wd Latest News by Telegraph. PROM EUROPE. Loudon, May 8. It is reported that the Princess Louisa, daughter of Queen Victoria, has been contracted to war- em * av look around we. [Loud cheers | [ would | Mot undertuke to say that the volwatary | no efforts of the whole of the Protestant Episco-| A brief account of a murder perpetrated pal congregations im Ireland have dune ao/rear Omeza Landing, on the Mississippi, has spach ter Protestantism, for a generation already appeared, The following terrible de. past, es bas been dove by that grand congre- tails are trom the Vicksburg Zienes of the gation which assembles from week to week 22ud:— yn thie building. [Renewed cheers.} | have Four negroes are supposed to be implicated. | riage te Christian Frederick Prince Royal of eae farth in relagiwas teal, and some farth Two, yet at liberty, planned the murder, and) Deumark im the voluntary principle, and if it were the two who were burned at the stake executed, Jolin Bright and the other members of the Pecessory te Chis audience—which it cannot the hellish act. The two arrested were taken Liberty party in Eugland have united tua petition be—te give proof of what that zeal and that ,sivyly; the first one acknowledzed his guilt, | to the Hon, Gathorne Hardy for the cvannutation voluntary principle could du, l might point and informing ou his accomplice. From the | ot the to mete = oe ha siicerei ' : 7 . " | naively observes, the full brunt of Lord | O08" . , ai sre & off 3 j that he performed his part well as the represen. 4 at heart. No of ier Governor ever 100 ot ICe | ative of our Protestant Queen, winning every under such a serious disadvantaze, None | one's respect and esteem. And he will cer. mir “4 ie raried so ste adily on pubiie favous when be l tainly he remembered by every colonist as the day, und endeuvoures pe | . rato the youn, | came to be known as he really was. There, s,ed Governor who did not leave us for anos ut when Sir Caarles bie lose of is nian oe ; jhas been no other at the close of whose career } 4), welds a Metcalfe landed at Quebec, Canadian statesmen | : } £ }ther earthly appointment, but was translated diskadonaonbence nnwrenaeas y VAnnGian statesinen | it could so truly be said that he left none but) sa the Kingdom of Heaven. > arin w ‘ t r huge xe! 26 cm 66 reo > i ) . so beginning:to ak themusivae—~“Ar0 We! (:ioude hebind him. The Rev. J. G. Wright (Primitive Metho. . ° ° & he Durbam’s experiment fell on him. | Previous Governors had staved off the evil | Hercules in his cradle. we to have responsible yovernment, or are we Sw Dominick had not suffered from any uOtt Sir Charles, a thoroush-bred Indian, | or anie disease, but from a complaint kKuowu dist) said:—Death is everywhere trampling vuder foot crowns and Jaureis, beautiful hopes raised, and the boy sank beside his mother, The Henry Lord Brougham, the eminent reformer | aed Chancellor ot Englend, died at his resideuce at Cannes yesterday, in bis vinetieth year. }was not dieposed to give thera more of it than His short term of eifice was | prolificim Miuisterial crisis, which, if they did futtle good to the couutry, brought out the | characteristics of its future statesmen. The be impossible to digcuss English home politics with enlightened wea ta any civilized and |*''°°* ‘ ag “4 Christian country in the world where ao LANE NY, (lil Alig "To be _ rari The ease of Barrett, a convicted Fenian, Englishwan would not be put on his defense | j * ti a oh id aacgnc begi awakens considerable interest. On petition, the if the trish Church question were raised io eget reid ’ gy rhe ante Pesci Tt ma | prisvver has been reprieved fora week, Further she discuesioa. { aaid that the Establishment ede r 7 ee ae ~~ | Government inquiry will be made. in lrelaud bad the effect of enfeebiing the ; hild on it, burned heralive! These Geo Francis Train, who waa imprisoned for pation. It has had toa certain extent eract- |" the facts, They are too revoltin debt, wue brought betore the the Court of Bauk ly the eame effect whieh would have been rupicy yesterday aod admitted to bail. produced if we bad a perpecual civil war Loudon, May Il. within the kingdom. And there is no doubt Consols 94 @ 94} tor money, and 928 for that for a long time past—{ am nut sure ry} account; at Liverpool Breadatuffs dull; Corn whether such # state of affiirs has not exist- "S| quoted at 38s. 9d; Lard Bes. 5d5 other articles ed for 200 years—in case of any struggle be- ©) unchanged. " : tween this nation and any Eur pean oF The perseenution ef the Jews in Moldavia bas American Power, we should find the sympa- been stopped by the authoriiies, Those who thies of w very large portion of the people ot | ph rence ee ee “ at} t} ter ) : +t wioewed ty re . : " i iconvinced that they fully merited the that despatches bad Just been received from the imposyifle to suy how widely the evil of ce OP ea a h ev suffere Foreign Seeretary in London ordering that the | ; ' misgovernment of Ireland has spread. At i Anti Fenianu-Treason- Felony Act should be putin | Ireland ever produced. amoug the faculty as anemia—or the absence f red blood in the sysiem. This was the cause of the extraordinary lack of eolour, and puysical vigour noticeable in His Excellency for months past. So tranquil were his last moments that he appeared quietly to sleep faway his existence. He had gitevally died in | harwess, too, for immediately before the final unpretending manners of owr late Governor that be carried in his veins the blood of one lef the most ancient and honourable families lin Ireland. The Dalys of Galway trace back jtheir lineage to the days of O'Neil, in the! ©! et dey |fourth