SS
âthe gove t, the p
, xee boat; mends to â the governinent, te :
Bh omni saogle ot both countries, by enlightened counstl
large toleration, and wise forbearance, to hoe
â_â 7a. ââ- Oe - -
Pusuc Meets Ap Lot 38, Cross Roaps.| spoils, one lucky individual having not loss | Rang! goes a gun at th i s hats
âPursnant te potice a publie meeting was held | than six ehronometers ticking in his pocket Great Western, while one from ber por Se oe or
in the sched] house, fer the purpose of giving the| atone time. Asa general thing, more money | tery at the rams, who ure leaving in aa f rather than stimulate existing irritations. a
tillage ane school District in connection &@ mame wag found on the dead on the field than any | direction, She now passes the Richmond, | vod asserts unqualifiedly that the Queen
it being salted Barrattâs Crovs, T | ; - . nine-i isle : â n dispatches
igh on gy < Anwe -! eS ee *, hos.) other of which we have heard. Clothing in| whose splendid ey | * ogee era pet the House of Cominons ee P
: diene a8, stoi 44 . gle See âe "9 © WOâ ahundance was scattered about, and immense | grens is held quiet by the ve ne y ate and resisted unfriendly legisla . vat
. Tule delholviak Gaatha wees waeabeied: Kensing- piles of new uniforms were found untouched. | iays just oppomte. ye ! a : Pusitiee LoutsviL_e, July 20.â bp Rag adh oye Friday
bepreity ans tee ee ke , âlight re guns at the ordnance boat. ? © | to Nashville were thrown off the trae Sh
i âlitton, Stantord : CairviewâKensington| Oar men seemed to take great delight in| more g â _â to Nashville ot of ES
wok naa we inch aan ° = sithed : assuming Federal officersâ aniforme, and | down she puts two balls mto the ok ar evening, between c poeege and Re ogee seme
e v Vv a ma) i noe > } necting J I 3 : * aa : : atter is ogi % oo of the passengers,
then dispersed after giving three cheers for Queen i strutted about serio comically, much to the! while in the meantime a Pi ehea dil tne killing oe oo ra: Selly p eid the latter
Victoria and three for iN nsington. jamusement of dusty, powder begrimmed | busy with Farragut s f eet. rn J, « ing ââ - i eet fi peng Obie ae pes
JonN Donation, Seeretary. | youths who sat lollmg and smoking i the | pursues ber way, nothing daunted, 14 Hing | was Âą oe - ee
Censington, August 21 Bu â : . : i ro | cheeke She i â â ay | since died at Nas: . ;
Kensington, August 2nd, 1802. ishade. Every conceivable article of clothung | checked. _ She is now > roe an at i ev hietdbah, Sel inated a
be veh dae ico 4p ate paarers ada band bees scl = i a lik tl e Rich-|N a ille with Gowrequcal forage and wagons.
| lawsiii i ate o - ashv , b : 6
| quite apropos to our needy suldiery, scores of noble old Gag-ship's wena cts , he â ; id i pn âthe Falls this evening. Nobody was 1n-
whom took a cool bath and changed old for | mond, for the same bro dside wry 1 â eure ied The boat ia a total loss. The cargo will
uew underelothing, many articles being of have hailed on the Arkansas woul ae Ro. | probably be saved, but in a damaged condition.
: . ; } he endi â it: ry o- ae) Ă©
costly material and quite unique. be | aihilated the spendid hospital boat Red Ro-}}
â _ââ â
â a <â- faâ â_
Tracapit Tracurrsâ Li Institute
: Lily meet of t! Metitutie wai
| Tracadie $ iotse, on Saturday,
duty last, when the following Officers w
a rth se nee yoy rans ph A re ona re 3 Gea bee v\ Th ha i r ye eh} sh ' a i : âamount of amingnition found wus consider- jver with ber cargy ol ââ. se WASHINGTON, July 25.â-Great reptgs 2
âwunds,â then he says ot the il â words" :â| MeAulay, > d Treasurer. Comniiiiee adie, and proved of very superior qualiby and | Oneida hits her with 4 er ⏠; ve as tee en thon af drafting continues to ee parr,
â This language aayors of the Rev. Mr. MeDonal ames MeAu » Mc us id, John MeSwain,/ manutacture. The Âą Xact amount captar sd ! the | onderous micele prodaces ye ey â aed in ofSainl circles b EB ne aaniners |
himeeli;" and finally he cals these â words "| tyr : ai ecacieth sign oo er 'we have not yet ascertained, but from the} W inopa and W issalickon engage her, 24%) Presidentâs call for 300,00) at thdudbout the|
* Priest Medouald a dk nunciation.â ih POL ENO Cecera, ANG Arran } Sie Passss their fire unharmed Can nothing | is already being responâ : - â
The article in the * MoniterÂź headed Eceie- |
StasvicalL Desporiss, â savers very much of |
te" Hon Edward Palmer â Shonld 1}
be wrong in my âsurmise,â T trust that the Hon-
eranie * gentleman wiil disclaim the charge in the |
colamnne of theâ â Moniter,â which I understan
is, er at least sometime was, very much under
bux control.
The assertion that T have been going about th
eouatry preparing the peopie for the cleetion,-is
4jute as UniTde as tie weg Inemuation that thi
tee papers to have been
' nperer tor the purchase o
books for the Rustico lashiute was in re ality mtend-
ed to aseist in repairing St. Dunstan's College.
Should the gentiesneu who eenduct the â Moni-
torâ b> decidesâ te coutinue their
Civistian career of untrathful insi:
abuse aed cabid searcility, | would recommend te |
heir serous conatderatiou the text of Scripture
44.98 Civeu, ad Wea as the following from Lccie
Si eS oom
âA lie is 9 foul blot ina man; and yet it will
be continually in ihe mouth ef men witheut dis-
Âąisline. A thief is better thas a man that is al-
ways lying; but beth of them shall ivherit des
truction. The manners of lving men are without
hover; and their confusien ms with them withuu
ceasing Sx. c. 26, 27 & WY
Yours very truly,
A. McDGNALD.
St. Dungianâs College, Aug. #th, Isux.
- coo
To Tus Eorror or Tee Exavrsce.
Sin, â I beg te inform the public, threuch the
m@iium of the â Examiner, that the mz.a with ihe
*âvoclean handsâ has been âdown souiirâ here
rough this district @ few weeks ago, no doubi
lusell,
ineney Said by tone of
given by the French E
onorable am
untions, low ;
oB some mission of impertauce to the interests ot |
«Ur present Gevermuent. Hut âithough nothing
@3 yet bas transpired suflicient to ealiehten the
Uniutiated regarding the ture of his mission, i!
Je the opinion of @ good mapy that the individua!
with the âuncleas handsâ was only endeavoring
te work his way to a seat in the next House o
Assembly, through the suffrages of the good peo-) and began the ascent of the hill uuder a ter-| toward White House, wits terrific grandeur,
ie ot Belfast. Thix opinion is, to sowe extent.
borne out by the following factsâtbat during ;
conversation with a gentlewan, residing net many
mules from the Woed Tefauds, whom he tock foi
eueef the ârighteort,â he ef the â unclean hands
appeared to be extremely anxious to kuow the
number of Orangemen in that part of the district
and also the strength and induence of the Lodges
On being asked if a general Election would take
place this summer, he replied that no derisive au
ewer couid be given wot after the beth of July,
When the Orange Lodges threnchout the « ountry
would be able te aseertain Ujeir strength
nt t hi or to the Georernment saceo
Phat then, if the Gevernment could come out
Wilh geod prospects ef success, there would be a
General Kiceton in Septenber,
Phe avove facts were commatilâŹated to me by
a peru whose Cerecity mey be relied upon. It
dn, shen five, quite Dkiiy
vy will he
etnced upon wilh a G
that the eount
ert | âpte
Prusting that this hint will have the effect o
puiting the friends of liberty on their cuare
sgainst the wicked machinations of a wily anc
#errupt igction,
{ remain, yours most truly,
A BELFASTER.
