- . THE HERALD, CHARLOTTETOWN, him with the usual honors. His Majesty walked along the front of the line, and as he went, the crowd of princes, dukes, generals and officers, broke from their laces and followed him, being in turn emmed in by the crowd, to whom in eneral the gendarmerie were very in- , spar There was no space cleared— jno border kept—aud the people got quite close to the person of the royal jeonqueror, The excitement was quict, THE LESSON OF THE WAR FOR ENGLAND, (From the Daily Telegraph.) General Dews. ed tlt ege PERILS OF THE LAST BALLOON| “4 MAIL. English precautions must be taken The ‘ ee with regard to events transpiringabruad, Vast balloon, owing to the current | We cannot shut our eyes to European of air which prevailed, did not attain @) facts, The new great Power in Europe greater clevation than 900 metres, Its | has a diplomacy no man can understand, passage ag Sony the i. pete hepa linterests that are not always ours, and ute yy a VoHey ili . romacy bez : ens . ofa Bails hich » his ted ; tl r¢ ¥/# military supremacy based, to a great) 4. the King turned he shook hands with ofrifie 8 Which whistled past the Cars) extent, on vast uumnbers of drilled men, bd : [A ; | the members of the great German Conted- ofthe occupants of the car, and some of | phege facts necessitate now duties for| a aa ea a “> a sang sord: i iy j , es }¢ration, Whose soldiers fight under fis which remained in the cordage.— Phe | those who have the defence of England | apse uldinlce wou an ‘ies te talk weronaut Bartout resolved immediately jinhand, Weareagreed on the necessity ros some old ‘saldios servant or some be mere < ee weneare i he | of having a first-rate navy, and an army : sad hrew a'l the ballast overboard, when’ jy the highest state of efficiency. But : i swation | a : : Crown Prince, Gen. Blumenthal, Colonel the balloon quiokly rose ty an clevation | we cannot possibly afford to have a large | 4 : me 8 sr fe : ne ith 7 rye of 1,200t01,500 metres. Atthisheight| sandine army of recular troops— it | ees: And his stall, ho strode at last, " , e**istanding army of regular troops-——it/,;.. ‘atc I strony, into the the rifle balls fell short, but the balloon | would weigh us down in peace. Our! \ a har rar ue * ret ag . . ae * Fe : : ' .,courtyard of the Prefecture, turne Was Lot ie out of danger of the canuon | object is to organize a cheap defence of | ison oad aclaiad Pilger raph maith: shot, which the Prossiaus now began to} our shores agaiast any possible invasion. | : raphe i A | ! The wind fresheve!, however, at! p, | ' jtude, and then passed into the hall, tik : : yy | rance has taught us a terrible lesson. | yy or the portal of which was waving the this juncture, aud the balloon was carried | [jer population is large, but hasty enlist-| po.) Deantand The crowd slowly dis- rapidly away. All danger seemed now | ments, imperfect drilling, and incomplete | _— “y : : ee passed, but it was net so; misfortune | armament cannot make upfor theabsence | Per oii “b sl na gal lt ae ee ine © aps | gel . +. | of citizens were broken up. = coenyaeet wie for halt - — lof a regular army organization, She is|* : alterwards the balloon again sank, and | Bol Git fisasks | if then soared for more hor uinens oaene studded with fortresses and fortified | reat me “ish I “8 “ul *jtowns We have few fortresses and no ~~ be Co ie or we t gp tar wl “ge i | fortified towns. Anarmy of 150,000 men Cie of Af ao Chemy, fall during’ t * jlanded in Sussex or Kent might find its Ws , . * s ™ og Pi : a : ome oft a Sn onset | sea-base cut off unless its fleet beat ours; orlal « ~ as ~ say a yer Pe ‘© | but there is no military power in Engtand che wth oe = : nd itl nga il nae | to scay its mareh if it should once win a a oe ae ot faouae pe ogy oa | victory in the field. London would then ‘ania pat porte dangors now arose; the |°° * Prize splendid cnongh to satisfy any Barseak af alc wes 40 forcible that the | “ition, and the rich, fertile, peaceful ballson was “Se pdeapl at a fearful | County surrounding it, would supply og now ceeeae sp “eo gli ekiramin ny amount of food to the most exorbi- the surface of the earth accor lee Wo ‘he tant requisitions, It may be said that ps of the tempcat. At last tho| Suc! things are impossible, because we areas seemed pro fitious for landing |have a floet, Our reliance on our Bartout threw on his anchor with four| fouclads is not greater than