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It was atinounced, a fuw days since, that subserip-
tions had been commenced in France in aid of a fond
to assist the â'apacy in the defence of the temporal
cent as any man in tais Court. I y this for!
sake of mercy; T want no merey- oe ne megey.
and ever-living God, that I am "ani ae in
ie
Wictidewde gh Novemner 27, 186%. attack, which only recoiled ypon bhnself and the Minis-
forced to depretate the injudieiousness of Mr. McGee's
try which he songlt to help with ten-fold force. What-
+o lessen the infamy redounding on them from the
ywer against the attack of ihe Garilakhans The I'll die asmany thousands have dh the sa ws) ie : civilized world for their puerile attempt at milit
Comes = taken op with great enthemasm, und iv a their beloved land, and inâ defen . Twill dieh re f hi ion for °Veh meaeuresâ may be enacted during the present aggrandizement. Let foe oy mh in mies
few days nearly 700 000 francs wees coutiibated, iproudly and triumpantly in defen publican Bea vee Dom | arliament, @t P seasion [OF ,tormy sessiotewe will not fail to chronicle, believing, that âeternal âis the cause of Rome ;* eteroalâ tl
Great military preparations continue to be wade in cipes and the liberty of an res enslaved -ipearly Shree weeks, has done nothing but talk in- as we do, that the coalition is to be judged by its acts treasure she possesses: â eterualâ the ity whi "4
Franee, and the magnitude of Use arrangements is'ple. LCis possible we are asked why sentence should The Hon. Mre.Howeâ ahd Dr. Tupper 4 e po ; e city which
referred to as clearly showing that the French Guvern-
ment anticipates afar more important conflict than the)
volunteyrs of General Garibaldi eould threaten, It is
said that troops are being sent to the east as well as
bou'bward, 9
The Pall Mall Goaette, of October 28, says the Pope}
went to Fort St. Angelo and presented himself to t e|
Garibaldian
in proloandasilence.. Looking arqundson Abe bait)â |
about.t%o huadeed ia nnmber, the Moly Father suid Âąâ
** Beho)d him whom your grugrals call the Vaowpire, + |
Traly, cls it aguiost me You Lave all taken up ans Pen |
And what do. sou see? oA pow. old, man.â âThy, Pope!
then.drew nearer aud addgesjed several of the prisou-
ers personally, saying:â" You, my tema, have, lost
your shoes; and you, your shirt, and your cout, aod
jourbat, Al! Well [shall see you ure provided
for, âtind theâ 1 shallâ Send You away to your homes;
ouly, T shallask you first, as Cafbotics, to wake a spir-
imal confession, tor my sake. You know, my dear
friends, that il is the Pope himself who asks this of
you.â âThe Garibaldians were deeply moved by this ad-
dresg, and pressed forward toâkiss The cross Lorderio
the PopĂ©âs robes, whe the Lloly Father gave them hâs
benediction. ~ ' â
There was a fearful accident to the mail from England
to Paris on Sunday merning. Our correspondent
sends us the following hurriedly written ACCOUNT
Aboot 14 miles Trom Paris, the train, which was going
at the rate of 30 mites âati hour, ran jit an engine an
tender which were coming from the direction of Paris.
llow the fatal pivce of carclessness was permitted, has
yet to be explained. The two engines met with a
jearful crash, and Yroke into each other in such â man-
ner as to look like a confused mass of iron. The first
carriages were smashed to atoms ; many of the passen-
gers were killed and others were fearfully bruised andâ
shaken, The two carnages furthest from the enging
sustained but Ittle damage. The accident took place
aboyt half-past seven, and it was nearly ten before
such of the injuryd persons as could bear removal
veached their hotels in Parjs and got medical sid. A
great deal, of suffyring was caused by the impossibility
ot gÂąting anything to drink, though there was a
stakon. gnly 300 yards off; but a couple of hours
elapoad before even a drop of water could be obtained
to mpigten the lips of the wounded,âPall Mall Gazette.
JAPANESE CARPENTERS AND JO!NERS.
The San Francisco Bulletin thus describes iheâ car-
sowheroreeetred bim-on thetrekireestience ofmy country. 4 fear nor,
not be passed upon us, on the evidence of the prosti-
tuics of the streets of Manchester, fellows out of work,
convicted felonsâaye, an Jrishman. sentenced to be
hanged when an English dog would bave get off, T say,
jweitively and cefiangly. justice was not dong me -siney
| was-arrested, As for myself [ tee! the righteousness
of my every act with regard to what I have done in de-
1 am fearlessâfear-
less of the punishment that can be jaflieted on me; and
with that, my Lords, T have done.â
Larkin acknowledged that he was of the crowd which
released Kelly and Deasy, and that be jomed others for
that purpose, but that they bud no desiga of murder.
Ue looked on bis fate, whatever it might be, as a de-
eree of God which he could not escape, and denying
wey hand in the murder, he âlooked to God for metey.
and asked His forgiveness fur thise who had aworn his
life away, Sony :
Gould, the finest-looking and, to appearance, the
most intellectual of the five, said his name was Michael
O'Brien, and. that he was boro in) Cork, Me also
addressed the Court as follows:
** Lam a citizen of the United States of Americayand
if Charles Francis Adams bad. done his duty toward
me, as he pen to do in this country, I would not
be in this dock answering your questions now. Mr.
Adams did not come thoagh I wrote to him. He did
not come to see if TB could find evidence to disprove
the charge) which 1] positively could if he had taken the
trouble of sending or coming to sve what I. could do.
| hope the Amerigan people will notice that part of the
business.â [Gould here commenced. to read from a
apeér, when Le would bave done better to have spoken.
{was upon the tyranny of England and the wrongs
and misery of Irelandââ*the thousands who want
bend, while aristocrats areâ rioting in Iixury and
crime.â Jis conclusion was as follows} âWiiich are the
the young of Iveland t respectâthe law thatâ murders
or banishes their people, of the means to fesist relent-
less tyranny and of ending their miseries forever under
a« home Goyeramen ss }arod not answer to that quess
tion bere: âI trust the Trish people will answer 1 to
their satisfaction sooh, "1 am not astonishe:| atmy Âą
vietion. TMie Governmentâ of this country have the
power of convicting any person. -They appoint âthe
judge ; they choose the jury; and by means of what 18
called patronage (which Ă©s. the âcans of corruption,
they dave the powerof making jthe,laws tosuit their
emery Tam confident that. my blood will. rise, a
cessantly. g
have crossed swords, and Ttfsâpliin to be seen, from
the sympathy which the Nova Scotian arch-traitor
received from his Canadian hearers, that the Dominion
will pot! relax âits trĂ©atherous grasp of Nova Scotia,
unless forved by superior power to do so. Under
these circumstances, the Nova Svotia papers gend a
ery after their representatives to, âcome home,â aa
they can do no good at Ottawa. Th the meanthnt, the
Local Parliament is determined upon â* Repeal,â and,
if backed upâby the sturdy independence of a united
peopleâas we have every reason to believe it will beâ
there is ng. power on earth can prevent them breaking
the odious gonnection which binds them to Canada.
Let them come home by all means, and if denied re-
dress by the Imperial Government, there is the resource
sistance of the neighboring Republic. At all e
we feel assured of the truth, that.a beggarly âNation.
ality, with a large minority ci its people discontented
and ripe for révelt at the very outset of its career,
cannot be of long âduration, The enormous expense
and extravagance entailed by the new Constitution
would, of themselves, ensure its destruction. So great
are these, ip fact, that the Lower Province members
are amazed, and raise in vain the feeble and unheeded
ety of retrenchment, whilst there is scarcely a states-
man in the Dominion who will venture to assume the
responsibility of Finance Mimster. Time, which the
fathers. of Confederation clamor for, to demonstrate all
the advantages of Union, so, far from improving mat-
ters, will, render these, difficulties all the more compli-
vated and numerous, until the mongrel Dominion
burstsâ by âthe force of its own flatulency, We have to
thank âour stars that we are not a portion of it, nor tv
âthere any consideration or bribe which should induceâ
the people of this âIsland to surrender its independence
into Canadian keeping at the present time, Upon this
point, however, we think we may make our minds easy,
for no! only bas the Imperial Government signified its
\determination that no corruption nor coercion will be
tolerated in attempting to extead the Dominion #0 as to
include the Island Colonies, British Columbia and the
of their own strong arms,-and the not improbable as- priestly regime, 10 make the time-honored centre of
and not by its words.
ROME OR DEATH.
Rome, the object of such doubtful conflicts during
the past few weeks, is again in a state of perfect
tranquility. Althoug its military strength, humanly
speaking, is scarcely sufficient to maintain order
within itewalle and the small remaining territory
aunexed thereto, still Garrabaldian hordes have
sorely experienced the âeftects of their enthusiastic
valor. Their iaferiority in numbers seemed only
to stimulate this new generation of Italian republic-
ans, desirous, under the pretext of bestowing liberty
toa people enclosed in the bondage of Papal and
Christianity the seat of United Italy.
