ORR SP nue rn An ARAR Aes To Tuer Epivet Sin,-—In looking ovey 0 the Koad Commie sur tied that m ery nierly « sours K thal office have be ership for Bing ” suslance, sayg One, tl ~: UVNUCALL, Of THE Examinen. 1@ list of appointments to Were, ae a which paper was, aud dou't care. "Aste publishing a Government advertisement without order and | without charge, we can't afford to do such a thing, for our space is too valuable to be given away after that fashion; besides’ it would not be proper to make the public beii¢ve we were recipients of ee ——— 8 * upwards of £500,"" and he stated a constructive falsehood as to the time Roth these falsehoods are proved Aa to the constitution of God's church, like the | coat of the Force wa politi¢al constitution of thie Teland, it can no more eutier from the accidental presence in office of an unworthy Pope, than the latter ape ~~ im: | of its exiatence, ire presence in the Serretary’s Office o a « i f ' The protecting’ power of God can subordi | by the Journals of the House of Assembly, now s County, 1) mute every hostile force to its own ends, jusfas the | ou qur table. Following Pope's example, we in- ye weutleigag | Linperial Queen of Evgland can, through the me- | vite the public te eome and read them for them- | ——— —_—— Staio necessit¥ as in Prvssin: avd it is probble| that, though Dartistudt will be frequently the! abode of the young couple, yet England for some be time te come will be the principal dounecile. Phat | jo the daughter of Queen Vietoria might bave chosen | de a husband of more exalted rank than Prince ec Louis--that, if she were less affectiouate and w more ambitious, she m restriction of our Priuees and Princesses to a notes depreciate wi ight, notwithstanding the | eents.” “E r you may save by letting these en we oh ) al three doilats to the lave usiness of the country. ‘The people will our drafts on theif pitnotism, but them to believe nothitg the fair) nor a tng te be @ dollar) senty-live yr and yfully honor y¥ » not require i juivalent of something, hen it eannot be sold for more than se The ‘ Journal of Commerce’ says:— a say oo one, and that js the ntment off ilps bring to eon fusion here her waworths ? Couvhan tu the place of Thomns Clay An tnworthy Pope teiwht bring trouble | } . Chuareh, just as an unworthy Governor ¢y Now, Mr. Editor, [ would wish to know how nang : Comes it that it was found necessary to get some | political strife upon us; bat neither can a other person to fif| that very tuipurtant, although | Cae AE le ‘Nae y poverty reannertled, be: th! Was there any direlic | 7 —— =. os warranted tion Of daty ou the part of Mr. Clay? Did he ee a, “us eB wander the public money ! or did he not possess a "aa “Te ans Ft ih Geis Chen puilicieut amount of mectanical or engiavering cx a character af God's Char us by the mud within the natural ' vitality and vajue of the reapeetive constifutions, y this iMustration is the most | should legve him toe the contempt of the public. | interests ofthe public, knowing that the‘ Examiner’ re-appoipted. | diuu of the very constitutton guarantes d this Colo- | ‘ aelvyes, if they wish, Is it negessary to say any-| Government patronage, whcn We were not 80. {thing more?) When we have convicted Mr. Pope | The Government, indeed, sometimes sends us an We don’t suppose it is from %PY | Bejake on the an bring feet the | of two deliberate falsehoods, and, of more than | advertisement. higher | o#e palpable absurdity, it may be averred that we; personal regard, but from a desire to serve the order to “pirena We have | stands inthe front rank of our local advertising rome to} i But we cannot let him slip in that way foreign Protestant, and th ) 1 tinental ecirele of matrimonial alliance, a /stget territory and more important state t eds Darmstadt, is not to be questioned; , ity he in all probe. tv he of Princesses the ™ Princes; and in her little Court at Darmstadt sh erefore au inferior Con- have | ¢ ; wife of a Prince destined to rule over | become the haa | least 8 per er but! on England to 120 pe r lot will be bappier than thet wives of greater territoria: “ The issue of one hundred and fifty millions of notes will cause gold to reach a premium of at ont., and it will also send up exchange r ceut,~Now, as bills to the nd which is a very low | extent of $200,000,000 (a A estimate) are drawn on England, the difference is equal to twelve inilliens of dollars, w hieh, added gold for duties of eight mil- pacity, reudering bin incompetent to perior the duties de voiving upon bin! If se, Edo not wonder at his being removed But knowing all about ii myseif, | will auderiake to answer the above ques tions, wand give what | consider to be the reason why Mr, Chay wae 80t reappoiped In atewering the tiret quewieh; L would say that Mr. Clay's great aim has been to do his duty and to every thing ke corruption; buy so fur from arriving wt this, he has never (save jn one hostance) succeeded iy vetting the work done accord- jay to contract, wlibough it bas been said that he has been guilty of ry ape rang f aguandering the public money, | am quite positive that never Waethe money granted to the poad ser Vice so udjcjously expended, deep quaymires and ppring holes, which remained incurable for years under former Commissioners, yielded to his superior pbitities; and were w& noy for the firm ana solid stone work which hus takeu their places, would now be quite forgutten. Agnin, in place of old, ; , wretched apologies for bridges which diszruced the District, now stand good, substantial, workmanlike structures—a credit to the builder, and @ comfort to ali eoncerned. 