7 H ae =r sR? A Mero * * A, MITRE er me ee a >—__—_—_ A Kansas paper, alluding to the manner in which Lidian azeuts acct mulate “6 pile,’ says: “An Todian ayent’s salary is about €1,500. By being economical in the saving ot his salary, he manuzes to retire at the ex- piration of ‘a four yea *s term with about $40,- 060, and in the meantime supports family iu a style that corresponds with the dignity ot ug official and representative of the best gov- ernment the sun ever shone upon” added that “*a superis tendeut who tu say that a superintendent shal! . js idertakes nel inake felty thousand dol'ars ont of an income of six babditants, and every one was shaking hands | likes bis own way more keenly, buc a Scutes-| théusand dollars,” is apt to vet hb uself tito rik LATE STORM IN NEW BRUNSWICK. The Storm of Friday mizht and Saturday morning resulted in namerous disasters on sea and shore. Our telegram from Quebec informs us that “ the ship Néar of Canada, for Montreal, with a weneral cargo, is ashore at the Pilars. Barqae Wary 2 kee, outward bound, is ashore at St. Roche.”’ r own harbor the damage done to shipp- cainparatiyely slight; the ship Com- modore Perry was driven fr her sncl Lup the Strait fortunately t sustainins We are pre amount of tou m Moors Shore, within serrous myary. pared to bear of a c¢ yisiderable | Seers. mand down to the vrivandiere, both inclusive, complied that, owing to their not having been able up to that time, to procure the baggage which they had broaght with there in the Nerapis. they mast go to Guildhall without their best uniforis, there was but One Opinion as to the fine appearance present- ed by the whole force of tue Bel sau Voluo- _-->- —-- PLOODED.—SUOCKING SCENES. The other evening » heavy thunderstorm burst over Beadford, Clayton, and the ad- joimog villages on that side of Manchester, A CEMETERY damaze to shipping in the Bay of | undy when sie dav we had a whose ili reports are received, } call from Captain Leary of the Hupress, vessel was driven on shore on Friday night at Irishtewn, near Mus ji ish, and whose escave, with his crew, from drowning was quite miracu us. he EKiapress lett Petite Passage on the Nova Seotia side on Friday morning for St. dohn, having in tow a quater of spars of the rrecked vessel Rilen Atlee, which were bemg srourht to M - bu the | reavy tog of Friday night, Captain Leary made Rowan at St. John. sud, a vd klore ne Knew Where he Was his vessel was alongside the rocks at [rishtown While the crew, consisting of the Captain, one two havds, were atlemptiing to keep wr Cleve the spars in tow struck the vessel tremendous blow, and seat bee bard and fast on ' ) Lie roc Xs. Swoon diter, & heavy fale tad soruas i ' w, the mght was dark Tae Captai snd tae sea Was raion Very hizsh. 1 and hig crew, sees » hupe of savi mr their vessel, ielt her, to gain the sh we: Dut, alter velimys gume Listance from the craft, the Captain saw that, through some extraordinary agency, the vessel had got alloat; the boat was put back and the crew asain attempted to coutrol the vessel's move- nents. They wor ked at her all through the dreary nizht, | Be tween the hizh seas, the thumping of the spars m the outside i ling i rocks on the other, and rolling and pitching, goals yt could accoarplish little. the } t vo dowu together. it seemed as if fuey uast all Davy came, but it brouzht them ne relief. [he seas rolled higher than ever. From seven in the morning until noean, -five long hours— those anudaunted men stood to their post, while | seas as hich as a three storey house broke over the vessel. completely filling her, and burying | i beneath the waters at surge. tue met Sull, they mate every hold of wh slevel Ves thoroughly vned their } *h could grasp, themse!l lust a Licie eu lrenched drowned—hoping az ' through — ai INost >) uy Occasionally, the spray and sea and surrounding tog, could | ol them wet the vale subsided, the sea abated, and a skiff | enthes a vlimpse of land. Fiaally, | manned by four men from the shore reached | them after great difficulty and took them of. he Captain had been oblived to cut thes adrift durias the nizht: the Banypress, to say, barring the loss of a forefoot and some | ftap | iter | } 5, Captain Leacy pars i strange damaze to tue keel, is but little injured. puimoin managed to bring his vessel up the harbor on | considerable extra Sunday wowing. On land the damage from the storm was | serious. We learn from Journal that in Albert County the tide ia the Petitcodiac rose hicher than was ever known before; dykes] broke alons the Petitcodiac and Shepody rivers, | the marshes overflowed, immense injury was lone to the grass, deals were washed away, the | Quickstep, lying at Mary's Point for stone, | was totally wreeked, and other losses sustained. At Sackville “gardens were laid waste; trees f their limbs, and uprooted ; dykes arried away, flooding the marshes, drowning eattle and destroyins great quantities of hay,— | i Loss | houses and barns more or less dama red. to farmers very serions."’—St. John Telegraph. | the 3 *hr. } . snorn << er BELGIAN VOLUNTEERS IN LUNDON. DANCE IN TUR STREETS. A London paper says :— During their waren to Guildhall the char- | acter of the greeting to the Belgians was| thoroughly English; buton their retura they succeeded in giving the enthasiasm quite a eontioental turn. [a moidera days no such scene has been witnessed in a leading part of | London as in the neighborhood of Cheapside at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon, When the, tiflemen issued from Guildhall their bands struck up a polka, and, instantly, several hundred wen began dancing in King street. | The English voluateers seemed much sur-| prised at first, as did also the ladies who oc-| cupied all the windows in the street; but atter a few minuies the latter began to wave their handkerchiefs, and some Riflemen in} British uniforms joined in the dancing. Meanwhile, & corps of Garde Civique who) had proceeded into Cheapside were singing | **God Save the Queen;” and, finding their! pertormance highiy approved, they continu. | THE i ‘ed it till they arrived mt the statue of Sir} Robert Peel. Jiere they seized on a volun-| teer in Highland costume. and, in spite of | his remonstrances, aume of them raised him | aloft and carried him triainphantiy on their! shoulders ip the direction of the General | Post Office. For a short time one might have | Guitidhall to St. Paul's. Compliments were | exchanged between the Beigians aod the in-| with every body else. A number