etleeeielaneas scab er» spe as ea ting, ay __ THE HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 5, 1868. wii Misrellaneonus, THE DUTY OF LOYAL IRISHMEN. Mr. Wm. Dighy Seymour thus writes to the London Times on the above sss Sir,—You assigned me a liberal space in your columns when I recently addressed you in the capacity of counsel for Allen, Larkin, and Gould. I hope you will now allow room for this letter, which I pos of n the simple vharacter of a loyal Irishman. I wish to make a eug- gestion which 1 would far rather bad emanated from one more entitled than Lam to claim the attention of my ellow-countrymen. Ina crisis like the preseut, how- ever, L hope I ueed not apologize for offering a word of advice, the sincerity of which can searcely be called in _ 1 thiuk the time has arrived when it becomes e solemn and paramount duty of loyal Irishwen of all rsuasions, in London and the provinces, merging their | the ndividual differences, to declare by public meeting or formal address their unshaken devotion to the throne and constitation, and their unmitigated abhorrence of the Satanic atrocity which, perpetrated under the ia- sulted name of Irish patriotism, has just eeut a thrill of horror from one part of the kingdom to the other, ‘there are obvious reasons, I thiuk, of a large and na- tioval character, in favor of such a movement; but there are also considerations of a more practical and personal kind which are worthy of grave aed immediate attention, A panic is rapidly spreading which, unlese checked in ite earlier stage, must tend w produce calamitous results among the industrial orders of Irishmen resident in the various eeutres of trade and commerce in England, Let the notion once possess the public mind that amon the hambler classes of my countrymen * Irish’? an ** Fenian” are convertible terms, aud who can say how long the English artisan or iabourer will consent to work side by side with men committed on the above assump- tion to a diobilical poliey of secret treason aud dastardly crime? If ships are menaced with Feuian fire, how long will Iriehmen be employed in our public docks? If waxghouses are in danger from explosive compounds, how long will Irishmen . allowed to labor in their ‘precitots? What, in a word, will be the prospects for the winter if thousands of Irishmen are driven from the | English labour markets under the ban of a national proscription? These are no speculative questions, nor am I a fanciful alarmist. There wre grouvds only too solid, for contemplating the possibility of such a catas- | trophe. It is not the professional man, whose social position is interlaced with various ties of home relations | und private interests, who las anything to fear. The sninobie! will fall on those whose humbler lot exposes | them to rmisrepresentation the’ makes them responsible for gui hich they are no | parties. Sir, I believe the vast ity of my country. men in London, are at heart as loyal avd true as an? men in her Majesty's dominions. 1 believe that the! miscreants who planned the desperate outrage of Clerk- | eowell, if frishmen by name or birth, are miserable and misguided tools ot foreign conspirators, If Lam right, | can the loyalty of he | countrymen be too svon declared! Jf aw wrong—quod Di prius omen averiant!"'—can the | danger of the situation f too soon exposed? When | eeasving are abroad, when © Greek five’ may menace | the home, ora Colt’s revolver the head, of a loyal citizen, | nnot confute, and! } ' | Cesigns to be taken of the Bardo in its varions aspects all — “T had that there to illustrate the power of rs cm as I'll show you, if you'll adjourn to the joor.”