1 might say more, but the District speaks for itself; and therefore Mr. Clay's work needs no fur ther commendation from me. And ae fur from | the natyral comprehension. But it is here merely | shown by reference to the Classified Accounts, | mediums. indicated The eternal abiding power guar nteed . re | i by Christ to his Church, like the civil constitution that out of the cum of £47 Aw “ ad, poe naan of @ country guaranteed at its origin, and upon! charge for the “ enrolled Military,” there was the i which ti owisls : ie judiciary : } » oes o. * . ’ vich the Legislature and the judiciary, &c , de sum of £154 138 74d “ for clothing, pend, outlives all accidents and maintains its pow : ; ers unimpaired, albeit the personal unworthiness of | the Warranta. Now, this clothing was handed its administrators. This, at least, is an educated | oor to the present Tory Government when the layman's view of the mutter ger . Ae to the tendeiey of HW Popery oP the present? Liberals lett office, and with that clothing there - ~ +? P- TeA AND BazaaR AT MARGATE IN AID OF |THE WESLEYAN CHURCH AT THAT PLACE.— as stated in| : ; | The above intereating event came off at Margate, | Lot 19, as previously announced, on the 16th inst. | Though kindly invited by the ladies who had the | management of the affair, we were unable to at- i top ft ving yreat! to the premium on ( 8 — eo ty lious (the present tariff yielding about $100,000,- ’ sind will | 000) will make a sum of twenty millions ef dollars. " This twenty millions of dollars is an indirect tax the people, as it will most certainly be paid by ~omers of imported articles, say on teas, sees, these articles forwing fully a gf the imports under the will have ample oppor ume. good, aud winning tor hersen #8 and a still greater hereafter, while ers be free from the cares, the anxieties, the plexities that beset a great Court and the throre | ow of a monarch whose position exposes him to the | tue Cob. ~pi auimosity of greater neighbours and the tormenting | sugars, ~ : v a wiles of diplomacy. Ol ihe three brauches of the | two-thirds t Van House of Hesse, Dartastadt is the most important, | present tarill. or. ps Gavernment, should it result in blood, its promoters | was a large piece of cloth, (the cost of which teed not hope to escape either the censure of the | {'rown or the vengeance of an infuriated people j itis wiser to be just, and to place the impending tended for Military uniforms. | party yesue upon legitinate grounds ‘in good time. | A CATHOLIC LOYALIST. | has bees. converted into private uses, just as the Stee SPRING PARK ROAD. Mr, WHeLan; — Sir—Many persons wonder why that Gipsey path called “Spring Park Road "| —What has become of the Cloth and the cast-off | should have about 30 werth of broken stone laid | clothing! And until he answers that question, he | jon it, vrhile such public thoroughfares as Queen, | Great George and Kents Streets are wanting so} ier sol lmach of that Macadamising material to make} Force enrolled by the Liberals in 1055, and kept | | tend. Our correspondent at Lot 19 informs us that " | it was a decided suceess. He says :-— Too much Webel hon besome praise cannot be bestowed on the ladies of M | for their uutiring exertions to get up a Bazaar and | |'Tea; and every person who saw their handiwork quer! on the counters at the Bazaar, aud partook of the ] We Ga bo ged Bn Sey wa make a, excellent things of the Tea table, must confess that they deserve the highest encomiums. Some formed part of the charge of £154 13s 74d—) in- | , argate | of it we have never heard; but we suppose it | | Surplus wine after the Prince of Wales ban | was. enquiry for us, as he is in a good position to do it uiust allow us to state that the cost of the Armed | The weather give eclat te the entertainment. | them passable in the spring and fall seasons: in- | j ar for »months, was only £320 19 ; ‘ ! , na te ini goed evtee fer nee enentin, san. omy "| soon brightened up, aud the countenances of the uneasiness was felt in the morning when the | murky clouds gave tokens of an unfavourable day + | but the ladies did net relax in their exertions to | 2ccomplishe put into commission within thtee meee =a Gen. Twiggs died “ Augeste, Git, on the Hon. Johu 8. Phelps is appointed Gover a4 Arkansas: adh Gen, #heply of Portland ditto of Louisiane Confederate Gen. Johaston is in a Critical dition. aaa Sr Jony, July 2 The recent escape of the Confederate guna “ Arkansas” is — correct, but the Teport Of the damages she did is greatly exaggerated, (") ‘The tederal vessels suffered very slightly, (1) The Carondelet engiged her, and attempted board bet-~beth throwing hot water, bd The Federal loss was 12 killed and severgi tally wounded. wor. Carleton's expedition from California Santa Barbara tm Arozona, forming a} Col. Carby and securing Mesita 1 : and northern tier of countries of Texas, restoration of Fort Fihmete, Anzona, Bliss, Texas: Guerillas are stil active i Fennessee, — Three bridges have been burnt Within eight miles of Nashville. : Forest's force is 50 miles from Nashville? fhq sry and ond Port and they are all now united by family tes with vce ro asd ‘ , ‘ ; a gS a! ‘ROM THE SOUTH, troops