The Herald -- 1867-09-04 -- Page 2

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    of Governor Winthorp; The Eastern trip of two
    ists; Intemperance and Intolerance ; Tevosk ;
    Maximilian; The Chiffonier; The Bill as it is,

    New Oats have béen selling in Charlottetownjfor 2s.
    6d. per bushel, : :

    To Counesronpenrsr—" Sentinel” will appear next
    week.

    Ee Some editorial matter and correspondence
    prepared forto-day’s paper, and in type, is crowded
    out.

    eee

    . ALL SORTS OF ITEMS.

    reporting. “These good people) Jraly and France are now united
    to live inside an orange. We fear! railway through Mouat Cenis, which
    not be cruel, to break up their | nelled,
    MeGee

    that the world is a big- Marey
    of Vreseott, for the Local

    lew. in general are absorbed and overwhelmed by | don ‘t pity him and only
    wh pou eal pentane ‘The operation of Re- wey la Meawoal he the

    To rue

    the season! These are Âą
    osities, which mothing |
    vent the T'ress from

    might really be
    it is hopeless,

    ee a ie ae

    page, ‘ wpen |

    eae on ae

    ; Se
    Forror or tum Hrranp.

    Sir,-~My attention has been ted to a communi-
    eaheon in your last issue, over ature ** 1 .
    charging be ped Court of this City a a der :
    ; : ot duty. recognizing the sight of every man w
    nothing after the lan:lin-. except that I fh a Ciany. | aay conceive Kimreell nentered the «ettence @ a
    faint feoling creeping over me. : Court of Justice to bring the case before the publie and

    * You struck the rock wiere the eurcent MACS ACPO) 4 point out the errors, partialiy, or ignorance of the

    the Kzeas from tie Dardaneltes ? ’ wibenal, | would only premise that the circumstances

    *T was wrecke:! far above,’ replied the
    the sunken rock of uorthern Negropout.’ - ae
    * From so far north ?* asked the renin, oppeionts
    * Ay, and floated down upon a spt opposite the
    sowh point, where | swam on shore. I remember

    # Jenvitical conspiracy can pre-

    "Mas ove ta.

    been defeated the constituenc:
    - aps of Gagan. We
    that he will fare

    of Commons,

    the same

    * ou attendant on the hearing showld be given with the most
    . ” ml
    ‘Sone you eenebanwe Ge Curent Gity tenge san

    to me, you may be assored,’
    ering at the remembrance of that

    days passed before Alick could leave his sick)
    bed, bat with such kind nursing he geined rapbily, and,
    alter a while strolled out a iitthe way at oo ‘ bare
    he grew stronger, an at last felt himself
    po bay S suaned teboagen and tiger, Tt was
    then that he began to talk of parting froa t's hoeplt-
    oble irivads, to whom he had become mueh emleaned
    It wiuld be doiag hin iajestiew to say tat his heart tolt
    quite at ease as to loavtag Nycdia, the fair tisher girl,
    who had aarsed an! waded iia with such unvemitiag
    kindness, She hul boen a sweet ministering angel to
    his wants, and with such «a nurse his heart nust have
    been of {to remain unmoved.

    To be Continued,

    Correspondence.

    seth te tig mi

    sighed Alick, abi
    night.

    form, the relations of industry and capital, Trade dnions,| The Royal Speech delivered by commission at the
    oa 4 4 ions, are perplexing us/closing of the English Parltament, pays a just tribute
    not to mention international relations,

    and exercising all our energies. One speaker did refer to|to the loyalty of the mass of the Irish population,
    inaeeuraries may have crept into his statements, some of the Neform Rill, only to say thet ~if the clergy aud the Lopez, the Mexiean General who betrayed Max
    rag Hy ny any ~~ —— _ ye on en Press did their duty + the Reformed Parliament woald be ¼/imiliau, has been assassinated in a hotel at Puebla:

    ‘ “the or a ’ ‘ o .
    adit the bench ; a as saan der, Councillor) ore Protestant Parliament than ever.’ The truth is, those} During the nominations in Montreal ou ‘Thursday
    Mitehell disappeared, auc Councillor Bateher took his|demonsteations arc relics of « bygone age. They reeall @/ias:, MeGee was hooted, and Cartier’s supporters
    place, an qn the third and last day, Me, Councillor! time when Romanism was not merely a scheme of religion, created a row in the Eastera Division, which requir-
    thateher ‘heappeared, and his place was taken by Mr.|put a great political system, identified with great nations. /91 the calling out of the cavalry, which charged upou
    it.

    serupalous attention to truth, as any deviation, even
    apparently trifling, may tend to mislead the judgment ot
    the reader. ‘The writer seems to have been aware that

    Lawson, City Recorder.” Hy the charter of the City, reat monarchs and great armies, when William IIL.‘ of] the mob and

    the Police Court is dirceted to be held by the Mayor|*ℱℱ : . . 1

    amt one Councillor, or, in the absence of the Sager by glorious apd imac) mamery ve the wn —— Lord Broqghem io in his 99th year.

