Edited Text
. eilielill ae * a a
ââ os
form
: ;
pea
word
vol. XV.
S eae
Weekly
Hournal of Politics,
\ c
Literature,
Tag
and stews,
wy i . . i =} . a . *guge ° = Bi
âThis is truc Liberty, when Freeborn Men, having to xdvise the Public, may spenk free.---Euripides.
Charlottetown, Prince Edward [sland, Monday, October 9, 1865.
New Series.-âNo. 45.
PRINT yy,
gsŸ ieee WG» .
SS %@
© GEO; BREMNER,
Printer, Dook-binder,
er etici YPER,
CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. 1,
Having engaged an experienced
BOOCK-BINDER
is prepared to execute all orders with
PROMYPTITE DE and NEATNESS.
Entrance to Printing Office and
Bindery at Mrs. Bremnerâs Book aud
Stationery Store, Prince. Street,
mere all orders may be left.
Âźrilice Street, June 35, [sc5.
BOUDOT HOUSE.
ESTABLISHUEY I820.
1965! SPRING!
B the Ships Undine, I. C..Owen and
Edwin & Lizzie. trom Liverpool; Urania,
fra Londen: Helen Daries, from Barbadows :
ug of Bath aml Commerce. fron Boston: aud
Chupe, too Liverpeol. th: subscribers
Have Completed
THEIR
' ray a
IMPORTATIONS
FOR THE. SEASON, |
which havieg been bought ou the Best Teams
they are enabled to offer at
EXTREMELY J.OW PRICES,
For Prompt Payment.
CP Wholesale buyers supplied as usual
G. & S DAVIES
Char'town, June 5. lous.
SPECIAL NOTICE!!
PVA undersigned have ap-
pointed ar" âJ.
RICUARDSON, of Sunmer-
side, their AGENT, where
TOLACCO ean be had at the
SAME RATE as:iw Char-
luttetown.
; LOWDEN & RICHARDSON
May}. Is vf
Cloth Pactory!
Pub subs RIBER begs re-peetiully to
tnherm the poisoiie that be will cantinuwe to
maivtlgeturs CLAYTIL, &e
Vevem Wook WIM be received jin Chitflotteto wu
by MH. J. Catleck, Agent. or at die Mill
Le Chath received for Dyeing and Dressing as
beretofvie.
HL Gla estuhlis iment i
» CHARLES Ek. STANFIELD
âMay BI, Sto uf
oa, or
To Consumers of Gas.
(puke Directors of she Crarl ttetown C ae
Light â «rte pay wv ill i uti, FREE of CH AhKGb
u few Patent (las Cook ire Stoves Consuniers
desirous oF preving. tliese most desirable nid eco
lwmical (iss Kanwes are requested wy wake wu en Ly
application at the Gaus Works. as only a lined
pundber, will be disposed of By enier,
WM. MURKY, Manager.
Uh âtewn, June IM, 1865
[ESTIMONIALS.âKerorr or Committee oF |
Pere Peorsigtoas, Pestisi#ep is Geren's
Pedene tien AGk, Ctircaco, Tru â We, the
undegigned, present by imvitiution, veMterday, to
wituess Che Gperation aud work ig of hie hew
principle of yas aed for coking purposts, were
preseat dyriig uw series of caperinctis, hear vow
fully calling out the utility of threes Moves As peony lied with,
the resalt of actual experimétt Ue following was
Heefstake was cooked in four minutes, Ms juices |
und fluvof refined : aut. farther, the « Tai of Vhe
inventes alaodantly sustatued, by. This pros cox |
tough qeat. ix rendered tender aud delicious, ;
âQuait were, in two âinstances, broiled in live
diate s. wick Bivat fer g Hare. {
Bread cut frest: from the uew loaf wag delicately ,
brewued in tWo tuinutes
tn euch case thexe viands would be pronannced |
dectyuety wnt emeosongity cooked. lu the cee OF |
the weats, the exterior surfaces were couggluted
wud rendetedâ firm: the snbaianee of the whole,
whea covked, retuluiug bheir juices and thivor i
f ueither ner any case was there the faintest |
sag flavor er odur of gaa lu or about the 4
âves. or iu the food when covked. We reward |
the process as entifely superior and successful
SaMUEL Hawk. Riehneond Hodse.
fixe. HW Prewen,
W. F. Tecker,
J_W, HWesteneny, Maseosoit touse.
A. M- Stepps, Revere Honse. â - |
Jonsx Waicur, * Andersvi's.ââ |
The coat cf cowking wv this method we append
th Sueie up fram caren! tests yesterday. neve ted
bat tet tried: 12) lbs. bread copked ns 42 mii tes, |
consuming 4 cubic feet of pus, cost L cent. 2 Ibs |
stenk brotied ix 5 tuilrates, eoftsd using | of a ethic |
tot of gam, cont jot acent. 1b qua jrmer, bu led |
us 94 duinntes, consuming | enbie foot of gus, cost
2OC1 cent. - 24 breakfast biscoit baked im im iin
tiles, consugiing J feet of gus,cesbâ?} onl!e-
Briggs Honse
* Having frequently examitied the-nrode of action
4 Shaw sSrmenBuorien, | have den led to the |
Suchusion that the tissues aml inteyument: yt |
Cough meat are ruptured and Brokeil throigh the
(Steet of hihiy heawed, even. red hot atenm of!
Which thos gasflumwe is highly composed. . At the |
fest inetitit this steam penetrates wud sentd- the
jieat, and the salmequent browning renbne a oui
ewirof the water formed, with te juices produced. |
© ie Tine, us obtained in the devices of Mi
Shaw: te the parest thune whieh art ntords: mid |
there le. neshivg prenenut, as vapor of, gas, whiel |
fate give odor to âor ally way iuterfere with the
âirodtcd tyn Of the delicious thivont of broiled reat. |
â Me ap paralus mecires bie greatest ecomeu.y ol |
fitie in cooking steaks: âit reuders the Loup: nest
serqt Move fener thin in any other notte of t oit ;
Mg i, aiel with the simple wotivie of tiyne, ets bles |
the voek to produceâ with certainty ay gradation
pt etheet/- 3 Respeetfull y, wr ATT ae {
&, A Wares, M. bt hte. |
PE Boylston Breet, rn a 2 ieaee bemepcn :
â ~~
Kuo Witrjay M.Lowyo.. |,
W. F. Staw.âThe? iam Cookin
(tus Heatly Stotes oof your juvention, which f
dyeve, wreak ve juant four veurss | ean anhesitas ugly |
say have piven we perfect gutisfaction ; and | can
coufidentiathy recomend them, as I âhave found
then, tu be the Meat -ceouomicul aud conyeniernt |
Srtinn and beating apparatus A dave ever met
: ;
- vin the Gua Coking Ra i
ne, the qmality of the |
rp #8 vet surpwimuyly iuoproved. by cb of |
1⏠toasted meat art ul retained, sv that they do |
pps to lone: ante oftiie wetzht: Tu the e: Uke
a. Ue Bea gO" Lite Lo Quite sen ious i
thre veobony oft te tnode of ciphian, ue ei, Pa
wii Suat that deat lone winch of tikes \. ight |
whew couhed ia the ordjpary coal rouge even |
Respecifally yours,
nen 13724 ee M.Lehixe
From D, B Cos â, | â.
L Ageeâ > ; whee st. Chig go. ;
t régard W F Mink Patetit Ge Studer ag
oe Ae ampeas ARO grenios Inventions uf the uaptes
tell 4 clajn tox it, ~-povel, counyusicn! and
â „ Convenient wi
eeâ wiichedruled âtating whey" ie weleomed |
be ees Pike Whee eves He bus dyon |
tied itm tral Ne of an to bg without it alte:
â ae g rare DB. Cog,
ean CW OWS vebeliientciiinâ vt tied
yritly ane } Liwew ithe
pe publicâ âHw Ntote for iol i? |
bd bd > 4
ate Habsaleina vidi oltasfonea ty danny
Âź BPN oat tla i mesenger ieeti ly cin ae Fh esdeods
iseactf padi *)
~ Wy Ping!
{oir stove, Which leats thay. icsigegpigh by, auth, rg Ldap
he tare roy.
Maeh woes y teemh fil teh Wry fer
Great invent Nolen ail in simple jartiod ion eds. | Lyte ms oua Stier?
: | Beptemvers, 1865.
Yours nie marae? a thee wits
~~
1865!
every MONDAY night. at elevet o'clock, reaching |
j;(woo clox _
psmume Dinh.
ot fiveuer more ge iug atic
LITERATURE,
A THE WIDOWâS WEDDING RING,
TO THE â
rex 7 7 re r Four years ago, this very day,
i Ec N Aâ IN i ke x With happy hearts and young,
or
P â i LAND Where ancient oaks dropped o'er the way
. ae » â . .
Tee Legislature, during the late Session
| having passed â An Act to ussist Teyants in
the purchase of the Fee-simple of their Farms,â
by udvuancing to the Tenant ONE HALF of the
umount wegreed upou by the Proprietor and Tenant,
as the Purebase Motey of bis Faruaâ
The Commissioner of Public lands
hereby gives notice to all tenants
| desirous of availing theriselves of the privilege of
the above recited Act, that he i4 now prepared to
| ASSIST SUCH TENANTS in the purchase of thei
Farms, as in manner and extent provided under
such Act
| FORM OF APPLICATION and fall particalars
may. be obtained gt the office of Crown Lands, |
Colonial Building, Charlottetown
. JOHN ALDOUS, |
â Coumissioner.
Public Lands Office, May 8, 1865,
We passed, while jov-bells rang ;
May sailor tove had claimed his bride
To share his future life,
We left the grey church side by side,
Fond husband, grateful wife,
Sut soon my sailor left his home,
Compelled by bitier fate to roamâ
Ah me! he sleeps âneath ocean's foan.
The glowing roseate bue of hope
From my young life is gone ;
As ivy trails without a prop,
So I must creep alone.
I look around the empty room,
Hot tear drops burn my face
Grim ruin rises from the gloow,
And fills each vacant place.
: a | My child lies sick upen his bed,
. BE. ISLAND
. . . â . â
Steam Navigation (o's. Steamers
Princess of Wales and Heather Belle. |
_ SUMMER ARRANGEMENT, |
Commencing Monday, May 22.
My spirit shrinks with lonely dread,
Great Master better both were dead.
Hush, wild heart, hash, I must not sin,
However keen my grief;
Oh, Father, save, ere | begin
To doubt thy sure relief.
pd â enrereÂź ape | IT hear my baby's piteous ery
Phe Steamer â Priucess of Walcsâ : Aw 06
| Paces V ES Charlottctown tor Duamerside, |
Shediac, Kichibucto, Chatham aud New custle,
It drives me almost wild ;
What have I left, wherewith to buy
Food for my Luangry elvild !
shredine lu time for the nO hina train on Puesday My husband 5 gift, muy w edding ring,
Leaves Shediae, for Richibaeto, at wine o'clock
ow LURSDAY morning, and Richibucto, for Chat- |
mt aml Néweustle, at one O'clock sanie day. ar
|
Phe purest, sweetest wewories cling
Arouna thee, bright aud precions thing.
riving at Chatham and Neweustle suameevening
: nd must I sell it? Heart be still
,
Be still, oh throbbing brow ;
Leuves Newcastle, fog Shediac, at four o ctock |
m WEDNESDAY morning,
wud Richibueto on way down.
Leaves Shedine, ter Suunuerside and Clurlotte
town, on WEDNESDAY afternoon, at halt past |
â* insted tel4 ey of the Train. | My love will not be slow to greet
aves Charlottetown for Pictou every THURS. | : . ;
ID \\ meant te ziL half-pust mt pronto. gt at | lis w Ue beside God â throne,
â= i ; ik. jen Ves }
Pictou for Charlottetown, fit 12 o'clock same night. |
Leaves Churlottetown for Summerside wand. She- Frow her thin haud is one.
lac, every ERIDAY luorlehg at hialt-} want cig hi
o elock. '
Leaves Shediac, for Summerside and Charlotte. |
town, at half-past two-emery SATURDAY after
noow, deriving #t Charlotieiowm at dialtpusd ten |
Calling at Chatham
What gives my spirit such a thrill,
It cannot uatier vow.