Buliazi, Aucust Sth, 1@c2.
âeerenenn> @ Ep <<
THE MAN WiTHil THE « UNCLAEN movuent in seores,
HANDS.â
MR. Wrretax â Dean Si, â People ar
enxfous te know whether the man with â nneleas
seit. Perhaps you will be kind enough to give
the public some miormation ou the subject.
@us rumours are afleat regarding th
Beme say that when he lately ma
individual
» hits appear
Snee in the Council Chamber His Execllency and
advisers could net help regarding him with jook
which were anything but cneouragiag to him, an
that ia a short time the indeseribably disagreeabh
efuvia which emanated from his digital extren:i
several other matte
. nye Lodges will encourage| drew their pieces and took up a fresh posi-|
Deul Mekiovermment to do en.
handsâ has yet made any attempt te purify biin-
fri
Vari-
i >? > ~ alle fleas of } e - Ty hroug! he â4 a
"i ae i lie alee: Tia immense piles « ft oxes seattered thro ig thie promises to secure |
â i si : eed a a : . es ie - * nohtar at
iute, Mr. dames MeDounld, Teseherof the District, | camnps, We conjeeture that the enemy bad | burst the rebel munster ? A dubious shake) country with an ulacrily thes teay was recently |
d ih! | expccting to of the bead is the only response, as ball ater) the whole number in less time Le "|
livered att ily a@bhie and bighlv instrnetive lecture lard in quite an unusual sapply,
wer Sir. MrDeonald dwe it & #04 | use it, doubtless, upon our devoted men, and | ball drops from her side into the water. | anticipated. a ae » eeveral |
. we : ech preg Por Eaicws a a ;, | 80 they would did our troops stand, as they Steadily but surely she keeps on the way,| Barrimore, July ed raed a ouch the }
ste wi rapt ate nes te seis vd. | do, at ** lovg taw,ââ and not come to ** close | firing one broadside ut the transports, and thousand men paced rg he de © end gape â so
son the Colony \fier the Lee-|quarters.â? The cannon and arms capture! | the other at some vesse] on the otuer side. | health of the arm} aan ees enh ah
1 peo ed debate took place | ig this battle were numerous and of very su-| She has vearly run the gauntlet. | Jaimes ee om â Sain, my ne weeky diy |
tmeeting will take pince oa Friday t â Ove more boat only to dispute her progress, | of troops. ap hepsi spe ot tes & âa
TL } ky anship. Ti > twent r-Six nieces ° â â7 ar}
when Re Stame Wide wih: aetivet | E eS ; aot aacill i ; | ie . a l for the enemy to open new batteries ou the ether |
i were 1@ mos youutiua ye ave eve een,
and that the Cineianats, which far below the!
wean * reseut an t : ne river. Rebels are visible at all Lintes |
i rpou bhe prevent 3 Peet couction Âą } â â . . er. â , | side ot the river. Rebels a th. P ~
e earth James McAULex, Secretary, | While imuiense piles of guns could be seen on | rest of the fleet is doiny picket duty pear -_ oa the opposite side, but are never interfered with |
August 9, 1562 every hand, many searcely having the waau-| point. All eyes are upon her, and a repett-| ss they appear in large numbers, when our gua-|
The enemy | tion of her Port Pillow experience seems in- |
ad quite willing to throw them away on evitable. On comes the Arkansas,seem'ngly |
brest pretext, dozens being found with | like Anteus of oja, picking op new strength
ouds siiil undischarged. The number of | at every step. She is sure of her prey and |
Stuall arms captured, we understand, was not jis making straight for it, Tie Cinemnati |
every calibre! bad not st-am suilicient to tackle on her or
- facturer s finish even tarnished.
are beiug seat in but none are granted except to
those who are worthless.
New York, July 23.âCol. Charles, of the
Tammany regiment, has been released by the |
| rebels, atid is here. He saw the iron clad ram and |
even hardly enough to hold her head up| also a small iron gunboat at Richmond, and gives |
shell them out. Many resignations of officers |
The Civil War in the States, | tic
Oe ee een nn ee eee
CONFEDERATE ACCOUNT. @F TUE (5° t! Gitcer
LAT ; > . = S lees nan i wae â
. â ge S BATES _ fand make. The Federal wounded were col-
_ From the Bichwond papers we select the! jected tozether, and tormed a very large field
following incide ata of the late
thousand o
Sie slipxed her cable however, and | a description of the former. He says the revel
headed for the Mussissippi shore, drifting | Governme nt tre at out wounded the same as the -
lown. Rebel officers admitted that their own anc
our wounded were dying so fast that they could)
siream.
engagements +) hospital. The eourt yard of a farm house |
It now beir g3p.m., and the head of our! was selected, and scores cou'd be seen re-| down stream all âithe time, her own motive
column m view of the Pederal gamwps, Geoe- elining on the grass, and expert surgeons, power being insufficient tu stem the current. fore Pubeip-sedh
ral Prvor wes sent forward with his brigade operating with much skill aud zeal. By| The Arkansas discovering her intenth n\* â °
to drive away the heavy mass of skirmishers | mutual agreement, surgeons are not con-)| beads for ber, when the gUBoOas Op nod aI
post âd to our rear to. annoy the advance | sidcred prisoners ef war ; hence at the close brisk and galling fire on the advancing i ae. Jane. Aneuhiheds tn ndelins
Phis being accomy lished wita great success | of the late battles many Federal soldiers re- | at short range. the rifled t â_ apparently Payor pe eck Gos, & @ emmmeed 1808
and with little loss to as, Pryor reterned and | mained behind, and their services seemed very | ierving her, the other shot dropping baru \it was intended to entice the Federal gunboats
a*sited orders. Meanwhile te Federals.) much appreciated by the men. As many as) lessly off. Lhe ram fires heavily as she RO) Stim James River, all of them being at present |
âfrom their camps ands» veral positions oa the | could be were conveyed to town and attended | vances, and is rapidly gaining on her OPP | above Harrisonâs Landing, in order to let the new |
âhigh grounds swept the whole face of the) to, good conveyances being furnished, and | nent, when just as all were expecting & COMI-) Confederate irou clad vessels out. The British |
} cuuntry with their namerous artiliory, which; much care manifested for their weliare. sion, the Arkansas suddenly checks ap heads | screw propellor -* Memphis,â eight hundred tens, |
'would have annihilated our entire force i! | _
not serecned in the dips of the fund and in| _A correspondent of a Northern paper
guilies to our left Advancing cautiously ee oes
bat rapidly in the skirts of woods and im ti: At Savage's Station 10,000 stand of bran
dips to the left, Wilcox and Pryor deployed | new arms were harned up; and piles ol
their men iuto bine of ba tle â Featherstone | biscuit m buxes, the size of a tolerable house, |
being in the rearâand, suddenly appearing | We e set fire to. Ă© An engimeerâs method was
jon tne plateau facing the timber covercd, adupted to get rid of p wider and ammunition
' yaitl, rushed down into the wide gulley,cross-| A train of cars was fifled with it, and then
ved it, clambered over all the feiled timber. | the train was fired, and the locomotive start-
il stormed the timber breastworks beyond it.,ed. 16 is said that it rashed along the road
LATEST BY TELEGRAPH.
