oe i ee ae i ’ ae eo anon. ee a ee? Ne a — ie anes ares . , OM 4 V/ PEG {L - 2) La Aw @ rs of the inti ' PETTY TYRANNY. CANADA FRO THE EA AMINER members of - Aseociatio: cn - eas POINT OF VIEW in future empioy any man to wor tor, 7 ’ . ° 4 —— a a ne . ’ a Tne General Government is guilty © t—-& GRACE 8 PUBLISHED EVE ui HONDA FORENOON them who was a member of the Union. 1. a PLENDID SPEECH BY LORD DUFFERIN—A GRACT . another gross outrage. The scene of if FUL TRIBUTE 10 THE CANADIAN PEOPLE es THRE Rraminer Printing & Publishing Co. Corner Queen and King Streets. TE VE MS—Per Annum, $1.62, if paid withi, the year—$1.82, postage paid; $2 i! not ; sid within the year. CLUB RATES. T « Examiner will forwarded t This resolution was carried out to the letter. The farmers made shift, with the aid macl and the linery, by f womer ind children to do without their laborers The latter were, in the meantime, nearly On the farmers side, the struggle,it is asserted, supported by the Laborers’ Union. be was for the most part carried on by small oi pot ee von pi * per year—Pay" | holders—hard—working men with all their 5 copies one address. . @ 7.00 | capital staked in their farms—‘ men who 10 ; af ie - a had done their best to be kind and good je “i “ hn masters, who had helped their mei in made up at any time, but | sickness and old age, and had had many Cbs may be at period than no for a shorter ADVERTISEMENTS Until further notice, Advertisement he inserted at the following rates | wee Feet lof them on their farms nearly all their 'lives.’” These farmers were exasperated. s wil tended to prolong the strike proceeded from 81. oo 1 square, one insertion, Each Continuation, . Special Notices, ** per line,” ACCOUSTS RENDERED for subscriptions, Ist December, in i year; for standing advertisements etc.,1st 00.12 | acl i resolution to * lock-out’’ ee al . . . with the pertinacity of Englishmen who employ- } They believed that the influenees which | 25 | strangers inspired only by interested | and selfish motives,”’ They held to the | their laborers | author enactment was Montreal, The Crystal Pa lace Property there was last year sold, in an underhard manner, for some fifty per cent less than its real value. The Coun- eil of Arts and Manufactures considered that they had a right in it; and, acting on legal advice, refused to give up the build— The Gazette de- scribes what followed :— ‘When Mr F< ing. Montreal thus jurnier was transiated t ir atling possession iifred Dorion of Montreal he to be sent about a forinight ago to the Coun | of Arts to the effect that at a certain hour he would be prepared to take over the pro- perty. The members of the Council being present, refused to give it up, and M. D and military power of the Government, with- drew, it being understoed that the quest would be submitted to the Courts for adjudi- cation. On Saturday, however, the military ty having been augmented by the pre- ‘Col. Wvhe, of the Militia Depart e of Ce Z ,and 1st December, in each year; fo >) : " i a oemeal adie P they | * Suen advertisements—when ordered felt that they cn aggrieved ; on pA, } ment, and a bedy of the Water Police, the po : triumphed. But. ex isperated as they loors of the Palace were broken open with i ° ee ull Pike le nceece take of the —_ pare | were, they committed themselves to the | @ ana , : poss s rte y t i wholly untenable position that the laborers | of 4 body of the Water Police ; the followi : . } latter no sent to Mr tevenso he Sees 'y Namie, | had no right to combine for the purpose ; ‘*tte! I ag sent t Mr Stevenson, the 5 i i . . - retary of the Council are _._ | of enforcing their rights. Signs wer cscenas Beet. & 1071 Ch’town September 14, IS74. not wanting that many of the farmers felt Mr. Stevenson, Secretary of the Coun L 7 . . ‘ i ‘aeiiseeemameinaiaaia : : + that the lock-out of the Union men was Arts and Manufactures THE AGRIC 2?4L STRIKE. | wrong in principle; “but it is hard to Si Ph rome: THE AGRICULTURAL naEn?. ° : : ° ane }men to clear out the Crystal Palace. As ; convince men whose interest it 1s to re- | there are some articles there which seem t « Tr is an ill wind which blows nobody good. ” So runs the hackneyed provert | discovered that that they could do with- The great conflict between labor and ca- pital in England, ‘ill’ in many respects as it certainly is for the mother country, has worked unmixed ‘‘good’’ for the Do minion. Numbers of able bodied, skilful Englishmen, who, if the conflict had not occurred, would have lived, labored and died in the old land, have, because of the eonflict, crossed the ocean, settled in Can | with so high a hand.”’ question as one of wages i that it resolved itself into this: ‘“ Shall ” ‘the men be allowed to belong to a Union. | that they should not. The laborers on their part acted with becoming spirit. Instead orked and prospered—helped to|*, : ; ; ; ada, worked “ll acne ‘T of complying with the unjust and despotic swell the population and to develop th resources of the country. The conflict has, therefore, a peculiar interest for Can- | adians. But of all its varied phases, th: phase presented by the struggle now going on between the agricultural laborers and their employers is most interesting t us. Blackwood’s Magazine, for August, has au able article on the subject. After setting forth the gravity of irreconcilabl: differences between labor and capital, as applied to agriculture—the tact that th whole population of England is vitally interested in the being made t yield its yearly increase and its fruits in yet the closer; and for four weary mouths allowance of nine shillings a-week, with nothing to de, with none of the resources of educated people, and no money where- | with to amuse or employ themselves. On one farm the effect of the lock-out was to raise the number of unionists from 3 to 20 In many villates non-unionists subscrib- ed for the benefit of the locked-out labor- ers. mising unionist,’’ says the ‘“ Times’’ cor- | respondent, “are to be found amongst the I feel that the husbands | and brothers of some I have heard talking dare not *‘ desert the good cause,’ or, if they did, life would become to them And so the struggle goes on. Both parties are spirit- | earth women. sure : that due season. the writer goes on to state th: struggle as scene and the cause of the follews :— ‘ The unties in which it has aris apparently a keen competition for labour be- | ed and stubborn. tweer the farmers and t! na! t the men have recently been th a bitterness and a burden.”’ The farmers continue to “ lock-out,’’ and the laborers continue | orgnanized, w the usual ‘a the strike and maintain the Union. In say ba ee ans ae ehedinate ond 01 ni time, no doubt, better councils will pre- ne farmers are as obstinate and endurin i race as any in England. All the um- | vail stances and conditions of the quarrel seen a a oe CONTROVERTED ELECTIONS. to render reconciliation hopeless, or ati a restoration of the old order of things possible. Farmers a1 ye Sap tgp. Potincat Morauity has certainly ‘ 4 .