° —— “—— him, but I must.’ »-_ *Ol, Amalia! my beloved! what is this?’ cried formed ?—I THE * Yee yea!’ said Amalia, ‘1 do—I must; I am , and preparing to grovel be- *unsay these *Do not call me by these unseemly names, Mr. Griffin; Iam no longer anything to you——I am married !° _* Married! * « Married !’ « Married 1" ‘ Married !° echoed round the group, expressed in every in- - Sonation and with every shade of emotion. ~ “Yes,” : Buttonshaw, riding forward, ‘she e’s Mrs. Buttonshaw-——my wife, in » Lowe you a sincere apology ; but - You see Amalia loved me long before she ever saw ou, aud promised that if ever there was au op- ‘ » She would marry me ; well, the oppor- ; teecured this morning, and we have avail- ed ourselves of it. We are both very sorry for you; but after all, you couldn't have married her yo for you were detained in quarantine, and here you would haye all been in the jaws of the pursuing parent. I may add that it was sim- a to escape from the brutality of that parent that induced her to run offwith you. Her position at home was desperate, Yes, Senor pa- pa, it was, and you needu't scowl; you have no powernow. The Vice-Consul at Tetuan has de- prived you of it, by marrying us this morning; and the Church, represented by this thoughtful re, has sanctioned and blessed the union: horse ; readful words, my cas ean nee Meeeeetetnen emcee epee Corvtespondence, Dear Herald,— . As I promised to drop you a weekly letter so that your readers inay be well posted on ghe affairs publique of Massachusetts, I now fuldl it. ‘To an individual leaving not only Charlottetown, but even Montreal, the commercial emporium of Canada, the city of Boston would be astonishing. No person remains stationary for & moment—all have some object in immediate view, and to accomplish it. A wooden dwelling is as rare as a silver coin, and an idle storekeeper an object.of astonishment. People advertise in all trades and pro- fons, and paste and palut their notices not only on their corners and places of business, but on flags which float from ropes connecting opposite houses, One would imagine Rostonians never sleep, for at night the city as- sumes nearly ag lively an appearance as at noon-day. Theatres, concert-rooma, billiard establishments, dining saloons, dancing hells ad itaitum, are the orders of the day. Nowarl’s Atheneum is one of the principal places of amusement. Some of the company, incloding Mrs. Allen, are at prosent performing in the city. They left Malifax last week, as another company forestalled them during their absence in Charlottetown. Yesterday, I witnessed the departure of Montgomery's Light Guard for New York to compete at drill for the champion flag. The Guard is_an Irish regiment, and one of the best discipline Iuion. ‘The commander is an Irish- man nar inuin. The officers sre mostly all mechanic ¢ of officers reminds me of an intro- uection I half-witred musician last night. Me was a general in the U. S. army. and was former'y a boiler fitter in a Philadelphia foundry, His boiler mak- NON A 8 tila tS tl on al STON LETTER. nine’ is before the footlights the ing propensity is :ather /ifradig. at present, and having ere are the certificates. We'll have antes for flddling, he hw# atenzagement in the orches- wedding to-morrow, to which you shall com you are yery penitent and very good. I hear eae) isa moans going to Gin this afternoon, so we’ bye.’ Come, Amalia; come, padre ;’ and they were off! : Let us draw a veil over the agonies of Unlucky Tim Griffin,’ It has never transpired to my know- ledge whether the conduct of Amalia and Button- shaw was the result of a deep and deliberate plot in which both participated, and in which Tim and I performed the parts of catspaws, or whether it arose from a sudden access of fickleness on the part of the lady, combined with that villany on the part of Buttonshaw which he shares with some other malesof his species. We are thero- fore free to speculate on the pros and cons of the question. Tue misogynist will, of course, give his adhesion to the former alternative, andif he is a Spanish scholar, perhaps mutter, apropos of my Spanish heroine,— ‘De mala muger te guarda, y de la buena no fies nada.’ For my part, I have ulways given Amalia the benefit of the doubt. Old Cayrasee, you see, was a desperately nasty old fellow ; and in desperate circumstances des- perate resources are necessary. She went off, therefore, with Tim Griffin in despair, and unex- tedly (for I defy you to prove any collusion on r ) meeting Buttonshaw, with whom she was desperately inlove, she desperately jilted my friend ; and if she left him desperate, let it be ro- membered to her credit that she desperately sold her -raseally parent into the bargin, As for Bat- tonshaw, he, of course, must have been a ruffian throughout; but let us be merciful even to that erring mortal. We are all frail. 