are out, aod great excitement e England :—Electoral Hesse, or Hesse Cassel, by FR . j noe Ace xiste, ony, Sate Me of Cambridge ; Hesse Homburg by } The Richmond Dispatch of WwW edne. day moat, y's Ohne vive Bocce aden ai the marriage of a daughter of George ILL. to the | Monday afternoon a ae eee ror caer ga ergad rey » ° | were . ot " . ° on SORARAPS SORES ORE GHGTORND, Bayon Meee The state of affairs in Russia may indeed be} at Jeast is at anend. There is nothing to justify have been overtaken aud seattered in Ker the base tool of a corrupt and urprincipled fuetion. | Square, and from Queen Square up Great George | eatling themselves the * present Government '—a/ street ta the Churchyard, wants and should have | place at the residence of his brother, Mr. P. Brady, ' faction ail rovtenness gad corr tion, fram the Hon hevery shoveltull of the stone that is now and may} at about 2 o’olock on Tuesday morning, the 22d | the auction which soa after ecenrred, The | there was much of the excellent eake to apare for | e : ; | well jikened to a voleano in full eruption. PFO! the shores of the Caspian to the Baltic, coutla- the belief, however, that our government will fail From | to improve its present advantage. L’ressed to the retaking cannon, horses, and other property, cap. tured by them at Cynthiana. , 5. P-—~- down ta duck Parbuckle, Governor Dun. | ; a: came? wt : ie ‘ , ie echo e Bin ie theee d - 4 ‘. q 2 soe boy. © pe broken in the Divers 2. be an ecemnbe ‘linet. The Rev. gentleman had been jn a very | ceeds from the Tea and Bazaar realized the very | grations are still the order of the day and night, | wall, as ihe enemy now Is, he will not be ar once @) Fifty Federal Cavalry have been made prisonery You, Mr. disor, this ane act alone is quite sutticient | Besides, how much more — ble woul it he to | feeble state of health for several t! oa | handsome. sum of £155, Nor is the evil confined to any particular classes | to revive froui the severe blow that has been in-| by the Contederate torces operating sear Boones, fe prove the above assertion. A greater picce of | the Street Comimnittee of the City Council to have ; feeble state af health for tae oe Pe cou . of districts, such as the interior or the seaboard. | flieted upon him, and MeClellan, in attempting to | ville, Kentucky. Skirnishing in that locality Was {ngratitade and injnstice comld not have been com- | such stone placed where it om eae wanted, inster |) which reudered jt necessary for him to relinquish | sana ..i ‘ide ich j ‘ j } few yeurs myer he Ae ad of oan cadets Aterest to sell their lands to the Government at serion was preached by the Rev. Dr. McDonald, | sorlsalt teapedt hate re of yor walla { i . j »* 6 a + erston’s | = Ns ki ar are ye earl Far serees, of reasonably low rates rather than paying a large of the Cathedral Church, in which be paid a just) Fortification scheme. Mr. Osborne was,as usual, | of the: private baildings now tein orected | Suiouritin the'shape of a new tax. This object | tribute tu the virtues and pious labours of the de- ese ag " aa = ieee pings expense ot | it to they all odni ‘ | i the ae vig . | 38 Dobie Inend and ieader, and Mp, Cobden was | their ; be "y - — micah lupe fr | was candidly stated by the Leader of the Govern parted Priest. The body was then consigned to) trenchant. He told the Premier that “he had | afew days ayo. ment in the House of Assembly ; and was made,| its last resting place, many hundred spectators had passes in that House with men who in his-| ¥~is public property, und | a8 we showed last week by the extracts from the testifying their affectionate remembrance of the | Ty Would be recognised as the superiors of the Proprietors’ Memorial, the principal groundwork | deceased by tears and lamentations. | noble lord—(cheers)—and if he were to choose . : ; : | | an antagonist in that assembly, he would select of their complaint against the Bill. apis the nuble viscount as the most vulnerable of liy- of which the corner stone was sid by the Masonic fraternit merits mention. It will be a very extensive build- ing, and an enduring monument fo the public spirit of the Georgetonians, and to their zeal for the wel- fare of ss 16 . ™ of shi- ” 7 an 99 . . | tectute in peculiarly local and doubtless when ceve.| Ato employing the Military Force contem-| ARRIVAL oF THE LiEwt. Goversor axp Mf Statesmen.” (Great cheering and laughter.) rally know » and faded, will be the one a a , tee the Shih do lichen So the alvil suthesities | LAGY:-Hie Excclicncy the Licet, Gore sa He then announced that if the Chancellor of the | plated by the as helps to the civil authorities | LADY. : 3 eur, “rovernor and) Exchequer, who was the connecting link between | all public editice throug! )' Wi : . . . y . nape Ament» — in collecting the rents of the Proprictors, no one | Mrs. Dundas returned to Charlottetown from their | a large party on that side of the House and the koown in England when the Steainer left, and | voted $20 to each man enlisted there, which will | A large and enthusiastic “ war meeting” was | held itt New York on Tuesday atternovn, in order to bring cut reerviis, Similar meetings are being heldelsewhere. Reeruiting is, however, anything ; | but brisk, although some of the towns and cities give additional bo. “ties of from 350 te Srv The‘ Tisnes’ staves that there are ruaours, which are credited, of co binet changes. The reported mutiny o “ebe) soldiers at Fort | Delaware is not believed at ¢ ..