century. Since the end of the sixteenth | Guvernor very carefully ** took stock” ot them icentury they have held a prominent position | all and of the parties they represent d. d be jamong the governing families of Ireland. By | latter he divided into Loyal Conservatives, intermarriage they raised themselves in the | Liberals aud gveach C anadians—the fist being | seizure he bad been attending in some smal! ' jalmost exclusively Huslish, the seeond chietly | degree to public busivess. Trish aud Amerivan, and the third Catholics}? and bleeding hearts. He enters our homes aud our vigor droops, our beauty fades, our health decays, our visions darkens, the silver curd suaps, aud we are gone. He has sarvied trem as our much beloved Governor, and left a painful vacuum im society. His (the lute Governor's) wisdom as astatesman, his integ- rity, as the servant of our Queen; his freedom of sentiment; his wbanny of manner; his kindness of disposition ; his fi eedom from re- ligious bigotry ; his sympathy with all branch- es of the Church; and bis whole publie and domestic demeanour (a3 far as known) have endeared him to our hearts, enshrined him in our affecituns, a.dengraved bim on the imper- hoa oe lishable tablets of cur memory. We shall ever We give below abstracts of those portions 01) 1 Woy of and mention his name with pleasare. the sermons bearing upon the Subject which ae Sd eee i were delivered at a number of those churches. Rosert Young, North Side Queen Square, At Trinity Church, His Lordship the Bishop} ig stil) selling off at reduced prices. His stock of South Austraita, suid: —Tne whole centre of} embraces all articles required for Ladies’ ed at a blow. second child, a zirl some | he cauuld help. vy to dwell ou. Tue arresting party secured the prisoners and delivered them to the proper authorities | Having confessed their guilt, Judge Noland mimitied them for trial aad placed them i ithe The jstarted on his journey, but had oaly gon rowd of ne tsacial seale from the small barony of Queen | Kiizabeth’s time to the Duusandie Peerage ot ' ‘ )1845. By personal ability more than one of | Lord Meteaite’s biographer, Mr, Kaye, has! {them has distinguished himself in the politica sketched a series Of portraits of the Cauadian | |world. ‘[heve was Denis, who represented his) Muustyy, iw Sir Dominick's stands lative country in the Ivish Parliameut during }Secund. It is so characteristic, as weil as true, ithe long struggle which preceded the Union, | tat its features may be at once recognized in| in the city to the death of Sir Dominick Day. | He fought by the side of Grattan in opposition Adelaide uv less than in Quebec. Mr. Kaye, ito the Castlereagh faction, and Grattan singled | #ler describing the Presideut of the Council, him out froma galaxy of stars to call him “one | M. Sullivan, as a man of great origiual talents, of the best and brightest characters that) ¥thout any moral character or cunsisteucy Tien there proceeds thus :— ; he SPECIAL SBRvViC&es IN THE CHURCHES Ou Suuday, Feb. 23, special references were toa greater or lesser extent made in eonnec- ition with tie services at almost ali the churches nands of his constable. consta i} i ich ishort distance when a ¢ sroes Over- the mur} ive, deliberately Both LooK hina, took t rciuie moot det ers, aud ' burnt them at the stake! POssessi ' uiidiis & huge met their late {without expostulation, and were apparently t } terrigie the burnin ri Was iwasin progress, thinking to prevent a con ie . | this woment the capital of the Dominion of | ta : f pt ‘ ey ty a padi the ate | torce iu Syduey. | Bowes Daly, one of the immortal “contem “ Mr. Daiy, the Seeretary of State or Provincial | nis personal and utlicial courtesy was in the | apparel, such a8 drese govds, shawh, marties, Cansda is in grief and consternation at a oni Ca; wale reer oy rn de en a ¥ ies aad Liverpool, May 12. | poraries of Curran,’’ and none the worse for | Seereiary of Lower Canada, was a man of avery | name of his Queen. In her constitutional} de, &e, &e Also Boots and Shves, and most fearful crime which has been com- | them ts dale be t hese i 1e5 ref a ro te The Emperor Napoleon and the Ew. | being a Monk ofthe Serew. The family served ditlerent aay. He alse Was an Liisiman and {position he realized bis own—the common cottons ata very cheap rate. mitted there. Atthis moment also the Lord noe saving th . i aoe tad sere iter i 3 ny en press were at Orleans on Saturday, from Ireland well in tier divest necessity, aid she has 1* Roman Catuolic; and although for tae latte 1 ft} end, the common protector of all Her Ma- enna Or eae Chief-Justice of England is engaged in the ee 7 ; Je n ~ ate svereee should be ie which city they returned to Paris on | not ceased to honvur them in hia generations. | reason Mis syupatives were strongly with the | lesty’s subjects in this land. And this was the | ie The Court of Commissioners for the recovery trial of men whe are alleged to have been | va " ae ee ne ae Monday Upon their arvival at Orleaus Sir Dominick was descended from a younger | Freeh preg. of had been en long 0 iey were pitts of his. success—this the cause of the unt- jot Swall Debts at Crauberry point, Lot 36, bas i suppos » De implica a va ated the mur oppressed by Whe dowinanl race, bis feelings, the - i . they were received by the Mayor ou the part of [been removed to Fietcher’s Corner, Fort Augus- the people, in an address of welcome. The Em- r ee oe iperor re hed br: yy BD i ay "pe 1 ' FENTANISM if . ae Pia fly, ' d after expressing his { cousin On the LNIANISN. thanks, said that he was bappy tu be in a city a . ; es are . oe" ‘ ; ads sed | “ae “UY ) mother’s side he