    two Councillors; and this direction was rly ob-|tion of Protestant States, and was really driven to fight ©) ‘Tue Empress Carlotta is — ay

    served in thix ease, for the Mayor snd Mr. Conncillor| stern battle with the greatest Continental Monarch for the| Tux father of the Irish Seceretary, Naas, the Earl of

    looper, by whom the judgment was given, attended! religiousindependence of hs kingdom. At such a time, and| Mayo, is . :
    oaie the whole of the three days, nor was there. any > long atter, everyone was obliged to fight with all the tt potaton-rt is reported to be very extensive in Nova

    necessily for eulet of the Councillors, Mitchell or 0a) he could command, and neither could afford to be| 4 destructive fire occurred in Montreal, on the 18th inst,

    Butcher, to be in attendance any longer than it pleased : : , ; 000
    them. The Court was therefore properly constituted. | Yery *erupulous, or delicate. It was excusable enough then, pe! — yon, sl ag oil stores, containing 600,

    The part taken by the Recorder will hoticed at the/ for one side to ery ‘ No Popery,’ and the other + No Protest- ie bused in cler 6 ee Ge :
    proper time. The author of the letter signed * Ixion "| antism,’ and then rush at each other's throats, The names Jon eo bill a nt 00
    appears to be altogether unacquainted with the rales| wore enough. But in the present day such proceedings) Ty» Oyster trade begins this week, and also the sporting

    To rue Eprron or rik Herarb,

    Sir,—-T have read in the Lxaminer of the 26th ultimo,
    a very singular letter addressed to the editor of that
    paper, by Mr. William Welsh, part owner of the ship
    ‘+, C. Owen,” so full of personal attacks against your
    correspondent *' Ixion.” and Mr. Frederick Me Mahon,
    that were it not for a statement which Mr, Welsh has
    made, and which requires immediate contradiction, |
    would not have considered it necessary to return any
    reply to so irrelevant and puerile a commanication.

    Mr. Welsh states in the letter referred to that the
    character of the young gentleman (Mr. Frederick
    MeMahon) occupies no enviable position in the records
    of the Police Court.” This, Sir, is a base, malicious,
    and wicked falsehood. Mr. Frederick MeMahon was
    never brought before the Police Court or any other
    court in this Island upon any charge whatever, and 1
    defy Mr, Welsh to prove it. In all probability, Mr.
    Welsh was thinking of himacl/, when ho was brought up
    before the Police Court and fined for striking a man,
    and he has merely substituted Mr. Frederck McMahon's
    name for his own.

    ‘Mr. Welsh muet, indeed, have been hard pressed, and
    on the ‘horas of a dilemma,” when he had recourse to
    the-very questionable proceeding of prying into holes
    and corners in search of information which he thonght

    might {prejudice the character of young Mr. MeMahen.

    in the eyes of the public; and it incontestadly proves

    the weakness of his cause and the unsoundness of his

    judgment when he works so silently, secretly, and per-
    sistently to discover some flaw, however trifling, in a
    schoolboy’s reputation for the purpose, as he imagines,
    of softening down the very serious charges brought
    againsthis ship. As for bis statements with reference
    to the captain and crew, coupled with his own opinion

    and belief, that the charges of assaults and brutal ill-
    usage on board the ship were ‘‘ all bosh,” they are not
    worth the value of the drop of ink which he bas expend
    ed.in writing them. He was notin the ship on the bigh
    seas, to witness them, nor has he any right to receive
    for gospel the garbled and false statements of implicat-
    ed.parties., Of course the captain of the “L. C. Owen,”
    who is responsible for the brutal outrages committed on
    board the ship, will Paing Mr. Frederick McMahon's
    churacier in the davkout ible aalore, ae a cort of set-
    off against them; but we will assume for a moment that
    the young lad was, like Mr, Welsh himself, brought be-
    fore the Police Court for fighting,—what, in the name of
    common sense, has that to do with the very serious
    charges brought agaiust the ‘L.C., Owen.” Instead
    of endeavoring to throw dirt at the young accuser, Mr.
    Welsh migit bave materially improved his coniition if,
    when he was inlormed of the conviction of the second
    mate before the Mayor's Court, he had at once dismiss-
    ed,him from his service, demanded from the captain his
    reasons for allowing such savagery to be constantly per-

    trated on board his ship, and expressed his regret to
    the young. gentleman's father that his son—who was
    po a supernumeraty,. without pe: and without
    being articled,—should have received such constant ill-
    usage to the imminent danger of his life, Lad he wisely
    done this, Sir, he might have been spared. all further
    anxiety in the matter ; there might have been no corres-
    pondence if the ‘busy tongue of scandal” had not been

    set wag pow Mr. MeMahon in the

    a i

    ing to disparage

    poste ay 04 ablie, an induce the belief that the

    statement of Ris wrongs and bitter sufferings was ‘all
    * and without foundation. Mr. Welsh having