of enter-| |under the coffins, raised them to the surface, | | ly no case of drowntog. | tery . and was followed by a tremendous tall of rain. Phe water filled the river Medloek with a degree of suddenness quite unexampled, and the Clayton Vale dyeworks were stopped hy the excess and muddiness of thestream. In| the viernity of Clayton Bridge a number of | wen had been employed several days patting | /down timber to protect an embankment abutt- - ) ing the river ta front of some cottages, and | ‘ | those the tunber was foreed away and carried down | the stream, which rapidly rose in height as} it advanced. About nine o'clock the water vot minty one of the three e¢:metries adj moins | Philips Park, and caused serious damage. | Che division of the burial ground neirest Manchester 1s to be sppropriated to menbers ot the Chureh of England, the middie plot is Dissenters, and the northern portion, whieh les very low, 3s consecrated tor the | nse of the Roman Catholics. All three are bounded by the Medlock, and to the inst | named the corporation have for several weeks | heen constructing a clay bank, about four| feet high, with # view to confine the river to} its proper bed. On this night, however, the | rush of water Was so strong thatit rose over! the embinkment, which is scarcely half ites | proper henght, and the consequences were | of w painful nature. Yhe water entered for} nw breadth of from 29 to 30 yards. along the! entire side of the cemetery, so ue LU yards) in length, and, as several recant mnterments had takea place im that part of the ground, the water sinking through the loose sand | for and one of them. containing tue body of a} woman, was floated over the adjoining flood gates of Messrs. Wood and Wright's dye- works, and pussed down the river. [t was, however, recovered lower down che streaa and taken to the Fairfield street police station, and the body being out of the coffin, and the | police most likely not kaowing whence tt had | come, reported the circumstance at the office | of the city coroner, The deputy-coroner, | Mr, Makingon, inquired invo the matter, and | on the next evening the body was placed in) a new coffin and re-interred. It was stated | jat the imquwest that the part of the cemetery | j whieh was flooded was appropriated to pab- | lic graves, and to the interments of bodes from the workhouses. When the flood oceur- | ed, one of the sextong vaw three or four| collins floating in the water, and he succeeded | In securing all but one whitch contained the | body of @ pauper; he afterwards found that! tue body had been recovered trom the stream | 48 above desertbed, Mr. Peatson, surgeon, who had | five teet. made a post morlem examination, said the) style, and costliness, aud comfort of these vail-| of being taught more than any other species of body and arms were tied roand with # cord, | which he believed was 4 common practice ta! workhouses and tufirmaries. tt was evident- open verdict. The height of water 1p the Cemetery was aggravated by the cireura- stance that the sluices in the flood gates! could not be opened, and this stoppage dam- med up the stream, caused the water fo rise at least ten feet, and buck up into the cewe- Some women attempted to open the sluices at nine o'clock, but found the axles immersed three or tour feet in the torrent, jand they could not be reached until two, }o’elock on Friday maguing, when the water) bad fallen severai feet. A hole was theu cut} through the clay bank of the cemetery, and | the water quickly receded to the river, leav- ing # great accumulation of mud upon the) newly-inade roads, to cleanse which a number of men were set to work. = Lt shouid be added that, in reference to the inquess in this matter, and to the whole circumstances of the ease, every obstacle has been torown in the way of their being published, but for what reavn 1s best known to the anthorities who have eaused ditficulties. cemetery is tie property of Che corpuration.— Manchester (ruardian. WHY SCOLCUMEN Git ON. those No class of foreigners are more desirable or more cordially welcomed in the United States than Scoteumen. tardy, enterprising and industrivus, they make the best of ert zens, A weiter in the London Spectator, aller remarking Chat they Succeed every- where, proceeds to tell why they do so. (hough hard in demeanor, and pragmatics! in mind, the Seotehman is nevertheless one | ot the most adaptable of mankind. Toere isa fund of reasvaableness in hin which en-| It is also Se pposed that a carn-val was being beld from | ables bim to adapt himself te ail circumstan- ces, tu ** tolerate the imtoleralie.’ profane, drunken, quarrelsom®, ignorant, half ‘eivilized, or rather semi-barbarous—yet he iveplied: “Instead of that, I will prove to you {that under certain jswear, however hard vou imay try. Then ithen took them haek to their childhood and fas dum? beasts. if vive vou a minute to do it! |tell the boys when they wa ited to) break my Some parts of the eeme- | known to the readers of the Sun that an excur j tery were submerged to a depth of four or) sion party left this city for Chicago yesterday | The jury returned an | Jersey Central Railroad Station yesterday: | ! | } had allowed no swearing, 00 drinking, and no) card playing, and enforced his rules with un- flinching firmness; but nevertheless had never | yet strack or received a blow, or resorted to} weapons of any king, He goverued, he said, hy example, by kindness and poeple ‘waking his men ashamed and afraid to break rules so wise. kind and fair—-rules which they | agreed on starting, by written contract, to | keep, and which he himself observed with | consnicnous fidelity, He gave me an account} of bis method of dealing with the profanity of | On a certain occasion they had said | “We can't help swearing,” He his mea. to him, circumstances vou can't he went on: “] talked to them a bit, and earried their thouczhts to their mother’s side and the prayers of their infanev, and the times { their inuocency, and after I had revived recollections I said, “6 Now, boys, I vive you a minute! Let the bravest of you swear if he can! They were as silent | Thea [ changed about and took them to a meeting, aud deseuribed the |? gray-haired minister plead:ng with a sober aud tearful con rrevation—such as I knew all of | swear! them had sometimes heard—and when T saw | thoat a mou , bothineness. Swear if you can! aspirations which leap like angels from the tem. | : | ple of our hearts, are forever wandering un-| satisfied? Why is it is that the