Edited Text
ng wr desperate in porseval apr i
they are eegatded as vl bad
was fad
iat? ilae
ce vothing at ri
tov h
âpetr probabi werey
handed over to tie Federal,
elrorts consider-
he
pearance,
yopule
paved of thetr Setiny ; .
. * wrens
ties for bYini a dd dvey
ne rthy frent the frendeet the Coutederaie
ehle â72 Hae .
- â Lu Consequenct ge i pirate at
iaatms ot Tater
tate
vans By, ; + he
depredahion tue pre 1 ' on .
stand Law bave aadergene more Una ordinary
naite +h ay oor jegal traternity, bur, as usual,
een stie Views @ad resu.isâ-soume lisist-
wi â
A Si.
that (acer opition OF The principal poiut tm
© emovetay a0 te vend dispute; while others, with
ae . ;
err frmress, maintar a contrary interpretation
gral â
is wntrariety Ă© rt the profession, twonid
area ht ¹¹ tf? d os }
. Lerwl â â , I ,
be d ie lk fo Whacrsk f Waal if Lhe generar
218 on the gration, Wi er ornel piracy
co@mitted Mm fine instance; vor ia it at
"
haus beer :
much Lape ance &) ths
rtainty exist the minds af a tew lawyers
rnert a -
people ab large that this
+ Âą
we escur in bie oF lion
Li, however, appea:
that tad Brae and his accomplices authority
ttm the Seathert > oe
etl t the semeete, Sroh an evplort eandet be eon
â
( eniledera
atracd intos piratical eFhue, bat must be accepied
ad a jusifiable
ower agrinet te artic d apy vent.
Og tee part of the complainants and prennant:
thon, two 5 Joon Barristers are employed, while
the Hon. Joba ti. Gray is recained âas he him.
wet? fermally aml somewhat grandly anneunced
oa the first morning of the investigaion ~ as
Counsel tor the Coatederate Slates ot America.â
What a distingnisied capacity! How clear and
promising i the preapect of becoming Consul-
procesding by one belligerent
General or Plenipotentiary in those Colonies to
the Confederate States of Aweriea when the
siall have been adiwitted inte the Family of Nd
tians, la twenty-tobr hours after their capture
the culprits were brenght before the Court and
arraigned, and yet within that short Space «i
thine gevllewan received jis briet
from Riehweud to defend the Rebel Government
iui 1 suspect that Mri Gray's eugageuent did
net originate with Jetl, Davis ov any ot tis Cabi
wet, bat more provably with a tew prowineni
citizens of St Jolin, whose prociivities in regurd
ty the American war are decidedly secessional
âThis, 1 presume, woul) be designated a consiru
tice velamer, aud, thervtore, a reiainer
Neo evidence on belli of the defence bas jet
been offered. It has generally â
thet o-mitissions under the sea! of the Coutede-
rate States would be produced to establish thy
fight of Braine and his subordinates to perpetrate
the act complained of ; and, on the prodnetion of
such decuments, the release of the
would dowbiless follow. but po such evidenec
bas hithertu: been âand ail the tacts
whieh have been revealed in Court tell strougly
agitst the accused
the learned
Tree? hy sirprareed
prisene: »
stubunitted
da ihe eariiest partet the preliminaries, objee
ties was taken te the jurisdetion of the Ponce
Magistrate te adjudeau upon the ease. The
eyection Was based dpor the tact that tie Chesa-
peake Was (taken Possesshii of and surrendered to
rave io American Walk rs, of WHiel matters
our Courts have no cognizance. When eloquently
urged by Mr. Gray, this pomt etieeted consider
abie hesitation in the wind of the Magis!
but Was, after consideration, overruled.
aise appears the nevative fact that
shewing the Steamer tu be Federal property, is
WM eVideuce ; but this detect is precised to Ue
remedied in the course of a tew days. A nove}
aud extcaordisaty application was made to the
Court at its last sitiings by the prisonersâ Coun-
eel. It has been currently reported that Brain:
was, aud stil! is. ia pessessionu of the proper ere
dentiais to trade in piracy and privateenng: and
fet, wetwithstanding this stute ot iguanuits rein
prosecution. he bas had the baseness ty abseoud
aad conceal bineelf trom the oficers oft public
jastice, and the treachery to leave iis untortunats
and deluded companions Without the benefit of
the buarted comission. Thus conduct. oi. t «utis-
fagtort! accounted fox, certain), strengthens the
presumption of his guilt Yesterday Mr
applied ty the Court ier permission te bi wg Brain
jerward delence, aud tor a
giaranter that he would be ex: tpt igus cru
hal pfotess guoad the matter in hand: but the
Magistrate stiumariy disinissed the request, and
aeemmpanied bis relusal wiih the *S pression of a
hope that tie Police officials would use their ut-
host wudeavours to capture Braine, so that he
Sieuld tuke lis trial, ter weal or wor, with thos:
dreads in cGetedy Mr. Gray turther announced
fis intention to demand from the Provincial Se-
cretary a copy of the offilavits and requisitior
bpen whieh the Lieut. Governerâs warrant wa
bewed; aud, ow failure of their reduction, the
learned Counse! siated that be would insist upe
a saoprae dace) treme ver ig issved tor Lis Ex-
eeliency to attend 4Âą a Tie further
beuting of the case je adjourned ofer unt:
Thursday of next week
rafe ;
Phere
tte Tegister,
(rray
BS a Withess lor tle
W ifhess
The coriesity and ex-iicwent which this oc-
entrence has created is ripidty g. Prop
Gre geting satiated with its details: and atill the
hoert weâthie NVes perbapsâol the Hite belies
~âwtelwWart young wietiâare in joo |
I Hi ptress re, al the present time, te Âą ieipate the
ual isaue, tor al) is delist and eoufua on bin
,
CUM;
is} Bidet HEtCE PLU: be Lint wuservey ia,
fiat whoever ulers by tie eveut, the
lawyersengaged will be the guwers, Five guineas
a day fee cack of these gettieawen, without the
Sig Bieet Fespeet ow their part ler theâ ter hours
*) stem, es a lealure Oy) LO teense Unwerluy of
huliee, AUG i4 al ali limes an ite
âaes of
Lo iis Feeipientâs purse, whether delrayed by
Waskingivn Cabinet or by the : t
Diates vi Awericu.â
Mra. Eveicth is again before the Supreme
Coart ou as indictment tor Abortion. Lis otfenes
is wade felovious by the Provincial Statutes, and
is puvishable with fourteen years imprisonment
bn the Penitentiary. tbout three years age, this
Woman was tried and acquitted in St. John on a
ewarge of enrbezzleme preterred agaiast ber by
Messrs. Evins and Gardner. On that eceasio:
the verdict whieh, legally established her innocene
tue
* Cunicderale
Was Commonly supposed to have beep preseunged
through the toree of almost overwheiming svin-
palhy,aod the persuasion ut her advowates. Now ;
huwerer, i is believed that she will be entirely
Wilhent these accidental atvantages. âI hough:
the evidence to be adduced in the present pro-
feculion can be ouly of a circumstautia! nature
Jet the probalilities af acquittal ars against ler.
Besides, I believe she has disdained the assistagce
of Counelâether that, or Ceunae] have refused
thelr tuterposition, bat this latter Ba pprerm Lived)
thinst be Wholly unfounded, and I only give it as
One af the strange rumeurs of the dav. â
Mr. Spinney, whe came here some twelve
houths age, and set up asa medical practitioner
hile ewereign renedy in all cases bei ig tie
Kivetric battery âis jowuily indicted with Mrs. E
for the crime imputed to ber. Mr. Spiusey will
be ably defended by 3. KR. Chowan, E q+ one of
Me cleverest members of the Bar. while the
Monble. he Solicitor fyeneral will be the Counsel
we the Crown. A day next week ia set apart to:
the tral of these ill-fated persons; the priv ipeal
Miltens aceiusd Berg will be a German paysician,
between whem and Spinney some disagreement
aad professional jealousy took place last autuun,
aod wineh 16 thougit tu have, in no small degree,
Mettated the accuser iu giving the intormation
that Jed te Spinuey âys ineareerativa. Tais in-
former, Wheiier his motives be selfish or dis-
Werested in the matter, may look out for a}
eathing denunciation from Mr. Piiomson.
Business ia tie stores and warehouses is eqttite
Ship-buiiding, shipprug and the requisition
" wainen, are exceedingly active. Ordinary |
manners are receiving froni seventy-five to uinety
dollars tor the ran te Great Brttain. aud there is /
? Mint lively danand for them at that high rate
Christnas gud New Year's passed off in a re-!
Markably qQaiet manner. âPhe custom ofâ making
aliaâ Was attended to, though not se extensively
i previous years, owing, ne doubt, te the
Magrevable state of the weather.
A course of tree lectures has been inaugurated
Mi the Mechanic's Lustitute, intended chieily for,
tee labouring and artizan classes, but from w ich
= high and low, learned or literate, wight de- |
e pleasure and advantage. We have had littl: |
⹠te «now as yet, aod the seasou sv far bas been
Very maid. P. 8.4:
St. J a, N. B. Janay. 16, 1364. |
oreo
THE Reviews avy BLACK WOUD.âWe desire |
> direct the attention of our readers to the adver. |
saaen another column, from the American
radeg of the standard British Reviews and |
flack wond's Magazine. It will be seen that the
velage on these works is very considerably les |
aes and a new induc ement i thus offered to)
vibers to forward their orders forthe. We |
we Feeceived Blackwood {or December, and the
North British for the
Mtuirabie Numbers,
last Quarter, and both are}
â
THECIVIL WARIN THESTATES,
THE SITUATION,
: Cold prevaitsin the quarters of the |
Potomac arm + Tendering the sleeping ar |
able. Ie the wen somewhat uncomfurt- |
ie bobefat ta ace whilethe Union army
pe 4. eriul, the rebels are cor-|
into Gen z âspondent, and are deserting |
a. S lines by hundreds. [; is |
esidentâs \proclamation ot!
duciog & wonderful effect in!
| golng out soon after to the baro, was sit
| believed tu be an American by birth, and has
' people have expressed @ strung desire tu iynet ) York.
| with fifteen fathoms of water on it, extends
| great nestsiance ig shipwmarters, baving, we
| ing was the state of the warket at New York |
}and at Richmond, reapectively :â papers
store rman eapnene er
Gien. Lee's army, and that whole brigades) Wan iy tue Serinc.âThe letter, of which
would come over to Meadeâs lines if they had the following is a copy, has fonnd its way
the opportunity, into print through the German Press. Con-
Despatetes trom Cumberland Gap say that,
on Sanday, 3rd instant, an overwhelming
foree of rebels, under Sam Jones, made a
deseent upon # small body of our troops, |
stationed near Jonesb rough, Va., Consisting
of about 230 men of an [llinois regiment,
commanded by Major Beers, and [8 men of! spring, and it is my father-in-law who will
Wellâs Ohio battery. A desperate cesistance, commence. âLhe position of King Vietor
was made hy our troops continuing [rom seven Emanuel ia not tenable. The national deht
in the morning to three in the afternoon, | is Mereasing every day, and there must be an
when the Union tro ps Surrendered. he end put to that. The King has written
enemy numbered four thousand wen. Thej several times to the Emperor thatâ there
forces Were guarding « portion of | must be a solution, and tuut he woud rather
country from which tue army relied for the be plain Chevalier Carignan than play the
supply of forage. part of a soverviga who fuds bimself pasted
Lue reeent attempt of Gon. Early, with the forward toa precipice. Lrepeat, my father-
wigades of Lee, Walker and Rosser, under | in-law has appriacd my cousin ttat he well
the immediate command of Puzbargh Lee, to | attack the Austrian lineg in the spring.
the produetion of po Jess a person than
Prince Napoleon, eousin to the Emperor ;â
âYou ask me if I believe in war. Yes, I
believe in it. How will it breuk out? 1
will tell you. War will break out in the
'
& fton
Âźapture the Union garrison at Petersburg leve me, it is thos the struggle will
and take possession of Cunmberiand and New | couwence. The King does not laboar under |
Creek, bas proved a complete failure. A Ile is aware
tew waggonsâthirty-five in allâof
lrhorbornâe force, were captured by the rebels
on their route from Petersâ urg. but they
were, fur the most part empty. Gen. Kelty | fore they yield. The conquerors will re-enter
gives @ brief account of the diseomGture of | L m>ardy, and may, perhaps. occupy Turin
the enemy, in a despatch te Governor) But the position will change. tlowever
Boreman wreat the desire of the Emperor may be to
The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad is) preserve the peace, he cannot permit Austria
perfectly sate, and the trains are running; to destroy what France bas accomplished in
reguiatiy. Anvlflicial document of the rebels lialy. If, neve rtholess, contrary wo ail
laying down the plans of Gen. Barly in) cal sulation, the Hany eror soaltd abandon my
West Virginia, tas fallen into the hands of | father-in-law, the latter would prefer to be-
troops. Lt appears trom this paper that | come Kang of Piedmont again in order to be
wny delusion on the subject.
our
lien
Ohio Rattroad at Martinsburg, and by a
combivation of movements attempt
capture of such Union torces as were between |
| Martinsburg and New Creek. At the latter
place Gen. Early having beard that we were |
concestrating troops aÂą Martinsburg, and South.ââ
having been ipformed that Gen. Averill was |
there with a strony cavalry foree, deterusmned |
to alterâbis plan. die therelure de
Generals Piizhagh Lee and Rosser to attempt) be in the most floerishing condition.
on him with regard to Italy. Le is
ment will interfere, and that after the war
the King will possess the centre of Northern
lialy, while the Kiaperor will dispose of the
ome
Prince Evwarp IsLaxp âThe trade of this
beautiful aad fertile isiand is represented to
This
a | atched
the capture of the garrison at Petershberg | is or ought to beexeeedingiv gratifying to the |
people of Nova Seotia. It wouid be altoge-
ther impossible to over-estimate the irapor-
tance of Prince Rdward Island,in an agriculte-
ral and commercial point of view ; and the in-
timate nature of the relations existing between
| this Province and the lesser Colony, which
hosser was ty try and get into Cumberland
und eupture or destroy the stores there.
They both failed, becauee Genera! Early
could not reinforee them with artulk ry and |
supplies.â New York Herald.
~> 00s eo â.