1. :
Although his marriage tuken sweet
Yeu, when we meet beyoud the sky,
My glauce shall tell hia pitying eye,
âT coald wot let our da: ling die
<<
The Steamer â Veather Belleâ TUE HARVEST MOON,
Leuves Charlottetown for Pictouevery MONDAY
]
}
wotuing ab bull-paal bine, |
|
Che moou has turued to silvery gold ;
Pieton sauie eveuingâon arrival of Mail, | The corn is swaying around the fold;
ubout six eâclockâtor Charlottetown
Leaves Charlottetown for Brule every THURS.
wuves
Phe lark is asleep by the plough at rest:
| DAY and SATURDAY. mornings, at five o'clock ; | Day is hushed tu the black Night's breast.
returning te Charlotietewn same cvenings, janne- |
ee | Thatched like } stund : :
diately after arrival of Mailat Beuic, at about live | *Patetred Ike hats, stund the elantiug sheaves,
o clock tu the eve ning
Steamer âHeather Belleâ also rans to. Mownt
Stewart Hridge and Rrekyw Vodut, ow thre Hills
ierongh Biver, every luasual aiid Ruiw tims beiaigy |
| Ou the broad field strewn with the poppy leaves;
Aud the red clouds hang, with a wandering love,
Lie weed and the meadow and streani above.
Market das) >.
AN IRISH BRIGAND.
Effect does not more surely fillow cause
than brigandaye and iis attendant suffer-
FARES:
From Charlettetown to Viciou
Steer
Charlottetown te Brule, or
Steernye Ts bal
uw backâCuabin L2s,
we Us. td
back â Cabriâ Os
Charlettetown te Suatuerside. or back-~Cabin 9s,
_ Steeraye fed. yoyo. | ings the teraivation of a civil war. Led
Charlottetown, tu Shediac, or Lack Cabiu 18s â i
Siabbake lds wood O Manion aud bis rapparees and a
Charkettetuven to Riehibocte, or back, $5.00) +ystemi of black mail succeeded the (1om-
lie Mirauiicha, do Ue) ns : ra al The .N
Summerside to Richilucto, deo au | Well au 8 ruguie iu ireland he North
Do Miramicii,, de 4.50} was his favori'e haunt;.and he is said. to
Shedine to~ Richibucty, â have been connected wich bands who touk
ite Niirnuriehi. dea 3 Oi} â
Ub âtow uw toiSt. dota, or backâSG1 88 Ud. or 4 Se} 0d through al parts of the isiand, aud met
Do k: niin re, ay 1 iva Gel, oF i v four times lu the year to aij ist the div slut
lw âortland, eo 2 lds Od, or 8.04) | +. rare ; :
fiy Busts, do % 16s 3d. ur 9.00 | VF the spoil. The O Haulons Leing of the
â FAKES â FREIGHUY. | ohd race and old Ie ig on, and Redmond
Charlottet6wh to Sanimerside, |
Is per barrel bulk.| y utle by birth and generous by nature, the
lie Shredine, Ts (al du
. soe Fa neg | pesBants a id tswall farmers stood u no fear
7 & Mirawmichi§ = rd of Sim, but were cver ov tbe watch tor his
Shediac to a. â ri au { ik Ga, de safety. ' Farmers, travell ag pedlars, and
politeel ie Te oe. t. Bontâ ei Biecee eas people In in ddity g Clicumstahccs, On paying
Sniitierside, Tus. avuilable one week. Tickers | Redutond er bis trusty agents half-a-crowa
void it partics*ienwe the Ishind dmring the-time. | per anium. Were sale frum plunder ; and
ExevasioS Retcun Tickets, at ome first class |.f through mistake they suffered at the
j fare, tues be immed at ansetichet Uflice. to parties | 1 sd. of atranvers, their 'lisces Were iuade
returning tevether, te ated |
yood on information being conveyed to the
fra HV One Slaljwl Wilk iLOne veek, it being dis
/ and the thief to three trusty followers, to anda nice little allowance of $500,900 per
ibe delivered over to the charge of the | @2oum.
Armagh gavoler *â
'
âBy Redmond OâHanlen, in loco, one of His |
With the annuities to the King of
the Belgians, (ÂŁ50,000 a year, out of which
he returns about ÂŁ30,000) and to the Duke
â
Deara or Mrs. Moors â** On September
4th, at Slopertun Cottage, Mrs. Moore,
widow of the late Thomas Moore, Esqr.,
,autbor of * Lalla Rooka,â aged 68.â" This
Majesiyâs Juatices of the Peace for County Are| 2. C&bbridge, his mother and sisters, the) is Ă©n announcement that one of the last ruses
wavh, aud Chiet Ranger of the Mountains. | a of 2.000 000 . unoually pay-| of a glorious summer has at length disap-
[herewith send you the body of » oho | able to rvyalty in England. Besides having! peared. Few are now left of the brilliant
was this day brought before me, and exammed | OY&F '„O million duilars a year for herself, company who adorned the early part of the
|
| individadls or families
tiuetilv understood that aniess these couditions are
the Tickets will be void.
Shasos Tickets may be plire hased ut Office for
'
|
by order, F
F. WAUXLES, See'y.
Charlottetown, Mav 29. 1865 |
ates a i
was going '0 sell his ouly cow to pay his
chief. One day meeting a poor man who |
rent, and pitying bis case, be lent him five |
pounds, aud bade him appoint any time and
place be choose for repayment.
say, the trust Was puuctually kept, aud the
Strange to
jiu danger of my life.
tor robbing Mr.
requiring of you to bold him in sate eustedy till | $5.000 000 whieh Prince Albert hud at the famous in our literature.
next general assizes, to be beld for the said | time ol his decease,
county, and for your se doing this shall/be your
| Sufficient warraat. Given uwuder my haud this) somely paid.
| Ist day of March, 1595.
âReDMOND O'HANLON,
_'T? » Gaoler of Armagh.â
The metbers of the Government are hand-
Lord Palmerstonâs sulary is
$25.00U a yearâand five Secretary's of State,
(tlome, Colonial, Foreign, War and India),
respectively receive the same. Sv does Me.
, onthe kingâs highroad, Queen Victoria further has the interest of the nineteenth century, and whose named are
Among these
/ names none is or will be held in more kindly
âremembrance than that of the lady to whom
the poet Moore gave his heart. Moore not
only tuved herâhe was proud of her, and it
| is delightful to see in bis letters and in his
diaries with what eagerness he sounded her
| However informal the commitment, the Gladstone, Chancellor of the exchequer. The | praises. Le writes to bis mother in 1813:
ârogue was secured, and sworn home ageinst
Audieuce, officers, counsel. | eeretary, $27,500 a year.
by the pediar.
ilors, judge and all, joined in ove roar of
| laughter ut puints of the trial when O'llan-
jlon's magisterial interference cane before
' the court.
As the chivalrous Robin Hood suffered | $30,000 ; the Irish Attorney-General, $30,- |
/more than one defeat from tauners, tinkers,
âaud sturdy beggars, so Redmond meta van-| ple, about seventy persons, all holding |
_quisher in a shopkeeperâs apprentice.
/youthâs muster having to receive a good
}round sum of money in Newry, was afraid
to risk an encounter with Redmond or some
âof his gang on his return to Dundaik, hic
native town. Lao his perplexity, his appren-
| tive, sixteen years of age, offered his ser-
| Vices, Which, after some hesitation, were
âaccepted. The youth, in the words of Mr
| Cosgrave, autbor of the â Trish Rogues and
Rapparees,â went to the ficld, and brought
}home an old vicious screw, with much cf
âthe same hamer of Sir Teague O Reganâs|
'war-horse, on which he rode out to meet
| Duke Schomberg after the surrender cf
| Charlemont, that when any o her borse came
âup to micet him on the road, he always
| strove to bite or k.ck bim, by which means
âhe commouly kept the road to himseif. A.
be weuded on his way, he was overtaken by
,4 well-dressed pgeutleman, with whom be
iâtreely enered into discourse, waking wo |
secret oO! his business, or of bis expeetation |
jut being about the same place ou his return
| to-morrow with L100 tu his possession. * 1
| Wouder,â ssid his fellow traveler, * you are
so free in your Comnubications with
strangers. Liow can you tell but that |
may be edmond O'Llaulon, or one of his
* Ob, oh!â suid the boy, bursting
out laughing, *such a nice looking geutle-
}Man as you to be a robber! Do you think
(Lt haveuât eyes?â * Well, at all events, 1
advise you to be more discreet. Redmond
is fausous at d-szuises, aud will pin you if
he gets wind of your business. Lereâs a
}erown for you tu drink my health, but keep
}a b.idle on your tongue.â The grateful
| youth, suberiug at once, made the promise
And even as the boy expected, the geutle-
wan overtook him as he was retuening nexâ
val
guug Âą
|
day, end conversation was resumcd, » Well. |
iny boy, L suppose from your looks you
have wot met with any had company, aud
your money is safe?â + Tudecd it is, sir;
avy thauks for your good alviee.â * How
ure you carrying it? * tu the two ends of
this ticken wallet.â © Dear me, L would like
to feel the weight of it out of curiosity.â
jand he approached, but the horse fashed
out, and he was obliged to keep his dis-|
tance.
rather sternly for such a niee speken gen-
tleman. * Oh, sir, houey, sure you wouldaâ:
think of robbing me; what would the mas-
ter say?â *iaonât know, but this is what
i say, if you do not surrender it at ouce, |
will send w bullet through you, and auother |
ithrouzh your garren.? +1 promised my
| master not to let myself be robbed till | was
Here is the mouey,
but you must take the trouble of crossing
the ditch for it.â So saying, he beaved th.
bag over the slough that bordored the
road, and the hedge beyond it into the next
field. This annoyed the highwayman, but
*Torow over that wallet,â said he. |
Trish Viceroy has $100,000, and the Trish
The first Lord
of the Admiralty bas $22.000 a year;
ithe Lord Chancelior $50,000; the Tris)
| Chancellor, $40 000; tue Attorney Genera]
iehout $50,000; the Solicitor General,
'$25,000; the Lord Advocate of Scotland,
U0U. When a change of minisierg takes
This | Ligh office, have ty retireâand the gross)
âamount of all their salaries is $850,000 a
year. All the working staff remain in office
| for life, their salaries gradually rising, and
after 30 yearsâ service, each wan may retire
}on a pension equal to his full salary at the
j time. A clerk in the treasury in Eagland com-
|menecs with $400 a year, and caanot obtain
} the nomination untill, in a strict competitive |
examination, he has shown himself tu possess |
w certain quantity and variety of general in- |
formation. When be retires, after a thirty
| Yearsâ service, lis income may be, and viten| gins ty tive for ever; but as much as any of
these, if not more, she was a pvetâs idol.
She died at three o'clock on the morning
ae cast |
These are a few of the tems of national
expenditure in England. In sume instances, |
isuch as the enormous payments to royalty,
ithe sularies may appear high. Yet, most|
Kaglish statesmen having extensive heredi a- |
| ry estates, the amount of the salary is not of |
|} much consequence to them. Each, in his |
way, bas to make a large annual expendi-
ture, and office increases the necessity of
muking 16.
|
ri fied : |
| Corron Prosrects.âThecult.vation of cot- |
ton iu the South has lung boen one of the
suvurces uf wealth in this country, but its im-
portane will be vastly increased and tho)
product greatly enlarged by the social changes |
which have occurced inthe Syuth. Jlereto- |
fore the evtton plantat.ons have been of vast |
dimensions, usually embraced several thou-
sand ueres, and the extent of land has been |
tov great tu admit of proper atiention, It is
with cotton cultrus as with every other braneh
of farming âfiity acres of land properly culti-
vated will produce more thao one hundred ac-
res careleesly atcended tu. There is no doubt
that the Southern cotton crop might be made |
(to double the yield of past years. The nacu-
| ral effect of the overthrow of slavery will be
to break up the large landed estate of the
South and convert them into cotton farms,
the owners of which will have an incentive to |
bring every acre up to the highest pitel of cul |
tivation. There was no dispositivn of this
kind among the ofd planters. They were
lrich, and every year brought them in a nice
| income from their plantations. This was all
|they desired; and the management of the
| business was left to overseers, who had no
more interest at stake than the monthly sal-
ary. in addition tu the expected inciease in
the cotton crop by a subdivision of the land, |
the extent of country devoted tu the culture
of tris staple will be rapidly enlarged. Texas)
tlone presents an almost boundless field fur |
'
|
| the culture of cotton; territories that have
' been erected outot New Mexico are ina great
| part weil adapted for this purpose, and in Ca |
| iifornia the practicability of cotton Krowing |
{has been fully demonstrate.d It would not be |
jetrange if the cotton product of the United
States teu years hence should be double what |
it has ever been heretofore. Lf the Southern |
| people will now eneourage emigration from
{the North,and allow the energetic Yankee |
jelement to help them inthe work of restoring | my pen, let me repeat to you an anecdote | | years.
| 18, between ÂŁ10,000 and $12 G00 a year. |
|
| brow knitted.
| âYou cannot imagine what a sensation
Bossy excited at the ball the other night.