was the ee i tne oad the ty as ms trust of Austria and of France in their ans i * was brought to earth, ‘All danger now | ercat armies, Look at France before 8 eg ili ,the war! She had an army that had seemed at an end, butin another moment | : ut | prestige of past victories, the hope of wind, mounted once more, carrying with | é ’ . : jnew glory to animate her people. Yet} it the hardy mronaut, who had been), ’ : ; : 4 : ‘in a few days she fell from a height of | caught in the folds of the line, suspended |... : : are military power as great as our naval | in mid-air, At length he falls, but,| i nL wonderlul to relate, the same folds of | Stteosth seems to us now. Why, with : P ignificant a warning in view, should | 80 si stake England’s all on our sea de- Mercantile Advertisements. W. A, WEEAS & C0, QUEEN STREET, ARE NOW RECEIVING THEIR AUTUMN AND WINTER the cable that were the cause of his) re} familiar friend; and, followed by the| being diagged after the balloon were| *° also the means of breaking his fall and} after dropping from a heigh: of sixty | fect, M. Bartout regained his foothold on mother earth, the worse only for a few contusions—not a limb was broken. There now remained in the car two other travellers, M. Lefevre, a diplomatic agent and Prosebecke, dealer in pigeons, who was conveying a number of carriers, destined to return despatches to Paris from.Tours, The balloon now continued its course, dragging the grapple along the surface of the earth, the balloon itself striking against the tops of the, trees that intercepted its path, Finally | the car came to the ground, and by the) concussion, M. Lefevre was thrown out, thus leaving the Belgian pigeon mer-! chant suleoccupant, The Belgian, how-| ever, did not lose his presence of mind ; he climed up the cordage to the balloon | itself, and having made, with the aid "64 his pocket knife, a large incision in the silk, he tore outa piece with his hand. The monster soon began to collapse, | and in a few minutes was level with the | earth. The poor Belgian had not even) now escaped danger,for the country peo- ple who had assembled to the number of 2,000, taking him for a German, were! about to lay violent hands upon him, | and it had gone hard with him had not: the timely arrival of M. Bricourt, Maire of Carniers, put an end to the misunder- standing. A couple of hours afterwards, the three wronauts entered Cambria with | their five large mail bags, weighing) . about 800lbs. and delivered them salely at the post effice, | fences? What great harm would accrue if every able-bodied young man in Eng- land, not the support of a widowed mother orof orphan brothers and sisters, were induced to serve his country as a Volunteer, a Militiaman, or a soldier of the line? If such liability were excep- tional, it would be invidious and unfair; but if all were thus obliged to qualify themselves, the obligation wonld be un- felt. Volunteering is not hard work in itself, but it is hard on really good Vol- STOCK GENERAL MERCHANDIZE, 000 Militiamen, thus releasing all our unteers to find that other young English- men, equally bound to serve their coun- FORMING THE try, neglect the duty and shirk the work. ‘ Were aa proper inducements organ- LARGEST ized on Lord Elcho’s or some other plan, we believe that we might easily have an AND inexpensive National Guard of 800,000 efficient Volunteers, and of at least 300,- MOST ATTRACTIVE soldiers of the line for service in the col- | - + +o: WSs Y, NOVEMBER 33, 1870. A PROCLAMATION. I D. I. MACKINNON, do, by virtue of Authority vestedin Bq me, as Proprietor of the ‘*New York Clothing Emporium,’ issue this, my Proclamation, the 29th day of October, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Seventy, which, like the laws of the Medes and Persians, is binding to all intent and purposes, that, whereas, this Fashionable Strect has been neglectfully miscalled Great George Street, which is not in keeping with the intelligence of the residents thereon, nor appropriate to the business thoroughfare of so magnificent a location for business purposes. Considering that all the Great Georges have passed from the scene of action, Little Georges being exempt from such honors, on account of inability, shall henceforth pass into obscurity, like all their ancestors, and substitute in its place a name which will give new life and vigor to the artistic skill and mechanism displayed