Cotornen Soupisns Murperep ry rae
Reners âIn Jone inst a company of colored | rence, n iturally induces no ordunary degree
svidiers, com) rising a Âą iptain, first lieutenant | Of Sympathy on our part as regards the pro-
amd eighty nen, were captured at Milikenâs/ 2°eSs tnd prosperity of the Jatter. Une of
Bend, during the siege at Vicksburg. after aj the primary aims of the Nova Seotia Jegisla-
ture would b* to draw more closely together
these sympathies,the sequence of self-interest,
and thus cement indissolubly the ties wh eh
ficial! could be learned of them, and from | extended imtercourse has already. fustered
the well known vindictiveness of the rebe{| into tangible results. Prince Edward Island
wilitary authorities the worst was appre-| !as for many years past proved an excellent
hended. Information has beer reeanved ac} customer ta this Province; the Islinders
the War Department, by way of âTexas, |
stating that these apprehensions were too
well founded, Lt appears that tie prisoners
were conveyed into the Âą suntry several miles
and pled in elose -oifinement. No inti-!
mation of their fate was given them. Aiter
several days the two officers were taken « ut
at dead of night, aud the word given out that
they bad escaped. 1. now appears that they
were hanged without previous notice or even
a semblance of trial, in obedience to a seeret | tke many years to develope its teeming re-
order from the rebel Seeretray of War. A | 8eurees in a ratio commensurate with the al-
tew days afterward the other prisoners also | most fabatous fertility which is beginning to
disappeared mysteriously, and there 1 no be secorded tu the **Granary of the St
doubt that they also were seeretely murdered | Lawrenee.ââ A ioeal jeuraal iurnishes some
by direction ot the Riehmond autburiti sg Statistics of the eXport tr ide of Charlottetown
What retaliation shall be inflicted for thos j tor the past year, which prove that the value
barbarous atrocities is yet to be determinud. | Of ovis, potatoes, barley, tarnips. oatmeal,
va poi nn . ezgs, sheepskins, and woul, shipped at that
Anuest ov A Desperate Cuaractzrârox Port tlone daring IXG3, amounted to ÂŁ107 ,-
Dvave Pegisianee ** Since their captivity,â |
sags the New York Just, ** their fate bag
been involved in rulound mystery.â Nothing
their surplus produets ; and the interchange
of commodities has long been mutually b- ne-
ficial, Let us then seek by every legitimate
means tO promoke and perpetuate a& Tec! pro-
city of trade which bas yielded so mach in
the past, and which promises, if practised
with wise discretion, to increase ind finitely
inthe future. The crade of the Island is now
-.) a . . ; i
AvuTHOR yr six Murvess !âi'vo montis ago, (23, beieg wore thau double tiw exports irom
the public mind was agitated by an exeite- | t@ whole Island in the year 1830! In ad-
ment the same in direction, it less in kind, | @'0n to the articles above enumerated,
to that caused by the exploits of Lueretia
Borgia. On the 26ch of Uctober the bod y
ot Fredrick Fernoaberâa well-kuown citizen
af Chieago, residing on Madisua street, near | sleep, poultry,
Leavictâwas found lying about a mile from | Pat! barley, beet, pork, dry fish, mac«erel.
the totl-gute on the Southwestern Plank | !Âąrrings, oil, oysters, parsnips. carrots, hay,
Road ; he hal beea shot from behind. Ty.) &e
wood, horses, turn-cattle
Toese, if added to the estimate, would
; murderer was pot known, and the people swell the total to av ry largeamount. Tue
, Were pacutally auxsious to knuw who it was! Teturns for tie whole Island, during the past
(iat thas rendered life insecure. Lorce or | „o#, bot now forthcoming, ein scarcely fail
tour days afterwards the body of an itiner-| to prove higily interestiug, and it is safe to â
ating vendor of watcles and clocks was | T4Y that they will abound sathy prove the ma-
found en the canal bank vear Brighton, ander | (etial prosperity of Prince Edward Istand to
cirearastances GOt the aust suspicious, but Fe immeasurably surpassed any eorrespond- |
] â
checkered |
the cause vf death was unkauvwn; and the} '% period in some Wirt
fact that his pockets bad been rifled, printeo | story âHalifar Reporter, J m9.
towards violence, although no marks were ei =e %
found on âhis person. No clue was ubtamed A Grear Warerraty.âA detachment of
to his identity, and he was buried as an un-/| tro 8 recently scouting in the valleys of the
known. [tis now aseertained. alinost beyond | Snake or Lewia tork ot the Columbus, dis-
juubt, that these two mea died at the hands | wered a waterfall which, i> is said, is en-
ot ene aad the same person, who is also! cited tu the distiaction of being called the
known to have comositted anovher must un- greatest in the world. The entire volume
provoked murder, and by his own coaiession
has killed three others, making six mdiv-
duals who bave fallea by bis hand
ws
etpice one hundred and ninety-eight teet
high, thirty-eight feet higher tian Niagara.
About two weeks ago a farmer named! Snake River is ful! as large as the Niagara,
Crovk, residing in the town of Lecroy, Boone | and the cascade te one solid sheet or body
County, Was Visried at nighttall by # teiluw| fue locality of this immense wateriall is
who remained vatil late, then asked tu) near the point Leretofore designated as the
bs allowed to stay all pight, which was re-| Great Shoshone or Salmon Falls of that
fused. ile left the house, and Crook, on River, but they bave always been enveloped
inmystery. Almose a dozen years ago the
from behind, and fell to the ground aecorpse. | writer passed along the Snake River road.
Cue neigibouts turned out © ia posse,â but! For two days he heard the roaring of these
could not find the wurderer.â Sherif Av-| falls, but learned ao more respecting them
irews of Belvidere, was pot upon his track | chan if they had been in the muon. It was
and succeeded in capturing him, the fellow | said that there were a series of falls and
drawing a large horse pistol at his eaptor, | rapids, making a descent of seven hundred
and being oniy prevented trom suvuling by | leet in seven miles, and the sound gave eolor
getting a kuvck-down blow. | to the repors.
Ile was subsequently ideatified as havin, | the great plain Snake River flows throagh a
been seen on the day of the murder of Farn-| cinon, wit vertical wails buadreds of feet
haber in the immedtaie viciaity of the place,| high. Le is only at long intervals thas
and In possession of a horse pastel eorrespeond- | salient polnts are foaad by whieh the river
ing ty tae one tuund on the prisouer. When! can be reveled. The road erosses from point
Captured the prisoper had also on his person | to point of the bends, only approaching close
a tut ul clockmakerâs tovls, similar to those | to the river where there is a ehance to de-
whieh bad been used by the one fowad dead scend for water. From these facts, very few,
on the canal bank. In bis pocket was also if any. of the tens of thousands of adven-
tound about @ pound of raisins, which on turers that lave crossed the plains ever looked
deen cut open, were found ty be liberally | upon the great falls. The late disesverers
charzed wits Cantharides or Spanish flies, a | r âport beside the main eataruct many others
well-known poison, and itis pussitle that the | of less height, varying from twenty. to filty
Âąlock-mwaker was polsuned by haviug eaten feet each, near by. Some day they will be
them. visit-d by the tourist and pleasure-seeker,
Lie prisonerâs naine is Leander Coffman, is! ind Jookad upon as frequently and familiarty
ubout thirty-two years o/ age, unmarried, has! as Niagara is to-day, and it wiil be admitted
lost the heftarm reimedatery beiew tueelhow, | t at, with the stupendous grandear of their
âheing thus easy of identification. He is | us Niagara now excels the bulauee of tie
spent several years of hisiife in Boone and) world.
McHeury counties ; be bas always been re- re
yerded as a desperate character. The ex- The New York Post says that there are at
elteinebt against him is very Sirong; the feast LUO O0V temporary residents inâ New
fhe hotels are adi erowded.
him and there is no doubt that an atiompt next to tinpossible to find a house to hire,
aud
+<4aP ee ~ -
j to remove bin from the jan) would be the sig- | and just as dificult to secure ordinary sleeping
nal for av effort to hang bim without trial
)apartments, All the hotels and boarding
ile coulesses to having killed three men in) houscs have raised their
Lowa. to turn applicants away
twee STS PEPIN
_ The ree âeh official survey of the coastof| In Tr 'y, the other day, while a physician
Newitound!and has proved the existences of a) was hunting up one of bis patients. be stun-
shuaititherta unknown. Captain Urlebar. | pied into tue apartment of & poor woman
, ; . i :
Ki. N., conducting the survey, reports that a) and diseovered that tor lack of @ bedstead
| shoul, fitteen miles long and five bread, aud) sie usea her bureau âeach drawer being
5
. f ; 4 c propped up and converted intu a sleeping
from about seven miles off Cape Race. The | bunk for her little ones.
depth of water oa the siwal geyes bat little 3
fear of vessels tovchiay the ground, bat m_
the ordinary course oi navigation it will bea) Indiana, or the night of the [7th uals.
+
Two
| young boys of Rushville were arrested for a
zelle. | jail, where a crazy man was confined, pre-
wt Ae Wt Didiin itr teh Foy pty hmm nage } Imorning, when the jailor went to give his
Un Monday, Vecawber 10, 1808, tire follow | prisoners their breakfast, the boys were fouad
weltering in blood their throats cut from car
The (ndianapolis Journal says that
Gold per dollar, $1 524 @ St 524, $19 50 @ | such excitement ensued that on Saturday some
220. Sterling Exchange, lof the people of Shelbyville took the madman
perdollar, 1 65 120 00. âfrom the jail, and were about to bang bim,
Fleur, per bbl,
mm
=> â_
The New York Cowwprecial estimates the ed bim. If they had heng the jailor it
eumber ot Suuthera refugees abvuc that city | would have been more sensible.
at 25,000. âThey find it difficult to obtain | ame ors
means of subsistence. Some of the ladies| Thestar of fashion ia Chieago is a Cana-
from the South have apened boarding houses, | dian ball-breed. She is said to be surpass-
and sume have dope Janey work. Some | ingly beautiul, and is the petted and idol-
bave suffered in poverty. It is stated tbat) ized wife of arich man, who took her when a
one whole family, who had lived in affluence little child from her wotherâs lodge, had her
in the South, passed the whole of last/ educated in a convent, and for a time set
winter ina swali garret room of tencment all Chicago wild with bis lovely â* foreignââ
iuuse. | bride.
siderable importance is attached to it as it is
Bo!
Col, | that the Austrians will obtain the advantage, |
but he knows likewise that his magnificent
army will oppos: a formidable resistance be- |
Karly was to cut the Baltremore and} freed from ths responsibility whieh presses |
there |
the; probable, however, that the French goveri- |
nevertheless holds the keys of the St. Law- |
have in turn supplied us bourtifally with |
progressing with giant strides, but it will |
there were alsy exported from Onarloste- |
town In Considerable quantities, the vatue of |
Which is pot aj pended, timber, deals, lath- i
the Suake River pours over a sheer pre- |
tt is,
pices, aud yet have |
A horribie affair occurred at Shelbyville, |
615 @ 675 10000 @119.' having actually fastened the rope about hisâ
- 'neek, but other citizens interfered and rescu-
M THE STATES.
BANGOR, Jan. 13.
LATEST FRO
pacing by authority ef Richmond Govermnent,
j offering to sell Gen. Hurlbect or United States all
cotton, tilleen thousand bales, remaming in certain
distriets yet outside Federal fines, for Greenbacks.
Phe other is from Kirby Swith, offering to furnish
every facility toe get out all the evtten fram Red
{River and Wastite districts in Confederate cou-
| trol. Money tor same to be paid to that class of
offeers excepted trom President Linceluâs Ag-
nesty, they to retire to Mexico.
| âPhe Republican credits the authenticity of these |
\ propositions.
; Newbarn Times saya the people of North Caro-
pia are rite for revolt against Richmond Go-
vernment.
Chattanooga despatch says affairs in East Ten-
Hessee are assuming ab exciliug aspect.
i Longstreet is heavily reintorceed trom Lee's and
Johnston's arniues.
Reaniorcements are on south side of Holston
river,
} Loagstreet has a splendid position, with river
and mountain in trent.
Jolnston maintains a
Hitt.
| Grant left Knoxville via Comberland Gap, mak-
) ing a complete civeuit of the Department.
bold front at Tunnel!
Forrest has been badly handled in Kast and |
tuiddle Dennessee, but managed 1 escape WALh |
ihest of his command,
Tribune's correspondence reports Confederates
have decided to retuove Capitel fron: Richmond
fo Columbia, S.C, Also that gunbeats and
euclids ut Rachinoud are ready for service.
Seouts report Geueral Early is lalliug back up
Slienandoah Valley.
JANUARY 14, a. mw.
Washington letter mentions rumors that Long-
i street, joued by Ewell, is preparing tor fresh
assault on Knoxville, und Gen. Grautâs sudden
departire tor that point was with a view te
jthreatened attack. It is doubted, however,
| Whether any assault is intended at present.
Bermuda dates of Dee. 20, meution steamers
Flora, Coquet, Ranger, aud another were Waillitiy |
te ran the blockade.
Gov. Parker, of New Jeraey, in message to Le-
i vislature, disepproved of Government's policy on
Slavery question, dod argues that resioration ot |
old Unien and Constivation should be the object
lined at.
Naines of Bishops Bailev, Tymon, and Me-
| Closkey, have been sent to Kome tor successor ot |
Arcaoishop Hughes.
Private letters irom Tlaly indicated agitation
oo Venetian queshon to make Italy free in tact
as well as in name.
Maryland House of Delegates definit« ly estab-
ished Eanancipation policy. The preamble aud
resolatwn declaring that the true interests of
Maryland demand Bimancipation, should be im-
mediately Innugurated, that a constiiutional con-
vention be early called, te carry such policy inte
effect, and that efferts be made te secure trom
Cougress reinibursements te loyal owners of lost
slaves, passed'5] to 15.
Gen. Banks writes to the President, that he will
soon Complete the organization of the State Go-
verntient ot Louisiana.
Tribune despatch says, that North Carolina
troops are not trusted en picket duty; also, that
a Confederate torce was in Shenandoah Valley, |
| fo procure subsistence, and preparatory to plan ot
aiptoerons for next campatga.
By Telegraph to the Exaniiner and Reading Room
Cuârows, Jan. 25,9 p. m,
sritish blockade running ship â Silvanus,â from
| Naseau, was captured in Doboy Suund, Georgia,
by gunboat â Huron.â
Richmond Whig thinks fature of South is in-|
volved in the next Spring cumpaign in Northern |
Weorgia
Washington letter te New York âTimesâ
sales co-operative movement will be made in
Richmond mi spring by Coluan, ou Peninsuia or
south of J mes River, under General Haneock,
aided by Butler's forees, aud by the main columu
in addition,
Number of Confederate troops west of Missis-
| sippi estimated at 36,000.
| Siege of Cfariesten temporarily suspended
jeXcept from fire of gans trom Morris Istaud.
Admiral Daigreen on leok out fer Confederate
ratus in the harber known to be in coutission.
Richmond Sentind of the Sth says Yankee
troops being landed ut Morehead City, N.C.
Wihiiugten Journal says recent presence ot
Geu. Batler iy Newbern, and concentration of
troops there as well as at Washington and Beau-
ford Harbor, indicate advance of serivus charaeter
Richmond papers report passage of bil Con- |
reliplion of uli Couiederates beretojove lucnishiog
Suter bilubes.
| expire,
No word of the â Canada.â
| lo $7.105. Gald, 158% to 1594.
| A Bazaar in aid of the Volunteer Band wae
}held in the Temperance Hall on Wednesday, and
| was a brilliant success.
iully decoraied jor the occasion. The tables were
amply supplied with fancy and useful articles in
great variety, and the ladies who had charge of
| them were vever mere zealous, or, we believe,
taure successful in obiaining purchasers, tor their
beautitul aud attractive wares. The Hall was
crowded with the beauty and fashion of the City |
throughout the day and evening.
the Lieut. Governor and Mrs. Dundas were pre-
sent, who were received at the door by a guard
jof honor composed of the Volunteer Artillery,
under the command of Capt. Morris. Many of
the Militia and Volunteer officers and men appear- |
ed in full regimentals, and the Volunteer Baad
enlivened the proceedings with quite a number
ot cbvice aad admirably executed compositions.