* All went. PaRl AND ITS EXHIBITION. Before the total dispersion of the fragments of the ex-Ex. hubition it would be wise to take a last promenade poy. uh ruins, Bo Aponpecs hep yeh eo — “ Now,” said the ‘Squire, taking out his snowy pocket- tigantic failure ta’ survives. The ctorm which letely burst | Uadkerchief, you willsee that this ie not what you Cons haw bt ee oF ae a ee it was, but merely a painting.” And he +t ngs Regent. ey Which had been simost | pressed the handkerchief on the “ illustrated "* spot, marked out for i eho Bg ufter the rest had been carried | then raised it saddenly to his nose. “ By Jupiter!” away. No scene of desolation would ever equal that which | he exclaimed, * its a rotten egg after all! niects the gaze as you wander through the masses of broken | Billy had taken the ten dollars and broken bona fide palin trees, crushed magnolias, and every kind of rare and | rotten egg on the door step. extensive plant, lont by the city of Paris for the exhibitioa,| —————— and not to be replaced under a sum of 100,000 francs, The violence of the wind may be jucged when it is mentioned that the glass roof of the greenhouse seems to have been first lifted off and then to have fallen with a tremendous erash into the interior of the building, crushing everything beneath its ponderous weight. ‘The confusion of broken statues, pa 0 glass, and twisted columns, gives the place appearance of some newly dug out destruction, occasion- ed by the explosion of a mining battery which had lain for some timo concealed beneath the earth and rubbish thrown up at the same time, F And all around the outer cirele the scene is even yet more indicative of ruin and desolation, animated enough, but with the anmation of destruction, that of a besieged town about to be surrendered to the enemy, whose inhabitants are packed up in all haste to avoid the sack and pillage which must ensue. Hundreds of waggons loaded to the very ut- most are hurried along by locomotives, whose discordant shricks echo through the long covered ways like those of the flying population, ‘The very atmosphere is loaded with the hissing jets of steam, and if there had been any sun it would have disappeared behind the clouds of vapour sent up by the perpetual tumult, ‘The whole gre of this hurry and tumult reminds one of the flight of the Hebrews eut of Egypt. only that in this case the despoiling has been all on the side of the Egyptians. But from the park 1s the deso- lation most visible. I'he cynical visitor declures that King Haussmann must surely have consummated the bombard- ment of the building in order to get it all the quicker out of sight. The walls are knocked down in many | eon to get the heavy machines more easily through—the footways are encumbered with boxes and with packages—with rough deal cases and bales of coarse matting, ere the sacked city is : behind in all its nudity of aspect. It is San Salvador atter | team a little distance off, while the father, assisted by the earthquake, or Sebastipol after the cannonade, Here! the little boy, proceeded to cut down the trees for their’ and there the trees have been cut down to allow of the| load. The child says he cautioned his father to keep | passage of heavier waggons, and, amongst the stumps which out of danger, but from his crippled state he did not do | stick out some feet adove the ground, may be seen the | vo, und a large tree fell on him. ‘The child immediate- | colossal pieces of artillery—half burried in the mud—with | ly ran for lus sister, and they together lifted the log their ponderous jaws wide open, as if appealing against the from their father's head. Mr. John Hersey, who hap- ry and ne to hyp ee a been condemned. pened to be within a few hundred yards ay the time, vi ron pha i bea Peggy ~ 4 _ i and hearing the lamentations of the poor children, has- | Bey of Tunis has given orders for numerous photographic | a to the spot, where he found Mr. Allan dead, with is head crushed quite out of its natural shape ; he must have died immediately,—[ Yarmouth Herald, We lear from the Bridgewater Times that a very | serious explosion lately occurred at New Dublin, in the store of Mr. Donald Currie. Having a lighted pipe in his mouth, Mr. Curry was stooping ever or near an open keg of powder, when it is supposed that a spark must have fallen into it, causing the explosion. Mr. Curry ~All Sorts of Paragraphs, — te a ee TAKING a Nip on THe Siy; on Scenr at a Fasnton- ABLE DaressMakur’s.—Misas T—" What shall your dress be?" Mrs. S—‘ Vil take an alpaca with trimmings ; ‘what is yours my dear?’ Miss T—*‘ Give me a moir-an- tique, plain.’ Dressmakera prodacea samples of the above goods ina liquid form, and serves them out in glass thimbles, Ladies empty thimbles, and dressmaker enters it in bill ag gimp and bugles. The business is carried on quite professionally. A rose you know, would smell as eweet by any other namo, and Bourbon isjast as good asif youcall it gingham. The following explanation of terms may enable you te come to an understanding with your wife's dressmaker :— Moire- antique, white silk, London gin; gingham, Bourbon whiskey ; alpaca, Santa Croix; delaine, Jamaica Rum ; tartetan, Svotch whiskey; poplins, Irish whiskey ; silk, 8. O. P.; barege, sherry; plain merione, XX Ale; all wool plaid, alf-an-alf, Mixed drinks are distinguished by the style of trimmings. A ‘gingham flounced’ means Bourbon sour; spotted silk isa mint julep. A popliu gored’ is synonymous with hot whiskey Ge, | A sad accident took place at East Chebogue on Tues- day morning. Mr, Ebenezer Allen, who had several years ago, lost the use of his legs, went out with bis son, a little boy of only 8 years, and one of his daugh- ters, a girl of 15, to get a load of wood about half a mile from their dwelling. ‘The girl was left with the through the Exhibition; and photographers are busy now in tracing it as it stands amid the ruin going on around it, while the trampery pasteboard edifices representing Moorish exfes and Turkish divans, with all their water paint decora- tions washed out dy the vain, and their canvass architeeture rept and torn by the wind, still subsist like the deserted tenements of Bartlomy Fair, when the actors have gone on before and the carts have not yet anived to carry off the properties. Inside the building all shape, form, or con- sistency has vanished completely, bd bd . * was seriously, though not dangerously, injured. His face, which received most of the blaze. is burnt and | The human portion of the show is not the least curious to | completely filled with powder. Fortunately his sight | behold. Neyer was a finer opportunity afforded for the| is not impaired. The boilding isacomplete ruin. The! observation of the contrasts of national character, The! roof and the side and end nearest the powder were | French workmen, who leaves his work half finished toadmire | blown entirely off, and a emashing business was done | some risk must attend those who take a prominent part) the cleverness with which the first half hes been performed, in euch a demonstration ; but the path of duty, ifsome- and rushes off to seek approval; the Belgian, who goes times one of dauger, is always ove of honour, and I am steadily but with such solid precision, despising all resource confident there are thousands of gallant Irish hearts of | but such as proceeds from himself; the American who, on every creed and class who are ready to respond to my the contrary, seizes, without thanks or acknowledgment, on invitation. ‘The place, the time, and the form of holding | such a mecting or preparing such an address a8 1 haye — I need not now pause to indicate ; but I have made the suggestion, and Lam prepared for my share in its execution, | i Hanp Tres 1x New Youk.—‘The New York World! | of the Tower of Babel, just at the very moment when the every man's suggestion, when caloulated to diminish labor | and facilitate progress ; the English, in their shirt sleeves, | with their trousers tucked up, move in and out amongst the engines swearing most awfully at the stupidity of the Frenchmen for not understanding the direction shouted forth in English ; the whole together reminding one forcibly Divine wrath was made manifest in the confusion of estimates that there are 50,000 persons out of employ: | tongues, and consequent enmity of souls, arising from the ment in that city. About 40 per cent. of the 4,000 impossibility ot cee each other, The railwa working jewelers bave nothing to do; of the 2,500 cempanies have established a service which saves muc jewelry box makers only 1,500 are at work; GO per! time and risk, Every hom the wagons start for the circular cent. of the diamond setters are idle; about one-third | railway, and are steamed away to the different stations, of the 1,600 jewelry polishers, who are mostly women, | where they are hoisted on to the railway which conveys are unemployed; of the burnishers of silver plate, at! them to their place of destination, And as the engine, Jeast half have no work, and those that are em-| Which puffs and snorts along the narrow line, disappears ployed earn small wages; of bank-note