1 can testify to the strength of his temptation, for I can vouch for the brightness of Amalia’s eyes, And then, wt reflect thatin all human probability he now itterly regrets lis conduct. HOLLOWAY—A FRAGMENT CONCERNING {118 , DOINGS, Professor Holloway is stillin the prime of life, though it is now more than a quarter of a century since he per- fected his discoveries and gave thein to the world. His yearly bills for advertising, taking the average of the eight years, amount to the sum of two handred and twenty-three thousand dullare per annwn, of which about one wceveh — Mae ee i dollars are spent in employing the columns of such journals as lars ten already established. ‘The Posey a 18 need for the creation of special organs in countries not hitherto acquainted with the wonders of the printing prese,and for educating and supporting interpreters who accompany his agents and make known the pro- erties of his remedies amongst barbarous and ancivyi- lized tribes which have no written langnage through which he may address them. These ‘ missionaries of health,” as are called, ave chiefly employed in Cen- tral Africa and ainong the Islands of the Eastern Ar- chipelago. In the former place they rendered im- portant service to the late government expedition sent out by Engtand; and it certainly was a galling con- feasion for t, Anderson, that after penetrating into the wild and ate region as far as he could or durst , the agents of a private individual should laugh at his official fears and offer to conduct him ** further and yet farther, rg the different stations ahead of me which Professor Holloway had already established for the eale of his Pills and Ointment !” The newspapers, daily and periodical, in which these are regularly advertised, amount — to three thousand seven hundred and sixty-five, of which two Wegeese eight hundred and sixty-three are printed in the tongues, while tho balance of nine hundred and two are divided between the Chinese and Asiatic tongues, (the former bee tergely »redomina- ting), and those other languages in whieh Mr. Hollo- way has made himself the pioneer of printing, management of this mighty machinery of illamination— even apart from its expense—may well appear in- to. ordinary minde; but system and steady business ion can reduce apparent im possibilities to order, and under the experienced hands of a host of clerke and linguists, the wheels of this claborate and x mechaniem revolve with silent and simulta- E to the number of those who are annually restored by Holloway’s medicines, a Committee eon- fossed that it could nuteven approximate the amount with any certainty of correctness, A box of Pills may t the individual who buys it, or a family of six eight for whose general use it is procured ; so alse with a box of Ointment. Again, it may be well con- eumed this is rare—for the cure of one par- tioular. 5 Orit may cure that, and yet another after that, and yet another, being kept in the house as a family medicine,—and of these cases the commitee eubmit they have no means to judge. Again, both pills and ointment may be used conjointly by asingle patient, by two: how, then, can an estimate be ian. fr i * May —_—_ the court,’ said a Jawyer before a justice, the other day, ‘this is a caso of the importance. While the American eagle, whose sleepless eyes watches over the welfare of this Republic, and whose wings extend trom the ies to the rocky chain of the West, was re- My his pride of place—' * Stop stop dare, I say! Vat has this suit todo amit eagles? Dish has nothing todo mit the wild bird. ‘At ie von sheep,’ exclaimed the justice. ; have rights here.’ hands moust inst cat-gut. Such is life! pular parties here just now The party newspapers both laud and Badges are disposed of containing their likenesses, on the streets aud in shops, from 1 cent. to 810 each. ‘Times are very good here. There is no de- cay visible in the garments of the people. I think the Bostonians dress better than even the Londoners. Wages range from $2 to $35 a day for first rate tradesmen. A carter won't drive yon a mile for less than 82. First class hotels charge $4 a day board, and it is an utter im- possibility to obtain even a half furnished sitting room and bed room for less than 814 a week. I tendered a 50 cent piece for some goods lately, and the coin went round the room as a natural curlosity. Paper pays for everything. T would strongly advise all who are inclined to work and are good tradesmen to select Boston for their home, trom what I hear of it and know by the ex- perience of comparison. One class should remain away, and that is the idle loafers who have no trade nor profession—those who live on thelr wits. A dozen or so Servant girls came down with the Alhambra, but a Boston gentleman, a passenger, observed to me—* We prefer strangers to our own servant