on so successful a Street, each day; therefore, I proclaim its name shall henceforth and forever be called “BROADWAY, Where I sell the most handsome and most stylish fitting Garments ever manufactured in Charlottetown or any other place. You can call, gentlemen, and cxamine my Stock of Cloths, my Fashionable made up Garments to order, my ready-made Garments, which alone excel any custom work in Charlottetown, Come and we will suit you to any- thing you want in our line, to suit your own notions of comfort and style, as well as our stylish and comfortable ideas, cut and mechanism. You can have all these Cheap, at , “The New York Emporium,” Broadway, Charlottetown. —BY— D H MACKINNON. November 16, 1870, Remember that MASON & HENDERSON, QTBat SSFARa HOV, Queen Street, STOCK OF GOODS THEY WAVE EVER OFFERED. onies, in India, or abroad. | Tre First Presiscrtre.—The Unita, Cattolica has been making researches | into the origin of the plebiscite of the | may Christian era, Of course we know that! it existed B.C., amongst the Republicans of Pagan Rome and Athens ; but its first | appearance since the Christian cra, must be put Anno Domini 32, when the genu- : ine formula of the plebiscite was cnunci-| PERSONALLY ated by a Galantuomo named Pontius | Pilate. Ife said, addressing the multi- | tude :— Whom will ye that I release | unto you, Barabbas or Jesus, who is| called the Christ?’’ And the multitude | had been wrought upon beforehand, St, Buyers will please note these Goods have been SELECTED IN Givreat Lrithin, and having been bought at the Mathew tells us (chapter 27.) ‘The chief Tue Prosrrers or Exauaxn.— The} priests and the elders persuaded the} Standard expresses its grave fears for) people that they should ask Barabbas | the fature of England, Our position at/ and destroy Jesus.” Thus it ever is in| this moment, it says, is one which we) plebiscites. ‘The people do not express | cannot regard without the gravest con-! their own wishes, but the wishes of cer- | cern. The country, the nation at large | tain wicked men who influence them, and | views with sympathy and horror, the | previal on them to choose the worst part. | present aspect of thingsin France., Yet) Thus, when the question was put, the | our Ministers rub their hands with some-| Jewish people auswere and said, ‘* Not thing very like satisfaction. !”’ Barabbas means | time GOODS were Lowest in Price, WEEKS & CO. are enabled If they do \ this man but Barabbas! to offer not feel it they pretend it, because they |in Syro Chaldaic “ the son of disorder,” | are powerless to intervene. Why are|and the Jewish plebiscite preferred him they powerless? Because they and/to our Blessed Lord, because disorder Special Inducements their supporters have stripped us of the jis both the invariable cause, and the | means to enforce respect. We now inevitable result of plebiscites, Will loarn that Russia is arming. Not only} any man dare to say that Jesus was is there great and growing uneasiness in| guilty aud Barabbas innocent, because British India, but China is unmistakably | the plebiscite declared so? No; plebis- | to Buy at their Store. Ch'town, Oct, 26, 1870, Be SEAR REM preparing to massacre all Europeans, | save perhaps the Russians, and throw) off the yoke of forced commerce and in-| ternational relations with the rest of the, world. Fear and trembling have come! upon the British residents in the East. | They know not what an hour may bring | forth, All they know is that in the resence of the frightful calamity that as overtaken Christian France, abroad as well as at home, the English Govern- ment shows no sympathy, and does noth- ing to protect them from a similar catas- trophe. With regard to America, no steps were taken to settlo the Alabama nestion at the nglt moment, and thus ill-feeling is fostered,and may be fostered until it drifts into hostilities. In Africa we have only taken away onr armed protection from the Cape, and trifled with the cession of a British settlement to France. In New Zealand at atime of imminent peril, we withdrew our troops. Jn Canada, Mr. Gladstone sells the guns of our fortifications for old iron, while Mr. Cardwell pretends to have sent thither the larger portion of the rifles in store of which England is denuded, and of which she stands in such urgent need, East and weat, north and south, the mutterings of the storm are heard. At home we undertake the responsibility