% ¢ apparentiv with succes thout one s ! i 4 “What the fin vy be. no | reached a low ebb in Ontario. No less enother. ai y one can predict. All that | io is to) than frve members ot Parliament elect, reflect upon the causes which have led to the there for It is a painful | | have been unseated centreversy, and then to endeavor to ascers tain what is the _ position ae ona | practices in elections. Sar eseerinn to " ia han te j fact, too, that every one of these corrupt } seale. Whatever may be the immediate or | politicians belongs to the Reform Party | the uliimate issues of the per ntrov- | = ersy, this much at least is agricultural class itself is imporsant change in its acter and its prospects cidents of this controver to be regretted ; forem mongst them, on | Pee the one hand, the irresponsible and mischiev eus eathusiasm, in whic! i can | as— at times indulge; on the rtinacity with which the corrupt | rise that the | the party which the Patriot ot Satur- | fan | day tells us “ admired Political Purity; ’’ its char ve man\ in. | Which boasts of itself as ‘ the Party of Pur- onagp a dleny i . . . be . } bh are deeply | ity,’ which stole into power on the ‘ purity | The men convicted are known | class of tenants McGreaor, ot Essex. farmers has nailed itself to an untenable | Morais, of Lincoln. positien. But at the same time, ne feat are | McDovea tt, of South Renfrew. | of the struggle may be regarded with un- gil mized @ongratulation and pleasure, and tha WaLxker, of London. is the absence of og | sense of oppression, | SHIBLEY, of Addington. | rhaps we may say the nuance of good : = Peeling between farmers and labourers, whi These five bribers and corrupters of I \ ears to survive the vicissitudes of a pro-},, feeaed ond even desperate ¢ ting the people ; aside occasional displays of excitement under | now stand forth in their true characters. the influence of the speculative an: interest ed exaggerations of itinerant agitators, th spirit which has animated the agricultur: laborers is not that of hostility or ill-will t their employers, but of disconts position, which they compare disadvantage, with that of classes, and which they own want of organisation ness which springs from a scattered ex ence and isolated lives. They see that ips these five canting hypocrites, | | We deplore the fact that such men live | inthe Dominion; but we cannot conceal | ped—caught by their own devices ; that .| ed, so that honest men may know them ist- | and shun them. geen They m: ot, it is e, be the only gil other departments of industry great pr They may not, it 15 true, be t : Kinks gress has been made; that the lives of| guilty ones. Perhaps, as the Patriot - , » silow-—lab rers if ‘ | - p thousands of their feilow-labourers in t! | declares, their opponents are deeper in towns have been improved by greater cor : : | mand of the necessaries and comforts of lif the mud than they are in the mire; per- | and they are not mt that their own } -| haps the trail of the serpent ‘3 over them sition has improved in anythir like the | aaa : ee ratio, or even, as they think, with reasonat all. But they have been proven guilty speed. Their position is that « fa man Ww adh > 2 gp Seca S land the others have not. The verdict in looking around him is disatisfied with his ee condition as compared with his fellows; but| their case has been pronounced. Their who, unable to estimate the real circum-| : a eo 5 . which he 1s surrounded, readily | Ppopents have not yet beentried. They slances by } fails @ prey to the interested or ignorant sug- | deserve the strongest of gestions of ethers | good men; but, by rules of British jus- In the spring of 1873, under the leader-| tice and fair play, their opponents ought ship of Joseph Arch, the “ Agricultural | t> be considered innocent uatil proven Laborers’ Union’ was formed. About| guilty. This is the real difference. We the same time the emp! yers also joined Race a right a So in s union, called the “ Farmers Associa- | pfiper - tion.” The struggle The laborers first asked, and the farmers granted, ap advance in their wages of one condemnation speedily began. | | deal deeper in the mud of corruption | than McGregor was in the mire;” shilling a week. Previous to preferring | cause it has not been proved that he was this request, the ordinary wages of a good | go, laborer was twelve shillings. The men | We may here be permitted to express say they owe this increase to the existence | our profound regret that the Patriot— be- main unconvineed ;”’ and the farmers had | | out the Jabour which they had rejected | The writer asserts that the farmers ceased to regard the | He declares action, The farmers wrongly and unwisely decided | demands of their employers they united they have been subsisting upon the Union | | . | of telling those | be subject to | law which are open } carnival of enjoyment. our pleasure that they have been entrap- | to hear the best of music. they now stand forth branded and mark- | r | }l of the crime of bribery and corruption; | but the Patriot is not justified | in declaring that O’Connor ‘ was a good | of Arts and Manufac- removed at once (to~ 1 be put belong to the Coun tures, they should be day), or else they will building out of the Yours truly, a4. 8 The Gazette asks the people of Mon- treal ‘‘ what they think of the wretched [ Signed) DORION, | Communist spirit displayed in this trans have been The guilty of an act which no private indivi- Government dual could perform with impunity. En- trenched in their greatness, they have de- liberately violated all law, and taught the might constitutes lesson that with them right. No man’s liberty is assured with this spirit of tyranny, this defiance of all legal restraint, this invoeation of brute } foree for the assertion of presume d richts | which the machinery of law is especially framed to confer, boldly flaunted in our faces. To day it is the Crystal Palace property which is thus seized upon, be- cause those who believe themselves to be Tho k i iin the legal possession of it, are unwilling | ** The keenest and most uncompro- | to give it up until a decision of the Court shall determine whether they have any rights or not. To-morrow it may be the personal liberty of some obnoxious politi- cal opponent that will be restrained, or a free outspoken press that will be } nh case 1s sup- The principle in eac ;and, as the people value their pressed. the same liberties they will take the earliest means tyrants at Ottawa, that under our free constitutional system, the Government as well as the people must the ordinary processes of to all, and that out- rages such as this Cryst il Palace outrage, cannot be committed without the great