was connected with the Blakes | The Ottawa Times, in referring to the seiz- | “#¢e Macred by glorious religioga and political | o¢ pein : me , { cK - wewories, and devoted to active industry. H }of Kilkenny, she having been a sister of the { ure of Penlan papers, says :— aigyath ' re eee op "—. re as ” = pay ie | Was stre such iabors were safe in the general | O'S Lord Wullscourt. He was born = the i assurance of peace year 1798, and was educated at St. Mary's | iCollege, Oscott. It is stated by a Canadian branch, his father, also Dominick by name, | having been a simple esquire thouyzh first | to the Earl of Duusandle. ' . versal 1s gone of a fearful Pee Shee OUOe GOP. fo oa bo esiedl in the eouree of bese Men are men of great iznorance, great) recklessness, and have great disregard, it way be, of human life. hey ure the foul blotches upon the surface of the opinion and! the feelings of Irishmen, [Cueers, aad & ery of «No at ; and, although ha would libel ‘We are glad to be uble to announce that foully the trish people who should say they the authorities have taken a decided step sorrow that felt at his less. He ) tus. rendered to Cawsar the services due to Cxsar, | EP Monvay, the Sth inst. wi be chieevell } tod the things thut are God’s. Ar ish- | — ae : ¢ ”” ad seer se adaye e* sry ered “wie aa irish jas a Holiday wt the Public Offices in conequence man by birth, by protession a Roman Catholic, | of the Anoiversary of Her Majesty's birth tailing he speut the best years of his lite among poli ‘i Sunday. cal discurd and religious disagreement. Firm Ea Ricnanp Hopson, Eog.. of Trym, hes been appointed Comuarioner for lakmg aff. growth ol education aud early assuciativy were vo! | a couservalive and eristucratic cast. Ail Met- calle’s informants represented bin to be a man of high hover aud integrity, of polished manners aud courlevus address—a good specimen of an Liisi gentieman. Lt wes added that be was pos- seased ul judgwent and prudence, tact aud dis- creloui—ln stoi, & Mian to be Crusted.” ; aicw Guy 5s. : ‘he Bishop of Orleans spoke io bis principles of hoyaity to the Crown and te c i toliu reply, and coucluded by invoking blessing aithtutuess to his region, be passed those : ; 8 . Judi ee ' ' . deg a Miki sings |, : : : ae ig > i davits tu be used is the Supreme Court of Judi- 6ywpathized with outrage and with crime, | wards the prevention of the circulation of trea upon the Emperor aud Empress. | biographer that he studied for the bar; but | The Provincial Secretary 1s repeatedly al-| years in Casauda without the impuiaiion vt cature of this Island ’ yet at the same time when you have in a sonable publications. Ou Saturday last Detec-| The sudden close of the Abyssinian war caused | this, we believe, is a mistake. He left [reland | luded tom Mr. Kaye’s narrative of Miuisieviai | bigotry, without the charge of partizanship; and Ce We understand that Wednesday and Thursday next, the 2Uth amd Zist mst.. are seb down to hear appeals agaimat the City assessment, -——_—— apo ——_-—-- Burciany.—At Souris West, on Thorsday nighd, the 7th inst . the store of Mr Lawrence Kickham was entered through the windew and the eum of thirty shillings extracted from a desk im the store. A ten shilling note wae found diopped near the desk. The window was raised from without- The thief or thieves must have beew in the store on the previous day. as the fastener fastening the windew was tursed, which conld net have been done from wnhout. Vhe wondow was left raised about eighteen inches, and nove #f the glass broken; im all probability, al Jeast pwe men committed the daring deed, us frow the height of the wimdow one wan conid pot possibly enter without alarming the innates—the store being in the end of the dwelling heuse The thief or thieves seemed only to be in search of money, as no voods were missing, and tortunately there was only forty shillings m the desk atthe time Any person acquainted with the premises wonld call it an attempt perbape as daring as almost any that bas occurred in large cities. Is is to be regretied that the thief escaped without being bronght te justice, as it is very likely he will still follow thievish habits until lmprisopmeant, or perhaps the vallows, closes his or their career.— Com. w Herald. ——---—-_-.. ie Cart. THos Forry, who was in Buenos Aryes al] Winter, has returned tothe Island in good bealth. We have not yot learned his experience of South a good deal of excitement in the East India ireight trade, and heavy decline in rates, as the release of the tonnage under charter te the Government would be speedy and very jarge. nativn generally, or among @ very large clase tive O'Neill and Cullen, under instructions in @ nation, disaffection and disloyalty such |from Mr. O'Reilly, visited the several news| as is admitted tu exist in [re and, and # feel- | depots in the city, and obtained possession ot ing of oppression and wrong which has/the whole suppiy of pro-Fenian literature in| gtwo up and becomes strengthened for|town, and at the sume time iaforming the} generations, thea you willalways find there |azenis that no more pernicious stock of the} men excituble, reckless and brutal, who will kind shouid be offered by them for sale unless put their hands to crimes of the most deeper- {at the risk of prosecution. The agents were ate character. {lear } Beside what [ have | quite willing to conform to the strictest ob- referred to in reyurd to Canada and this city, | Servance of the law in this respect, as they we have now abouta 100 persons who have! were on a former oceasion, when the vigilance! bean convicted of treagon-fel my, of treason, | of the press called forth the