the other way, fircs a parung broadside, and | has been captured while attempting to run the}
rapidly leaves the Cincinnati behind her. | Charleston bluckude. She had fifteen hundred |
The gunboat had drawn her into too shallow | bales of Sea Island cotten on beard, and had pre- |
jeaught in. The Cincinnati, assisted by! the | Care ef ammunition for the Confederate army. |
non: snt ar Incessi i t he d
Winona, kept oe Senne ate wnti} ap The Federal gunbeat â* Adirondack â
rounded the point, aud was in the arms of
her friends
âThe Fe-
probably never take place again. In broad} are very troublesome to the Unionists. |
rific fire of sharpshooters and an incessany| disebarzing siecils, bombs, and all kinds oi) daylight, im the very teeta of a hundred | deral fleet ia the Mississippi will be abliged to
' discharge of grape and canister from picers | missiles of destruction along 108 fiery track. | guns, this eraft slowly and deliberately made, drop dow u ray bs trea, ay achaburg, owing ~
posted on the brow of the luligaad from bat-| | will not go ipte details, yet L was amused | her way, selecting her own victime and hurl) rie ear ge pees wallet AA scam âead id we
teries in their cumps to ther iit on the pigh | at one of tour corresp mdenisâ eatin tting theling the glove of defiance at the combined | ?Oâą 6) â : â
. ; . her ae . eas) 38 F pig gees enen | Waking a movement on Chatanooga and Nash-
| dat lands. Such a position was never stormed âon ee Miho Hoase, at $9,000. | Geet. it i9.n6 example of Cool daring courage ville. Prices of FlourâSuper. $4.50 to $5.00.
elore. In descending into the deep creek | Two locomotives, at least, and a long train
onexatm pled and the name of * Catesby | Extra $9.20 to B.30 per bbl.
the infantry and artilery fire tit assailed | of cars, were destroyed at the railway ter- | Jones â* ber commander, wiil be awarded by | :
. the three brigades was the most terrible on | minus, and a large pile of lumber for building ail men as deserving a place among the list)
-reeord. Twenty-six pieces.were thundering | 4 bridge over the Pawunkey, at the least ooe of those ** who know no fear.ââ
at them, and a perleet hailstorm of lead fel: schooner load, and that too just landed tne |
thiek an] fast around them. One of „ ii-|¹sy before. The five that commenced at that}
-| coxâs reciments wavered ; down the General | pornt blazed fierceiy (or hours along the tine |
rushed furiously, sword in band, and threa:-| Of the Pamankey shore, at White House
Larer.âA formidable ram has been completed
lat Savannah. Confederates in taking soundings
ior bringing her duwn, came within range of Fort
|
|
|
Pulaski. Commedore Dupont making prepara-
tiuns to receive her. Geieral Wailace joined
General Curtis at Helena. Taree thonsand Con-
SOUTHERN WAR NEWS.
A copy of the Mobile advertiser of the 11th has
â , 2 i - â a eh tit rete anes eq yo ees eal
the position Ain 1 ee bubthrough tim-/ Suis siraiegic retreat. ; no more suri nde ra of $ peers Semen Sseer) UAT ier pine months, um hd MELEE
Desert over felled trea, Foatherstoeatan | one ik aes } rere BAS tinct hed â outhera | to be raise d immediately by draft. Pope's corps
1 ° : Weimeyerie Pawn Cin Oo TOD Pp lbatred of Yankee rule. We mean to fight forour eccupicd Orange Court-house. Reeonnoisaace
Quickly the Federals with-| GRAFT cic ATT OUNT.OF THE BOLDi. ; sill dad tt ds ; s God and nature } i: â â ; are
. ND SUCCESSFCL DASH OF âTHE | {{PeBeenes A suc eans as God sad pature}pmade from MeClellanâs army within fourteen
A. ' ,BUce HDD: U JASIL OF TUE j uave put iute oar hands, as if intervention was| miles of Petersburg, Va. Regiment of cavalry
CONFEDERATE. RAM ARKANSAS. out of the question of hope. t
!) perfect line of battle from the woods and up- Correspondence of the Chicago Tribune.
driven in, all their tente, equipage, &e., burat.
i ' oe ; âoustitutionalist says our Govern- | Health of MeClellanâs army mproviag.
â+ on the plateau. Ufficers had no, horsusâail | U.s s
"| were on foot; brigadicrs marched on foot. | pcliay
ds several hundred Yankee |
i sword in hand Pe rezim ânte were comman led jcc ed . us sources te nd to confirm the belief that the
ibe captarns, and comyanies by sergeants: | sted by the misereant | pay : / : : :
âyet saluaad they Met ro with J Hg and ev-| ke a pali for the last two weeks over our) 3,7) cau ~ to @s| 7. op eeealyge a â â sare
lors fying, and backward and stil backward | leet was most effectually broken yesterday | mand reiribation inariyved eed yor en ut ii "this Ao abe pb anes oi
i fell the Fede rals, their men tussbling every | âą wning, anda rather uapleasiat beeak iC) Mumford. His death cries to heaven for vea-| ae wr Ca on Pas OY.
But whata sight met the | *#4- But to facts: About 3.5) a.m. the! eean is Let twenty or thirty ; priconers | ,,
eyes of these three gallant brigades ? In) sembvats Caroadelet and Tyier and the Ram ie i re rauk as Bee porte ge din eo apie
» front stood Pyderal camps, siret suing to bbe Queen of the West got under way, steamed | Sariuent, â â9 oe a ae i my
North-east foe miles; drawaâup im fine of MP the river a short distaice, turned and | &P, ef antl by the chances of 8 ge thee dire otc
battle were more than three foil divisrons, | headed up the Yuxuo. si a ala - i â | quota, General Robestsonâs cavalry force is be-
commanded ty Sethi, _Porteb-lletienck. for several days that the Arkansas was pre- Sr. Low is, Ju y 3.â yeneral f chofield has ie heved io have been withdrawn from the Shenan-
: paring to come out, bat a large majority | sus da general order for the iminediate organiz-| dosh Valiey.. A reconuoisance from Pope's corps
ovted it down and seoffed at the bare iden, | *tion of all able bodied men in Missouri, for the encountered and defeated them (Robertson's
ae A oEe Th a lt seems, however, that chose in authority | âXSCTeBation of Gueriht ae [@pers) on Saturday, taking the Orange Cour:
er heavy u . : rate pre . . Every man inust bring to the nearest military) House, killing eleven, capturing filty-twe, and
on our left through the woods to tank us piccod ated ss â in the report, and con- | post what arms he can procure. Those having) destreying communication between them and
Yet onward came Wileux to the right,Pryor | SG" ety the two gunboats aud ram were | none will be supplied by the erduanee depart-| Gordonsville.
t â seni to luok up matters. Upon entering the| ment. All arms and amununition net ia the bands
: â been reevived. Tr makes a flattering allusion tea iederate prisoners arrived at Fortress Monroe for
' ened to behead the first man who hesitated. Landing, and iis fury was fed with costly portion of the populations of Louisiana. Ft says} exchan Burnsideâs corps embarked and mov-
: Pey or steadily advanced, but slow ly, And by material. Lshould sity hat §2.000 000 would bie lues of New Orleans has aroused the Southc ti fing. Gunboats and mortar beats under orders.
the time that the three brigades had stormed | Rt Cover the loss of material destroyed inj cities. The word has gone forth that there will] President coils for three hundred thousand more
i ved:
-| far in advance.
i tion to assail the three brigades advaneing io
| The Augusta {
Gunpoat Froritna,
Wednesday, July 10, 1862. officers, some of h
tion. Now is th:
The monotony and ennui which has hung
> how is the
fur the blood of the
putation urging the acceptance of negro regi-
tents, President Lineola said be could not accept
them unlers offered as labourers.