girls, who are gen- erally impertinent; but. believe me, sir, 12 months make igrorant country girls more impertinent than our own.” Ae Thave wut yet been sufficiently posted up in the aifairs of the city, I'll conclude the present letter with a hope for more interesting matter in the next. F, of the theatre here, sq@ general now wages war Grant and Colfax are the with the majority, roast them. (To tux Herarp.] : The subscriber begs to acknowledge the reccipt of some stationery, &e.. for the benefit of the scholara of Lake Verde School, Luts 48 antl 49, from the Mon. R. P. Haythorne. August 8, 1863. JAMES SMITH, Teacher. Mr. A. H. Sr. Germain, Proprietor of the Canadian Advertising Agency, Toronto. Ont., ix our Sour Agent for procuring American Advertisements, and is authorized also to receive Cunadian Advertisements for this paper. The Berala. Wednesday, August 12, 18Gs. CITY IMPROVEMENTS. Ovr readers can form some idea of the progressive character of the City Council, from the rate at which improvements are being effected on Queen Street —the principal street of the Town, and the only one, as far as We are aware, which is being repaired at all. During the past week, there has been one mah with a wheel- barrow employed on this street, and daring that time, he wheeled stone and clay enough to cover ton square feet. At tls rate of progreasion,it will take some four or five months to repair the street as far as Queen's Wharf. Now, if we except Queen Street and Qnreen Square, we do not think that the City Council can point to any improvements effected in the City for the past year. Considering that between three and four thousand pounds are annually collected by taxes, fines, &c., a per- son would fancy that the strects ought to be in tolerable condition at all seasous, that the city ought to be pro- vided with good side-walks and crossings, efficient drains and pleasant squares. We kuow that we have none of these things—that we lave no pure water—and that no attempt has been made to supply it. At the same time we have heavy taxes to pay, and there are no quarterly accounts published, avd no one seems to know where the money goes,’ What becomes of it. — Will Councillor Laird tell us? Have the sweets of the city printing closed his eyes to these matters,or is a paltry grant of two or three hundred pounds to St. Dunstan's College of more importance than the thousands of pounds wrong from the poor of the city, and spent no one knows when, where orhow? A few spirited gentle- men, by the aid of private subscriptions, have done more to adorn and finprove the Town than tie whole Council put together, with their revenues at their back. This way of managing business cannot be allowed to go on much longer. From ¢tood authority, we hear, that not- withstanding the heavy and increasing taxes levied from the citizens, the Corporation is going in debt £700 or £800 a year! Wow long is this going to Jast? ‘the steam fire engine was seized the other day, and we sup. pose the Market House and Police Court will go next— unless the citizens are prepared to pay five times the taxes they do now, Are they prepared for this? We fancy not; and if they are not, they must wake up and insist that the Corporation be revised or abolished; for at present we maintain that it is worse than useless, One eMcient magistrate, with a clerk and four or five special constables.could do more for one-third the money, than the present large and expensive organisation. We imagined that when Mr. Laird was elected to the City Council, the reizgu of economy and reform would be in- augurated, but we find that we have been mistaken. His own interests and not those of the public, are what mos! concern him, At the present thine, the Corporation is next thing to bankrupt, and, unless we are treatly mis- informed, is running into Cebt head over heols. “Now, there are two or three things very evident, and about which the citizens should concern themselves. It ts plain that the Corporation Is clither too extravagantly worked, or that taxation Is Insufficient. If the former, is it better to attempt to cut down the expenses or abolish the concern altogether? As to taxation being insufficient, we think there is scarcely a rateable citizen who will not say that taxation Is sufficiently high—in fact that it is higher than it ought to be for all the advan- tages derived from it. TN: only question then is, can economy be introduced into the * soulless” Corporation ? In ous opinion it cannot, and the sooner the citizens de- vise and adopt some better plan by which to govern the town, and secure the judicious expenditure of the taxes, the sooner will we have good streets and side-walks, and pure water and air. A mass meeting of citizens ought to be called to consider the “ situation,” for, otherwise, matters will be conducted as ry! are until