official condemna- | and who are now undergoing their sentences | tion of the immoral sensational sheets import. | of penal servitude for long terms of years jed from the neighboring tepublie, so that the Many of these men who. in all the ordinary ‘sale of treasonable publications is stopped in relationa of life, have been hionurable men, {this part of Canada. Mr. MeMicken, who} and some of them were wen of education and leit for Toronto on Saturday evenin ia 1822 in the capacity cf Secretary to Sir] Francis Burton, the then newly-appointed | | Governor of Lower Canada. Thus at tie com- | | paratively early age of twenty-four he entered | }on the arduous and eventful life ino what was, | then politically as well as commercially the | Crisis as a disisterested Imeud of Coustitution- | upon ibese principles his conduct inatter Lie was alsin, No one who dus not had persuval ex-! tounded. Thus trained in the school of God's perience of the impartiality, not tu say neutral | liberty, he came among us a stranger, an alien } ty of Sir Dominich’s mind, can understand how | in reigious professiou—he died sincereiy re- cuily ue stecred his way tivough this ayuated | gretted by all, of every Christian name, every sea vf trouble, la the storm that raged around | political hue. And that because he was | leading colony of the empire. On the 20th} him there was every cunceivabie eiement vi | honest, and being honest to all was at one ‘eth | May, 1826, he was iarried to Caroline Maria| chavs let louse—ersonal ambition, poiitica:| those who ditfered from bim both in rebgion | Gore, third daughter of Colonel Ralph Gove, | imcendiarism, local Jealousy, aud reiigious | and politics. " 4 " 7 formerly of Borrowmount, in Kilkenny. | Yet in the midsi of all the Pro-| for the people of this colony I believe that The Colonel, who was then on military service | Vincial Secretary remained quietly at his posi,| with one vuice we shail ail prociaim that we at Quebec, subsequently distinguished himself} ur, as Mr. Kaye expresses it, ‘he adhered | have lost a friend—one whom we were always in the rebellion of 1837. In allying himseif} iuithtuily to tue Guvernur General throughoui | glad to welcome—one whom we liked us a man, to this ancient and highly connected family jall his diticuities.” Lo the first crisis the | respected as a Governor, and whose memory iMr Daly was but following the example of! whule of his feliow Counciliurs resigued ia a! wiil be revered. He made more friends and many of his own aucestors. ‘Ibe univn, which | body, leaving him, hke Loid Weiluyton, tj fewer enemies than those who generally fill jlasted more than forty years, was happy inj furm a concentrated Cubuwet. In the succeed | hizh places in the earth. : itselt and in its results. ‘ Of the children only | ing Muuistry he shared the Premiership with | The Rev. James Pollitt (Church of England) tive have survived His Excellency, all of them | Messrs. Viger aud D.aper, the Canadians not pes :—Throuzbout his career in this province | |with one exception being resident in’ this having yet gol the ieugta of acknowledging a| Sir Dominick had been known for his firmness colony, namely, Mr. D. G. Daly, Mr. J. G. | single Premier. besides his seat in Couueil, | Daly, Mrs. Souttar and Mrs. Turton. Loudon, May 12, p.m. In the House of Commons this evening, the | reply of the Queen to the petition of the House of | Comtns, based on Mr. Gladstone's third reso lution, Was announced —The Queen says “ that i relying on the wisdow of the House of Commons, she desires that ber iiterest in the temporalities et the Chureh will not in any way hawper par- lanaticism. ! liammentary legislation on the subject.” — To | | morrow, Mr Gladstone will bring in a Bill to suspend for the present any waking of additional appolatmeuts tu the Irish Church. Constantinople, May 12. The Sultan opened the new Council vesterday in @ speech remarkable for its liberality. He r } | 2, will see | of well-kauwn, bigh, and respectabie charae- that the siuine kind service is done for the news ter. Not only this, but we ‘ : ot | stalls in Toronto this morning, and arrance- : 7” | rn $s ¥ this, b * have had, not | * , 8 | said the time had come when Turkish maaners | we.’” however, for [ must be excused from ents have been made tor a like procedure inj puget yeild to European civilization . 1 °,° ad . shat [4 laugh] —bat Government has thought Montreal and other cities. : | i i sme ii koa Shad a nf ‘My tay the discharze of bigh and important duties, , . . » i s : s Seereturv } ; HOP il SN a a Bee bint ~ = t tee bey ae rYSM)s | wud a keen sense of duty both te Gud and mau. When Sir Francis Burton assumed the go-| " a al ee pr “ vg + nec vied Se He was distinguished for bis simplicity of amiud taany sudsidiary Oullels tur Als Sleady activity. | and freedum from ustentation, a watchful care | vernment in 1829 Lower Canada, was a thori | He was fur 2 iony tie a member of the B : 4 ; in the side of the Home Government. It had| pw ot. oe umes On tae 0a'S | fur the interests of his Queen and country; and | whether i bis official capacity or private walk, : eee med Works, aud a very earnest member he must just entered on the course of disaffection which | ¢ ; : after many vicissitudes and changes ended in all who knew him could bear ainpie testimony Lo the consistency of his life. itself justified with reference to the repres- Toronto, May 5. | FROM THE STATES sion of crime, the safety of life, and the peace| The arrest of Fenians here created intense | Ne ¥ rk i 0’ the country, to call into operation the excitement. Nothing was known till Monday | eae 5? gallows—the wost brutal expedient of