Sprague, of Rhode Island, calls upon the evigred
| Cigens te form a regitnent as part of the State's
z â Vey â
> ' Âą âfied OomT ans.
Ruarers had been rife |e ONT had
&e.; banoers darkened the air; artiliery vo
mited forth incessant yolleys gf grape, ean-
t
S8us Were moving
to the left, and Featherstone in the eenire
i
j
j a a ZS â
-jone grand, matehless lime of battie, almost | f„er toe Queen shot up auead of the rest, | of loyal militia will be seized.
ties soon filled the room with a vapor so noxieus| consumed by exploits of the day â vet on- f°? Carondelet following, while the Tyler) Capt. John Culb ee ee ee a eet G | (s Y i
that his presence was dispensed with. Others! ward they advanee. to the heart of the Fede- brougnt up tue rear. : | sylvania toserves, one of the w ounded prisoners | & iÂą VAMC,
say that several of the Councillors fear that a! ral position, and, when th: Pirey had proceeded about five miles only | from Richmond, says that while he was in Ricb-
pertion of the uncleanness of this man will be
transferred to themselves, and that they are ft
. - 2 ae + â
quevily seen examining their digits. It is «:
that the man with â unclean handsâ has gene ot
! . t
the Ieland. either to look for a patent soap Ol Ppe-
I
euliar porperties to chance hiniself, or to aveik
for a time the jnet wdiguation of a!
Charlottetown, Protestant and Catholie.
believe, generally understood that avy fet
is seen speaking, either in publie or priv a
man with âunciean bands,â
having lost her character. J hope this cou
will nut drive the wretched mai t
cali him to turn his pistols aguinst binuself.
Hoping that you will give turther intormatio:
regarding the âuncleanâ man,
Iam faithfully yours,
ENQUIRER.
â
the ladies o
fs Âą
, OLS
1 to despair, anc
(For the Examiner. )
GONGS FOR THE CoLon?...... bY W. H. ADAMS.
TIE EGGS.
OF IMITATION OF âTHE BELLS
Xo. I.
Tent the cackling about eggs,
â
Golden eges
What a world of clamoring for putting them in kegs
How the geese do serenm aud eackle,
Tn a fierce and warlike tone
"Gainst t
Aud restrain them with their tackle,
veir lords who would them shackle,
Frow providing for their own,
And continuing their race,
To the very latest days,
is, ]| brigaces of Jucks nâs army bave flanked the S0TUY after a long, low, mud evivred eralt,
e who
wil be regarded av
senemy bud fairly }
suceveced in almost flanking us on the lett. .
ereat commotion is heard ty the woodsâvol-! the ap pearance of the Queen coming fall
leys upon volleys are heard in rapid eees- | Speed down tic river, with evidently every
sion, which are recognized and cheered by pound of steam she could make at work on
âTt is Jackson,ââ they abu It, âon her shaft. She flew by the Carondelet with
vos
jour men. 7 ; : eiet
(their right and rear!â Yes, two or three| Se words, © The Arkansas is coming,
when those on tie gunbuais were startled by | ond,
new Le
fight of Friday with {500 men, and that
his loss out of that number was 860 killed and |
wounded, and 16 missing |
The official list of the killed, wounded and miss- |
ral MeCat!âs division in the battles be-|
le Po | } » * : eli vearae ., silt -
| fore Richmond, shows the following result:â
8uce
ing in Ge
ama
enemy and are getting inthe rear. Now the | WitÂź @ short, thick, biack smoke ssack in her| Killed, - - - -. 95 240
fighting was bitter aud terrific. Worked up middle puffiag out large voluuies of biack| Wounded, - - ° - 70 1iv4
poem 52 1 oP ae wil CTrac. , A â = Ă© j ERS re Koo
to madness, Wileox. Featherstone and Pryor | â@208e. Came swiltly wuround the point and Missing, - . â Bip Âą 1528
. Âą sade f the Caronde | eared âome
"t dash forward at a run, and drive the enemy | 46? for the ⏠drondelet. , | Total â â « 343 2942
i -.| Tue river was too narrow to tarn back, | ha wins
with irresistible fury: te our left emerge a ae Bye
Hioodâs Texan Brigade, Wintingâs comes af-| C„e" if Capt. Walker had so wished 5 but the!
ter, and Pender follows. The fine is now | c2ptain is one who knows no such word as
| cui plete, and âforwardâ? rings from one end âback cut,ââ and swinging a8 mind Be ae we
lof the line to the ta avoid raking sliote, the Curondelet belehed
Tue latest reports at Richmond from Fredericks-
: burg indicate a Union stampede thence. A num-
and other means of transportation were being ueed | violent splutterâwe fancy we see him kuawing his
other, and the Yankees. in removing Vast amouuls of stores from that
over thirty t! ' :
| Wheeling their artillery from the front, the | Y8eetg erait. Imagine the consternation) The Despatch believes there are fears in the | out like one possessed. He hardly knows who
i 3 4 C ery » vs â ? * . dn aa i Mi . âseâ . | : ÂŁ * >
| Federals turn part of it to break our left.and produced when the balls were seen to sirtke | 1 ederal capital of a change of policy in the future | to abuse most savagely for the advice referred toâ
save their retreat. The very earih shakes and fall harmlessly in _ water. â ine rhe he rsd ba at Âą vinweelllleretention f| sometimes Edward Whelan is honoured in this
â ar! N PRO i | again,â was the ery, and another broa : oe eee: MiG 2 Yee Qire~ nes :
| nd se: a yi _ âtee pare St Sore ban gee was , ored int ry ' i ae t Bitty ; âry the war against McClellan, the invaison of Mary-| Way, but most frequently the Reetor of St. Dun-
led vet! ed yet âthas been done with bullet and pia. âa fapegens AF : âJ Mbp | land or marching against Washington direct. â A | stanâs College. That gentleman, we are informed.
bayonet ,and onward press our troone throug) TPge, but with no more effect than if so/| : ti P an 3]
| ; I ee tyre | 7 peas had t hiechar vigorous prosecution of our present successes,â | writes part of our editurialsaâat least, we are po-
camp epon camp, capturing guos, stores, | M4aUy per sad been dise larged. j it says, âwe know to be the design of our]... |. : a me
larms, clothing. &e. Yet, like bluodbounds True Arkansas now ran inte the Caronde- | authorities, and the ignorance that exists in the tively assured that he wrote a portion of the
This
lon the trail, the six brigades sweep every-| '@Âą5 starboard quarter with a tearfal erash, | public mind as to where the campaign will pot | article which contains the obnoxious advice.