She was very prettily dressed, and certainly
looked very beautiful. 1 never saw so much
admiration excited. It strikes everybody
pesca that sees her how like the form and
| expression of her face are to Catalaniâs!"â
| And so through all bisletters and journals,
| he is never tired of referring to herâquoting
| what she said, telling what she did, describ
ing how sie luoked, and recording how she
was admired. [be married her in L811, and
| her history is summed up in this one phrase
|âthat she was the delight of his life. She
| does nob apjear to occupy a great place in
| his poetry ; but it is one of the curious traits
of many a poet that he is ex@ited to sing less
âby the real mistress of his heart than by
suine imaginary heroine, or by sme beauty
Mrs. Moore
j}was pot a Lesbia, nor a Beatrice, nor a
| Laura, nor a Highland Mary, destined in
| that kindies a passing flime.
,of Munday last. She was sensible to the
}end:; she knew that she was dying ; and she
said that she was quite happy. She was the
last that remained to us of the Moore fami'y,
aod now that she has departed, we begin to
count with sume sadness how many links are
there leit to eonnect the preseut generation
of letters with the past. â Tunes.
Aytoun aNp Tuackeray.âApropos of the
death of Professor Aytoun, when Tuackera y
was giving his famous lectures on the Pour
Georges in the Music Hall, Edinburg, Aytoan
was peesent. Livery one has read those lee-
tures, and must remember the sarcastic al-
lusions made to the virtue of Queen Mary,
and the half contemptuous, halt-pitying moc-
kery at Aytuunâs well-known hobby. Aytoun
âwas in the hall close under the lecturer,
listening intently tv the great novelist, as
he rolled out his period of delizhtfal criti-
cim. At length be came to the âQueen Maryâââ
passage, and Aytounâs face fushed and his
Oa he went in his mocking,
bantering tone of scepticism, and the Pro- |
fessurâs brow grew darker, and his hands
began to work convulsively. At last came
the allusion to Aytuun himself, and his
. 4 ae
chivalrous advocacy of Mary, and the balf
| cuntemptuous, half flattering notice was ac-
companied with the marked side-glance and
ball-bow which gave it its point. Aytoun
was irritated bevund eudurance. Le durst
not and did not interrupt the lecturer, but
deliberately got up, and stalked down the
passage to the Govr, muttering as he weat
sumething that sounded strangely like * in-
fernal quack.ââ Lie was last seen that day
striding luriously alung George Street, on
his way to his house in Great Stuart Sireet,
gesticulating as he went, and moving his
arws in a way that boded little good to any
one who at the moment should block his
path with asluron Qieen Maury. Be this
as it may, be ever after disliked to bear the
name of Thackeray mentioned. â Lazlish
paper.
The Paris correspoudent of the Publisher's
Circular, relates the fulluwing aneedute of
Chiers :â
â* Since M. Thiersâ name is flowing from
| An Anssiay Lavomixe PiawtâFor the
frst time I met with a narcotic plant â
âcommon further south, and gifted sit
curious qualities. Its seeds, in which âthe
deleterious principle seems chiefly to reside,
when pounded and administered in a small
dose, produce effects much like those as-
ain to Sir stemehery Davy's
; the patient dances, sings,
ieee. extravagance, till, afteran hour
of great excitemeut to himself and amuse-
ment to the bystanders, he felis asicen, and
on awakening has lost all memory of what
he did or said while under the influence of
the drag. To puta pinch of this powder
into the coffee of some u ing indivi-
dual is not en uncommon joke, nor did [ hear
that it was ever followed by serious cunse
quences, though an over quantity might per-
haps be dangerous. 1 myeelf tried iton two
individuals, but in proportions, if not abso-
lately homcepathic sul! sufficiently minute to
keep on the safe side of risk, and witnessed
its operativn, laughable enough, bet very
harmless. âThe plant that bears these berries
hardly attains in Kaseem the height of six
inches abuve the ground, but in Oman I
hav: seen bushes of it three or four feet in
growth, aud wide-spreading. The ste ns are
woody, and of @ yell»w tinge when barked ;
the leaf of a dark-green colour, and pinnated
with ubout twenty leafl-ts on either side ;
the stalks smouth and shining; the flowers
are yellow und grow in tufts, the anthers
nawerous: the fruit is a capsule, stuffed
with a greenish padding, in which life em-
bedded two or three black seeds, in s'ae and
shape mach like French beans; their taste,is
sweetish, but with a peculiar opiute flivoar ;
the smell heavy,and almost sickly.âPal-
rgave. ae
Ilarv tro Bear.âFor the past six or eight
weeks an [rish woman, who lives in Billerica,
has come to the city every morning, perform-
ed a full day's work on the Lawrence, Cor-
poration and returned to her home at night.
he distance she has walked twice a day is
not an inch less than five anda half miles,
making eleven nules per day! Besides this
sie did the coukiug at huwe and other house-
work for her busband and one child. She
was elways on time in the morning, and
quit the mill with the other operaters at 64
o clock at night. Sammed up, we have thi
result: A walk of eleven miles, a fall day's
work in the mill, and the cure of a femtly at
home, every day for six weeks. âThis actual
occurrence we believe cannot be exeelled.â
Lowel Courier,
In one villaga in the Delta of the Nile,
celebrated for the culuvation of watermelons,
the whole of the inhabitants died during the
recent prevalence of cholera. Being unable
to sell their fruit, they ate it themselves and
died to the last man. It was necessary to
âemploy lorced labgur to bury the last. It ie
âsaid that in all eighty-two thousand victune
âof the cyutagion and bad living were buried
in Egypt within six weeka.
| Josu Bittines Lysves mis Ligg. â1 kom
to the conclusion lately that life was so on-
jsartin, that the only way for me to stand a
/iair chance with other folks was to gst my
âlife insured, and su | kalled on the ageat of
âthe Garden Angle Life Insurance Co., and
âanswered the tullowing questions which wore
| put to me over the tep of a pair of specs hy
âa thick old feller, with a round grey bead ca
| tim as any man ever ownel :âAre you
mailor femail? Lf so, state how long you
âuave beep so. Lad you a tather or mother ?
|If so, which? Are you subject to fits? And
iif sv, dv you have more thau one at a time?
| Waat is your precise fitting wate?) Did you
ever bave any ancestors? and if sv, how
âmuch? D.d you ever bave any nightmare ?
| Are you married or single, or are you a
bachelor? Llave you ever committed suicide?
And it so, how did it affeet you?â After
apswering the above questions like a man,
ie coutirmatiff, the slick little fat old feiler
with gold specks on, said L was insured tor
âlife, nud prodable wuld remaim so fur sam
1 thanked him aud sailed ove oy my
judging the prize worth the trouble, he dis- |
their industrial interest, they will yet see) recently heard, and which places in a strik-| pensive euales.
the day when cottun will truly be king. not! ing ligot his wonderful talents for narration o-
| politically, but productively.âNew York) One evening on which M. Thiers received | Tatreraasxy âThere are a set of men who
| Sun. }eompany at his house (a veritable dastide of are continually boring people for autugraphe ;
| > ââ_â Marseilles) in the place of St. George's, the | few have the talent of refusing them witb
| MEgETING oF. THE Frexcu AND Spavisu | Swedish aubassador, Count de Lownustein, | politeness. Talleyrand being onee asked «
Sovexeians âThe Emperor Napoleoo and | told the assembled company the particulars similar favor by ae English nvbleman, promis-
the Ewpress arrived at San Sebastian on of the assassination of Charles ILL. Ue was ed to send him one in a few days, and thus
}mounted, scrambling over the dyke and) sacurdiy, and met with a cordial reeeption |
| fence higher up, and jaid hands on the bag | at the railway station. âfhe Queen of Spain |
| Hearing a clatter, be raised bis head, looked | descerded to the bottom of the sttirease to
present at that bloody scene which furnished
M. Scribe the incident on which he built
Gustave Ith. and Bertrand et Raton and
gave M. Verdi the **boukââ of his **Ballo iu
âkept bis word. Le sent bim an invitation to
dinner: * Will you ablige me with your
âcompany to dinner, on Wedoesday, at eight
o'clock? I have invited a number of ex-
âover the fence, and saw the innocent youth | rece!ve ther Majesties, and the Ewperor, as
imakinge the read to Daudalk short ov bis
'own (Kedmondâs) good steed, and the vivi-
(vus beast praveing about on the road, and
| longing for some one to let fly at. He was
: enraged for being so taken in, but mach
| more so when be gound the two ends of the
| precious bag containing nothing more valu-
able than the copper half-penee of the time,
lor less on the way at the country geutle- i value for thirty or forty shillings. So there
| manâs expense, and when he was about dis- | we must leave our outiaw, incumbered with
'm's-ing them with a parting gl.ss from his âhis copper, and uot daring to lay bauds on
| their Majesties met, kissed the band of the
Queen.
subsequently appeared on the baleuny, and
were greeted with loud cheers by the assem-
bled crowd.
took Âąlace in bonour vf the Imperial visic.
(heir Majesties dined at the Hotel de Ville.
| Tue Queen and King of Spain, aceom-
panied by the Prince of the Asturias and the |
tufanta Isabella, arrived at Biarritz on Mon- |
day ona visit to the Imperial family. Tue |
Ewperor aud the prince [imperial went at
three p.m. to meet the Queen at the rail-
The Suyereigns of France and Spain Thiers said nuthing; but when Count de be the valy vol among them.
led:
ceedingly clever persuns, and dy nut like tu
â
Maseleraââ Daring this narrative M
â a Oe
Necro Surrresce.âThe agitation of the
â
Lowenstein ended his stury, the host remark-
** Capitally tuld, my-dear Count, and
A military review afterwards | every assertion you bave made is strictly | questiva of negrv suffrage naturally awekeone
i
true; nevertheless, you have forgotten some a desire to know how the biacks are distri-
important particulars.ââ The Count ex-)| buted inthe Suath. The war has of course
claimed, ** L bave forgotten some particu- | made the census tables of 1860 ices valuable
lars?â M. Thiers smiled, and began to tell for use than they were. But according: to
the history. Le rejuvenated it, and mwen-| them the colored population was in excess
tioned uew, Curious, and omitted particulars. over the white. in 20 counties of the 42 ia
Che circle were ustunished and delighted, Alabama, in G of the 55 in Arkansas, in 6
and Count de Loweasterm siid: ** You are jof the 21 in Florida, in 43 of the 132in
â =
x = | le | debt discharged.
= ce PP m= | Bewg in want of arms, he presented
=. cv cae wR, ro | himself to the commander of (be garrison in
a Lev op: una | Armagh, dressed as a couutry geutleman,
us +O = sand requested him to allow uo few of his
a pot ten to go with him beyond a certain place,
S sy 4 â| where he expected the great outlaw to be}
se Se aw wy © }eoucesled. * He had a good sum of money |
: ee din. oat â2 âabout him and did not wish to lose it? Tne |
mm SA a wm, jcoouel cmplied; avd Redmond and his
ââ ee â_ | guard went on very pleasautly for about |
t= ' Prot e (seven miles. Every man had drauk more
â
r â
@ = a
â =) | own flusk, they were ouly too ready, ut his
ES GUY Ge
Aq JO-Saywy o]quuosvoyy FV
z
| suggestion, to fire a few de jote iu honor of
ihis safe delivery. Lustautly a whistle |
brought a party of fellows to the spot with
a
ad charged guns. and tbe poor red-coats bad |
tet j fo resign muskets, bayoucts, and every regi.
us 1a (mental article of use, avd walk back to}
| Armagh io a very evil plight. |
Redmoud was at-oue thine pursaed by the!
the ill-tempered and davgerous garrau left
at his discretion. The boy arrived safe in
Dundalk with âthe bhuudred guineas quiited
into his waistcoat.
After many eseapes from armed foes and
from prisons, O'Hanlon was treacherously
murdered by his own foster-brother, fo
sake of the rewrd, an almost unprecedeate]
erime in his country. The names of his
way station. âLhe route taken by the Im- right; thatus the true history. I had for- | Georgia, in 33 of the 4% in Louisana, in, 31
| perial and Royal party was thronged with | gotten it, | confess, dear Minister; âtwas you | of the 60 in Missis-ippi, in 20 of tho ST in
âpeople. Upon arriving at the villa Eagenie | who saw Charles ILL. assassinated, nut 1!ââ North Uarvliaa, in 20 of the 30 in South
| the Spanisu Royal Family were received by | Dae 'Carvlina. in 2 of the T750n Tennessee, in 19
âthe Ewpress at the bottom of the starrease.| Prerry Wett Docroren â The English | of the 154 in Texas, in 44 of the 143 in Vir.