we wake up some dine morning and find the market , steau engine, and other city property in the of the Sheriff; or else taxation will be so enor- increased aa to depopulate the town. In the meantime, would the Corporation be so as to have blished an accurate statement of its fnancial condi- rng The statement, we know, would amaze the citizens, HERALD, 4 WEDN Pecan oor au apemameaeeee NOVA SCOTIA, ‘Tur Local Legislature of Nova Scotia not on Thurs- | day last, and adjourned almost immediately after unthhy Monday, the 10th Instant. The object of the adjourn-| ment seems to have been to enable the Dominion and Local anti-members of that Province to hold a consulta- tion on “the situation,” as also a conference with Sir John A. McDonald and the other members of his Gov- ernment, at present in Halifax, on the same subject. A peaceful withdrawal of Noya Scotia from the Dominion was to have been proposed to Sir John, and in the event of his refusal to such a policy, some definite ne of ac- tion was to have been adopted and submitted to the Local Parliament. From Monday's papers we learn that no satisfactory arrangements could be come to with Sir John and his colleagues-in fact that the latter had no power except to offer a ‘few offices in the way of bribes to the Repeal leaders, who reject all such offers with scorn, The hostility of the Nova Scotians to all overtures short of Repeal ts manifested in a thousand different ways. The papers are determined and defiant, and the people are ten times worse, even on the admis- sion ofavowed Unionists, The Canadian “conelliators,’ as Sir John and his friends ave ealled, met with a frigid reception on thelr landing—not over a dozen persons being present on the wharf; and ‘Halifax, the hospitable,’ as the cloquent Darcy MeGee styled it, for the first time in her history, wraps herself up in an ley hauteur in the prosence of the * charmers,” and declines to spread the festive board for them or to mingle with them tn soctal pleasures. The members of the Legislature refused an invation to dine at Government House, because they be- lieved they would meet Sir John and his friends there. The Spartan fortitude and determination thus exhibited commands our adnifration, and we are at times Inclined to believe, that any people, however numerically small they may be, animated by such a spirlt, cannot long be held in subjection. ‘The patriotism of the people and their leaders is above all praise; and their contemptuous rejection of place and power, when offered for the purpose of diverting them from the assertion of thelr rights, is in bright contrast to that servile and mercenary spirtt which characterises too many politicians of the present day. The MeCullys aud the Millers—fourth-rate law- yers and politicians—fellows who, like Sciplo Afrl- canus, sought to build a great name to themselves“ up- on the foundation of mighty mischiefs done,” may strut upon the stage at Ottawa, in all the pride and conse- quence of senatorial honors and pay,but the reflection of their treachery to the people, and the deplorable eon- dition into which they have plunged their native Pro- vince, must often intrude upon their hours of solititude, and even sadly mar the enjoyment of their dignity, Not forthe wealth of the Provinces would any honest or honorable man accept the position of those traltors— acquired In the manner it has been. Leaving, however, those who have brought about the situation, for a con- sideration of the situation itself, we seo no way in which it can be changed unless by an appeal to arms. Some of the repealers appear to think that the power of Great Britain will not be emp'oyed to compel Nova Scotia to remain tn the Union—that the Mother Coun- try wishes to coerce none of her Colonies under a re- gime or constitution not agreeable or desirable to them. if this be so—and we very much doubt it—then Nova Scotia might safely take up arms to-morrow in behalf of her rights. But it is the consideration whether Great Britain will or will not use force to compel an ac- ceptance of the situation that gives the repealers pause, and bids them rather bear those ills they have than fly to others they know not of. The effusion of blood would certainly be a very poor way to coment a union such as the Dominion of Canada is—bordered by a jealous and powerfal neighbor—but if the Nova Scotlans are de- termined to recover theirlost rights, they must not val- culate that they are going to get them by talking. They must be prepared to smell gunpowder and face the gallows. and if they have their courage screwed up to this sticking-pol.t, we very much doubt if they can accomplish a repeal of the Union—and for the reasons we gave a few numbers back—the certainty of the British Government putting forth all its power to main- tain Imperial rights, the weakness of the Nova Scotians, and