the moruing, when Mr. MceMicken had warranis The ms tthe sin ye epent the larger most brutal times. {Loud cheers} Not-| made out against Patrick Boyle, Owen Cos. 8 le ann ag oe nt se withstanding such detence as can be wade grove, Edward Hynes, and John Nolan. poms sty say A gar pla presatsligg : at. ‘ ‘ of war veesels to the Gult ef St. Lawrence tor for it, U take the galiows to be not only the Bovle is editor and proprietor of the Irish) the purpose of protecting our fishermen from the have been, to judge trom his practical acquuiut pauce with Lhe subject of roads and brid ses and gg but the fruitful parent of murder. | Canadian, and President of the Hibernian So- | excessive tax impuend by the Canadian authuritivs | the rebellion of 1838. ‘ There were many thas. | reproductive works generaily. It almost form : ; : \merica: but it affords us mach pleasure to chrou- Now, say that if these dep! rable evente ure. ciety. Hynes is his brother-in-law, and works, The resulution was finally passed by vote of 92 to | rae abuses in the : Government, and Many | ed the stapie of his pubiic speeches, especially 1 he Rev. Jobo Gardner (Presbyterian) icle his sate arrival home.—lHer. ging on around us, ia it not worth our while, |*8 ® journeyman in his office. Cosgrove is a| 39. , | Violent elements of dissension manag ae ecetii: ' ‘ said :—So far as man could judge, the deceased eit poet gp : as Eugiishmen and ag Christian men, as we {Fenian, and a member of the Hiberuian So-| A despateh from Ottawa says that the new | colonists themselves. Che public revenues | “f Grovernor was tree, aud thal, tuo, in the hizh- Ts bark “ Pricress"’ which was frozen jo at } this port all winier, sailed for Liverpool on the 5th ipatant with 40,000 bushels of Oats and 10 barrels The year 1846 must have been the culminat- Holding a| biz oflice in the Govermment, enjoying at once ‘patent Bill will only allow the citizens of Canada | ere shamelessly squandered by a dominant | to take out patents. The Bill to redace Governor | clique acting in the name of the Provincial ; ' " “ S oepeossal’ ary >> a>. fae he " » hanes rae tstaolt en | minds, and reflecting on the freedom we eo ?'clock, and the arrests made a few minutes General's salary trom $50,000 to 332,000 wae | Parliament, which was itself ~ ery ii paseed on the second reading in the House of | was founded on the bicameral principle, and fully possess in this ev in-|later. Boyle was working in the office in Ex-| P! ; poke . : Gilser to bear un Pockadckt pia yoy het lehange Lane when Fuilis entered, accowpan- | ’ ie pecan hte oe R. — mnchqnaen. : consisted of oe aoe: ale Council, w ith @ House | ministration with a view, if it be possible, to | id by the city deteetives. Follis asked for | York Times aa Ang @ : tu the New | of Assembly elected under a high franchise. , ‘ i SiRielial, wlalliadh cose in bien mod anid i et S, says the vatine Fovernment has Wipe ous trum the English oame forever the tiynes, dag uu) at nid, agreed lo fix the tax on American vessels fishing diazrace which attaches to it in connection YOO the Queen suame; you also, Mr. Boyle in Canadian waters at $2 pertou The three with the affairs of Ireland. [Loud ehweers } “re the Queen 3 prisoner-——come over here.” | warnings therefore reqiired to be given to Ameri Ao euioent member of the present Adminis- On this both were handcuffed. Both took it) can vessels gre to ve dispensed with. Gold tratiun, the Foreign Minieter, in a speech well, although Hynes felt not pleased at the! closed at 140. Which he made before the meeting of Parlia- |e of beins arrested, as he was not a meinber | ment ac & banquet at Bristol, deelared that jot the Fenian or Hiberniau Association. The | bhe Irish question was the yreat question of Mavuseript in the office was seized, but the! the hour. Another Minister, still more | 2°F8 &Zaxed in settings up type were not in-| eminent, now holding the office of Prime terlered with. The Jrish Canadian had a cir- Mioister, { hisses) has declared in Opposition | CHation of 2000. a vee a A Washington despateh contains correspon- to the opinions of his colleagues, that after | Nolan was taken while at work in Baird S| dence between Mr. Seward aud Mr. Thoruton, ell there is no great and pressing question foundary, and when the detective Went in, the | the British Minister, announcing the release of whatever, [laughter] and quite consistently inouiders there, three-fourths of whom are | the sv called Jacmel Fenian prisoners, Nagle, With that view, ke bas come belure Parlia- Perians, looked aghast, but said nothing. Cos-| Nugent, Lee, aud Fiizgibbuu. ment with no distiect and etatesmanlike |4°°¥e ¥45 arrested when unhitching his horses,} Guld 1404. policy on the frish questiun. Let us, then, atter being On a plot of ground near the city, | bo-night, following the example of man |ploushing. A list of the members ot the Hi-| est degree, from seeking to court the favor of the rich or the poor, the Jearned or the iznor- | ant, by any arts approaching to guile—by any attempt at dissimuiation, or by any approach, however distant, to flauery. However many, or however marked, might be the changes | taking place in Parliament—whatever pat ty night be in place or in power, for a season, louszer or shorter—thbe late lamented Governor did his duty to each and te all—made the work to which they were called plain, pleasing to all, in so far as to do su lay within his power. No one could fail to notice the frank, eontiding, affectionate, and yet the thoroughly seit-poss- rofeas to be, to consider this subject, to ‘ciety and a marshal, and Nolan is Secretary to Gees to bear upon it all the faculties of our |the latter. The warrants were issued at 12 lig port of bis Canadian career, alae cae Tue Steamer“ Heather Belle ’’ has commenced her tips for the seasun on the route of last year —namely. between this Port, Murray Harbor, Georgetown, Souris and Picton. —Ib Cart. Evass and other offcers of the “ Princess of Wales’ were feasied at the “ Clitton House, sumrierside, on the first yirit of the Steamer to that port this season, namely, the Snd iustam. They deserved it.