engravers only fom sight, bearing after it the unsold produce which its 100 ure at work against from 800 to 1,000 in former | °¥™* had been at so much pains and expense to convey yeuips Mt dae EASD setpentare, about S00 are aan of] X12 LEO. syeperty ir tn loed of one ede . be 4 eh pir: p- pee b> of the bricklayers and masons, who are pointment Kd which it is accompanied, And what remains about half as numerous as the carpenters, many are out |. ot work; all the hat finishers are found work i an ag-| (0 U2 of sil this vast show, which, by the help of ten in ney hee sociation, but as work is dull, each individual receives pay only on alternate weeks; the 20,000 tailors are obliged to support themselves on 39 per cent. less. work than last year; great stagnation prevails in the | iren business, and a large proportion of the workmen | have nothing to do; there are 10,000 ship-carpenters | and caulkers out of employment; there are 500 sulle | men out of 4,000 cigar makers; and the dulness of | business has greatly reduced the earnings of those em- | ployed; there are 3,000 to 4,000 ‘long shore men, persons | why unload vessels, who have no work, or, at best, | small and unfrequent jobs; there are over 5,000 unem- | ployed clerks, many of whom have been lately dis- charged on account of the dullness of their employers’ business; a great many servant girls are out of places, and their number is constantly being augmented by the arrival of emmigrants who are desirous of domestic services, and are too poor to go westward. The office of the Superintendent of the Poor is crowded from morning until night. The majority of the applicants want fuel and clothing. This is a picture of the desti- tution existing in New York. The population of the other large cities in the Union are not uuch better off. It is hardly a matter of surprise to read of the per- petration of great crimes m New York, Chicago, or. some of the other cities of the Republic that bave be- come sv notorious for the audacily and caring with which crime is committed within their precincts, bot when we see it stated that in well-regulated Boston and the cities that cluster around it, not a single night passes without the perpetration of two or three bur- gilarics, we must confess some astonishment. Yet auch is the fact. Exeluding from the liat three or fonr exee! | occurrences, such as the attempted bank at Haverhill, with the murder which avenged its failure ; an embezzlement in State-street, with the tof an insurance clerk, &e., a local paper thus fills up the cata for a week :—‘ Two private houses in one of the most quiet and secladed parta of the city have been robbed of large amounts within the week, The safe of one store has been emptied in the day-time, confederates engaging the attention of all the attendants on daty to make it possible. One gen- tleman has been attacked by a gang of three highway- men, provided with the means of rapid flight, in one of the most respectable streets of the Back Bay, and only saved from being plundered by a vigorona nee of a eoucenled , the possession of which might have | observer might fancy that it caused a disagree: made him Viable before the law, A shop in the most crowded tof the town has been pillaged in the early evening, the special watchman employed to pro- teet ft ing himeelf meanwhile at the theatre, Bat we unable to give even a resume of the bur- and stores within the past seven days. the reason, among others, that only a portion of them ever get mentioned in print, or are known be- thousand navvies and terrasiers, will have entirely disap- in crockery. The poogen part of the goods, being on | the opposite side of the store, escaped with slight in- | jury. There were three or four men in the shop when the explosion took place, but they threw themselves. flat upon the fleor and escaped from the blaze. A. piece of the bailding slightly injured one of them. An exchange says: “ The London Jimes has taken up the question of naturalization in earnest, and advo- eates a revision of the matter by a mixed commission, | The law, as it stands,. is ps ls te The child of | American parents, born in England, isa British subject, | and might be tried for treason against the Queen. Not only that, but the born American is a Brtiish subject, | by law, if his father or grandfather was ene, ‘The; stamp is So indelible that it lasts three generations. In | strict law, not only ty naturalized Englishman or) Irishman in America could have claime? exemption from conscription in the late war, but the children and grand- children of adopted citizens could have done so. A Misraxr.