the improhability ofthe Americans alding them tu the struggle. Time, however, will shortly develope these various issues, as the” present crisis cannot long con- tinue. Tur Portianp Convention, after a short Session ad- Journed without doing much towards forwarding Reci- procity. The Provincial delegates had some trouble and withdrew from the convention. We are not aware whether the Island delegates,-whose expenses (£75) the Island papers forgot to tell their readers, were defrayed bv the Government—were among those who withdrew. We must await their own report to the Board of Trade upon that point, The only good likely to result from the convention, apart from the intercourse of commer- celal men from both sections, will be the ex‘ension of rall- road communication between the Provinces and the United States, Even this is an indirect advantage worth contending for. As free trade is anall important matter to the people of this Colony, we hope the Government will prove thelr competency for their position, by call- ing the Legislature together, to consider Gen. Butler's propositions, without waiting to ascertatn what the “anadian or Imperial authorities think of the subject. We have aright to look after our own interests, and if they are opposed by those authorities, the consequence be theirs. Let us, at all events; do oar duty to the peo- ple. After the return of the delegates, we shall refer to this again. Mr. W. M. Wien, of St. John, N. B., an tmitator of Dickens in his style of reading, is about to give some public readings in Market Hall, for particulars of which see advertisement in to-day’s paper. Speaking or tits gentieman,the St John Morning Journal says :— “Mr, Wright's reading of the humorous passages is delightful, and calls forth repeated and irresistible bursts of laughter. Dat it is not in the comic alone that Mr. Wright excels, for when in the pathetic passages he brings tears into avrcog men’s cyes, and women weep outright, his suecess camvot be doubted; and to this success the sympathetic (ones of a sweet and flexible voice contribute almost as much as his dramatic power, The following words from Misa Field's “ Pen Photo- graphs of Charles Dickens’ Readings " may justly be ap- plied to the Readings of Mr. Wright :—‘ iZ¢ Las demon- strated by personal Wlustretion the meaning of the long neglected art of reading,* Ile has shown us that it means a perfectly casy, unaffected manner, a thoroughly colloqaial tone and an entire absence of the stilted style of elocution that has heretofore passed current for good reading. He has proved that the very best reading ap- proaches the very best acting.” Hore: AccommMopatTiIon.—A large number of the pas- sengers by the Alhambra lust week were Ameriean ex- cursionists, who, for the want of hotel accommodation, had to remain on board the steamer whilst she was here, and took their departure in heron her return. This shows that notwithstanding the number and. excellence of the small hotels which the town posseses, yet from the year)y increasing number of travellers Who find their way to this Island in the summer season, a large first-class hotel is much wanted and would pay handsomely. One located at the river's side, with bath-houses and boats, is what ts requived, and sucha one as would attract travellers to our shores during the hot months of summer. There is a great dearth of enterprise among us, or this want would have been supplied before now. Tur following challenge has been transmitted by the weil-knowa oarsmen, the Ward Brothers, to the Editor of Bell's Lise, London:— “The Ward Brothers, désirons of testing the relative merits of the oarmanship of Great Britain and the Unit- ed States, will make a match with any four men for $5, - 000 a side. Distance. five or six miles straight-away. The race to be 1owed incither conntry, on waters to be mutnally agreed upon. We will give $1,000 to any crew willing to visit the United States, for expenses, or will take that amount and row in England, Communi. cations yy steamer or telegraph, addressed to care Edit- or New York Herald, will receive immediate atvention,” Mn. Kexxepy, the Scottish vocalist, is to entertain the lovers of song and anecdote in Market Mall, on Seca | him.and offending the nostrils of every man in the State, | ed at Port Hawksbury.