—Her. the Contdeuce of the Goverior as a Minister, wid the esteem of the peuple asa Parliamentary | representative, he might well have thought ] . co. > sporhye a } ta! Tie cies Dela iitere Hk ia Bat eet Hiiuseit at the height ut his ambition. But at cal pe ee verientisneneee which .,.;uew career was in prospect. During the last} | hibited that strict Conscientiousness which re- | ; ; 4“ . Pi ee j three years of bis resideuce in Canada he was | | mained to the latest day of his life his most! he re “it ies j all ; at : | breaking off gue by gue the links whieh bound | | distinctive characteristic. His personal in-|} vs vrae : ; : } him to bis adupted couutry. Lu 1845 his stanch Neesins might have whispered to him to take : } | New York, 9. It is expected the vote of the United States Senate on luwpenchuent will be taken ou Munday vuext. Gold opened at 1395. New York, May 11. ay tricnd Loid Metcaite returned to Enygiand in things as he found them, and shut his eyes ou |, | hp a A ee © is ; : ie } Droken leallh, aud survived only a few months what he did not Itke; but he did neither.{ 06, atk wars ; a : H ed 4 ng ai { the fulizucs and Vaxauions of office, from which | Where oceasion required it, he showed the!; © scaned , j bi i ae : lie su avruptiy escaped. For a cousiderabie people that he did not sympathize with the | \ i 1 : ; eat eg A j lime the yuverumenat was adiniuistered by Lord abuses agaist which they so frequently and so! (s, he he C al : na ate gaye * te J | Catheart, the Commander of the Forces. loudly complained. ve year beture he arrived | Pt aad “Sagar a ‘ ‘ i oe : )Dunug this mterina aduiuistration the old j they had sent a petition to the Home Govern-|, | F atirtl Diced gah wurete all } a ae Phar . jieaven of civil discord was asain aliowed to ment, with 87,000 signatures at the end of it. |. a Ae ; j ’ i! ag ;.. | come ty the surlace, Inu the reign of Lord | Inthe confusion attendi:y the repeal of Catholic | ys, Li ‘ stare ell Bis Alek ites | Bigin, which cominenced in 1846, it once more disabilities in Ireland, the disabilities of the yds Sapa only the Leyistature, but also the Canadians were iguored, and remained so until | The turbulent elections of 1848 he tactics of O'Connell were reproduce Sut , : . the tactics ; 2 1 ced at! were fullowed by a Mimstreal crisis, whea Si: Quebec and Montreal. I *pineaus ‘Sons of silk lata The Sehr. Adele, from Boston, arrived bere on am : é Monday with 20% barrels of fluartor O. Connolly, essed, dignified manner in which the late Gov-| ang sundry merchandize tor ether parties; the. ernor received all coming within his reach or i Sehr. Dominion, trow Boston, arrived on Tuesday seeking his counsel and aid. Nor could any / with 50 barrels flour tor L. C. Owen; 150 do tor interested or reflecting observer have failed to | estate of M. McWade, and 300 de., and 109 bags notice the genuine simpheity with which trom| and 40 bbis cornmeal tor W. Welsh; and ibe the outset of his career in the province the de-| Steamer Alhambra, trom Beeton and Halitax on ernor declared his inability to we Pegs J a ry: a. gona awry - 3u0 nee—s, deslaratin ei 4| dv. cornmeal ter J. 8. Carvel, and a lot of sugar, wir seadraem pense petri molasses and goods, for Messrs. Peake Bros. & Co, &. & 3. Davies, Davirs & Werks, Beer & Sons, LC. Hall, W. Dodd, F. LePage, Lenivel | ceased Gov | dress an auc | to tuke an audience off its guard, and then by | jsome brilliant stroke of oratory, or by some | | public peace, Boston, May If. The latest from Washington up to this hour eee se ’ : ber Society, were found in Nolan's posses. | a i : cas ee | Dominick, tollowing the eXample of bis me - | compact olnted utterances to : oe m : : ather great assemblies of the people, and D&eran Sor iety, were found in Nolan's posses- (11 30 p. m ), is that the indications are strongly | Liberty” diffused a mild kind of Fenianisn | I ominick, er v ing e examp . of hi banearetid ompac ;'. ° t 3 ; carry & con | McKay, Chas Quirk, Jaues McCraith, Starbird ; making Ourselves an ex Le pie to the other |", aS also a lot of other doouments of no! in faver of President Joboson’s acquittal There throu oh the province which stiensthened with | Lord Metealte, washed his hands ot anata | vietion to the mind and to make an impression | & Co., and others —Pat. ' grest assemblies which will be held, swell |” slue, all the prisoners were lodzed in Jel, and) wall not be two votes to spare on either eide, and ay neglect, until in 1837 it rose in arms | poutics Phe picture given of him in his/onu the heart of his power to speak, and to ALES | speak forcibly, efiectively, and eloquently wheu | and where he pleased. | public capacity is creditable alike to himseli | eer , at bie SHIPMENTS FoR THE Weew :—21,994 bush. j}and bis Contemporaries. Lut it is not a com | the general cry which ie now being raised in placed ia tuur differerit parts of the buiiding. | ihe result is anxiously loeked tor whieh will be | x The acknowledgement, | potatoes, 10.994 do, owls, 220 do, turnips. 26 bbis. ayainst the unreformadle law. The Assembiy |had in the preceding session refused to vote every part of the coustry and let us help, | Or tawa, May 6.