“ladelphia. | General Scott, who had been stcnping in New / York for the last three Weeks, has returned te! | West Point. (the boatmen at the West against employment of! blacks on the river steamers and at Cincinnat: | On the 10th this feeling culmivated in a row, A Washiagion despatch says the Ways and! Means Comittee have agreed to report te the ifouse a bill making postage stamps a legal cur- rency. This measure was recommended by Se- cretary Chase. The Confederates are said to have recaptured | Baton Rouge on the Mississippi, near New Or- leans, making 1500 Federals prisoners. ‘The Fe- derals fear the re-appearauce of the ubiquitous | Jackson in Western Virginia, and are in consi- derable trouble. The State of Maine will pay a bounty of $ te each recruit mustered into the United States service in @ new regiment, and $35 in an old re- giment. The banks advance the money. with the United States payment will make an ad- vanee of $70 and $75. The city of Portlaud has jt t be in addition. New York, July 16.—The British steamer | There appears to be a good dealof feeling among | * killed, wounded and prisoners; and that of these three-fourths at least fell ou the two great engage- ments of Priday and Monday. ‘that the Southern boast that they captured 20,000 | prisoners is noasense; they really took about 7,000 39 or 8,000, while the Federals in turn took one or This | statement; rid mishing in front of the hnes, but ne severe fighting ths occurred. The Scottish American Journal estimates the strength and losses of the contending armies near Richniond as follows :— “That the three corps-d'armee of the Federal j army, with reserves and independent rerps, all under General McClellan, numbered 90,000 eifee- tive wen. “That the Southern forces, including the old Manassas army (60,000), the new ceuscription levies (40,000), and the columu of Stonewall Jackson (say 50.000), was actually much larger tian the Federal anmy, as the bodies i» the Son- thern service are ney much mere concentrated al ) than those of the Union aracy, * As to the losses. Jotere, by the published statements of loss in certain divisions and regi- ments, and vy the lists of killed and wounded, it ' would not be surprising if the entire Pederal joss from the commercement vf the batile to ita close | footed up the prodigious Humber of 40,000 rey in ( We may say here wo thousand of their men captive.) Of the Soa- bern loss, we cannot even approach an accurate but, judging by the result of previous ‘ngagements, we estimate the real loss to have ween about the same on beth sides. And this terrific slaughter resulted, after all, in an indecisive | moriand Times contains the following sensible re; b ? attle or series of battles THE LATE COLONEL THOS. CASS, | tination is said to be Ingersoll, Loadon, Colling- ; space sn prevents. me giving a minute des-, it. In order to commtnication with the boring districts, a steamer was parebased this ng to ply between Georgetown, Montague, assistance in that way. > ~&e. 's wus brought here, when, owing to some slight faalt in her machinery, eke did not work very well. Immediately, a num- ber of re, taking their cue from “ Ross's Weekly,” and led on by a certain officious offieia|, | ever dreamt of such av absurdity ; and certainly tour in the neighbouring Provinces on Tuesday | } the landholders themselves did not expect any morning last. Lady Constance and Lord Harvey Administration, were to leave the Cabinet, there | were eighty members who would invite the Op- | | position to take a step that would oust the Minis- | The House of Assembly | daughter and son of the Earl of Mulgrave, came | try in a fortnight. This significant declaration | jp and Executive Couneib of 1855 had such an afec- from Halifax as guests of Mrs. and Mr. Dundas, Produced a deep nopression on the House. | tionate regard for the: Proprictors—and thelatter On the evening previous to His Excellency’s ar- | knew it well—that sooner than employ one bayonet | rival, the Volunteers were summoned by the) , called up Mr. Gladstone, | that, as a member of the Cabinet, he was respon- sible for the measure, in favour of which, how- Ann arrived at noon in charge of Acting Maste Patridge. The Ann was discovered under the guns of| Fort Morgan, Mobile Bay, unloading arms, gun powder, &c., when the trigate Susquehanna ani 7 It! the gunboat Kanawha sailed into the Bay. The who simply explained | former engaged the Fort,and the latter succeeded iu cutting the neutral vessel out. r| The St. John Freeman of 15th inst. furnishes the | | subjoined particulars of the death of this geutle-| man and soldier, which cannot fail te prove inter- | | esting to his numerous friends and admirers in this | |city. The statement of our contemporary to the | effect that foreigners bear the brunt of the fighting H in the Federal army, and yet are devied the honors | ! and emoluments, is a simple truth, The citizens | nent, good-tempered, lenient, and forgiving to 4 , fault,—se much se that these qualities often sub, | jected bim to the censure of his superior officers, | Phe soldiers are savage against the murderer, | whose conduct they meation with augry deaunei: ‘ation and abhorrence. Mawa, it | sern, ie (a persan of somewhat intemperate antecedents, but was always well treated by the deeeased.—— | Montreal paper, Wtb. The Risnop or TLo0a.