Notwithstaudivg their prospects of success, we
feel eurprised that they did not tremble to undertake
« war against truth, which had already proved so
many times disastrous to ambitious invaders, God
does, indeed, chastise his beloved Church when she
pecomes relaxed in the exact fulfillment of her duty ;
hut repentant, He admits her to the kiss of peace, and
forgetful of her past offences, reinstates her in all
her former grandeur, There is no one certainly
who did not sympathise with the people of the fair
Italian Peninsula when they were visited a short
time ago by a merciless epidemic; yet no one was
more interested in the fate of the poor sufferers than
the devoted priests. They, regardless of the danger
to which their excessive charity exposed them, were
aivays to be seeo assisting the unfortunate victims
in their mortal agonies, thus endearing themselves
to God and maa. Among the many who couraye-
ously braved the terrors of death, was Cardinal Al-
tieri, the illustrious prelate of Albano. The cholera
had decimated her population, so frightful were its
ravages. Such asad state of things only inflamed
possesses it.âCom
Amona the passengers who left Charlottetown for
Boston by the steamer Alhambra, on Tuesday the 19th
inst., was Capt. Thomas Foley, of this city; Who is en
roue for Buenos Ayres. Capt. Foley is well and favor-
ably known in this Colony, where he has resided for
over twenty years, and in his search for a new home in
South America and a beiter climate than Prinée Edward
Island affords, he carries with bim the cordial well-
wishes of numerous attached friends. 6 For obrsélves,
we wish him a pleasant and speedy voyage, and we
sincerely trast that Buenos Ayres will more than meet
his expectations asa suitable location in which to settle
himself and his family; for, if such be, the case, we
know that, by the exercise of the same industry and
integrity by which he raised himself to a position of in-
dependence in this country, he cannot tail to acquire
more than a competence within afew years in South
America, test
Tux Hon, Mr, Anglin, one of the New Branswick
members of the Dominion House of Commons, in a re-
cent letter to his paper. the St, John Mreeman, warns
the people of this Island to be on their guard against
some plot or scheme which is believed to be in contem-
plation by Sir John A. McDonald's Government to
wheedle the Colony into the Dominion. We can as-
sure the Freeman that the people are on their guard and
thoroughly wide awake in anticipation of any political
vascality that may be attempted to deprive them of their
independence, as Sir Jehn and his wretched local
agents will find to their cost when they come to put
their scheme in practice.
ny
Tue Islander of last week devotes two or three
columns to prove the Hon. Mr. Aldous a liar in assert-
ing that the Land Purchase Bill bas proved a benefit to
this Island, aud fortifigs its wild assertions by an array
of figures which nobody can understand, and which, wo
are sire. nobody will read, âIt would be a waste ot
valuable time to refute the /slander, tor the fatt is, that
Mr, Pope's opposition to the Land Purchase Bill and
the Loan will be accepted by the people at large as
proof etrong as holy writ, that both are good and neces-
penters wha aceompanied the new.and most wonderfull}, dred fold against tbe tyrants who. think proper Âą âer + bud the ial > i ., |sary, Measures Which 1s, in reality, the fact, proved t
| troup of Sapancee, since: pertormig in that city: leommit Wuch an outrages âThere ts nothing pe in bo apr Pst a sages pedo wescnni the more the Prelateâs charity, For in the midst practical experience, as regards the first rr Bill,
j "Phe Japanese. galling themselves the Haga-ta-kee, Closeâ of nry âpolitiÂąal career which I te daa I don't ub-te prochade Sle-Jein A. MeDonald end shis collegues of the unburied dead, abandoned dying, and shrick-|and soon ty be proved in the case of the second.
tro are fitting, up thd stage of the Metropolitan
Thepire ip the similitads of, My mtaelery temple, for, the
exhibition of their, feats of strength and legerdemain,
They are. said tobe. all of one Jamily, and .the very,
carpanters who are doing the joiner. work are members
of thatfamity.. dapawese carpenters bave an advantage,
over:,American mechanics, in the fact that. they have
four mands instead. of (wo, their toes being as handy as
theig, fingers. But they gain, nothing by it, because
they; make no,use of, workebenches or vices, «If a
Japagese carpenter,wants to sharpen, a saw. he squats
on hip bavite planenithe back of the tool to be operated
on the ground, grips one ead of the saw with the lef
aand, seizes the other with the toes of his right foot,
ind goes to workowith as umob.eonfidence ast Yankee
carpenter at a bench. Their tools are not like Ameri-
enn toolâ) though ther have.a faint similanty,â showing
thatall tools have one .common parentage, âwhether
theirioventor was Tabal Cuin or some other artificer.
A ees din ghaâbanabe oÂą-o'cionrer, bat talvtal
die. is dike theâ handle of aâ cleaver, âOut
The han . eed oe
whittle of eof inch board
eo
. " being wrepped with fine split cane,
jinn sovegee Dk Oe 4 ioaut. the substance of opr
sawh, buf the teeth are much narrower, giving, more of
them Lo an InĂ©l, Rnd mudchâlunger, âThey are'all point-
ed towards the Hands, und ext the Wool liké'so niany
hooks.â When a: Japanese wante'to! tip âa âplank, he
plaeesit acnossianything which will; clevate one end a
few. inghes,, then stands on the wood and ents it;
seizing the cleayer-lookisy saw in both hands and l-
ing Jt, tywirds bim, Thus, vy a nomber of short,
quick, up strokes, h+ gets through a plank not so
speedity, A as effectively a„ an American car-
penter Would do withthe loig, slow, down stroke of the
rip-sawi'/Dhe" plates are email, with single irots, no
handles, The planes are shorter,dighter, and tlhe wood bl
shallower than ours, being generally not more than an,
inclf deep. T& planeâa"piveĂ© of wood. theyâ lay it on
the ground; squat on their hams, âlrold ft fast with their
toes,â ande work tbe âplane with beth hands towards
them. Te devil] » hole they have a.sbort'awly inserted
in the end.of a,round, stick eight. or nine inches long,
âThey take the rect efween their toes, squat as before,
he ak e hole by rubbing the handle of the awl be-
roel éfy Hands in fess tirhe'thah one of our Carpen-
ters could 4Hll one with a'fimlet. Their hammers are
solid cylindrical pieces, not made sharply wich waists
and graceful outlines like ours, hey have the same
flat-sided handles as the saws. e Japs. have iron
squared, not untike American squares, marked with de-
rees.. Their measures are brass, very light, Ape
uted. âOn one oy wd wg y Bed stands for the
in ith, psÂą 13-16, igches, a ivided into. Len, parts.
Som Fa il ol digect i. mere childrenâs tava;
for pi ce, âtliĂ©y have a smoothing her 24 inches
long; dn inch broad, atidâ half an inch âthick, Thesr
chiselé are light and'small. \ The cutting part of some
are âthe size:
the square side, being the wutting edge, And @ round
metal ahatt connecting the convex side with a wooden:
me ad ae Fy ingenious article in their tool chest
is a chalk line, [tis
se : didh ink. This 1s pierced frent
dyshape âof acsection of a half doliar,joaly
know ofone act whieh would bring the blush âof shame
to my face, or make me atraid to meet my God or fel-
low anaa, L-would be happy and nothing wouid'make
ine more happy than.to,die. on the field for my country
t- pg her het Uberties As it i T cannot. die on
the fiel ut I can die on the scaffold, I h ag
âsoldier, âa with âand & Christian, ' je ;
Shore, commenting briefly upon the leose and irreg-
lar evidence upon which he had been Âącnyicted, de-
nied that he bad'a.y hand in the murder of Brett, but
defended nip a of the attempt to resene Kelly and
Deasy from the hands of the authorities, He said the
beircumstences would liave justified 46° act before the
English had it: happened -ins any "her âcountry, and
taunted English justice thus : i Ite : i
â If Jefferson Davis had been relvased in a Northern
ity; «there would have been @ cry âof wpplause through-
out all England:. If. Garmbaldi, whow fF saw before
f was shut out from the wortd, had been arrested, was
released, or something of the Find had taken place, they
should bave spplavded the bravery Of sty ant. If the
wo
be in Ehgland, of courseâ itisâ an âawful thing, while
Yet im Ireland murders are being perpetrated âon un
offending men, as ib the case âof the riots in Water-
ford, where an unoffending man. was murdeved and no
one was punished for it, Had Ibeen an Englishman.
and arrested near the scene of that disturbance, I would
have been brought as a witness to indentify them ; but
being an Irishman, and it was supposed my 8 mpathy
was With théent, dnd 6h Saapicion of syitipathy { wes ar-
rested. and in conâ ende Of the arrests and rewards
which were off:red IT was,indentified. It.could motâ be
otheyyise. We have, been found guilty, and as.a matter
of course, âwe accept our death as gracefully as possi-
ce. We are pet afraid die, at least I am, not,â «
âNor hrâ « Nor 1?"' Nor] "said the other pris-
â :
«*T, tod, âany an Athetiean citizen, and âon âEnglish
territory. I have committed we crime which makes me
amenable to the ctown ef England. I have done no-
thing, and, a8 o matter of course, [did expect pretec-
tionâ~as this gentleman (pointing to, .Allen) has said:
the protection of the Ambassador of my Government,
fam, a citizen, of the State of Ohio; but Iam sanry to
say my name is not Shore. My name is Edward Q'-
Meagher Connor. 1. belong to Ohio, and there are
loving hearts there who will be sorry for, this, I bave
nothing but.my best wishes te send them, and my best
feelings, and J asgure them that Ican die as a Chris«
tian and an Ixiakman, and. that I am mot ashamed or
afraid.of anything | have ever done or the consequen-
ces, either before God or man. They would be ashamed
of me. if |.was in.the slightest degroe a coward, or con-
é2aled my opinions... Yom will soon.send us betore our
God, and J, am. porfyctly, prepared to.go. I have
nothing to regret,.or to.retract or take back. 1. can
say God save Ireland.â , j
1! God, save Ireland }â sbouted the ovhers,. âGod sare
Ireland !" â
ho tw jade pvt-on the'r black eaps, and. in the
They rose, and pass-
â o The âe had heer. saaod, 4
cron bave boty apiiahdeâ âBat a5" happened tole
Bhe pe
from offering this Colony $800,000, or even a particle
of that Sum to gain itsadbesion tothe Union, A bogus
offer may, prrhaps, be made for the purpose of deluding
the people, but! wes feel certain that not one dollar will
ever*be handed over from the empty exchequer of
Canada to *âsettleâ the Land Question of this Island,
or for any other purpose, except bribery, There are
parties in the Island who have already received the
bribe, and are advocating, to the best of their ability,
the political suicide of their native or adopted country.