— Monday and Tuesday nights next. AUGUST 12, 1868. “LIBERTY AND LICENSE” ONCE MORE. — Tuw Patriot, in two colamns of editorial, having estab- lished, to its own satisfaction, the right of the press to single out and abuse private gentlemen for their private views, exercises that right in its late issue by introducing to the notice of its readers the Rector of St. Dunstan's College. Now, we have only one word to say about the Patriot's conduct in this matter, and It is this—that if private gentlemen have no protection against this sort of “license,” they have, at all events, the privilege of applying a good horse-whip to the back of the editor who exercises it~a fact very unpleasantly known to some of the Editors of the Patriot; but which they seem anxious to have repeated, from their frequent and altogether inexcusable liberties with “ private gentle- men.” Private gentlemen may, and generally do, treat with contempt such splenetic scribblings as the Patriot indulges In, but there are exceptions to every rule, and if, through provocation, our contemporary or his aids should receive, as they have before, a touch of the argr- mentum ad hominem, the fault will be their own, and they will meet with but little sympathy In the community. As to St. Dunstan’s College receiving Government aid, we are not going to have any controversy on that point, but we may state onr conviction, that perhaps before the crows have a bill of sale of our contemporary that institution will receive state ald with the free consent of a majority of the electors of the Colony—the New Glas- gow * Arcadian” and his assistants to the contrary. At present they are unwittingly aiding the grant, Thurlow. Weed, who supports the 1epublican ticket. says in his paper, the New York Commercial Advertis- eri ’ “Governor Seymounis not to ba beaten by heing ecall- eda Copperhead, or Kiank Blale to be ‘distanced in the race because he isa revolutionist. Ridicule Sey- mour as some Republican journals may, he is the most popular man in the Democratic party, The man who, in 1864, with the record against bim that Seymoar had, and with the odor of the New York rio clinging to barely ta eseane an election in a poll of over seven hun- dred thousand votes, is a eandidate not to be sneezed at, The man, we repeat, who, with the intense pres- sure of disloyalty brought against him, could poll over three hundred and sixty thousand votes, is more to be feared now than in 1861. Eternal vigilance is neces- sary to elect General Grant.” Distixfvrsuep Anniyars.—The Dominion Steamer Napoleon, having on board Sir John and Lady McDonald; Sir George Cartier; Hon, Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell; Hon. Saudeld McDonald, Attorney General of Ontario; Miss Cuvilller; Miss Symes; Miss Louisa Cuvilller; Miss Me- Donald; T. N. Gibbs, Nsq., M. P.; Lieut. Col. Bernard F. Gibbs, Esq.; arrived at this port this morning. We do not know what stay these gentlemen purpose making. nor are we aware wehether the visit is of a political nature, or merely on pleasure. We are of the opinion that it is altogether one of pleasure, and under such Cirenmstances, we wish those distinguished gentie- men a pleasant time of it, and hope to see them renew their visit annually. AN imaginative writer, over the signature of “ F. M. N.,” in the last Summerside Journal, says that the peo- ple of Tignish, at the late Tea Party held in that place, fought until they drove one another into the sea! Will some Tignish friend favor us with his opinion on this episode—so damaging to the falr fam of that locality? Our own opinion Is, that “ F. M,N." is aslanderer of the narrow-minded stamp, and deserves a trouncing for his wholesale libel. Tun Postmaster General despatched the Steamer Heather Beileto Pictou this morning, for an English mail due to-day. As the telegraph is out of order, it is not known whether the English Steamer has arrived at Hall- fox ;but as the weather has heen favorable, it is antl. pat- ed that she has been up to time. We may, therefore, ex- pect the mall cither this evening or to-morrow. Finst Anrtvats rrom Tan Bay.—Fishing schrs. Model, Ball, with 96 barrels Mackerel, to Williem Heard, Esq., and Game Cock, Chivirie, with 140 barrels, to HI. E. Star- bird & Co., arrived yesterday forenoon. They report Mack- erel very scarce, bat have done better than the sverage catch upto date, , A strange scene, says the Peterborough * Examiner, was enacted at Seaham harbor lately. A man who had deserted his wife to elope with another woman was brought home by the police, escorted by a mob, Includ- ing about 500 women beating tin pots and yelling. Tiere is quite an exodus of laborers going on just now from this Colony to New Brunswick. The emi- grants are going to work on the railway known as ‘Western Extension,” and will receive one dollar and a quarter a dav—at least, so it is said. One of the newest dodges practised by the thieving fraternity of Buffalo is for one of them to suddenly fall down on the pavement as if sun struck, and a crowd being thus immediately collected, his associates make a raid upon the pockets of the sympathizing by-standers. The following parties were passengers in the Dark Undine wiuch sailed for England on Thursday :—-Chas, Dalgleish, Eeq. ond Mra. Dalgleish; Dr. Inglis. Mra. Inglis, Master and Mise Inglis; Mr. Playfair and Miss Blateh. During the last year the