little more propriety, be las a plagiary than the architect can de censured meaning of | Fitzgerald's letters ta the people of Prince gritty of misreprosenting the thors frum whom he eites, by giving the| Rdward Isiand,for the Duke's special perasal The Examiner. of the public inte an_iatenser fame. The in- tentions of the French Goverment, hewever, are said te be unaltered, ‘To comnteract the wart wwomitl give it thot titke; bat it in to be hoped thet, aefing iw the spirit of Orrwngeism, we shall net find theee of four DY Aeeies where there was only i that & Beat Comuaiieiower ; | vivimity recently let a jp’ ue a mean copier of Angelo or Wren, beemuse | text without the eontext < and further, he! Let them go #tronghy recommended by bis i = — a ya wdke wn aa Ss fem engin ee prope one. ‘The Broker's shop was shut, stter a great of work ow the road he digs hee marble from the same quarry, | has, in the most shameless and (higraat man- Excellency. Thero i no doubt but that, 4 K yember 2nd, 1863. ‘odour On oaketer iopuion ILL. tothe Preneh | deal of minebief was dene, throng: Phe enormous | te a pertieular friend of hie, withoas gi ou rquares his stone by the same exé, and unites | ner, wwterpolated words and passages pot to those brillivgt. profeand, and re cae! Charlottetown, Ro Chourbers ot tew0th July, 1850, as» justidieation Gh the presiding genive. Wee Bre Wore for- ficient notice for pale: «mmpetitinn, — them if columns of the sume order. ‘he found in the writer trom whom he Quotes. works, will ereate a revolution in the m for bringing the war te a close. The reiteration tanatiiie hid regard tul@ranges am Their shop is cifcumetaners which led to the Cone ietion : Now, all this only proves that-writers nay have similar thoughts, and employ simiber ideas. without being liable te be charged with plagrariem from each ather. In the cavay trorme which L have cited, Johnevom ad- mits that wothing degrades an author more than te be proved guilty of plagiarism. What would be thonghs of the areltect who, instead of digging his martle from the quarry would take a corniee trom the building of Another to adorn the columns of his own ? Ile would be a thief certainly, and the write: who takes the labors of another and ap- If it be necessary, these charges cau be fully his Gmos. Leta special meeting of the sup- shewn in another communication. As the porters of the Government be called forth- public is now ia & proj er temper to weigh the with. There will he little trouble in getting evidence al truth and reasoe, iv it not tairto them to xppoint the Revda. Sutherland and assume that Mr. Pope has been as gailty, Preagerald as parts of « delegation. Then whepewer it suited his purpose, in all his) with another person, a layman of influence, iwritings of the practices uboye referred to,| whose talents ure of te highest order, whose as he has been iw eve letter in which be hes attainments in literotare command respect jbeen proved guilty ot plagiarism? Therglore,) with the most intellectual and fastidious whatever the incorrigivly sgoorant and pre- circles, and whose eloquence combines the judieed may think, no scholar, or person of fire of Fox with the elearness and profundity jintelligence, can in the future regard the of Pitt, there is but ane such man in the writing of Mr. W. tL. Pope with any teelings | country, and tt will not do tor me tosay wo ee na LATEST NEWS FROM EUROPE. ARRIVAL OF THE ENGLISH MAIL. ‘Tus R. M. Steamer Canada arrived at Halifax on Wednesday mosning last frow Liverpool. Latest dates are te the 18th ult. The Mail for this Island reached here on Friday mwrning. A considerable part of the news, thus furnished, as columns, was }will be seen by referenee to our | auticipated by the arrival of the Hibernia at New but those of scorn and eontempt. The reader) be is,who will form a delegation worthy of the | York. to reassure the pnblic wind and dispel the Ubasieme which prevail #ib reteremeeto the Polish questiog, The returns tron Polaad contain the same sickening details of bowbarity which have charac- wore determined than ever to extewminate every person fore the soil laviyg the slightest sy wpathy with the insurrection. ‘ i The news of a general riemg BY Georgia, Pag- of such a@eatinents is contended for a neersragy |: terized them for menthe, the Russias appearing jyewts of Orangeism belougi shot by the goed bold hand of f of New- ‘castle before much evil fas Beet wierd on the , thet fhe presiding to thi Esiand, but now a hie travelay tried by hand, with bridhent stevess, at the game sty¥e of-art practived by D’Arey; but the former was considerate eneugl community. It is true, ind hestan, and Circassia, against the Russian autho- rites has been confirmed. In this, it appears, they } have been assisted by the diseruborkatuve of a large amount of military stores sent eat from | to confine his great operations to one victim, while the hatter extended them to many. There are some few Orangemen, we understand, there wee a cullusion betwerm the gives and thy the job, wikh @ view te the Prrrmiary advantage of the former. Vhe rb waw gir not properly suld—for L5—it war dene in littl | better than a day by five men, whe ieblied away 6 considerable portion of their time while bunt if. | and our correspondent assures us that the wou sw he well and: profitably dene for twenty fiog | shillings. But the Commissioner ~generons may) —thought the labourer was worthy of greater hing, and: added, after the work was dene, proprintes them ae hes own, without Amogst the English news, the most note- Enelwud en board the Chesapeake, 2 Byne Lwho will be quite delighterk at eherer—nenit, ' acknowledgment, is as equally chargeable | need not be told that in this Colany, with| country that sent them, and the i Piel) worthy items are, the shocks of Earthquakes} gpoamer. The Russian envey Saas of their Incorporation Bill. These are the fortunate | pound to the five. We forbear i with gure. The defartions which the) ite three bund d common sohetass, intuler hate adverse y we ete sen = al which have been experienced in England—and lias protedte a ial fd Gibeassian on | fellows who were permitted tu borrow large sums | nake further enquiries, cithet iz p give of the word plagaarise— | aneeand ‘all uncharitableness have steadily | pared a the Duke's £31¥ would he ~ Phils death of Lord Lyndhurst, the most accom- the at of puriamag the writings or published atalked on their high horae ower the length | perugnt of the works ave mentioned, va | pret ’ Preteen! ae works of another, and plagrarist—a thref in| and breadth of PK. Island. The spirit of Will not, bowever resist the flood gf arguwent, | plished orator, statesman an ) ' p- icerature, surety shew that those best quali lintoleranes has been so long amongst us, that) the trde of eloquence, and the fascination ol | peared on the stage of English politics during the bed to judge eonsrder plagrrism a meen dis-;it bas abmost withered the green herbage of )toanner that will be brought t bar upon! present century. The foreign news indicates honorable act \ gry the peri. the public ree te oe — — ce a ee ~~: P —~ ae = tino se mp on te — ‘trouble and commotion in Europe at a date not laciariat ie guilt of ‘aleu besa aud of wing }ol eectal life. Alr. upe as certain y been) his Opish procitvitie iw tv 5 « ‘ : 4 r : d : pe nq Ly eslah anaes as be takes credit for the high priest who aa invoked this direfal charm of deuspetind and the power of argu-| lar distant, buy we regret we ape. roewe. learning and ability to whioh he had ne/|spirit more than any other. Therefore, ment. Let no consideration of expense deter; at present, to offer comments on any feature claims. Lenee, when once the plagiarist