best: We hope the Reetor will take a
A large quantity of cloathing has been sent to |
| thing beâore them, presenting an unbroken, | POUTIOg In broadside after broadside into the | we consider our best indication ef success.â
i | â . A } :
!/ solid front, and closing in upon the enemy, guubuat, which, passing through the wooceu | hoeer | hint from it, and give us a â liftâ now and then, by
keep up an incessant succession ef volleys| Cesements, raked the vessel from stem to | Braggâs army Pete (Goch ve uteraeeate
upon their confused masses, and unerringly |StÂąâą!. The Arkansas showed no intention ot | | General Beauregard has gone to Columbus, | Writing an article in full for our editorial columns,
di i âus as 3, i wey iia. } ore ho rd abs , âae Lis ce ae are te i ies a » . "
slaughtering them by tundreds and thou- leaving her vietun, bat remaining along ber | og to juin lis wife and recuperate his | as Mr. Edward Palmer and Mr. Donald Currie
lsands. But * where is Jackson ?ââ ask all. | pe ere quarter raked her tore and att with | /°O"âą | occasionally do for the â Monitor.â But we don't
| He has travelled fast, and is headfAg the re divisio a a fe i hoses âwi ae paepee M(t) Some young men in bathing in the lake, near| Want the Reetor, or any one else, to pateh any
| treating foe, and as night closes in, all is an-| - â âee ee PORE viteries: â% Up BO ID- | Chieago, the ether day, had rare sport riding a/ aritcle of ours by pieces of his own. When we
| xiety for mtelligence trom him. jcessant fire; but the huge solid shot flew off | drove of horses brought down to water. The|
ny : » Tedia-rubbe i There wz : / commence an editoriul w ways take care
| âTis now about seven p. m., and just as the! bike Indva-rubber balls. There was no tan- | sport grew rarer, when one of the youths found : : o Mareee tone 'ente ty
| is news to us,
Thut they ne'er may want snecessors, unfettered in| rout of the enemy is completeâjust as the gible spot to be seen ; and avery small round | himseif naked ov a runaway animal, who took him | 48h it without assistance. If it be any relief to
} ? * .
Wings and fleys,
To lay exys, eggs, eas, eggs,
Tae source of their posterity and fortunes,
@ellien eggs!
2.
lear that old goose, save and gray,
Martial Gray !
What a world of wisdom doth his sombre mien dis
play !
As hi: flock he doth advise
To depute him to apprise
The disposer of the mead,
Where they feed;
What reforms doth Gooseland need,
That bis Grace may send an umpire who will heed three Generals (Reynolds, Sanders and Rank-/ deck, but could fiud no possible way of get-
How the mead
And its oceny ants sueceed ;
Whether on their luscious eggs their birds too freely
feed ;
And declare
Their just share
Of what eggs may bappen there.
But the umpire has appeared,
And all grievances bas heard ;
Yet their lords continue robbing
Geese of exus, egys, exyus,
Eggs, egys, egys;
And the umpire has not settied
To which should belong the eggs,
To the geese or merchant kegs !
New London, August 7th, 1862.
Note.âOne may easily conjecture that the â Old
geose, martial gray,â weans the gallant Colonel of
that uame, and the geese which lay the â yolien
egus,ââ or coins, the Tenantry, whom he and tis col
leayues treat us if they were so many âyees?, if not
Asnes.
Exratem.âtin the verees, published last week,
respecting the Tea Party ou St Dunsian's College
, ut the end of the firsi line of the sixth verse,
tor â eloquenceâ reud ELEGASCE ~âSiA.e.
-~
>_>
ARLOTTETOWN DPeraving CLun.âAt a
meeting of the Ciub on Prday evening last,
Cw
| jast volleys are sounded in the enemy's ear, | #22, Just large enough to admit the gun, | through the #treets of the city, regardivss of Lis| the âMonitorâ to know who really did write the
ithe distant and rapid discharges of cannon | C°M%tituted her ports, and on elevating or de-| want of attire, or of the astonished citizeus who| hole of the
ree âi I , . | diaenens ir liva on a bende in
tell that Jackson has tallen upon the retreat- | Press'ng the porthole moved with the gun. | thought him Lard:Godiva ou a bender.
} ae 2nag | â : : ice.| Congress has adjourned! What a reliet!â
ing column, broken it, and captured 3600) Finding his guns were doing no service, | at ode Megas â sei
Bee... > 6. s , â - er > . 5 we? | Nin tha sation ta. has 3 aah re misehies| Government, â under any pretence "âw Ww
| prisoners. Par in the night bis insatiable) Capt. Walker had his boarders eailcd away, | Now ae » a ig â â4 it done more misehie!| ved: ee tee -iy fie wom,
|troops hang upon the enemy, and for miles| and into the rebel crafs they poured ; but not ae â people and the army can repair !âÂą fa- | thatit was Edward Whelan; and he did so without
} 9 kel . ° . pal | cago wes.
j}upon miles are dead, wounded, prisoners, | 4 nan of a passuge-way could be found. The | ape : Ana , f â
wagons, cannon, &c., scatiered in inextrieable | voarders now returned and the guns set to Pia ee dahidacll, dn thea hero 0 mingical ap-| We hope this will be a suffi-
niusion upon the road. âous for four! work, bat it was co muc sr wasted, | P2ratus attached, on the snit of ten of his New! 77 pete belt â obit
cu pon the 1. âTous for four | we ky ut it was so n uch powder waste de York ballet girls, to whom he owes $320, and who | Cl@8t answer to the nonseuse bout â ecclesiastical
hours did ovr inferior force, unaided by a The Carondeletâs stern was now perfecily |... Ht daw âae : ine,
| x : ; bora J have made affidavit that he is insolveat and unable | despotism.
single piece of artillery, withstand over thirty | riddled, ail the officer's quarters shot away, to pay them | ; :
a ieee seeds fend oe rota : ; | to pay tem, | âThere is another statement in the âMonitorâ at
;) thousand of the enemy, axsisted by twenty-, and everything literally torn to pieces. Act| â ee
| six pieces of artillery. | Which we have been no less surprised than at the
article under consideration â who
son, lay or clerical.
Ă©' ; ; The recent hard fighting is sai ave scared |
In total we captured lenzt! a shot cut away the steam pipe, and Bide" the 5 litical *t bulitic pete) oy toa ciey
< â4 - r . . pe - i. si 1 F oa ae acai Ps j : : WIC 2 al , aTigadie yxEeDCTAIS ee i a iil
| many ye gs thirty piece 8 of artillery the scalding vapor spread to every part of and other officers. and they are resigning their | Bleee of information above adverted to.
jup to o p.m. riday, and in the battle oi the boat. Many of the men Jumped over- commissions as fast as possible. They want no| follows :â
| Gaines Mills captured twenty-six field p:eces, | board. At this juncture of affairs, Capt. | more dangerously earned glory.
| 15.000 stand of arms, six stand of colors,| Walker ied a boardmg party ou t.e rebeiâs|
It is as
â Tt has been for some time in the minds of many
Poe TING.âReer ing i oe } 7 22. - °
ReCRUTING.âReeruting in Boston is progress-| of the adherents of the present Government a
in) en over 400) sdlanhinie; Saeteediied Biakns ting bulow. Ww W though more naines could be taken each
of officers of every grade, froim coluneis to) ture or hole was nowhere to be found. Phis | The mint is coining two hundred thousand! any amount of support at the next General Elee
lieutenants of the line. MeCallâs, Porter's discovery, the party returned to give up their | nickle cente-s' dav and will probably continue tis | tioa.ââ â
ard Sedgwickâs âcrack ââ divisions meited | boac only when the bottom of the river called | as long as the demand ew! sant ytd id pel wet CYP
away beivre our advance, however, and had} for her. The flag whieh still floated trom Lerrer FROM THURLOW Wrev.âThurlow | We can well understand the â perplexityâ of
the fight lastea one-half nour jonger, not one | her stera was never to be struck to the rebels! Weed has wriiten an interesting letter in reply to! the Government. It is that which causes the de-
| whole regiment would have survived it. Me-| us long as one board fluated to hold it Op. some complimentary resolutions respecting his | lay in holding the election.