    thonght proper at the ‘‘ eleventh hour” to dip his hands

    in the troubled waters. must not feel surprised if some

    f the muddy spray should fall upon his person. From
    Âź fapling of deli

    elicacy towards his having remained so

    Jong quiet and silent (for it was presumed that he felt
    rieyed and ashamed that such infamous conduct should
    a, been brought to light), his name was never once
    ntioned or called in evidence; but now that he has
    thought proper to indulge in gratuitously insulting
    ta ts ig and to’ buty himeelf in endeavoring to ferret out
    from, tuscruputous sources, any boyish folly which he
    codld magnify ito a crime, he ust be told—if he knows
    it not already—that the ‘‘gentleman‘s son” is not the
    only 6n6 who is entitled to protection on board a mer-

    chant ship. The person and feelings of the poorest
    béggar boy in the land should be held as free from in-
    ury arid ffl-usage as those of the son of the, proudest
    { rin En Jand. With his conduct on shore, a captain

    of ship or Ifis crew have nothing whatever to do; and
    if th ick, aud strike, and tamble him overboard, ney
    will hd to thelr cost that the laws of their country will
    take no cognizance whatever of any report they may in-
    simuate to his prejudice. Mr. Welsh desires it to be in-
    ferred that by using the term ‘‘records of the Police
    Court,” young Mr. McMahon has been frequently
    brought before that august body. I have already stated

    i never once re them, and if Mr. Welsh
    pay phd discovered some boyish freak, let him tell it
    out like a man, in print, if he likes, and have all the be-
    nett 6r it; but insinnations wrapped in falsehood are
    cowardly in the extreme.

    Welsh alludes to a statement’ made to him by one
    of the Magistrates who tried the case, to the effect that
    the was “no proof (?) of any of the ehargrs made
    exdĂ©pt the evidence of the young gentleman bimselt.”

    f Such was the case, and that the Court was not per-
    fectly varied of his guilt, why was the savage conyict-
    ed? Does that Magistrate, whichever of the three he
    was, mean to Inply the least donbt of it? “I trast not,
    for'he would on!y’be reflecting on himself, and shaking
    the confidence of the commanity in the ob gr tte of
    his jud t and ce of Lis ability. T think he
    sad find been wiserif he had kept his opinion ta him-
    solf aftér he had pry the tg oA ¹ has giton

    e rtynity of now stating that there was other
    me the Chey the Ove fe

    ‘be
    batt afbtd Mt. Welsh not to write any more on
    the “for I have no desire to prolong this corres-
    gy pm el has not heard one-half of
    sbosh ” yet. him wait quietly until he has the
    A petitiers hemedli pool betore him,
    ae ot been broug! ight, and he may find
    have tO answer

    n can afford to
    Mr, Welsh to

    sfivage second mate
    suaten Vo bo think.
    nasties saved

    rd the lose of » boy over-

    shh

    i

    Âą
    Ă©

    and practice of the Police or any other Court of Jus- ism. What Roman- season.
    ltice. He talks of the sworn depomtions before the|”” eaty"> minsttorens — sag Menno ‘Tun latest returns from the Dominion elections, so far as
    \Court, and complains of their not having been read in| ℱSy be in theory, in practice it 1s a scheme of religion they have come off, indicate a majority for the McDonald
    jopew Court for the information of the Recorder, Is)#nd no more, and it must be treated in the sune way asall) yiiiery,
    jwould have been highly improper that such a l-jother religions. It cannot be exterminated by a war-cry.| Ty» ee Grand Duke Alexis, third son of the Bm-
    ling should have been adopted. Depositions are merely |t must be left to men’s conscience and reason to die out or peed — .om visit the United States and
    jused for the purpose of mangurating the proceedings, i itality. This, we must tell the National Protest-| British American Pro’ . :
    and the instant the parties appear in Court. they are set * - 7 hg . ‘ _|. Tux Dominion Government proposes to appropriate the
    aside, and the case is heard and determined upon the|*Âź* Institute, is the whole secret of * the injustice of Par funds raised from the sale of fishing licenses to granting
    ese ened Ovilente given in the presence of the ore ac-|tiament and the Press,’ if such there be. We are tired of/pounties to the fishermen of Nova Scotia and New Bruns-
    cused. They were handed, however, to the Recorder, |theiteration of old war-eries when their significance is gone bog ne least lle ayy Pe yi a a pate be
    for the purpose of informing him as to the subject mat- {t is of no avail merely to ‘rally round the old banner,’ and we Pee eet Aa Ge ee ‘tin aeieks oa
    i ; . ‘ when it is known that unties H source
    ter of the complaint. Let us now see what this complaint play the old loyal tunes. What is wanted is argument

    rough amount to about 10 cents each,
    i. pape atte. os tor rl a whe A oon pores instead of noise, 10,000 Snider-Enfield Rifles were lately received at

    . England for the use of the Canadian Volunteers.
    ascertain how he would like the sea for a profession.” Quebec from Eng!