indignation of a law-loving and | law-abiding community.” cinereus o——. oe oe ——_ NEAT WEE XK. Tue first three days of next week will, if fine, be gala days in Charlottetown. The Regatta on the harbor, the promen- | ade concerts at the Drill Shed, and the | grand ball at Market Hall, together with | cricket matches, etc., will make up a perfect | energetic Boating The of the ‘Millsboro’ we understand, using every Committee Club’’ are, possible exertion to make the affair suc- | eessful. On Tuesday, we expect to see a much finer exhibition of P. E. Island pluck, muscle, and aquatic skill than that which last year delighted Lord and Lady | Dufferin. The promenade concerts on Thursday and Friday evenings will be | ‘ | rendered especially attractive by the pre- sence of the splendid band of the Royal | Irish Fusileers ; and people of the country | as wellas the town, will, doubtless flock | The Ball on Wednesday evening will, we have no doubt, the city and surrounding country. For full particulars see our advertizing col- umos, “WAS WANTED. Tue streets, during the dark nights of last week, were unrelieved by the light of a single gas lamp, if we except those oppo- | } site the Post Office. The reason is thata difficulty has arisen between the City Council and the Gas Company respecting the cost of each lamp. The Council has, we understand, decided to appeal to the citizens assembled at a public meeting. The appeal, we think, shows that the Councillors are wanting in ability ; and act the Civic business. They were elected to trans- Let them trans- act it like sensible men and the people will The peop'e do not want But they do appeal meeting” will, we bear them out. to be bothered with appeals. want gas. The“ learn, be held on Wednesday evening next, in Market Hall. -_- of the Union; while the farmers assert | the high-toned, the pure, the true Pat. | ANCIENT EGYPTIANS PUT TO riot—should stoop to be the excuser of a that they granted it of their own free | briber. ‘Corruption,’ pleads the Patriot, will, under no pressure or dictation, and | that the Union had nothing whatever to “is catching,” and the Tories are to de with the matter. However this may! blame. Is this the language we have a be, says the writer already quoted, the | right to expect from the ‘“ Patriot?” demand made in February, 1874, at a| And, after all, is the excuse valid ? time when the price of farm produce was Twelve months ago, the lately convicted failing, for another increase of a shilling | politicians were vociferating at the top ot a week, was certainly made under the | their voices in denunciation of the alleged corruption of the Conservative Party. | Were these men pure then? or did they the men that the saccess of their first | openly ery demand was due to the existence of the | while secretly they helped to pile the filth Union. The farmers took alarm, not | still higher? Corruption is, we fancy, wholly, nor even chiefly, at the prospect | We direction of the Union executive, and may probably be traced back to the belief of not such a very taking thing. can— of another rise in wages, but from a na-|not imagine that a man who, twelve | | and other turnips. | has been going on for years, and may go on for many more. It is astrange fate to pre- | serve one’s skeleton for thousands of years | in order that there may be fine southdowns tural feeling of strong dislike to being| months ago, was uncontaminated—who subject to foreign interference, and to Joathed and abhorred the very idea of having demands for increased wages made | corruption—should be completely satur- upon them suddenly at the instigation of | aged with corruption now? And, with the outsiders, at seasons when labor must be} fate of Sir John A Macdonald (whom had upou any terms. The increase of | the Grits denounced as the very embodi- wages was accordingly refused, and there- | ment of corruption) so fresh in their fore the men entered upon a strike. The | memories, it is anything but likely that ext step was taken a few days after- within the past ten months the Grits have wards, when the Newmarket District become enamoured of corrupt practiees at Farmers’ Association met at Newmarket, | elections. No. The conclusion to which and resolved to make no alteration in reasoning men are irresistibly drawn is ’ hours or wages, and to lock out Union | that the Grits, being proved guilty of cor- | men so long as the men continued to | ruption, were corrupt from the beginning ; trike. On the 24th of March they | and that to their corruption was added adopted the further resolution that hypocrisy, MODERN USES. [Fi » the London Tin The other day at Sakhara | saw nine camels pacing down from the mummy pits to the back ofariver laden with nets, in invoking | | t ear.) | | be irresistible to the youth and beauty of | | cessive and untoward tutelage ; | was Canada more united than at present in | sympathy of purpose and unity of interest | with the Mother Country, more at one with | | | | i | } | which were femora, tiba, and other bony | bits of human form, some two hundred weight in each net on each side of the camel. Among the pits there were people busily engaged in searching out, sifting, and sorting out the bones which almost ‘down with corruption,’ | crust the ground. On inquiry I learned that the cargoes with which the camels were laden would be sent to Alexandria, and thence be shipped to English manure manufactures. They make excellent mas nure, [ am told, particularly for Swedes The trade is brisk and and chevoits in adistant land! But Egypt is always a place of wonders. >: ae -+ ~ A. T. Stewart's advertising bill for one year amounts to about $500 00#. A collision occurred in the Mersey on | Wednesday last, between the Spanish , steamer 7omasand the Anchor Line steams jer Alezandra. ‘The latter was sunk and the Tomas badly damaged. The total population of New Zealand, ex. clusive of natives, half casts, and Chinese, | was on the Ist of March of the present | year, 299,168. or something less than the | population of Boston. | AND CANADIAN INSTITUTIONS. On Thursday night, the 3d instant, His Excelleney the Governor General was en- tertained at dinner by the members of the foronto Club. His speech in reply to the toast of his health, is one of the most re- markable delivered by him in Canada We take the following report from the {, ~— Mr. Cameron and Gentlemen, 1 cannot ita very happy circumstance that one of the most gratifying ever made by a representative Queen in any portion of the British Ems } should find its th lial and splendid reception h body of t but consider progresses of the appropriate close in at the which, s cor unds of a gentlemen hough non-political in its corporate char- acter, is so thoroughly representative of all that is most distinguished in the various schools of political thought in Canada, It is but afew short weeks