Let the people be on their guard against these charac-
rors, who, as soon as they accomplished their countryâs
rum, would flock tq Ottawa for promotion, like the
jhundreds of dther hungry vultures that crowd the halls
of its Parhament Buildings, and leave their dupes bere
to eke out 4 miserable Oxistence and pay an ever-ending
triv anada. Wersay to the people, let them not
Eee hy the try YS pre ar and money
grants, &e., &o., every one of which is but a snare
and a delusion. re can be no doubt but that,
within @ short tl » the tariff of Canadaâwhich is now
fifteen per cent.âwill be materially raised to realize
funds to ââ clothe, feed, educate, arm and equipâ rhe
** skeleton empire,â known as the Dominion of Canada,
as the Hon. Mr. McGee graphically wrote, and also
that .tevery other mode of taxationâ must be resorted
to (such as stamp acts and toll gates, &c.,) to maintain
five Legislatures: and five setts of officials, with inÂą
culty which a Government fiuds in the way of a ngh
tariff is, that it induces smugyling, and whatâ the
Dominion particularly dreads is, tliat Prince Edward
Island, âwith âits admirable facilities for smuggling, and
a ten per, cent, tariff, would drive a most profitable,
though illicit, trade with Nova Scotia and other largely-
consuming portions of the Dominion laboring under. the
disadvantage of a twenty or thirty per cent. tariff, and
hence the desire and anxiety, which it is said Sir John
A's) Gevernent entertain to have. Prinve Ed-
ward Island incorporated in the Dominion before
the tariff shall be finally adjusted, and bear with an
iron pressure upon ihe enterprise, trade, prosperity
and very vitality of the condtry. Some bogas offer
may, therefore, comé from the Dominion Parliament
this session, which will ehable the Canadian agents in
our midst to take the stump, and endeavor to persnade
the people, that they are going to get free lands and
their pockets lined with gold, by uniting with the Do-
creased numbers and increased pay. The great diffi-/9f (he Cangers which afflict the body.
exclaim â*Rome or Deathââ and the flames of hatred
minion ; byt we venture to assert that the tariff quesiion they cross the Italian frontier, and congratulate
will only be patched this session with, the view.of secur-|themselves on the easy conquest of the batedâ but
ing an easy Conquest of the Island. The people, how-|ââ eternal city,â flushed as they were by the slight
ing survivors, was he to be seen, exerting himself to
render Jess miserable the state of the unfortunate.
By his ordets the dead were interred ; by his bene-
volence, the needy were supplied with the necessary
medicines, and when they were destitute of homes,
the spacious apartments of his palace were ready tu
receive them, He did not allow himself the neces-
sary time for repose, but vight aud. day dischas
the sacred duties of his mivistay by wiping away the
tears of the disconsolate widow so suddenly beteft
of her husband and darling child ; by absol„ing the
penitent sinner, imparting to him in his dyingno-
ments words of consolation, and fortitying him in
his last passege by the Holy Viaticum. Steb io-
cessant toils, boundless charity, and Christiau hero-
ism obtained from Heaven its well-merited recom.
peuse, for we see the panic-stricken iuhabliuuts be-
wail the death of the saintly Pastor, taken from
their midst to enjoy tho glory of the Heavenly Je-
rusalem. Such was the âspirit that auvimated the
clergy in that terrible visitation ef Providence ; such
likewise the spirit which animated the military more
recently in the unjust invasion which threatened
their immediate ruia ; forthey were alike faithful to
God, loyal to their Pontifical King, aud regardless
As Rome and her few depending towns were
gradually recoveriug from the sad effects of the epi-
demic, hostile troops were on the poiat of forcing
their way to the very capital. Loug azo did they
employ their agents to demoralize the Roman youth
by steulthily introducing trashy reading and immodest
pictures into the City, seeking thereby gradually to
undermine the foundation of religions and thus ren-
der them ivemical to thie Pope.â Now they vonsider-
ed their plots mature, and the death blow all that
was required : now Garribaldiâs ranks swelled with
oumbers of persons as reckless as they were desirous
of pluuder ; as depraved as they were eager to sup-
press Catholicity ; now the aged general weed only
for all that is holy and the desire to shed ienocent
blood was susitated in their breasts. Thus excited
tion about the doings of the Executive Council, There
mont be a letking individuul somewhere in connection
able ays there: is a good deal of pumping peeing
on. We would simply caution the public thatthe
Patriot's information aid conclasions may not be at all
times exactly reliable, ,
ne nm nt th ne
Tr appears that the rides with which the Canadian
yolunteers \arearmed, bave been merely loaned by the
Imperial Government, and will eithur have to be paid
for or returned within a shor: time. 1t will be remem-
bered that one of the buits held out by Col.
Gray to induce this colony to unite with Cunada was,
that by so doing, the Canadian Government would Sup-
ply the Island volunteers with an unlimted quantity of
rifles, thus relieving the âlocal government from the
necessity of borrowing arms from the Mother Country,
which we would eventually be called upon to pay for.
thatthe argument of the gallant Culunel was as falla-
elous âas the leather argument of âthe Jslander and tho
Keaminer, when based upon Dawson's âTannery, and
nearly as worthless as the Summerside Journal's articles
on the same subject. y
The members of the Canadian House of Commons
are to be allowed $6 day for their âservices, to-
gether with 6d. per mile travelliog expensesâtho
mileage calculated both ways: - if the session do not
extend beyond thirty days, But if the session ex-
ceeds thirty days, then the sessioual allowance will
be $600! We think hon. members will have very
little troubleâto prolong their labors for: ove day be-
are to have ÂŁ1000 each, for the session.
Stewart Campbell. one of the Nova Scotia eight-
the people siuce his arrival at Ottawa. This politi-
eal Jodas will be held in remembrance when ânext
he presents himself to the people for election,
past season.
Louis Carvell, Esq., Sunerintendent of the New
Brunswick. Railways, arcived here frou Shediac on
Thursday, last by the Steamer Princesg of Wales, aaul
left again by the same boat for Halifax yp Teesdav
morning.
the TuwnsÂągnd Estate mn Kingâs County upon reasonable
terms. mt)
We understand that the members of Vic, otig. Lad
Freemasons, with their friends and guests will ae the
From the-fact above given, however, it will be seen...
+ wa
Local Items, oa uaa
Tuvespay, the Sth of December, has been seh part, ;
by Ilis Excellency the Lieutenant Governor in Council «
usa General Thanksgiving Day for the harwestof the ..
taken prisoners ; or dispersed, they threaten ruin to
the King whom they had sworn to serve in order
Wx wonder where the Patriot obtains all ite informa. «
With it, or otherwise (which may be the more reason-
«
yond the thirty, so as to secure the $600, âThe Pre- |!
sident of tha Senate and the sneaker of the Houte, |
een to the Louse of Commons, has turned traitor tay» â
sedi
â
a)
sw}
bee
We understand that the Government has purchased:
Al
= ei oe - TELS Uist ty, Wirt ' 9 U bs ) scessaoniieebiihinitlemaiaritaitiaa ns
= : â oe ee ee aed the Senatorial sp-|â Garibaldi is now a haggard and humiliated pris |
P eo dak as the Gian ale tit deaths abi Brett mare than at dl matter of proscribing Catholics in the Senato P er ated pris |
f ueaday sg 9 he gmaa . oe mi a a S peskivels ann in the prt of th ighty G h â a ce â pointments for New Brunswick:~~"The Government was oner at Spezzia ; his followers are partly killed or )
|
gyrogsen cup containing a spongy brew a og a ae deter read the sentenve of
can a e aners, ; Fy
and'Hack, Guid the sie passes through it. i} ed quick! .feom sight. .with. one mane ory, ae they |. "dt" ry ne lio pee) Sa den, wea pated wanpoee galags «i Howse Rotaane. Romp ot Denth
end 6f-the 4ine ie attached to-a small awl, the other end| {seed the crowd, before, descending the staircase. of invited by the lion into bis den. Reynard accepted ths! was uppermost in their thoughts; Rome or Death
of theolme, after passing through the cup, is wound|" God bless Old Ireland.â The prisoners, nein 4 invitation, but-on examining the approaches to the deny). xcited their courage; Rome or Doath was their
aroiind:a:teel not unlike « fishing-rod iwel, which takes|iFoned, and under @ military eseort, were taken to. pri-|/he diseovered inithamerable tracks leading to, bat none b d and desi
the pleoe.of the handle of the.cup.; Tomark w line}sn; where, if there is no delay, in two weeks after thel suming from it, and very wisely dĂ©clined âĂ©nterigâa| "er c'yâ °7e Word aad dese,
down a plapk, the danadees, carppatar tisha the awl, in eatone, soy ep stein a ped oe yew ae âplace fromâ whith there was: no 'retreat, âThe invitation| âVbilst thus buoyed up by delusive hoper, the lot is
wtiekŸ Wine paying itself out As he does 90s he hide that Dlaguire ham heen pardoried hy. the: Queen and «nay be 'vety cordial and tempting, but we have: the|bei0g drawn from the fatal tr and tbe gocieize mer
the fine oh eed fines He reaches fie desiredâ spot, probability that. thethacks' of ver three hundred thousand Nova Scotians ment arrives. The compaet little army of Pius 1X.,
Sentences Commuted testy warn us against accepting it. What the people of|aided by some detachments of French, softly wind
to-dayls despatch announces tio
âthis country have to eonsiddr is, if} for sorte delusive|their way over the hilly district of Tivoli and fall
anniversary of St. Andrew, by dining together at the Narth ..->
American Hotel, at seven o'clock on Mondayâ night.â >
next. mt .