is} with this parroté-gan spiked, the Monfor you trom making the necessary arrangements | the pews. bed Se detected and convieted, be is sutlicientiy | out of repairs, and the defeat from the reeent) We are strong enough to carry every thing BRITISH NEWS. punished, as he is then subjected to the | broadside from Downing Street, that quint-| before as, and though people grumble at| py, ceremony of inaugerating the memerial to le xtcugraphers war frem an The Memorial Diplomatique states that the Arehduke Maxtnthan’+ aenbignous speech was meant as an acceptauee of thie Mexican throne, and that the Kiperor of the French was se de- lighted with it thai be tumaethiatel sent au auto- ftograph letter “ expressing bis satixfaction in engolistic terms.” Phe edrter of this paper, whe accompanied the Mesicuu dy patation te Priesie, has published further detstb of bie ir intersiew with their /eture Eaaperor, is which he says * that in order lo rightly undemtond the meramug of the Arcbhéeke’s veply toe the de; utation it is neewssary 6 in and contempt of those who formerly jessence of intolerance, Orangeism, ought) being taxed to defray the usual expenses ot | pis Hoyal Highnees the kite Prince Gunbott-tavk praised and admured hum. now to be ‘so low that none shuuld stoop to Goverment, we will so manage it that they | place on the 13th, at Aberdeen, in the presence f may now turn to the eas: of the Hon jdo it reverence.” ‘ | will pay cheerfully any sum that may be : I remain in tive hope of not being silent as| necessary to make the voyage to Bugiund VW ll Pope This gentl man, during the | . | : ornen | C able » Delegation. past tno years, has written several Jetters | long as since L last had the honor of address _combortable to the Delegati | ; Yours, in haste. pe woheun te: bjecte. Those whose | 'mg you. Yours traly, ‘ ee cae . . = a A og pele a acer afi his rene re- CONSERVATIVE. | SAPPY STUCK UP MeNOODLE. sagan . ; | To the Hon. Yeliow Skin MeQuack. The vceasion excited great interest, royal family. ‘ f Majesty has appeared in being the fiest tine public sitee her wy On Saterday, th ddresses ef eotwamtnla- u Were present & King of the Greeks by hin wtclajeagehss resteline London, biverpool and Manet r. Lhe Ppihellenio Commuiter Can as- sociation wihiel CoD sy ermyinent mMeubers Lot both Houses of Parliament!) also presented an rr — 34 £ wrded him as their = man, “ rsd Oct. 23d, 1863. successful champion, whilet inany Ditterly 4 slisaiie EP ee" ) LETTER | opposed to bim guve him credit for, at least, [AN INTERCEPTLE] JETTER ] | homg an erudite scholar, Lis admirers have | Reith ahi aoW cask | | fins Guen Ow ner, Oct. 26,1863. | a | ma : ARRIVAL OF THE “ HIBERNIA. LATER FROM ENGLAND! of her Majesty aud various other meu bers of the | to kaow that x was previonsly approved of beth fry the Riuperor of Austria and the Eniperor ot the Preven.” He does mat, however, expla the ‘condition demanded by the Acck«luke, viz, the j Hachixpensable ciorentees whieh aaall protect the Mesieon cospare trea the dangers which would ienace ite detegrity and ifs iidepcudence. TUE POLISH INSURREC'FEION. The Breslaner Zeitung of Thursday annemnuers that au banypewwal decroe hie detarbed the Gevern- heat ov Lewestow and the district of Lewze from t the kingdom. « Poland, weet bas declared then | cof money from seme of the Lod yes on their mere personal security. Without the Fnewrporation Bill the Ledges cannot swe, avg uwre thaw be sued; and it is not probable that, with the bright example of them eiet betese them, the borrower: will bem a very great hannvy te nefamd; nuless this allusion should «deme them inte speedy liqui- dation, in which case we heye all honest Orange men will be grateful to a8. eel THE DELEGALTION. Puree English Mails Lave arrived heve since ‘it wae known that the Delegates wer in Eng- laud, wid we have positive assurance, iw the fol- low ing extvagt trom the Londen Tones of the 15th ‘October, that they had at wast ene interyvaew with the Colomal Mipeter -— “The Hon. Edward Pahoet, Attomes-General, ‘and the Hou. Willems BR Pope, Colouial Seere- bi eee het we ATT | the Jetter, or even stating the ciremmstaneus “Easy kawtoos — pa APUY.” —Thiy “work. whieh emanates from: the extensive Pui, lishiag Hower of Mr. dioha Revell, hes been noticed sone fine since in eae cola We see no reason to aller the very hescur able opinions we then formed aad eapressed of ache, the ‘more we loolk at # the more wo hextent andthe general accuracy ot the j ‘it contaius, Ia is certainly @ work from x. old as well as youny may cavily acquire a ledge of one of the most pleasing branches of sb ou whieh the mind can be employed. By iieiling trated by Mays aud ether interesting ‘whieh eamnet full to be of great’ service iq ‘clucidating the text. The generat Agent , Lovett’s Publishing House, Mr. T. W. MeGrathyis vow in Charlottetown, and we trust be wi ; ; wT AF sae toe ati x ey hailed his . ag ee mi 4 rd Bsland, N. A., had an in Leen heard ofteo toexclaim that the professed), address to tiv Majesty, stating that they “peeferth Jucorporated protinces oi the Russian jtary of Prince Edware +r H< s sag theologians were as but children compared | Dear Sin, . fe : Sees? accession te the throue as an event full of ee | wor “ er maa atte General Mouravietl plerview on Monday with the Duke of Neweastle | away with-bis numerous orders tor the Cemgraphy, W asever the like heard or seen or pmagine: Sr. Toun’s, N. F., Oct. 20, 1863. | and sytnpathy ter a country which has long and) at the Colonial Office, Downy Street, on the } — - + ae -— ey with bis vast learning and matured intellect. | Lam actually speechless with indiznation!! justly commanded thé admiration of every lovey has “din Suwalki, te assume the jaubject of the laud tenarer of blat ewhony.” FO COBRESPON DENTS. It was said that he Was deeply read in the} ’ ~ Steamship “ Hibernia ” from Galway, 13th. [7"- i ayer rae ish, “Lon thst he was | @ “ works of the early Coristian Fathers, the ae magnet we pn tel oo anne "y p. m., on Tuesday, 20th. The de on addpeen, nth he wend | t the Buesaw aecepanent IS} And yet, strange te aay, the pagers im the servies) «KE gickerbocker’s” connmunication i in 5 6) | that the righteous ane ed Ge ‘ * Heela ” arrived at Liverpool on the morning oi ; is hith afte . firsnly te incerporate Poland cou- ee x 21 + Tine , i? ‘ naa een hele er peter enter be raed FOSr® and ds God-learmg advisers siould a ord t yea yo Ne ar pee ce ahs etal ee sett gage agg and pay s thee Gopermacet coutaa not one Tine | come disputes about the Voluuteet For at abe 7 I : ‘a hiet bet rmtithed re ed ged a ag ~ The statenient that the REN GoNrreN, bap in Paria a the Sobovriang Wednesday. the possession of that country, as recognized hy on the subject ! We tay be told it would be Dundas, Lot 58, is declined 4 ee, ee ere | the Duke of Neweastle, 1 enough to make) oi) gd the Rams in the Mersey is confirmed. : ithe treaty ot Vienna, ne longer te exist. Should | premature te make any dixelosures respecting the -“o- + Ramee Letepevanen,*. exptaining Suates }one'’s hair stand on end. To see a member) Phe Daily News selieves every English gentle- Parliament has beew farther progued to \ustria participate in the declaration, it is said ‘result of the Delegatiow aati the Delegates shall tiv We are glad to welcome to our cohimne his letters, he, with the air of being " canta “pee gjgee sie : been blinded by | Déeceiiber Jet. Fete nag ihe dedi die aaa than rset let such pious, talented, disinterested, 874) yan whose reason has net been bind > | i Russia wil) tumediately deviare war ayainst that f . ‘ P : t aiet e trorvaghly conversant | with the Christian | Sistineaiched statesmen, set down in 4 grave) prejudice and passion will congratulate hinselt! = Phe actual surplus revenue of the United King- Power. Tue wartke party indeed gains ground jhave returoed, aud given be @ repeat te thelr con- : again ae old — sibuter, Conservative,” whim Peete ene, Sk-aieanee Semee’ | state paper as a parcel oi fire-brands, & paoek upon the step taken by the Goverumetl 10 Se1Zi0g) dom of Great Britain aud Ireiand, beyond ‘the | daily, (stituents. But we kuow what valee is te be put | comnumndention, iy adother part of oar paper, Will, of the Fathers Ll have named" (3t Chrysoston. dt. Jerome, and St. Auguatine) ** passages equatly as strong as those fram derome, Gon | | imued publiely and tu their faces, in what tigeunatery of pagan erudstion.”” Yet, the terms must they be ebaracterised privately Very passage whet) he does quote as from | ad halite their backs? If such u cutting tue Rams. bactual expenditure thereet, lor the year ended The Morning Herald considers the set as | 3oth day of June, 1463, ameunted to the sam of siguitying that Russet! bas succumbed te the | e176 be. od. Of this surplus £295,446 pressure put upon hin by the Federal Government. |<. 