rainbow and icloud come over us with a beauty that is not! Rezister of British Shipping. lof earth, and then pass off to leave us to muse | on their loveliness ? Why is it that the stars | which hold their festival around the miduizht) (iro throue, ave set above the geasp of our limited | faculties, forever mocking us with their unap- | therr eyes moistening a little, [I said azain: ‘+ Now. bovs, is your tims. : Then every | man’s throat was choked so that he could not speak, Finally [ said: “ But boys, perhaps you think it is only beeause the seenes [ have des- | “among civilized aud Christian | ertbed) were people, and away back in the ditys | of your childhood, that you could not} swear. But [il give you another chance. | Here we are with our tarred and greasy clothes, nit here on the Plains, wit’) nothing but save brash, and sand, and buffaloes 1 asap tongues, and yoose-necks, and mules, and har- | sand Pry }an Alpine torrent apou our hearts ? Weare born ness about us, nothing but ourselves and God, who is everywhere! And now my boys, | want you to try and see uf you caa’t swear, Try hard; [will give vou full leave ; just one round oath! fut never word of | swearing did [ get from the poor creatures, whe looked more tamed aad afraid of m+ themselves than sheep with a wolf round their | fold. Why, sir,” he continued, “ [ used to | a single aad would come in with resolute anid | anery faces, and doubled and loaded whipstocks, | to tell me that they would not stand my tyran- | ny. ‘Ceriatniy, boys, you ean break ail my rules, but you have to get rid of me first. You | can easily” yet me @ut of the way if you want | to; it would be easy for so many of you to | murder one man and you have got to murder | ine before you ean break my rules.’ . | . ules, j inan’s only abiding place. [t cannot be that ft life is a bubble cast up by the ocean ot eternity | and wazon-| & for a higher destiny than of earth. There is a | l realm wheve the stars will be spread out before | © jus, like islands that slumber in the ocean, and! per ceut, but the parties to whom the proposals where the beautiful beings which pass before! were made were so full that they refused to hus like and | presence. i | | jwho testified in the Surratt case on ‘Tuesday, | | j exami _ MORN. | Peeping threngh the purple bars, Down the endless street of stars, Moltiog all the ingota up. As her eyes more brightly shine, Morniug, in @ crystal cup, Floats the bubble varth in wine. From the red lips of the sea, Out inte samensity Steals a tengue of green and gold ; Soou to swarm with giddy dies, When the mighty landseapes roll! Further to the Western skies. Splendour wew by splendour quaffed, Weeper greavs at every draught, Till the wonogram of fire — The rowad red Halos of the sun— Full with lame the heavens entire, And sweeps all glories ipto ove. asline bE hi Zi of Eieqvent Passage.—One the finest; ‘things George D. Preatissever wrote is this in-| * It eannot be that earth is, mituble passage : Hise, why is the high and glorious | i | proachable glory ? And tially, why is it that) will leave for Gaspe on Thursday next, ithe bright f-oms ofhuman beauty are presented | 9 our view and taken from us, leving the thou-| streams of our ailection to flow back in|} } shadows will forever in our ‘ stay ——— a <> Ge Ay Eveyrevn Lire.—Stephen F. Cameron, for the purpose of imoeachinz the evidence of De. MeMillan, (the surseon with whom Surratt left Canada for Europe), was shown, on cross- | ston, to have studied for the ministry, | and preached several diferent religions. Lis mode of life during the past two years, as admitted by himself, has been excecdin sly | precarious. At times he tausht lanyna ses | sh ° . . : i » Wea of Now peo- jin France, music in London, was a Bohe rain! the feeach ple don’t like much to murder a man for tell- lin England,a Catholic in Canada, an Episeopali- | puick ul successful trip across the Atiaatic, LAUNCHED, On the 6th instant, from the Shipyard of Robert Cameron, Esqr., of Montague River, | | for the Hon. Beuj. Davies, Merchant, of Char- | : 257 tons N. M, On account of the proportions of this vessel being highly approved of, we have taken the | pains, for the benefit of our ship building | friends, wo ascertain’ her leading dimensions, which are as tollows, viz :-—Length from fore side stem, to the aft side stern post, on mnainu- 112.40 feet: midships 25.05; depth of hold, at midships 14.20. This vessel has been built with care to the requirements of her practical and ex- deck main breadth outside at perienced owner, under the inspection of R. Slozget, Es yuire, Surveyor for Lloyd's, and we understand she reflects great credit on Mr. Cameron, who has built several vessels for Mr. Davies, all of which have commanded the | highest price in the Home Market, which we | have no doubt this ship will do likewise. She is built of juniper, and the principal | ported from New Brunswick, thus enabling | the vessel to stand hizh in the class built to| ! i ET Ba ET Her Majesty’s Ship of War, the Fuconrite, n-clad) sixteen guns, arrived at this port on Monday evening last. We understand that she ---— —-- ~, A Saratoza correspondent spe tks 7 wily turow one a@ione, inside horsehair ensues there young man at cne of the botels never felt sd much like an aristeerat as when being brushed. He had obtained twenty five ddllars worth of new quarters af che sub- tréasary, and every time he was brushed he handed one of these forth from h pocket. He was brushed waiters. watched him, quarrelled with each athier for him. They brushed him anywhere but in the sunall of tis back and on the knees off his The result was that io three davs those por-! tions of his attire were threadbare. Nearly all his stdtape were gone. He waistcoat a everywiiere. The hever PoOsses sfon of Ptutaloons, not probable that any compliment which may he paid to them during their visit wil leave on therr minds more peasing recollections than their reception by the population at large on their first visit to the city of London. GIGANTIC DROM MAJORS. Some of the Tambour-Majors attached to) the Belgian corps are very large men. The | one who accompanies the infantry of the | Garde Civique of Brussels looks of Kigantic | proportions when arrayed in tall costume. | fleis himself about Gte.4in high; but on his | head he wears a@ busby of not jess than 2c. | Gin., from the top of which eprings # white | feather of 24in. in height, surrounded by! coloured plamage of snaller growth. This| drum-mwajor was an object of especial wonder | to niany of the bystanders, and evidently he | felt proud of the towering altitude of tus own! figure, fur when persous looked up at bim with eager curiosity he at once made over-| tures o! fraternization by shaking hands with them and siying * How do you do.”