    Ile goes into the forecastie, and bunks with the common| T18 investigation of the Blue case (alluded to in our
    sailors. The second mate, it would appear according|last issue) before tho Police Court on Thursday and
    to the evidence of the complainant, treated him with un- Friday of last week, evoked a good deal of unnecessary

    usual severity, and did unquestionably commit the two : .
    assaults, for which he wat Syutenced to pay a fine of perty spivis on the part of Mr. Blue's treads.’ The

    thirty shillings and costs. And the smal! amount of the|evidence gave to the assault the character of a cowardly
    fine constitutes the grievance of Mr. McMahon's com-|and unprovoked one, It alo cleared Mr. Blue of all

    Tux St. Patrick's yy 4° re ge
    le oceedings against eGee, ibellous at-
    ody connect that society with Fenianism, ‘The Society
    in justice to itself, is bound to investigate this matter to the
    bottom, and prove to the country the falseness of Mr Mc-
    Gee's atrocious Mbel.

    Tur 8t John Confederate papers complain that the Cana-
    dians receive the lion's share, in the way of appointments,

    ‘pointing. The speeches consist simply of a repetition in

    dlediont servant, ._|Protentant Institute has {6 ‘tell ws at ‘an extraor@inary| The Halifax
    me TS 1OM” fasten convened for a great effort at the busiest time eee deccased.,

    plaint. Has*the complainant or his father any just blame, aud showed that, so far from being intoxicated a ee ey maa patronage, It serves the St John mer-
    ecmar .

    cause to find fault witu the decision? Tliere are two : ; : " i ae :
    modes of secking redress for injuries arising out of|°T “ME insulting epithets, he was proceeding on his New Brunswick is said to be overrun with agents frem
    violence to the person: the one by civil, the other by|„ay home, soberly and quietly, when he was set upon) Canadian boot, shoe, fur, woolen, cotton, stove and other
    : ‘ 1 H -|by rank ughs. It appears. however, that|ℱanufacturers secking for orders, and underselling the
    criminal, process. In this case, the party has had re-|by some drunken roug’ PP , local manufacturers, In Nova Scotia,too, Canadiansare equal-
    course to both. Now, itis a rule of English Law, that] pine was confounded with a man named McLeod, who oy tn tn toch inerthe Etalifen marketwith butter and various
    np mau chal be twice panied Tor the sae offencs.—-|. ose time previously wan seen deank.on the streets. lather rte at greatly reduced rates, to the injury
    Phe defendant has been held to bail in the sum of £200 shouting out for any ‘+ d——d Papist "to fight him, and|of the local farmers. Flour, however, upon which the peo-
    to answer to the varieus acts of alleged uruelty on hia sing other insulting epithets. is fellow was captured ple of Nova Scotia are more or less t, is kept at an
    part toward the complainant, and the case will be heard + a7 lice and ficed next morning. We eee tolexorbitant rate, anc the tariffs of the Maritime Provinces
    and decided by the proper tribunal as jadge.and jury. Sen : pws Mr, Blue for the mistake tos which we in-|of the Dominion is to be raised to the Canadain rate of fifteen
    Under these circumstances, all that the Police Court had ab ~ sand fell in attributing to him insulting language | per cent. Thus are the benefits of Confederation being re-
    to decide was the question of the breach of the peace. eee ae y poe a de Several a See alized to the bluenoses.
    Now, it should be remembered that the only witness was ae pg hese „eey on Pah ty er Ar the recent Provincial Rifle Competition held at Bed-
    the complaiuant, and, without impugning his veracity, nde ee the Su a Court for adjudication, |ÂŁT4 N S., we see thata former townsman, Mr. FP Hick
    ho, in common with every one else, ia, in hiv own case.l.ins tote of the case will then be more dispassionately|*ℱetsined bia reputation ae « markeman, onl castle
    apt to give a version of the affair with a greater warmth viewed than under existing circumstances, and will, we pier y be oe og by by “6 Bock anon!
    of coloring than a disinterested witness might adopt, have no doubt, lead to the suppression of brutal assaults. |% f or — i on “Ardijery Pomporks Aart
    aud if the defendent gould have been put upon his oath! jo ourselves, we set our face against rowdyism, from Site thee, at 300, 600, and 600 yardsr engee, dive shots
    = as he may in the Supreme Court-—it is quite. possible) i scaver source it may proceed, and assaults such as|at cach range. Several Island Volunteers competed at the
    that the whole transaction might assume a different hue.| that ±o which Mr. Blue was subjected should not only! second contest—for the Cogswell Challenge Cup,—but did
    It is quite true that a witness was called by the com- receive their due punishment, but should be frowned|nothing. We did not expect they would—tor this reason,
    plainant (to produce whom the Court was adjourned down by every person who respects good order and so-|that they are not considered crack-shots, nor had they any
    for one of the days of hearing) who, however, instead briet Mr. Blae isa sober and most inoffensive man, | practice to qualify them for sucha competition. On
    of corroborating the statement of the complainant, gave pedis Ae tack of bie Heine nesaulted. proves that hie aa day last, at a private shooting match of ex-volunteers, who
    contradictory evidence. It having been proved that, sailatita cared but ve Fittle what his creed or country | formerly [sustained the credit of the Island Volum but
    from expressions used by the witness on previous occa- was, so long as they indulged their propensity for fight-|;who have been out of practice for some time back—a seore
    sons, he was unwortby of credit, his testimony was set jie andtk any respectable Catholic was just as liable) of forty points was secured by several at the ranges above
    aside, and not allowed to invalidate that of young Mr. ake same treatment had he come in pid way.