since I left Toronto and yet I question whether many born Canadians have ever seen or learnt more of the western half of the Dominion than | have during that brief (Ilear, Memory itself scarce ly suffices to reflect the shifting vision of mountain, wood and water, inland and silver rolling rivers, golden corn-lands and busy prosperous towns, through which we may have held our way; but though the mind’s eye fail ever again to readjust the dazzling panorama as long as life not a single echo of the universal greeting with which wo have been welcomed will be hushed within our hearts (Great ap- plause. ) Yet deeply as | am sensible of the personal kindnesses of which I have been the recipient, proud as I feel of the honor done to my office, moved as I have been ky the devoted atlection shown for our Queen and for our common country, no one is better aware than myself of the imperfect return I have made to the gen- erous enthusiasm which has been evoked. If, then, gentlemen, I now fail to respond in suitable terms to the toast you have drunk, if in my hurried replies to the in- numerable addresses with which I have been honored, an occasional indiscreet o1 ill-considered phrase should have escaped my lips, I know that your kindness will supply my shortcomings—that naught will be set down in malice—and that an indul- gent construction will be put upon my hasty sentences. (Laughter.) But, gent- lemen, though the language of gratitude may fail, the theme itself supplies me w ith that of congratulation, for never has tlie head of any Government passed through a land so replete with contentment in the present, so pregnant with promise in the future. (Cheers.) From the northern forest borderlands, whose primeval recesses are being pierced and indented by the rough and ready cultivation of the free- grant settler, to the trim enclosures and wheatsladen townships that swell along the ikes, from the orchards of Niagara to the hunting grounds of Nepigon, in the wig wam of the Indian, in the homestead of the farmer, in the workshop of the artizin, in the office employer, everywhe:e have | learnt that the people are satisfied —/(applause)—satislied with their own in- dividual prospects, and with the prospects of their country - applause—satistied with the Government, and with the institutions under which they prosper—applause satisfied to be the subjects of the Qluee tremendous applause stied to be members of the British Empire. (Renewed applause) Indeed I cannot help thinking that quite apart from the advantages to myself, my yearly journeys through the Provinces will have been of public benetit, as exemplifying with what spontaneous, unconcerted unanimity of language the entire Dominion has declared faith in it- self in its de in its connection with seas endures of his n 43 BALL nw ny, the Mother Country, and in the well- ordered freedom of a constitutional mon- archy. [Applause.| And, gentlemen, it is this very combination of sentiments which appears to me so wholesome and satisfactory. Words cannot express what pride I feel asan Englishman in the loyalty of Canada to England. [Hear hear. ] Nevertheless, I should be the first to des plore this feeling if it rendered Canada diss loyal to herself—if it either dwarfed or smothered Canadian patriotism, or gener: ated s sickly spirit of dependence. Such, however, is far from being the case. legislation of your Parliament, the attitude of your statesmen, the language of your press, sufficiently show how firmly and ins telligently you are prepared to accept and supply the almost unlimited legislative facilities with which you have been en- dowed—hear, hear,—-while the daily grow- ing disposition to extinguish sectional jeas lousies and to ignore an obsolete provins cialism, proves how strongly the ycung heart of your confederated commonwealth has begun to throb with the consciousness of its nationalized existence. [Great cheering.] At this moment not a shilling of British money finds its way to Camda, Ihe interference of the home Government he the tween two countries are regulated by i spirit of such mutual deference, forbear ance and moderation as reflects the great- est credit upon the statesmen of hoth. (Hear, hear.] Yet so far from this gift of autonomy haying brought about any di- vergence of aim or aspiration on eitherside, every reader of our annals must be aware that the sentiments of Great Britain are infinitely more friendly | now than in those early days wher the political intercourse of the two countries was disturbed and complicated by an ex- that never her in social habits and tone of thought, more proud of her claim to share in the heritage of England’s past, more reaily to accept whatever obligations may be im~ posed upon her by her partnership in the future fortunes of the Empire. [Tremen- dous applause. J cent journey has been more striking, no- thing indeed has been more affecting than the passionate loyalty everywhere evinced towards the person and the throne of | Queen Victoria, (Great cheering. } Where- | ever | have gone, in the crowded cities, | in the remote hamlet, the affection of the } people for their Sovereign has been blazcn-~ ed forth against the summer sky by every device which art could fashion or ingenuity invent. [Cheers.] Even in the wilds and | deserts of the land, the most secluded and untutored settler would hoist some cloth or rag above his shanty, and startie the solitudes of the himself and his children in glad allegiance to his country’s Queen, [Applause.] Even the Indian in his forest, or on his reserve would marshal forth bis picturesque sym~ bols of fidelity, in grateful recognition of a Government that never broke a treaty or falsified its plighted word to the red man great applause--or failed to evince for | the ancient children of the soil a wise and conscientious solicitude. [Renewed ap- plause and cheers.] Yet touching as were the exhibitions of so much generous feel- ing. | could scarcely have found pleasure in them had they merely been the expres- sions of a traditional habit or of a conven. tional sentimentality. No, gentlemen, they sprang from a far more genuine and noble source. ([Cheers.] The Canadians are loyal to Queen Victoria, in the first place because they honor and love her for her personal qualities, — cheers—for her life- long devotion to her duties—cheers—for | her faithful observance of all the obliga- tions of a constitutional monarch ~ cheers ; and in the next place, they revere her as the symbol and representative of as glori- ous @ national life, of as satisfactory a form of government as any country in the world can point to—a national life illustrious ‘through athousand years with the achieve- ments of patriots, statesmen, warriors, and scholars—great cheers—a form of Govern< ment which more perfectly than any other | combines the element of stability with ; a complete