of defending Belgium, which ‘ simply an insult to common sense, amounting to - a defiance in its absurdity, as in practice itis a pretence. The cruel strictures of Mr. Bruce upon the alleged danger from France, and her character and fate as a * burglar,’’ are not disowned ‘by his col- a , and never can be forgotten or by our ally. Conquered or not, she may live to pay back those cynical _sneers with interest, while Prussia is already her bill of indictme in New “York has remitted to Berlin a total of 270,000 thalers, contributed to the war £ cites prove nothing. Wrong is wrong, though millions should aff_rm it right by universal suffrage. Barabbas could not be saved from infamy by the acclamations of the Jews. Jis name has come down to after ages with the stigma attached to it—* Now Barabbas was a rob- ber,’’ KING WILLIAM’S ENTRY INTO VERSAILLES. Dr. Russell sends to the 7'imes a des- cription of the King’s entry into Ver- sailles :—‘‘ At 5.85 the cheers of the troops who lined the Rue des Chantiers heralded the arrival of the King. The of- ficers in front of the prefecture formed front. The cheers sounded nearer. A pe- loton of lancers with their lances lowered, swept round the corner, and took up their post on the right front of the pre- fecture. These were followed by a small body of dragoons or gendarmerie, Then came the stahlmeister and some mounted equerries, closely tullowed by a general or field officer, at whose heels clattered a troop of lancers, with lances raised who wheeled round and halted on the flank of the rest of the squadron, Next, in an open carriage, appeared the King. Ile was covered with dust, but he looked wonderfully well and strong. On his left was the Crown Prince, dusty, and vigorous-looking also. The troops cheered, the colours were lowered, the band burst into a wild triumphal blare of drums and trampets, and the whole crowd of officers, with upraised casques and caps and shakos, shouted lustily. The caleche drew up some thirty yards in front of the prefecture, and the King bounded rather than stepped out of it, followed by the Crown Prince. His officers pressed forward to greet him, and, with that peculiar mix- ture of profound. t and. heartiness which we cannot imitate, thronged close to the King. Ile shook hands most warmly with Generals von Kirchbach, Vo Rhetz, and others, and then, with the Crown Prince a little behind him, strode off to inspect, according to custom, the colour company, drawn u GOoonpDs. ee HE Subscriber has received, ex Merion, | from Glasgow, and to arrive, by Theresa, | from Liverpool, the following Goods :— 10 hhds. DeKuyper GIN, 15 bbis. Hennessy’s & Otard’s BRANDY, 100 cases Scotch WHISKEY, 100 “ Old Tom GIN, 10 eases Shamrock WHISKEY, 10 qtr. edsks Campbelton WHISKEY, 5 bbls. SHERRY, 156 * pale ALE, 50 chests superior TEA, 60 boxes Liverpool SOAP, 2 casks Crosse & Blackwell's PICKLES, 80 boxes T, D. PIPES, 10 erates assorted EARTHENWARE, 4 bbia, CONFECTIONERY, 8. Mixtures 15 tins black PEPPER, 15 boxes STARCH, 50 «© GLASS, 10412, 8410, 2 bbls. LOGWouD, 1 bbl. CUDBEAR, 1 case Wine CRACKERS, (in tina) 10 bbls. crushed SUGAR, 10 * brown, . 10 “ Soda CRYSTALS, 10 “ Bi-carb SODA, 1 case Nixey’s Black LEAD, 30 boxes Valentia RAISINS, 4 cases Barcelona NUTS, 3 bbls. CURRANTS, 40 bags NAILS, 70 kegs PAINTS, 4 casks Paint OIL, 50 bble. Kerosene do., 30 coils 6 & 9 thd. MANILLA. All of whjch will be sold Cheap for Cash or Approved Paper. A. W. OWEN, Nov. 3, 1870. 31 Fall and Winter GOoOonpDs: er Subscribers have received, per Steam- ers and Sailing Ships, from England, Scotland, Canada, and the United States, 127 Packages DRY GOODS, which they offer, Wholesale and Retail, at their usual low prices, for prompt payment. G. & 8. DAVIES, on the left of the palace, which receive London House, Queen Square, 2m November 2, 1870, AVING nearly completed their Importations for the Season, call the attention of the inhabitants of Prince Edward Island to an “early incpevtion of their Stock, which will compare with any on the Island, for QUALITY, STYLE & PRICES. Having purchased in the best markets, by one of the firm, for Cash, enables them to offer the whole of their Stock at very low rates, rE a@g- We invite special notice to our various assortment of Carpet- ing, Hearth Rugs, Matts, Room Papering, and Furnishing Goods. MASON & HENDERSON. Charlottetown, Nov. 9, 1870, REMOVAL. _— + GEN TUE MEN’sS OUTFITTING