    whether the partics Who have been held to bail fo ap-| Would far exceed tmis sore,

    Tue Hon George Brown, one of the High Priests of
    pear at the Supreme Pen: one Term yea the really Confederation, pa ‘leading mind’ on oslo has
    guilty parties or not, is anothegquestion, and one which been defeated by a Mr Gibbs, for South Ontario, He will
    the Court alone can determine. robably fall back upon his old Constitueney—which has
    a kept open for him, fora seat in the House of Com-
    mons. Wehope the same fate will overtake some of the
    other ‘leading minds,’ before the elections are over,

    His Grace the Archbishop of Quebec is dead.

    Caouera is spreading in Italy, and fineancially the King-
    dom is ma deplorable state.

    Tur Editor and Proprietor of the Moniteur Acadien,
    Mr. Israel J. D. Landry, is out for the House of Com-
    mons in opposition to A. J. Smith, late lender of the
    New Brunswick Government, and now the anti-Con-
    cderate Candidate for the County of Westmoreland,

    Some terrible floods have taken place in Australia,

    Rutigiven, and we have no doubt that with a short practice they
    feMahon. Tad it nat heen so decided, the Geurt would
    ave been compelled to dismiss the case. When the
    Mayor, with Councillors Hooper, Butcher and Yates had
    retired, the Recorder gave it as bis opinion that the
    Court should gonfine itself to the simple breaches of the
    peace that had been proven, eliminating the whole of
    the acts of hardship and oppression complained of, as
    being the fit subjects for the consideration of a Jury,
    As to the alleged inadequacy of the fine to the offence,
    that is a matter ofopinion, and the Pohiee Court did but
    follow the course invariably adopted by the Supreme
    Court when a civil suit for the same cause of action is
    famicg, + and awarded a much more moderate punish-
    ment than it perhaps would if no such civil suit had
    been commenced, and the Mayor, in pronouncing sen-
    tence, distinctly stated that the general conduct of the
    defendant was a matter for anotber Court, as, in fact, it
    was; for the making the lad draw water, while the ship
    was under weigh, or mount the raging and ascend to
    the top-mast head, holy-stoning the deck, &Âą,, were mat-
    ters not cognizant by the Court, which has only to do
    with actual breaches of the peace.

    The fact is, that it was a great mistake sending a
    young and delicate tad to sea in a merchant vessel to
    bunk and eat with the crew, and it is certainiy not
    strange that, under such circamstances, the second mate
    treated him as he would any other lad. for there does
    not appeat any evidence to shew that the mate was
    ‘aware hat young MeMahon was to be treated in a dif-
    ferent manner from any other ship boy, upon whom the
    curse of being ‘‘a servant of servants” is entailed in
    the worst of all possible forms. After all, it may be a
    question whether the second mate has not intentionally,
    or the reverse, done the young man a great service by
    subjecting him to the extreme hardships of a nautical
    life. If, after such discipline, he continues to like the

    LATEST FROM ‘EUROPE,
    The Foreign news received by the Cuba may be
    summed up in the following paragraphs:

    Prussia is jealous of any good understanding bein
    arrived at by Austria and France during the propo:
    exchange of visits by their respective rulers; and it
    is given out that the Kaiser, on his return from Puris,
    will be intercepted by his quondam ally and present 5 f
    rival—King Frederick William, The place of mecting| which have resulted in causing great distress in addition
    is hkely to be Carlsbad. to loss of life,

    There is a dispute betwixt the representatives of| The King of Greece ts at present in Paris secking, it
    Hungary, deputed to the Conference which has now|is said, a guarantee for the stability of his throne,
    met for the adjustinent of the relations between Austria} Bennett has sold his yacht, Henrietta, for $50,000—
    proper and Hungary, as to the contribution which the|a good ‘ sell.”
    latter should make to the Imperial Exchequer. The} Tar cholern is making fearful havoc in Rome, both
    Hungarian deputies propose a fourth of the whole sum|the Quirinal and the Vatican having been invaded, and
    as adequate for them, but the representatives stickle|several deaths in each have occurred. Cardinal Altieri

    and Princess Coloma, the ex-Queen dowager of Naples
    are among the victims.