—is Lordship the Bishop ot Tha, RO. Adavinistrater af the Diocese of Quebec, reepived, before leaving Rome, letters. } | patent from tie flul.ess conferring a him the j title af neble Meman. The same | of was conierred ov all the Lishops whef assisted at ihe ceremenes of the eth June. Sm Eb. P. Tacue.—Phe Courrier of last even. ing announces that Pepe Pias LX. has eonterred upon Etiewne Pascal Taeche, M. L. ©, the dix, finetion of Commander of the ordeg gf St, Gregory the Great. } } / ' | | | ARRIVAL oF EMIGRANTS.—RBetween three ang four hundred emigrants, chiefly from arrived in Toronte by train on the Grand T. Railway yesterday (Suuday.) They crossed the Atlantic by the steauner Damascus, and their des wood, and Owen Sound.— Teronte Glebe, Mth. Av Artilrey man named Farrell, of No. 6 pres 10th brigade Royal Artillery, committed suici at Port Henry, Canada West, on the Int inet, by drowning higuself in the lake near the prt. NEW BRUNSWICK. Tue tate Vouvsveer Mererixc.—Phe Wea. marks : Not wore than two hundred were proxent, and the whole thing was destitute even of public spirit, to say nothing of military enthusiasm. Resolutions were passed, speeches made, and a committee ap- pointed to ask for subseriptions ; it was also to request the Sheriffs of the different Counties te call meetings, and otherwise assist in the ' scheme. Here then, for the present, the matter rests, and beyond this, for all practical purposes, it will not be carried. The whole thing is wrong from the commencement—it is based upon a wrong principle and will only end in disapointment to His Referring to the recent expose of military se-| of the North do not hesitate to say that the foreign | Excellency avd others, who onght to know better commenced 4 furjous oualang)t o phesied that the company would Bhat she would sink bour, Nothing Was too bad us remark, en passant, that hove shiureholders Were either seekers or persoms who, regretful for bavi seriled to the share list, now wiskedan opportunity | to evade puyment of their shares. When the ex- her wus at ite yreatest height, Mr. @uewent against weber, A suecessfn beautiful Feulanty on ean “ phatcy the ists when they beheld Volantee 7 on dri! eveni we substan fess bent tinl « i whi execute w veteran of them one cau well exclaim: ooning ** | to test the esteem in whieh he is held by the ten- * To here bound for tattle strife, antry for bis reeent as well as furmer champion- — Sdomarmbee ful lif ship one their behalf, let bisw offer himself at the One glance st their — ae next election for some Diatriet in which there is ‘The Georgetonians feel secure from invasion while wap eel less foot ou their sae this movem-nt continues a fee\ asqured that, should i Caotecr wil a that thenceforw “ The terror aftheir name Will add lustre to the fume Tit , blow up, or barn in the bar- te be aguiusther.| Pope knows all this quite well—he koows that| the wharf; but whether it was that the notice | ? her machinery, pronouneed her in running ; ItAp was made; and the | Week—and we repeat fhe opinion—tbat no mad- little steamer now plies with rapi between the places pheeli which hod i Fiieg| Published in the ‘Islander’ Wim. H. P. pe K The old company has sergonmt d; and pr town prescutes (tite a martial , ab imposing s room, ee in their A vege e drill Loo ; ! tad ap Prose os like true and | te ait ned by her: | proprietor driven into the Gulf of St. Lawrence. d fin! hey ithe proprietors, as aclass, are extremely unpopu-| mg wob-|lar; and he foolishly thinks that the Liberals’ might be rendered unpopular likewise, if he could| ' only show that they were in league with the land- whe bad been work -| holders to oppress the tenantry! We stated last 1é prenie eappointe i { ity and) man alae meutioned.| even onein the most hopeless stage of lunacy, " of the secession- | nks would perpetrate such nonsense as he has lately | Setting himself up as a sympathiser with the tenantry ! as a man jealous of their rights! ! and indignant at the wrongs contemplated by their Proprietary task-masters—thé thing passes human comprehension! It is, at least, too ludicrous for serious notice. If Mr, Pope should be anxious cle to wart y and to mark the mar. es as they the yarious king a majority of tenant voters; and we will engage , for they | that he will come out of the District quieker than invader | seil,their | them hard hi kets. blows so lustily oA gg he went inte it) even if he had fifty revolvers in| | nander-in-Chief, when the Steamer would reach was too short, or that Mr. Hatch his voice distine was extremely small—oflicers and privates aumber- ing, we understand, only twenty two. A a ARRIVAL OF THE Ricuyr Rey. Dr. MciIn- TYRE. — The venerable and esteemed Bishop of Charlottetown arrived in this city, on his return from Rome, on Friday morning jast so early was quite unexpected. His Lordship came passenger in the R. M. Steamship Asia from | ¢: Liverpool, together with his Grace the Archbishop of Halifax, and other Ecclesiastics of the Catholic Chureh. The venerable Prelate resumes the duties of the Episcopate in excellent health and spirits. After High Mass, in the Cathedral yesterday, the Bishop gave a very interesting account of his journey to Rome and back—describing the great cities and countries through which he passed, and | referring particularly to their magnificent eccle- | sinstical edifices. He commented on the great