4d. bas been applied to the reduction of the Two war vessels bs the Mersey had been on the | National Debt. alert to prevent any attempted departure of the | fof unprincipied politcal gam ers, ts epougt to make one weep. |) such strong language MELANCHOLY SPATE OF WARSAW, Accounts of the aspect of Warsaw are ie the jhighest degree melanebols. bie deseribedk as au terrorestricheon city, Whose inbabtitaste saree!) }dare move out of their houses, ane whe lise in jnone go abread whe cauhelp it; those whew one fupon this plea tor merciful silence aud forbearanec | . (Uf the Delegates bad effected any object at all, ‘that was likely to be serviceable in gulling the jtenawtry, eertaws. we are thet the fact would be fue Goutt, be nead with interest. It js rather 2 grave thing, theach, to bring amd prove a change of literary larceny against Mr. Secretaty ‘Pipe. ) It be never takes anything untairly ‘but the pre St. Jerome. be cvpied nas « work A =e \contemptuvus rebuke is given m & document Ratwea. . po mpetenn ges te: iprlbag hp? Hegre ne | continual appreiension lest seme rash jndividuai |anneanced with great parade in the Government duct of other people's brains, we shall cheerfully »G ! o 3 he P . . , , » Liss! “Ale é t : a uit | : . : 4 , . a u Abbe ee gg. rel ean thie | intended to be read by all men, what must | Che character of the speeebes at the New York} : “3 ae eee perevived The alleged es | weer suould iuvelve hundreds in ruin. Of a nyht | papers, just us they proeksi ch tha setting out of | give him absolution for all the political sie of cation. act, 3 ) #3 4 uue i ene” ‘ ‘the reprimand be which is intended only for the eye of bis Exevllency ? He, worthy man, is really w be pitied. After ail the trouble he has been at to establish Urangeism tn this country, after showering hunors upon Urangemen and giving them every coun- tenance and encouragement, what must his pap Sor mrt ee 6 On a | of this exodus are politieal discontent, uncertainty TI + Tunes say that the Russian squadron of Lot & uber Or Sy ane Bow wages; ther in. 4 ! Hducewents be emoyrate are ebvap lend and high the eastera ocean should winter in American ports | FGhkinitabiin ta Barth A otk te eseape the ice ot the Baltic, and be so aueh | * i aig? at nearer its cruising ground in the spring, is a very | ia the pamphlet referred to, he pillers from tie Abbe Gaume ip the most shamelea- manner. With the ard af your paraliel | colunsas | wili addnge the proaf of the charge | made against Mr Pope, and leave the public | ty decide whether or not be is & mere im-| postur and plagrarist. | feelings be to find that his services are Not The present owners of the Great Eastern have i dliretul consequences to all the world that is net | ene than she has hitherto been allowed. The American is absurd. It is an absurdity too wild | slip is te be placed * on the longest toyage where lineets by day che women all clad in deepest i pression of some great calaiity, past or imminent, | Phe system ef whelesale punisimnent for the of- }tences of usdividnals is carried out with barbarous jneurning) bear upon their countenajees the im- | ‘the Delewates, and deseribed the jvot's errand on whieb they had proceeded. We learn from the London Mustrated News | of the E>th ult., that the Duke ot Neweastle had natural cirenmstance, but to build an it such | teselved to give her anotuer trial, aud a fairer | aud Lehseriminating rigour. Ot this, the affair |turned bis back on Dewauing Street, and, of at the ‘hotel de Pearepe is an example. A per-| course, upon the Delegates, for a sojourn at die 4 1 ‘whieh be stands unshrived, ‘ ea Last week we brietly stated that his Grace the Archbishop of Halifax, aud fhe Right Revd, Dr, Sweeny, Bishop of St. John, weve expected ap Chatham. They arrive o Aaa yes Na. turday last, and during thes brief sajourn aston ald te the guests wits tae Aight. Kevd. i : . . . ‘ son of wysterious aud suspicious character, said | ,, ¥. : 4 : ; : yee From Paganism in “ Frem Ifon. W. HH only not appreciated by his wasters at home, | oven for stump orators, It will be observed that | Tiere can be the least competition aud the highest |ty have acted as apy both for Poles aud Russians, country seat, Chumber Park, Notts,” and we Rogers, Bishop of rr a \ a ra em ro. Ae ; = on ia rw but that he is stigmatized asa disturberof the) Russian and American Adwirals who ate real| receipts.” Phe Liverpool aud Melbourne trade | was lodging there. Ap assassin made bis way junderstand (iat the Delegates areexpected home nd nie vid shad feicodly sitet poh réeame, page OY. ANGUS CLONES, MNC-! oblic peace and consequently an enemy bv! officers and sailors do not echo the blued-thirsty | Will prebably be seleeted. into the hotel and stabbed him. They struggled | py il; ‘ “ite prappevie wed : : ; ) 3 se 3 s and sailors ‘ he st) i i : . ) gueled (by the next Mail; so thet there ds net the least]. " ial Ses SS 3 tao common weal, And those pure, self-| trash which is ascribed to : P with whom they were acquainted, A large & persen named) ‘The Couservatives have won another seat, Mr. Wallbridge, & Vanishing Director of a hatuble|) Jolin Peel having been elected ou Menday tor Company in Louden. Tamworth. The How. Mr. Cowper, the Liberal The Tunes’ city article insinnated that Wall-| candidate, was defeated by a large majority. The bridge got up in England, in $860, a Calitorniz | House of Commons isse eveuly balanced that the Geld Mining Company in a questiowable if net | Government can ill afford to lose a stigle suppor- dishonorable manner. iter, A general election next Spring is by many Lord Lyndhurst died on the morning of the 12th. persons considered probable; a tew more Liberal Queea Vietoria and the Princess Louise of) deteats will aake it certain. Hesse and Helena were turned out of a carriage near Balmoral, but sustained only slight bruises ‘The carriage was thrown on its side owing tea the coachiman mistaking the read. The Kiug of the Belg ans will pay a lengthened visit to Victoria during the winter. Official investigation tute the loss of the steamer one | gucrifiemg, devout, gealuus gentlemen, the : Pen a students | wembers of the Government, how cap the ? y en oo i age to vee de | Duke of Neweastle expect the people to show rowe, and there they | them the respect due to men of their high will fiud that great ta- | attainments ip religion and state cralt, when ther ot the Church thus | he bimaclt sete the eXample ot abusing them. | expressing bimeselt: How angratetully is that eninent man, the “Dwell net in the tem Hon. W. H. Pope, treated by the Protestant ple of idols.” Do you net) ginister of a Protestant nation. The un- bear the great St. Paul, peard of efforts and the stupendous scerifices See AT ted tiuat be has made in the cause of Protestant- vacbngey hile “4 a the ism, are recompensed not with richly deserved . mophers, . Ree e eee eee ¢,., honors and hatdly earned rewards, bat with the orators, of Cle poets ; 2 i contempt and insult, with contumely and “Writing to Pope Dawmascus,....he (st. dvtowe) cited the text wt St. Vaud, ‘ Dacell not ta the Temple of idols. te whieh he added, do Jou net hear the great St Paal, who says in ther words, ‘Do not Teud the pagan phile- sephers, or the oraters, or the poets; de net re- pose in the study of their works.’ Let us not be | It sew appears that England has nothing to | fear trom the trou-clad squadron of rane’, which j recently satled from Cherbourg with a view te test the sea-going qualities of the ships, }it has been ascertamed that, however usetul they way prove as ‘a bowe squadron,” they are ut- pout Together dpen the siairs; the murderer disen- | gavest himeelt trem the grasp of his victin, sprang jturongi a glass deer, cuthiog bimselt severely in jthe wet, aie iede his escape. He was tracked hior some distance by the blued drops that iell } foots iain, bel tinably escaped. | We would net eatetiuate the assassinations that jhave been committed by Polish agewts, and which have exasperated the Russian officials aud troops, bbut even these unjustifiable crimes canet excuse ithe barbatities eemnnted by the latter. Mien; Uta ae cording io tnest trustworthy accounts }(uet from Polish seurces), they have im various linstances rather seta bad example. There har likelinood of their having awy more palaver wth the Colonial Minster, When they left here, we are told, they assured their dupes—the members of the house of Assembly who support the Ge- vernment—that the whole business of the Dele- to the complete satisfactionet the tenanéry ! One | timost pity the fools, if theve were any stupid) ther in a very social-agreeable manuer. A night expect to fd the Russian officers seeking | enough to believe this norsense; but we shall | ber ot leyal, patriotic, and personal teasts, Ther jbo teiper the execiteuent asd violence of their ‘nevertheless laugh at them, in w littl: while, when drank, and several speewtes delivered. [have experienced seme very rough weather, and | ‘they become convinced of their aumaaug credulity. bichon The Delegation scheme was one eof the most gation could be easily settled in a fortnight, and! “ We Lof the river te meet his respected gnests a of their Clergy had asseubted to nivet their arrival. We mulervtand that on Sunddy, at 11 o'clock, the Bishop of St. John offter mtifieally, alter which his Grace the Archbishop Sulisunad & most elogient descourse. t Ov Tuesday afternoon the Bishop of C invited & niwber of gentlemen from different take of aluneteen ‘Bley spent a few hours were On the following morning His Grace the Arch and ther Bashep of St, Jolin, took their ide © bg the Routhern route, aud were aceuty- tue confident that we do net repose in the 4 Sanstenneasti aulte » suspensi ot the ('s sain Oh ral of tupine: th as me A ‘ ” : : : ; shall not believe the study of their works. | Scorn. Such treatment is enough tu banish me cae Pe. 4 , db ry tema be ram a) | terly unfit for service a heavy sea. Even in a! - ~ fn Vet deal of tay 7 Son art Sorat transparent political “sells’’ ever practived in poor by thet er ee far os Bather ‘ i “nag 2 i “a . . tains ce cate fo eive ihuntis, ob Lae grouse | fres| breeze a red in “dd on" i dlner Wieder 20 Cases of Jewenery (isappen eas | 4 ay Nel »| Be etier’s reswkenee, } eotnes! rugiac, — Mira- things we read. It ix a Let us oot be tov confi-, patriotism from the land and religion from ot Wee ef thiation: | tresh breeze the vessels are reported as rolling | nnd: although there sre’ strong: sspichous nd te ithe Coleny—but all circumstances ge te ebow } thost terrifically, su that the sailors could vot keep | michi Gleaner. crime te drink at the dent that we shall pot/ the heart. The Duke, without doubt, knows : : ) J A aichiteiae leita hat ; Lael eect F .}that it will turn out to be the most signal failure. | > han sacne time ofthe Chalice believe the things we the part he has played bere during the iate |. POLISH Questtox. — Paris correspondent of | their teet, and it was found impossible te opeu the | POT 6 8e tnt ‘theta, ms bn hres rag would be } ; , ‘ j pereon . ’ of Jeans Christ and that read. It is a crime to pesado and bet _ it. H idvn such the Times believes it is true that Prince Czarto-) port-holes for action, The commission of u qiiry We a he aed probably dangerous, tuo attempt) Dp Agey was au adfiirable schemer, and be i It appears from the report of the directors = . : : ‘© ae ‘ . 0 ° ’ - > | y aie ee? Tt proof. tau life bas epye eas iyi , : . Ps . ; » ofthe demons. Inether drink at the same tae on . risky has dewanded of Freneh and Euglish go-) have come to an unfarorable conclusion respeet- |?! f Huiwas lite bas eptne to be ax ligatly re | powclbertend guod substautial capital by the besiaess. of the Great Ravers, that during the months | . Ay | vpinious, and entertaining such feelings us of the chalice ot Jesus | Christ and that of the rere Pat SUR ge, gy pas | garded as ever it was to Spasuist civil wars, or i niin : ot M. 2 ast, wi he ing them, but before publishing Their final report | ch og, Stl Sa Pelion IA, wae ry conflicts, —Megn (Our potitieal schemers think themeclven, ne doubt, | May, dun duly hes ven the vessel trad- auether trial is to be’gramied the vessels in the |" 9" * Selenint: tikal ak aeonk Hives & rade psi , ; ied regularly between Liverpool and New Buy of Biseay. . Lo bert, wi ~ hte s prvand sufiers for sui | mneh cleverer nea than the abscouding Broker | ork, she earped £37,(40, and canned iw ey Ce re ; it there eno doubt that when the balance sheet June tipwarcds or SOW, and tx July apwardh NEW ZEALAND. jt the Conservative Party shall be made ap, the of E100 passengers > but hee voyages. 8 1th WARLIKE APTITUDS OF THE Svrires, | political capital derived from the Delegation wil}, Sues apparcetly handsome results, beve.e- yong” nae ea uta fedda Vth muah? Bi ebL sete tl peaagroy : : tiled a hoe apen the company of £20000, on oth Nov. Paris Telegram says of Forey’s re-) shake himself. Avother says that the wotien in- Phe veconnte from this colupy are of a very the returned “wil” Tt is a rather singular ewin- , 4 ooey 2 pees a3. *? 9 +, } | ut peistortanes seldom it issand come singly, turn to Franee, it will net be tollowed by aur | er se , a! ne : it a iv eriike characses Phe nalite® are assenbling + hl ceil th, > ineeillstienailie Le } 5 reduction iu the Freneh army in Mexico. diag] ber ep teetiy set cnencapanon Rpm gees jin diye teree. and the Rerepean residents In peidence that the three schemers should be ail 00 ang whete she directors and sharebolders ate }erash, Which lasted one or iwe secoids, aad then | ; : : . . : ow deemed } . oe car we tg. Disney sl lcles malate heen in Be we bli | pussling thems brains Low to set her «feat MEXICAN QUESTION. —It is stuted that Napo-| it declined tor some secouds 7 it was fike te titrigts whewe busi iid feos Peal we fave } P 4 veruments the recegnition of the Poies as beiti- gerents, and that France will net at present | aceede to request. Keply of England unknown. | Affairs in Poland aucianged. Tranquility re-| ported restored in nearly every part of the Pre- Vinee of Lithuania, Podaiia aud Ukraine. , words, Paganism and Christiamty are ineom- patible ; the one Ww rensual, the ether spiri- tual; the ene practices all that the other con- deimus; there