    for a third.
    It appears that the Austro-Italian Committees, ap- :
    pointed on the evacuation of Venetia to arrange the| EB. J. Boyp, Esq., ©. E., has resigned the situation of
    frontier line, cannot satisfactorily settle their differ-|Superintendent of the E. & N. A. Railway, and Lewis
    ences. The negotiations between the two powers as|Carvell, Esq., so long and so favorably known as Su-
    to the restoration to Italy of the Venetian archives and/perintendent of the same, has been re-appointed to that
    objects carried off by the retreating Austrians are also |oflice.
    sail to have failed, and if we me may credit the tele-| Ong hundred winers were reeently buried alive in
    ram, from a somewhat singular cause, viz., that “ the|Saxony, while working in a coal mine. All attempts to
    talian Commissioners, being convinced of the justice|recover their bodies have proved futile,
    fi ; of the Austrian claims, had og neg Dr. Cumming has published in London another pro-
    occupation, he will probably make a good sailor, able to Thursday was celebrated in Paris as the festivity of|phetic book called * The Last Woe,” in which he says
    bear hardships and accustom himself to all the dangers St. Napoleon. Immense preparations had been made|that the Jews are to be converted as a nation, and
    of the'sen, is a necessary part of his education. Had for honouring the day, Indeed, throughout all France| the Papacy is to be extinguished, between the autumn-
    young Mr. MeMahon lived with the captain, and been|;+ ig by tar the most popular holiday of the seasan, Asj|al equinox of 1867 and the same period. of 1868. ‘The
    subject to the orders of the captain only, be might ors, former years, its advent had been marked by the|time is short and the work Herculean.
    might not then effect his purpose of ascertaining whe- cireulation of rumors that the Emperor meant to sig-| ‘‘ Lord Dundreary,” finished in Paris on the 8rd,
    ther he would like the service; but after being articled, |nalisn the recurrence of the anniversary by | »o-}** after a most successful season.” ‘The Emperor and
    the disagreeable part would have to be encountered and litical concessions, such as would amount to a varitable| Empress were present at Friday night's performance ;
    undergone. Ihave been more particular than I other-|,, crowning of the edifice,” but, if anything of the sort|and for the first time on record Napoleon III. was seen
    wise might have been, but itis necessary that the most] jag taken place, the telegraph has as yet kept us in ig-| indulging in a hearty laugh.
    perfect confidence should exist in the minds of the citi-| Korance of it. A considerable number of robberies
    zons as to the integrity and fprightness with which jus- Copenhagen is just now entertaining a ‘party of fra-| petrated in St. John lately,
    tice is administered ia the Court of the City, and I trust terniaing Parisian journalists, who have assumed the|that the police are not as Vigilant as they should be.
    that confidence has not been shaken by the communica-|nathetic mission of renewing the latterly dilapidated |The force was increased recently, but it seems that
    tion of Mr. MeMahon over thy signature **xion. ties of amity and alliance which anciently subsisted be+| burglaries and robberies have increased in proportion.
    Tromain, Sir, tween France and Desmark, Among other addresses} A despatch from Galveston, Texas, reports the yel-
    Your obd’t servant, resented to the visitors is one numerously signed by|low fever raging terribly in that place. ‘Twenty deaths
    J. LAWSON. [8chleswi ers, who, after eng France for her dis-/Oceured on the 12th; ‘thirty-one on the 18th, and
    ‘ interestec sympathy, express the highest confidence in|twenty-nine on the 14th instant. There were over one
    the future magnanimous aid of the French people. thousand cases in the city,

    have been por-
    Some of the papers sa

    Charlottetown, August, 27 1867.
    SSS rendanaeanen es

    rr h : H eva | a. ble he deg sie toe ot ae eo gy ~ smmasanianaiaa comes
    a ; st few days has be e grand sensation of Paris, ‘ah
    : : ins just ended. Madame Frigard wan, it will be re- LOCAL NEWS,

    sy il

    Wednesda>, Soptember 4, 18067.

    ee

    membered, charged with murdering her companion, a

    ung woman of very gay character, named Sydonie| _TÂź Patriot and Eraminer are ripping into each other

    “ with extennating circumstances,” and sentenced to

    The National Protestant Institute was holding a grand penal servitude for life.

    orange demonstration in London at the time when the Sultan
    was being entertained and the Belgians were being feted.
    The daily press, probably finding ample employment for
    their reporters, paid but little attention, it seems, to the pro.
    ceedings of the Orangemen, and the 7imes was taken to task
    therefor, and accused of refasing x hearing to them, whilst
    they reported ** Popish meetings.’* ‘I'he * Thunderer ” took
    heed of the warning, and duly reported the Grand Master
    and his friends. The result, it says, is bomewhat disap-