Irish in the States sent home the eum of £2,700,000 to their relations. Of this money more than a million dollars was in prepaid passage orders. Anovr three hundred mowing and reaping machines have been sold here this season; and stili the supply is not equal ta the demand. Mr. Barratt, the Temperance lecturer, lectured tn Temperance Hall, Charlottetown, last evening, to a good audience. : Our farmers ate busy hay-making. The crop is above an average one. Potatoes and other crops promise well. There were 1142 deaths in New York last week. The highest number daring any week in 1867 was 708. Tus Steamer Conmerce arrived this morning from Poston and Halifax, with freight and passengers. ‘The Halifax Chronicle has been enlarged and clothed in an entire new suit, Tur revenue this year is in excess of that for the same period last year. Tur Colonial Rifle competition begins at 9 o'clock to- morrow morning—~at Kensington. The Bark Prioress, sailed for Liverpool on Tuesday last, and the Undine on Thursday evening, by Hon. J, C, Pope. The Sch, “ Lettie,” 1s reported to have taken 70 Bbls, of mackerel in her seine some few days since. The Sch, * Dominion,” at St. Poter's last Friday, reports 76 Bois. Macke rel, ee The steamer City of Durham arrived last night from St. John, N. F. e have received our usual fyles but note little of importance. The reports of the Fisheries from the Northward are not encouraging. The Agents of the City of Durham entertained o large party of ladies and gentlemen on board that vessel in St. John. His Excellency the Governor of Newfoundland came passenger in the steamer en route to England.—-Jiz. Ee. The steamer Her Majesty, hence, bound to Montreal, put into the Straite of Canso leaky, and will be taken on the Marine Railway there for repairs. The steam. er struck on White I and was subsequently dock- He. Unionist. The President of the United States has directed the Scoretary of War to withdraw all the military from those of the Southern States which have ta- tives in Congress, Thus has civil govnriment been ro- Miscellaneous, The London Weekly Register of the 11th says:— “Daring the last few days three items of social in. telligence have created quite a panic amongst certain persons of the ultra-Protestant persuasion in London. The first is that at the dinner table of 4 certain Cath nobleman, the deservedly popular Princess of Teck met, and spoke to, no less a person than the Archbishop of Westminster; and, moreover—the horror of horrors —the said prelate eaid grace in the ofa Prin- cees of the Royal Family of England! But the second anecdote is worse than ‘the firat. Monsignor the Hon, George Talbot, private chamberlain to His Holiness, enlled theother day at Marlborough House and paid a visit to the Prinoe and Princess of Wales, having known the former in Rome. And there is, ene a moro dreadful tendency to Popery in high places. On Sun- dav last, the heir of the throne of England, with his wife and brother, paid an afternoon visit toa Catholic peeress near London, and remained nearly two hours wandering about the gardens of the house. What will Messrs. Newdogate and Whalley say to all this. A letter from Buenos Ayres. published in the Off. cial Gazette of Turin, eatimates that no less than 4000 the number of Italian emigrants‘landed in South American ports between the Ist of January and the 15th of March. A few figures will show the rapidly increasing impor- tance of this movement, which takes place almost ex- clusively from the port of Genoa, In 1862 the number of emigrants amounted to 3.082 persons; in 1863, to 4,. 494; in 1864, te 6.435; in 1865, to 5.004; in 1866, to 6,- 000 ; and for 1898 we may estimate a total exceeding 10,- 000. The returns for 1867 are wanting. - Important. Advices have been received that the Hon, Mr. Rose has put one-half of the Intereolonial Railway loaf in the market. The Montreal Gazette says: *£1,500,000 of the sum he offered is covered by the Imperial guarantee, (the Act limiting the rate of in- terest to 4 per cent.) and $500,000 upon the credit of the Dominion. If we are not misinformed, the loan was offered in the proportion of three-fourths guaran- teed and one-fourth without the guarantee. The bids were very satisfactory, amonnting to £8,250,000 stg. The lowest tendera accepted were at a premium of 54 and the higheat 64.” Pisrrxevisuep OCanapians.—On Saturday last Sir John A. MeDoneld and Lady McDonald, Hon. J. 8. Me- Donald and daughter, Miss MeDougall and Co). Bernard, brother of Lady McDonald, arrived by express train from Windsor, They are the guests of His Excellency General Dovie, The Hon. Dr. Tupper also arrived. The Hon. Mr, Mitchell arrived here the same evening via Pictou and Sir Geo, B. Cartier and Lady came passen- gers in the steamer Carlotta, which arrived yesterday from Portland, On Saturday evening, His Excellency the Lieutenant Governor entertained a large party at dinner fn honor of his distinguished guests.