After buving rested a short time the Frese papers are now enjoying the luxury of se-/ginia. ln many others the Glack population
and Spanish Sovereigns went to Biyonne to) yeral first-class seusationsâthe Feniacs, the | wasonly a litte less than the white.â/fes-
visit the Uashedral, when a Je Deum wus | nayal fetes, und the catile plague, the last fax Eaupress. â
yung, after which areview took place ia the of which furnishes matter fur very grave re- | â âSiig eer Na ty i
) Place dâArwes, in presence of the Sovereigns? Qections fur our beef-eating lihebile.â Atlast| A rich old widower in Canada is said to
ne
#-Ranye ami the | =
122
used yaad) >
j military for vearly three days, during all
âmini
(i)
âIVIldVO dQ alva
wy DN AOK sw1UVE
TUTHSVONV'T GNV
4 a
b 4
â . . j }
âtL auc âwhich time be scarcely got a morsel of food |
= At lust in desperation be evtes ed the hun-e |
, âbos ot a friend, aud fell toa breaktast of bread |
J _â " avd butter and wilk, Lie bad seareely |
he pL leatea a mouthful when the house was sur-|
âae fr 2 ' rounded, and the captain, leaning over the
. - ÂŁ2 > âhalf-door, iv. polite tone, said: * Captain
ee . \, â . ae hae
3 âie tg ge â oat 'OHaulon you are a Kingâs prisongs ; re-
af 2° i*4 | sistance is useless.â âSo [ perceive,â wa-
"br taaishi§, 6 5. Be a ih Ae gat lt ~--â= | thĂ© answer; *â but as you have oot allowed
NOTIGE TO THE TRADE. inks 6's : |
PENSE SUBSORIBEKOUAS REOELVâ| you will not disturb we now ull hunger is
kp, TB USUAL satiefivd.â © The request being reasouable,
a Spring & Summer was granted ; Redwoud coming to the end
With pute Sizep Cot Parretss oF GARMENTS | 1 od oteurell the balfudourâ oaathe ede:
from the represeutations on the F. shiou Plate. : . akin ebiok wrtee âpte
pret am punciually attended to oo ed : | prise and fear © uhog eae MA
Q Street rete ; gusted the suidiers at exch side from firing
= neen reet, uric $ x
enlaces | mach refresied at his good break fast, and
Labrador Herring for Sate. | big pursuers tired out, be escaped with a
12 Walt ge io = |. ('tanlowâs life = _ â prejudice
40 Ride. Hea f te Sent cm against lawoavd order, Meeting « poor
JOUN_S, PURDIE. him against
ChartotfĂ©town, Jan â30, 1805. uf pediar one day bitterly lamenting, aud
atari th ALT! hearing from bun, (hat he had just. beeu
y SALT! SALT! : rubbed of five pounds lw mouey aud mal-
9.000 bBa-hels Liverpool SALT, rreated by that notorious robber, Redmoud
1 3 YY w Uaen fe YD , UâHanion, he roared at the fellow, and ap-
an I. CO HALL, Water Street. plied a title to bim me refecied on his
; oo 4865.03: % , 's good nawe. * Yuu son of ao un-
Byoe a Se at eule? mas fate said he, i, Man evuld I rob
R ee oa? HS od asides you, that never laid eyes ou you before ?
UST RECEIVED, a large arsores ai Sir,â auswered the poor wan, âthe rogue
Phere rent Gn ates ob Mitac oc bo that robbed me said he was Redimond
very dipleerton. Âą ~_ popp & ROGERS. (*tHanlon.â * Get us follow him,â said the
: âDonde Bric Store. Pownal strect, ; A other, " aud never fear that I wou't make
4 AdMA BY, Lode [he prim sing to anorber tuve.â Coming up to
oat i he thiet, they eased him of his acquisitions,
i ave
giidew vol at Agnieultoral Society's Store, and, whith Rednionwd restored to the right owner,
Office are remove te lid. Rovent i
superâ rive âroutes sorrth te door ber at the ânext assizes,
Oe ALASZA RD, Secâ y- {uie following mituiaus, and entrusted it
â*
ie to take a meal for three days, T am sureâ
lof Lis cakeâ in great tranquility, at onceâ
Reports of Fashions for 1865, | sprang ap. seiz-d his blunderbuss, with whieh |
FiotheJower end of owns {aad bound him over to prosecute the rob-
He then wrote
and ua numerous suite of buth nations, The |
Stieets were
ehief associates were Patrick Mefhevgue,
Joho Kelly, Shan Meruagh, Phil Gallege,
Puadruig Maol (bald), Arthar O'Neil, aud ears
the determined O Kelly, O'Hauloa âwas Royal party returned to Biarritz to dinner,
d stinguished by avis of kinduess to the poor! after which there was a display of fireworks
aud weary soldiers on their march, and by | Pie Spanish Royal Family lett by the half-
abstaining from wanton~ bloodshed, Ils
tollowers were obliged by a most solemu
âoath never to shed blood uuless mw selS-de-
fence, never to rob a poor person, nor to |
offer violeuee to a woman.âDudlin Uni- |
versity Magazine.
Prince Amadeus also paid a visit to the Eu-
peror and Ewpress. Tue statemeat thas a
marriage is projected between Prince Atia
|daughter yl the Queeu of Spam, is cuoatra-
= | dicted.
MISCELLANEOUS, |
~ â*-- na
?
A Pretry Littrie Incipent at Biarritz.
HOW TUE MONEY GOES.
| Until lately, it was very diffeult, alinost | When the tram entered the Limotte station,
im possible, to obtain a complete ufficial state- | iÂą was received by a formidable body. of war-
ment of the various disbursements to indivi- âriors, consisting of twelve litte boys. perfect-
| of salaries, allowances and pensions, As fur! wim wore the uniform of a supper and
| back as the year 1847, the late Juseph Hume | another that of a drummer, ander the eom-
} succeeded in carrying a mytiva, in the House | wand of the Prince Lurperialâs intimate
of Commons, that such a list or statement) friend General Espinasseâs little boy, and at-
should be published as ** a blue buok,ââ by .
âthe government. It did not appear in 1847, lof canjinieres. The drummer beat *Aux-
nor yet in 1848; but as parliament was be-"| champs ââ as the train stopped ; the Ewperor |
ing prorogued in the July of the latter-year,! and Prince immedtately goc out of their car-
Mr. Hume was informed, in reply to 48 eD- praye, and the Prince reviewed his triendâs
,quiry, that it was considered tov trouble- | company, who executed. their mang@uyres
sume to comply with the order of Parliament. | yery creditahly. . Meanwhile the Empress
âSince Mr. Gladstone has had the financial ad- | s.yt for the little cantenieres to ber saloon
ministration, the report or listâin queston | carriage, and as they were hited down again
bas regularly appeared. The volume 0! che chidren were a perfect mass of flowers
1864-65 gives us suuie facts. which may 45- and fruwt. As the train started, the Espin-
topish some of our readers. . -jasse Regiment shouted * Vive 1â Ewpereur,â
Queen Victoria's anneal allowance is $Ll-, and waved their depis after thejmost approved
925,000, to which must be added $125,000 fashion.
from the surplus revenue of the Duchy ol
Lancaster. âTotal, $2 150,000. She alsoâ âThe Great Eastern had on board when she
has a variety of-first-@f498 palarial residences, | returned irom her lust trip, the eubstanve
such a8 Buckingham! Palaces, Kensington Pa-) brought up from the bed of the ocean 2,000
lace, St. Jamesâ Palace Kew and Windsor fathoms deep. When dry it formed into a
â_ââ + >
Castleseâali of which are kept io repair, de- white substance, like chalk in appearance, |
corated, aud frequenuy furnished, at the ex-* bat which erdinbles at the touch, and teites
pense of the nation. Besides this, the Prince uinuteÂź traces on theâ finger, like so much
vt Wales has Marlborough fiouse to live in, âdown from a buttertlyâs wing.
tended by luis two little girls in| the costume |
advices the ravages of this strange disease
decorated) with Freach and) was spreading into every quarter of the
Spanish flags, aud much enthusiasm pre-| United Kingdom, fand bade defiance to the
At six p. m. the Imperial and skill of the veterinary surgeons. The modes |
of treatment appear to be ecanflicting, and
| often rather wild. âTwo Ayrshire cows, be-
âlonging to Miss Bardett Contts, were at-
past teu tram, being accompanied to the | tended during their sickness by one. of the}
railway station hy the Emperyr and Empress. | most celebrated veterinary surgeons in Eng- Yâ
j land, one of them being so far gone that ite
ârecovery was pronounced impossible. An
âaccount which Las been going the roand of the
(a week with âeight bottles of whiskey.
twelve botties of brandy, thirty bottles of
| port wine and other strong drinks.ââ As the
--From Biarritz a private letter telis us of | result of this somewhat expensive spiritual |
an incident which oveurred during the jour- | treatment. one of the sargeonâs patit ute died |
|ney of the Imperial family to the south.!in a fit of de/zrium tremens ; the other, whose
dissulution bad been contidently predicted,
recovered from the disease, bur exhibited all
, the symptoms of having been on a * high
jat him till he got at some distance. Being | duals out of the British revenue, om account | ly equipped and armed ta the teeth, one of | old apres.â We agree with the Pall Mall
_ Gazette in doubting whether it is desirable tu
âbe an English millionaireâs cow at the pre-
sent er-sis.â-N. Y. Tunes.
Paisece per Lavcuaste ~In ** Notes of
an Aruy Surgeonâ we tind the following :â
*[ remember one day in my hospital rounds,
âa patieut jast arrived presented an amputated
forearm, and in doing so be could hardly
ârestrain a broad laugh; the titter was con-
istantly op his face. * What is the matter?
This does not strike me as a subject of laagh-
âter.â âIt is not, Duetor{ but excuse meg; I
âlost my arm in so funny 4 way that i stall
taugh when L lovk at it.â .* What-way?
: Qur first. sergeaut wanted shaving, and got
| me tu attend wo 4t, as | am a-corperal~ We
âwent together in frout of Ys teut yt tad Ia-
â thered him, held bis nose, dnd was just about
âapplying the razur, when a eannga bad came,
land that was the last I seen of hus head and
(my arm, Excuse me fur laughing so, Doe-
tur, but L neversaw sach @ thet before.
â âââ ee â â
| âThree native Kast fdran eotton-farmers,
âfrom Madras, have been lately ** prospectiagââ
iat Mauebgster. coo | iedeeity Sib
pe
of beauty in aftegagteyÂź
|huve practised a very artful echeme to gain
| the band of the belle of a village. He gut on
old gipsey to tell the young lady's fortune ia
words whieh he dictated, as joliowe: â* I
âdear youngJady. your star wil] soon be hid
| for a short Gime by a very dark cloud, but
âwhen it reappears it will continue to shine
âwith uninterrupted splendur until the end of
uur cays. Before one week a wealthy old
_widuwer, wearing a suit gf black and « fiee
âeastur hat, will pay you a yisit and reqy
âyour hand in marriage, You will aceept bie
in the possession of all bis property, belore
the close of the year. Your uext husba
âwill be a young man of whom you thi
most of at present ââ Three days alter the od
gentleman, dressed in the manner
by the gipsey, presented-himeelf to the young
ides â ds alien tovk place. â :
- woe 3
| Beavty ix Ponasp.â* Beeause,ââ says
| Bayard âTaylor, ** there girls do not jump
from infaney to young ludyhuud. Biey are
not sent frum the cradle» tu the <, te
{
childhuod, which extends rete cet ey
âseveral years, they are plainly and lousy
dressed, and allowed ty can, comp, aad play
Lin the open air, They are caanaem aa
girded about, and oppressed every way wi
| countless frills und saperabuadsat founces
sv as to be ddwired fur their clothing. « Nor
are they rendered deligate or me tw by
continual stuffing with 2andies: aad ewes.
cakes as are the majority ofcAmerican chitde
ren. Pluin,y siwple foad, fee and sarioup
â exercise,and an abundanee of pawe during
âthe whole period of chitdtfo0d are the seerevs
4 . ~~ --. - +84
| The Britishâ Cabinet tiustâ possess-a nigs-'
terious âaod far-reaching power, ifwe ay
crĂ©dit the following statement,â put forth â
âthe Londonâ mdent of a cont
** The Pritice arid Princess of WalĂ©s, andâ
(presome their two children â both ây
thanks to Lord âPalwerston and « âliberadâ
Cabinetâhave followedâ the Queen tu the
, Coutineut.â
wiat
> oo ian «4 oy >
deus of Italy aud the Prineess fovbella, eldest | Unglish papers, says that alter being severely | offer, become his wife, aud be left a widow.
| purged they were drenched in the course of |
dress, to sit still and look pretty. Nn, shdy:
are treated as c'itidren should » be. mg
Sos sO ee Ss
41*
ââ os
form
: ;
pea
word
vol. XV.