? The delight of the visitors was complete by the time they reached the corner of King street | Cheapside. Such exclamations as ‘C'est | magnifijue, cest superbe,”’ were continually | being uttered by them, and they declared | aire than onee that they had nut aatiecipate | anything like such # reception. | GoRGROUS UNIFORMS OF THR BELGIANS. | Ten o'clock way the hour named for the} ave notice | assembling of the visitors in the Quadrangle | ceyct the English hatred of the ¢ suntry, ae bim, asnine Englishmen in ten do, and does not think service a profession, ay Freachmen)} be found to-day in our columns. We speak | He means) not of blood shed in open fight between two | and Germans are so apt to do. ordinary drawer, where it is stawed, under the \ Ladies are p “ovided Wita a seoarate an neatly arran rad wash-room at one end of the ear, and zentiemen are similarly accommodated at the other. Each rooin is furnished with large and elesant hanving lamps, and aear the door of each sunilar ones hans, surmounted piated dome. The hall before referred to is amply supplied with eamo-chairs for the use of those who desire | tolook out atthe windows. In this nrorressive | are, wWheu nothing is expected to be wonderful, it may sound strauge to say that berth when mot in use, by a silver Or Surprising, Palace Excursion is really surpassin s ia splen- dor wad comfort anything heretofore known or conceived, These cars were built inthe shops of o> i get 5 the company at Port Wavne.—New York Sua. _ - Daa Camety tHe Usirep Stares.— We question much if ever a telezram from the States con- veyed so many sad tidings, so many reckless deeds of blood, such a vivid photography of the social status of our uighbors, as that which is to to be master himyelf some day svon, and) contendins armies, or murderous ouslaught of | meanwhile there is the master and there is} maddeoed Indians on detenceless men, women | the work, and both are natural facts, sud) aad children in search of homes ou the distant! most laudable enersy and skill, he ebeys the one and does the other with a} plains; but of cold, deliberate murders in a reasoning fidelity. Seoten clerks. and **tae-| country boasting of its civilization and refine | tors’, and agents, and employees generally , meat, and the elevating inflaence of the most | are simply the bestia the world, unapproach- | perfect freedom in the present ege, Karly on | able by Hoglisuwen, and rivalled ouly by the morning of the 2tth July, the telegram Germans of the very best kind. capacity, the capacity without becuming obedient, smooths the path | an axe, of every Sevtchman in the beyinnias of life, and the same temperament makes itself mant- | ¢! fest io yther und higher departuents of delirium. The next naragaph, we read that a j riot Uf all people they have always suceveded| A Mr. Echeridse was speaking, no doubt with work. best in France, becanse they dy not enanze or Jose their nationnl characceristics, they do just what the Kuytish will not—tivy accept | France. ** Thoy con-equently,"’ the writer continues, ** never excite the hatred wihiei) attavhes to Koglishmen abroad, and which | 18 not ao muce exeiicd as by a sort vf knob- | biness of cuuracter, & determination Rot bo | fit into any hole whiel he has not made him-| gelt.’’ It is the same in india. ‘Che Scotch pash | there more vehemently chau uny race, aud | ary, we think, quite as apt as Kuglishimen to) dislike the natives; bue they rarely con- | at the office of his departure for home. He} at Somerset House. Before thac tune the) cept the people they do not like, yield to ail | had jos money enouzh left to pay expenses, | aud h thé stage. The waiters found that iu the ag-| wrézute they had received $21 fur brushing | the four sides of tha square, but they did not ‘less than the Englisi do—the Anglo Indian | his franzy, he picked up a large stone, and thit aufortunate youn’ man. Sabbatini ending Ixtea@estine To Wise Duixkens.—People | whe have a tuste tor sherry wine, Jn the | United States, ought to know what the ex-} porters of it Sav tu the Amenecan Consul at (ladiz, in Order to account for invoicing it at wuch fow rates. —¢ They similin sly explained,” ways the account, “that the stulf sent to the | U nated States was uot sherry at all, but merely | slows weed to wash out the tubs au! fur ether; dirty work about the stills.’ T cheerfal intelligence to drinkers of + yolden | sherry,"’ of Amoutillado,”” and sim iar “slops’? | imported yuder -*yuiden”’ aud other poetic | titles, -- —~—a- —— An impudent qasck in London has been in| the habit of seudinz his pamphlets to respect-| able people, but here is the way he recently | yee” treated by « writer for the Pull Mail Avagette :-—Sir: [ have been frequently annoy. | aed by receiving Dr. Jordau’s | ‘oductions, ! Last wight daring dinner, one arrived. Think-| ipg tha it was @ tradesman’s adve tisement [| wus on the point of viving it toa) oung lady who was zitting next tu me, when (ie name of Jeedan cayght my eye. This morning I paid | the doctor @ visit, at 59 George Sireet, Han-| over Syuare. [ returned him his pamphlet. | 1 remained with him for @ few minutes, and| left hiw apparently suffering from * neryons) exhagation..” J recommend other men who are aguoyed by his abominations to pay bim a! viet after the receipt of the next pamphlet, and feave him in ¢he suine abject condition. | P ; Par et same any wry | artillery are black; their epwulettes and) fur forwarding aciy stores. Af all avadone of tee year the rate of mortality No better remedy gan be used thaw Jolusion’s Auodyne Liviu ; } troops begun to arrive. Lt was, however, | e was brushed to the last: brushed into) past eleven before the whole of them had col-| way either reconcile themselves to facts ur the lected. ‘They were tormea in doabie lines at earry urins. In the centre were the Com-| mandant and his staff; the Bourgomestres| and Echevins of Bruges, Grent, and Ostend ; | M. Kessils, Chef de la Division de iw Marine; ) the Count Aschot, aod other superior otfivers. | There were two or three bauds, and a strong | body of dramwmers. W bile tie riflemen were | awaiting the time for forming column and, marching, the bands several times played| ** God Save the Queen’’ and the * Braban-| conpe,”’ for each vf which thera was doud | is will be applause from she crowd surrounding the steadily Belgians. During the same time the rank! and file were yupplied with relresiments and | eigars by a young vivandiere who accow-| panies the Ostend contiagent, and who wears) & costume closely resembling that of the) corps to which sie it attached. Suon after twelve o'clock the order for marching w| Guildhall was given by Colonel Gregoris, the | officer commanding their whole toree; and,! with their bands playiog, the mea proceeded to file out of the uain guteway as Somerset. House, and march along the Scrand in the! direction of Guildhall. The Belgian riflemen now visiting Eogla d are as a body quite up to the average height of Englishmen, and, generally, their uniforms, though, perhaps, not better adapted for Vulunteer duty, are} more handsome and more elaburate that! those worn by our rifle corps. Tae cunts and! between Missouri and Colorado, eagazed in| very word for the said kuobs. trousers are richly embroidered in gold or) this rough, exposed life, until by native supe-| introducer of head-cabbayes had called them silver lace, and the dispiay of borsehair de- | rivrity he had become a large owner of teams, choux, whut rofare. stripes red. Their shekus are adorned with. cocks’ feashers, whieo are stuck to fregt and hang down nearly do the peak. ehmatie conditions, and in thair grave, stiff | facts to them. LTaey change in India much | is less tke an Kogiishman iu ideas tiaa an | Australian or Awerican—bdut they fit them- selves in, and are often exceedingly popular. Lie Sevteh Missicaaries in Beogal, tur ex- amplt, having among ail missivaaries perbaps | tie greatest influence over the people, an in- Huvuce the more remarkable because they vi ail missionaries have taken least trouble to acquire the Dative tonvue. Southerners used tu say that Scotchmen imade the best slav+- drivers, not so cruel as the Yankees, more | Stern than the English; and they succeed equally well in Asia. A Seotehman | will gst mure work done ina Beng alee indigo inctory, with lese fussy and irritation auung | the people, thag any other human deng, and | the seuss fact is peresptible in the contrac | tion of railways—New York Commercia Advertiser. | —--- ~~ ee (ZENTLENESS AND PikMNess.-—-Rev. Dr. Beliows gives this narrative in the Liberal | Christian: Inu the ears near Camberiand | met a man of avout forty five, a master: | wagzouer, who, brought up on the western | border of Missouri, between the lowest kind | of whites aud the wildest Iadians, had passed | his life in teamins freight to the advauce posis | It would be monstrous to say that all the young For more than | ladies who stick knobs behind their noddles are | seventeen years he had lived on the Plains! baggazges, bat we submit that chour is the | of our struggling civilizstion. He told me that | life, with bands of forty or sixty meu ynder his | he had conducted trains of wazzone all kis Toat single | states, a min named Bender, living in Bu‘falo, | vt being obedient | horribly multilated his wife about the head with | Tue writer adda: \ } a list is not finished. A man named Hunter was jan the temple, and she died in ten minunts! {ther on we read that a pistol fight took place in | Louisville, Kentucky, between two men named ; Up | picle. H — . ° ° i é sh SS | think the Executive should give some attention way, and his interiment took place on Monday. ok Causaces?—When did the | to this matter. There is a very easy way of The coffin was carried into the Roman Catholic | Baglish ? | diferent name. | pending from their helmets is exceedingly | aud « leader in bis special occupation, as well | None. : ‘ The tunics and trousers of the | as a successful contractor with the Government! chiznons after crinolines regularly call these | ever, 1s repleie with valuable lessons and whole. ; and then drowned himself in the | eanal. Drink, that curse so brutalizing in its feet, no doubt, was the cause of this monster's! occurred at Rogerville, in Tennesee. the latitude allowed so stup speakers in the States; he was interrupted, it appears, by Kiuz,who pronounced Etherid se’s statements to be a fie. Etheridge retorted, | whereupou some seoundrel in the crowd shot | Reheridve dead! Other shots followed, result: | ingia the death of a white man and a_ nezro, seven others mortally wourded, and thirty others slightly! Further on we read that on the same day, a negro shouted for Brownlow, the radical yevernor in) Kavoxville, at a public meeting, and was instantly shot dead by some rufian—riot, yetto come, ouly being prevented by the activity of tne pohee. But the frightful one standing near a sajoon m Cincinnati with seve- ral companions, all very drunk, the report says, when Hunter's mother came up, imploring her son to accompany her home. Suddeuly in throwing it into the crowd, itstruek his mother Qie would think that this carvinal of blood was enough for one day: but, unhappily, fur- Nicholas and Bridgeford. Nicholas was killed onthe sot, and Bridgeford had his leg shot off. An Jndian raid thrown in, resalting in the death | ofa Mer. Brown; and the death of eight persons | by the cansizing of a boat near Portland, make | the frightful day's record. From the same | source we find that Courtney F. Terry, Esq, of the 6Jth Rifles, is taking testimony on the mys- ‘terious murder of Capt. Sneers by a United | : States soldier ona boat, when on the Upper Missouri river, some time since.— Quebee Chro- | “CoIGNoNS’ word chignon come into French and into The article itself was used in much earlier days than our own, but had then a} ‘© Mundas Maliebris’’ in 1690 | describes the affair exactly :— * Behind the noddle every bagzage Wears bundia chour, in English, cabbage.” | } Oaly if the re- girl would have worn them. Therefore let those who want to send bundles cabhages, and they'll succeed. Mr. | Pairholt’s detinition of the chouz is ‘the great | round boss, or baudle of hair, worn at the ‘Teough direction, men of the roughest gnd most back of the head, and resembling a cabbage, ; many of the visitors, frow the Colonel ia com-)vigleut character—men who came to hiw | from whence the Preach gave it that name.” (a place in our columns, i | out in the san.” | purpose of allowing him to testify in the case. Boston Herald. } | meutioned fire broke out, lames were discover- sumed, and it was with very great dilliculty unpardoned rebel, up to the commeucement | that they didn’t |of the trial, when he was pardoned throu sh) her arcival in French waters: — the influence of the prisoner's counsel, for the | He was also one of Morygan’s cuerrillas, and was connected with the St. Alban’s caiders.