—Charles to the altar led the lovely Jane, and to her father’s house returned again; where, to convey them on their wedding tour, already stood a brilliant coach and four. When, lo! the gathering showers at once decended, clouds avd warring winds contended ; thie moves him not, but in he hands his oO warranted to WORK WELL,| consisting of MAGICIAN, VICTORIA,| ~~ and HELPING HAND | YARMOUTH COOK. Aes ERS BOILERS, all sizes, Mirs.8.A.Allen’s PREPARATIONS ror tor HAIR. ae. 7 s. A. ALLEN’S Mes. 8. A. Adkiii’s ORLD’S HAIR RESTORER, W ORLD’S HAIR DRESSING is suited to both young and old. It strengthens or ZYLOBALSAMUM, is essential to use with ‘he Hair, prevents its falling or turning , and im- the Restorer, but the Hair Dressing alone often re- Parts to it a beautiful glossy appearance. It never fails|stores, and neyor fails to invigorate, beautify and re- to RESTORE GRAY HAIR fresh the Hair, rendering it soft, silky and glossy and disposing it to remain in any desired position. TO ITS ORIGINAL YOUTHFUL COLOR. - Iris nor a Dye, but acts directly upon the roots of FOR LADIES AND CHILDREN, the hair, giving them the natural nourishment required, |whose Hair requires frequent dressing, it has no equal. producing the same vitality and luxurious quantity ag in| No lady's toilet is complete without it. The rich glossy youth. It will restore it on bald places, requires no appearance imparted is truly wonderfal. It cleanses revious preparation of the hair, and is easily applied the Hair, removes all dandruff, and imparts to it a most Ey one's self, One bottle will usually last for a year, \dehghtful fragrance, It will prevent the Hair from ’ out, and is the most economical and valur dle Millions of bottles sold every as after the hair is once restored, occasional applications fallin ‘ once in three months will insure against grey hairs to Hair Dressing known, the most advanced age, lyear. THE RESTORER REPRODUCES AND THE HAIR DRESSING CULTIVATES AND BEAUIIUFIES Sold by all Druggists throughout the World. Principal Sales Office, 198 Greenwich-st, NY. Citv. ae at a TT A FINE CHANCE FOR SPECULTAORS —AN D— ENTERPRISING MEN! rP\HE undersigned has heen instructed by the Owners to offer for SALE or to RENT several valuable FREEHOLD and LEASEHOLD PROPERTIES and FARMS in Bexrast and other parts of theIsland in good cultivation well wooded and p o ssessing other advantages; and for which good and valid u tles and immediate possession can be ivea. : . Also four LOTS being the residue of thirteen Building Lots on other nine having been sold the present Season) in that most advantageous mercantile situation known as SUMMER HILL" adjoining MONTAGUE BRIDGE, ten miles from Georgetown where close to 150000 bushels of Produce are annually shipped and nearly all paid for in Casb, Americans and other speculators purchase here and ship for Great Britain the United States &c, A number of Stores, Wharfs, a Meeting House Post Office, and ‘Temperance Society have been established for some time; with many Grist and Saw and Cloth Mills in the vicinity; where also any quantity of all kinds lumber can be had in trade atlow rates, Summer Hix. is “the only Prechold Property for sale in the place which renders it mostdesirable for the above class of artizans now so much wanted in this rising town. A STORE and DWELLING on it capable of holding 14000 bushels produce with a double Wharf and site for a Lime Kiln, will be sold or icasea on reasonable terms. Plans, particulars or any other information can be obtained ¥ calling at the office of Messrs. Bars & Sox, Land Surveyors, Charlottetown, Reference canalso be had from W. Sanprkson, F. P, Nonrox, Tos. ANxox, Georgetown; Jas, Bropericx, Campbelton, Lot 4; F. W. Iuanes, Examiner Office, Charlottetown, and to he subscriber at Orwell, who is also Agent for the sale of Manny's Mowing Machine, the celebrated Yarmouth COOKING STOVE, and also for the Fulling Mills of