Cleilan, prisoners say repeatedly Was present, | What men were left stood by what guns | eervices abroad. He admits that he and Areh-| to, ;
and directed movements, bat when the three could he brought to bear, and worked them bishop Hugues and Bishop Melivaine were invit
brigides to our ieft emerged from the wo ds, | until the Arkansas, thinking she bad about | ed by our government to visit Eurepe, and expreas. |â
| such confusion and havoe ensued that he gave | finished ber victim, pushed along, passed | his regret that some other citizens whe were | iutend to offer the Government any umount of
| ther the Catholics intend to offer the Government
. as i duty assigned to them, as their influence wou!
âDe best | â : ome &: 42 hn the Carondelet throuch t! ee duly assigned to them, as their influence would! : - : :
escaped as best he could. Some say that he, by ne ot delet through the whole fight. | have been of great value. Mr. Weed explains the | PO the Catholics are fools, or contemptible dogs,
was severely wounded, avd many officers) The Tyler discovered her motion, and gnow- » of
(prisoners) believe the report that he wes on! ing her thin frame would stand no chance éxistine in Es : ; fig :
7 P , : peer , rs xistin uulrepe aguiast us, which be attributes | w : â
the field is undoubtedly true, for everything | when brought in contuet with the enemy 8) to the 8) wat ey eee alw ays shea with ef | whe abape thamnt
had been previously arranged for a grand! inva!nerable sides, headed down the strem, forts for the overturow of moaarehs, our alacrity | {2 te serve any seeret or ecclesiastichl purpose.
ficit at Gainesâ Miils, McClellan even pro-| keeping just elear of the Arkansas, and firing | in recognizing ihe independence of such natious | but tomake some of them better and truer Liberals
| mising to capture our whole force should we | her stern battery. This chase was kept aa-| as struggled successfully, the Morrill Tariff, which | than the
j are | til th. var Ww rac} ren | is mach disliked in England and France d to:
j attempt to storm his camps, Resalts were! til the mouth of the river was reached, when | is mach dishi Eng rf unce, aid t02 | out te them the foll ,
| different, and so the fates reward che greatest| the Tyler, her boats shot away and badly | belief in Hugiand that we desired a war against | : frets y of supporting a party who are
lr of hisage. -There was but one *âcharge,ââ| eat up otherwise,came into view of the whole | perk reser? : : e | ready to spit in their faces as soon as their votes
and Unies the coouieht the werd of command} Heck. | nile Bngland, France, Belgium and Germany | are polledâa party who have outraged their feel-
yas given, * Fix ba i th aren ve,» : Vi | seriously feel the loss of cotton, Mr. Weed does | ing th â
was given, ** Fix bayonetaâforward!â Gur} Nota vessel in the whole fleet, from some! not apprehend, immediately, that these povern.| âS* the moat sacred and delicate subjects; and
advance was never stopped despite the awful | strane fatality, bad steam enough to wove. | ments will intervene, though with the two former) W280 have reviled them as an inferior race,
| reception which metit. Our troops received | fee Louisiana shore was lined with od | the subject has been considered. France is even âscarcely fit to be hewers of wood and d
tie command but once, and if Sitaa and ali| transports, ordaxnce boats, &e., while di-| more impatient than England; not. however f waterâ W. ee
his hosts had confronted them, instead of | rectly opposte them, three or tour abreast, irom untriendliness, but because the Emperor as âs bare i We repeat, that a Catholic would be
mortal Yankees, the result would have heen! lay Farragutâs and Davis's fleet. scarcely | sumes, in the absence of employment, to supply incomparably mean and spiritlessâonly deserving
the same. There was no repulse--al! ar-| two of which could fire without pouring their | #is people with food. Bat we have nothing to| of contempt and disrespect â if he did not prove |
We did not offer our advice to
y have been on former oecasionsâto point |
the following gentiemen were elected-otfice bear-
ers in reom of C.C. Vaux and W. Surphy, Esqs., |
have resigned:âA. H. Yates, Esy., VPresi-
dent; J.C, Catbeck, Esq,, Vice President.
âMembers of committee in room of ye geu-
ranzements worked like a charm. Money, broadsides into some of their ows vessels. Aj} !*at from Europe, if we are successful in the! pj se e i i ; ;
was fuand quite abundintly among the aise | 6yee were strained to seo the cause of the | Prosecution ofthe war. Fort Donelson, Nashville, ie ps BE a on ens 4 calum-
Some men, in imterring the dedd, often Tylerâscommotion. The ram fleet whieh lay | a 7am Osienne Sad Mensphin are our) oO et a ery eee near,
searched the pockets, &e , one man fieding| near the mouth of the Yazo are sontvering | "sve tvnonte that det against intervention with | But we now believe there was no necessity for our
pot less than 3150 in gold; anotier fistied in every direetion. A moment more and the tary imma all questioas by mili- | admonition. Catholics, not as a religious, but as
ont i some oid clothes not less than $500 ;| long dreaded ** Arkansas ââ steams into fall t 4 political body, will be more united at the bust-
i vinced, than the overthrow of the Government;
Tiie vessel and carge have arrived at New York. | and trembling.
recently | true; and shews how well qualified Mr. Laird is
| chased the British steamship Herald, whieh had) | be an âevangelical witnessâ fo any fect. In
i r {ran the Charieston blockade, into Nassau, N. P., | a e yang oe ee aif
Phis unparalleled audacity and boldness | 644, ing considerable excitement at that place.â | his own language we askââ What credence can
It is re-|
ame
Str. JowN, August 5th âInformation from va- |
derates have evacuated Richmend, and ta-!
In answer to a!
(rovernor |
really did advise the Catholies not to vote for the |
| any recommendation or suggestion from any per-
> . } : | anesiion, levoil rs rplexity.s ering
The swaliest kind of an aper-| day, if offered. | Question, not devoid of some perplexity,as to whe-
But we are ainazed | Pope would be disposed to ceusure them ; or, that
o think that any intelligent persons should have | the Proprietors themselves would have resisted
raised the âquestionâ âwhether the Catholics | near ly all the important measures passed by the
; ietin podewh ene eee | Liberals, including the very Bill which, the
orders to retreat, slipped off his corse, and! her and stood for the Tyler, which had stuod |" ited to go Gut unofficially did not accept the | support,â &e. Why should they? Do they sup-|
jcaitse and orgin of the prejudice and antipathy | te suffer the vilest abuse, and then support those decided hostility has always existed between the
by attempting to shew that there was some con-
thelr elese union has ne other object, we ate con-
and Mr. Seeretary Pope, together with the aad
high official patrons of Orangeism, are sr ~
the eredit of having brought about this devoutly
wished-f ummation,
a â Protestant,â we have only space
reply at present, The article in
Saturday's No. is evidence of great fear - eed
safety of the Government of which the edi âa i
father is a memberâfrom whom the son bas 4 ;
tolerably good patronage a3 a Reporter, and as â .