—lt is believed that parties | delivered in Seuale at 1230 to-morrow, ; 3 larrested at 2} > y } kareninniicane once for all, tu establish squud and just prin- arrested at T. ronto under the ubeas Corpus | . plete picture of a man, nor even of his best | Supplies, so that the Governor had to face the wel E . too, of his mability to speak was rendered all | oysiers, 58 do. pork, and oO do. egys- Of bread- | | statis the imports were 3075 bbls. four, 540 do. and Ses —— ses Eo ciples ia the government of the trish aation Let us ask them to join with us, aud let us) Tt j, | Has now to be kept at the gual | jvin heartily with them iv a poliey whic Shey shail fewl and acknowledge tu be just. We shall by that means relieve our country from # great reproach, and, lb vhink, we stall jof uther parties, who are mure or less implicat do something tu add fresh Justre tu the reign of the Queen. [Loud cheers] And, possi bly, if we are nut very tender in our proceed. ings, and careful of what we are duing, we auay Gad ourselves helping 4; wedily to over- | Shrow what | fear will turn out to be the moat inglorious Administration in the modern annals of our country. [Great applause | [ need aot tell this audience that in my Parliamentary ile L have not been much wctusted by what sre called party feelings, and that { fave not striven for what are ealled party trmmphs {Hear, bear] [ have siwaye bad before my eyes some great measure thet seemed to me attainable, and fur that meaeare 1 have iahored; but when | gee an Administration like (he present, which denies thet it bas awy great duty to perlorm @owards [reland. an Adwinietration whiels bas no majority in the Meese of Commons, which hag still less anything epproaching 8 majority in the couniry, whieh has no poliey upoo that which Lord Stanley deelar- ed to be the great question of the hour, then | say it is the duty of every great assembly dike this, the duty of @ wise majority in Par: fiament. aad the duty of every honest repre. eentative of the people, to put an end as sucn as posible to that Adwiaistration. [Lhe hon, gewtiewan resumed bis seat amid loud eheeriag, having spoken for exactly 40 minutes. Resolutions were passed in support of Nr. Giadstone’s proposale. A frightful catastrophe occured at Buffalo Jaat week. The boiler of the propellor Gover gor Cashman exploded in the erees. The vease] was shattered to frazments. Eleven menu were killed, aud two wounded, The hody of » man named Andersou was blown ever .au | elevator a hundred feet higl. The St. Paul Prese describes a sincular hesomenon which was exhibited inthe western @ue at sunset on the 20th ult. There appeared on # blue and purple cloud, alowe the gun, aud aboul $5 degrees above the horizon, a distiuctly delived croszof yolden hue, quasar past life in carrying him with honor pars # separation of exactly half a century. The! * nese Aecegeeae he Sound bisnaont pent ongdecisnges,. circumstances of very testiny character in what | Provincial Parliaments were abolished, and a} side of fifty, and perhaps little thought that be | is now the dominion of Canada, and in secur united Leyislature, with 20 members in one! had quite iant'g ante begin. | ing the esteem of those in power and ade | House and 84 ia the other, took their place. Ss During his residence in England the Home promotion at the hand of the Sovereign whorn | We a ~ | Government tesiitied their appreciation of bis| ie served. As to the personal sttiskaanees' Thus ended the first stage of Sir Dominick's! services by placing him ou various Public} of the deceased Governor I have mations ta} career —his experience of the old colonial) Commissions. The first of these was appoint-| say, for I am wholly without seiledeenualinin rf He | would hope that kindliness to which we have sequently delayed fer. some years. Lord Sydenham slowly prepared the soil for the new system. The first promotion he received was/ ed to enquire into the condition acd claims of | k the New aud Waitham Forests, his associates | yeferyed was the fruit of the spirit of Christ, | being Lord Portman aud the date Jude! and that great wisdom he manifested was a| Dampier. In 1852 he received his first Coi-) gilt of God in answer to prayer, so that we! vuial Governarship, and a very modest one it may rejoice in and be thankful for the grace of much bigher position than he had orginally | occupied as a member of the Governor's staff. | It proportionately extended his intluence and | . . . ; ' ’ his sphere of observation. Little as he puraded | 1 BE et of Py bhanorap a | God ia him. Albeit it possessed two Houses of Parliament.! -. . & , . it was ie so large as the County of Adelaide oO: ane mer. R. , . Plockart pheirwesn tesa we oh and nota tenth part as populous. Sir Dom, patties — igs grt or pes prance _ tend, inick’s stay here was short, tor in L854 he was | aud who, for bis kindly and manly bearing as promoted to the Government of Prince Edward | “ - om Sor his wise Gnd Rapertial wie; ine zreatly respected and esteemed by all, has been his intercourse with the turbulent Legislature | of Lower Canada throughout this stormy period | sharpened his political insizht to a very high de- | ; | } | ° . -" | But it did more than that—it gained for ! > He. Hapress. h : “eur ; lhe 7 > : eT eine 9 im the best reput.tiouwa politician can aspire to! Island. There he remained the full viceresal mtn anemic ieaneemepincngeatnitonne y eb stan Pgs ay dhe isc ae '—that of Sierras and ees When the | aa of six years, and had an Moca ees aye removed by death: thousands Lave followed in | te Since the assassination Mr. Notmay of SUC: & b ylug action places ae ‘ ‘ PM NY O8| the long procession to his