Dr. Young, Chairuwan of the Band Comniittes,
delivered an address on Musie, which contained
many beautiful aud eloguent passages, and WarPPns ie
listened to with appreciauive attention.
ceeds of the Bazaar amount, we understand, to
the landsome sum of ÂŁ130.âMon.
20e-â__-_~
Por hundreds of miles across |
| The Hilary Term of the Supreme Conrt for
} Queenâs Connty closed its sittings on Saturday |
lust, there having been, among others, severai
luteresting cases, both civil and criminal, tried.
The following are the criminal cases, with the
sentences: âThomas Lynch, Robbery, 24 monthsâ
loprisonment, with hard labor. Thomas Fisher,
Perjury. 9 mouthsâ imprisonment. Mabelle Gal-
labor, in addition to three mouths already passed
in jul, Wan. Matthews, Lareeny, 4 mouthsâ iu-
prsonment, wilt hard labor. Henry Capel, As-
sault, 3 months, in addition. te the 3 months
already passed in jail Mary Meinnis, Lareeuy,
12 monthsâ iprisonuent.
| eee _
PEMPROOKE DocK.âAs the steamer Malakoff,
belonging lo kord AY dackson, Was proceeding
;on her vevage on Weduesday the 4th November,
frau: Nayland ta Waterterd, she saw a large
schooner about 10 aan, in dangerous proximity te
ihe Chauaci Islauds, off Miltord Haven, with a
j distress signal flyig, and making what seamen
term very bad weather of it, Capt. Aylward,
{with that promptitude in assisting a brother sea-
inanin distress which, three years ayo, gained
hhim the medal ef the â Humane Society,â imme-
diately changed his course, and bure down to her.
The sea was runititig so tremendously tigi that
| Capt. Aylward jound it quite impossible te board
âher without risking the lives ot his men: se he
signalled ber to tollow the steamer, whieh piloted
j her under shelter of the land, and as seen as he
) was able, placed bis cuiet officer ou board, and
| brought her safely to Nayland, where she was in
satiety. The scene on board of the rescued craft,
; when Capt. Aylward went on board, almost beg-
gars description Tiey had, as a dermer resort,
coustructed ratts oi a very ingeuivus device, but
; Which would have availed them very little on our
rocky bound coast. The master of the Schooner,
;Capt. A. R. MeDonald, advanced to Cavtaiu
| Ayiward, aud thanked iim for saving himself and
lis men; we hepe and trust the owrers will give
} him more subsiautial proof of his services. The
| Vessel was the Lily, belonging to the Lleuerable
Liverpool with timber aud deals. The Captain
!said he had nob seen the sun jor several days; |
and, in consequence of losing seme of bis sails,
the vessel was quite unmanageable. I> was pro-
vidential that the Malakoff tetlin with ber, asa
few hours more would have sealed her door.
The waster of the Li/y, on landing, showed the
rafis himself and his men had made; and turmng
to Capt. Aylward, said: âI have to thank you
and your crew for not being put to the dire ne-
âEnglish paper.
seeupcne te iliaieoeicong ins
| Down-Town.â-In wiatis termed down-town
in New York eity,or below Fourteenth street,
are halfa million people, in fifteen wards,
wich only eight pastors, and 25000 in the
churehes at one time! Six thousand familics
live under grourd. the youth are growing
up immorai and dangerous. In the dowa-
town region there are 80,000 between the
ages of 5 and 12; over 54,000 of these are as
yet unreached by Sunday sehooi effort : they
are the Goths and Vandals of the ey.
oe are ee ee
Gen. Hardy, Chatham and Breekenridge reeom-
mend couscription of saldicrs whose teruis shortly |
|
Super. Flour, $6.60 to $6.70; Extra, $6.9: |
The Flall was very taste- |
His Exeetlency |
The pro-| aved 52 years.
ant, Larceny, 6 montisâ unprisomment with hard |
. z | Joseph Wightman, ef P. E. Isl 1, i to!
understand, good anchurage.âSt. John Ga- slight misdemeanor and sent to the Shelbyville | rt - ag yk
cessity of using them, aud may God bless you.â |
- See te
lÂą .
| for crossing.
| a a eT ae
Catholic Young Men's Literary Institute.
On Wednesday evening Inst, the question of ap
\** Union of the British American Coloniesâ was
discussed before the above Inatinnte W. A. doiin-
stone, Biscyt : opened the diseussion with an eloquent
and elaborate address, in which he ably set forth
his viewsin favorel a Legistative Unioa of put lenst,
iwil the Lower Coloaies Several other geutlenmen
took part in the disenssion which enaned, nearly all
of whotn expressed themselves entirely opposed to |
, the Union. At the close of the debate, Mr. John
hetoue intimated his intention of detiveriniza lectnre
por the subject daring the course of the season.
| Committee of this Tustitute baving engaged the
| services of the City Awatenr Band for the session,
} the proceedings of each «evening will be diversified
iwi music. The doors will be open cach evening
at 7! o'clock ; the Band will be in utteudance at a
j quarter betere eight, and will play till 8 o'elock, |
when the regular lecture will puactually commence.
| After exch leeture the Band will aguiu play.
}: On Wedneaday Evening next,the Vice President
| (Llow. Edward Whelan) will leeiare * Ou Lloqueuce
)asan Art, with a glance at brish Eloquence, illus
trated by Passayee frou Grattan and Curran.â
| Che Chair will be taken at & o'clock
W. W. SULLIVAN, Seeây.
January 25, 1864.
oo â
| Young Men's Christian Association and
Literary Institute.
| The next lecture, on Thuisday evening, the 28th
instant, in Pempermee Hall, at So clock. Lecturer
pove ting, the followmg gentlemen were appointed
Office-bearers and Members of Committee for the
| present year: â President, Hon, George Beer;
| Viee President, Win. Marpiy, Esqr.: Treasurer,
) James Anderson, Esyr.; deeretary, D. Currie,
| Rear.
re. ro Starbird, Thomas Handrahan, and W. R.
Watson, Nequires.
ALKCIID. MCNEILL, Saperintendant.
Charloticiowa Reading Koow, Jan, 20, 1864.
The Annual Meeting of the Caseumpee
(Alberton) Temperance Hall Company was beld
on the 7th instant, when a dividend of 114 per
cent, on the capital steck of the Company was,
| ~â-2< Do
|
|
| ;
jwe are glad te Jearn, declared, and will be paid
j te the shareholders on application to ihe Trea-
isurer, The directors for the ensuing year are :--
;
Herbert Bell, Esq, President; Alexander Horton,
| Vice President; Neth Woodside, Secretary;
) Benjamin Rogers, Treasurer; James Porsyth,
| Juhu Gordon, and S. F. Matthews ~â Mua,
toll hl
| The shipping of Yarmouth, the present time,
jamonunts to 19 ships, G7 barques, 27 brigs, 14
| briguutines, and 57 schooners, aggregating 63,990
| tomnsâbeing an increase of 32 vessels and 14,005
tous during the past year. It is also satisfactory
to learn that there have been fewer disasters to
the shipping of the port during the past year than
jin Idoâ. Lhe losses in [862 amounted to 36
| vesselsâ6, 65 tons. In 1463, they puinbered lv
vessels, and 3,014 tons.â Varmovth Herald.
et
Hottowayâs ©oxtMextT axn Pits. âSkin
Diseases âIt is acknowledged by all medical men
| that our well-being depends in a large measure on |
| the natural action of the skin. Every precaution,
therefore, should be adopted to keep itin ahealthy
slate, or, if already diseased, to set it right. Hol-
| iownyâs Ointment may be relied en for cvring all
cutaneous disevses. âIt arrests inflammations, re-
| moves scurvy, beals nleeratious, obliterates blem-
ishes, and restores elasticity and softness to harsh
skins. le overcomes all obstructions of the pores,
wud promotes general perspiration. No scorbntic
or scrofulous sniject will be disappointed in the re-
sit, if Hollowayâs Ointment and Pills be used
according to theiraccompanying instractions, which
contain full information for self-treatment.
- ââ-
JUDSON'S MOUNTAIN HERB WORM TEA.
by us frou Dr. Rush, ef this cityâit speaks in
trumpet tones for this great remedy ; read it:ââ As
I before remarked, have used your Worm Tea in
my practice. Now [never said a word in favor of
a Putent Medicine before, but [think it just to say
to you that your medicine is no humbug. T have
tried it, aud I know it willdo allitelaims. Tt must
be ove of the most snecessfn) medicives of the day,
for it is one of the most valuable Those who
| have children should never be without it. Sold
by all Dealers,â~âV5 cents per packuge.
panier ema
A CURE FOR COLDS.
If seized with severe Cold, Hoarseness, Sore
Throat, bad Cough, Head ache, pain in the back or
| shoulders, take, on going to bed, two teaspoousful
| of Radway's Ready Relief, in half a tmmblerful of
hot watersweetened with sugar or molasses. In
| the morning you will rise cured of your cold. Let
i those who have canght cold, either slight or severe,
try this prescription ; it will break up your cold, if
you neglect your cold it may grow seriously, and
end in consumption. Lf suflering from Rieumatism,
lannbayo, Gout, Neuralyia, Cramps. Strains, Bruises,
Wounds, &c., Radway's Ready Relief will offord
j immediate ease. Price 25 cents per bottle. Sold by
| Deagyists. Every Agent has recently been furnish -
} ed with fresh Ready Relief.
; LL
Married,
| At Charlottetown, on the 19th instant, by the
| Rev. Thomas Dancan, Mr. Joseph Coffin, Bay
Fortune, to Miss Mary Browa, Lot 48.
Died,
At Malifax, on the 12th instant, William Hickey,
son of Patrick Hickey, formerly of Charlottetown,
im the 1th year of his age.
| Lately in the Peshwar, where he had command
âArtillery, Lt Colonel Robeyt Warburton,
Colonel Warburton was a younger
' brother of Mr. Warburton, of Woodbrook, Let It
At dloutazue, on Monday the Jith instant, Mr
| Meter Campbell, aged {4 years and 2 months: and |
âon the Sth Sept. last, Aun, his wile, aged 88 years
jaunud if days.
At Priest Pend, on the 2th December last. Flora,
| the beloved wife of Peter Melnutyre, in the 24th
| vear ofher age, leaving a disconsolate husband and
i three children to piourn their irreparable loss.
At Summerside, on the Sth instant, of water on
the brain, Allan Wilmot, eldest son of Charles W.
| Strong, aged L years aud 9 month.
At Little Sands, on Thursday the 7th instant,
after nine dsys illness, borne with patient and eou-
i scious subinissiou to the Divine appotutment, Plora
| Stewart, the beloved wife of Mr. Angus Blue,
| Teacher, aved 24 vears. She leaves a disconsolate
jfnsband and an infant son, with many kind rela-
tives to mourn their joss.
At Richmond, Lot 19, on the 26th ualt., Mr
| Williau Glover, in the 90th year of lis age.
| At Sturgeon, on the 24h ult., Mr. Weary Sabine,
in the (2nd year of bis age.
At the Lunatie Asylum, on the 18th instant, ef
Epilepsy, Roderick McLeod, aged 28 years, a native
of Belfast, P. E. Istand.
At J. Moore Johnston's shipyard, Dundas, Lot
09, on Monday the isth instaut, Nicholas Cooualiai,
yeed OS years.
\t Dundas, on the night of Thursday the Ith
instant, Eliza, the believed wife of Mr. Douuld
Canipbell, aved 37 years.
At Cherry Valley, on the 10th insiaut, aged 70
vears, Sarah Wright, youngest danghter et the
late Thomas Wright, i3q., Surveyor General of
| PE. Island.
| At Lrishiown, New London, on Wednesday
janorning, (4th instant, after an ilness of {7 days,
duration, which was berne with exemplary meek
| ness and Christian resignation, Jatwes Power, in
the 76th veur of his age. The deceased was a na-
| tive of the County Waterford, Ireland, and emigrat-
'ed to this Istund in the year I8i8) He was Âź inan
of quiet, unassuming manners, and was wnuch rer-
pected by all wio had the please of his
hacyaaintance. He leaves a wife and fauily to
mourn his death. â Requieseat ia pace.â [St.
Joliu, N. B., papers pleaze copy .]
HE ADVERTISERRENTS
ee
Notice to Debtors.
LL persons indebted to the subscriber
are hereby notilied thut nulese they conie and
| settle their accounts befove the 25th of Murelt next,
| the several accounts then dae will be pluced iu the
lands of an Altorney tor collection.
) J. W. PICKARD.
; Ch. Town, Jan 25, i864. w & p 3w
N Rs. W. STEVENSON desires to
organise a uew Glee Society, to be called
}* Tied ART UNLON GLEE SOCIETY,â for
Ladies aud Gentlemen, upon the following terms:
Gentlemen ÂŁ2 19s. per quarter,
Ladies £° per quarter.
| Phe evénings devoted to the Musical Instrnetion
| of the Society will be fixed for MONDAYS and
FRIDAYS, from balf-paet six ill Nine. The first
of the evening Classes will commence on Monday,
February ist. Those Ladies and Gentlemen desir-
ing to become Mewbers of the Glee Soeiety are
respectfully requested to
(Mes. W. 3. without delay.
| Txuusâ For private pupils, as well as for the
| Art Union Glee Society,â halfa quarter in advance.
Janây 25, 1804. lin
give in their pawes to
The |
Mr. H. Barnard Subject â* Analogy between |
| Respiration and Combnstion.ââ âTo be ilusttrated by
fexpernuents. Admission Que Peuny.
} lent 25, J. DAVIS, Secây.
| _~ ee â - .
; Ata meeting of the Subsersbers of the Char-
| loitetown Reading Room, held last (Tuesday)
Committee â H. Haszard, J. 8. Carveil, |
The following is an extract from a letter received |
A NEW GLEE SOCIETY. |
WE received a Cotoniat and American-Mail ow | ~~ nTiAreeril LONDON " Tre
Friday evening, from papers by which we give the new ADVERTISEMENTS Bac
Correspondent of the St. Louis Republican re- | lutest news in other columns. âThere was no ac- | .
perts two important propositions from Confed- | count of the urtival of the Bugtish Mail at Hatifax.
erates, one from Quarter Master at Hernando, | The ice in the Strait, we understand, is very bad |
ESTABLISHED 1820.
PRINCE SPREEL oo
BOOK AWD STATIONERY STORE, 2 â7434 18658.