— scious lllaindiieiiiaon A horse is truly a ned anna, and ia eapable | the brute creation. He often exhrbita intelligence truly wonderful, as well as enthusiastic feeling | To preserve such a heree in all his glory, uae | Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders, Ghe Gxaminer. Charlottetown, August 12, 1867. — — 3 INCENDIARY FIRES. —— MORE YesterDay morning, between five and six o'clock, our City was startled by an alarm of fire, and it was soon discovered that the de- | vouring element had broken out in two places. {A Red Store oa Grew Georse Street, near the Cathedral, now oWaed by Hen, 5,6, P rere, appeared to have been the first attucked. The Fire Companies were very promptly onthe spot, and sappressed the fire before it bad made | much headway. Two suspicious-lookins cha-| racters were seen lurking about the premises a few minutes before the fire broke out; two per- sons, supposed fo be the Stine, were arrested at the| Mayor’s Court, nothing to implieite them in oy the police, but on eXamination the tire could be proved against them, and they were discharged. Very nearly at the same tiie the above ed issuing from a Barn belonzing to Mr. Ben- jamin Rogers, of the firm of Dodd & Rogecs, near the North corner of Hillsborough Square, opposite the residence of D. Hodgson, Esq. It had | been used partly as a workshop by Mc. William Wright, Carpenter, and contained a lot of valu- | able materials in his line. [t was totally con-| some of the neighbouring property was saved | from destruction. The Steam Fire Eugine worked admirably, and indeed all the Fire Com- | panies and Engines were employed with the, There is very little doubt that both fires were caused by some evil-disposed vagabonds who | We hope | Committee may be organized to} have a taste for such fiendish work. a Vigilance i protect the from future City—aiready a great sufferer— damage in this way; and if any one is causht in the evime of arson we hope he | . . ° } will be puuished in the most summary manner, | ee Wer have nothing in the way of local polities | this week, to which we might devote a column. | The Opposition appears to be silent, or nearly | sv, aud the Goverument pursue their course | David Laird and Donald Currie, editors of the Putriof, seem to very smuothly. Messrs. ' ’ . F ' the Catholic question, | They tind that their advocacy of the Catholics | doesn't take. have backed out of In the Putriot of Thursday there | was a miserable, flimsy atteinpt to excuse con-| tradictious and absurdities in tormer articles of | that paver which we had previously exposed ; and alas! the ground on which the excuse is | mainly based, is—that the principal article in| the misprinted. *alriol to which we made reference was— The printers in the Patriot office | are, in fact, though indirectly, charged with | having falsitied the words of the editor. Very! well. Let them settle the difficulty between | them. We have disposed of them to our satis- | faction. W. have mentioned Mr. Donald Currie’s | Public re-! vame as co-editor of the Patriot. port certainly assigns him that office. Now, Mr. Currie is an employee in an office under, , There ought to be an enyuiry as to whether persons Situated as he is,eau, with impunity, attack the Government, as he does, which upholds an and supported by, the Crovernment. office that afords him aliving. We really | . | reaching such malcontents as Mr. Donald) i . Currie. We insert on our first page a letter from His | Grace the Archbishon of Halifax. in reference | to the claims of the Hon. Thos. D’ Arey McGee | to the confidence of his countrymen in the new | Dominion. The letter is written with great | fervour and eloquence, and as a tribute to the | genius and services of our tjead Me(ree is very | well deserved. The Acchbishop’s letter, how. | some advice, which Irishmen in all places as well as Canada may profit by, and that it should | be so utilized is our chief reason for giviag it i ) 1s . had heavy weather and hich seas. | parations for another yreat movement will be iy leaders. | subjecting it to a series of practical and scieuti- the Prussian war department. } Tae followings tele rrsph dispateh announces | Cuzrnoves, Aas. 3.1.—“To James W.| Buckan & Co., Pacis: The Danderberg has} arrived here in fourteen days aad seveuteen hoarse from New York—all on board are well. | The vessel isin food condition, althowch we! The ship} behaved nobly awl proved berself a soledid | sea buontt. (Niqued) Fronence, Aug. 5.—Garibaldi has come to} the Conciusion tia, ¢ musidertos all the circum stances, it wasebeatto abandon, for the present, the movement azainst Rome. ‘The volunteers }which had begun to collect from all parts of | i Ttaly, who had iavaded the Papal territory at} several places, will disperse. but the imove:nent is only delaved, not abandoned forever. Pre- wursued with great wid) Garibaldi himself expresses his firin belief in the success of the aext movement. aclviny, Lowvon, August 5. —The Russian loan, which was otfered in this market on Satumlay, does not meet with success. No bids have yet been made, and its chances of success are slim. = The | Reform m-eting called at Hyde Park to-day | proved a failure; few people, comparatively, no spirit Was | were in attendance, aad little or m&uilested. Beauis, Aus. 7. -The second session of the Parliauentotthe North German Coutederation will commence on the 29th toast. in this city, Beriis, Aug 7J—Bve.-—-The Prassian Gov- ernment has become anxivus for the satety of Baron Vou Moanuissus, Misister resideut of Prussia in Moexieo. At last uints the Baron h x unsaccessfiily iatervened to save the life of Maximilian, and wt ts thonght that he thereby provoked the hostility of the Mexican nee No despatehe Ss irom him have berets j received fora long time past, and nothing is known as to his coudition or whereabouts. Tue Government has taken means to ascertain cer- tainly whether the Juarez authorities have treated its Miuister coutrary to the law of nations.....Tae Prussian Army Commission appointed to examine the Chassepot Riile, after fie tests, have reported ayainst its aduption by | Srercarpt, Aug. 7—Evn'y.—A convention of the prominent meiubers of the liberal party of Southern Gerima 1y Was held here to-day. [; adopted resolutions urging the Southern States of Germany to unite with those of the North (Grerman Confederation, Loxpox, Aug. 7th, evening.