can he nething in commen be- tween Jesus Christ and Behal.” (i) De legendis Gen we know the Duke tu hold aad entertain, how | ieee. Ae sether ten regard that patrivtic man when he) words, paganism and | *PPears hetore bun as delegate for the Christianity are incony | entry? How will Mr. Pope feel when patible; the one is ser Standing before a man, and that man hus) sual, the other spiritual; | Superior in rank, in office, and in ability, | the one preaches what/ who esteems him as w mischievous reptile | the other condemns. that the weil beimg of any community in) There can be nothing 8) which he may happen to exist, requires to be | common between Jesus crusted, or caged, or trodden to death. i A severe shock of ao earthquake was felt in England. Charles D%ekpus deserives the sensiwtion. | vw [At seemed, le saya, aggl sme lage meusier ied | FRANCE. — Senate and Corps Legislatif meet) slept unde rdais bed, ak was then trying to rise and "their travels at the same tue. iN (iumder, | A Si Meteis B47 ae t si . : = ‘ f ti i ‘hrist ¢ Seliaal.”” f J i } - - their property for the safety ORTHO Ue! bn | . << - ‘again with ory chance of success, the vest a abso 5 rat gre | know that he isa strong minded man, and leon addressed aw pelegrapy letter to Archduke | but deeper god thore guud and taeribiv. ital Cusin von is boldly pasting his freajiefercard Lop Russen.’s Serees ar BuamGowrir, has been actually sieaed ander an ademiraly “ont | that he ean bear himae!{ in situations where Maxiuilian ; fully approved bis reply to Mexican} The distress in the anauntae*uring districts: ix tod several > kirisishes hsve tiken place, bart watts : (2) Epist ad Dumas, '—Phis speech of the noble Foreiga Minister has! warrant, for renemz dewn a vessel off the De duobus Filiis. Mr. Pope next quetes the aceornt whieh St. Jerome gives of a vision which he had cuneerning his pagan stadies, bat which is tou lengthy to place side by side with the literally same aceount to be found in the hook of the Abbe Gaume, page 70, from whieh Mr. Pope has evidently copied. The following short extract will further prove) that his acquamtance with the writings of | the Christian Fathers has been made through the work of the author above named, and Deputation, alse stated his reply is regarded in| still diminishing. Austria us an acceptance, and weastires being | taken aveordingly. Arenduke will set out for | Mexico iu February or Mareh next. ’ dn thear districts ever a uiiihon ipo defisite resnit, ‘Ihe seene of action new ex: pounds has been Applied tor, ander a late Act oi ltouds te within BG nukes of Auckland, where are ea to thi, =p on probe Works ot the uraest aiaeo prevails. It is estimated that Warn enthusiasts for the Federal iw: | thane? of £33,000 being incorperatedans ee ‘4 TULA MAbAdeGk Pde Me natives ean brtag 7.08 fighting sen into the | vemuuent praise it immensely, while Seuthere join or £100,000, and of a seeund mortgage Sime 9 : . . » ah ‘ “the yeoar es i} gh? : he eae > the > oP eA , a . ° , the magnanimity of a saint. But woe to the | F a : The « ‘ipping returna for the ye “nt show that ol | bis li. od: is said tu be th inte ution vf the Petish ; synipathisers regard it with much dixgust. Wel of LGW, aud tinably wo this tess cause that depends upon such an advvcate WARK NEWS. | the vessels trading te ports in the United Kingdom, Government te raisegevies in the Australateoie | . site "Be beinee auch « idee VThe situation of Baal The Washingt 4 rial nas I | during the year, 1~27 Were wrecked, and the deep | nies to the mmnber of S00, and considerably to | eee nothing very remarkable in it beyund an i ed chaim tor the disaster to the Jane on the é i Ba | ou ashington Star gives the annexed account | ww allowed 090. Over 236 thousand vessels cleared | @tguwent tie Maglieharpy. The atvocities cem- unciation af the policy of the British Government | last voyage. Hitherto, the shareholders in eoadjutor, Mr. Palmer, is not & much of the tate movement: + ah : t \ P ; na Jf, ; ‘and entered altogether, Many of those vessels | mitted by the natives: are said to equal anything caf ire salieetemn, eenene but | 2! great undertaking have been hoping peeasunter vue. W e wll know that be med nt Phe hp poeta, # ey wi eres OR the are very old. Over 7 are more than 50 years | whieh eceurred during the fudian BPI . . regarding rrae heard ny the fame ps ‘ ; against hope, and have found the means tu wil along been but half-hearted in the cause. a eon the Tes gos ag the Rubs gee Hive old, aud 25 are over sixty years, and one old tub) As a sign of tive times, it is werth mention that | on That point we were long since KR aut make the Great Kasterna paying speculation ; He never hiked us, bat net en hemtrmegt > aa pp tS turd thd tuk pos idles ot ays 9 or a4 oo hundred Ont ithe tuchitud Weekly News lias suspended pubii- | was the determination of Her Majesty's Govern- but all resourees appear now have beea i bee « “ b Sd add wed > —_ ‘ ey > " ont » yreater wn: P 2 ek: 5 anes * sSiobes . i ™ ae 2 ‘ bette ‘ Monee Fire a oe Pe ss usest ha | abiudouod by them. When our turce was ail | The iinmeuse emigration from Treland again |“ aad gn — nee uf i Pe meut to preserve the strictest neutrality. We anticipated) ~ 1 a ately. in all which he never acknowledg 's :— bercene a aaron ipedealin tie the Dike al eee ee Ses ih 3 ay. 8 sat fe re lef gy nar Mita r copy from a Colonial contemporary (the Freeman), | probability, fallinto the handsot the Govers> ' - a we gee re aeross the river ; with July, 20,500 emigrants le ‘eland—the | . 4 : . : | Doak Wh PP ae one, in feels that he ie guilty of force, drove him across the river without tine to ily HY emigrants left Treland—the ~~ the following vemarks touching the Bcet produced | 2s ‘other men would be covered with confeaion. and completely abashed, with wonderful ease | jand composure, bat in that situatzon he will | require all the heroism of a martyr, and all) ‘trish coast. Pheress it seems, an onm sdiate -gcited great attention on both sides of the At- , ms Me ; ‘ jneceasity dor 250.600, snd we bear a first | huntic. From the Abbe Gaume's _— © oe P ‘destroy the erossing, and pursued him to Kapa.) 2'eater part for the Used States. This was an Pope's Letter, page A. $ P o ; increase of nearly 35,000 ofer the emigration of the corresponding period of the previous year Paganism in Educatwn, page 2. “What can there he writes St “What ean there be between it) “mmen, as cut off yesterday alteruoou | i been verage , 1 avi . rege f | ‘ } . a ae . ao i : ' 5 . 4 i i ' i ; . “ Jerome, Suterevts light David and “re ’ the least palliation 1 fear very mach that) on the road to Culpepper by a portion of Eweii’s | the sate a caltte is Sunalier. iy every point) Phe Eramiaer aud | audicator—as war te be | are displeased with what he said of the determin: | prnadingA a ‘ was ee ne bel wd ‘ and darkness! between Paul and Cicero ! sit) the antecedents of both our delegates ate such | corpse which were tormed across the only road | of view the country is declining. ‘The Crops are | expecicd—are exceedmyly juiitant over the Duke [ation to step the steam rams. They say that | PPIvE P I a net a seandal for your brother te see yeu in the temple of idols 0” Jesus Christ and Belial / What connection be- tween David and He- race! Paul and Cieero? ls it net a scandal for your brother to see you li the temple of idois!” --(3) Fpist. ad Damas. The next instance doing for a mereenary motive what we have | hanneck station. done through zeal for the eause of religion, | “ Kilpatrick, with a foree of cavalry and artil- ‘eyes of the Duke, his offence is without the} ison Court House, w las t create the strongest prejudices in the by which he could retreat in