(Near the Temperance Hall.)
| fe? sai a ant re steamers se LIVERPOOL,
~ v us â
| JOHN 8. BREMNER | nudties cl Can kee tee te an
AS i âee subscribers have completed their importations for
AS constantly for sale, ut the lowest | the genson, which, ouak welt a hand from pre-
vious Tmportations, they offer forsale at their usual
Low Prices. The present inportations comprise :
| j rices, a geveral assortment of
- Books and Stationery,
20bhds Berbadoes Sugary 5 bales Clothe,
Tneluding all the SCHOOL BOOKS in generai use, | a ; Meteora moi: 4 * Fomwete y
toxcther with a great variety of new and stundard i e wee ir
jworks. Pocketand Pga Pattee Work Boxes, &e. | al a P Congou iL -
AlLjoâą= Rubles and Vestaments, Comueniaries, | 300 sacks Cares Salt, 6 do Printed Cubteach-
| Prayer Books Chareh Service, Wesley's Hymns, j 0 sides Sole Leather, ed & White Calicos,
| Psaim Books, &c, in vurious bizes wid styles of! 6 caAwen Reaty-macel 2 do Striped Shirtings,
Bindiny. a } : i * ini
; „ : vo { Clothing, 2 do Glazed Linings,
) Buglish end American BOOKS and PERIODI-|. 9 do Ladiesâ Boota &| 2 de Bullalo Skiue,
CALS imported to order, aud supplied on tavouravle Shoes, Phbds Point Oil,
terns, âââ 4do Rabber do do
3 do Silke & Ribbons,
3 do Millinery,
4 do Haberdashery,
4 do Linen Drapery,
14 k nerorted
ine
20 tons assorted Tron,
150 bars Muntz Metal, §,
and j in. Keys
1 do Hosiery, tw, 6}, by 5,
1 do Gioves, 7 by f-
Y% do Shawts & Mantles,| 20 bandles Spring, Cast
1 do Ladiesâ Fars, & Piister Steel,
6 do Dress Materials, | 50 sets Wilkie & Gray's
10 packages Glasgow Ploogh Metals,
Goods, bi Gala Plaids 1100 Wrought tron Plough
W inseya, ting Flan] Bhares
âA LARGE VARIETY OF
NEW AND POPULAR MUSIC
PRIZE EXDIBITION (1862)
|
| SCHOOL ROOM MAPS.â
ARTISTSâ MATERIALS.
. ee All_kinds of JOB PRINTING and
|\BOOK-BINDING executed with neatness
and on moderate terms
Printed Shirting,Fland 9 case assorted Cutlery,
| Charlottetown, Jun y 25, 1864.
aie
nels & Shirta, Gom-100 kagrs Nails aud
forters, Bags & Bay
â4 do lronmongery sd
Hardware.
Ow
NOTICE! NOTICE! ox Cotten Sieben
TT! Ki sabseribers would request IMME-! _ chiefs, dee, de. by
eat te PAYMENT frou all parties indebeed | Caske ae â~ eres Wash.
. ct me pine cy a r . . ui) od ing ia, nis ama inger,
London Soap, Raising,
Lozenges, Extract ,
Popper,Glass, Bags Rice, P. %
Allspice, Corks. Coffce, Coils Manitla
Rope; Dozeas Pails, Brooms, &e, &e.
D G. & 3. DAVIES.
Charlottetown, Dec. 7, 1863,
Just in time for Christmas!
Oranges, Apples, Raisins,
Currants. Confectionary, &e. &e.
puâ Subscriber has Just ReCEIVED an
eXteusive Stock of GROCERIES, which he
offers cheap for Caeh among which will be foundâ
200 bLis No. 1 APPLIN, (choice),
Boxes Ornnges, Do Lemons,
Boxes Raisins, Do Currrant
Sugar, Molasses, Tobacco, (a good om
Boxes Congou and Bouchong TEAS,
A lire assortinent of Confectionary,
CAKE ORNAMENTS, &e.
150 lioxes Lozenges,
Nuva,
oan
.TNT
FINAL NOTICE!
„ LL PHRSONS indebted to the sub-
| + scriber for Lime, due in November last, are
requested to call and settle their respective accounts
fortuwith. THOMAS W. DODD,
Brick Store, Pownal Street.
din
Janây W, 1864.
}
|
|
| Leasehold Farm. for Sale.
TPO be sold, on TUBSDAY, the 23rd day
of FEBRUARY next, at the Colonial Building,
jin Charlottetown, by virtue of a Power of Sale
| contained in an andeuture of Mortgage, dated the
| 27th day of June, i061, aud made between Bernard
| Shannon of Township 35, farmer, and Jobn $8} annoen
| of the same place, mail carrier, of the ene part, and
| John Kuight, of Sours, werchant, of the other part:
| Ail the unexpired tern: of 999 years, {nientioned in
ja certain lease from Roderick Charles MeDonald to
| ihe suid Bernard Shannon, and made the 24th day
lot November, (841), of aud to that Tract of Land
j situate in Bedford Parish, in Queen's County, com-
meneing on the north side of St. Peter's Road, and
running from thence North one degree; East,
jscventy-one chains; thence West, one degree ;
| North, five chains and tive links; thence North,
| one degree ; East, reven ciiains end thirty links;
thence East, one degree; South, six chains and Bays of assorted
fifty Jinks; thence South, one deree; West, '!> All orders from Town and Country for Cake
| seventy-one chains and eighty-six links to the road Coutectionary, &e. promptly attended to. 4
juforesaid; and thence along suid road to the place ALEX. McKENZIE
lof beginning ; bounded on the North by tands is the Dee. 14, 1363. isl & rw Sin Water-cienet
jocenpation of James E. Weed and Alexauder Me- srseiiirsintpiiaminaeeriiniglitiaitalas ttitieas ine
Ex Aunie Elizabeth & Laurel.
| Donald; on the Kast by Peter Pheeâs iaud, on the
I Soath by stad road, and on the West by lands in
"HE Subscriber has received, ex the
above Vessels from New York and Bostopâ
ithe ocenpation of James Bressugh, containing, by
| estiraation, fifty-two acres, a litte uvre or less,
| with the appurtences thereunto belonging.
For Terms and farther particulars apply to the 200 bble Bakersâ FLOUR,
Subscriber at Mill View, Lot 49. 200 do Choice Family do
JOUN BR. BOURKE. 250 do superfine de
Jannary 25, 1864. isl 30 4 Pastry â* do
TT See 50 boxes Mould CANDLES.
EDUCATION $3 Amen ores
° 50 de Backets,
so boxes SUAP,
U#â For sale on Jiberal terma,
J. 5. CARVELL.
Cl'town, Dee, 28, 1863. tf
SLEIGHS! SLEIGHS!
oJ USE RECELV ED and for Sale by the
sees AMERICAN SLEIGH.
J. 8. CARVELL.
Charlottetown. Dee, 28, 1863. wf *
SUGAR! SUGAR!
âPuE Subscriber offers for SALEâ
10 Hhds. SUGAR,
Crarotetown, Dee. 2 nad. Sah 2M
SOLE LEATHER,
UST RECEIVED and for Suleâ
200 Sides Extra SOLE LEATHER.
J. 8. CARVELL.
Charlottetown, Dee. 28, 1863. tf
MOLASSES! MOLASSES! _
r pus ge haf has IN STORK and for
sule On hocral termeâ
50 hhds Muscovado Motassns,
50 tierces Viepfugos Do
30 barrels Do Do
J - S. CARVELL.
To the Residents of Charlotte-
town and Vicinity.
Pub UNDERSIGNED being desirous of
opening classes for instruction in the Latin,
Greek, Freuch and Italian Janguayes, as well as in
Drawing and Perspective, cau be consulted by
heads of families and others, as to Terms, Liours,
&c., at his RESIDENCE, King's Street, in the
| hottve Intely oecapied by Major Beeie, near the
residence of Frederick Brecken, Key.
JOUN BF. NEWBERY.,
Charlottetown, Nov. 9, 1563 isl tf
Assemblee No. 2,
Under thĂ© Banner of the â Albert & Alexandraâ
Temple, No. 1, of the I. O. of Good Templars
of Prince Edward tslaud.,
4X ASSEMBLEE will be beld in the
4% Temperance Hall, on WEDNESDAY EVEN-
ING, the 27th instant, at 7 o'clock.
There will be Addresses, Recitations, Voca) and
Tustramenutal Masic. Refreshments will be served
during the evening.
Tickets is. td. each, to be obtained from the
Stores of Messrs. W. R. Watson, Tf. DesBrisay and
Laird & Harvie; and atthe Door. Sous of Tem-
perance and Good Templars half price.
No Boys will be admitted.
Sons of T. and G. T. will appear in Regalia.
Ladies are requested to leaye their Bounets and
Clouks in the Ante room.
CHARLES YOUNG,
Châtown. Jan. 18, 1864. Chairman of Com.
PINE SHINGLES. |
100 M. No. 1 PINK SHINGLES, ex
** Elizabeth,â from Newcastle, Miramichi,
will be sold in qauntities to suit purchasers.
N. RANKIN, Queen-street.
Dec. 14, 1863. Im
The Singer Sewing Machine |ââ,
3 unquestionably the only reliable Sewing | Maple Lumber.
Machine now offered to the public. * Singer's ANTED hy the SUBSCRIBER
gh'town, Dec. 8, 183
TOBACCO! TOBACCO!
| STOCK and FOR SALEâ
2) keuw Cavendish TOBACCD,
SJsmall boxes Extra Do
30 De Honey Dew Do
J. * CARVELL.
t
Char'tuwn, Dec. 28, 1863.
| Letter A Family Sewing Machineâ is destined to IMMEDIATELY
| find its way inte every honsebold to the exclusion âaT ag ae a
| of the numerons téys and nuisances in the shape of Fr | sous tons ge Wave MAPLE,
worthless Sewing Maghines, which have aud are ara nye Do
For partientars call at the Furniture Warerooms,
corner of Kent and Hillsboroâ Streets.
GEORGE DOUGLASS.
_Ch'town, Jan. 18, 1864. 4i
Canada Flour.
November Inspection.
JOHN HIGGINS, Agent,
January 11, 1864. ins
âBLACKWOODâS MAGAZINE 5OO BBLS. No. 1 Sapertive Canada
FLOUR, choice ;
20 bbis Cabin Biecuit, Torouto manufacture,
AND THE
For sale by
BRITISH _REVIEW S. J. ROBERTS ECKART,
PRICES CHEAP AS EVER. Ephapaghie Building, Water-street.
December 14, i
TO THOSE WSO PAY PROMPTLY IN ADVANCE,
| eT perme am {ee
NOTWITHSTANDING the cost of Chance to Make Money '
> aj * * +
Keprinting these Periodicals bas more than |â ii Subseriber has in his Yard at
| doubled, in consequence of the enormous rise in the| âą ** Brows 6 Mana :â Egmont Ray, a quantiry
|price of Paper, and of a general advange in all | patho sa PIM Bick, sneh, #3 Pink loge, Beams,
| other expenses âand notwithstanding otber publish-| a ocks, Knees, &e.,âalso, Koel, Stem and Stern
ers aie reducing the size or incrensing the price of | ; gt pg ee i, the principal partof the material
| their publicatives, we shall contioue, for the year |â? âa & ad te eee toy tone, âtlne, & good
| 1864, to furnis! ours complete, a3 Leretoture, at the } mat Mould: ard Model, the whole ot whie he
old ra yin: Ă© Will sell on reasonable terms, with privilege of
pwd salen, ViRerâ yard room, &&Âą., (if required) to build wud vearet.
He also offers for sale the Hall and Spare of a
now being pulmed off og the public. Sewing Machine, asthe pursliaser will very soon
discover, is worse than useless; if is in the way,
| Phe above Sewing Machines are now for sale at
the Agent's in Great George-stieet.
| 1
The Loadon Quarterly, (Conservative),
siperiur new Briy, of about 230 tong ister, (sprnce
with hardwood bottom). This vessel is de good
+ jmodel, and built wuder the inspection ot W
Blogyet, Esq., (Messrs. Lioydâs pom sory â
Bide y
Brown's Mart, Oct. 19, 1863. arapnie
Notice to the Public. |
ASYSTEM of MONEY ORDER IN.
2
âThe Ediabargh Review, (Whig).
| 3
The North British Review, (Free Church).
4
, The Westminster Review, (Liberal).
5 TERCHANGE between the Money
| Blackwoodâs Edinburgh Maguziue, (Tory). | Office, in the United Kingdom, and the Post a
TERMS. Per ann, | (ehartwnent of this Island, being established, Money
ae" Orders payable at any Post O Sond
| For any one of the four Reviews........---$3 00 Order Officeâin Gren PA agg tec are,
For any two of tae four Reviews.........-...5 00 issued from this Otlice. on
| Por any three of the four Reviews... geesnend 00 | February next. » Ob aud afier the let of
i Fue ali four ef the Keviews... .....-.0.0-.- i " 7
| For Blackwoodâs Magazine.......... cae oes oun Upto s Pend of Coonpen:
| For Blackwood and one Review......... ig Re From #2 to ÂŁ5 ie ; tte eee ane. Com.
| For Blackwood and iwo Reviews ....... or ae ÂŁ50 ÂŁ7 * | ae
| For Blackwood and three Keviews ...........9 00 £7 wo £10 « a
| For Biackwood aad tie fuuc Reviews........ vip
These publications )osseas uousual interest at this
time from the numerous articics tacy contain in re-
lation to our oWn country; and although many of
thew are strongly tinctured wita prejudice, and re-
present us somewhat unfairly, etbers are entirely
Maximum amonut for which le
be issused, ÂŁ10 aera ree
General Post Otfice, 18th Jan., ag
aoe. ~~â ee
iree from euch objections, and aLt contain many Notice to Debtors,
se fro â eject ;
wholesome truths which it would do us po harm to fs PRRORS tam BL she Sub.
i viwerd ules
| read and ponder. i
| Sal re teas in Charlottetown mast remit in Cana. | = rye tag âseen Accounts, are he
âdian currency, and wll then receive their Nambers | tt © come forward aud pay the aime,
free of United States potage. } wd ee the FIRST OF AA hee fee the
Tgâ The Third Edition of the September Number xccounts and Promissory Notes thee â Ped care
of Blackwood, containing an article by an Eagiish placed in the hands of au Attorney for collect;
officer who was preseut at the BATTLE OF : OWEN CONNOLLY,
GET LYS BU KG, is now readyâprice 25 cents.| _Ch'town, Jan. 18, 1864. all pa 6w +.
| *,Âź Remittances and commusications should be NOTICE
| adaressed to ; - .
LEONARD SCOTT & CO, Publishers, | pas Pqcnaise: by Jeel obliged to all
»,tor
bis ee eeRey
No 33 Walker-street, M. Yy. : settlement.
Ch'town, Jan. 18, 1864.
We also Publish the
_- FARMERâS GUIDE, LOST. Lost
; ° .
âBy HENRY STEPHENS, of Edinburgh, and ei OST yesterday, (s ;
' Octavo, 1600 pe ses and nuwerous Engravings. âWHITE CORNELIAN bRootee a LARGE
| Price $6 for the two volumes. By mail #7, will be suitaly rewarded by a âyo
el
âCC ie as | Exainre Office.