—The second ‘day of the Brighton Races was signalled by a race for the Brights»n Cup, A number of horses were entered for the race. The attend- | ance was very great, and universal interest was manifested. The Cup was won by Moulsey. The leading horses passed the Stand in the | following order—Moulsey Ist, Tyndal 2nd, | Lecturer Sed. After the race the Nursery | Stakes were run for and won by Cecil, the prin- | cipal horses coming in as follows—Cecil 1st, | Persian 2od, Chantilly 3rd. Both rices were | closely contested, and there was loud cheering at their termination. i } As ets ¢ tal NS Ee | CROPS IN THE SOUTHERN STATES. | The Richmond Ecauminer has the following summary of intelligence in rezard to the crops | ut the South :— | “ Our dhily business correspondence is heavy | with subscribers in middle aud soutnera Georgia, | ‘nud it is to these sections that we would more particularly divect our remarks. * Ol the vrain crops, embracing wheat, corn and vats, we may say that the section referred | to never produced better to the area planted, | Provisions for mau and beast will be abundant | another year, except in the matter of bacon. | * As resards cotton, the area planted is some- what, though not largely, in excess of last year’s crop. The seasons have been far better, | alternate sunshine and rain having been visited ou the earth in very fair proportions. The | weed has grown of finely uuder a more careful | culture than last year’s, and is now fruiting to | the satisfaction of the planters. * The only drawback to the crop has been | a super-abundance of rain for the last month causing an inordinate growth of wood, and the falling of many of the squares and young bolls. We do not think, though, from all we can learn, that the crop will very imaterialiy su®er from this suuree. ** As regards the general crop, if our informa- tion be correct from all the cotton-growing sections, we should estimate it, with all the | lights beture us, at from 2,800,000 to 3,000,000 bales, barring future disasters. We think it can exceed the latter fizure event. do not in any - MS LP $<. A Fexian Scene ix Burrato.—Fenian ex- citement continues to ran riot in Bulfalo. The Fenian Lyuch died on Saturday last, from the effeet of wounds received at the battle of Ridye- Cathedra! by six men in Fenian uniform, bat the Rev. Vicar-General Gleason refused to per- form the funerai services over the remains of vne who had incurred the excommunication of the Church. Tae coifia was then carried ont, the great bulk of the con sregation accompany. ing it, and the last rites were discharged at the | grave, as the telegram informs us, by Head Centre O'Day. > oe __ How To Save O1l.—We find the following in aoe of our exchanges. It will be very easy for any one to try it:— “A short time ago we published an argiclo from an exchange, to the effset that salt ina kerosene amp was a great saving of oil. We have since fully teated it, and it ia a greater saving than wus stated iv the article referred to. Fill the lamp half fall of common salt, thea fill up with oil. It burns with a clear fline, and is a saving of mure than twenty-tive por cont. in oil. Try it.” | faith. {the conmarry ” iby the Governipent. ’| Scotland, in regard to crimes against the pet Serecn or THE Pore. —The following ig the text of the apeech recently delivered by Pope Pius 1X. to the deputies of 100 Italian cities ;— “ There upon that pile stands the angel whe subdord the dewons. He bolde a sword returned | lottetawn, a handsome brig called * Dirsy,” | go ite scabbard, and, in like manner, announes thi day the termination of the pesulence, im allusion is to @ tradition that on (be Cessation yf j the plague, in the time of Gregory the Ureat, the augel sheathed his sword.) Now, agai methinks [see hin return the sword to ite seabe bard, as if in the act of obeying the Divine decrees, for to-day coummences an era of merey. At tre begining of this cestury, on this very day, one of my predecessors was deihroned and counselled ty fly into exile, pursued by those sume eneuion wig now, under tue pretence of aggisudizing theig country, would root out of our hearts owr On this same day (tor it began with thes varliest breath) liberating lorces enter thie Holy City to disperse the enemies of God wad His Church, who in this city, the centre of the Cathalig Faith, wished to destroy the Kingdan of Josue Christ. OF il omen to Rome bas this day been called. Asay that the hour of ite triagumph has begun. Meu have sad that [bate Italy. No, do uot hate her. 1 bave loved ber abways, aud have blessed ber; [have louged for ber 4 and God knows how | pray for her, Let ue pray jor this, P must at present eall ity unhappy nation That is pot unity which is founded ow egotiem: that unity is vet blessed which destroys charit y Ae s 5 Pr jand justice, whoch tramples ander foot the rights ent upon its waves and sink Into | sticks used in her construction have been IM-\of all—of the ministers of God, and of goud Christians, They have all tor their eneuses; ail stand in array against thew ; for they have ae their enemy God himself. The bour bas dawned, eur range in, viz: seven years A I ou Lloyd’s triumph canuet fail, aod it it be delayed let ws sulfer in peace the indictions of Divine jastioe, | aim inoved by this dewenstration of alfectiou—by the sentiments which you have et pressed to me in your own name, aud 1 the uames of the bundred coties of Ltaly, and | declare to you albany gratitude, wy tenderness. 1 dles® Those who bave presented we this offering, aud tueir iamilies. I bivce you and your tamilies with & special benediction, and if any of them bas wandered—if a father, @ sop, or a brother, deceived by fulacious ides, hag wandered into the path of error, let this benedie- tion cause bim to return to the atraght path, May this benediction accompany you every Where; way it follow you on your return lo your homes; ay it uecotupany you even to your last day. it during your lives you fiad yourselves abandoned by all, Chis benediction wul wever forsake you, I bless this classic land, fruitful mother of ae saints, which bas given to the Church and te Heaven so many heroes of sauctity aud justice, | pray to God to preserve her us ber ancient faith, which formas her greatest glory. Again I bless you aud your tauilies, aud be this benediction pledge te you of every prosperity, I impart it te you in the name of God, that we may reach that blessed efernity in which we shall praise