Messrs. Bourke, Mill View, the Honble, Jas McLannx, New Perth, Eintay W. McDonaxp, Pinette; where CLOTIL is received and returned with des patch. RICHARD J. CLARKE. __Or well Store, Aug. 10, 1864. STOVES! SLrOVES! SLlOVES! | , Russel's Mills Cotton Duck, ‘the Subscriber is prepared to receive orders for all the pe COOK STOVES suitable for coal, | different Numbers, in quantities to suit parchacers, | es Charlottetown, May 22, 1867. CODTOMNM DVS BS tpl ne been appointed Agent for the sale of the celebrated THE CHEAPEST AND SAFEST DODD & ROGERS. DOCTOR. | oe - Holloway’s Pills. on niede hy r trp | Pus t household Medicine ranks among the leadin. OOK STOVES FOR W OOD »sWA rER | iy aoeenasian of lite. It is well known to the world that LOO, BROADSIDE, PREMIUM, and | ix cures many complaints other remedies cannot reach, the act ia as well established as that the suf lights the world, Disorders of the Liver and Stomach.. Most persons will, at some period of their lives, suffer from | indigestion, derangement of the liver, stomach or bo which if not quickly removed, frequenty settle into a dan- gerous illness. It is well known in India, and other oe cal climates, that Holloway's Pills are the only remedy | can be rehec on in such cases, Almost every soldier abroad carries a box of them in his knapsack, In England most sons know that these Pills will cure them whenever the iver, stomach or bowels are out of order, and that they DODD & ROGERS. DODD & ROGERS. | the year which | From the Medeleine to tiie Bastile do these poor. wretched | with such startling echo above the rattling of the balls and ared from the oer ne — with the last day of | bride, and seats himself enraptured by her side; when ag repel ecu ae tae 1 pox Bang sg thus to cheer the fair one he begun: “+I hope we soon ens Preetagpce sl pte ange Tangyan babble oc shall have a little sun.’ But she to whom the weather caus sean ok misery of Paris, ‘Thele numbers | Sete B° pain, who heeded not the blast nor pattering render the great boulevards impassable after a certain hour se e “ye an her fatare state betheaght her, of the mght, Neither the special ordonnances of the police | "PNC@ My dear I'd rather have a daughter. Napoleon's chief of Paris hasan eye to politics as _ the individual efforts of the owners of the different cafes situated In the principal thoroughfares, can remedy | well as to the beauty and convenience of his city im- it; the * social evil” oe increased to such an extent that provement. When the Emprees said to him, lonbia at one of his long, straight boulevards, just opened, it has become the subject of inquiry of the Government “Why did you make that boulevard so long and straight, it is tiresome,” ** Madame,” replied the per- fect, ‘* 1 made it very long and straight, because the enerals of the artillery, whom I coneulted a great beings, still attired in_ the summer finery m which thev shone forth during the Exhibition time, go shivering along, pacing the pavement from sunset till suntise, famished wit hunger, burnt up with fever, yet shaking with the cold, a living reproach to all the splendor which grects them on | (eal on the subject, assured me that it was impossible the way; and the tears roll down their painted cheeks as | to teach cannon balls to turn round the first corner to Sey try to gions rng re gaudin passes them by | the left,”’ rom the opera to his club, ing nothing but the incon- : ' venience . his own precious person of wating through the Tho death of the eminent Italian ee Pacini, iv mud across the pavement to his carriage, The boulevards |*"uounced as ae vecurred at Pescia, He was at this moment are actually fermenting with this strange | born at Catania, im 1796, and had attained hie 71st year. leaven of human wretchedness, and the gay and pleasant| His genius was precocious, for at the age of eleven reflections once suggested by the brilliant shops aad illu- | years he wrote sacred music. Three years alter he minated cafes are all saddened by the contrast of those| wrote a little opera entitled “ Annetta e Lucindo,”’ hollow-oyed, hungry-looking victims, whose mirth is even | which was received with favor at Venice. more piteous than their despe.r, and whose laughter rin z re : a We are informed that an affray