S eae
Weekly
Hournal of Politics,
\ c
Literature,
Tag
and stews,
wy i . . i =} . a . *guge ° = Bi
âThis is truc Liberty, when Freeborn Men, having to xdvise the Public, may spenk free.---Euripides.
Charlottetown, Prince Edward [sland, Monday, October 9, 1865.
New Series.-âNo. 45.
PRINT yy,
gsŸ ieee WG» .
SS %@
© GEO; BREMNER,
Printer, Dook-binder,
er etici YPER,
CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. 1,
Having engaged an experienced
BOOCK-BINDER
is prepared to execute all orders with
PROMYPTITE DE and NEATNESS.
Entrance to Printing Office and
Bindery at Mrs. Bremnerâs Book aud
Stationery Store, Prince. Street,
mere all orders may be left.
Âźrilice Street, June 35, [sc5.
BOUDOT HOUSE.
ESTABLISHUEY I820.
1965! SPRING!
B the Ships Undine, I. C..Owen and
Edwin & Lizzie. trom Liverpool; Urania,
fra Londen: Helen Daries, from Barbadows :
ug of Bath aml Commerce. fron Boston: aud
Chupe, too Liverpeol. th: subscribers
Have Completed
THEIR
' ray a
IMPORTATIONS
FOR THE. SEASON, |
which havieg been bought ou the Best Teams
they are enabled to offer at
EXTREMELY J.OW PRICES,
For Prompt Payment.
CP Wholesale buyers supplied as usual
G. & S DAVIES
Char'town, June 5. lous.
SPECIAL NOTICE!!
PVA undersigned have ap-
pointed ar" âJ.
RICUARDSON, of Sunmer-
side, their AGENT, where
TOLACCO ean be had at the
SAME RATE as:iw Char-
luttetown.
; LOWDEN & RICHARDSON
May}. Is vf
Cloth Pactory!
Pub subs RIBER begs re-peetiully to
tnherm the poisoiie that be will cantinuwe to
maivtlgeturs CLAYTIL, &e
Vevem Wook WIM be received jin Chitflotteto wu
by MH. J. Catleck, Agent. or at die Mill
Le Chath received for Dyeing and Dressing as
beretofvie.
HL Gla estuhlis iment i
» CHARLES Ek. STANFIELD
âMay BI, Sto uf
oa, or
To Consumers of Gas.
(puke Directors of she Crarl ttetown C ae
Light â «rte pay wv ill i uti, FREE of CH AhKGb
u few Patent (las Cook ire Stoves Consuniers
desirous oF preving. tliese most desirable nid eco
lwmical (iss Kanwes are requested wy wake wu en Ly
application at the Gaus Works. as only a lined
pundber, will be disposed of By enier,
WM. MURKY, Manager.
Uh âtewn, June IM, 1865
[ESTIMONIALS.âKerorr or Committee oF |
Pere Peorsigtoas, Pestisi#ep is Geren's
Pedene tien AGk, Ctircaco, Tru â We, the
undegigned, present by imvitiution, veMterday, to
wituess Che Gperation aud work ig of hie hew
principle of yas aed for coking purposts, were
preseat dyriig uw series of caperinctis, hear vow
fully calling out the utility of threes Moves As peony lied with,
the resalt of actual experimétt Ue following was
Heefstake was cooked in four minutes, Ms juices |
und fluvof refined : aut. farther, the « Tai of Vhe
inventes alaodantly sustatued, by. This pros cox |
tough qeat. ix rendered tender aud delicious, ;
âQuait were, in two âinstances, broiled in live
diate s. wick Bivat fer g Hare. {
Bread cut frest: from the uew loaf wag delicately ,
brewued in tWo tuinutes
tn euch case thexe viands would be pronannced |
dectyuety wnt emeosongity cooked. lu the cee OF |
the weats, the exterior surfaces were couggluted
wud rendetedâ firm: the snbaianee of the whole,
whea covked, retuluiug bheir juices and thivor i
f ueither ner any case was there the faintest |
sag flavor er odur of gaa lu or about the 4
âves. or iu the food when covked. We reward |
the process as entifely superior and successful
SaMUEL Hawk. Riehneond Hodse.
fixe. HW Prewen,
W. F. Tecker,
J_W, HWesteneny, Maseosoit touse.
A. M- Stepps, Revere Honse. â - |
Jonsx Waicur, * Andersvi's.ââ |
The coat cf cowking wv this method we append
th Sueie up fram caren! tests yesterday. neve ted
bat tet tried: 12) lbs. bread copked ns 42 mii tes, |
consuming 4 cubic feet of pus, cost L cent. 2 Ibs |
stenk brotied ix 5 tuilrates, eoftsd using | of a ethic |
tot of gam, cont jot acent. 1b qua jrmer, bu led |
us 94 duinntes, consuming | enbie foot of gus, cost
2OC1 cent. - 24 breakfast biscoit baked im im iin
tiles, consugiing J feet of gus,cesbâ?} onl!e-
Briggs Honse
* Having frequently examitied the-nrode of action
4 Shaw sSrmenBuorien, | have den led to the |
Suchusion that the tissues aml inteyument: yt |
Cough meat are ruptured and Brokeil throigh the
(Steet of hihiy heawed, even. red hot atenm of!
Which thos gasflumwe is highly composed. . At the |
fest inetitit this steam penetrates wud sentd- the
jieat, and the salmequent browning renbne a oui
ewirof the water formed, with te juices produced. |
© ie Tine, us obtained in the devices of Mi
Shaw: te the parest thune whieh art ntords: mid |
there le. neshivg prenenut, as vapor of, gas, whiel |
fate give odor to âor ally way iuterfere with the
âirodtcd tyn Of the delicious thivont of broiled reat. |
â Me ap paralus mecires bie greatest ecomeu.y ol |
fitie in cooking steaks: âit reuders the Loup: nest
serqt Move fener thin in any other notte of t oit ;
Mg i, aiel with the simple wotivie of tiyne, ets bles |
the voek to produceâ with certainty ay gradation
pt etheet/- 3 Respeetfull y, wr ATT ae {
&, A Wares, M. bt hte. |
PE Boylston Breet, rn a 2 ieaee bemepcn :
â ~~
Kuo Witrjay M.Lowyo.. |,
W. F. Staw.âThe? iam Cookin
(tus Heatly Stotes oof your juvention, which f
dyeve, wreak ve juant four veurss | ean anhesitas ugly |
say have piven we perfect gutisfaction ; and | can
coufidentiathy recomend them, as I âhave found
then, tu be the Meat -ceouomicul aud conyeniernt |
Srtinn and beating apparatus A dave ever met
: ;
- vin the Gua Coking Ra i
ne, the qmality of the |
rp #8 vet surpwimuyly iuoproved. by cb of |
1⏠toasted meat art ul retained, sv that they do |
pps to lone: ante oftiie wetzht: Tu the e: Uke
a. Ue Bea gO" Lite Lo Quite sen ious i
thre veobony oft te tnode of ciphian, ue ei, Pa
wii Suat that deat lone winch of tikes \. ight |
whew couhed ia the ordjpary coal rouge even |
Respecifally yours,
nen 13724 ee M.Lehixe
From D, B Cos â, | â.
L Ageeâ > ; whee st. Chig go. ;
t régard W F Mink Patetit Ge Studer ag
oe Ae ampeas ARO grenios Inventions uf the uaptes
tell 4 clajn tox it, ~-povel, counyusicn! and
â „ Convenient wi
eeâ wiichedruled âtating whey" ie weleomed |
be ees Pike Whee eves He bus dyon |
tied itm tral Ne of an to bg without it alte:
â ae g rare DB. Cog,
ean CW OWS vebeliientciiinâ vt tied
yritly ane } Liwew ithe
pe publicâ âHw Ntote for iol i? |
bd bd > 4
ate Habsaleina vidi oltasfonea ty danny
Âź BPN oat tla i mesenger ieeti ly cin ae Fh esdeods
iseactf padi *)
~ Wy Ping!
{oir stove, Which leats thay. icsigegpigh by, auth, rg Ldap
he tare roy.
Maeh woes y teemh fil teh Wry fer
Great invent Nolen ail in simple jartiod ion eds. | Lyte ms oua Stier?
: | Beptemvers, 1865.
Yours nie marae? a thee wits
~~
1865!
every MONDAY night. at elevet o'clock, reaching |
j;(woo clox _
psmume Dinh.
ot fiveuer more ge iug atic
LITERATURE,
A THE WIDOWâS WEDDING RING,
TO THE â
rex 7 7 re r Four years ago, this very day,
i Ec N Aâ IN i ke x With happy hearts and young,
or
P â i LAND Where ancient oaks dropped o'er the way
. ae » â . .
Tee Legislature, during the late Session
| having passed â An Act to ussist Teyants in
the purchase of the Fee-simple of their Farms,â
by udvuancing to the Tenant ONE HALF of the
umount wegreed upou by the Proprietor and Tenant,
as the Purebase Motey of bis Faruaâ
The Commissioner of Public lands
hereby gives notice to all tenants
| desirous of availing theriselves of the privilege of
the above recited Act, that he i4 now prepared to
| ASSIST SUCH TENANTS in the purchase of thei
Farms, as in manner and extent provided under
such Act
| FORM OF APPLICATION and fall particalars
may. be obtained gt the office of Crown Lands, |
Colonial Building, Charlottetown
. JOHN ALDOUS, |
â Coumissioner.
Public Lands Office, May 8, 1865,
We passed, while jov-bells rang ;
May sailor tove had claimed his bride
To share his future life,
We left the grey church side by side,
Fond husband, grateful wife,
Sut soon my sailor left his home,
Compelled by bitier fate to roamâ
Ah me! he sleeps âneath ocean's foan.
The glowing roseate bue of hope
From my young life is gone ;
As ivy trails without a prop,
So I must creep alone.
I look around the empty room,
Hot tear drops burn my face
Grim ruin rises from the gloow,
And fills each vacant place.
: a | My child lies sick upen his bed,
. BE. ISLAND
. . . â . â
Steam Navigation (o's. Steamers
Princess of Wales and Heather Belle. |
_ SUMMER ARRANGEMENT, |
Commencing Monday, May 22.
My spirit shrinks with lonely dread,
Great Master better both were dead.
Hush, wild heart, hash, I must not sin,
However keen my grief;
Oh, Father, save, ere | begin
To doubt thy sure relief.
pd â enrereÂź ape | IT hear my baby's piteous ery
Phe Steamer â Priucess of Walcsâ : Aw 06
| Paces V ES Charlottctown tor Duamerside, |
Shediac, Kichibucto, Chatham aud New custle,
It drives me almost wild ;
What have I left, wherewith to buy
Food for my Luangry elvild !
shredine lu time for the nO hina train on Puesday My husband 5 gift, muy w edding ring,
Leaves Shediae, for Richibaeto, at wine o'clock
ow LURSDAY morning, and Richibucto, for Chat- |
mt aml Néweustle, at one O'clock sanie day. ar
|
Phe purest, sweetest wewories cling
Arouna thee, bright aud precions thing.
riving at Chatham and Neweustle suameevening
: nd must I sell it? Heart be still
,
Be still, oh throbbing brow ;
Leuves Newcastle, fog Shediac, at four o ctock |
m WEDNESDAY morning,
wud Richibueto on way down.
Leaves Shedine, ter Suunuerside and Clurlotte
town, on WEDNESDAY afternoon, at halt past |
â* insted tel4 ey of the Train. | My love will not be slow to greet
aves Charlottetown for Pictou every THURS. | : . ;
ID \\ meant te ziL half-pust mt pronto. gt at | lis w Ue beside God â throne,
â= i ; ik. jen Ves }
Pictou for Charlottetown, fit 12 o'clock same night. |
Leaves Churlottetown for Summerside wand. She- Frow her thin haud is one.
lac, every ERIDAY luorlehg at hialt-} want cig hi
o elock. '
Leaves Shediac, for Summerside and Charlotte. |
town, at half-past two-emery SATURDAY after
noow, deriving #t Charlotieiowm at dialtpusd ten |
Calling at Chatham
What gives my spirit such a thrill,
It cannot uatier vow.