_ An editoria: article in review of the Islanger of the 16th" .
inst. is, for its great length. unavoidably Âąfowded oat this â° 1
ee j eae
sore gaat
â
week, | #4 i
Twenty Shares in the Union Bank of P: Eitekind,'* °
were put up at Auction by Mr, W. Dodd, Auctio„féer, +
a few day's since, and after a somewhat spirited bidding °*
were knocked down at $5 per cent. over the o es
amount of each share. seb Tae .FelgqQa
The âHeather Belleâ has discontiqued her trips ta" .
Souris and othet outward ports.
OE prope
trikes the nvdtrk, and then takes up his cup and reelÂą other prisoners will have their
: - lriw line as he walks back to the spot where he insert. iuaprisonment. :
ed the awh « The pracess of paying the/line aid weeling â
it up again both draw through the
eg tpt p
a
|
4
\
i
keep.it ready for action.â »
l Crrrc rr * 7 Tr âHe 2 at
THEOONDEMNED ENGLISH FRENIANSâTABIR
SBEGCURS.ON RECEIVING SENTENCE,
i woz! yvirrrrd fiw jut jad) bow
Hawevar wieked we Way copaider the condapct,of the
Fenjap party, we cannot ut admire ihe patgigtign that
makes. thom so, regardless of death in, what, they Consi-
der ghely coumttyâs cause as thd followmg! speeches: in-
d:eate. . Allen, Larkin, Gould, avd Shore-found guilty
andygondémacdto death for the anuvders of the | Mane
chester polioeriian Brite daring: the riot which) besalred
in the runnd of Kelby and Dease, thie Pevtan leaders, on
the OMe? wetenlly made dpeiicher fh âFoply tothe
cotirt WHAt thoyâ Had td thy Whiy'kbutdndy
âltonly infamous as
n to be almost unfitâ for publiearion|
One priest who would not reveal where the church plat
was, they stripped stark naked, aid prodded kim wrth
Wayonets, until be fell balf dead from the loss of bléod :
The tabernheles of: the âseveralâ churches were broken
open, the Blessed Sacrament scattered on the door, apat
0, fradvapon, the-ciboriums and ebalices being
crated it & maniier too infamousiand too filthy:to mene
tion. In a word, devils from the infernal regions could
not behave move vilidy chun those âscoundrels didi All
this'is known in the French army, andif overs
we greatly: ore Etim ett nce have' the
euurage to come hear imperorâs' legions, the spunish-
ment inflicted by the latter!will not be chiki yey, Bor
the Garibaldi are. brave only âwhen they outhamber!
thd encmy! as seven to one, and arehurdly! itely to faceâ
=
â a tbitg : ; i i
ink in the cup andj, 4 London paper learns from undoulsted authority that aad glittering offer, they are prepared to pay from two- like tigers on their unsuspecting enemies, turning
athe conduct of the Garibaldians at Nerola was-douwam|pence to four pence additional for every pound of h
sugar, tea, tobacco, etc., which they use, and the same
upon every gallon of molasses and yard of cotton, ete.
which Wey buy. df theyyare prepared for this, toge-
ther with an additional tax âupon their land for school
nding equivalent br advantage,â they will fall down
wd worthip thĂ© Canadian dalf;â bat if they are not
prepare!â to accept the âundoubted Blessings just
ei umératid, they will wisely fetain their envied posi-
tion of comparative ladependernt and comfort, in spite
of the wiles and influenye of all the. minions that Cana-
da is able to bribe.) We shink we have said. enough ow
of wild desperation, blasting in their hearts the de-
sire of obtaining Rome; bringing Deata to them
at the bayonetâs point,
Is it not glorious to every Christian soul to hear
recorded a victory in which long persecuted trathâ
triumphs, and triumphs the more gloriously in as
much as it was more vigorously assailed! Will we
be suy Jonger told that the subjects of the Pope are
instantly the glee of their national airs into shrieks| 77
>) | All Sorts âof Item (ier i
Tux Intercblonial Raflway totite is Hkel)i td ba thee
suggested by Major Robiasonânamely b. Wists i
Shore of New Brunswick, as that is the farthest rem hae
from the American âfrontier. The Lower Cap
the Nova Scotiane, anda large proportion of the- New
Brunswickers are in favor of this route, whilet-the
Upper Canadians, with Sir John A. MeDonal âbis
not loyal, but devoted to Victor Emmanuel? Are,
we to judge of the characterâ of the inhabitants of
the Pontifical States from the revolutionary agente
who Gre sent thither to foster repepligns principles ?
°
vernment at their head, are averse to it, and will/@n-
tavous to carry their point by politicalsfimetiseysdmdto
vito the railway io What is known as the corteeal
route, wo 1 prdee
Tuere are over 300 officials employed about the
liament Buildings at wa, and the nu
T
omer
âee
etre
lis " Guiare vie sf â A . " : . C â who infest the ca i a
an at Ueâ phate âupa Yehâ Auth 6 the i 8 ctr en a _| |Uiiesubject just now, dad ne we Commeneed. thie article| Are we to believe that the Papal rimebt is re-|numerable. âThis Iriettalaly © brigit pet e
han fA 7 "Daihen Hagalte Dre ad? Gece is The London: of-a Dublin âTory Rn | by'a reference to the wordy oonteste being waged in the|garded by ite sibjects as a systerit of Oppression and /|tax-payers of the Dominion. â
number Co hamion ibarjcaan ff fi : r 2â * latates asa factthet the ala ve bw) age san | Devointon: Patlisdeent, oviiensanhbemndide without pe-/tyracoy? No, no, and as a testimony thereof,| Nearly the wholv population of Vanco d
years inthe army, wade ho nemrarky « le oved 1 clmtinek was veal, that tie GovernniĂ©nt Were apprised of ferrmg to the giadiatorisl ciAtestinâ Which ihe Hon,|"Âą @ppeal to, the conduct of the inhabitants of'those| have signed a prfien. the Briush Gover
* Widiam Ripip. Allen, .@ patide of Bandeny vir t â(repaid â Loe: ply meant cn i ae a Messrs. "McGee âand Afigiinâ ehgugĂ©d. | Mr. McGee|Places visited by Garribaldinn bands who always re- ing Poehed ies rua that distant culony to ay 0
Count yd GOrks\n irepty to then inwerrogardry, of! ela)" * et Nye ode deupatched. to Her|ommenced the fight ly & âreview of theâ Hon. Mr, ceived the Pontifical greeting, proudly displaying) âTue Proprietors of the &t. John newspapers cane â
Cou ietidaint jeul te .e70d ow pte i908 MOGITHG Majests si â ay. t0 keep close wetch, ang) Howe's speech, whict heâbitterty denuded, ial of the their banners 5 and mantully, courageously and #e0- ing in that city last week, at which they Wy Soneot
âine Lertencalâ Geidtindes Your 'encnion te theMird healtâ | duhds.â The same writer says, we'sams thine Wide 's'Ă©ve He dhdtnegheâ oa Mr. Angits erously refasing the liberty thus offered to them Roselusions y of the stamp tax, to.whiehe the: lt
thatvedl be! anally dkcody iat bther atid more: « know HOt how tfaly, that the Hewspaperd have recelted The Latter, gout 4 itty dei âby the invading party ; we appeal to the conduct of, 5 sally reli sre, shows ip ed
LWihgire areâ thermew' a jirit te: say an âlittle ne possible hoot the Queen's in-tt atter gentleman retorted 40 ably as to fairly drive|the Roman youth who, seeing their beloved and) 2t%"* Government This is another of Confeder-
ll â
I von!
Âą, 1, wl Uthers, who have stood dup the tended movements, ands}
like me im dy new of theix country: No man in'at Osborne this winter.
he Court will not so: ;
mate Tiltey and bie GĂ©
r. Meee aut of the, Houge, apd :to place
ernment @pon their backs in the
the Hon. cherished city imminent
young bears, are onlr
which we are not yonage per pinerDrvnatitts
doomed tO ruib, did ot rem experience and oo fancy that their troubles, like 4
âeas to take up the rifle in self-defence.