occurred on Satur- the loud disputing of the billiard players, A memorial | day, the 4th inst., ata tavern in Kennetcook, between has already been sent up to the Chamber of Deputies, se- | two men named Miller and Lee, resulting in the death conded by the member for Lillancourt, to suggest that] of the latter. It appears they were playing cards and some measures be taken for the immediate removal of quarrelled, when atliter went into a room, got a gun, these untortunates to their tive Provinees; and an i pai amehoration of the law by which they are subjected to the tae CS Lee. hey, i Gens. surviellance of the potice, the limitation of their numbers, anda provision for sickness and old age—whieh begins| In Boston, short dresses aro about all that are seen very carly with these unhappy creatures—have been sug-| upon the streets, but the length ie made up with the nnd fit wubject for debate at the same time.— Paris | evening dresees with their long trains. It is said of a of Liverpool Journal, fashionable Beston lady, who went to a party in that : i long since, that she arrived there about the Tue Powers or Isactnation.— Billy Smith is a ear- + la lai riage hes lo & shee OC Pelvis rd te 06r villages. firet of the evening, but tho last of her dress did not rive until twelve o'clock, ily is a gening, aathe gofgeous red and yellow stripes ” . on Pulford's wagons show; avd while Seanertett ing| , Count Bismarck's yearly income, since he receiv ed nature one day, for his own amusement in the rear of | he gift from the Prassian Pariament, is botween forty the shop, his mind happened to ran on the subject of| and fifty thousand dollars, He lives economically, rotten eggs, and forthwith one of these interestirg objects | 4, According to a cerrespondant, said rome weeks appeared on the board beneath his magical brush. I¢| #89 to Rotschild, that he had no doubt that he would, Was represented as broken, and waa go natural that an|by-and-by, become a millionaire, Until 1865 he was able odor, | heavily in debt, The picture remained there for some time, all who had! ‘he Manchester"Examiner states that on the day of occasion to go that way, not caring to disturb # thing| the Fenian executions, it printed 192,645 copies, which 80 forbidding to the delicate sense of the nasal protuber- | jt helieves to be the greatest weight of newspapers over ance. One day 'SquireM saw it and applied his printed and issued in one day from any offive in the fingers to his nose, Billy saw him and explained to him| world. ‘The public were supplied at the rate of that it was merely paint. At first he would hardly be: | 95 000 per hoar, or nearly 600 per minute. lieve, but finally convinced, he offered Billy ten dollars to painta similar one on his door step. e Squire}, When the Dake de Choissul, who was a remarkable was something of a wag, and s.ished to see the effect |/ean man, came to London to negotiate a peace, Char- produced on the ladies and gentlemen who had been in-|!¢s Townshend being asked whother the b gov- vited to a party at hie house that evening. ernment had sent the prelimimaries of a treaty answered, Billy reovived ten dollars and promised to have the | b¢ did not know, bat they had sent “ the outlines of an in ie. ambassado ; gentlemen;| ‘The j containing the details of the celebrate uccession passed over Billy's F merge | Yel "Longworth > Ao weight three tons, The feet and skirts, and app! their’ case has been tried eighteen times, has employed chiefs to their . it the jodges and 200 lawyers, aad has twent ARLOR AIR TIGHT and SHOP STOVES. DODD & ROGERS. EGISTER GRATES and MARBLE MANTLES. DODD & ROGERS. ROOFING PITCH and FELT. DODD & ROGERS. OX No. 3 Singer's Sewing Machine. DODD & ROGERS. Noy. 13, 1867. BRITISH PERLODICALS. The London Quarterly Review, (Conservative.) The Edinburgh Review, (Whig.) The Westminster Review, (Radical.) The North British Review, (Free Church.) AND Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, (Tory.) These periodicals are ably sustained by the contributions ot the best writers on Science, Religion, and general Litera- ture, and stand unrivalled in the world of letters. They are indispensible to the scholar and the professional man, and to every reading man, as they furnish a better record of the current literature of the day than can be obtained from any other source. TERMS FOR 1867; F f the Review wngs.00 Dro or any one of t ‘ sue % < , : vie 8 a 7.00|. Hundreds are cured yearly by the use of these Pills con ene Yee aa omen, « ‘ <' 466 — with the Ointment, which should be rubbed very For all four of the Reviews, — - . 