WAREHOUSE REMOVED TO Redadin’s Corner, QUEEN STREET. nV“-—_ WING to the inerease in the Subscriber's business, he is necessitated to remove to larg- er l’remises, and having received, per ‘“*Etna,” cea Halifax, over Two Hundred Pieces of Choice Tweeds, Beavers, Pilots, Napps, Meltons, Fancy Coatings, &c., &c., TOGETHER WItit Furnishing Goods, IN GREAT VARIETY. He is now prepared to accommodate his Customers in first-class style. Cutters and Workmen unsurpassed in P?. E. Island. Nothing will be left undone to ensure satisfaction. A call solicited, J. W. FALCONER. Ch'town, Oct. 5, 1870. HATS, CAPS & FURS! BooTSs & SHOES! —_— be te ECEIVED from England, United States, and Canada, a full and complete assortment of the above GOODS, embracing all the leading and most fashionable Styles for Fall and Winter, * LADIES’ FURS, Latest Styles, all New Goods. have been kept over from last year. moths. A. B. SMITH, South Side Queen Square. R No old nor moth-eaten Furs which Ch’town, Oct. 12, 1870. N. B.—Highest Price in Cash paid for MINK, MUSKRAT, ny; on STANDARD PERIODICALS FOR 170 By the Leonard Svott Publishing Co., New York. Indispensable to all desirous of being well in- formed on the great subjects ofthe day, 1. The Edinburgh Review, This is the oldest of the series. In its main features it still follows in the path marked out by Brougham, Jeffrey, Sydney Smith, and Lord Holland,its original founders and first coxtri- butors, 2. The London Quarterly Review, which commences its 128th volume with the January number, was set on foot as a rivel to the Edinburgh. It resolutely maintains its op- position in polities, and shows equal vigor in its literary department, 3. has just closed its 92d volume, In point of lit- erary ability this Review is fast rising to a level with itscompetitors, Itis the advocate of politi- cal and religious liberalism, 4. The North British Review, now in its 6Ilst volume, occupies a very high position in periodical literature, Passing beyond the narrow formalism of schools and purties, it appeals to a wider range of sympathies and 4 higher integrity of conviction, The Westminsler Review 5, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, was commenced 52 years ago, Equalling the Quarterlies in its literary and scientific depart- ments, it has won a wide reputation for the nar- ratives and sketches which enliven its pages. Terms for 1870, For ony one of the Reviews For any two of the Reviews $4.00 per an. 6.00 * For any three of the Reviews - - 1¢.00 | For all four of the Reviews - - 12.00 “ For Blackwood’s Magazine - - 4.00 * For Blackwood and one Review + 7.00 * | For Blackwood and any two of the | Reviews - - - = = = «+ 10.00 * ' For Blackwood and three of the i leeviewa <« + «© = « s 18.00 “ ' Por *lackwood and four of the Reviews - - «+ = + « += 16.00 * Single Numbers of a Review, $1, Single Numbers of Blackwood, 35 cents, The Reviews are published quarterly; Black- wood's Magazine is monthly, Volumes com- mence in January, Clubs. A discount of twenty per cent. will be allow- ed to elubs of four or more persons, when the periodicals are sent to our address. Postage. The postage on current subscriptions, to any part of the United States, is two cents a number, to be prepaid at the office of delivery, For back numbers the postage is double, Premiums to New Subscribers, New Subscribers to any two ofthe above peri- odicals for 1870, will be entitled to receive one of the Four Reviews for 1869, New Subseri- bers to all the five may receive Blackwood or two of the Reyiews for 1869, Back Numbers. Subscribers may, by applying early, obtain, back sets of the Reviews from January, 1865, | to Decen.ber, 1869,and of Black wood's Magazine | from Jauuary, 1866, to December, 1869, at halt the current subscription price, The wanuary numbers will Le printed from new | ) itis hoped, will secure regular and early publi- | | cation, The Leonard Scott Publishing Co.,| 110 Futton St., New York, The Leonard Scott Publis! 'ng Company also | publish the Farmers’ Guid to Scientific and | Practical Agriculture. By Henry Stephens, F. | R. 8, Edinburgh, and the late J. P. Norton, | | Professor of Scientifie Agriculture in Yale Col- lege, New Haven. 2 vols, Royal octavo. 