historical monuments of ancient Rome; and al- luded to many of the most interesting reliques and “The Secretary says that it“ would cost not leas than FIVE THOUSAND POUNDS 4 YEAR” to rap- port the Military Force which the Liberals con- records which illustrate Sacred History that came |under his personal observation. His Lords!.ip | feelingly touched upon the kind and gracious re- They pro-| in their defence, they would see almest every, Town Crier to be in readiness to receive the Com-| ever, he did not vouchsafe a word of defence. did not make) jars of the assumed F’ tly heard, the muster of Volunteers | mond might be included in the discussion then to y Britain's glory und greatness near and that Li Senden po intrude too canch.on your valuable Yours,&e., © ”P? (The shore Letter on the wonderful energy and enterprise uf the Georgetown people reads very apuch like a guiz It may uyt haye been intended templated estabhshing under the Rent Roll Bill. ception given to him by the Sovereign Pontifi— patie pure wvention of the Secretary's. ‘There and the interest evinced by him in the welfare of was no estimate ever given to the public of the | the Catholic community of this Island. The Bis- eoat-off the Armed Fores; and it. was certainly hop promised to give a description, on another never contemplated by the Liberal Government | occasion, of the interesting ceremonies observed thatthe cost should be avything at all near the! at the canonization of the Japanese Martyrs. su mentioned: Mr. Pope snakes a statement ar ce Mr. W. 8. Lindsay, M. P. for Sunderland, had ostponed his totion on the American question, from J1th to Ith inst., in order that the particu- ederal defeat before Rich- | take place in the House of Commons. There has been twe judgments in the celebrated ease ef Yelverton vs. Yelverton. In the Scotch eourt Lord Ardinillan has delivered an elaborate | judgment declaring in the suit of Mrs. Longworth | Yelverton, that there has beer neither a Seotch | nor av Irish marriage,—~and in Major Yelverten’s | cross-suit, inhibiting the jady from assuming bis | His return | name or calling herself bis wife in future, and im- { posing upon her a penalty of 250 for having done’ s0 hitherto. Meanwhile in the Irish eourt of | ommon Pleas, the verdict obtained by Mr. 'Thel-_ wall, which established Mrs. Yelverton’s marriage, has been upheld, the Judges being equally di- vided,—the Chief Justice and Mr. Justice Ball deciding against the motion to set the verdict aside,—and Judges Keogh and Christian taking the opposite view. Already an appeal has been lodged against Lord Ardmillan’s judgment to the Superior Court in Scotland, but whatever the re- sult, there is little doubt that the whole question will be ultimately taken to the House of Com- mons. On the 10th, Mr. Peabody was entertained at | the Mausion House ty the Lord Mayor, having | in the earlier past of the day received the free-) dom of the City at the Guildhall in a gold box, valued at 100 guineas. This is a becoming re- cognition of the eminent American banker's mu- nificent gift of £150,000 to the poor of London. The Viceroy of Egypt bas been visiting Liver- pool and Manchester, where he was received with the greatest respect and enthusiasin. MARRIAGE OF THE PRINCESS ALICE. A London paper menting upon the various causes that prevented the affair from being con- ducted with more becoming splendour, says :— “In these painful circumstances the nuptials of the amiable Prineess Alice were shorn of all! i erets in the Senate, the Washington correspatident of the New York ‘ Post’ remarks: “ The facts stated by Mr. Chandler were known to many persons here; but the Democratic sena- | | tors, who have been too ready to listen to unjust statements respecting the ability of the President | still further to reiuforee Genetal MeClellan, were | evidently startled by this semi-oficial statement. | When the public shall learn the number of the troops sent to the Peninsula previous to the recent | news of battles—as it will learn if the call for in- formation is answered by the War Departinent— there will be a general astonishment, and it will be proved beyond a doubt that either the losses of the army of the Potomae by disease and batile have been enormous, or General MeClellan at. this time has a large army under kis command.” The campaign in Virginia is being discussed by | the press as it should be. The blundering of the | Administration is everywhere acknowledged and | denounced. The people will no longer submit to | the impositions which have been practised upon | them. Among the outspoken journals upon this | subject is the New York ‘ World,’ a strong Repub-| lican sheet, ‘That paper of July 8th says :— “The rebellion has but one solitary chance of success, That chance lies in the short-comings of our government. It is settled that the loyal North has strength enough and spirit enough. It is sei tled that its officers have skill enough. It is set- tled that its soldiers have courage enough. But it is not settled that its rulers have wisdom enough. | It is yet to be determined whether they are equal | to their work. Thus one thing we know, that the | register thus far is againgt them, Here in this} second week of July, sixteen months after the} first gun at Sumter, and twelve months after the | warning of Bul] Run, the Confederacy has as | the Union. element of the population must fight the