—[Hx. Col. ll. M. 8. Urgent, arrived at Plymouth, G. B., on the 14th ult. having on board Prince Dejatch Alamayor, the son of King Theodore. He is7 years of age and is described as being a very interesting and intelligent child. He appeared to be delighted with England, ex- claiming. "this isa beautiful country ;I will never go back.” The native servant who accompanied him, on going over the dockyard and arsenal at Plymouth, ob- served with regret “Ah, Theodore, Theodore, you should have seen this!” The City Council of Baltimore voted $50,000 for the relief of the sufferers by the flood, $15.009 to repair tho streets and bridges, and $20,000 for clearing away the sand and rubbish. ‘The Cou. il also adopted a resolu- tion of thanks to Geo. W. Childs, of the Philadelphia ‘Ledger,’ for his contribution in ald of the sufferers. The Board of Trade are also adopting measures in ald of the sufferers, Many females are entirely destitute and homeless, and are living temporarily in the engine- houses of the fire department. Tae Suez Canar,.—A short time since it was annonne- ed that the great Suez Canal to connect the Mediter- ranean with the Red Sea was drawing near to comple- tion; bat the work has come to a sudden standstill for want of the one thing needful"—money. The Frenoh shareholders are unwilling to make further advances, and the Legislative body have paseed a bill to allow the Company to raise tunds through the organization of a great lottery scheme, The Atlantic Cable Companies have decided to re- duce,on and after September ist, the tariff on cable messages between Valentia, Ireland, and Plaister Cove, Nova Scotia,to three pounds for ten words, with five words additional allowed for the address, etc. The charges on land lines are to be added. There is a great demand for harvest laborers in all parts of the Province of Ontario. The Windsor Re- cord say's there is fear that much grain will be injured in that section from the inability to secure sufficient help to store the same in season. Late advices from Mazatlan deny the truth of the statement to the effect that Capt. Bridge, of Her Maj- esty’s frigate. ‘*Chanticleer,” had been either repri-- wnauded or recalled, and announee that the blockade of that port is still fally maintained. Mormons continue to flock to Salt Lake. Reeently 600 persons—100 men, $50 women, and 150 ehildren— arrived at New York ev route to Utah. They were Eng- lish and Welsh. . News by Telegraph. Vienna, Aug. 6.—Baron Von Buest, in a speech at the Jobuttezfest to-day, declared that Austria would not inter- fore in German affairs, and that the Imperial Government: utterly ignored any policy of vengeance. ‘ New Yorx, Aug. 6.—The office of the Fire Star In- surance Company, was robbed about 8 o'clock this po mv of | 40,000 United States 5-20 Bonds, : New Yorn, Aug 7.—Gold 47}. ; Monrargat, Aug. 6.—Adelbert Lancelot, has organized a new association for the independence of Canada. Lonvos, Aug. 3,—The Cable of 1866 ceased to work at thirty-five minutes past twelve o'clock this afternoon, and tests show the fault to be at the Newfounland side, Cable has probably been damaged by an iceb &, (Signed.) Crnvus W, Fiery. Panis, August 3.—An Imperial decree is issued, autho- riging the issue of anew loan, Dispatches from Bucharest’ report a fight has taken placo near Buetchuah, between Turkish insurgents, in which the latter were defeated and dispersed. It was rumored thata Turkish gun boat had been fired on from the shores in the neighbo of Gal- taz. Rtomn, Aug, 3.—It is reported that in the Consistory which will be held by the next month, Monsignors Merode, Chigi, ‘Talbot, Rondi, Parr and Sayretti will be ap- pointed Cardinals, i Lonpon, 5th (even,)-—The “Times” editorially says of the Mazatlan affair, although the commander of the Shans ticler was exposed to considerable provocation, he should have sought redress through his government, Otherwise headstrong and espe, gra commanders will always hold the power of peace and war. Even the Soanish American States insolvent, and brutal ag they are, to this treatment. A despatch from Constantinople that Mr. Morris, the American minister refuses to concur in the protocol of the Sublime Port, ne oe to hold lands in fwnee Lonvow, Aug, 4—Tho Royal Commission on the Church establishment have mace their xpport. The: commend the abolition of all the E; Sces Ca- thedral establishments in Ireland except 80, to be tained on reduced revenues, ‘They also report in measures to encourage tenants Church chase property. y, and to enable land the payment of tithes and rent charges, to even’ of their lands, ‘The wheat harvest in 3 3¢ Ha ayy fg 4 | = 5 4 ; sz a4 EEE all : 4 ul F stored, and the despotism of military power been ab- lished,