1600 |; pages and numerous Engravings. Trice, $7. | By mail, post-paid, $8. | TH CATHOLIC WORLD, —h— | MONTHLY MAGAZINE —Or— GENERAL LITERATURE & SCIBNCE. TIMIE Catholic World contains original ar- ticles from the best Catholic English | Writers at home and abroad, as Well as trans- jlations from the Reviews and Magazines of | Franee, Germany, Belgium, Italy, and Spain. | Its readers are thus put in possession of the | i choicest productions of European periodical | literature, in @ eheep and couvemlont form, { — | type, and arrangements have been made which, | _ MAILS! 1s7 0. URING the months of October, November and December, Mails for the United Stater, Canada and New Brunswick, to be forwarded via Shediac, will be closed at the General Post Office, Charlottetown, every MONDAY an? THURSDAY evening, at 7 o'clock, Mails for Nova Scotia, via Pictou, until further notice, will be closed every Monday, Wednesday and Friday evening, at 7 o'clock. Mails for Great Britain, Newfoundland, West Indies, &c., every alternate Monday and Wed- nesday evening, at 7 o'clock, as follows ;— Monday, 3d October Wednesday, 2d Noy, Wednesday, 5th Monday, 14th Monday, t7th Wednesday, 16th Wednesday, 19th Monday, 28th Monday, 3ist Wednesday, 30th Monday, 12th Dee, Wednesday, l4th Dee, Mails for timmersice, St. Eleanor’s, North Bedeque end Lower Freetown (to be forwarded by Steamer), will be closed on the same even- ing as Mails for the United Stares; for George- town, e/a Steamer, every Friday evening at 7 o'clock, Letters to be registered, and newspapers, must be posted at least half an hour before the time | of closing Mails, Mails trom the United States, Canada and New ' Brunswick, will be due at the General Post Office, Charlottetown, on the evening of Wednesday and Saturday, at 10 o'clock, Mails from Nova Scotia will be due on the evening of Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at 6 o'clock, Postage on letters for the Dominion of Canada, 3d, ey. each rate; for the Unit. d tates, 4d, cy. ; for Great Britain, 44d, cy. merge for Newfoundland and West In- dies, 1d. stg., each; for Australia, New Zea- land, &c., 2d, stg. ench; Newspapers for Great Britain, United tates and the Dominion of Canada, forwarded free. JOHN A. MACDONALD, Postmaster Geveral General Post Office, Charlottetown, Ist Oct.. 1870, Molassses. Just Received, on Consignment, 10 pun. Choice Retailing Molasses. VERY CHEAP. MACEACHERN & Co. Italian Warehouse, Ch'town, } 21 Noy. 9, 1870, po" ie gt Spl a => PVE Subscriber requests all persons indebt- ed to him, by note of hand or otherwise, for the services of the Horse CLYDE,” to call at the different stands where the Horse istood, or at ‘J, D. MeLeop's, Queen Square, | Charlottetown, and pay the same without fur- WILLIAM MILLIGAN, Lot 13, Oct, 26, 1870. | ther notice. NOTICE. NOTICE. FPN “American Variety Store” is the only place to get all kiuds of FRUITS, in sea- son, TIMOTHY O'CONNELL, Ch'town, Queen St., Oct, 12, 1870. 3m ALL CURES MADE EASY Holloway’s Ointment. Bad Legs, Ulcerous Sores, Bad Breasts, No description of wound, sore or ulcer can re- sist the healing properties of this excellent Oint- ment. The worst case readily assumes a heal- thy appearance whenever this medical agunt is applied; sound flesh springs up from the bottom of the wound, inflammation of the surrounding skin 18 arrested and a complete and permanent cure quickly follows the use of the Ointment, Piles, Fistulas, and Internal Inflammation, There distressing and weakening diseases may | wath certainty be cured by the sufferers them- selves, if they will ue Holloway’s Ointment, land closely attend to the printed instructions. | It should be well rubbed upon the neighboring | parts, when all obnoxious matter will be remov- led, A poultice of bread and water may some- times be applied at bed-time with advantage ; ‘the most scrupulous cleanliness must be ob- i served. If those who read this paragraph will bring it under the notice of such of their ac- quaintances whom it may concern,they will ren - der a service that will never be forgotten, as a eure is certain, Eruptions, Scald Heads, Ringworm atid other Skin Diseases. All Furs warranted free from |. Extract from letler of Pope Pius 1X, Rome, Dec. 30, 1868. Rey. I. T. Weexen: We heartily congratulate you upon the es- teem which your periodical, “The Catholic World,” has, through its erudition and per- spicuity, acquired even among teose who dif- er from us, ete. Letter from the Most Rev, Archbishop of New York, | New York, Feb. 7, 1863. | Dean Fatnen Hecxer: I have read the Prospectus which you have kindly