recognition of popular nights, and insures by its social accessories, so far as is compatible with the imperfections of human nature, a lofty standard of obliga- tion and simplicity of manners in the classes that regulate the general tone of our civil intercourse, As you know, on my way across the lakes [called in atthe city of Chicago—a city that has arisen more splendid than ever from her ashes—and at Detroit, the home of one of the most prosperous and intelli- gent communities on this continent. At both these places | was received wita the | utmost kindness and courtesy by the civil | authorities and by the citizens themselves, | who vied with each other in making me feel The | i (Cheers ance ehter.) Canada towards } (Chee nd laughter. Again, nothing in my res | forest with a shot from | his rusty firelock and a lusty cheer from | wi) how friendly an interest thet great ind generous people who have advanced the United States to so splendid a position in the family of nations, regard their Cana- dian neighbors : though dispo ed to watch with genuine admiration and sym- pathy the development of our Dominion nto a great power, our friend the line are wont, as know, to amuse their light the ‘large utter- (Laughter.} M but across you er moments with ances gods,” iddre early More than once I was that ( should unite her fortunes with those of the Great Rept blic ({ fo these invitations | ir vari ibly replied bv a tint ing them that in Canada we were esse ntialls ademocratic people (great Jangi : . ! is unle sed with the playful suggestior inada ughter. } inada we were nothing would con lar will could complete contro! over ent exercise an immediate and the E ed the Government were buta Committee of Parliament, which was an emanation from constituencies {loud | applause], and that no Canadian would be breathe freely if he thought that the persons administering the affairs of his country were removed beyond the super- vision or control of ' lative assem blies. Hear, cheers and laughter). And,gentlemen,in this extemporized repar- country the Ins (renew isters who conduct r able to our legi hear, tee of mine laughter there will be found, I think, a germ of sound philosophy, — In fact, it appears to me that even from the point of view of the most enthusiastic ad vocate of popular rights, the Government of Canada is nearly perfect, for while you are free from those historical complications which sometimes clog the free running of Parliamentary machinery at home, while you possess every guarantee and pri vilege that reason can demand—{hear, hear]~you bave an additional element of elasticity introduced into your system in person of the Governor-General, for, as | bad oeeasion to remark e!sewhere, in best forms of Government, should a misunder- standing occur between the head of the State and the representative of the people, it is possible a dead-lock might ensue ofa very grave character, inasmuch as there would be of course no power to appeal toa third party and dead-locks are the dan-« gers of all constitutional systems—w! in Canada, should the Governor-General and his Legislature unhappily disagré I misunderstanding is referred to E & omicu “"? whose only o} ject of course, is to give free play to your Parliamentary institutions, whose intervention can be re- lied upon as Imparti il and benevolent, and who would immediately replace an erring or impracticable Viceroy—for such things 'can be {laughter _ by another oflicer more competent for his duties, without the slight, est hitch or disturbance having been occa sioned in the orderly march of your affairs. (Applause). If then the Canadian people are loyal to the Crown, it is with a reason ing loyalty. (Applause.) It 1s because they are able t » apprec the advantage of having inherited 2 constitutional system so work ible, SO d, an lso pecu li urly ad ipte l to their own e pecial wants (Applause.) If to these constitutional ad- vantages we add the blessing of a judiciary not chosen by ac ipricious method of popu- lar election, but selected for their ability and professional standing by respon ible Ministers, and alike independent of popular favor and political influences— (hear, hear) a civil service whose rights of permanency both the great political parties of the coun- try have agreed fo recognize—(applause) and consequently a civil free from partizanship, and disposed to make the ser- vice of the st ite, rather than that of p arty, o} } our ereas €, tue ngl ind as iate well balances service their chief ject (hear, hear); an electoral system purged of corruption by the joint action of the ballot and the newly-consti- tuted courts for the trial of br p> plause) ; a population hardy, y, and industrious, simple in their manners, sober !in mind, God-fearing in their lives ; and lastly, an almost unlimited breadth of terri- tory, replete with agricultural and mineral esourses, it may be fairly said that Canada sets forth upon her enviable career under as safe, sound and solid auspices as any State whose bark has been committed to the stream of time. (Great cl The only thing still wanted is to man the ship with a more crew. From the extraordinary number of babies I have }seen at every window and cottage door— (laughter and applause)-—native energy and talent appears to be rapidly supplying this defect—-(laughter) ; still it a branch cf industry in which the home manufacture has no occasion to dread foreign competi- tion—(great laughter —and Canadians can well afford toshare their inheritance with the straightened sons of toil at home. When crossing the Atlantic to take up the government of this country, I found myself the fellow-passenger of some hundred em.- igrants. As soon as they had recovered from the effects of sea~sickness, the captain of the ship assembled these persons in the hold, and invited the Canadian gentlemen on board to give thena any information in regard to their adopted country which might seem useful. Some of the emigrants began asking questions, one man prefaced his remarks by saying that ‘‘he had too many children.’’ Being called upon in my eeriDg. ) numerous fair 2 : | turn to address the company alluded te wigh the domestic affairs of the Dominion | turn to address the company, I alluded to | h@s ceased, while the Imperial relations be- the phrase, which had grated harshly on my ears, and remarked that perhaps no better idea could be given of the difference be- | tween the old country and their new home | than by the fact that whereas in England a struggling man might be overweighted in in the battle of life by a numerous family, in the land to which they were going aman could scarcely have too many children. Upon which I was | greeted with an approving thump on tne back by astalwart young emigrant, who cried out “Right you are, Sir, that’s what I,ve been telling Emily.’’ (Great laughter.) Indeed, for many years past I have been a strong advocate of emigration in the inter- jests of the British population. I believe that emigration is a bene-~ | fit to those that go and those that remain, j at the same time that is the most efigctual | and legitimate weapon with which labor can contend with capital. | have written a book upon the subject, and have been very much scolded for wishing to depopulate my native country; but however strong an advocate of emigration from the English standpoint I am of course a thousandfold more inter~’ ested in the subject as the head of the Can~ adian Government. Applause). Of course am notin a position nor is it desirable | that I should take the responsibility of say~ ing anything on this occasion which should | expose me hereafter to the reproach of hav~ | ing drawn a false picture or given delusive | information in regard to the prospects and opportunities afforded by Canada to the in | tending settler. (Applause.) The subject | is SO serious a one, so much dependent up. | on the individual training, capacity, health, | conduct, and antecedents of each several! emigrant, and no one without an intimate and special knowle dge of the subject would | be justified in authoritatively enlarging up- | on it—(hear, hear) ; but this at all events I | may say, wherever | have gone I have found | numberless persons who came to Canada | without anything, and have since risen to competence and wealth-—(applause)—that | have met no one who did not gladly acx knowledge himself better off than on his first arrival —(cheers)- thousands of persons with whom I have been brought into contact. no matter what their race or nationality, none seemed ever to regret that they had come here. (Great and continued applause. ) — of the settlers in the more distant regions | of ths country. Undoubtedly their hardships had been very great, the difficulties of cli. mate and locality frequently discouraging thei personal privations most severe, but the language of all was identical, evincing without exception pride in the past, content with the present. hope in the future (chzers]; while, combined with the satisfac- tion each man felt in his own success and the improved prospects of hia family, there shone another and even a nobler feeling— namely, the delight inspired by the con- sciousness Of being a co-efficient unit in a visibly prosperous community, to whose } prosperity he was himself contributing. | (Hear, hear, and cheers.) Of course these people could never haye attained tke poei- tion in which | found them without tremens dous exertions. Probably the agricultural laborer who comes to this country from Norfolk or Dorsetshire will have to work a great deal harder than ever he did in his life before, but if his work is harder he will find a sweetener to his toil of which he could never have dreamt in the old country, namely, the prospect of independence, of a roof over his head tor which he shall pay no rent, and of ripening cornfields round his homestead which own no master but him- self. {Tremendous applause.} Let a man be sober, healthy, and industrious ; let him come out ata proper time of the year: let him be content with small beginnings and not afraid of hard work, and I can scarcely conceive how he should fail in his career, and that amongst | This fact pars | | ticuhrly struck me on entering the log huts | (Long continued applaus have been tempted by the interest of the subject to trespass far too long, I fear, upon your indulgence [no, no,] but I felt that perhaps [ could not make a more appro- priate return for the honoi you have done me, than by frankly mentioning to you the upon my mind during my ' Hear, hear.) It now me, therefore, to thank for your kindness, ry frash mark of con- impression left recent j only you mos irneys. remains {or t neartiy to assure you that every } ‘ fidenee which I receive from any section of the inadian ) op! » only makes me more determ ned to strain every nerve in their service [cheering] and to do my best to contribute towards the great work upon h vou are now engaged, namely that of building up on ti la of the Atlantic a prosperou a? y ind powerful associate of the British Empire. [Tremendous ap ae" the conclusion o. His Excellency’s speech the whole company cheered for several minutes. nr ne an WESCELLANEOUS. G I 2K 1 is appointed Captain ‘ \t re | (ven \I | rilt 1inst B hes exper ted to bet f 1 October Madrid ad report a new cabinet crisis, an _d the ay niment of a new Ministry [tis thought that 100,000 men will be add- “1 to the dS] army by the consertption. Bush fires on Long Island have destroyed ver a th es of woodland since Sa- turday. rwe th and men will be sent to Cuba na few days toreinforce the Spanish troops in that island Advices from Spain state that Marshal Serrano will soon take command in person | i \ f the army of the North Business of every dercription is almost at a standstill in Havana, owing to the extreme influctuations of gold. The Portuguese Minister of the Interior has issued a notice that Arabian ports on the Red Sea are infected with a plague. The trial of those alleged to have been ims plicated in Marshal Bazaine’s escape will com- 14th of September. a The planters in Cy crowing pine apples and bananas for the Ameri in market pays better than tobacco and coffee lexas is suffering from a prolonged and severe drought. Large numf of cattle | ive died of arvation The cotton cron in one district of Vera Cruz 1 Mex which produced 300,000 ind 1873, w 1 600,000 this | il Ad from France report the suspension L Univers by the Government for the re- t publication of a bitter art against I j Serran Phe German Emigt Society's report shows a falling off of per cent. for the teight months of tl ear, a compared th t! ir 1873 v murdered at Belles on Wednesday light The rd and compAnion } th be , Mr. Albert I ce, M. P. P. for Essex, has i need the elaborate address to his tituents his ention to abandon the custom of personally canvassing for voles. A despatch from Fort Garry announces the ection of Louis Riel for Provencher by ac- amati [he nomination, in opposition, f Dr. Brow ted on a unt of some fi 1 ed hal | on building | ( ) Ly of 709 families ] Austrian I xped 1, for whose | ave fears v felt, h } 1 heard . Bes ishipw k, tool leig hs, a 4 g I i ch- ‘ N VW 1 2 I English it is now safe, iy s ‘ Y in ¢ sequence of the be- ‘ tt ‘to the average, ! s are “ , and English heatiss g i from there. Ad $ Gautemala, of August 30, ite rs Gonzales and Buhres, 1 the outrages on British Con- 1 the second time on the { at Meze, in the de- par t, Fran mi the 4th inst, | the anniversary of the establishment of the Republic. The geudarmes fired on the riote ra, of ' m was killed and nineteen Official auth: y fi the exposure and punishment of all premoters and participators rtheS ern t bles has been transmitted » United States Ma and Attorneys in ral S where the disturbances ive taken place Board of Steam Navigation in session ey », N. Y., has adopted a resolution in fav f Government aid to American ships uilders. A resolution was also adopted re- juesting the President to place some man at head 1 rs Who cannot be ribed, and wh ili be a practical man rhe Ye wi } oken outin sey- ral of the cities of the Southern States, and essels from ¢ 12 and other West Indian Is- lands are i intine at New York with yellow fever on board. Fortunately the late- n tl 1 in which it has appeared vil! tend 1ilsravages, The quaran- ubt, li v i A Paras as a Drapty Weapon. On the {3th ult., Mary McDonald, aged fifty, of No. | o7 West Eighteenth street, had a quarrel with i Mrs. Callahan, of Twenty-sixth street and Seventh avenue, and was struck on the head | by her with a eaded parasol. Mrs. McDonald, whos | home, and was shortly afterwards taken ill nd died on Saturday night. The case was last evening, who ordered the arrest of Mrs. Callahan.