1. :
Although his marriage tuken sweet
Yeu, when we meet beyoud the sky,
My glauce shall tell hia pitying eye,
âT coald wot let our da: ling die
<<
The Steamer â Veather Belleâ TUE HARVEST MOON,
Leuves Charlottetown for Pictouevery MONDAY
]
}
wotuing ab bull-paal bine, |
|
Che moou has turued to silvery gold ;
Pieton sauie eveuingâon arrival of Mail, | The corn is swaying around the fold;
ubout six eâclockâtor Charlottetown
Leaves Charlottetown for Brule every THURS.
wuves
Phe lark is asleep by the plough at rest:
| DAY and SATURDAY. mornings, at five o'clock ; | Day is hushed tu the black Night's breast.
returning te Charlotietewn same cvenings, janne- |
ee | Thatched like } stund : :
diately after arrival of Mailat Beuic, at about live | *Patetred Ike hats, stund the elantiug sheaves,
o clock tu the eve ning
Steamer âHeather Belleâ also rans to. Mownt
Stewart Hridge and Rrekyw Vodut, ow thre Hills
ierongh Biver, every luasual aiid Ruiw tims beiaigy |
| Ou the broad field strewn with the poppy leaves;
Aud the red clouds hang, with a wandering love,
Lie weed and the meadow and streani above.
Market das) >.
AN IRISH BRIGAND.
Effect does not more surely fillow cause
than brigandaye and iis attendant suffer-
FARES:
From Charlettetown to Viciou
Steer
Charlottetown te Brule, or
Steernye Ts bal
uw backâCuabin L2s,
we Us. td
back â Cabriâ Os
Charlettetown te Suatuerside. or back-~Cabin 9s,
_ Steeraye fed. yoyo. | ings the teraivation of a civil war. Led
Charlottetown, tu Shediac, or Lack Cabiu 18s â i
Siabbake lds wood O Manion aud bis rapparees and a
Charkettetuven to Riehibocte, or back, $5.00) +ystemi of black mail succeeded the (1om-
lie Mirauiicha, do Ue) ns : ra al The .N
Summerside to Richilucto, deo au | Well au 8 ruguie iu ireland he North
Do Miramicii,, de 4.50} was his favori'e haunt;.and he is said. to
Shedine to~ Richibucty, â have been connected wich bands who touk
ite Niirnuriehi. dea 3 Oi} â
Ub âtow uw toiSt. dota, or backâSG1 88 Ud. or 4 Se} 0d through al parts of the isiand, aud met
Do k: niin re, ay 1 iva Gel, oF i v four times lu the year to aij ist the div slut
lw âortland, eo 2 lds Od, or 8.04) | +. rare ; :
fiy Busts, do % 16s 3d. ur 9.00 | VF the spoil. The O Haulons Leing of the
â FAKES â FREIGHUY. | ohd race and old Ie ig on, and Redmond
Charlottet6wh to Sanimerside, |
Is per barrel bulk.| y utle by birth and generous by nature, the
lie Shredine, Ts (al du
. soe Fa neg | pesBants a id tswall farmers stood u no fear
7 & Mirawmichi§ = rd of Sim, but were cver ov tbe watch tor his
Shediac to a. â ri au { ik Ga, de safety. ' Farmers, travell ag pedlars, and
politeel ie Te oe. t. Bontâ ei Biecee eas people In in ddity g Clicumstahccs, On paying
Sniitierside, Tus. avuilable one week. Tickers | Redutond er bis trusty agents half-a-crowa
void it partics*ienwe the Ishind dmring the-time. | per anium. Were sale frum plunder ; and
ExevasioS Retcun Tickets, at ome first class |.f through mistake they suffered at the
j fare, tues be immed at ansetichet Uflice. to parties | 1 sd. of atranvers, their 'lisces Were iuade
returning tevether, te ated |
yood on information being conveyed to the
fra HV One Slaljwl Wilk iLOne veek, it being dis
/ and the thief to three trusty followers, to anda nice little allowance of $500,900 per
ibe delivered over to the charge of the | @2oum.
Armagh gavoler *â
'
âBy Redmond OâHanlen, in loco, one of His |
With the annuities to the King of
the Belgians, (ÂŁ50,000 a year, out of which
he returns about ÂŁ30,000) and to the Duke
â
Deara or Mrs. Moors â** On September
4th, at Slopertun Cottage, Mrs. Moore,
widow of the late Thomas Moore, Esqr.,
,autbor of * Lalla Rooka,â aged 68.â" This
Majesiyâs Juatices of the Peace for County Are| 2. C&bbridge, his mother and sisters, the) is Ă©n announcement that one of the last ruses
wavh, aud Chiet Ranger of the Mountains. | a of 2.000 000 . unoually pay-| of a glorious summer has at length disap-
[herewith send you the body of » oho | able to rvyalty in England. Besides having! peared. Few are now left of the brilliant
was this day brought before me, and exammed | OY&F '„O million duilars a year for herself, company who adorned the early part of the
|
| individadls or families
tiuetilv understood that aniess these couditions are
the Tickets will be void.
Shasos Tickets may be plire hased ut Office for
'
|
by order, F
F. WAUXLES, See'y.
Charlottetown, Mav 29. 1865 |
ates a i
was going '0 sell his ouly cow to pay his
chief. One day meeting a poor man who |
rent, and pitying bis case, be lent him five |
pounds, aud bade him appoint any time and
place be choose for repayment.
say, the trust Was puuctually kept, aud the
Strange to
jiu danger of my life.
tor robbing Mr.
requiring of you to bold him in sate eustedy till | $5.000 000 whieh Prince Albert hud at the famous in our literature.
next general assizes, to be beld for the said | time ol his decease,
county, and for your se doing this shall/be your
| Sufficient warraat. Given uwuder my haud this) somely paid.
| Ist day of March, 1595.
âReDMOND O'HANLON,
_'T? » Gaoler of Armagh.â
The metbers of the Government are hand-
Lord Palmerstonâs sulary is
$25.00U a yearâand five Secretary's of State,
(tlome, Colonial, Foreign, War and India),
respectively receive the same. Sv does Me.
, onthe kingâs highroad, Queen Victoria further has the interest of the nineteenth century, and whose named are
Among these
/ names none is or will be held in more kindly
âremembrance than that of the lady to whom
the poet Moore gave his heart. Moore not
only tuved herâhe was proud of her, and it
| is delightful to see in bis letters and in his
diaries with what eagerness he sounded her
| However informal the commitment, the Gladstone, Chancellor of the exchequer. The | praises. Le writes to bis mother in 1813:
ârogue was secured, and sworn home ageinst
Audieuce, officers, counsel. | eeretary, $27,500 a year.
by the pediar.
ilors, judge and all, joined in ove roar of
| laughter ut puints of the trial when O'llan-
jlon's magisterial interference cane before
' the court.
As the chivalrous Robin Hood suffered | $30,000 ; the Irish Attorney-General, $30,- |
/more than one defeat from tauners, tinkers,
âaud sturdy beggars, so Redmond meta van-| ple, about seventy persons, all holding |
_quisher in a shopkeeperâs apprentice.
/youthâs muster having to receive a good
}round sum of money in Newry, was afraid
to risk an encounter with Redmond or some
âof his gang on his return to Dundaik, hic
native town. Lao his perplexity, his appren-
| tive, sixteen years of age, offered his ser-
| Vices, Which, after some hesitation, were
âaccepted. The youth, in the words of Mr
| Cosgrave, autbor of the â Trish Rogues and
Rapparees,â went to the ficld, and brought
}home an old vicious screw, with much cf
âthe same hamer of Sir Teague O Reganâs|
'war-horse, on which he rode out to meet
| Duke Schomberg after the surrender cf
| Charlemont, that when any o her borse came
âup to micet him on the road, he always
| strove to bite or k.ck bim, by which means
âhe commouly kept the road to himseif. A.
be weuded on his way, he was overtaken by
,4 well-dressed pgeutleman, with whom be
iâtreely enered into discourse, waking wo |
secret oO! his business, or of bis expeetation |
jut being about the same place ou his return
| to-morrow with L100 tu his possession. * 1
| Wouder,â ssid his fellow traveler, * you are
so free in your Comnubications with
strangers. Liow can you tell but that |
may be edmond O'Llaulon, or one of his
* Ob, oh!â suid the boy, bursting
out laughing, *such a nice looking geutle-
}Man as you to be a robber! Do you think
(Lt haveuât eyes?â * Well, at all events, 1
advise you to be more discreet. Redmond
is fausous at d-szuises, aud will pin you if
he gets wind of your business. Lereâs a
}erown for you tu drink my health, but keep
}a b.idle on your tongue.â The grateful
| youth, suberiug at once, made the promise
And even as the boy expected, the geutle-
wan overtook him as he was retuening nexâ
val
guug Âą
|
day, end conversation was resumcd, » Well. |
iny boy, L suppose from your looks you
have wot met with any had company, aud
your money is safe?â + Tudecd it is, sir;
avy thauks for your good alviee.â * How
ure you carrying it? * tu the two ends of
this ticken wallet.â © Dear me, L would like
to feel the weight of it out of curiosity.â
jand he approached, but the horse fashed
out, and he was obliged to keep his dis-|
tance.
rather sternly for such a niee speken gen-
tleman. * Oh, sir, houey, sure you wouldaâ:
think of robbing me; what would the mas-
ter say?â *iaonât know, but this is what
i say, if you do not surrender it at ouce, |
will send w bullet through you, and auother |
ithrouzh your garren.? +1 promised my
| master not to let myself be robbed till | was
Here is the mouey,
but you must take the trouble of crossing
the ditch for it.â So saying, he beaved th.
bag over the slough that bordored the
road, and the hedge beyond it into the next
field. This annoyed the highwayman, but
*Torow over that wallet,â said he. |
Trish Viceroy has $100,000, and the Trish
The first Lord
of the Admiralty bas $22.000 a year;
ithe Lord Chancelior $50,000; the Tris)
| Chancellor, $40 000; tue Attorney Genera]
iehout $50,000; the Solicitor General,
'$25,000; the Lord Advocate of Scotland,
U0U. When a change of minisierg takes
This | Ligh office, have ty retireâand the gross)
âamount of all their salaries is $850,000 a
year. All the working staff remain in office
| for life, their salaries gradually rising, and
after 30 yearsâ service, each wan may retire
}on a pension equal to his full salary at the
j time. A clerk in the treasury in Eagland com-
|menecs with $400 a year, and caanot obtain
} the nomination untill, in a strict competitive |
examination, he has shown himself tu possess |
w certain quantity and variety of general in- |
formation. When be retires, after a thirty
| Yearsâ service, lis income may be, and viten| gins ty tive for ever; but as much as any of
these, if not more, she was a pvetâs idol.
She died at three o'clock on the morning
ae cast |
These are a few of the tems of national
expenditure in England. In sume instances, |
isuch as the enormous payments to royalty,
ithe sularies may appear high. Yet, most|
Kaglish statesmen having extensive heredi a- |
| ry estates, the amount of the salary is not of |
|} much consequence to them. Each, in his |
way, bas to make a large annual expendi-
ture, and office increases the necessity of
muking 16.
|
ri fied : |
| Corron Prosrects.âThecult.vation of cot- |
ton iu the South has lung boen one of the
suvurces uf wealth in this country, but its im-
portane will be vastly increased and tho)
product greatly enlarged by the social changes |
which have occurced inthe Syuth. Jlereto- |
fore the evtton plantat.ons have been of vast |
dimensions, usually embraced several thou-
sand ueres, and the extent of land has been |
tov great tu admit of proper atiention, It is
with cotton cultrus as with every other braneh
of farming âfiity acres of land properly culti-
vated will produce more thao one hundred ac-
res careleesly atcended tu. There is no doubt
that the Southern cotton crop might be made |
(to double the yield of past years. The nacu-
| ral effect of the overthrow of slavery will be
to break up the large landed estate of the
South and convert them into cotton farms,
the owners of which will have an incentive to |
bring every acre up to the highest pitel of cul |
tivation. There was no dispositivn of this
kind among the ofd planters. They were
lrich, and every year brought them in a nice
| income from their plantations. This was all
|they desired; and the management of the
| business was left to overseers, who had no
more interest at stake than the monthly sal-
ary. in addition tu the expected inciease in
the cotton crop by a subdivision of the land, |
the extent of country devoted tu the culture
of tris staple will be rapidly enlarged. Texas)
tlone presents an almost boundless field fur |
'
|
| the culture of cotton; territories that have
' been erected outot New Mexico are ina great
| part weil adapted for this purpose, and in Ca |
| iifornia the practicability of cotton Krowing |
{has been fully demonstrate.d It would not be |
jetrange if the cotton product of the United
States teu years hence should be double what |
it has ever been heretofore. Lf the Southern |
| people will now eneourage emigration from
{the North,and allow the energetic Yankee |
jelement to help them inthe work of restoring | my pen, let me repeat to you an anecdote | | years.
| 18, between ÂŁ10,000 and $12 G00 a year. |
|
| brow knitted.
| âYou cannot imagine what a sensation
Bossy excited at the ball the other night.