    Miss Sullivan, the owner of some 80,000 acres of
    Jand on this Island, arrived in Charlottetown from
    There is such Âź pressure upon our columns this| England, on Friday last. It is said that she is about to
    week, in the way of advertisements and original cor-| offer to sell her lands, either to the tenants or to the
    respondente, that we find ourselves unable to redeem| Government,

    our promise to give a detailed report of the Scottish s
    Games of the 2ist inst., and besides, as the matter has dag tauren Tee fet Peet ee Gaso

    ng,)
    now become stale, we do not know that the omis-
    sion will be much regretted by our readers. 7 cliton wh ee a ale node

    : ._|fish and oil. The schoon nk al i i
    day next instead of Tuesday, her usual day of sailing ae oot know to whom the © is to be attached

    _|in this matter, nor have we thus far ascertained the
    oe! i‘ reported ‘ee aga on clad voewe 1|"*ℱe of the ashooner,

    war the Royal Ship o erth Ameri- Regin t,
    ean station, will shortly visit the harbor ot Charlotie- te

    varying phrases cf the familiar Orange mottoes which, sur-
    rounded the Hall, ‘No Popey,’ ‘No Surrender,’ ‘The
    Protestant Kingdom,’ ‘ The Reformation and the Revolution,’
    ‘ Por our God, our Queen, and our Country '— which inter.
    mingled, according to Mr. Shandy’s recipe, with auxiliary
    verbs, constituted the greater part of the eloquence of the
    evening,” © © © “And iv all that the National

    Col. Smith's orderly, a soldier of the 4th
    who remained in Charlottetown with his master, after
    town. his company le’ for Halifax this Spring, ‘‘skedaddled,’
    ‘i ‘on Saturday morning last, while the Col. was engaged

    atrioal Company, died in Boston, on the 26th instant.| Brackwoot's Madazixe for Augnst has been is sued
    I and Boston papers speak in high terms of/and contains the following articles:-—-Browlow's Part
    VII. ; The Social Era of George IIT, j Life and Letters

    ‘oO
    a ae Foilevile te pete ym Givin ner ~ bx about nothing.
    iE“ TIMES", OD ; ‘orest of Fontainebleau, on the 7th of May last, er) Tur Islander ia in favor of obtaini 1 .
    ae poss "or Pg thy trial, the prisoner had been loand Guilty,| ways in this Island, . a2 ae

    REPORT OF THE COLONIAL RIFLE
    COMPETITION,

    Patron—Uis Excelleney the Commander-in-Chief.
    Umpires— Lieut. Col. 'T. H, eae, Major A. Mitchell,
    Range Officers—Major Il. Beer, x R, Mabon,

    let Capt. J. Tanton, St. Eleapor’s Rifles, 30 points
    ad Wy Sergt. J. Woodside, do, 27 points, ÂŁ8 and
    edal.

    3d prize, Ensign D. Harper, Thistle Rifles, 27 pointe ÂŁ7.
    ath prize, Ldeut. G. anton, Military School, 26 points, ÂŁ6
    6th 7 ating &. Catford, Prince Rdward Rifles, 26
    ts, oJ r

    prize, Private J. Hardy, Little York Riflee, 26 points, |

    ÂŁ4.
    7th » Engign J. Newson, Prince of Wales Rifles, 25
    ts, ÂŁ3.
    points 2/.

    Sth prize, Gunner L, Younker, Ist Artillery, 24
    9th prize, Corporal UC, Callaghan, Irish Rifles, 24 points,
    ld. 108,

    10th prize, Cut, G, Dogherty, 1st Queen's County Militia,
    24 points, LU,

    ith prize, Gunner W. Wyatt, let Artillery, 24 points,
    lds,

    12th prize, Private W. C, White, Prince of Wales Rifles, 23
    points, 12s, 6d,

    13th prize, Lt. D. Tobin, Irish Rifles, 23 points, 19s.

    lith prize, Private C, Newbery, Royalty Rifles, 23 points,
    7s, 6d,

    1éth prize, Private W. Thorne, Rovalty Rifles, 23 points, 6s.
    Ranges—500 and 600 yards. ‘The priority of tivs was de-
    cided by extra shots, The first prize was the Silver Medal
    of the National Rifle Assoviation of England, and 6/, from
    His Excellency the Commander-in-Chief, and 4/, from the
    Grant of the Colonial Government. Another Medal accom-
    panied the second prize, ‘

    There has been a very marked improvement on the firing
    of last year—the 4th prize making a higher score than the
    Ist prize of 1966,

    A. Dovotas Suirn, Col. Insp. Militia,

    EXTRAORDINARY IMPOSTURE EXPLODED!

    AN IMPORTANT QUESTION SETTLED !