— [N. Y. World, Sept. 7.] ‘Figures cannot Jie’’is a maxim that some persons probal | continue to believe The discrepanc the trade returns of Canada and the ted States, noticed by an American rna d of itself be sufficient | to prove that figures sometimes tell a great feal of untruth We can understand how Mt n nay receive a great deal more dst ther country appears to have | upplied it with, because the check on ex- often very inadequate and the value d:fferent. But here we have all sorts of dis- ncies. $2,362,000 worth of iron steel, shipped from the States. be "re 791,000 worth in Canada ; ports 1s tobacco, leaving over half a million iwindles down to $117,61 receipt at house; Ontario and Que- ipt ofa million and a » States at a value of von its in statisticians 300 to account for these di would be desirable to irse, for misleading figures are worse than none atall. Mr. Darby, in his report on the Reciprocity Treaty, ¢ the opinion that it would be safe to take the imports of each country asthe true measure of the value of theexports of the other; but it is certain that in this he onto Natio 7 crepancies though it trace them to their x pressed Sir Samuel Baker is just now the object of | he gravest charges, made againsts bim by | s chief engineer, Mr. McWilliam, who aps | t hi pears in the Times with accusations which cannot be overlooked. According to Mr. McWilliam, Sir Samuel! Baker was in loague with Abou Soc frequent raids nh persons upon unoffending ibes for the purpose of plunder, and gave orders, on one occasion at least, that al! the natives found near his camp should be shot, f espective of orders also being execuled lle says, I would rather not relate the brutal details of those cold-blooded murders,’ and he speakes of having witnessed scenes such as are not to be met with in modern history. Sir Samuel Baker has appealed to his other oflicers to vindicate him; but up to the latest account they have failed to comply with his request, It is to be hoped that no unneces- sary delay will take place in replying to these heavy charges, if they can be met, and the reputation of the illustrious traveller will receive no lasting injury in this age of andles. Sir Samuel is bringing out a book relating to his last expedition, and a new interest will attach to it in consequence of these damaging accusations; but we cans not suppose that he will allow these states ments of his chief engineer officer to mono- polize public attention until the tardy pro- cess of publication is completed, and we await with anxiety the earliest information concerning a subject of so much consequence to the good name ofa British explorer, and affecting at the same time the good name of the British Empire in its dealings with the savage tribes ot Africa. i > and sex, these to the letter ‘he population of Chicago, according to the census of 1870, was 298,293 ; of St.Louis, at the same time, 310,864, but the populas | tion of Chicago is now estimated at over 400,000, 1 Gentlemen, I } and | tood up and iba have discovered that as i head was badiy cut, went | and | omes $5,s | n 92, American locomotives, | whittle | It is difficult | ad,a noted slave-dealer; made | VEW ADVERTISEMENTS. D>AARAIA SO Hillsboro’ Boating Club. g GRAND PROMENADE CONCERTS. Two Nights Only. MNWHE CONCERTS by the Band of the 87th | Royal Irish Fusileers will be given iu the DRILL SHED on MONDAY & TUESDAY BVENG Sept, 24 & 22, 1874. TICKETS Fifty Cents each, to be had at Bremner Bros,. Bookstore. Doors open at 7.50, p.m. orommence at eight o'clock. EXCURSION FROM Georgetown, Pictou and Summerside. On MONDAY, from the above named places to Charlotte- | town, and good for return on THURSDAY, | the 24th., will be issued on board the Stea- | mers ofthe P. E. I. Steam Nay. Co., at | | ONE FARE. This will afford persons wishingto do so, an opportunity of attending all the amuse- ments advertised by the Hillsboro’ Boating Club. By Order, J. E. HASZARD, Sec’y. Ch’town, Sept. 14—all pa till 22nd ‘Hillsboro’ Boating Club. ‘PUBLIC BALL. | the City Hall, on Wednesday evening, the | 23rd inst. The following gentlemen have consented the Club: —- Hon. The Chief Justice, Hon. Joseph Pope, Hon. A. A. McDonald, Hon. John Longworth, Hon. W. W. Sullivan, J. E. Boyd, Esq.., L. H. Davies. Esq. CLius COMMITTEE. F. L. Haszard, Esq., Mr. H. J. Palmer, Mr. H. W. Longworth, Mr. W. C. DesBrisay, Mr. J. E. Haszard. Gentlemens’ Tickets $3.00 Lady's do §2.00. Application for tickets must be made to | the Secretary on or before Monday the 21st instant. By order J. E. HASZARD, Secy. Ch'town, Sept. 14, 1874 —all is! pa till 23d HILLSBORO’ BOATING CLUB! pleted arrangements, are happy to an- | nounce, that by kind permission of Colonel | Stephenson and Officers of the Regiment, de kts a OF THE ‘87th ROYAL IRISH FUSILEERS WILL VISIT THIS CITY ON THE 2ist, 22d & 23d Sept., 1874, and will give a series of CONCERTS, of which particulars will be published later. ON TUESDAY, SEPT. 22, BOR, of which the following is the PROGRAMME: UMPIREs : Lieut. Haszard, R. N.; and John E. McLean. First Race. Sail Boats 20 feet keel and over. Ist Prize, a Silver Cup, by Major Pollard, and $15; 2d Prize, $10.00. fee $3.00. SecoND Rack—Four Oared Row Bouts. Ist Prize, $20.00; 2nd Prize, @10.00. En- trance fee $2.00. Tump Race—Ningle Scull. Ist Prize, Earl of Dufferin’s Medal & $10.00; 2nd Prize, $7.50. Entrance fee, 82.00. Fourtu Rack—Sail Boats under 20 ft. keel. Ist Prize, $20.00; 2nd Prize, @10.00. En- trance fee. $2.50. Firrn Race—Stern Scull. Ist Prize, 96.00; 2nd Prize, $4.00. Entrance fee, $1.00. Sixru Race—Two Oared Boats. Prize, $15.00: 2nd Prize, @7.50. trance fee, &2.00. Ist En- SEVENTH Racer. Four Oared Row Boats pulled vy Boys under 17. Ist Prize, $12.00; 2nd Prize, $8.00. trance fee, $1.50. Eigutn Race. Sail Boats (open to all except winners in | previous races.) Prize, $10.00; 2nd Prize, trance fee, $1.00. Ist 5.00. Ene Nintu Race—Double Scull. Ist Prize, $10.06; 2nd Prize, 85.00. trance fee, $1.50. En- TENTH Race—Two Oured Dories. Ist Prize $6.00; 2nd Prize, $4.00. fee, 1.00. The rules and regulations governing this Entrance | Regatta will be those of the Royal Halifax Yacht Club. Entries must be paid at Messrs. Bremner sros. Bookstore, before noon of Monday, the 21st Sept. The first race will be started at 10 o'clock, a, m. sharp. _ ON WEDNESDAY 23RD SEPT, os A CRICKET MATCH was m staken.