She was very prettily dressed, and certainly
looked very beautiful. 1 never saw so much
admiration excited. It strikes everybody
pesca that sees her how like the form and
| expression of her face are to Catalaniâs!"â
| And so through all bisletters and journals,
| he is never tired of referring to herâquoting
| what she said, telling what she did, describ
ing how sie luoked, and recording how she
was admired. [be married her in L811, and
| her history is summed up in this one phrase
|âthat she was the delight of his life. She
| does nob apjear to occupy a great place in
| his poetry ; but it is one of the curious traits
of many a poet that he is ex@ited to sing less
âby the real mistress of his heart than by
suine imaginary heroine, or by sme beauty
Mrs. Moore
j}was pot a Lesbia, nor a Beatrice, nor a
| Laura, nor a Highland Mary, destined in
| that kindies a passing flime.
,of Munday last. She was sensible to the
}end:; she knew that she was dying ; and she
said that she was quite happy. She was the
last that remained to us of the Moore fami'y,
aod now that she has departed, we begin to
count with sume sadness how many links are
there leit to eonnect the preseut generation
of letters with the past. â Tunes.
Aytoun aNp Tuackeray.âApropos of the
death of Professor Aytoun, when Tuackera y
was giving his famous lectures on the Pour
Georges in the Music Hall, Edinburg, Aytoan
was peesent. Livery one has read those lee-
tures, and must remember the sarcastic al-
lusions made to the virtue of Queen Mary,
and the half contemptuous, halt-pitying moc-
kery at Aytuunâs well-known hobby. Aytoun
âwas in the hall close under the lecturer,
listening intently tv the great novelist, as
he rolled out his period of delizhtfal criti-
cim. At length be came to the âQueen Maryâââ
passage, and Aytounâs face fushed and his
Oa he went in his mocking,
bantering tone of scepticism, and the Pro- |
fessurâs brow grew darker, and his hands
began to work convulsively. At last came
the allusion to Aytuun himself, and his
. 4 ae
chivalrous advocacy of Mary, and the balf
| cuntemptuous, half flattering notice was ac-
companied with the marked side-glance and
ball-bow which gave it its point. Aytoun
was irritated bevund eudurance. Le durst
not and did not interrupt the lecturer, but
deliberately got up, and stalked down the
passage to the Govr, muttering as he weat
sumething that sounded strangely like * in-
fernal quack.ââ Lie was last seen that day
striding luriously alung George Street, on
his way to his house in Great Stuart Sireet,
gesticulating as he went, and moving his
arws in a way that boded little good to any
one who at the moment should block his
path with asluron Qieen Maury. Be this
as it may, be ever after disliked to bear the
name of Thackeray mentioned. â Lazlish
paper.
The Paris correspoudent of the Publisher's
Circular, relates the fulluwing aneedute of
Chiers :â
â* Since M. Thiersâ name is flowing from
| An Anssiay Lavomixe PiawtâFor the
frst time I met with a narcotic plant â
âcommon further south, and gifted sit
curious qualities. Its seeds, in which âthe
deleterious principle seems chiefly to reside,
when pounded and administered in a small
dose, produce effects much like those as-
ain to Sir stemehery Davy's
; the patient dances, sings,
ieee. extravagance, till, afteran hour
of great excitemeut to himself and amuse-
ment to the bystanders, he felis asicen, and
on awakening has lost all memory of what
he did or said while under the influence of
the drag. To puta pinch of this powder
into the coffee of some u ing indivi-
dual is not en uncommon joke, nor did [ hear
that it was ever followed by serious cunse
quences, though an over quantity might per-
haps be dangerous. 1 myeelf tried iton two
individuals, but in proportions, if not abso-
lately homcepathic sul! sufficiently minute to
keep on the safe side of risk, and witnessed
its operativn, laughable enough, bet very
harmless. âThe plant that bears these berries
hardly attains in Kaseem the height of six
inches abuve the ground, but in Oman I
hav: seen bushes of it three or four feet in
growth, aud wide-spreading. The ste ns are
woody, and of @ yell»w tinge when barked ;
the leaf of a dark-green colour, and pinnated
with ubout twenty leafl-ts on either side ;
the stalks smouth and shining; the flowers
are yellow und grow in tufts, the anthers
nawerous: the fruit is a capsule, stuffed
with a greenish padding, in which life em-
bedded two or three black seeds, in s'ae and
shape mach like French beans; their taste,is
sweetish, but with a peculiar opiute flivoar ;
the smell heavy,and almost sickly.âPal-
rgave. ae
Ilarv tro Bear.âFor the past six or eight
weeks an [rish woman, who lives in Billerica,
has come to the city every morning, perform-
ed a full day's work on the Lawrence, Cor-
poration and returned to her home at night.
he distance she has walked twice a day is
not an inch less than five anda half miles,
making eleven nules per day! Besides this
sie did the coukiug at huwe and other house-
work for her busband and one child. She
was elways on time in the morning, and
quit the mill with the other operaters at 64
o clock at night. Sammed up, we have thi
result: A walk of eleven miles, a fall day's
work in the mill, and the cure of a femtly at
home, every day for six weeks. âThis actual
occurrence we believe cannot be exeelled.â
Lowel Courier,
In one villaga in the Delta of the Nile,
celebrated for the culuvation of watermelons,
the whole of the inhabitants died during the
recent prevalence of cholera. Being unable
to sell their fruit, they ate it themselves and
died to the last man. It was necessary to
âemploy lorced labgur to bury the last. It ie
âsaid that in all eighty-two thousand victune
âof the cyutagion and bad living were buried
in Egypt within six weeka.
| Josu Bittines Lysves mis Ligg. â1 kom
to the conclusion lately that life was so on-
jsartin, that the only way for me to stand a
/iair chance with other folks was to gst my
âlife insured, and su | kalled on the ageat of
âthe Garden Angle Life Insurance Co., and
âanswered the tullowing questions which wore
| put to me over the tep of a pair of specs hy
âa thick old feller, with a round grey bead ca
| tim as any man ever ownel :âAre you
mailor femail? Lf so, state how long you
âuave beep so. Lad you a tather or mother ?
|If so, which? Are you subject to fits? And
iif sv, dv you have more thau one at a time?
| Waat is your precise fitting wate?) Did you
ever bave any ancestors? and if sv, how
âmuch? D.d you ever bave any nightmare ?
| Are you married or single, or are you a
bachelor? Llave you ever committed suicide?
And it so, how did it affeet you?â After
apswering the above questions like a man,
ie coutirmatiff, the slick little fat old feiler
with gold specks on, said L was insured tor
âlife, nud prodable wuld remaim so fur sam
1 thanked him aud sailed ove oy my
judging the prize worth the trouble, he dis- |
their industrial interest, they will yet see) recently heard, and which places in a strik-| pensive euales.
the day when cottun will truly be king. not! ing ligot his wonderful talents for narration o-
| politically, but productively.âNew York) One evening on which M. Thiers received | Tatreraasxy âThere are a set of men who
| Sun. }eompany at his house (a veritable dastide of are continually boring people for autugraphe ;
| > ââ_â Marseilles) in the place of St. George's, the | few have the talent of refusing them witb
| MEgETING oF. THE Frexcu AND Spavisu | Swedish aubassador, Count de Lownustein, | politeness. Talleyrand being onee asked «
Sovexeians âThe Emperor Napoleoo and | told the assembled company the particulars similar favor by ae English nvbleman, promis-
the Ewpress arrived at San Sebastian on of the assassination of Charles ILL. Ue was ed to send him one in a few days, and thus
}mounted, scrambling over the dyke and) sacurdiy, and met with a cordial reeeption |
| fence higher up, and jaid hands on the bag | at the railway station. âfhe Queen of Spain |
| Hearing a clatter, be raised bis head, looked | descerded to the bottom of the sttirease to
present at that bloody scene which furnished
M. Scribe the incident on which he built
Gustave Ith. and Bertrand et Raton and
gave M. Verdi the **boukââ of his **Ballo iu
âkept bis word. Le sent bim an invitation to
dinner: * Will you ablige me with your
âcompany to dinner, on Wedoesday, at eight
o'clock? I have invited a number of ex-
âover the fence, and saw the innocent youth | rece!ve ther Majesties, and the Ewperor, as
imakinge the read to Daudalk short ov bis
'own (Kedmondâs) good steed, and the vivi-
(vus beast praveing about on the road, and
| longing for some one to let fly at. He was
: enraged for being so taken in, but mach
| more so when be gound the two ends of the
| precious bag containing nothing more valu-
able than the copper half-penee of the time,
lor less on the way at the country geutle- i value for thirty or forty shillings. So there
| manâs expense, and when he was about dis- | we must leave our outiaw, incumbered with
'm's-ing them with a parting gl.ss from his âhis copper, and uot daring to lay bauds on
| their Majesties met, kissed the band of the
Queen.
subsequently appeared on the baleuny, and
were greeted with loud cheers by the assem-
bled crowd.
took Âąlace in bonour vf the Imperial visic.
(heir Majesties dined at the Hotel de Ville.
| Tue Queen and King of Spain, aceom-
panied by the Prince of the Asturias and the |
tufanta Isabella, arrived at Biarritz on Mon- |
day ona visit to the Imperial family. Tue |
Ewperor aud the prince [imperial went at
three p.m. to meet the Queen at the rail-
The Suyereigns of France and Spain Thiers said nuthing; but when Count de be the valy vol among them.
led:
ceedingly clever persuns, and dy nut like tu
â
Maseleraââ Daring this narrative M
â a Oe
Necro Surrresce.âThe agitation of the
â
Lowenstein ended his stury, the host remark-
** Capitally tuld, my-dear Count, and
A military review afterwards | every assertion you bave made is strictly | questiva of negrv suffrage naturally awekeone
i
true; nevertheless, you have forgotten some a desire to know how the biacks are distri-
important particulars.ââ The Count ex-)| buted inthe Suath. The war has of course
claimed, ** L bave forgotten some particu- | made the census tables of 1860 ices valuable
lars?â M. Thiers smiled, and began to tell for use than they were. But according: to
the history. Le rejuvenated it, and mwen-| them the colored population was in excess
tioned uew, Curious, and omitted particulars. over the white. in 20 counties of the 42 ia
Che circle were ustunished and delighted, Alabama, in G of the 55 in Arkansas, in 6
and Count de Loweasterm siid: ** You are jof the 21 in Florida, in 43 of the 132in
â =
x = | le | debt discharged.
= ce PP m= | Bewg in want of arms, he presented
=. cv cae wR, ro | himself to the commander of (be garrison in
a Lev op: una | Armagh, dressed as a couutry geutleman,
us +O = sand requested him to allow uo few of his
a pot ten to go with him beyond a certain place,
S sy 4 â| where he expected the great outlaw to be}
se Se aw wy © }eoucesled. * He had a good sum of money |
: ee din. oat â2 âabout him and did not wish to lose it? Tne |
mm SA a wm, jcoouel cmplied; avd Redmond and his
ââ ee â_ | guard went on very pleasautly for about |
t= ' Prot e (seven miles. Every man had drauk more
â
r â
@ = a
â =) | own flusk, they were ouly too ready, ut his
ES GUY Ge
Aq JO-Saywy o]quuosvoyy FV
z
| suggestion, to fire a few de jote iu honor of
ihis safe delivery. Lustautly a whistle |
brought a party of fellows to the spot with
a
ad charged guns. and tbe poor red-coats bad |
tet j fo resign muskets, bayoucts, and every regi.
us 1a (mental article of use, avd walk back to}
| Armagh io a very evil plight. |
Redmoud was at-oue thine pursaed by the!
the ill-tempered and davgerous garrau left
at his discretion. The boy arrived safe in
Dundalk with âthe bhuudred guineas quiited
into his waistcoat.
After many eseapes from armed foes and
from prisons, O'Hanlon was treacherously
murdered by his own foster-brother, fo
sake of the rewrd, an almost unprecedeate]
erime in his country. The names of his
way station. âLhe route taken by the Im- right; thatus the true history. I had for- | Georgia, in 33 of the 4% in Louisana, in, 31
| perial and Royal party was thronged with | gotten it, | confess, dear Minister; âtwas you | of the 60 in Missis-ippi, in 20 of tho ST in
âpeople. Upon arriving at the villa Eagenie | who saw Charles ILL. assassinated, nut 1!ââ North Uarvliaa, in 20 of the 30 in South
| the Spanisu Royal Family were received by | Dae 'Carvlina. in 2 of the T750n Tennessee, in 19
âthe Ewpress at the bottom of the starrease.| Prerry Wett Docroren â The English | of the 154 in Texas, in 44 of the 143 in Vir.