grave; aud to-day | | Moutreal. has issued 50,000 photugraphe of the Hon. TD. MeGee. ot; EP Koex, the millionaire hatter, of New York. | ghus resture cheertuluess gad vigour. came to that cily a poor Irish boy. Advertising | | has made bim what he is. _———_~9 0o-——— We often hear it cemarked that our finest Ea } “The life of all flesh is the blood thereof.” and) Borses come from Vermont fuwctions ui the system ty healtby action. j are very beuelicial lo young Lorses. them abuve all other medicines. La tudigestion, %EW S¥Stem was introduced his fellow colonists verveus affections, gout and rheumatism, these Slowed their gratitude for his constant, though | Pils have raised tor themselves an dniversal fae, | Uuostentatious services by electing him to a seat They expel all impurities from the bluud, and in the United Legigiatue. The best proof of | what this complimeuz really meant is that Sir | Dominick was the only one of the old officials | sv elected. Why isit?) Because #44inst impending e'urms po life or flesh can be bealthy while its blood. they never relax theie watelitul care from the G@echrinaire, and equally little af a demayozue, it diseased. Pataous’ Purgative Piila will not only time they are foaled wutil they are ready for. he had beea from the first a sincere believer in cleanse ard purity the bleed, but stimulate the warket. Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Pewd: ra. responsible goverament. | Judives of tem years’ irresponsible officialism he studying the quiet side of responsible Govern- | : : ys i f four puipits are shrouded in black and we all | ment. Before he left it he could say that he | ae eae biek she bh . had viewed the Waketield system both fron | MON ie 1088 which the ereaved family and | ; the country have sustained. above and below, that he had practised it as a | Minister, and endured it as a Governor. In| The Rey. J. C. Woods, B. A., (Unitarian) | 1556 a we'l-deserved mark of royal favour was|said:—We lament this day, in common with | conferred upoa him in his creation of a Kmght | our brethren of all denominations, the death of | Bachelor, He had proved himseif to be no| Her Majesty’s representative in this province, wuworthy member of the family, which had our late Goverasr, Sir Dominick Daly. We raised itself! froin country squr dom to the all respected him on account of his position, peeraze. In the end of J859 Sir Dominick and we esteemed and loved him for his own _feturned to Eugland, and was once more at sake. Venerable in years, in aspect, and in He alone had not :et his face Though no; The habits and pre- | form of coustipation. 50 bays cornmeal. ‘Total to date, 6690 bbls flour and 2 157 do. cornmeal, as compared with 918 bbis tlour, and 705 do cornmeal for corresponding period of last yeur.—Pat.- cel aeittiaiaaiaaii, fe The Rev. Thomas DPaoncan, of St. James Chureb, of this City, was a passenger in the Steamer City of Cork, from Hulifax for Liver- pool, on Friday last —Jsl vim eiiieeniiliiliiniltes The Rev. Mr Simpson, son of Alex. Simpson, Esq , of Cavendish, in this Island, bas accepted a call as colleague to Kev. Mr. McGregor of Poplar Grove Presbyterian Church, Halifax, and is to be inducted on the zist inet — Jb. ie re We ure pleased to be able to announee to eur readers that Uie Sab-Marine Telegraph Cabie, between Capes Traverse aud Tormentive, is aguin jin working order — Jb. —- << --- ------ re Areerr H. Yates, Esq., has been ap- poiuted Marshal of the Viee Adwirality Court of | this Island, in the place of Robert Hyndwan, Faq, deceused — Jb ities A New any Gaaxp Erocn in Mepicing.—Dr. Mayyiel is the founder of 1 vew Medical system. The qauantitarians, whose internal doses enteebis the stomach wud paralyze the bowels, must give precedence to the wan who restores health and appetite with from oue tw two of Lis ordinary Pills, and cures Lie most virulent sores wilh a box or 80 vf his wonderful and all-healing Salve. Those Lwo great epecilices of the Doctor are fast super cediug all the stereotyped vosiruns of the day. Extraordinary cures by Maygiel's Pills and Salve have opeved the eyes of the public to the ID efficiency of the (so-called) remedies of otbers, ane upon Which people have so long blindly depended. Maygiel’s Pille are not of the clare thatare ewnllow- ed by the dozen, and of wheh every box ful taken Creates un absolute necessity for another. One or two of Muggiel’s Pills suthces to keep the bowels in perfect order tone the stomach, create au appetite, and render the spirits light und buey- unt. ‘There is no griping, and bo reaction m the If the liver iw affected, its functions are restered, and if the nervous system is feeble, it is invigorating. This last quality makes the medicine very desirable for the wants of delicate females Ulcerous and eruptive dit | enses are literally extinguished by the disintectunt use of Mayyiei’s Salve In fact, it is here an nounced that MacGikL’s Bitiocs, Drerertic 48D DiakkHa@a Pitis cure where all others fuil- Whiie for Burns, Scalds, Chilblains, Cute, and all Abrasions of the Skin, MaGoirt. 8 SaLve i IB- fulliable. Sold byJ- HAY POCK, It Pine street, New York, and ail Drogyists, at 29 cents fa bok. * Coustexreiis!—bBuy po Maxgeiel ‘ills or Salve. with w litthe pamplet inside the box rp are bogus. The genuine have the nuwe of 4. Hydock on box with name of J Mayziel. MD. The geouine have the Pills surrounced with white powder.” FRIGHTFUL Muayyiei's Sulve stops the moet vi burns, scalds, ete.. at once, while for weun Bunss! Feanrer Scatve!—Dr. lent pain © de, nile, cor! 6,elc. it isunsurpasted. Seld by all a W.t. Watson, agent for P. EB. Island. on a > ESERIES COE sae 8 = ve