L. SCOTT & CO, | Ua aes ical
|
„ the â GAZELLE,â â THERESA,â
ee ee
they are eegatded as vl bad
was fad
iat? ilae
ce vothing at ri
tov h
âpetr probabi werey
handed over to tie Federal,
elrorts consider-
he
pearance,
yopule
paved of thetr Setiny ; .
. * wrens
ties for bYini a dd dvey
ne rthy frent the frendeet the Coutederaie
ehle â72 Hae .
- â Lu Consequenct ge i pirate at
iaatms ot Tater
tate
vans By, ; + he
depredahion tue pre 1 ' on .
stand Law bave aadergene more Una ordinary
naite +h ay oor jegal traternity, bur, as usual,
een stie Views @ad resu.isâ-soume lisist-
wi â
A Si.
that (acer opition OF The principal poiut tm
© emovetay a0 te vend dispute; while others, with
ae . ;
err frmress, maintar a contrary interpretation
gral â
is wntrariety Ă© rt the profession, twonid
area ht ¹¹ tf? d os }
. Lerwl â â , I ,
be d ie lk fo Whacrsk f Waal if Lhe generar
218 on the gration, Wi er ornel piracy
co@mitted Mm fine instance; vor ia it at
"
haus beer :
much Lape ance &) ths
rtainty exist the minds af a tew lawyers
rnert a -
people ab large that this
+ Âą
we escur in bie oF lion
Li, however, appea:
that tad Brae and his accomplices authority
ttm the Seathert > oe
etl t the semeete, Sroh an evplort eandet be eon
â
( eniledera
atracd intos piratical eFhue, bat must be accepied
ad a jusifiable
ower agrinet te artic d apy vent.
Og tee part of the complainants and prennant:
thon, two 5 Joon Barristers are employed, while
the Hon. Joba ti. Gray is recained âas he him.
wet? fermally aml somewhat grandly anneunced
oa the first morning of the investigaion ~ as
Counsel tor the Coatederate Slates ot America.â
What a distingnisied capacity! How clear and
promising i the preapect of becoming Consul-
procesding by one belligerent
General or Plenipotentiary in those Colonies to
the Confederate States of Aweriea when the
siall have been adiwitted inte the Family of Nd
tians, la twenty-tobr hours after their capture
the culprits were brenght before the Court and
arraigned, and yet within that short Space «i
thine gevllewan received jis briet
from Riehweud to defend the Rebel Government
iui 1 suspect that Mri Gray's eugageuent did
net originate with Jetl, Davis ov any ot tis Cabi
wet, bat more provably with a tew prowineni
citizens of St Jolin, whose prociivities in regurd
ty the American war are decidedly secessional
âThis, 1 presume, woul) be designated a consiru
tice velamer, aud, thervtore, a reiainer
Neo evidence on belli of the defence bas jet
been offered. It has generally â
thet o-mitissions under the sea! of the Coutede-
rate States would be produced to establish thy
fight of Braine and his subordinates to perpetrate
the act complained of ; and, on the prodnetion of
such decuments, the release of the
would dowbiless follow. but po such evidenec
bas hithertu: been âand ail the tacts
whieh have been revealed in Court tell strougly
agitst the accused
the learned
Tree? hy sirprareed
prisene: »
stubunitted
da ihe eariiest partet the preliminaries, objee
ties was taken te the jurisdetion of the Ponce
Magistrate te adjudeau upon the ease. The
eyection Was based dpor the tact that tie Chesa-
peake Was (taken Possesshii of and surrendered to
rave io American Walk rs, of WHiel matters
our Courts have no cognizance. When eloquently
urged by Mr. Gray, this pomt etieeted consider
abie hesitation in the wind of the Magis!
but Was, after consideration, overruled.
aise appears the nevative fact that
shewing the Steamer tu be Federal property, is
WM eVideuce ; but this detect is precised to Ue
remedied in the course of a tew days. A nove}
aud extcaordisaty application was made to the
Court at its last sitiings by the prisonersâ Coun-
eel. It has been currently reported that Brain:
was, aud stil! is. ia pessessionu of the proper ere
dentiais to trade in piracy and privateenng: and
fet, wetwithstanding this stute ot iguanuits rein
prosecution. he bas had the baseness ty abseoud
aad conceal bineelf trom the oficers oft public
jastice, and the treachery to leave iis untortunats
and deluded companions Without the benefit of
the buarted comission. Thus conduct. oi. t «utis-
fagtort! accounted fox, certain), strengthens the
presumption of his guilt Yesterday Mr
applied ty the Court ier permission te bi wg Brain
jerward delence, aud tor a
giaranter that he would be ex: tpt igus cru
hal pfotess guoad the matter in hand: but the
Magistrate stiumariy disinissed the request, and
aeemmpanied bis relusal wiih the *S pression of a
hope that tie Police officials would use their ut-
host wudeavours to capture Braine, so that he
Sieuld tuke lis trial, ter weal or wor, with thos:
dreads in cGetedy Mr. Gray turther announced
fis intention to demand from the Provincial Se-
cretary a copy of the offilavits and requisitior
bpen whieh the Lieut. Governerâs warrant wa
bewed; aud, ow failure of their reduction, the
learned Counse! siated that be would insist upe
a saoprae dace) treme ver ig issved tor Lis Ex-
eeliency to attend 4Âą a Tie further
beuting of the case je adjourned ofer unt:
Thursday of next week
rafe ;
Phere
tte Tegister,
(rray
BS a Withess lor tle
W ifhess
The coriesity and ex-iicwent which this oc-
entrence has created is ripidty g. Prop
Gre geting satiated with its details: and atill the
hoert weâthie NVes perbapsâol the Hite belies
~âwtelwWart young wietiâare in joo |
I Hi ptress re, al the present time, te Âą ieipate the
ual isaue, tor al) is delist and eoufua on bin
,
CUM;
is} Bidet HEtCE PLU: be Lint wuservey ia,
fiat whoever ulers by tie eveut, the
lawyersengaged will be the guwers, Five guineas
a day fee cack of these gettieawen, without the
Sig Bieet Fespeet ow their part ler theâ ter hours
*) stem, es a lealure Oy) LO teense Unwerluy of
huliee, AUG i4 al ali limes an ite
âaes of
Lo iis Feeipientâs purse, whether delrayed by
Waskingivn Cabinet or by the : t
Diates vi Awericu.â
Mra. Eveicth is again before the Supreme
Coart ou as indictment tor Abortion. Lis otfenes
is wade felovious by the Provincial Statutes, and
is puvishable with fourteen years imprisonment
bn the Penitentiary. tbout three years age, this
Woman was tried and acquitted in St. John on a
ewarge of enrbezzleme preterred agaiast ber by
Messrs. Evins and Gardner. On that eceasio:
the verdict whieh, legally established her innocene
tue
* Cunicderale
Was Commonly supposed to have beep preseunged
through the toree of almost overwheiming svin-
palhy,aod the persuasion ut her advowates. Now ;
huwerer, i is believed that she will be entirely
Wilhent these accidental atvantages. âI hough:
the evidence to be adduced in the present pro-
feculion can be ouly of a circumstautia! nature
Jet the probalilities af acquittal ars against ler.
Besides, I believe she has disdained the assistagce
of Counelâether that, or Ceunae] have refused
thelr tuterposition, bat this latter Ba pprerm Lived)
thinst be Wholly unfounded, and I only give it as
One af the strange rumeurs of the dav. â
Mr. Spinney, whe came here some twelve
houths age, and set up asa medical practitioner
hile ewereign renedy in all cases bei ig tie
Kivetric battery âis jowuily indicted with Mrs. E
for the crime imputed to ber. Mr. Spiusey will
be ably defended by 3. KR. Chowan, E q+ one of
Me cleverest members of the Bar. while the
Monble. he Solicitor fyeneral will be the Counsel
we the Crown. A day next week ia set apart to:
the tral of these ill-fated persons; the priv ipeal
Miltens aceiusd Berg will be a German paysician,
between whem and Spinney some disagreement
aad professional jealousy took place last autuun,
aod wineh 16 thougit tu have, in no small degree,
Mettated the accuser iu giving the intormation
that Jed te Spinuey âys ineareerativa. Tais in-
former, Wheiier his motives be selfish or dis-
Werested in the matter, may look out for a}
eathing denunciation from Mr. Piiomson.
Business ia tie stores and warehouses is eqttite
Ship-buiiding, shipprug and the requisition
" wainen, are exceedingly active. Ordinary |
manners are receiving froni seventy-five to uinety
dollars tor the ran te Great Brttain. aud there is /
? Mint lively danand for them at that high rate
Christnas gud New Year's passed off in a re-!
Markably qQaiet manner. âPhe custom ofâ making
aliaâ Was attended to, though not se extensively
i previous years, owing, ne doubt, te the
Magrevable state of the weather.
A course of tree lectures has been inaugurated
Mi the Mechanic's Lustitute, intended chieily for,
tee labouring and artizan classes, but from w ich
= high and low, learned or literate, wight de- |
e pleasure and advantage. We have had littl: |
⹠te «now as yet, aod the seasou sv far bas been
Very maid. P. 8.4:
St. J a, N. B. Janay. 16, 1364. |
oreo
THE Reviews avy BLACK WOUD.âWe desire |
> direct the attention of our readers to the adver. |
saaen another column, from the American
radeg of the standard British Reviews and |
flack wond's Magazine. It will be seen that the
velage on these works is very considerably les |
aes and a new induc ement i thus offered to)
vibers to forward their orders forthe. We |
we Feeceived Blackwood {or December, and the
North British for the
Mtuirabie Numbers,
last Quarter, and both are}
â
THECIVIL WARIN THESTATES,
THE SITUATION,
: Cold prevaitsin the quarters of the |
Potomac arm + Tendering the sleeping ar |
able. Ie the wen somewhat uncomfurt- |
ie bobefat ta ace whilethe Union army
pe 4. eriul, the rebels are cor-|
into Gen z âspondent, and are deserting |
a. S lines by hundreds. [; is |
esidentâs \proclamation ot!
duciog & wonderful effect in!
| golng out soon after to the baro, was sit
| believed tu be an American by birth, and has
' people have expressed @ strung desire tu iynet ) York.
| with fifteen fathoms of water on it, extends
| great nestsiance ig shipwmarters, baving, we
| ing was the state of the warket at New York |
}and at Richmond, reapectively :â papers
store rman eapnene er
Gien. Lee's army, and that whole brigades) Wan iy tue Serinc.âThe letter, of which
would come over to Meadeâs lines if they had the following is a copy, has fonnd its way
the opportunity, into print through the German Press. Con-
Despatetes trom Cumberland Gap say that,
on Sanday, 3rd instant, an overwhelming
foree of rebels, under Sam Jones, made a
deseent upon # small body of our troops, |
stationed near Jonesb rough, Va., Consisting
of about 230 men of an [llinois regiment,
commanded by Major Beers, and [8 men of! spring, and it is my father-in-law who will
Wellâs Ohio battery. A desperate cesistance, commence. âLhe position of King Vietor
was made hy our troops continuing [rom seven Emanuel ia not tenable. The national deht
in the morning to three in the afternoon, | is Mereasing every day, and there must be an
when the Union tro ps Surrendered. he end put to that. The King has written
enemy numbered four thousand wen. Thej several times to the Emperor thatâ there
forces Were guarding « portion of | must be a solution, and tuut he woud rather
country from which tue army relied for the be plain Chevalier Carignan than play the
supply of forage. part of a soverviga who fuds bimself pasted
Lue reeent attempt of Gon. Early, with the forward toa precipice. Lrepeat, my father-
wigades of Lee, Walker and Rosser, under | in-law has appriacd my cousin ttat he well
the immediate command of Puzbargh Lee, to | attack the Austrian lineg in the spring.
the produetion of po Jess a person than
Prince Napoleon, eousin to the Emperor ;â
âYou ask me if I believe in war. Yes, I
believe in it. How will it breuk out? 1
will tell you. War will break out in the
'
& fton
Âźapture the Union garrison at Petersburg leve me, it is thos the struggle will
and take possession of Cunmberiand and New | couwence. The King does not laboar under |
Creek, bas proved a complete failure. A Ile is aware
tew waggonsâthirty-five in allâof
lrhorbornâe force, were captured by the rebels
on their route from Petersâ urg. but they
were, fur the most part empty. Gen. Kelty | fore they yield. The conquerors will re-enter
gives @ brief account of the diseomGture of | L m>ardy, and may, perhaps. occupy Turin
the enemy, in a despatch te Governor) But the position will change. tlowever
Boreman wreat the desire of the Emperor may be to
The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad is) preserve the peace, he cannot permit Austria
perfectly sate, and the trains are running; to destroy what France bas accomplished in
reguiatiy. Anvlflicial document of the rebels lialy. If, neve rtholess, contrary wo ail
laying down the plans of Gen. Barly in) cal sulation, the Hany eror soaltd abandon my
West Virginia, tas fallen into the hands of | father-in-law, the latter would prefer to be-
troops. Lt appears trom this paper that | come Kang of Piedmont again in order to be
wny delusion on the subject.
our
lien
Ohio Rattroad at Martinsburg, and by a
combivation of movements attempt
capture of such Union torces as were between |
| Martinsburg and New Creek. At the latter
place Gen. Early having beard that we were |
concestrating troops aÂą Martinsburg, and South.ââ
having been ipformed that Gen. Averill was |
there with a strony cavalry foree, deterusmned |
to alterâbis plan. die therelure de
Generals Piizhagh Lee and Rosser to attempt) be in the most floerishing condition.
on him with regard to Italy. Le is
ment will interfere, and that after the war
the King will possess the centre of Northern
lialy, while the Kiaperor will dispose of the
ome
Prince Evwarp IsLaxp âThe trade of this
beautiful aad fertile isiand is represented to
This
a | atched
the capture of the garrison at Petershberg | is or ought to beexeeedingiv gratifying to the |
people of Nova Seotia. It wouid be altoge-
ther impossible to over-estimate the irapor-
tance of Prince Rdward Island,in an agriculte-
ral and commercial point of view ; and the in-
timate nature of the relations existing between
| this Province and the lesser Colony, which
hosser was ty try and get into Cumberland
und eupture or destroy the stores there.
They both failed, becauee Genera! Early
could not reinforee them with artulk ry and |
supplies.â New York Herald.
~> 00s eo â.