part compiler of a worthless little book about
Land Commission. We know it won't be plea-
sant for him to witness their destruction; but he
should rather subinit to the hard fate than com-
his character for piety, by inserting inthe
religious part of his paper statements in support
of which he cannot bring a particle of proof. He
says, alluding to our advice to the Catholics to
promise
eet
atacand ath a EPA Soot J
ee ba ee ah ee an Ds a A
âUl wo pew â platform ââthe eve upon whick
they stood for nearly eight years is quite as good
as new; and every plank in it ia tasuiliar te the
eyes of the country, We all knowâthe Tories
know quite as Well as we do, and every week
they partially admit the fuct in ali their papersâ
that the Liberals are on the eve of coming inte
power, the porsession of whieh by them ix, indeed,
the only remedy the country bea of saving itself
from positive destrietion,âwhat right, then, hate
the CONDEMNED GOVERNMEN? Co ask what shall
be the poiicy of their successors! Jt onght to be
enough for them to know that they are nearly en
gulphed in aa overwzhelaing torrent of publie epra-
ions and they should have the deceney to yetive
before that farrent grows stronger, if teyâard
sensible to shane, from vlaces whieb they hete set
been able te fill with honour to themselves, or
service to the country. If they have done eves one
good deed in their time, let it be made known. We
shall help to publish it to the world; and if it be
vote against the Government :ââ* Here is popieh
combination threatened ; and knowing that where
Roman Catholics obtain the ascendancy a wither-|
ing influence pervades the community, we warned
Peotestants of their danger.â
Seericty Pepe gave the â warning,â pet Mr.
David Laira 20e8 not deny it. As toraâ corbi-
âatholies for any ether than a
athing of the kind exists.
~ed this point. And
Catholies seek
nationâ amongst
purely political cbject, :
We have already fully expla:
as regards the assertion that the .
for âascendancy,â or, having obtaineâ it, they
cast âa withering influeneeâą over âtho couna-
nity,â it is well known to be one of those stupi!
lies in which fanaties and unprincipled politicians
love to indulge.
Again, he says: â The recent instructions of the
Romish organ to the people of that communion
show that for a certain purpose, or purposes, it Is
resulved among the âiathers of the Churchâ that
no effurt sball be left uutried to overthrow the
present party in power.â
The â certain purposeâ we have already clearly
stated. It is âto overthrow the present party in
power ;â but whether the â fathers of the Churchâ
have come to any resolve on the subject, we nei-
| ther know, nor care toknow. What we doknow,
however, isâthat they did not dictate nor autho-
rise the âinstructionsâ which appear to have filled
: â » ondie ran the whade } âhurlestu t a} .
|water, which she had no intention of being viously ran the bieckade into Charlestun with oT editor of the âProtestantâ with so much fear
The assertion is, therefore, un-
H
elicits the unqualified admirati n ot all Such) About two thousand guerillas are in North East- | [now ] be given to any of bis statements igs
a thing never teck place before, and will) ern Missouri, and their operations in that quarter | :
| Mr. Laird lectures us upon having vivlated, as
| he says, a promise made by us in January, 1869,
| to the effect, that our paper should not meddle in
any sectarian disputes or differences. While we
| repudiate the pretensions of the editor of the
| â Protestantâ to set himself up as our censor, in a
| matter which relates to our own proper busmess,
| we are nevertheless willing to join issue with bim
on this point. We contend that we have not
| meddled in âsectarian disputes or differences.â
| We have never yet written one line that can be
| considered a violation of our pledge. Our advice
| to the Catholies is cited as proof that we have
âdone so. Only a very stupid person would regard
âit in that light; and only a very stupid or very
post tes
| of our meddling in âsectarian differences.â We
| admonished the Catholics to unite for a political
| abject, because we do net think they can do other-
wise withouta serious compromise of their honour
âand independence.
}alleged as an intermeddiing with âsectarian dif-
ferences,â by which we understand, disputes or
controversies en poiuts of doctrine.
The â Protestantâ states, also, that we allowed
ithe Rev. Mr. McDonaid to violate our pledge, by
| the publication of certain letters in the EXAMINER.
The letters referred to
| Wa dany the charge.
| were addressed to the * Protestant,â but they were
| kept froin the public so unreasonably long, after)
| they weve sent to the editer, that the writer had
| no alternative but sending them to our paper.
They did not, however, meddle with â sectarian
| diieroncesâ in the slightest degree. They were
| Written to refute an infamously libeliens charge
| made, we believe, hy the âProtestantâ itself, to the
| effect, that Catholics everywhere were sunk in
ignorance and immerality. Mr. McDonald proved
the very reverse of this on the testimony of disin- |
| terested Protestant writers; but he never sought
| to controvert any doctrine or principle of Protes-
tant faith. Had he done so, we should bave felt
Tur Editors of the â Monitorâ and âProtestantâ! it our duty te reject the coutroversial part of bis
i ââseem to be a good deal exercised,â to use a} writings. However, the best proof we ean ad-
MHicers. Privates.! phrase of the latter, about our honest and can-| duce in support of the correctness of the course | religious institution. But the mest amusing fact
| did advice to the Catholies net to vote for the | we have pursued, is the greatly increased confi-/ is, that the Government seem te make a regular
|Government at the next election, on account of! dence and patronage with which we have been | business of spreading Orange Lodges; and returns
| the many and unprovoked insults heaped upon them | fayoured by all classes, and we believe all deno-| of the number of members are received at the
iby paid officials, and evidently approved of by minations in the community. We are not aware | Secretaryâs Office with something like the system
the Government. The ease of the â Monitorâ man j that we have lost even one Protestant subscriber | Which is observed at the Adjutant Generalâs Office
ber of vessels had ascended the Rappaliannock, | Âź ludicrous oneâhe has worked himeelf into a) by the publication ef Mr. McDonald's letters, | in regard to Volunteers. This is certainly a new
while we have added to our list several hundred
| THe EXAMINER in January, 1860; and in eon-
| clusion, We must say to Mr. Laird, that we hepe
| the day is far distant when our paper will be con-
| ducted in such a manner as to meet his views and
| please his taste.
ae es
| âTuar the real editor of the â Islanderâ is again
| on his travels, mayhap searching for a wreck in
| the Gulf whereon to speculate, or engaged in
, earning a good name for the Island by his gentle-
manly deportmeut in a neighbouring Provinceâis
very clearly shown by the two last Nos. of the
| Government organ. His geniusââevilâ though
it beâdoes not lend the slightest glimmer to its
/ columns... The new editor, whoever he may be,
| is a most. unworthy successor. He, no doubt,
| hates the Liberals quite as cordially as Secretary
| Pope does; but he does uot know how to express
| bis hatred; and he has neither intelligence nor
brains enough to give birth to a new idea. The
| two short articles which he has written for the
last â Islanderâ may be very summarily disposĂ©d
(of. The first is only a clumsy copy of Mr. Pope's
| silly falschood about the Liberals having attempted
| to assist the Proprietors to collect their rents,
| even at the point of the bayonet, when they passed
| the Rent Roll Bill in 1855; and the second is a
| tiresume repetition of the questionâ What plat-
form de the Liberals propose to act upoa when
j they get their majority at the next election?