After buving rested a short time the Frese papers are now enjoying the luxury of se-/ginia. ln many others the Glack population
and Spanish Sovereigns went to Biyonne to) yeral first-class seusationsâthe Feniacs, the | wasonly a litte less than the white.â/fes-
visit the Uashedral, when a Je Deum wus | nayal fetes, und the catile plague, the last fax Eaupress. â
yung, after which areview took place ia the of which furnishes matter fur very grave re- | â âSiig eer Na ty i
) Place dâArwes, in presence of the Sovereigns? Qections fur our beef-eating lihebile.â Atlast| A rich old widower in Canada is said to
ne
#-Ranye ami the | =
122
used yaad) >
j military for vearly three days, during all
âmini
(i)
âIVIldVO dQ alva
wy DN AOK sw1UVE
TUTHSVONV'T GNV
4 a
b 4
â . . j }
âtL auc âwhich time be scarcely got a morsel of food |
= At lust in desperation be evtes ed the hun-e |
, âbos ot a friend, aud fell toa breaktast of bread |
J _â " avd butter and wilk, Lie bad seareely |
he pL leatea a mouthful when the house was sur-|
âae fr 2 ' rounded, and the captain, leaning over the
. - ÂŁ2 > âhalf-door, iv. polite tone, said: * Captain
ee . \, â . ae hae
3 âie tg ge â oat 'OHaulon you are a Kingâs prisongs ; re-
af 2° i*4 | sistance is useless.â âSo [ perceive,â wa-
"br taaishi§, 6 5. Be a ih Ae gat lt ~--â= | thĂ© answer; *â but as you have oot allowed
NOTIGE TO THE TRADE. inks 6's : |
PENSE SUBSORIBEKOUAS REOELVâ| you will not disturb we now ull hunger is
kp, TB USUAL satiefivd.â © The request being reasouable,
a Spring & Summer was granted ; Redwoud coming to the end
With pute Sizep Cot Parretss oF GARMENTS | 1 od oteurell the balfudourâ oaathe ede:
from the represeutations on the F. shiou Plate. : . akin ebiok wrtee âpte
pret am punciually attended to oo ed : | prise and fear © uhog eae MA
Q Street rete ; gusted the suidiers at exch side from firing
= neen reet, uric $ x
enlaces | mach refresied at his good break fast, and
Labrador Herring for Sate. | big pursuers tired out, be escaped with a
12 Walt ge io = |. ('tanlowâs life = _ â prejudice
40 Ride. Hea f te Sent cm against lawoavd order, Meeting « poor
JOUN_S, PURDIE. him against
ChartotfĂ©town, Jan â30, 1805. uf pediar one day bitterly lamenting, aud
atari th ALT! hearing from bun, (hat he had just. beeu
y SALT! SALT! : rubbed of five pounds lw mouey aud mal-
9.000 bBa-hels Liverpool SALT, rreated by that notorious robber, Redmoud
1 3 YY w Uaen fe YD , UâHanion, he roared at the fellow, and ap-
an I. CO HALL, Water Street. plied a title to bim me refecied on his
; oo 4865.03: % , 's good nawe. * Yuu son of ao un-
Byoe a Se at eule? mas fate said he, i, Man evuld I rob
R ee oa? HS od asides you, that never laid eyes ou you before ?
UST RECEIVED, a large arsores ai Sir,â auswered the poor wan, âthe rogue
Phere rent Gn ates ob Mitac oc bo that robbed me said he was Redimond
very dipleerton. Âą ~_ popp & ROGERS. (*tHanlon.â * Get us follow him,â said the
: âDonde Bric Store. Pownal strect, ; A other, " aud never fear that I wou't make
4 AdMA BY, Lode [he prim sing to anorber tuve.â Coming up to
oat i he thiet, they eased him of his acquisitions,
i ave
giidew vol at Agnieultoral Society's Store, and, whith Rednionwd restored to the right owner,
Office are remove te lid. Rovent i
superâ rive âroutes sorrth te door ber at the ânext assizes,
Oe ALASZA RD, Secâ y- {uie following mituiaus, and entrusted it
â*
ie to take a meal for three days, T am sureâ
lof Lis cakeâ in great tranquility, at onceâ
Reports of Fashions for 1865, | sprang ap. seiz-d his blunderbuss, with whieh |
FiotheJower end of owns {aad bound him over to prosecute the rob-
He then wrote
and ua numerous suite of buth nations, The |
Stieets were
ehief associates were Patrick Mefhevgue,
Joho Kelly, Shan Meruagh, Phil Gallege,
Puadruig Maol (bald), Arthar O'Neil, aud ears
the determined O Kelly, O'Hauloa âwas Royal party returned to Biarritz to dinner,
d stinguished by avis of kinduess to the poor! after which there was a display of fireworks
aud weary soldiers on their march, and by | Pie Spanish Royal Family lett by the half-
abstaining from wanton~ bloodshed, Ils
tollowers were obliged by a most solemu
âoath never to shed blood uuless mw selS-de-
fence, never to rob a poor person, nor to |
offer violeuee to a woman.âDudlin Uni- |
versity Magazine.
Prince Amadeus also paid a visit to the Eu-
peror and Ewpress. Tue statemeat thas a
marriage is projected between Prince Atia
|daughter yl the Queeu of Spam, is cuoatra-
= | dicted.
MISCELLANEOUS, |
~ â*-- na
?
A Pretry Littrie Incipent at Biarritz.
HOW TUE MONEY GOES.
| Until lately, it was very diffeult, alinost | When the tram entered the Limotte station,
im possible, to obtain a complete ufficial state- | iÂą was received by a formidable body. of war-
ment of the various disbursements to indivi- âriors, consisting of twelve litte boys. perfect-
| of salaries, allowances and pensions, As fur! wim wore the uniform of a supper and
| back as the year 1847, the late Juseph Hume | another that of a drummer, ander the eom-
} succeeded in carrying a mytiva, in the House | wand of the Prince Lurperialâs intimate
of Commons, that such a list or statement) friend General Espinasseâs little boy, and at-
should be published as ** a blue buok,ââ by .
âthe government. It did not appear in 1847, lof canjinieres. The drummer beat *Aux-
nor yet in 1848; but as parliament was be-"| champs ââ as the train stopped ; the Ewperor |
ing prorogued in the July of the latter-year,! and Prince immedtately goc out of their car-
Mr. Hume was informed, in reply to 48 eD- praye, and the Prince reviewed his triendâs
,quiry, that it was considered tov trouble- | company, who executed. their mang@uyres
sume to comply with the order of Parliament. | yery creditahly. . Meanwhile the Empress
âSince Mr. Gladstone has had the financial ad- | s.yt for the little cantenieres to ber saloon
ministration, the report or listâin queston | carriage, and as they were hited down again
bas regularly appeared. The volume 0! che chidren were a perfect mass of flowers
1864-65 gives us suuie facts. which may 45- and fruwt. As the train started, the Espin-
topish some of our readers. . -jasse Regiment shouted * Vive 1â Ewpereur,â
Queen Victoria's anneal allowance is $Ll-, and waved their depis after thejmost approved
925,000, to which must be added $125,000 fashion.
from the surplus revenue of the Duchy ol
Lancaster. âTotal, $2 150,000. She alsoâ âThe Great Eastern had on board when she
has a variety of-first-@f498 palarial residences, | returned irom her lust trip, the eubstanve
such a8 Buckingham! Palaces, Kensington Pa-) brought up from the bed of the ocean 2,000
lace, St. Jamesâ Palace Kew and Windsor fathoms deep. When dry it formed into a
â_ââ + >
Castleseâali of which are kept io repair, de- white substance, like chalk in appearance, |
corated, aud frequenuy furnished, at the ex-* bat which erdinbles at the touch, and teites
pense of the nation. Besides this, the Prince uinuteÂź traces on theâ finger, like so much
vt Wales has Marlborough fiouse to live in, âdown from a buttertlyâs wing.
tended by luis two little girls in| the costume |
advices the ravages of this strange disease
decorated) with Freach and) was spreading into every quarter of the
Spanish flags, aud much enthusiasm pre-| United Kingdom, fand bade defiance to the
At six p. m. the Imperial and skill of the veterinary surgeons. The modes |
of treatment appear to be ecanflicting, and
| often rather wild. âTwo Ayrshire cows, be-
âlonging to Miss Bardett Contts, were at-
past teu tram, being accompanied to the | tended during their sickness by one. of the}
railway station hy the Emperyr and Empress. | most celebrated veterinary surgeons in Eng- Yâ
j land, one of them being so far gone that ite
ârecovery was pronounced impossible. An
âaccount which Las been going the roand of the
(a week with âeight bottles of whiskey.
twelve botties of brandy, thirty bottles of
| port wine and other strong drinks.ââ As the
--From Biarritz a private letter telis us of | result of this somewhat expensive spiritual |
an incident which oveurred during the jour- | treatment. one of the sargeonâs patit ute died |
|ney of the Imperial family to the south.!in a fit of de/zrium tremens ; the other, whose
dissulution bad been contidently predicted,
recovered from the disease, bur exhibited all
, the symptoms of having been on a * high
jat him till he got at some distance. Being | duals out of the British revenue, om account | ly equipped and armed ta the teeth, one of | old apres.â We agree with the Pall Mall
_ Gazette in doubting whether it is desirable tu
âbe an English millionaireâs cow at the pre-
sent er-sis.â-N. Y. Tunes.
Paisece per Lavcuaste ~In ** Notes of
an Aruy Surgeonâ we tind the following :â
*[ remember one day in my hospital rounds,
âa patieut jast arrived presented an amputated
forearm, and in doing so be could hardly
ârestrain a broad laugh; the titter was con-
istantly op his face. * What is the matter?
This does not strike me as a subject of laagh-
âter.â âIt is not, Duetor{ but excuse meg; I
âlost my arm in so funny 4 way that i stall
taugh when L lovk at it.â .* What-way?
: Qur first. sergeaut wanted shaving, and got
| me tu attend wo 4t, as | am a-corperal~ We
âwent together in frout of Ys teut yt tad Ia-
â thered him, held bis nose, dnd was just about
âapplying the razur, when a eannga bad came,
land that was the last I seen of hus head and
(my arm, Excuse me fur laughing so, Doe-
tur, but L neversaw sach @ thet before.
â âââ ee â â
| âThree native Kast fdran eotton-farmers,
âfrom Madras, have been lately ** prospectiagââ
iat Mauebgster. coo | iedeeity Sib
pe
of beauty in aftegagteyÂź
|huve practised a very artful echeme to gain
| the band of the belle of a village. He gut on
old gipsey to tell the young lady's fortune ia
words whieh he dictated, as joliowe: â* I
âdear youngJady. your star wil] soon be hid
| for a short Gime by a very dark cloud, but
âwhen it reappears it will continue to shine
âwith uninterrupted splendur until the end of
uur cays. Before one week a wealthy old
_widuwer, wearing a suit gf black and « fiee
âeastur hat, will pay you a yisit and reqy
âyour hand in marriage, You will aceept bie
in the possession of all bis property, belore
the close of the year. Your uext husba
âwill be a young man of whom you thi
most of at present ââ Three days alter the od
gentleman, dressed in the manner
by the gipsey, presented-himeelf to the young
ides â ds alien tovk place. â :
- woe 3
| Beavty ix Ponasp.â* Beeause,ââ says
| Bayard âTaylor, ** there girls do not jump
from infaney to young ludyhuud. Biey are
not sent frum the cradle» tu the <, te
{
childhuod, which extends rete cet ey
âseveral years, they are plainly and lousy
dressed, and allowed ty can, comp, aad play
Lin the open air, They are caanaem aa
girded about, and oppressed every way wi
| countless frills und saperabuadsat founces
sv as to be ddwired fur their clothing. « Nor
are they rendered deligate or me tw by
continual stuffing with 2andies: aad ewes.
cakes as are the majority ofcAmerican chitde
ren. Pluin,y siwple foad, fee and sarioup
â exercise,and an abundanee of pawe during
âthe whole period of chitdtfo0d are the seerevs
4 . ~~ --. - +84
| The Britishâ Cabinet tiustâ possess-a nigs-'
terious âaod far-reaching power, ifwe ay
crĂ©dit the following statement,â put forth â
âthe Londonâ mdent of a cont
** The Pritice arid Princess of WalĂ©s, andâ
(presome their two children â both ây
thanks to Lord âPalwerston and « âliberadâ
Cabinetâhave followedâ the Queen tu the
, Coutineut.â
wiat
> oo ian «4 oy >
deus of Italy aud the Prineess fovbella, eldest | Unglish papers, says that alter being severely | offer, become his wife, aud be left a widow.
| purged they were drenched in the course of |
dress, to sit still and look pretty. Nn, shdy:
are treated as c'itidren should » be. mg
Sos sO ee Ss
41*