H
}
4
i
It was atinounced, a fuw days since, that subserip-
tions had been commenced in France in aid of a fond
to assist the â'apacy in the defence of the temporal
cent as any man in tais Court. I y this for!
sake of mercy; T want no merey- oe ne megey.
and ever-living God, that I am "ani ae in
ie
Wictidewde gh Novemner 27, 186%. attack, which only recoiled ypon bhnself and the Minis-
forced to depretate the injudieiousness of Mr. McGee's
try which he songlt to help with ten-fold force. What-
+o lessen the infamy redounding on them from the
ywer against the attack of ihe Garilakhans The I'll die asmany thousands have dh the sa ws) ie : civilized world for their puerile attempt at milit
Comes = taken op with great enthemasm, und iv a their beloved land, and inâ defen . Twill dieh re f hi ion for °Veh meaeuresâ may be enacted during the present aggrandizement. Let foe oy mh in mies
few days nearly 700 000 francs wees coutiibated, iproudly and triumpantly in defen publican Bea vee Dom | arliament, @t P seasion [OF ,tormy sessiotewe will not fail to chronicle, believing, that âeternal âis the cause of Rome ;* eteroalâ tl
Great military preparations continue to be wade in cipes and the liberty of an res enslaved -ipearly Shree weeks, has done nothing but talk in- as we do, that the coalition is to be judged by its acts treasure she possesses: â eterualâ the ity whi "4
Franee, and the magnitude of Use arrangements is'ple. LCis possible we are asked why sentence should The Hon. Mre.Howeâ ahd Dr. Tupper 4 e po ; e city which
referred to as clearly showing that the French Guvern-
ment anticipates afar more important conflict than the)
volunteyrs of General Garibaldi eould threaten, It is
said that troops are being sent to the east as well as
bou'bward, 9
The Pall Mall Goaette, of October 28, says the Pope}
went to Fort St. Angelo and presented himself to t e|
Garibaldian
in proloandasilence.. Looking arqundson Abe bait)â |
about.t%o huadeed ia nnmber, the Moly Father suid Âąâ
** Beho)d him whom your grugrals call the Vaowpire, + |
Traly, cls it aguiost me You Lave all taken up ans Pen |
And what do. sou see? oA pow. old, man.â âThy, Pope!
then.drew nearer aud addgesjed several of the prisou-
ers personally, saying:â" You, my tema, have, lost
your shoes; and you, your shirt, and your cout, aod
jourbat, Al! Well [shall see you ure provided
for, âtind theâ 1 shallâ Send You away to your homes;
ouly, T shallask you first, as Cafbotics, to wake a spir-
imal confession, tor my sake. You know, my dear
friends, that il is the Pope himself who asks this of
you.â âThe Garibaldians were deeply moved by this ad-
dresg, and pressed forward toâkiss The cross Lorderio
the PopĂ©âs robes, whe the Lloly Father gave them hâs
benediction. ~ ' â
There was a fearful accident to the mail from England
to Paris on Sunday merning. Our correspondent
sends us the following hurriedly written ACCOUNT
Aboot 14 miles Trom Paris, the train, which was going
at the rate of 30 mites âati hour, ran jit an engine an
tender which were coming from the direction of Paris.
llow the fatal pivce of carclessness was permitted, has
yet to be explained. The two engines met with a
jearful crash, and Yroke into each other in such â man-
ner as to look like a confused mass of iron. The first
carriages were smashed to atoms ; many of the passen-
gers were killed and others were fearfully bruised andâ
shaken, The two carnages furthest from the enging
sustained but Ittle damage. The accident took place
aboyt half-past seven, and it was nearly ten before
such of the injuryd persons as could bear removal
veached their hotels in Parjs and got medical sid. A
great deal, of suffyring was caused by the impossibility
ot gÂąting anything to drink, though there was a
stakon. gnly 300 yards off; but a couple of hours
elapoad before even a drop of water could be obtained
to mpigten the lips of the wounded,âPall Mall Gazette.
JAPANESE CARPENTERS AND JO!NERS.
The San Francisco Bulletin thus describes iheâ car-
sowheroreeetred bim-on thetrekireestience ofmy country. 4 fear nor,
not be passed upon us, on the evidence of the prosti-
tuics of the streets of Manchester, fellows out of work,
convicted felonsâaye, an Jrishman. sentenced to be
hanged when an English dog would bave get off, T say,
jweitively and cefiangly. justice was not dong me -siney
| was-arrested, As for myself [ tee! the righteousness
of my every act with regard to what I have done in de-
1 am fearlessâfear-
less of the punishment that can be jaflieted on me; and
with that, my Lords, T have done.â
Larkin acknowledged that he was of the crowd which
released Kelly and Deasy, and that be jomed others for
that purpose, but that they bud no desiga of murder.
Ue looked on bis fate, whatever it might be, as a de-
eree of God which he could not escape, and denying
wey hand in the murder, he âlooked to God for metey.
and asked His forgiveness fur thise who had aworn his
life away, Sony :
Gould, the finest-looking and, to appearance, the
most intellectual of the five, said his name was Michael
O'Brien, and. that he was boro in) Cork, Me also
addressed the Court as follows:
** Lam a citizen of the United States of Americayand
if Charles Francis Adams bad. done his duty toward
me, as he pen to do in this country, I would not
be in this dock answering your questions now. Mr.
Adams did not come thoagh I wrote to him. He did
not come to see if TB could find evidence to disprove
the charge) which 1] positively could if he had taken the
trouble of sending or coming to sve what I. could do.
| hope the Amerigan people will notice that part of the
business.â [Gould here commenced. to read from a
apeér, when Le would bave done better to have spoken.
{was upon the tyranny of England and the wrongs
and misery of Irelandââ*the thousands who want
bend, while aristocrats areâ rioting in Iixury and
crime.â Jis conclusion was as follows} âWiiich are the
the young of Iveland t respectâthe law thatâ murders
or banishes their people, of the means to fesist relent-
less tyranny and of ending their miseries forever under
a« home Goyeramen ss }arod not answer to that quess
tion bere: âI trust the Trish people will answer 1 to
their satisfaction sooh, "1 am not astonishe:| atmy Âą
vietion. TMie Governmentâ of this country have the
power of convicting any person. -They appoint âthe
judge ; they choose the jury; and by means of what 18
called patronage (which Ă©s. the âcans of corruption,
they dave the powerof making jthe,laws tosuit their
emery Tam confident that. my blood will. rise, a
cessantly. g
have crossed swords, and Ttfsâpliin to be seen, from
the sympathy which the Nova Scotian arch-traitor
received from his Canadian hearers, that the Dominion
will pot! relax âits trĂ©atherous grasp of Nova Scotia,
unless forved by superior power to do so. Under
these circumstances, the Nova Svotia papers gend a
ery after their representatives to, âcome home,â aa
they can do no good at Ottawa. Th the meanthnt, the
Local Parliament is determined upon â* Repeal,â and,
if backed upâby the sturdy independence of a united
peopleâas we have every reason to believe it will beâ
there is ng. power on earth can prevent them breaking
the odious gonnection which binds them to Canada.
Let them come home by all means, and if denied re-
dress by the Imperial Government, there is the resource
sistance of the neighboring Republic. At all e
we feel assured of the truth, that.a beggarly âNation.
ality, with a large minority ci its people discontented
and ripe for révelt at the very outset of its career,
cannot be of long âduration, The enormous expense
and extravagance entailed by the new Constitution
would, of themselves, ensure its destruction. So great
are these, ip fact, that the Lower Province members
are amazed, and raise in vain the feeble and unheeded
ety of retrenchment, whilst there is scarcely a states-
man in the Dominion who will venture to assume the
responsibility of Finance Mimster. Time, which the
fathers. of Confederation clamor for, to demonstrate all
the advantages of Union, so, far from improving mat-
ters, will, render these, difficulties all the more compli-
vated and numerous, until the mongrel Dominion
burstsâ by âthe force of its own flatulency, We have to
thank âour stars that we are not a portion of it, nor tv
âthere any consideration or bribe which should induceâ
the people of this âIsland to surrender its independence
into Canadian keeping at the present time, Upon this
point, however, we think we may make our minds easy,
for no! only bas the Imperial Government signified its
\determination that no corruption nor coercion will be
tolerated in attempting to extead the Dominion #0 as to
include the Island Colonies, British Columbia and the
of their own strong arms,-and the not improbable as- priestly regime, 10 make the time-honored centre of
and not by its words.
ROME OR DEATH.
Rome, the object of such doubtful conflicts during
the past few weeks, is again in a state of perfect
tranquility. Althoug its military strength, humanly
speaking, is scarcely sufficient to maintain order
within itewalle and the small remaining territory
aunexed thereto, still Garrabaldian hordes have
sorely experienced the âeftects of their enthusiastic
valor. Their iaferiority in numbers seemed only
to stimulate this new generation of Italian republic-
ans, desirous, under the pretext of bestowing liberty
toa people enclosed in the bondage of Papal and
Christianity the seat of United Italy.