and thank God. Farewell tor ever and ever.” Locat TAXATION IN UNITED STATES CiTigs. —In an article on toc devis and taxation of the large cities of Une States, thé New York Commer. cual Chronicle states, that the aggregate indebted. ness of jourteen of the principal cities of the Siates, viz: —New York, Poiladelphia, Brooklya, Balumore, Bostun, Ciuucianatt, St. Lows, Ubicaga, | Batfaio, Newark, Louisville, Albany, Saa Fran cisco, Providence, has been increased during the }eix years from P00 Le (300, [row abvut $103. SUVVUU to about BI49ou0,000, This gives au average jnctease of souwe 45 per ceut. A com> patisou of (he whole taxauea per head of the populations of the cites of New York: York, | Patadelolia, Boston, Cinciuuatt, Chicago sod Saw. Francicco, leads to the conclusion, as lar as one Wis. H. Webi? [oo Judge trom Loe cities justauced, timat the total |fasadeuof Cue ety population in the States hae creased trom about gl2 per head to 1500 bw oU per head in isd6. Tuero we considerable diversily ta Cae proportions between tue diferent cles, wud the raliool Increase also Varies water ally at the several places; but this may be takeu as the average augmeatation of their burthea since Ue year antecedout to the war. Aliowing five persens to eacn lauily, it would follow that the amount of taxation pail diveedy and Indireetly. bby tae ety population is 3150, por fauuly, ageines Pl Uw bS0u, sh Wlug an average jucrease uf b per fauily Pats invense addition to ety burtheus must matecady affect the social aud political futare of ibe country, and, adds the Chronicle, evil loudly upon the State aud Federal. Legislatures lo relreock li every possible way the expenditure uader their coutrel, mecca iat aiicilican THe Mexican Quesviean IS Faance. —The speech ot MM. Phiers on Mexico, whieh bad been | twice postponed, was deavered in) the Corps Legisiaut, July 9 M. Chiers saul: > Tae Mexican expedaion has ended without any good resus te Brauce. Our compatnots remaia eXposed to greater losses than ever, our commerce with Mexico % coined, and the pres hige of onr greatness ie compromised in Ameriea, Even tn Rurope tue Moxicau Wooregho has hau pered our atitiude toward the great reveluttens accowplished in Germany. The lessena of this Loliappy eapedicou ix (hat coutrol aud opposition The Mexican expedition was approved by a0 one In France, but was, never theless, nuderiaken and Coulinmied tor serena. years Tbere are two ways of underetanding movsrehial governoent. The first is the rule of a Prince with irrespousinle Ministers, wha merely execute the orders they reeetve Poe second ia a Prince goveruing with rexpotaible Ministers, who lave to subaut their views to hiw, ae the are hecessary }bead of the State, sud can, if necessary, bean upen a representative Assembly which is able te- oppose the Ministers, both, however, dependent upon pable opinion ‘This is the term of mon archy toward which We wust advance as speedily av possible ta the miterest of the Goverument aud M. Jules Favre stated that the real idea of the expediiion was the subversion of the Mexican Republic and the establishment of a throne in tu Mexico, but this inteution bad been conevaled The French troops ought to have brought back Maximilian, aud thus have saved France frou tue stam of blood which will resi Upos Ler. DOUBLE MURDER IN ASCUIPNEYVILLE,. VERMONT. FRESCHUMAN MURDERS A MAN AND His WIFE —A LITTLE CHILD THY ONLY WITNESH OF THE TRAGEDY. SPRINGFIELD, Mase., July 23. 1867.—The Little village of Ascutaryville, four miles south of Windsor, Vt., was thrown into a state of intense excitement this morning by the discovery that Mr. Gowing, a well-to-do farmer of that place, bad been murdered, and that his wife had met the sau fate. The erume was committed by # Frenchman, who was employed by Gowing last auniver, and knew that Gowing usually kept several bundred dollara in the house. He lealled Gowing to the door by shouting that the cows Were io the corn, and as soun as be ope the door, felled him to the floor with an axe and beat his brains out. The Frenchman thea cosh- ed te Che oom where Mrs. Gowing wasan bed, and murdered ber in a like horrible manner. La the same reom was a little girl ina trundel bed, who was the only witness of the tragedy, and who knew the Frenchman by his seice. After rifling the house the murderer escaped, but K 16 rumoured he has been arrested, —_----~<=pe ———-— Comparison iN Recarp vo Caines i¥ IneLanp axp Scotianp.—It would appear that the idea that human life is more insecure in Ireland than in any other part of the United’ Kingdom, was, antil very receutly, firmly root ed in the minds of the people of England and Scotland. This idea, however, has been | effectually dispelled by a comparison institut by the Pall Mall Gazette, between Lreland and The result of this contrast is eminently lin favor of Ireland. The statement shows that lin ten years, ending in 1465, 204 persons were | epee with murder in Scotland. Jn Irel 'the population of which for the greater part the ten years, was nearly Jouble that of Sev land, only 349 persons were charged with mur ‘der. The statistics of convictions tell more ' powerfully still in favor of the Green Isle. | the 204 persors charged with the capital crime iin Seotland, 109 were brouzht to trial, and of these, fifty-nine, or more than half, were com victed. Of the 349 persons tried in Irela only 58, or 17 per cent. of the whole, were convicted; shewing that in most instances | grave charge was preferred upon ingufficiest grounds. One feature in the statistics spé very favorably of the morality of [rish wome®- Fifty-six per cent. of the persons commillé |for murder in Scotaland were females, but Ireland the percentare was only 32. In Eng: land in the same period it was 42. SR ER tm aa | i About fifty rowdies trom Moutreal went with the Grand Truck Railway Company's Pie-nie ® St. Hyacinthe, on the 28th ult., and created § riot of eerioa nature there, It is stated thet they got up a row with vagabonds like themaelves residing at St. Hyacinthe, and when the party was returning to the cara, the fight furious—stones and brick-hats flying every and shots fired, About thirty volunteers went called out, but were useless Meantine, inost or) the windows of the cara were smashed, women and children had to lie down to araid missiles, When the train started, the volu son. astonishing to aay, fired inte the eara, One was shot by a rifle ball, and has siace died. hotels in the village had the windows \ wud several persoos injured, Tw