Cotornen Soupisns Murperep ry rae
Reners âIn Jone inst a company of colored | rence, n iturally induces no ordunary degree
svidiers, com) rising a Âą iptain, first lieutenant | Of Sympathy on our part as regards the pro-
amd eighty nen, were captured at Milikenâs/ 2°eSs tnd prosperity of the Jatter. Une of
Bend, during the siege at Vicksburg. after aj the primary aims of the Nova Seotia Jegisla-
ture would b* to draw more closely together
these sympathies,the sequence of self-interest,
and thus cement indissolubly the ties wh eh
ficial! could be learned of them, and from | extended imtercourse has already. fustered
the well known vindictiveness of the rebe{| into tangible results. Prince Edward Island
wilitary authorities the worst was appre-| !as for many years past proved an excellent
hended. Information has beer reeanved ac} customer ta this Province; the Islinders
the War Department, by way of âTexas, |
stating that these apprehensions were too
well founded, Lt appears that tie prisoners
were conveyed into the Âą suntry several miles
and pled in elose -oifinement. No inti-!
mation of their fate was given them. Aiter
several days the two officers were taken « ut
at dead of night, aud the word given out that
they bad escaped. 1. now appears that they
were hanged without previous notice or even
a semblance of trial, in obedience to a seeret | tke many years to develope its teeming re-
order from the rebel Seeretray of War. A | 8eurees in a ratio commensurate with the al-
tew days afterward the other prisoners also | most fabatous fertility which is beginning to
disappeared mysteriously, and there 1 no be secorded tu the **Granary of the St
doubt that they also were seeretely murdered | Lawrenee.ââ A ioeal jeuraal iurnishes some
by direction ot the Riehmond autburiti sg Statistics of the eXport tr ide of Charlottetown
What retaliation shall be inflicted for thos j tor the past year, which prove that the value
barbarous atrocities is yet to be determinud. | Of ovis, potatoes, barley, tarnips. oatmeal,
va poi nn . ezgs, sheepskins, and woul, shipped at that
Anuest ov A Desperate Cuaractzrârox Port tlone daring IXG3, amounted to ÂŁ107 ,-
Dvave Pegisianee ** Since their captivity,â |
sags the New York Just, ** their fate bag
been involved in rulound mystery.â Nothing
their surplus produets ; and the interchange
of commodities has long been mutually b- ne-
ficial, Let us then seek by every legitimate
means tO promoke and perpetuate a& Tec! pro-
city of trade which bas yielded so mach in
the past, and which promises, if practised
with wise discretion, to increase ind finitely
inthe future. The crade of the Island is now
-.) a . . ; i
AvuTHOR yr six Murvess !âi'vo montis ago, (23, beieg wore thau double tiw exports irom
the public mind was agitated by an exeite- | t@ whole Island in the year 1830! In ad-
ment the same in direction, it less in kind, | @'0n to the articles above enumerated,
to that caused by the exploits of Lueretia
Borgia. On the 26ch of Uctober the bod y
ot Fredrick Fernoaberâa well-kuown citizen
af Chieago, residing on Madisua street, near | sleep, poultry,
Leavictâwas found lying about a mile from | Pat! barley, beet, pork, dry fish, mac«erel.
the totl-gute on the Southwestern Plank | !Âąrrings, oil, oysters, parsnips. carrots, hay,
Road ; he hal beea shot from behind. Ty.) &e
wood, horses, turn-cattle
Toese, if added to the estimate, would
; murderer was pot known, and the people swell the total to av ry largeamount. Tue
, Were pacutally auxsious to knuw who it was! Teturns for tie whole Island, during the past
(iat thas rendered life insecure. Lorce or | „o#, bot now forthcoming, ein scarcely fail
tour days afterwards the body of an itiner-| to prove higily interestiug, and it is safe to â
ating vendor of watcles and clocks was | T4Y that they will abound sathy prove the ma-
found en the canal bank vear Brighton, ander | (etial prosperity of Prince Edward Istand to
cirearastances GOt the aust suspicious, but Fe immeasurably surpassed any eorrespond- |
] â
checkered |
the cause vf death was unkauvwn; and the} '% period in some Wirt
fact that his pockets bad been rifled, printeo | story âHalifar Reporter, J m9.
towards violence, although no marks were ei =e %
found on âhis person. No clue was ubtamed A Grear Warerraty.âA detachment of
to his identity, and he was buried as an un-/| tro 8 recently scouting in the valleys of the
known. [tis now aseertained. alinost beyond | Snake or Lewia tork ot the Columbus, dis-
juubt, that these two mea died at the hands | wered a waterfall which, i> is said, is en-
ot ene aad the same person, who is also! cited tu the distiaction of being called the
known to have comositted anovher must un- greatest in the world. The entire volume
provoked murder, and by his own coaiession
has killed three others, making six mdiv-
duals who bave fallea by bis hand
ws
etpice one hundred and ninety-eight teet
high, thirty-eight feet higher tian Niagara.
About two weeks ago a farmer named! Snake River is ful! as large as the Niagara,
Crovk, residing in the town of Lecroy, Boone | and the cascade te one solid sheet or body
County, Was Visried at nighttall by # teiluw| fue locality of this immense wateriall is
who remained vatil late, then asked tu) near the point Leretofore designated as the
bs allowed to stay all pight, which was re-| Great Shoshone or Salmon Falls of that
fused. ile left the house, and Crook, on River, but they bave always been enveloped
inmystery. Almose a dozen years ago the
from behind, and fell to the ground aecorpse. | writer passed along the Snake River road.
Cue neigibouts turned out © ia posse,â but! For two days he heard the roaring of these
could not find the wurderer.â Sherif Av-| falls, but learned ao more respecting them
irews of Belvidere, was pot upon his track | chan if they had been in the muon. It was
and succeeded in capturing him, the fellow | said that there were a series of falls and
drawing a large horse pistol at his eaptor, | rapids, making a descent of seven hundred
and being oniy prevented trom suvuling by | leet in seven miles, and the sound gave eolor
getting a kuvck-down blow. | to the repors.
Ile was subsequently ideatified as havin, | the great plain Snake River flows throagh a
been seen on the day of the murder of Farn-| cinon, wit vertical wails buadreds of feet
haber in the immedtaie viciaity of the place,| high. Le is only at long intervals thas
and In possession of a horse pastel eorrespeond- | salient polnts are foaad by whieh the river
ing ty tae one tuund on the prisouer. When! can be reveled. The road erosses from point
Captured the prisoper had also on his person | to point of the bends, only approaching close
a tut ul clockmakerâs tovls, similar to those | to the river where there is a ehance to de-
whieh bad been used by the one fowad dead scend for water. From these facts, very few,
on the canal bank. In bis pocket was also if any. of the tens of thousands of adven-
tound about @ pound of raisins, which on turers that lave crossed the plains ever looked
deen cut open, were found ty be liberally | upon the great falls. The late disesverers
charzed wits Cantharides or Spanish flies, a | r âport beside the main eataruct many others
well-known poison, and itis pussitle that the | of less height, varying from twenty. to filty
Âąlock-mwaker was polsuned by haviug eaten feet each, near by. Some day they will be
them. visit-d by the tourist and pleasure-seeker,
Lie prisonerâs naine is Leander Coffman, is! ind Jookad upon as frequently and familiarty
ubout thirty-two years o/ age, unmarried, has! as Niagara is to-day, and it wiil be admitted
lost the heftarm reimedatery beiew tueelhow, | t at, with the stupendous grandear of their
âheing thus easy of identification. He is | us Niagara now excels the bulauee of tie
spent several years of hisiife in Boone and) world.
McHeury counties ; be bas always been re- re
yerded as a desperate character. The ex- The New York Post says that there are at
elteinebt against him is very Sirong; the feast LUO O0V temporary residents inâ New
fhe hotels are adi erowded.
him and there is no doubt that an atiompt next to tinpossible to find a house to hire,
aud
+<4aP ee ~ -
j to remove bin from the jan) would be the sig- | and just as dificult to secure ordinary sleeping
nal for av effort to hang bim without trial
)apartments, All the hotels and boarding
ile coulesses to having killed three men in) houscs have raised their
Lowa. to turn applicants away
twee STS PEPIN
_ The ree âeh official survey of the coastof| In Tr 'y, the other day, while a physician
Newitound!and has proved the existences of a) was hunting up one of bis patients. be stun-
shuaititherta unknown. Captain Urlebar. | pied into tue apartment of & poor woman
, ; . i :
Ki. N., conducting the survey, reports that a) and diseovered that tor lack of @ bedstead
| shoul, fitteen miles long and five bread, aud) sie usea her bureau âeach drawer being
5
. f ; 4 c propped up and converted intu a sleeping
from about seven miles off Cape Race. The | bunk for her little ones.
depth of water oa the siwal geyes bat little 3
fear of vessels tovchiay the ground, bat m_
the ordinary course oi navigation it will bea) Indiana, or the night of the [7th uals.
+
Two
| young boys of Rushville were arrested for a
zelle. | jail, where a crazy man was confined, pre-
wt Ae Wt Didiin itr teh Foy pty hmm nage } Imorning, when the jailor went to give his
Un Monday, Vecawber 10, 1808, tire follow | prisoners their breakfast, the boys were fouad
weltering in blood their throats cut from car
The (ndianapolis Journal says that
Gold per dollar, $1 524 @ St 524, $19 50 @ | such excitement ensued that on Saturday some
220. Sterling Exchange, lof the people of Shelbyville took the madman
perdollar, 1 65 120 00. âfrom the jail, and were about to bang bim,
Fleur, per bbl,
mm
=> â_
The New York Cowwprecial estimates the ed bim. If they had heng the jailor it
eumber ot Suuthera refugees abvuc that city | would have been more sensible.
at 25,000. âThey find it difficult to obtain | ame ors
means of subsistence. Some of the ladies| Thestar of fashion ia Chieago is a Cana-
from the South have apened boarding houses, | dian ball-breed. She is said to be surpass-
and sume have dope Janey work. Some | ingly beautiul, and is the petted and idol-
bave suffered in poverty. It is stated tbat) ized wife of arich man, who took her when a
one whole family, who had lived in affluence little child from her wotherâs lodge, had her
in the South, passed the whole of last/ educated in a convent, and for a time set
winter ina swali garret room of tencment all Chicago wild with bis lovely â* foreignââ
iuuse. | bride.
siderable importance is attached to it as it is
Bo!
Col, | that the Austrians will obtain the advantage, |
but he knows likewise that his magnificent
army will oppos: a formidable resistance be- |
Karly was to cut the Baltremore and} freed from ths responsibility whieh presses |
there |
the; probable, however, that the French goveri- |
nevertheless holds the keys of the St. Law- |
have in turn supplied us bourtifally with |
progressing with giant strides, but it will |
there were alsy exported from Onarloste- |
town In Considerable quantities, the vatue of |
Which is pot aj pended, timber, deals, lath- i
the Suake River pours over a sheer pre- |
tt is,
pices, aud yet have |
A horribie affair occurred at Shelbyville, |
615 @ 675 10000 @119.' having actually fastened the rope about hisâ
- 'neek, but other citizens interfered and rescu-
M THE STATES.
BANGOR, Jan. 13.
LATEST FRO
pacing by authority ef Richmond Govermnent,
j offering to sell Gen. Hurlbect or United States all
cotton, tilleen thousand bales, remaming in certain
distriets yet outside Federal fines, for Greenbacks.
Phe other is from Kirby Swith, offering to furnish
every facility toe get out all the evtten fram Red
{River and Wastite districts in Confederate cou-
| trol. Money tor same to be paid to that class of
offeers excepted trom President Linceluâs Ag-
nesty, they to retire to Mexico.
| âPhe Republican credits the authenticity of these |
\ propositions.
; Newbarn Times saya the people of North Caro-
pia are rite for revolt against Richmond Go-
vernment.
Chattanooga despatch says affairs in East Ten-
Hessee are assuming ab exciliug aspect.
i Longstreet is heavily reintorceed trom Lee's and
Johnston's arniues.
Reaniorcements are on south side of Holston
river,
} Loagstreet has a splendid position, with river
and mountain in trent.
Jolnston maintains a
Hitt.
| Grant left Knoxville via Comberland Gap, mak-
) ing a complete civeuit of the Department.
bold front at Tunnel!
Forrest has been badly handled in Kast and |
tuiddle Dennessee, but managed 1 escape WALh |
ihest of his command,
Tribune's correspondence reports Confederates
have decided to retuove Capitel fron: Richmond
fo Columbia, S.C, Also that gunbeats and
euclids ut Rachinoud are ready for service.
Seouts report Geueral Early is lalliug back up
Slienandoah Valley.
JANUARY 14, a. mw.
Washington letter mentions rumors that Long-
i street, joued by Ewell, is preparing tor fresh
assault on Knoxville, und Gen. Grautâs sudden
departire tor that point was with a view te
jthreatened attack. It is doubted, however,
| Whether any assault is intended at present.
Bermuda dates of Dee. 20, meution steamers
Flora, Coquet, Ranger, aud another were Waillitiy |
te ran the blockade.
Gov. Parker, of New Jeraey, in message to Le-
i vislature, disepproved of Government's policy on
Slavery question, dod argues that resioration ot |
old Unien and Constivation should be the object
lined at.
Naines of Bishops Bailev, Tymon, and Me-
| Closkey, have been sent to Kome tor successor ot |
Arcaoishop Hughes.
Private letters irom Tlaly indicated agitation
oo Venetian queshon to make Italy free in tact
as well as in name.
Maryland House of Delegates definit« ly estab-
ished Eanancipation policy. The preamble aud
resolatwn declaring that the true interests of
Maryland demand Bimancipation, should be im-
mediately Innugurated, that a constiiutional con-
vention be early called, te carry such policy inte
effect, and that efferts be made te secure trom
Cougress reinibursements te loyal owners of lost
slaves, passed'5] to 15.
Gen. Banks writes to the President, that he will
soon Complete the organization of the State Go-
verntient ot Louisiana.
Tribune despatch says, that North Carolina
troops are not trusted en picket duty; also, that
a Confederate torce was in Shenandoah Valley, |
| fo procure subsistence, and preparatory to plan ot
aiptoerons for next campatga.
By Telegraph to the Exaniiner and Reading Room
Cuârows, Jan. 25,9 p. m,
sritish blockade running ship â Silvanus,â from
| Naseau, was captured in Doboy Suund, Georgia,
by gunboat â Huron.â
Richmond Whig thinks fature of South is in-|
volved in the next Spring cumpaign in Northern |
Weorgia
Washington letter te New York âTimesâ
sales co-operative movement will be made in
Richmond mi spring by Coluan, ou Peninsuia or
south of J mes River, under General Haneock,
aided by Butler's forees, aud by the main columu
in addition,
Number of Confederate troops west of Missis-
| sippi estimated at 36,000.
| Siege of Cfariesten temporarily suspended
jeXcept from fire of gans trom Morris Istaud.
Admiral Daigreen on leok out fer Confederate
ratus in the harber known to be in coutission.
Richmond Sentind of the Sth says Yankee
troops being landed ut Morehead City, N.C.
Wihiiugten Journal says recent presence ot
Geu. Batler iy Newbern, and concentration of
troops there as well as at Washington and Beau-
ford Harbor, indicate advance of serivus charaeter
Richmond papers report passage of bil Con- |
reliplion of uli Couiederates beretojove lucnishiog
Suter bilubes.
| expire,
No word of the â Canada.â
| lo $7.105. Gald, 158% to 1594.
| A Bazaar in aid of the Volunteer Band wae
}held in the Temperance Hall on Wednesday, and
| was a brilliant success.
iully decoraied jor the occasion. The tables were
amply supplied with fancy and useful articles in
great variety, and the ladies who had charge of
| them were vever mere zealous, or, we believe,
taure successful in obiaining purchasers, tor their
beautitul aud attractive wares. The Hall was
crowded with the beauty and fashion of the City |
throughout the day and evening.
the Lieut. Governor and Mrs. Dundas were pre-
sent, who were received at the door by a guard
jof honor composed of the Volunteer Artillery,
under the command of Capt. Morris. Many of
the Militia and Volunteer officers and men appear- |
ed in full regimentals, and the Volunteer Baad
enlivened the proceedings with quite a number
ot cbvice aad admirably executed compositions.