Notwithstaudivg their prospects of success, we
feel eurprised that they did not tremble to undertake
« war against truth, which had already proved so
many times disastrous to ambitious invaders, God
does, indeed, chastise his beloved Church when she
pecomes relaxed in the exact fulfillment of her duty ;
hut repentant, He admits her to the kiss of peace, and
forgetful of her past offences, reinstates her in all
her former grandeur, There is no one certainly
who did not sympathise with the people of the fair
Italian Peninsula when they were visited a short
time ago by a merciless epidemic; yet no one was
more interested in the fate of the poor sufferers than
the devoted priests. They, regardless of the danger
to which their excessive charity exposed them, were
aivays to be seeo assisting the unfortunate victims
in their mortal agonies, thus endearing themselves
to God and maa. Among the many who couraye-
ously braved the terrors of death, was Cardinal Al-
tieri, the illustrious prelate of Albano. The cholera
had decimated her population, so frightful were its
ravages. Such asad state of things only inflamed
possesses it.âCom
Amona the passengers who left Charlottetown for
Boston by the steamer Alhambra, on Tuesday the 19th
inst., was Capt. Thomas Foley, of this city; Who is en
roue for Buenos Ayres. Capt. Foley is well and favor-
ably known in this Colony, where he has resided for
over twenty years, and in his search for a new home in
South America and a beiter climate than Prinée Edward
Island affords, he carries with bim the cordial well-
wishes of numerous attached friends. 6 For obrsélves,
we wish him a pleasant and speedy voyage, and we
sincerely trast that Buenos Ayres will more than meet
his expectations asa suitable location in which to settle
himself and his family; for, if such be, the case, we
know that, by the exercise of the same industry and
integrity by which he raised himself to a position of in-
dependence in this country, he cannot tail to acquire
more than a competence within afew years in South
America, test
Tux Hon, Mr, Anglin, one of the New Branswick
members of the Dominion House of Commons, in a re-
cent letter to his paper. the St, John Mreeman, warns
the people of this Island to be on their guard against
some plot or scheme which is believed to be in contem-
plation by Sir John A. McDonald's Government to
wheedle the Colony into the Dominion. We can as-
sure the Freeman that the people are on their guard and
thoroughly wide awake in anticipation of any political
vascality that may be attempted to deprive them of their
independence, as Sir Jehn and his wretched local
agents will find to their cost when they come to put
their scheme in practice.
ny
Tue Islander of last week devotes two or three
columns to prove the Hon. Mr. Aldous a liar in assert-
ing that the Land Purchase Bill bas proved a benefit to
this Island, aud fortifigs its wild assertions by an array
of figures which nobody can understand, and which, wo
are sire. nobody will read, âIt would be a waste ot
valuable time to refute the /slander, tor the fatt is, that
Mr, Pope's opposition to the Land Purchase Bill and
the Loan will be accepted by the people at large as
proof etrong as holy writ, that both are good and neces-
penters wha aceompanied the new.and most wonderfull}, dred fold against tbe tyrants who. think proper Âą âer + bud the ial > i ., |sary, Measures Which 1s, in reality, the fact, proved t
| troup of Sapancee, since: pertormig in that city: leommit Wuch an outrages âThere ts nothing pe in bo apr Pst a sages pedo wescnni the more the Prelateâs charity, For in the midst practical experience, as regards the first rr Bill,
j "Phe Japanese. galling themselves the Haga-ta-kee, Closeâ of nry âpolitiÂąal career which I te daa I don't ub-te prochade Sle-Jein A. MeDonald end shis collegues of the unburied dead, abandoned dying, and shrick-|and soon ty be proved in the case of the second.
tro are fitting, up thd stage of the Metropolitan
Thepire ip the similitads of, My mtaelery temple, for, the
exhibition of their, feats of strength and legerdemain,
They are. said tobe. all of one Jamily, and .the very,
carpanters who are doing the joiner. work are members
of thatfamity.. dapawese carpenters bave an advantage,
over:,American mechanics, in the fact that. they have
four mands instead. of (wo, their toes being as handy as
theig, fingers. But they gain, nothing by it, because
they; make no,use of, workebenches or vices, «If a
Japagese carpenter,wants to sharpen, a saw. he squats
on hip bavite planenithe back of the tool to be operated
on the ground, grips one ead of the saw with the lef
aand, seizes the other with the toes of his right foot,
ind goes to workowith as umob.eonfidence ast Yankee
carpenter at a bench. Their tools are not like Ameri-
enn toolâ) though ther have.a faint similanty,â showing
thatall tools have one .common parentage, âwhether
theirioventor was Tabal Cuin or some other artificer.
A ees din ghaâbanabe oÂą-o'cionrer, bat talvtal
die. is dike theâ handle of aâ cleaver, âOut
The han . eed oe
whittle of eof inch board
eo
. " being wrepped with fine split cane,
jinn sovegee Dk Oe 4 ioaut. the substance of opr
sawh, buf the teeth are much narrower, giving, more of
them Lo an InĂ©l, Rnd mudchâlunger, âThey are'all point-
ed towards the Hands, und ext the Wool liké'so niany
hooks.â When a: Japanese wante'to! tip âa âplank, he
plaeesit acnossianything which will; clevate one end a
few. inghes,, then stands on the wood and ents it;
seizing the cleayer-lookisy saw in both hands and l-
ing Jt, tywirds bim, Thus, vy a nomber of short,
quick, up strokes, h+ gets through a plank not so
speedity, A as effectively a„ an American car-
penter Would do withthe loig, slow, down stroke of the
rip-sawi'/Dhe" plates are email, with single irots, no
handles, The planes are shorter,dighter, and tlhe wood bl
shallower than ours, being generally not more than an,
inclf deep. T& planeâa"piveĂ© of wood. theyâ lay it on
the ground; squat on their hams, âlrold ft fast with their
toes,â ande work tbe âplane with beth hands towards
them. Te devil] » hole they have a.sbort'awly inserted
in the end.of a,round, stick eight. or nine inches long,
âThey take the rect efween their toes, squat as before,
he ak e hole by rubbing the handle of the awl be-
roel éfy Hands in fess tirhe'thah one of our Carpen-
ters could 4Hll one with a'fimlet. Their hammers are
solid cylindrical pieces, not made sharply wich waists
and graceful outlines like ours, hey have the same
flat-sided handles as the saws. e Japs. have iron
squared, not untike American squares, marked with de-
rees.. Their measures are brass, very light, Ape
uted. âOn one oy wd wg y Bed stands for the
in ith, psÂą 13-16, igches, a ivided into. Len, parts.
Som Fa il ol digect i. mere childrenâs tava;
for pi ce, âtliĂ©y have a smoothing her 24 inches
long; dn inch broad, atidâ half an inch âthick, Thesr
chiselé are light and'small. \ The cutting part of some
are âthe size:
the square side, being the wutting edge, And @ round
metal ahatt connecting the convex side with a wooden:
me ad ae Fy ingenious article in their tool chest
is a chalk line, [tis
se : didh ink. This 1s pierced frent
dyshape âof acsection of a half doliar,joaly
know ofone act whieh would bring the blush âof shame
to my face, or make me atraid to meet my God or fel-
low anaa, L-would be happy and nothing wouid'make
ine more happy than.to,die. on the field for my country
t- pg her het Uberties As it i T cannot. die on
the fiel ut I can die on the scaffold, I h ag
âsoldier, âa with âand & Christian, ' je ;
Shore, commenting briefly upon the leose and irreg-
lar evidence upon which he had been Âącnyicted, de-
nied that he bad'a.y hand in the murder of Brett, but
defended nip a of the attempt to resene Kelly and
Deasy from the hands of the authorities, He said the
beircumstences would liave justified 46° act before the
English had it: happened -ins any "her âcountry, and
taunted English justice thus : i Ite : i
â If Jefferson Davis had been relvased in a Northern
ity; «there would have been @ cry âof wpplause through-
out all England:. If. Garmbaldi, whow fF saw before
f was shut out from the wortd, had been arrested, was
released, or something of the Find had taken place, they
should bave spplavded the bravery Of sty ant. If the
wo
be in Ehgland, of courseâ itisâ an âawful thing, while
Yet im Ireland murders are being perpetrated âon un
offending men, as ib the case âof the riots in Water-
ford, where an unoffending man. was murdeved and no
one was punished for it, Had Ibeen an Englishman.
and arrested near the scene of that disturbance, I would
have been brought as a witness to indentify them ; but
being an Irishman, and it was supposed my 8 mpathy
was With théent, dnd 6h Saapicion of syitipathy { wes ar-
rested. and in conâ ende Of the arrests and rewards
which were off:red IT was,indentified. It.could motâ be
otheyyise. We have, been found guilty, and as.a matter
of course, âwe accept our death as gracefully as possi-
ce. We are pet afraid die, at least I am, not,â «
âNor hrâ « Nor 1?"' Nor] "said the other pris-
â :
«*T, tod, âany an Athetiean citizen, and âon âEnglish
territory. I have committed we crime which makes me
amenable to the ctown ef England. I have done no-
thing, and, a8 o matter of course, [did expect pretec-
tionâ~as this gentleman (pointing to, .Allen) has said:
the protection of the Ambassador of my Government,
fam, a citizen, of the State of Ohio; but Iam sanry to
say my name is not Shore. My name is Edward Q'-
Meagher Connor. 1. belong to Ohio, and there are
loving hearts there who will be sorry for, this, I bave
nothing but.my best wishes te send them, and my best
feelings, and J asgure them that Ican die as a Chris«
tian and an Ixiakman, and. that I am mot ashamed or
afraid.of anything | have ever done or the consequen-
ces, either before God or man. They would be ashamed
of me. if |.was in.the slightest degroe a coward, or con-
é2aled my opinions... Yom will soon.send us betore our
God, and J, am. porfyctly, prepared to.go. I have
nothing to regret,.or to.retract or take back. 1. can
say God save Ireland.â , j
1! God, save Ireland }â sbouted the ovhers,. âGod sare
Ireland !" â
ho tw jade pvt-on the'r black eaps, and. in the
They rose, and pass-
â o The âe had heer. saaod, 4
cron bave boty apiiahdeâ âBat a5" happened tole
Bhe pe
from offering this Colony $800,000, or even a particle
of that Sum to gain itsadbesion tothe Union, A bogus
offer may, prrhaps, be made for the purpose of deluding
the people, but! wes feel certain that not one dollar will
ever*be handed over from the empty exchequer of
Canada to *âsettleâ the Land Question of this Island,
or for any other purpose, except bribery, There are
parties in the Island who have already received the
bribe, and are advocating, to the best of their ability,
the political suicide of their native or adopted country.