battles of | The alternative is, “enlist or starve | j | te —Vyou.: “ Telegrams recvived by his friends in this city on Saturday last brought intelligence that Thomas Cass, Colonel of the Ninth Massachusetts Volun- | teers, died in Boston of wounds received in the | late fights before Richmond. The first reports of | the struggle stated that he was wounded. This statement waa afterwards contradicted, but it| proved to be true. It is said that when his regi-| ment, which, previously weakened by disease, in that terrible fight lost 310 men, was thrown inte disorder at a crisis of the battle, Cass placed him- self at the head of a regiment which, in coming to his relief, had lost its Colonel, and while thus hold- ing the overwheluning force of the Contederates at bay, he was shot, the ball passing through his mouth and cutting away part of his tongue, and so sorely were the Northeraers pressed, that he lay for hours uncared for on the field, when timely assistance might have saved his life. Cass, when young, lived in St. John, where his sister and many other relatives still ive. He was one of the best regimental officers in the Federal army, his regi- | ment being the only one of all those encamped near Washington that extorted unqualified praise from | Russell of the ‘Times.’ It took no very prominent | part in actual fighting until recently before Rich- | mond, when, like all the other Irish regiments, it | haps of glory, if net of honors and rewards, Yet if their Colonel had lived, he would undoubtedly, by the gallantry and conduct of which he gave such honorable proofs, have forced the Government to award him a share in these honors, which in a remarkable degree are withheld from those who bear the brunt of the contest—to be lavished on | celleney bas just made St. John. “The law is too | lands | got far more than its share of bloodshed, and per-| many effective men under arms as the true go- verument, and the first great battle has yet to be begun with the advantage of numbers on the loyal, and not on the rebel side. That is the record. We challenge any living man to confute it. Our success, thus far, is mainly attributable, not to what our armies have done in the field, but to what our ships have done from the water. Well | worse than worthless politicians.” NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. Baneoor, July 19. It is supposed Gen. Halleck will not take the field but be entrusted with important duties at than he should have advised him to adopt another course. We endeavoured some time ago to point out the difficulty of working out a Volunteer hie in this country, compared with an organization of the kind at home where His Excellency has been accustomed to reside. Tt will now be found that what we then stated has actually come to pass, and nothing could have made the mutter clearer or plainer than the result of the visit which His Ex cumbersome, and not by any meansappiicuble tothe requirements and position of this country, and an attempt to carry out its provisions with the arsistance of $10,000, is all gammon and nonsense—the money will be frittered and wasted to no purpose, whole thing will end in smoke. Tue Crors.—From all partsof the Province the iutelligeuce respecting the crops is very favorable. —St. John. N. .* Courigs.’ * NOVA SCOTIA. Tue Crors is Nova ache pe 9 Bridgetown Register is favorably impressed wi e Or of the crops in Nova Scotia this season. it says: “The progress of present vegetation is traly mar- vellous. Even grass, it is now hoped, will not much ka! any) below an ~ “ e = and all kinds of grain are looking 4 corn in particular bids fajr for an uncommon! heavy crop, Pruit trees, espacially and ple give goominn of fruit in Temgeee 2 graLig 1ave so improved of late that we may antct ate from our dairies an unusually supply of utter and cheese.”’ t Sap Accrpext.—We regret to learn the death by drowning of Charles, son of Lauchlin NeDoeaidiet - of Bouladiere Island. The accident hare on Sunday last, by the upsetting of a boat jo hich the pare 3 and ‘two other }y ya sailing on ce. Strange to say, young Mc only one of the threé who could swim. ‘The ue fortgnate youth who lost bis lite was @ pro lad of 17 years. We deeply sympathize with family in their bereavement:—C. B. News. A young man named Carey was killed last wast the Albion Mines. ile was coming up one of the eep shafts in a tab, and when stepping off at was ms wich, seeiyg that the writer says he is @ stran- may every loyal cheek mantle with indignation. Washington. get tothe place Jf it were apy one that was of King’s Couaty, be would certainly be accused of poking fuu at ile quet inhabitants, Whether it was intended for a joke or not, we cannot but regard the ronctading femaris, respecting the Vo Tenist foreign invesion, a8 Ja). EXAMINE. | os teedih | whieh rather seriously conflicts with his assum p- )tion about. the“ five thousand pounds.” He says | the Government paid “upwardsef £500 to defray the eost of this force during the few short week« of ita existence.” It Mr. Pope will substitute }months for “ weeks” in one part of hisstatement, he wil! be nearer the truth. The Force referred ‘e'was in existenée for nearly NINE MONTUS— we believe there was no intention to iacrénse it, nd, it could not Cost anything like intensely comical. — x4 oo angels fear to tread.” " Our p | “Pods rush Ge In the abowe | ' fe +" 4 ae about pounds a yéar.” But wéate pre- fo show that for'the ‘eight or nine months i Pope into bis five bund red per Mtoat Bi Hope posibey t asserts “apy f 0.” e tarn to Make r the head only Pope has stated a a ets a ADVERTISING PATRONAGE.