12,00 | bonutifully into the parts affected. For Blackwood'’s Magazine, ° . . 4,00 of the Kidneys. For Blackwood and one Review, —_« is - 7.00) The quantity and q of the bile are of vital imppart For Blackwood and any two of the Reviews, . 10,00 | ance to health, U the , the which aeeretes the For Blackwood pace Some the Review, =~ - reed URS meenttleg Sas Meagubehier nk: Ccovolig’ eatk, wi bad + bet For Blackwood and th ‘our Reviews, ! fomediek, canine pe ly 4 “ ocean by an unnatural condition of that organ, POSTAGE. : ‘olloway's Pills ag tor nae vemedy known for the fol- bseribers shold prepay by the quarter, at the office of ing diseanes :— deliv . The Postaor oad wy pant at the United States, | Ague Debility aundeo Secondary symp Two Gents anumber, This rate only applies to current| Asthma = | Dropsy Liver Com- toma subscriptions, For backnumbers the postage is double, Biliouscom-| Dysentery plaints Tie-Douloureux BACK NUMBERS, 7» BY oe on|Fi Irre-|Piles Subscribers, by remitting direct to the Publishers, may | the skin gularities |Rheumatiom | Veneral Affec- obtain back numbers at the fol reduced rates, vit i | Rowel com-!Fovers of all of + tons The North British from January, 1863, to December. 1867, Kinds |. Beine of all inclusive ; Bdinburgh and the Hestminster from 1864, | o . Fite | Serofals or , inclusive, and the London Quarterly for ome Kings Beil wi from -<» $8 Walker Street, New York. Sold at the Establishment of » Houtowar, 244 L. 8, PUB, 0, aleo publish the Lp Denese ian asegtat h Sed the prices: Le, 4s. Od, Lie, need no physician, Weakness and Debility. Such as suffer froin weakness, or debility, and those who eel want of epergy, should at once have recourse to those Pills, as tney immediately purify the blood, and acting upon the main-epr.ng of life, give strength and vigor to the system Ts young persons entering into wemeahoed with a deran, ment of the functions, andto mothers at the turn of ile these ills will be most efficacious in correcting the tide of life that may be on the turn, Young and elderly mon suf- fer in a similar manner atthe same periods, when there 1s always danger; they should therefore undergo a course of his purifying medicine, which ivsurce lusting health, Disorders of Childen. If these Pils be used according to the printed dircetion and the intment rubbed over the region of the kidneys, at least once a day as salt is forced into meat, it will penetrat the kidneys and correct any derangement of their organs. Should the affliction be stone or gravel, then the Ointment should be rubbed into the neck of the bladder, and a few days will convince the sufferer that the effect of these two re medies is astonishing, Disordes of the Stomach Are the sources of the deadliest maladies, wheir effect is to vitiate all the fluids of the body, and to send a poisoned stream through all the channels of circulation. Now what is the operation of the Pills? They cleanse the bowels, re- gulate the liver, bring the relaxed or irritated stomach into & natural condition, and acting through the secretive organs upon the blood itself, ¢ the state of the pec sickness to health, by exer a simultaneous and whole- some effect upon all its parts and functions Complaints of Females. The functional irregularities peculiar to the weaker sex are invariably corrected without pain or inconvenience by the use of Holloway's Pills, ‘They are the safest and surest me- dicine for all diseases incidental to females of all ages, Bilious ns. All young children should have administered to them, from time to time, a few doses of these which will purify their blood, and enable them to ly through the dit- ferent disorders incidental to chilliren, such as measles, hoop- ing-cough, cowpock, and other infantile diseases, These Pills are 40 harmless in their nature as not to injure the most deli- eate constitution, and are therefore more adapted as corrective of the humors affecting them, Nn,