| â* What do tiey intend to do for the people?â
With regard to the first matter, it would be a
| Waste of tine and space to repeat the arguments
with which we demolished Mr. Pope's falsehood
_abont the Liberals being in secret league with the
| Proprietors to oppress the tenantry. No man ef
;
j
We said that Mr. ;
Me,
h Would ofier such a thing as proof
Surely this cannot be fairly |
really a good deed, we shall ask the public for a
âmitigation of that paaishment which their peliti-
âcal sins deserve. As te making out a case for
themselves, the notion, if it were ever entertain-
jed, is quite abandeaed. The â platiomâ upen
| which they strutted their brief hour, has crumBled
to rettenners under theirfeet. But, thenâknow-
ing that their day of doom has come, how can
they seppuse that their meniory will be respeeted,
even by their most enthusiastic admirers y ho
witness their humitiation, when they ture reand,
whiningly aud svivcllingly, addressing their ih-
âtended sucecssurs: â We leave the Government
| in your hasdsâpray tel us how you are going te
carry *t onâand how you lend to repair the
disastrous es TOPs We hate committed 1â A Govern-
ment who had the pusaphernalie of a pultary
organization unlet their ehargeswhe tall
tremendously âloudâ abort things that eaghd tu
raise the courage of the most Âąs#poadingâhail
the members of which are warlike en, Without
counting supernumerary Clerksâand with wioed
chief officer the practice of the revulrer is
considered the first religious dutyâshould not set
an example of cowardice when the Fates otder
them to retreat from a ficld whieb they have
shown ne Âąapacity to held.
nn ete
Tite last â Royel Gazetteâ contains a rew
proclamation, further proroguing the Legislature
until the 6th September next, We are not
surprised at this. The Government look with
fear aud trembling to the issue of a general
election, and therefore postpone as long as they
ean what will be to them an evil day. Usage,
the spirit of the law, public opinion, and every
principle of justice, evil for a general glection now
âthe proper scason for holding it is rapidly
passing away; but the greed of power, and the
overwhelming fear of deicat seem to have para-
lyzed the Governmert, The exeuse they open!y
allege. we understand, for putting off the ceetion
âis a desire te ascertain what decision the Colonial
Minister will give on the Award Bills. That is
all humbug. The Colonial Minister and the Pro-
priecters have already given their decision in
very numistakeable terme o: the whole exbject of
the Award. That measure is permanently shelved.
âoath Inatterâif they thought, for one moment,
that the Bill were likely te reecive a favourable
consideration xt the Colonial Office, it was very
easy for the Geverner to have written to the
Duke of Newcastle. urging His Grace to dispose
| of the Bills, in one way or other, without delay.
It is about four months since they were passed ;
and we are sure that if the Gevernment had any
desire to get the final answer of the Colonial
Office in regard to them, that desire might have
, boen gratified long ago. The real object of the
| delay, however, is Gait which isâ elated by our
| correspondent, â a Belfaster,â whose letter ap-
pears in another eolamn That letter is the
producti highly respectable gen I-man,
Wing in of the country from which it is
| dated, and statement it contsins ean be
| verified, if necessary, over the signature ef the
_ gentleman with whom the Colonial Secretary had
| the conversation referred to, and who is, we
| believe, a Magistrate of the County. Here,
| then, we have the open avowal from the princi-
pal officer of the Government that the authorities
| have put ofthe clevtion for no ether purpece than
âte see if their prospects will brighten while the
Oraage scrofula shall spread throughout the
| land; and it is an avewal, also, that Orangeisin is
i here, what it is elaewhere, a political and nat a
âfeature in eur governmental affairs; bet it is
: ie, one § ; a | , a a j | ret from the ke of Newcast ho
housand strong, begin t treat. | forth a whole broadside on the rapidiy ed | place | pen, tearing his hair, and jumping and tumbling! names, Protestant and Catholic, siace : we enlarged | kept a see fi the Du New ic, w
would be apt te rebuke Mr. Dundasâs patronage
of Orangeism, in this Icland, as he rebuked the
promoters of the unclean thing when on his tour
in Canada.
The Government may put in practice all their
scheming tricks, and foster as many bad secret
societies as they pleaseâand let sectarian pre-
judice be aroused in their behalf wherever ig-
norance prevailsaânone of these thmgs will save
them from politica! destruction at the polls. They
|have po honest policyâthey have no political
| principles that will stand the test of investigation ;
| and there are no useful measures of their creation
_ to be adduced as silent but effective testimony on
| their behalf. Their total discomfiture is inevita-
bleâand every day the election is postponed only
tends to make it the more certain and everwhelm-
ing. It is not, therefore, with any feeling of
dissatisfaction we witness the delay of the Govers-
in proclaiming an election ; for that delay is proof
| of the fear and confusion of mind they are in, and
foreshadows the greater confusion that awaita
them,
â_ââ- â +4 â- -â-ââ
THE RIFLE SHOOTING.
The holiday Rifle shooting for the Silver Prize
Cup, purchased with the funds of the Colony, to-
gether with some small money prizes, raised by
private subseriptionâbegins to-day. The place
selected is a very pretty spot adjoining Belvidere,
on the lower Royalty Road. A few of the Nova
Scotia Volunteers came over tu the Island by the
last Steamer; and the Adjutant General and
some of the New Brunswick Volunteers also
arrived in the Steamer yesterday morning. We
_common sense believes that if they were, Mr.| shall be glad te hear that our Island boys honorably
| âIslanderâ says, was intended to favour the
Proprietors. Every one knows that the most
landholders and the Liberals; and because the
former are almost universally detested, the
âIslanderâ hopes te make the latter unpopular
nection between them. The hope is a forlorn ove,
and clearly shews that the Government party are
in a desperate strait when they resort to sach an
untruth.
As regards the enquiry, in all its modifications,
which seems to trouble the souls of the Tories so
muchââ What is the platform of the Liberals?
What do they propose to do for the countryâfor
the Tenantry ?â we want to know what right the
oflice-holders have to catechise us upon that or
any other subject?â Who gave them a commis-
sion to establish a Court of Enquiry with regard
to our political intentions? We donât held our-
selves amenable to a Goverment, or to the paltry
acquit themselves; and without selfishly wishing
to take all the prizes, we hope they will succeed
in keeping at least the Govermment Prize and Mrs.
Pollardâs handsome cup amongst themselves.
While we have these good wishes for the Island
Volunteers, we are very far from thinking that
either the public money, or their ewn money and
their own time, are judiciously employed in thit_
shooting business. It must be a serious dra
to many of the young men engaged in it, whose
private means do not enable them to live a life of
idleness or leisure, and whose avocations must .
be neglected, to the injury of themselves as well
as to that of others, to say nothing of the expense
mary of them incur in coming to and staying about
Charlottetown. However, they may say it is
none of our business how they spend their time
and money. That may be the case. But it is out
right to object to the waste of the public money,
which, for a week to come, will be blazed away
on a painted board. We suppose there will be @â
good deal ot twaddle heard during this military
week in praise of the virtue of i
ce | ) : ; Me. Weed «ays that the English
â SAN ia Fotets! notes. Watebes,| view, and heads right for the centre of our | believed, * the Trent affair, tate desig ings than ever they wereâthat has been for some
were found among tLe fleet. wo rselves with England, be coin. ' timo a settled resolve, not
a ae eh tierce -
servants of a Government which no considerable
party in the Colony respects, To 7" ~ ">
Protect the honour of their wives and daugh-
aad the ener ar s**t
But af the Guseramieat really had âany dott
in ammunition, in attempts to hit the Bullâ e7
ee