—It appears that ‘ Ross’s Weekly’ made a statement to the effect thata certain advertisement relating to the Prince of Wales College was ordered to be pubhshed in all the papers of this place, except the ‘ Weekly,’ and Mr. Ross, we areinformed, expressed his sur- prise at the apparent slight, but did a good turn _by publishing the advertisement without charge. The ‘ Protestant’ takes up the subject, and hints at the neglect shown to it in a similar way, but states that it was equally generous as the ‘Weekly’ in gratuitously inserting the advertisement. The ‘Islander’ next comes forward and eries ditto. It rather huffishly refers to the Board of Educa- tion, which, it appears, had the ordering of the advertisement, and states that the order eonfined it te two papers only —one of which was the "Royal Gazette,’ “and,” the Proprietor of the uder says, “ we presume the ‘ Examiner,” being ‘organ of the Opposition, was selected by scretary a’ the other.” You are wrong, Mr. Ings. The ‘ Examiner’ was not the favoured one in this case; and, morcover, we don't know } { the magnificence with which they would other-| wise have been surroanded. But splendour does | not always create happiness; in domestic life it. too often mars it; and we sincerely hope that the | love of ber husband and of her family will onee than compensate to the gentle Princess for any | waut of gorgeous array at the marriage ceremony. | There is every reason for indulging in this hope, fur the mariage is not one of those ‘cold-blooded affairs of State in which the heart of a Princess is cruelly crushed te smooth the path for some infamous Court intrigue or State policy. The Princess Alice has not ‘been ferced to give away her hand te a husband to whom she could not give her heart. Her future happiness has not beev ruthlessly sacrificed to the exigencies of Stateeraft. She has net been sold to buy a worthless alliauce, to up a hollow truce, or te cement an old at has been Three times more true men than false in the land, and yet, in the grapple, the false ever outnumber- ing the true! This thing must stop, or the cause must fail. The gunboats can achieve little more. They have nearly reached their limits. The re- bellion can be met in its last interior strongholds by the army alone. Woe betide us if that army shall not be strong enough for that final encoun- ter!’ The new issue of United States paper is soverely condemned by the United States press, ‘ ‘Tribune’ says :— ‘As yet the evils of a depreciated currency are not generally felt. Let the premium on gold rise a little higher, and they surely willbe. It will be idle to protest or resist; when coin can be sold at ten per cent. premium, shopkeepers, grocers, bar- bers and newsboys will hie with it to the broker, and will only change your note with detestable evidences ot National bankruptey—~‘Giood for a ride,’ ‘ Good for a drink,’ ‘ Good for a shave,’ hut eniaeny good fur nothing—as was the case in é “ We earnestly entreat the Secretary and the two houses to unite in saving the country from thus abyss. Use the public credit to the requisite extent; but donot balauce the saving of one per cent. on a of the public debt against the } i } The) } Consolidation of army of Virginia wader Pope and others ascertained. Arrangements warrant the conclusion that measures are in progress to ensure everywhere unity of action aud secure suc- eess. Pope’s present orders are highly popular with military men. Gov. Nelson arrived at Nashville on Thureda with heavy reintorcemeuts.—Guerillas still occupy Henderson. Steamer Commerce from Memphis for Louis- ville stopped below Henderson, declaring it unsafe to pass. Correspondent of Ney. York press mentions a large proportion of ar cers absent from their posts, many being skulkers. Flour—Extra $5 55 a $5 40. BanGor July 21. It is believed that Gen. Banks succeeds Secre- tary Stanton, with Geu. Halleck as Military Ad- viser. Confederate papers state that iron-clad ram and gunboat Arkansas came down Yazoo River, 15th, running by Federal fleet above Vicksburg, driving the Benton ashore, Llowing up a ram, burniag one and damaging others. She was badly cut urg batteriss. ! . twenty men. nauseous Inations of a shinplaster. up + fore reaching cover of Vicksburg ; - Federal loss reported heavy. ¥ | were the Rev. Dugald McDonald, of Tignisb, and surface, missed his footing, aad was bed the bottom and instantaneously killed. | The y man was about 19 years of age.—Colo ee — The quarterly examination of the Sea Cowhesd District School, Lot 1, came off on Monday the 7th mst. Among those present on the occasion the Hon. Mr, Perry ; also the Trustees and agrest number of the resident hoyseholders of the Di trict. The pupils itted themselves very ere ditably in tos varie Miona, in Reading, Writing Grammar and General [ntormation — ‘at proving the skil} and ability of their teacher. ue the sion of the examination the Rev. *F McDonald addressed the pupila at considerable length on the advaytages to be gained by - Education, and cougratulated the pavents ing obtained the services of so efficient 3 Sofie ee rge 0 A A notice by the press of such examinationt oom not fail in having a beneficial effeet 5