twelve rauhs, with minds of the authorities aguinst them. But, Ye Fetitnents on each flank. Kilpatrick, was | pity worst of all those Reverend gentlemen | compelled to charge direetly inte the cul de sac jwho have exerted themselves in the good | there made by the enemy's formation. | pan j | the charge In person, telling bis mea they niust do jcause, They of course had no end, no view | . . or die. j but the good of the country and the welfare| «phe eavalry ent their way through wader a) lof Protestantism. ' Y Fame was to them vanity, concentrated-tire sach as bas hardly been experi- | le connection and hatred of tre Popish superstition. [nthe lery, Whieh has made a recosuoissauce hear Mad-| Pe quantity of land in cultivation is nearly 93,: | 000 aeres less than in the previous year, and even | comparatively good this year, but this wall serse | bat little fo arrest the progress of the rain whieh jis the work of government and legislation, He Jed | essentially so bad that ne patch work reform ean, | in any important degree, modity its malignant FOREIGN. The Emperor of the French is looking very influeace. ia more disereditable | wordly honour a snare, and the hope of gain eaced by our troops during the war, aud probably unwell, and ‘appears te suffer from the auxiet? than the above, a¢ in them he adopts the too base and grovelling a motive ty influence | his rear, with his artillery, retired through Qul-| occasioned by the present Haropean complications Abbe Gauwe's translations, without giving him credit for them; but in the following Mr. Pope purloins the original account which Abbe Gaume gives of the writings of Vida. You cansot observe the manner in which Mr. Pope plagiarises from the Abbe Gaume, without having feelings of contempt tor a wan who sets up asa public writer, and who has to eke out lus paragraphe by teking o sentence from one page, then turning over to | throwing undeserved reproach upon men of) ed to her howe in Miunesota, having enlisted two | P another, then omitting several lines, and next taking a sentence from another page : From Abbe Cawme's From W. H. Pope Paganism in Education, Letter on Romish Intol- pages JS, LUO, 10, 1055 erance, page’ and7: “ Vida, a learned and “ Vina, whois usually irreprouchable bishop, represented as a learned (page 9s), speaks of amd irrepreachable Bis- God the Father in all hop....speaks of God the names oven ta du- the Pather in all the piter: he is the god of names given to Jupiter mortals, the powerlul -—sxperunt sator, supe- master of the tempest, ram pater nimbipotens, )monds of 80 clevated, so spiritual a east and | pepper. Kilpatrick's loss in killed and wounded 80 humble a frame. They, indeed, have been | 6 L!. “ar : F i horribly maligned and woefully misunderstod |” General Mead is said to have displayed good | To impute to such peace-loving and discerning | i men as the Rey George Sutherland and the | the Rappahannock. | | i te e i 4 . 4 ' — . . . | Rev. D wid Fitzgerald, the deaign of emit) int of following fim iv force to attack him in| | tering religious and political diff-rences. und | ‘acting in a manner detrimental to the best) interests of this or any other Colony, is) the rear, massing his troops at Racouir Ford for that purpose.” 4 A married woman named Clayton has been pass- | the most undoubted genius, of the purest and years eines in the Minnesota regiment with ber | | most enlightened philantrophy, and of the | husband, and been cousidered a good suldi¢r for a| minds of all. and the equally pe exing affairs of Mexico. The Franlfort Journal, in a eonmuneation from ad is sai Brussels, states that the Emperor Napoleon was genertship in bringing his army backto the line of | one day last week attacked so severely With renal |. When the enemy made his) colic that he lay for the space of a whole hour in | "> : mi "| feint of aevig up the valley, Mead alew-tade 4) a state el pertect insensibilty. ‘Pe terror of the | their spite and contempt for the Colonial Minis- questions of home polities were alse displens. | ling tow large number of people. Evupress aud the whole Court was indescribable, ax the test serious apprehensions possessed the | Tie Euperor of the French sinee his return to aris has appeared meeb in public—as some per- e418 insintate, te ascertain from personal ob- servation the state of public feeling with respect To say that such men are intolerable bigots. lunserupulous agitators, social firebrauds, | purblind peliticians, unreasoning zealots, is | plainly the most flagrant Irbel, and the man |who makes such statements, whether tie | Editor of a Snatcher newspaper or Minister jot State, should be prosecuted in the courts | of Jaw, and visited with the just vengeance of jevery Orange Lodge in the United Kingdom. And bas not the Duke of Neweastie asserted ry mort profound and penetrating judgment. | Year betore she was found out. At the battle of | Stone Kiver ber husband was killed five paces in | front of her, and she herselt was wounded iia des- perate bayouet charge immediately afterwards. Another female, twelve years old, who had-enfist- ed from Bucks county, Pa., and served two years as a drummer, and was present at tive battles, has aise been detected, aud will be sent home. She is now il of typhoid iever in the Peuusyivania hospital, Puiladelphia. ——t > ee *| Whilst the Kemper the Freneh maintains [to him. The cicas which have greeted hin on every occasion show tht, whatever may be the feeling of the people with respect te the Frenel i treatment of the Polish question, they bave lost none of their loyalty. A vetter index to the state | of publie feeling in the eountry will, however, be given upon the assembling of the Corps Legisiatit, | When the great question of war or peace will be | discussed and determined. ‘his well Known reservedness, it is diffictlt to dis- THE “ LOYAL” ORANGEMEN. | " | | We take the following paragraph from the | Momtior or "Thursday last:— wo Now & e's Despaceh, consigning the Orage | Jucerporation Bill to © the tomb oft all the Capt lets.” Well, let them chuckle te their icarts’ leontent; bat we will tell them what we firnily traer- I beliewe will be one of the results of tha dinary Despatch, viz: that three, if” our, | Lodges will humediately spring inte being but exe previously existed. Orange Lodges, be | ahon tothe coutrary, notwithstauding—are per, fectly legal institutions, and Orangemen mure | k iow this, and will act accordimgly.” ' 'Phis was conceived in the true spirit of Orange- The “loyal” men are determined to show | ter, and through him for Her Majesty the Queen, by making their institution, “ which is calenlated, if not Acitally intended, to embitter religions and political differences,” more formidable than ever, and therefore more injurious to the community. But this is the way that Orangemen always show their loyalty; whenever the Crown ora reval per- | sonage rebukes them, they show their good tiste, good sense, good manners, and gushing loyalty by | vaking the silliest vaunts and threats, and prac- trsing any blackguardism that may serve to give expression to their feelings. This is the way they acted in Canada under the eye of the Prince ot Wales. They swore they would make His Reyal j present mode of electing its members. by the speceh of the noble Ear) in Great Britain:— | « Lord John Raseell’s Blairgowrie speech does | not give unmingled satisfaction in Exgiand. The | friends of the Confederacy—and they are many—! } such neutrality is one-sided, avd that while be italked of nut “ yielding a jot of British law or British right in consequence of the menaces ot | any foreign power,” he was im tact giving evi-| denee that he had yielded toe the wenaces of the | American