Let the people be on their guard against these charac-
rors, who, as soon as they accomplished their countryâs
rum, would flock tq Ottawa for promotion, like the
jhundreds of dther hungry vultures that crowd the halls
of its Parhament Buildings, and leave their dupes bere
to eke out 4 miserable Oxistence and pay an ever-ending
triv anada. Wersay to the people, let them not
Eee hy the try YS pre ar and money
grants, &e., &o., every one of which is but a snare
and a delusion. re can be no doubt but that,
within @ short tl » the tariff of Canadaâwhich is now
fifteen per cent.âwill be materially raised to realize
funds to ââ clothe, feed, educate, arm and equipâ rhe
** skeleton empire,â known as the Dominion of Canada,
as the Hon. Mr. McGee graphically wrote, and also
that .tevery other mode of taxationâ must be resorted
to (such as stamp acts and toll gates, &c.,) to maintain
five Legislatures: and five setts of officials, with inÂą
culty which a Government fiuds in the way of a ngh
tariff is, that it induces smugyling, and whatâ the
Dominion particularly dreads is, tliat Prince Edward
Island, âwith âits admirable facilities for smuggling, and
a ten per, cent, tariff, would drive a most profitable,
though illicit, trade with Nova Scotia and other largely-
consuming portions of the Dominion laboring under. the
disadvantage of a twenty or thirty per cent. tariff, and
hence the desire and anxiety, which it is said Sir John
A's) Gevernent entertain to have. Prinve Ed-
ward Island incorporated in the Dominion before
the tariff shall be finally adjusted, and bear with an
iron pressure upon ihe enterprise, trade, prosperity
and very vitality of the condtry. Some bogas offer
may, therefore, comé from the Dominion Parliament
this session, which will ehable the Canadian agents in
our midst to take the stump, and endeavor to persnade
the people, that they are going to get free lands and
their pockets lined with gold, by uniting with the Do-
creased numbers and increased pay. The great diffi-/9f (he Cangers which afflict the body.
exclaim â*Rome or Deathââ and the flames of hatred
minion ; byt we venture to assert that the tariff quesiion they cross the Italian frontier, and congratulate
will only be patched this session with, the view.of secur-|themselves on the easy conquest of the batedâ but
ing an easy Conquest of the Island. The people, how-|ââ eternal city,â flushed as they were by the slight
ing survivors, was he to be seen, exerting himself to
render Jess miserable the state of the unfortunate.
By his ordets the dead were interred ; by his bene-
volence, the needy were supplied with the necessary
medicines, and when they were destitute of homes,
the spacious apartments of his palace were ready tu
receive them, He did not allow himself the neces-
sary time for repose, but vight aud. day dischas
the sacred duties of his mivistay by wiping away the
tears of the disconsolate widow so suddenly beteft
of her husband and darling child ; by absol„ing the
penitent sinner, imparting to him in his dyingno-
ments words of consolation, and fortitying him in
his last passege by the Holy Viaticum. Steb io-
cessant toils, boundless charity, and Christiau hero-
ism obtained from Heaven its well-merited recom.
peuse, for we see the panic-stricken iuhabliuuts be-
wail the death of the saintly Pastor, taken from
their midst to enjoy tho glory of the Heavenly Je-
rusalem. Such was the âspirit that auvimated the
clergy in that terrible visitation ef Providence ; such
likewise the spirit which animated the military more
recently in the unjust invasion which threatened
their immediate ruia ; forthey were alike faithful to
God, loyal to their Pontifical King, aud regardless
As Rome and her few depending towns were
gradually recoveriug from the sad effects of the epi-
demic, hostile troops were on the poiat of forcing
their way to the very capital. Loug azo did they
employ their agents to demoralize the Roman youth
by steulthily introducing trashy reading and immodest
pictures into the City, seeking thereby gradually to
undermine the foundation of religions and thus ren-
der them ivemical to thie Pope.â Now they vonsider-
ed their plots mature, and the death blow all that
was required : now Garribaldiâs ranks swelled with
oumbers of persons as reckless as they were desirous
of pluuder ; as depraved as they were eager to sup-
press Catholicity ; now the aged general weed only
for all that is holy and the desire to shed ienocent
blood was susitated in their breasts. Thus excited
tion about the doings of the Executive Council, There
mont be a letking individuul somewhere in connection
able ays there: is a good deal of pumping peeing
on. We would simply caution the public thatthe
Patriot's information aid conclasions may not be at all
times exactly reliable, ,
ne nm nt th ne
Tr appears that the rides with which the Canadian
yolunteers \arearmed, bave been merely loaned by the
Imperial Government, and will eithur have to be paid
for or returned within a shor: time. 1t will be remem-
bered that one of the buits held out by Col.
Gray to induce this colony to unite with Cunada was,
that by so doing, the Canadian Government would Sup-
ply the Island volunteers with an unlimted quantity of
rifles, thus relieving the âlocal government from the
necessity of borrowing arms from the Mother Country,
which we would eventually be called upon to pay for.
thatthe argument of the gallant Culunel was as falla-
elous âas the leather argument of âthe Jslander and tho
Keaminer, when based upon Dawson's âTannery, and
nearly as worthless as the Summerside Journal's articles
on the same subject. y
The members of the Canadian House of Commons
are to be allowed $6 day for their âservices, to-
gether with 6d. per mile travelliog expensesâtho
mileage calculated both ways: - if the session do not
extend beyond thirty days, But if the session ex-
ceeds thirty days, then the sessioual allowance will
be $600! We think hon. members will have very
little troubleâto prolong their labors for: ove day be-
are to have ÂŁ1000 each, for the session.
Stewart Campbell. one of the Nova Scotia eight-
the people siuce his arrival at Ottawa. This politi-
eal Jodas will be held in remembrance when ânext
he presents himself to the people for election,
past season.
Louis Carvell, Esq., Sunerintendent of the New
Brunswick. Railways, arcived here frou Shediac on
Thursday, last by the Steamer Princesg of Wales, aaul
left again by the same boat for Halifax yp Teesdav
morning.
the TuwnsÂągnd Estate mn Kingâs County upon reasonable
terms. mt)
We understand that the members of Vic, otig. Lad
Freemasons, with their friends and guests will ae the
From the-fact above given, however, it will be seen...
+ wa
Local Items, oa uaa
Tuvespay, the Sth of December, has been seh part, ;
by Ilis Excellency the Lieutenant Governor in Council «
usa General Thanksgiving Day for the harwestof the ..
taken prisoners ; or dispersed, they threaten ruin to
the King whom they had sworn to serve in order
Wx wonder where the Patriot obtains all ite informa. «
With it, or otherwise (which may be the more reason-
«
yond the thirty, so as to secure the $600, âThe Pre- |!
sident of tha Senate and the sneaker of the Houte, |
een to the Louse of Commons, has turned traitor tay» â
sedi
â
a)
sw}
bee
We understand that the Government has purchased:
Al
= ei oe - TELS Uist ty, Wirt ' 9 U bs ) scessaoniieebiihinitlemaiaritaitiaa ns
= : â oe ee ee aed the Senatorial sp-|â Garibaldi is now a haggard and humiliated pris |
P eo dak as the Gian ale tit deaths abi Brett mare than at dl matter of proscribing Catholics in the Senato P er ated pris |
f ueaday sg 9 he gmaa . oe mi a a S peskivels ann in the prt of th ighty G h â a ce â pointments for New Brunswick:~~"The Government was oner at Spezzia ; his followers are partly killed or )
|
gyrogsen cup containing a spongy brew a og a ae deter read the sentenve of
can a e aners, ; Fy
and'Hack, Guid the sie passes through it. i} ed quick! .feom sight. .with. one mane ory, ae they |. "dt" ry ne lio pee) Sa den, wea pated wanpoee galags «i Howse Rotaane. Romp ot Denth
end 6f-the 4ine ie attached to-a small awl, the other end| {seed the crowd, before, descending the staircase. of invited by the lion into bis den. Reynard accepted ths! was uppermost in their thoughts; Rome or Death
of theolme, after passing through the cup, is wound|" God bless Old Ireland.â The prisoners, nein 4 invitation, but-on examining the approaches to the deny). xcited their courage; Rome or Doath was their
aroiind:a:teel not unlike « fishing-rod iwel, which takes|iFoned, and under @ military eseort, were taken to. pri-|/he diseovered inithamerable tracks leading to, bat none b d and desi
the pleoe.of the handle of the.cup.; Tomark w line}sn; where, if there is no delay, in two weeks after thel suming from it, and very wisely dĂ©clined âĂ©nterigâa| "er c'yâ °7e Word aad dese,
down a plapk, the danadees, carppatar tisha the awl, in eatone, soy ep stein a ped oe yew ae âplace fromâ whith there was: no 'retreat, âThe invitation| âVbilst thus buoyed up by delusive hoper, the lot is
wtiekŸ Wine paying itself out As he does 90s he hide that Dlaguire ham heen pardoried hy. the: Queen and «nay be 'vety cordial and tempting, but we have: the|bei0g drawn from the fatal tr and tbe gocieize mer
the fine oh eed fines He reaches fie desiredâ spot, probability that. thethacks' of ver three hundred thousand Nova Scotians ment arrives. The compaet little army of Pius 1X.,
Sentences Commuted testy warn us against accepting it. What the people of|aided by some detachments of French, softly wind
to-dayls despatch announces tio
âthis country have to eonsiddr is, if} for sorte delusive|their way over the hilly district of Tivoli and fall
anniversary of St. Andrew, by dining together at the Narth ..->
American Hotel, at seven o'clock on Mondayâ night.â >
next. mt .