Dr. Young, Chairuwan of the Band Comniittes,
delivered an address on Musie, which contained
many beautiful aud eloguent passages, and WarPPns ie
listened to with appreciauive attention.
ceeds of the Bazaar amount, we understand, to
the landsome sum of ÂŁ130.âMon.
20e-â__-_~
Por hundreds of miles across |
| The Hilary Term of the Supreme Conrt for
} Queenâs Connty closed its sittings on Saturday |
lust, there having been, among others, severai
luteresting cases, both civil and criminal, tried.
The following are the criminal cases, with the
sentences: âThomas Lynch, Robbery, 24 monthsâ
loprisonment, with hard labor. Thomas Fisher,
Perjury. 9 mouthsâ imprisonment. Mabelle Gal-
labor, in addition to three mouths already passed
in jul, Wan. Matthews, Lareeny, 4 mouthsâ iu-
prsonment, wilt hard labor. Henry Capel, As-
sault, 3 months, in addition. te the 3 months
already passed in jail Mary Meinnis, Lareeuy,
12 monthsâ iprisonuent.
| eee _
PEMPROOKE DocK.âAs the steamer Malakoff,
belonging lo kord AY dackson, Was proceeding
;on her vevage on Weduesday the 4th November,
frau: Nayland ta Waterterd, she saw a large
schooner about 10 aan, in dangerous proximity te
ihe Chauaci Islauds, off Miltord Haven, with a
j distress signal flyig, and making what seamen
term very bad weather of it, Capt. Aylward,
{with that promptitude in assisting a brother sea-
inanin distress which, three years ayo, gained
hhim the medal ef the â Humane Society,â imme-
diately changed his course, and bure down to her.
The sea was runititig so tremendously tigi that
| Capt. Aylward jound it quite impossible te board
âher without risking the lives ot his men: se he
signalled ber to tollow the steamer, whieh piloted
j her under shelter of the land, and as seen as he
) was able, placed bis cuiet officer ou board, and
| brought her safely to Nayland, where she was in
satiety. The scene on board of the rescued craft,
; when Capt. Aylward went on board, almost beg-
gars description Tiey had, as a dermer resort,
coustructed ratts oi a very ingeuivus device, but
; Which would have availed them very little on our
rocky bound coast. The master of the Schooner,
;Capt. A. R. MeDonald, advanced to Cavtaiu
| Ayiward, aud thanked iim for saving himself and
lis men; we hepe and trust the owrers will give
} him more subsiautial proof of his services. The
| Vessel was the Lily, belonging to the Lleuerable
Liverpool with timber aud deals. The Captain
!said he had nob seen the sun jor several days; |
and, in consequence of losing seme of bis sails,
the vessel was quite unmanageable. I> was pro-
vidential that the Malakoff tetlin with ber, asa
few hours more would have sealed her door.
The waster of the Li/y, on landing, showed the
rafis himself and his men had made; and turmng
to Capt. Aylward, said: âI have to thank you
and your crew for not being put to the dire ne-
âEnglish paper.
seeupcne te iliaieoeicong ins
| Down-Town.â-In wiatis termed down-town
in New York eity,or below Fourteenth street,
are halfa million people, in fifteen wards,
wich only eight pastors, and 25000 in the
churehes at one time! Six thousand familics
live under grourd. the youth are growing
up immorai and dangerous. In the dowa-
town region there are 80,000 between the
ages of 5 and 12; over 54,000 of these are as
yet unreached by Sunday sehooi effort : they
are the Goths and Vandals of the ey.
oe are ee ee
Gen. Hardy, Chatham and Breekenridge reeom-
mend couscription of saldicrs whose teruis shortly |
|
Super. Flour, $6.60 to $6.70; Extra, $6.9: |
The Flall was very taste- |
His Exeetlency |
The pro-| aved 52 years.
ant, Larceny, 6 montisâ unprisomment with hard |
. z | Joseph Wightman, ef P. E. Isl 1, i to!
understand, good anchurage.âSt. John Ga- slight misdemeanor and sent to the Shelbyville | rt - ag yk
cessity of using them, aud may God bless you.â |
- See te
lÂą .
| for crossing.
| a a eT ae
Catholic Young Men's Literary Institute.
On Wednesday evening Inst, the question of ap
\** Union of the British American Coloniesâ was
discussed before the above Inatinnte W. A. doiin-
stone, Biscyt : opened the diseussion with an eloquent
and elaborate address, in which he ably set forth
his viewsin favorel a Legistative Unioa of put lenst,
iwil the Lower Coloaies Several other geutlenmen
took part in the disenssion which enaned, nearly all
of whotn expressed themselves entirely opposed to |
, the Union. At the close of the debate, Mr. John
hetoue intimated his intention of detiveriniza lectnre
por the subject daring the course of the season.
| Committee of this Tustitute baving engaged the
| services of the City Awatenr Band for the session,
} the proceedings of each «evening will be diversified
iwi music. The doors will be open cach evening
at 7! o'clock ; the Band will be in utteudance at a
j quarter betere eight, and will play till 8 o'elock, |
when the regular lecture will puactually commence.
| After exch leeture the Band will aguiu play.
}: On Wedneaday Evening next,the Vice President
| (Llow. Edward Whelan) will leeiare * Ou Lloqueuce
)asan Art, with a glance at brish Eloquence, illus
trated by Passayee frou Grattan and Curran.â
| Che Chair will be taken at & o'clock
W. W. SULLIVAN, Seeây.
January 25, 1864.
oo â
| Young Men's Christian Association and
Literary Institute.
| The next lecture, on Thuisday evening, the 28th
instant, in Pempermee Hall, at So clock. Lecturer
pove ting, the followmg gentlemen were appointed
Office-bearers and Members of Committee for the
| present year: â President, Hon, George Beer;
| Viee President, Win. Marpiy, Esqr.: Treasurer,
) James Anderson, Esyr.; deeretary, D. Currie,
| Rear.
re. ro Starbird, Thomas Handrahan, and W. R.
Watson, Nequires.
ALKCIID. MCNEILL, Saperintendant.
Charloticiowa Reading Koow, Jan, 20, 1864.
The Annual Meeting of the Caseumpee
(Alberton) Temperance Hall Company was beld
on the 7th instant, when a dividend of 114 per
cent, on the capital steck of the Company was,
| ~â-2< Do
|
|
| ;
jwe are glad te Jearn, declared, and will be paid
j te the shareholders on application to ihe Trea-
isurer, The directors for the ensuing year are :--
;
Herbert Bell, Esq, President; Alexander Horton,
| Vice President; Neth Woodside, Secretary;
) Benjamin Rogers, Treasurer; James Porsyth,
| Juhu Gordon, and S. F. Matthews ~â Mua,
toll hl
| The shipping of Yarmouth, the present time,
jamonunts to 19 ships, G7 barques, 27 brigs, 14
| briguutines, and 57 schooners, aggregating 63,990
| tomnsâbeing an increase of 32 vessels and 14,005
tous during the past year. It is also satisfactory
to learn that there have been fewer disasters to
the shipping of the port during the past year than
jin Idoâ. Lhe losses in [862 amounted to 36
| vesselsâ6, 65 tons. In 1463, they puinbered lv
vessels, and 3,014 tons.â Varmovth Herald.
et
Hottowayâs ©oxtMextT axn Pits. âSkin
Diseases âIt is acknowledged by all medical men
| that our well-being depends in a large measure on |
| the natural action of the skin. Every precaution,
therefore, should be adopted to keep itin ahealthy
slate, or, if already diseased, to set it right. Hol-
| iownyâs Ointment may be relied en for cvring all
cutaneous disevses. âIt arrests inflammations, re-
| moves scurvy, beals nleeratious, obliterates blem-
ishes, and restores elasticity and softness to harsh
skins. le overcomes all obstructions of the pores,
wud promotes general perspiration. No scorbntic
or scrofulous sniject will be disappointed in the re-
sit, if Hollowayâs Ointment and Pills be used
according to theiraccompanying instractions, which
contain full information for self-treatment.
- ââ-
JUDSON'S MOUNTAIN HERB WORM TEA.
by us frou Dr. Rush, ef this cityâit speaks in
trumpet tones for this great remedy ; read it:ââ As
I before remarked, have used your Worm Tea in
my practice. Now [never said a word in favor of
a Putent Medicine before, but [think it just to say
to you that your medicine is no humbug. T have
tried it, aud I know it willdo allitelaims. Tt must
be ove of the most snecessfn) medicives of the day,
for it is one of the most valuable Those who
| have children should never be without it. Sold
by all Dealers,â~âV5 cents per packuge.
panier ema
A CURE FOR COLDS.
If seized with severe Cold, Hoarseness, Sore
Throat, bad Cough, Head ache, pain in the back or
| shoulders, take, on going to bed, two teaspoousful
| of Radway's Ready Relief, in half a tmmblerful of
hot watersweetened with sugar or molasses. In
| the morning you will rise cured of your cold. Let
i those who have canght cold, either slight or severe,
try this prescription ; it will break up your cold, if
you neglect your cold it may grow seriously, and
end in consumption. Lf suflering from Rieumatism,
lannbayo, Gout, Neuralyia, Cramps. Strains, Bruises,
Wounds, &c., Radway's Ready Relief will offord
j immediate ease. Price 25 cents per bottle. Sold by
| Deagyists. Every Agent has recently been furnish -
} ed with fresh Ready Relief.
; LL
Married,
| At Charlottetown, on the 19th instant, by the
| Rev. Thomas Dancan, Mr. Joseph Coffin, Bay
Fortune, to Miss Mary Browa, Lot 48.
Died,
At Malifax, on the 12th instant, William Hickey,
son of Patrick Hickey, formerly of Charlottetown,
im the 1th year of his age.
| Lately in the Peshwar, where he had command
âArtillery, Lt Colonel Robeyt Warburton,
Colonel Warburton was a younger
' brother of Mr. Warburton, of Woodbrook, Let It
At dloutazue, on Monday the Jith instant, Mr
| Meter Campbell, aged {4 years and 2 months: and |
âon the Sth Sept. last, Aun, his wile, aged 88 years
jaunud if days.
At Priest Pend, on the 2th December last. Flora,
| the beloved wife of Peter Melnutyre, in the 24th
| vear ofher age, leaving a disconsolate husband and
i three children to piourn their irreparable loss.
At Summerside, on the Sth instant, of water on
the brain, Allan Wilmot, eldest son of Charles W.
| Strong, aged L years aud 9 month.
At Little Sands, on Thursday the 7th instant,
after nine dsys illness, borne with patient and eou-
i scious subinissiou to the Divine appotutment, Plora
| Stewart, the beloved wife of Mr. Angus Blue,
| Teacher, aved 24 vears. She leaves a disconsolate
jfnsband and an infant son, with many kind rela-
tives to mourn their joss.
At Richmond, Lot 19, on the 26th ualt., Mr
| Williau Glover, in the 90th year of lis age.
| At Sturgeon, on the 24h ult., Mr. Weary Sabine,
in the (2nd year of bis age.
At the Lunatie Asylum, on the 18th instant, ef
Epilepsy, Roderick McLeod, aged 28 years, a native
of Belfast, P. E. Istand.
At J. Moore Johnston's shipyard, Dundas, Lot
09, on Monday the isth instaut, Nicholas Cooualiai,
yeed OS years.
\t Dundas, on the night of Thursday the Ith
instant, Eliza, the believed wife of Mr. Douuld
Canipbell, aved 37 years.
At Cherry Valley, on the 10th insiaut, aged 70
vears, Sarah Wright, youngest danghter et the
late Thomas Wright, i3q., Surveyor General of
| PE. Island.
| At Lrishiown, New London, on Wednesday
janorning, (4th instant, after an ilness of {7 days,
duration, which was berne with exemplary meek
| ness and Christian resignation, Jatwes Power, in
the 76th veur of his age. The deceased was a na-
| tive of the County Waterford, Ireland, and emigrat-
'ed to this Istund in the year I8i8) He was Âź inan
of quiet, unassuming manners, and was wnuch rer-
pected by all wio had the please of his
hacyaaintance. He leaves a wife and fauily to
mourn his death. â Requieseat ia pace.â [St.
Joliu, N. B., papers pleaze copy .]
HE ADVERTISERRENTS
ee
Notice to Debtors.
LL persons indebted to the subscriber
are hereby notilied thut nulese they conie and
| settle their accounts befove the 25th of Murelt next,
| the several accounts then dae will be pluced iu the
lands of an Altorney tor collection.
) J. W. PICKARD.
; Ch. Town, Jan 25, i864. w & p 3w
N Rs. W. STEVENSON desires to
organise a uew Glee Society, to be called
}* Tied ART UNLON GLEE SOCIETY,â for
Ladies aud Gentlemen, upon the following terms:
Gentlemen ÂŁ2 19s. per quarter,
Ladies £° per quarter.
| Phe evénings devoted to the Musical Instrnetion
| of the Society will be fixed for MONDAYS and
FRIDAYS, from balf-paet six ill Nine. The first
of the evening Classes will commence on Monday,
February ist. Those Ladies and Gentlemen desir-
ing to become Mewbers of the Glee Soeiety are
respectfully requested to
(Mes. W. 3. without delay.
| Txuusâ For private pupils, as well as for the
| Art Union Glee Society,â halfa quarter in advance.
Janây 25, 1804. lin
give in their pawes to
The |
Mr. H. Barnard Subject â* Analogy between |
| Respiration and Combnstion.ââ âTo be ilusttrated by
fexpernuents. Admission Que Peuny.
} lent 25, J. DAVIS, Secây.
| _~ ee â - .
; Ata meeting of the Subsersbers of the Char-
| loitetown Reading Room, held last (Tuesday)
Committee â H. Haszard, J. 8. Carveil, |
The following is an extract from a letter received |
A NEW GLEE SOCIETY. |
WE received a Cotoniat and American-Mail ow | ~~ nTiAreeril LONDON " Tre
Friday evening, from papers by which we give the new ADVERTISEMENTS Bac
Correspondent of the St. Louis Republican re- | lutest news in other columns. âThere was no ac- | .
perts two important propositions from Confed- | count of the urtival of the Bugtish Mail at Hatifax.
erates, one from Quarter Master at Hernando, | The ice in the Strait, we understand, is very bad |
ESTABLISHED 1820.
PRINCE SPREEL oo
BOOK AWD STATIONERY STORE, 2 â7434 18658.