Minister, to which the recent reverses | of the Coutederates bad given additional ‘peg It us scarcely probable that in the present temper! it remembered, — George Coles’ famous Progia- | of the country the Government will venture to ask | tons for any special law to enable them te stop more eflectually the building of ships for the Confeder-_ ates. Lord Palmerston has too lively a reeollee-| life of Louis Napoleon. Lord Russell's views on) Tle was ence called “ Finality Jou,” because he declared that the Reform Bill should be regarded as a final measure, and all agitation for a further extension of political mghts te the people should be discontinued. He retains those views still, and in this speech gave sueh ex- pression to them as grievously offended all whe are dissatistied with the constitution of what is called the House ef Commons, aod with the | It w said that they despair of any change for the | better, yet they resent the enunckition of sueli | doctrines by one whe pretends to be a Liberal, | and the member tor Deal, who isa Lord of the Aduiralty or of the Treasury, has been put for-| ward by the Ministers to explain away this part | ot the speech, so damaging to the Government, and to assure the rank and file of Liberalism that Spirsvitpise at THE Norrsern , New Beenswick is 1063 —Tue Miram Gleaner says that by the end of the the North Shore. It says :— ** At Bathurst, Messrs Ferguson, Rankin & Co. have launeied the Barque Punjaub, of 504 tons; Messrs. G. & A. Saith, the Feronia, of 328 tons; and Mr. Join O' Bri-®. two Bargces, one named the Nyanga, of 417 tons, and the other the Credenda, of 243: At Miramichi, Beaubair's Island, Me. tharlry + a built the Vacke 5 : and the Brigantine Rio Grand, of 286 tour > Mr. Mitchell, at Neweastie, has ]annehed the tion of what befell when he intreduced his bill) Barque Danish Prinecss, of 364 tons, anda for wore effectually preventing attempts ou the Ship Jeddo, of 1059 tons, and hae ano nearly ready to be launched of the same as the Danwh Princess. Messrs. Harding, have built and sent to market fiom Newenstle the Barque Beatrice, of 623 tons, and are at ener engaged on another vessel to be aunched this season, which will measure @ little below 600 tons Mr. John Haws, at Rose Baak, has launehed the Sea King, of 1071 tons, and the Brig Antelope, of 208 tons, and jaunched last week a Barque of 328 tons. At Douglastown, Messrs. Gilmour, Rankin & Co. ave launched the Barque icon, of 340 tons, and are engaged on a vessel of 250 tons, wineh will be launched late thit Fall. Mr. Muirhead, at Chatham, har built the Steam Tug Alexandra, for use at Pictou, of 136 tons. the May Queen, of 350 tons, and the Coriolanas, of 1244 ‘ons Mr. Jucolr Gough has launehed the Mistress of the Seas, : " TIoRRIBLE BARBARUTIES OF Necro SoLotrrs : ; ; 9-2 . ib i : tl ° lraiv, the imbripetens, — regnator : , : ie alti RS fet WER ga peo (ieee tO te RS) Gover what are his inteptivus with regard to the | Highness ride under their banners in’ spite of : wi +e edi . Dee ' ne a pra Ar aniinies’ Uipapi- Our Lord | this much of them in his first Despateh ?) IN Mississtrit.—The Confederate troops are still | great questions now agitating the Siac Ramee ne. Tha a A, Rigid Pls endinge B = 2 a is some differences between Eurl) of 1240 tons, and is finishing a vessel of about pionarch © y may ’ | tlas he not ead that the Orange Tnstitution | aelvely engaged in baruing cotton te prevent its) fF he be not determined to go to war, he is at least : . hanes erby and Lord Palnerstos, a Whig. The Tory 350 tuns,whieh will be launched jate this fall, constantly spoken of as a hero,the here te- preaches Peter with Supe; am sator, superum pater nimbipotens, ali sonans, imbripulens, Te- is ** one of a class of institations whieh al) j jexperrence hae shown to be caleunated, (i! _of the State of Mississippi, which are within reach of the Federal troops “ seem to be given up te the falling inte the hands of the enemy. The portions | practically illustrating the sentiment that the best preventive of war ix te be prepared for war. Orders have been issued to the Luperial manu- auother for the purpose of carrying ont this thivat. The Queen has declared through her Minister organ complains bitterly that a Whig Duke has served notiees to quit on all his tenants who at a late election dared to vote for a Tory candidate. vt the same model as the Royal Bride, but built by him fast year. At Koachibougese, ; : in | Os stuall intended) to ewbitzer political hat Ora instituti re baneful in thei T 7h M b i la Danish Beaut yeater Olympi. Our winhihg-te prevent him | not actually > “OP Pultienl | rast atlocitics which ulter aatage; dren with | « * : : Muant | that Orange institutions are baneful in their oper- |The W hig papers retort that Earl Powis dealt in| =": Cale has unched the Danish auly, Lerd oo constantly dying imerepuit dictus | and religious differences, and which must be Seoube: cnn quacnte.” | The Missiinippian ae som factories-at Vincennes to set all hands te werk in ation, and must be discountenaneed. ‘The | thesame manner with sueh of his tenants ax dared | &! 345 tons, At Kichibucto Mr. Des quen: talibus heras. Faith spoken of asa hero: the : teaches ua that God co- here reprowcliee Peter fided the Llessed Virgin | | detrimental to the best interests of any colony jin which they exist?’’ Now, who mut an the following details of feartul eutrages com- mitted at Deer Creek in that State :— the preparation of S0Q,000 projectiles, and one of the Government cautractors 1s to supply some hundred of thousand of shakes for the use of the “Loyal” Orangemen reply —* We dont care a snap jor the Queen or her Minister; but we shall tu vete fora Liberal at anther recent election. Wilmer & Sinith’s Tres states tronestly that has launched the Lucy DesBrixay, of |b tons, and is building onc of 450 tone, to be With winking to prevent unscrupulous agitator and a social fire-brand , ns there i treed , ; =i di ket thi M J i @ —{jRere- . St. ‘ +) “On the night of the 24th of Angust, Thomas | army. These movemeuts have again strengthened i db seg, A ra ‘ -. iere is no freedom et election mm the rural dis-| 6ent to market thie season. erers. pal per hy a lelibuo in giving her te bin - pit gol aaplly to wart to embitter political | H. Hill, a planter of Washington county, and a) the ae beliet in impending hostilities, and have spread the institutions wider than eves. Ist be- | triets, as the landowners on both sides invariably | have launched the Arzilla, of 1095 tons,.an heros (yp. 100% Faith wile. Vida tells ueit ie | 2 Bone. f-renees? Who but » par-) Mr, sims, of Issaquena county, were arrested at | created an impression that at the opening of the | cause we are told not to do it.” This is certainly |}Cortee Yeeir tenantry. The members for such are buildinz one of about 700 tons, whieh huches we that Ged eum the will of the immor- blind politician and an unressosing szealot) the plantation or Tues. Dick Hull, by about twenty | legislative Session by the Emperor in person, on | an admirable way ia which to practice and incul- districts are merely the huminees ot the mere | be also sent tu sen this year. At Weldiord, filer the Fheswed Virgin tole— Ei oli, alna| WOU! et ina wanner detrimental to the best|arwed negroes wearng the Federal uniform. | the Sth of November, his Imperial Majesty will ehte'lotalve' powerful landuwuers.” which is about 15 miles up the Richibucto to the eare of St. Je Parene fuerat superau interests of the culony? If the Duke of New- They were finally tied and dragged a distance of| give some defiued expression of the policy he in- 4 Pr, Lit) i ~- ——- seme - River, Mr, Rober: Brown has built the Barque seph, in giving her tor Juste ‘The Blessed | caetle ie right, every one of those epithets is | several miles to the L pemryr of Charles J. Pore, | tends to pursue. : 3 Tle Mondor and its friends seem te have made| HALLOWReN.