submitted of a new Catholic Magazine, to be entitled; “The Catholic World,” which it is proposed publishing in this elty, under your supervision; and I am happy to state there is nothing in its whole scope and split which has not my hearty approval. The want of some such periodical is widely and deeply munity at large will rejoice at the prospect of having this want, if not fully, at least ina great measure, supplied, _ With the privilege which you have of draw- ing on the Intellectual Wealth of Cathotic Europe, and the liberal means placed at your disposal, there ought to be no such word as Failure, in your vocabulary. Hoping that this laudab'e enterprise will meet with’ well-merited success, and under God's blessing, become fruitful in all the good which it proposes, Ng I remain, Rev, Dear Sir, very truly, your friend and servant in Christ, JOHN, Archbishop of New York. “THE CATHOLIC WORLD” Forms a double-column octavo magazine of 144 pages -vach number, making two large yol- umes, or 1728 pages, each year, and is fnrnish- ed to subscribers for 85 a year, Invariably in advance. Single copies, 50 cents. Postage, thirty-six cents a year, payable quarterly in advance, at the office where the magazine is received, All remittances and communications business, should be addressed to LAWRENCE KEHOR, General Agent. The Catholic Publication Society, No, 126 Nassau Street, N.Y, P.O. Box 6,396. Nov. 1, 1870. on Flour. Flour. JS ge vo hho per Steamer “Georgia,” from Montreal— 200 bbls. No. 1 Superfine FLOUR, Strong Bakers’ do, Faney do, For Sale Low. A. B, SMITH. OTTER, FOX, and other Fur Skins, felt, and Leannot doubt that the Catholic com- | After fomentation with warm water, the ut- | most relief and speediest eure can be readily ob- tained in all complaints affecting the skin and | joints, by the simultaneous use of the Ointment ‘and Pills, Butit must be remembered that /nearly all skin diseases indicate the depravity of the blood and derangement of the liver and sto- mach: consequently, in many cases, time is re- | quired to purity the blood, which will be effect- led by a judicious use of the Pills, The general | health will readily be improvea, although the eruption may be driven out more freely than be- fore, and which should be promoted; perseve- |rance is necessary, On the appearance of an ot these maladies the Ointment should be well | rubbed at least three times a day upon the neck | and upper part of the cheat, so as to penetrate /to the glands, as salt is forced into meat: this | course will at once remove inflammation and | ulceration. The worst cases will yield to this | treatment by following the printed di ections, | Serofula or King’s Evil and Swelling of the Glands, This class of cases may be cured by Hollo- way's purifying Pills and Ointment, as their double action of purifying the blood and strengthen the eyetem thom more affable than any other remedy for all complaints of a scrofulous nature, As the blood is impure, the liver, stomach and bowels, being much de-« ranged, require purifying medicine to bring about a cure, Rheumatism, Gout and Neural gia. Nothing has the power of reducing inflamma. , tion and — pain in these complaints in the same degree as alg cooling Oint- ment and purifying Pills. When used sim- ultaneously they drive all inflammation and de- pravities from the system, subdue and remove all enlargement of the joints, and leave the sin- ews and muscles lax and uncontracted. A cure imay always be effected, even under the worst circumstance, if the use of these medicines be persevered in. Both the Ointment and Pills should be used in the following cases :— Rad Legs, (Corns (Softs) |Rheumatiem Bad Breasts Cancers Sealda- Bums Contracted and Yaws Runions | Stiff Joints (Skin-diseases Bites of Moe- Elephantiasia |Sore-nipples chetoes and Fistulas Sore-throats Sand-tlies Gout Seurvy Coco-bay 'Glandular Sore-heads Chilblains | Swellings /Tumors Chiego-foot _ |[Lumbago. Uleers Chap'd Hands,Piles Wounds Sold at the Establishment of Prorrssor Hor- Loway, 244 Strand, (near Temple Bar,) London, and by all respectable Druggists and Dealers in Medicine throughout the civilised world, at the following prices :—1ls, 14d., 20. 9d., 40. 6d., 11s. 6d., 228,, and 338, each Pot, *,* There isa considerable saving by taking the larger sizes, N, B,— Directions for the guidance of patient® Ch'town, Noy, 9, 1870, in overy disorder affixed to each Pot,