_ An editoria: article in review of the Islanger of the 16th" .
inst. is, for its great length. unavoidably Âąfowded oat this â° 1
ee j eae
sore gaat
â
week, | #4 i
Twenty Shares in the Union Bank of P: Eitekind,'* °
were put up at Auction by Mr, W. Dodd, Auctio„féer, +
a few day's since, and after a somewhat spirited bidding °*
were knocked down at $5 per cent. over the o es
amount of each share. seb Tae .FelgqQa
The âHeather Belleâ has discontiqued her trips ta" .
Souris and othet outward ports.
OE prope
trikes the nvdtrk, and then takes up his cup and reelÂą other prisoners will have their
: - lriw line as he walks back to the spot where he insert. iuaprisonment. :
ed the awh « The pracess of paying the/line aid weeling â
it up again both draw through the
eg tpt p
a
|
4
\
i
keep.it ready for action.â »
l Crrrc rr * 7 Tr âHe 2 at
THEOONDEMNED ENGLISH FRENIANSâTABIR
SBEGCURS.ON RECEIVING SENTENCE,
i woz! yvirrrrd fiw jut jad) bow
Hawevar wieked we Way copaider the condapct,of the
Fenjap party, we cannot ut admire ihe patgigtign that
makes. thom so, regardless of death in, what, they Consi-
der ghely coumttyâs cause as thd followmg! speeches: in-
d:eate. . Allen, Larkin, Gould, avd Shore-found guilty
andygondémacdto death for the anuvders of the | Mane
chester polioeriian Brite daring: the riot which) besalred
in the runnd of Kelby and Dease, thie Pevtan leaders, on
the OMe? wetenlly made dpeiicher fh âFoply tothe
cotirt WHAt thoyâ Had td thy Whiy'kbutdndy
âltonly infamous as
n to be almost unfitâ for publiearion|
One priest who would not reveal where the church plat
was, they stripped stark naked, aid prodded kim wrth
Wayonets, until be fell balf dead from the loss of bléod :
The tabernheles of: the âseveralâ churches were broken
open, the Blessed Sacrament scattered on the door, apat
0, fradvapon, the-ciboriums and ebalices being
crated it & maniier too infamousiand too filthy:to mene
tion. In a word, devils from the infernal regions could
not behave move vilidy chun those âscoundrels didi All
this'is known in the French army, andif overs
we greatly: ore Etim ett nce have' the
euurage to come hear imperorâs' legions, the spunish-
ment inflicted by the latter!will not be chiki yey, Bor
the Garibaldi are. brave only âwhen they outhamber!
thd encmy! as seven to one, and arehurdly! itely to faceâ
=
â a tbitg : ; i i
ink in the cup andj, 4 London paper learns from undoulsted authority that aad glittering offer, they are prepared to pay from two- like tigers on their unsuspecting enemies, turning
athe conduct of the Garibaldians at Nerola was-douwam|pence to four pence additional for every pound of h
sugar, tea, tobacco, etc., which they use, and the same
upon every gallon of molasses and yard of cotton, ete.
which Wey buy. df theyyare prepared for this, toge-
ther with an additional tax âupon their land for school
nding equivalent br advantage,â they will fall down
wd worthip thĂ© Canadian dalf;â bat if they are not
prepare!â to accept the âundoubted Blessings just
ei umératid, they will wisely fetain their envied posi-
tion of comparative ladependernt and comfort, in spite
of the wiles and influenye of all the. minions that Cana-
da is able to bribe.) We shink we have said. enough ow
of wild desperation, blasting in their hearts the de-
sire of obtaining Rome; bringing Deata to them
at the bayonetâs point,
Is it not glorious to every Christian soul to hear
recorded a victory in which long persecuted trathâ
triumphs, and triumphs the more gloriously in as
much as it was more vigorously assailed! Will we
be suy Jonger told that the subjects of the Pope are
instantly the glee of their national airs into shrieks| 77
>) | All Sorts âof Item (ier i
Tux Intercblonial Raflway totite is Hkel)i td ba thee
suggested by Major Robiasonânamely b. Wists i
Shore of New Brunswick, as that is the farthest rem hae
from the American âfrontier. The Lower Cap
the Nova Scotiane, anda large proportion of the- New
Brunswickers are in favor of this route, whilet-the
Upper Canadians, with Sir John A. MeDonal âbis
not loyal, but devoted to Victor Emmanuel? Are,
we to judge of the characterâ of the inhabitants of
the Pontifical States from the revolutionary agente
who Gre sent thither to foster repepligns principles ?
°
vernment at their head, are averse to it, and will/@n-
tavous to carry their point by politicalsfimetiseysdmdto
vito the railway io What is known as the corteeal
route, wo 1 prdee
Tuere are over 300 officials employed about the
liament Buildings at wa, and the nu
T
omer
âee
etre
lis " Guiare vie sf â A . " : . C â who infest the ca i a
an at Ueâ phate âupa Yehâ Auth 6 the i 8 ctr en a _| |Uiiesubject just now, dad ne we Commeneed. thie article| Are we to believe that the Papal rimebt is re-|numerable. âThis Iriettalaly © brigit pet e
han fA 7 "Daihen Hagalte Dre ad? Gece is The London: of-a Dublin âTory Rn | by'a reference to the wordy oonteste being waged in the|garded by ite sibjects as a systerit of Oppression and /|tax-payers of the Dominion. â
number Co hamion ibarjcaan ff fi : r 2â * latates asa factthet the ala ve bw) age san | Devointon: Patlisdeent, oviiensanhbemndide without pe-/tyracoy? No, no, and as a testimony thereof,| Nearly the wholv population of Vanco d
years inthe army, wade ho nemrarky « le oved 1 clmtinek was veal, that tie GovernniĂ©nt Were apprised of ferrmg to the giadiatorisl ciAtestinâ Which ihe Hon,|"Âą @ppeal to, the conduct of the inhabitants of'those| have signed a prfien. the Briush Gover
* Widiam Ripip. Allen, .@ patide of Bandeny vir t â(repaid â Loe: ply meant cn i ae a Messrs. "McGee âand Afigiinâ ehgugĂ©d. | Mr. McGee|Places visited by Garribaldinn bands who always re- ing Poehed ies rua that distant culony to ay 0
Count yd GOrks\n irepty to then inwerrogardry, of! ela)" * et Nye ode deupatched. to Her|ommenced the fight ly & âreview of theâ Hon. Mr, ceived the Pontifical greeting, proudly displaying) âTue Proprietors of the &t. John newspapers cane â
Cou ietidaint jeul te .e70d ow pte i908 MOGITHG Majests si â ay. t0 keep close wetch, ang) Howe's speech, whict heâbitterty denuded, ial of the their banners 5 and mantully, courageously and #e0- ing in that city last week, at which they Wy Soneot
âine Lertencalâ Geidtindes Your 'encnion te theMird healtâ | duhds.â The same writer says, we'sams thine Wide 's'Ă©ve He dhdtnegheâ oa Mr. Angits erously refasing the liberty thus offered to them Roselusions y of the stamp tax, to.whiehe the: lt
thatvedl be! anally dkcody iat bther atid more: « know HOt how tfaly, that the Hewspaperd have recelted The Latter, gout 4 itty dei âby the invading party ; we appeal to the conduct of, 5 sally reli sre, shows ip ed
LWihgire areâ thermew' a jirit te: say an âlittle ne possible hoot the Queen's in-tt atter gentleman retorted 40 ably as to fairly drive|the Roman youth who, seeing their beloved and) 2t%"* Government This is another of Confeder-
ll â
I von!
Âą, 1, wl Uthers, who have stood dup the tended movements, ands}
like me im dy new of theix country: No man in'at Osborne this winter.
he Court will not so: ;
mate Tiltey and bie GĂ©
r. Meee aut of the, Houge, apd :to place
ernment @pon their backs in the
the Hon. cherished city imminent
young bears, are onlr
which we are not yonage per pinerDrvnatitts
doomed tO ruib, did ot rem experience and oo fancy that their troubles, like 4
âeas to take up the rifle in self-defence.