—Tor- WILL BE PLAYED ON GOVERNMENT HOUSE GROUNDS. The Band of the 87th R. I. F. wil] be in at- | tendance each day. Admission to Regatta, Grand Stand, " Cricket Field, By order, J. E. HASZARD, Sec’y. Ch’town, Sept. 7, 1874. r MONTREAL AND ACADIAN S.S. COMPANY. 25 cts. Change of Boats, O* and after lst SEPTEMBER, Three First-class Iron Screw Steamers, of 840 tons, 7,500 barrels capacity, will take the place of the S.S, California Columbia, and Armenian, and form a Weekly Line between Montreal, Shediac, Charlottetown, and Pic- tou. S.S. Venevia; ComMMANDER, H. Gorpon. S.S. VaLreta; ComMANDER, LiInDQUESTER. S.S. Roma; COMMANDER, MCKINLEY. DAVID SHAW, Esq., Agent, Montreal. HYNDMAN BROS., Agents at Charlottetown. Through Freights. The subscribers will grant Through Bills of Lading, by above Line, to CHICAGO, for Mackerel and other Freights, at One Dollar HYNDMAN BROS. per barrel. Ch’town, Sept, 14, 1874.—2m Performance the 2lst inst., Titkets i BALL under the auspices of the Hills- | | | ties allowed a discount of ten per cent. | boro’ Boating Club, will be given in | | | to act in conjunction with a Committee of) | BUSINESS, and is NOT the Busine | Dry Goods,]| Hardware, ; Stores, | Pipe-fixings of every description, Cigars, | Cigarettes, and | Smoking | cheap, for cash only. A REGATTA will be held in CHARLOTTETOWN HAR- | Messrs. H. P. Welsh | conn ace Hu AVING appointed William James Heney { } Ladner | (Prince St. 6] En- | | § | of Charlottetown, when the Military Band AUCTION, HOUSE AND LOT OF LAND ge svld by Auction, on the on TUESDAY the 15th day of SE mn TL the 15 1 SEI | BER, inst., at TWELVE 0% LOCK, nea, _ ga Preggin te d by the late John Law. son, Esquire, with land on whici bt and the gerden adioining an WILLIAM DODD lerms at sale.— pa Auctioneer SUPERIOR STOCK AM instructed by the Government Stock Farm Commissioners, to Sell by Auctio at the ¢ ‘attle Show Grounds, ¢ ‘harlottetown’ on TUESDAY, the 29th day of Septemt my oo ( et Day » a 2 o'clock p os sharp, the following STOCK. fr Se gpher. Farin, viz: a, oni -— 1 Blood FILLY. two years old, Sire * Blucher,”’ Dam, thoro’ bred Mare: i . 1 Mare FOAL. Sire. Imported Ameri. -> pga Don Juan.’ Dam, thoro’ bred 1 Mare FOAL, Sire. Clyde Mare ; 1 Cart COLT, Sire. Stockman’s Mare; 1 Mare FOAL, 1 Durham COW, in premises, ** Gladstone,” Dam *Blucher,” Dam, Calf, (three yearg Old, ) 2 Durham Heifer CALVES. } 4 do Bull do, 1 Ayrshire Heifer do, r RAMS, 2 Leices 1? EWES, 18 LAMBS, Purchasers from Prince and King’s Coun- A. McNEILL, Aue’t. Ch'town, Sept. 14. 1874 till exh COUNTRY DEALERS Can do Better at our Store in Stationery Supplies! Than at Dry Goods, Hardware, or Commis. sion Stores, as STATIONERY Is OUR or Comal For those wanting WRITING # WRAPPING PAPER, PENS, INK, SLATES, SLATE PENCILS, SCHOOL or other BOOKS, ENVELOPES, oranything else in our line, we can positive. ly OFFER BETTER PRICES than those alluded to. We always keep a FULL ASSORTMENT of everything in our line, and invite a call, BREMNER BROTHERS. Sept. 14, 1874.—2i “UNION HOUSE,” Corner Queen & King Streets, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. eel : | a“ VELLERS accommodated on reason- PRE Hillsboro’ Boating Club, having com- | able terms. Bedeque Oysters and Re- freshinents in first class style, at short no- tice, day and night. Best quality of Wine, Liquor, Ale. and Cordials. A HAIR DRESSING SALOON IN CONNECTION. Imported direct from Manufacturers, a Large and well-selected Stock Meerschaum, Briar, and Fancy Pipes, Cheroots, Chewing and Tobacco, (14 brands), ‘Tobacco tazors, Strops, Brushes, Soaps, . Which are offered, Wholesale and Retail, ! . A call respectfully Satisfaction guaranteed, Oysrers sold by the quart or bushel. CHAS. OTTO WINKLER. Proprietor, pt. 14, 1874.—er dw Pooches, solicited. * Uxiton Hovusr,”’ § my Attorney, with full power and sole authority to collect and disburse all the As- sets and Liabilities of the late tirm of Heney | & Ladner. I hereby notify all parties con- ' cerned to that effect. Entrance ARCH. LADNER. Ch’town, Sept. 2, 1874. To All Whom It May Concern. I hereby notify all parties indebted to the firm of Heney & Ladner to pay to me their | respective amounts, within THIRTY DAYS from the date of this Notice (2nd Septem- ber, 1874,) after which time all amounts yp- settled will be placed in legal hands for col- lection, All agents acting for said firm are notified to render accounts to me of their transactions, within the specified time, to enable me to satisfy all parties concerned and make full and satisfactory disburse- ments. All parties having claims against said firm are notified to furnish the same to me within THIRTY DAYS for settlement. The Books of the late firm of Heney & are at my office for inspection, Cor. Dorchester). W. J. HENEY. Sept. 14, 1874.—2in ‘BRIGHT SWOKING TOBACCO, LANDING EX. 8 §. VaLerra. CADDIES * McDonald's Bright $0- LACK.” ALSO, IN STORE 15 boxes Chewing, ‘ Princess Louise.’ 35 caddies do ‘One Star, * Black Diawond,’ &c. Ba For Sate Cnear. FENTON T. NEWBERY. Sept. 14, 1874.—2i Market Day Changed | From TUESDAY, 22nd, to WEDNESDAY, 23rd SEPTEMBER. UESDAY., the 22nd inst., being appoint- ed for a General Regatta, in the Harbor of the 87th Royal Irish Fusileers from Haii- fax, will be present. Notice is hereby given that the Market | will be held on Wednesday, the 23rd Sep- tember inst., instead of Tuesday, 22nd. By order f GEORGE Sept. 14. 1874 LEWIS, Market Clerk. iin SALT. 500 Bags Liverpool Salt, — POR SALE BY FENTON T, NEWBERY. Sept. 14, 1874. lw Mackerel Barrels. ANDING Ex. S. &. * Carroll.” from Boston : 175 BARRELS ? best American 50 HALF BBLS.,§ Manufacture. FENTON T. NEWBERY. Sept. 14, 1874. lw Union Hail Meetings: " es DAy, i, a. Me, * Breaking of bread.” Lord’s Days, 63, p. m., Gospel Preaching: Thursday, 8, p. m., Bible Readings. Sept. 14, 1874. tf LITTLE GLACE BAY COAL. IjXPECTED to arrive on MONDAY, Mth inst., 200 TONS of the above Very Superior House Coal: Wili be Soild Curar from vessel. Apply at Worship and KOUGHAN’S SCALES. Ch’town, Sept. 14.—ar h lin Buinpine Lors At CASCUMPEC HARBOR, near the GOv- ernment and Railway Wharves, FOR SALE ON FAVORABLE TERMS. A PLAN may be seen and particulars obtained at the Ol- fice of JOHN BALL, Esq., Charlotretow?- CORNMEAL. »¢ BBLS KILN DRIED, 200 To arrive ver Scud due here during the week. r F. T. NEWBERRY. June 22, 1574, Se in ( hes tha