    Innumerable efforts have been
    ticians to square the circle. It is now admitted by
    rational men that no such thing 1s possible. A ques‘ ion
    of the same sort, nearly, is often propounded which, for
    the moment, may puzzle a man of slow wit, but which
    is eventually seen to be incapable of solution. likewise.
    Itis this ? What would be the consequence of an irte-
    sistible body coming in contact with an immoreable one?
    Very little consideration is required to enable one to dls-
    cern that this is a contradiction in terms. Tho closest
    approximation to a categorical answer that we evet
    heard of has been given by an eminent pathologist, Pro;
    fessor Hortowax, who has proved beyond all question
    that his extraordinary Pills and Ointment are irresistible
    in their effects on diseases’ which under every other
    tieatment were absolutely immoveable. This is no
    empty boast. it is true. We court disproof. Lfis
    medicines, we say, wre the greatest remedial agents that
    scientific genius ever invented. ‘* Pshaw,’? somo con-
    temptible professional starvling, or disappointed char-
    latan may explain, ** what is it all but quackery ! Igno-
    rant or unthinking people may be found to re-echo the
    charge. But stop, friends. You do not bear in mind
    that this very cry of ** quack-quack-quackery,” which iz
    us frequently rnised against the true thing as the false,
    savors itself of the greatest quackery. Besides, an im-
    osition cannot last for ever. If Hottoway's Medicines

    made by mathema-

    rear imposture they are the most gigantic ono that

    fr: darkened civ'lization, It they are an impostare,

    they have effected more good to humanity than thous-
    ands Of ostentatiously benevolent verities. If they are
    an imposture no other imposture has ever originated
    like them, for they are the result of the most profound
    physiological investigation and pathological skill, If
    they are an imposture tlien it is an impostare which the
    world has been thankful for. The most eminent medi-
    calmen of the age have testified to their unparalled
    effects as sanative agents. Princes and Potentates have
    borne voluntary testimony to their virtues. Nobles of
    natare’s making (as well as noblesot man’s making)
    have ahke acknowledged im terms of deserved eulogy
    their extraordinary powers. There is scarcely a news-
    paper throughout the world, which has not willin ly
    made itself the medium of communicating to the pubis
    the astounding cures which these Medicines have effect-
    ed, Most countries they have attained to a patron-
    Âą, the extent of which is perhaps without precedent
    when the comparatively brief coned of their introduction
    is takén into account. Professor Hottoway can pro-
    (lace almost countless numbers of written, acknowledg-
    ments Mp every clime and language) of their efficacy
    forwarded to him unasked. Where then is the imposture? «
    Let us state a few facts of greater interest.
    “It is paramout importance to perserve the blood in
    a healthy condition, because itis the vital fluid that
    is the priniple of life, and when it is affected the whole
    orginization is affected likewise. Hovtoway’s Pills clear
    the blood of all — and introduce a healthy con-
    dition of the body. His ointment acts in harmony with the
    Pills, when applied to external sores. Both invariably
    lead to this result. Afens sana in corpore sano, * asound
    mind in a sound body,— Sunday Courier,
    a = a= er ee

    News by Telegraph. :

    Marserirs, Aug, 27.

    An arrival from the Island of Crete brings the fol-
    lowing intelligence :—While a Russian war steamer
    was taking on board a number of refugees on tho
    Cretan coast, the commander of a Turkish man-of-
    war which was lyicg near, forbid any further em-
    barkation. The Russian Commander refused to
    desist, and both vessels run out their guns, and pre-
    pared for a fight, but Omar Pasha, the tommander
    of the land forces, who was on shore, immedi

    ately on
    Y |hearing of the danger, interfered, and preveniel an

    engagement,
    Lonvon, Ang. 27.

    Active preparations are being made tor the speedy
    departure of the troops from Todin to release the
    British prisoners iu Abysivia. Sir William Napier
    has been appointed to command the expedition,
    The lastreport statesthat the prisoners were no long-
    er in the power of King Theodorus, aad strong hopes
    are in consequence entertained that General Napier
    will suceeed in reaching them in time to save their
    lives. :

    Lonpow, Aug. 27,
    Accounts have been received from Spain which
    confirm the previous reports that the insurrection in
    the Province of Aragon had been successful. The
    General who led the Royal troops against the insur-
    gents was killed. He was a nephew to Narvaez,
    the chief of the Spanish Cabinet.

    Paris, Aug. 27,

    The Emperor Napoleon in a speech just made at
    Arros, significantly said :—

    ‘* Have faith in the future. Weak Governments
    often seek to divert public attention from domestic
    troubles by fomenting foreign broils, On the other
    hand, these Governments which rest upon the na-
    tional will have strength, and need on ly resort to
    whatever shall tend to promote the permanent inter-
    ests of the country as the means of upholding the
    honor of the national flag.” ’

    Lonpon, Aug. 28, (even.)

    The Government of Denmark has renewod its
    demand on Prussia in regard to the northern Pro-
    vince of Schloswig*

    . Professor Faraday, the eminent scientist, died to-
    ay.

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About
Title
The Herald -- 1867-09-04 -- Page 2
Date Issued
1867-09-04
Language
English
Type
Text
Genre
Extent
1 page
Rights
This material has been made available for research, education, and private use only. Publication, distribution or commercial use of the material requires permission from the copyright holder.
Digitization Agency
Robertson Library, UPEI
Reel Number
none
Reel Sequence Number
0186
Page Number
2
Physical Location
Robertson Library, UPEI