(Near the Temperance Hall.)
| fe? sai a ant re steamers se LIVERPOOL,
~ v us â
| JOHN 8. BREMNER | nudties cl Can kee tee te an
AS i âee subscribers have completed their importations for
AS constantly for sale, ut the lowest | the genson, which, ouak welt a hand from pre-
vious Tmportations, they offer forsale at their usual
Low Prices. The present inportations comprise :
| j rices, a geveral assortment of
- Books and Stationery,
20bhds Berbadoes Sugary 5 bales Clothe,
Tneluding all the SCHOOL BOOKS in generai use, | a ; Meteora moi: 4 * Fomwete y
toxcther with a great variety of new and stundard i e wee ir
jworks. Pocketand Pga Pattee Work Boxes, &e. | al a P Congou iL -
AlLjoâą= Rubles and Vestaments, Comueniaries, | 300 sacks Cares Salt, 6 do Printed Cubteach-
| Prayer Books Chareh Service, Wesley's Hymns, j 0 sides Sole Leather, ed & White Calicos,
| Psaim Books, &c, in vurious bizes wid styles of! 6 caAwen Reaty-macel 2 do Striped Shirtings,
Bindiny. a } : i * ini
; „ : vo { Clothing, 2 do Glazed Linings,
) Buglish end American BOOKS and PERIODI-|. 9 do Ladiesâ Boota &| 2 de Bullalo Skiue,
CALS imported to order, aud supplied on tavouravle Shoes, Phbds Point Oil,
terns, âââ 4do Rabber do do
3 do Silke & Ribbons,
3 do Millinery,
4 do Haberdashery,
4 do Linen Drapery,
14 k nerorted
ine
20 tons assorted Tron,
150 bars Muntz Metal, §,
and j in. Keys
1 do Hosiery, tw, 6}, by 5,
1 do Gioves, 7 by f-
Y% do Shawts & Mantles,| 20 bandles Spring, Cast
1 do Ladiesâ Fars, & Piister Steel,
6 do Dress Materials, | 50 sets Wilkie & Gray's
10 packages Glasgow Ploogh Metals,
Goods, bi Gala Plaids 1100 Wrought tron Plough
W inseya, ting Flan] Bhares
âA LARGE VARIETY OF
NEW AND POPULAR MUSIC
PRIZE EXDIBITION (1862)
|
| SCHOOL ROOM MAPS.â
ARTISTSâ MATERIALS.
. ee All_kinds of JOB PRINTING and
|\BOOK-BINDING executed with neatness
and on moderate terms
Printed Shirting,Fland 9 case assorted Cutlery,
| Charlottetown, Jun y 25, 1864.
aie
nels & Shirta, Gom-100 kagrs Nails aud
forters, Bags & Bay
â4 do lronmongery sd
Hardware.
Ow
NOTICE! NOTICE! ox Cotten Sieben
TT! Ki sabseribers would request IMME-! _ chiefs, dee, de. by
eat te PAYMENT frou all parties indebeed | Caske ae â~ eres Wash.
. ct me pine cy a r . . ui) od ing ia, nis ama inger,
London Soap, Raising,
Lozenges, Extract ,
Popper,Glass, Bags Rice, P. %
Allspice, Corks. Coffce, Coils Manitla
Rope; Dozeas Pails, Brooms, &e, &e.
D G. & 3. DAVIES.
Charlottetown, Dec. 7, 1863,
Just in time for Christmas!
Oranges, Apples, Raisins,
Currants. Confectionary, &e. &e.
puâ Subscriber has Just ReCEIVED an
eXteusive Stock of GROCERIES, which he
offers cheap for Caeh among which will be foundâ
200 bLis No. 1 APPLIN, (choice),
Boxes Ornnges, Do Lemons,
Boxes Raisins, Do Currrant
Sugar, Molasses, Tobacco, (a good om
Boxes Congou and Bouchong TEAS,
A lire assortinent of Confectionary,
CAKE ORNAMENTS, &e.
150 lioxes Lozenges,
Nuva,
oan
.TNT
FINAL NOTICE!
„ LL PHRSONS indebted to the sub-
| + scriber for Lime, due in November last, are
requested to call and settle their respective accounts
fortuwith. THOMAS W. DODD,
Brick Store, Pownal Street.
din
Janây W, 1864.
}
|
|
| Leasehold Farm. for Sale.
TPO be sold, on TUBSDAY, the 23rd day
of FEBRUARY next, at the Colonial Building,
jin Charlottetown, by virtue of a Power of Sale
| contained in an andeuture of Mortgage, dated the
| 27th day of June, i061, aud made between Bernard
| Shannon of Township 35, farmer, and Jobn $8} annoen
| of the same place, mail carrier, of the ene part, and
| John Kuight, of Sours, werchant, of the other part:
| Ail the unexpired tern: of 999 years, {nientioned in
ja certain lease from Roderick Charles MeDonald to
| ihe suid Bernard Shannon, and made the 24th day
lot November, (841), of aud to that Tract of Land
j situate in Bedford Parish, in Queen's County, com-
meneing on the north side of St. Peter's Road, and
running from thence North one degree; East,
jscventy-one chains; thence West, one degree ;
| North, five chains and tive links; thence North,
| one degree ; East, reven ciiains end thirty links;
thence East, one degree; South, six chains and Bays of assorted
fifty Jinks; thence South, one deree; West, '!> All orders from Town and Country for Cake
| seventy-one chains and eighty-six links to the road Coutectionary, &e. promptly attended to. 4
juforesaid; and thence along suid road to the place ALEX. McKENZIE
lof beginning ; bounded on the North by tands is the Dee. 14, 1363. isl & rw Sin Water-cienet
jocenpation of James E. Weed and Alexauder Me- srseiiirsintpiiaminaeeriiniglitiaitalas ttitieas ine
Ex Aunie Elizabeth & Laurel.
| Donald; on the Kast by Peter Pheeâs iaud, on the
I Soath by stad road, and on the West by lands in
"HE Subscriber has received, ex the
above Vessels from New York and Bostopâ
ithe ocenpation of James Bressugh, containing, by
| estiraation, fifty-two acres, a litte uvre or less,
| with the appurtences thereunto belonging.
For Terms and farther particulars apply to the 200 bble Bakersâ FLOUR,
Subscriber at Mill View, Lot 49. 200 do Choice Family do
JOUN BR. BOURKE. 250 do superfine de
Jannary 25, 1864. isl 30 4 Pastry â* do
TT See 50 boxes Mould CANDLES.
EDUCATION $3 Amen ores
° 50 de Backets,
so boxes SUAP,
U#â For sale on Jiberal terma,
J. 5. CARVELL.
Cl'town, Dee, 28, 1863. tf
SLEIGHS! SLEIGHS!
oJ USE RECELV ED and for Sale by the
sees AMERICAN SLEIGH.
J. 8. CARVELL.
Charlottetown. Dee, 28, 1863. wf *
SUGAR! SUGAR!
âPuE Subscriber offers for SALEâ
10 Hhds. SUGAR,
Crarotetown, Dee. 2 nad. Sah 2M
SOLE LEATHER,
UST RECEIVED and for Suleâ
200 Sides Extra SOLE LEATHER.
J. 8. CARVELL.
Charlottetown, Dee. 28, 1863. tf
MOLASSES! MOLASSES! _
r pus ge haf has IN STORK and for
sule On hocral termeâ
50 hhds Muscovado Motassns,
50 tierces Viepfugos Do
30 barrels Do Do
J - S. CARVELL.
To the Residents of Charlotte-
town and Vicinity.
Pub UNDERSIGNED being desirous of
opening classes for instruction in the Latin,
Greek, Freuch and Italian Janguayes, as well as in
Drawing and Perspective, cau be consulted by
heads of families and others, as to Terms, Liours,
&c., at his RESIDENCE, King's Street, in the
| hottve Intely oecapied by Major Beeie, near the
residence of Frederick Brecken, Key.
JOUN BF. NEWBERY.,
Charlottetown, Nov. 9, 1563 isl tf
Assemblee No. 2,
Under thĂ© Banner of the â Albert & Alexandraâ
Temple, No. 1, of the I. O. of Good Templars
of Prince Edward tslaud.,
4X ASSEMBLEE will be beld in the
4% Temperance Hall, on WEDNESDAY EVEN-
ING, the 27th instant, at 7 o'clock.
There will be Addresses, Recitations, Voca) and
Tustramenutal Masic. Refreshments will be served
during the evening.
Tickets is. td. each, to be obtained from the
Stores of Messrs. W. R. Watson, Tf. DesBrisay and
Laird & Harvie; and atthe Door. Sous of Tem-
perance and Good Templars half price.
No Boys will be admitted.
Sons of T. and G. T. will appear in Regalia.
Ladies are requested to leaye their Bounets and
Clouks in the Ante room.
CHARLES YOUNG,
Châtown. Jan. 18, 1864. Chairman of Com.
PINE SHINGLES. |
100 M. No. 1 PINK SHINGLES, ex
** Elizabeth,â from Newcastle, Miramichi,
will be sold in qauntities to suit purchasers.
N. RANKIN, Queen-street.
Dec. 14, 1863. Im
The Singer Sewing Machine |ââ,
3 unquestionably the only reliable Sewing | Maple Lumber.
Machine now offered to the public. * Singer's ANTED hy the SUBSCRIBER
gh'town, Dec. 8, 183
TOBACCO! TOBACCO!
| STOCK and FOR SALEâ
2) keuw Cavendish TOBACCD,
SJsmall boxes Extra Do
30 De Honey Dew Do
J. * CARVELL.
t
Char'tuwn, Dec. 28, 1863.
| Letter A Family Sewing Machineâ is destined to IMMEDIATELY
| find its way inte every honsebold to the exclusion âaT ag ae a
| of the numerons téys and nuisances in the shape of Fr | sous tons ge Wave MAPLE,
worthless Sewing Maghines, which have aud are ara nye Do
For partientars call at the Furniture Warerooms,
corner of Kent and Hillsboroâ Streets.
GEORGE DOUGLASS.
_Ch'town, Jan. 18, 1864. 4i
Canada Flour.
November Inspection.
JOHN HIGGINS, Agent,
January 11, 1864. ins
âBLACKWOODâS MAGAZINE 5OO BBLS. No. 1 Sapertive Canada
FLOUR, choice ;
20 bbis Cabin Biecuit, Torouto manufacture,
AND THE
For sale by
BRITISH _REVIEW S. J. ROBERTS ECKART,
PRICES CHEAP AS EVER. Ephapaghie Building, Water-street.
December 14, i
TO THOSE WSO PAY PROMPTLY IN ADVANCE,
| eT perme am {ee
NOTWITHSTANDING the cost of Chance to Make Money '
> aj * * +
Keprinting these Periodicals bas more than |â ii Subseriber has in his Yard at
| doubled, in consequence of the enormous rise in the| âą ** Brows 6 Mana :â Egmont Ray, a quantiry
|price of Paper, and of a general advange in all | patho sa PIM Bick, sneh, #3 Pink loge, Beams,
| other expenses âand notwithstanding otber publish-| a ocks, Knees, &e.,âalso, Koel, Stem and Stern
ers aie reducing the size or incrensing the price of | ; gt pg ee i, the principal partof the material
| their publicatives, we shall contioue, for the year |â? âa & ad te eee toy tone, âtlne, & good
| 1864, to furnis! ours complete, a3 Leretoture, at the } mat Mould: ard Model, the whole ot whie he
old ra yin: Ă© Will sell on reasonable terms, with privilege of
pwd salen, ViRerâ yard room, &&Âą., (if required) to build wud vearet.
He also offers for sale the Hall and Spare of a
now being pulmed off og the public. Sewing Machine, asthe pursliaser will very soon
discover, is worse than useless; if is in the way,
| Phe above Sewing Machines are now for sale at
the Agent's in Great George-stieet.
| 1
The Loadon Quarterly, (Conservative),
siperiur new Briy, of about 230 tong ister, (sprnce
with hardwood bottom). This vessel is de good
+ jmodel, and built wuder the inspection ot W
Blogyet, Esq., (Messrs. Lioydâs pom sory â
Bide y
Brown's Mart, Oct. 19, 1863. arapnie
Notice to the Public. |
ASYSTEM of MONEY ORDER IN.
2
âThe Ediabargh Review, (Whig).
| 3
The North British Review, (Free Church).
4
, The Westminster Review, (Liberal).
5 TERCHANGE between the Money
| Blackwoodâs Edinburgh Maguziue, (Tory). | Office, in the United Kingdom, and the Post a
TERMS. Per ann, | (ehartwnent of this Island, being established, Money
ae" Orders payable at any Post O Sond
| For any one of the four Reviews........---$3 00 Order Officeâin Gren PA agg tec are,
For any two of tae four Reviews.........-...5 00 issued from this Otlice. on
| Por any three of the four Reviews... geesnend 00 | February next. » Ob aud afier the let of
i Fue ali four ef the Keviews... .....-.0.0-.- i " 7
| For Blackwoodâs Magazine.......... cae oes oun Upto s Pend of Coonpen:
| For Blackwood and one Review......... ig Re From #2 to ÂŁ5 ie ; tte eee ane. Com.
| For Blackwood and iwo Reviews ....... or ae ÂŁ50 ÂŁ7 * | ae
| For Blackwood and three Keviews ...........9 00 £7 wo £10 « a
| For Biackwood aad tie fuuc Reviews........ vip
These publications )osseas uousual interest at this
time from the numerous articics tacy contain in re-
lation to our oWn country; and although many of
thew are strongly tinctured wita prejudice, and re-
present us somewhat unfairly, etbers are entirely
Maximum amonut for which le
be issused, ÂŁ10 aera ree
General Post Otfice, 18th Jan., ag
aoe. ~~â ee
iree from euch objections, and aLt contain many Notice to Debtors,
se fro â eject ;
wholesome truths which it would do us po harm to fs PRRORS tam BL she Sub.
i viwerd ules
| read and ponder. i
| Sal re teas in Charlottetown mast remit in Cana. | = rye tag âseen Accounts, are he
âdian currency, and wll then receive their Nambers | tt © come forward aud pay the aime,
free of United States potage. } wd ee the FIRST OF AA hee fee the
Tgâ The Third Edition of the September Number xccounts and Promissory Notes thee â Ped care
of Blackwood, containing an article by an Eagiish placed in the hands of au Attorney for collect;
officer who was preseut at the BATTLE OF : OWEN CONNOLLY,
GET LYS BU KG, is now readyâprice 25 cents.| _Ch'town, Jan. 18, 1864. all pa 6w +.
| *,Âź Remittances and commusications should be NOTICE
| adaressed to ; - .
LEONARD SCOTT & CO, Publishers, | pas Pqcnaise: by Jeel obliged to all
»,tor
bis ee eeRey
No 33 Walker-street, M. Yy. : settlement.
Ch'town, Jan. 18, 1864.
We also Publish the
_- FARMERâS GUIDE, LOST. Lost
; ° .
âBy HENRY STEPHENS, of Edinburgh, and ei OST yesterday, (s ;
' Octavo, 1600 pe ses and nuwerous Engravings. âWHITE CORNELIAN bRootee a LARGE
| Price $6 for the two volumes. By mail #7, will be suitaly rewarded by a âyo
el
âCC ie as | Exainre Office.
L. SCOTT & CO, | Ua aes ical
|
„ the â GAZELLE,â â THERESA,â
ee ee