—We were reminded of the re- Alicis, of 61h tons. At Shippegan, Mesers. hime for wite, Vide Virgin iw called the most | applicable to the Reverend gentlemen who | Whe was alse seized aud all marched to a cane) The France states that the Russian Admiralty a wonderful discovery, and are mighty exultant | turn of this joyous festival, on Saturday night by | Fraing & Co. wil) launch a | for theit le it io the wilh of beautitet . j b inly i ; : brake a mile distant where they were ordered to! are at present building 00 gunboats plated with " the Tye 4 ° = us it ot pe — me — ayin _ foe me ode ere Bom wecreean iu patting our be chet. While preparations were being made to| ima un anew model. They are nut to draw gore thereat. They “mow know,” they say, “that & more than usual outbreak of ruffianiem on | own use of 165 tons. These made wr a oo fun he The a pre- por _" wepeowmye viciabe 7 baron’ perp execute this fiendish order, a desperate etfort was | than four feet six iuches wt water, and may con- Orange Lodges are perfectly legal iustitutions.” | the part eof some miscreants, whe teek a, # total of 23 versels, and as near y as can be phat hi Sit I and wo have been the principal tounders of | ade by all temake theireseape. In the attempt | sequently serve in shallow places, Such boats are | Frou what circumstance they | ame o- FGai the . : ascertained about 16,080 tuns Kegister. The perum concredia sented to Jeene on the | che Orange Lnstitution in this eount rt . “ar : ui at circumstance they have aequired this | fancy to carrying away and smashing of deor-| “ Jussis. The Wemed eranie tbo cup vi Rac-|-° ge tnst uscountry. Ehose | Mr. Suns was killed, Mr. Fore mortally wounded | rega by the Russian Admirals as very useful) oy csctor w Pa ee Chiet Controller's Return for 1862 show® Virgin nertied pwpreph, eliuw:—Corrapts ta | who are so footish as to consider the Duke of | or supposed to be se, while Mr. Hill made good | for tae detence-of Cromtadt, the, works.of whieh | ‘ laracter we ure not informed. Cau it be the j steps, devor bells, knockers, fences, and other that the total for that year wae 25 vessels, ther teat. tuactiital a Rawent ‘aon ‘eho | Neweastle a better avshority than the Rev. | his escape. by great daring and coolness. ‘The | are surrounded by groups ef recks which render despatch of the Duke of Neweastle? If se, we property upon which, in the stillness of the night, | measuring 8,785 tons. hyuphs: mywpherem The tread of the Ex | Sentienen f ce Bsc mage ar ee oe ererere Eve prone & ~ prom arial Corrapts pocule Racchs wnjficiunt felle. Vie une leavened bread, the bread of the Eucharist; is called Ceres without mixtuze—Sinceram Ce- Fane Cererem,’ ™ | Poke) attaches to every eneourager of Orange ' fnetitutions Not:only will they have to bear their share of the odiam, but a large portion of it will fall apon ws, who owe our importanee and standing in the country to our influence as Orangemen. I certainly would rot have been eievaced to the magis- tracy were not that my influenee among wounds. “Phey next proceeded to the plantation of George Hunt, and here murdered Mr. Johnson in the presence of his wife and six children, who ' stoud with eyes filled with tears, pleading in angel tones that the husband and tather be spared, but the demons, disregarding their supplications, shot A ont 2° attempted to murder several other planters, who made their pe by flight. foiled an their ae A bouts inay be launched before the Baltic is frozen ; and as the arsenal at Crwnstadt is occupied with other works, orders have been sent tea private establishiuwnut in Prussia fer 200 guns capable ot throwing shot of 100 pounds weight to arm the boats. By many persons it is theught that the Emperor of the French is inclined to recogniae the Poles as belligerents, and pot a tew think such a course We always laboured under the impression that to make a thing legal was te have it daly recognised on the Statute book. Orangeism has, it is true, tound a place upon our statute beok, but the pages devoted to it are no better than blank leaves now. We might say that Ribbon Societies the state of things at the eastern end of the town, —Wwe suspect matters were worse to the west- ward, and that all the Police must have been em- ployed there; at all events, the complaint is general amongst these whe suff-red from the depredations, that the Police did not appear in the eastern part mature yet to k of them generally tie well understood, however, that the total tonnage expected to be produced will be as mach und somewhat more thay that sent @ market this year. -_—--2 <> o—__—_—-~— from San Francisco to withia 17 wiles 01 San dose, over the Western Case nesiwed ey Lud. iy countrymen je ulmost boundless, and that Minding themselves parti would be the signal of an opeu ure betw: would be legal, if they gyere to spring wp to-mor- | of the City te proteet property astheywhomd. It) pag — : . : «The ae porate paseages palpably prove Sees es “ ythes si ween mk a cece hn, soniee that they | France and Russia, and that tan Walteat uf St.|Tw,—any sveret sovietion, nu matter bow in-|is very lamentable that we should have, in the! jr a in rye ay & te . a : thin choose to cell them, | Would seon return again and murder ev hite | Petersbu ld be justitied 3 rdiy i sian re ‘€ SOIT “rs Se ete oe , Mr. Pope guilty of being « playarist, that nen every sorb sus egnntog pare sew ida, Waekh and CANA ‘ak fhe Cs ma, a > —— eee just m regardig i as 4 | jurious to the welfare of the community, would | community any individuals, whether young or old, mainder the road to San Juse will. be % > the words vt the dictiunartes, a literary thief, _ So this genius, whe woetakes for a literary lion, proves to be omly like the antusel inthe fable, which roared around up the hiew'eskin. but, besides Leing « plagiurist, be has been | the Doke's Despatch at my head, and the _ghes wow't be off of my new tith: before it \wilhbe @ repronch to we. Bet FE tel} you whatwe must de, we must send home a dele- oii, Pi; ed “DMaedesinet - t . . Ps ; pan ” , and \ patter Firet—bet the next mailearry howe | pualedeniog! sho ehdtve swore aay cnet > order frou General Grant.” \# copy of the Pustoral letter and a copy of: residences of the murdered men were phitwlered— ‘everything carried away, and their stock drove off. The perpetrators of this crime said they | erossed the river at Snyder's Bluff, belonging to carrying out an Tt cannot be disguised that the war spirit is again predominant m France. Notwithstandimg the surveillance to which the press is subjected, declamatory and warlike artieles continue to be published in seme of the Paris Journals, which cannot fail to exert a powerful influence upon the public wind aud fan the already excited feelings be entitled to the same designation of legulity whici the Orangemen now claim for their Lodges; but on what foundation would it rest? Ay, there's the reb. D’Arey’s shaving and exchange shap | was “a perfectly deal institution,” so fur as mere. tolerance, for a brief period, in the community, who should be so base as tocomumit such outrages as those mentiored, under the strange delusion that they are merely playmg practical jokes ; and it is not exeditable to the authorities that stren- vous efforts are wet made to detect aud punish thee severely. completed by January. th.t the rebel conscripts are running mbo 3° lines by hundreds, a, desire to joir bs army. He says in his letter that Tennesse? is now wore loyal thun his own State oe