MISCELLANE GUS NEWS. THE TRIPLE MURDER IN LONDON, ihe shadow of o great uad unparalleled ertme — & mysterions tragedy — hangs over Londou :— perpetrated in silence in the midet of crowds, 10 & public veliele in the public street We mught search sensation fictions io vain for & more appalling instance of cool il determination. careful ealculation and indo ? mitable reseive. No thaching trom the so deed ; no precaution against diseovery > but % stern determiuation on the part of the er winal to share the fate of his murdered wife tiee vshoald track bi to his lair. Tle waited a foc the me, and when 1 came he defeated | retribative justice by adding to the guilt of murderer the erime of suicide, for which there is no repentance. When all men were talk:tg of the terrible tragedy—of the un- ee keown mother and children foully murdered, none knew by wiom— sxe went about his a daily husiness, at his accustomed place, with no trace of conscious guilt on his counten- ance, no uneasiness in bis manner, and lis- tened to the gossip of the counting-house, io which for # time the absorbing topic miagled with the business proper to the place. At J night he went home—to the home which a few days be'ore was occupied by his wife and little children, now lying d sad anowned, in the dead-house of a distaut hospital liow he passed the Sunday we know not; but on Monday evering he went to a tavero cloae to bis house, where be was well known, and then to lus lovely bed, where he lay, reading a racord of hearty, innocent boy tile, ** Tom Brown at Ox'ord,”’ till a loud kuecking at the door wid him that the police bad traced him. What a strange contrast between the happy youth leaping and theuting af their active games, Tipening by earcfal stadies and exercise foran honest, . nrole manhood, and the conscienve-scared ; qurderer, fresh from the foulest of ctimes, vet with # strange, almost unaccountable Bolt possessi » and remorselessness dwelling in his wind upon the happy scenes of Raghy ' hie. Le rewieds as of Eugene Aram, among ‘ toe pupils of bis school, dreamily watching their sports, as ‘* to and fro they ran and leapt,’ and endeavouring to tall his own terrible memories in the perseasion that the rmege of the murdered man was an unreal phantom, whieh the presence of childhoud and innocenee would drive away. Aram was roaved from his moody dream, his stern struggle to repress his mnuer guilty! self, by the ** stern-faced men,”’ who put + “gyves upon his wrists,”’ eo Haunt was traced by the offeers, whom common rumor — the repart of neighbours who missed his wife and children — had direeted to the spot. Un- flrachingly even at that terrible moment he drank the poison, whieh would enable him to dixappoint justice, even at the instant = when it seemed to triumph moat ; opened the door, replied unmoved to questionings, and, in a few brief moments, died with a le upon his lips, and with no sign of surrow for his victim of repentance for bis erime. There emis the termble tragedy. A hundred petty details may be elicited by forma! inquiry ; bat nothing can add to the naked horror of the facts. One satisfaction only remains, und that is, that there is not another item added to the fearful eatalogue of murder mysteries. The author of the terrible crime ie discovered, and is now as dead as thuss whose lives he took ileneeforth we may hide the record in oblivion; or only dimly ty be relerred to by those whose office it is i aad children whea the sleath-loeads at jus- i Bac as) The steamer Von Phul was attacked on her voyage from New Orleans to St. Louis, on the 11th inst., at a pot near Bayou Sara. Her captaim was killed and several of the crew also. The vessel, however, was ultimately got off by the aid of a United States gunboat, and conveyed up the mouth of the Red River. i> 060 oo - disposed to conce or any other fellow mortal in the wide universe. Whether this can be practically accomplished, however, under all existing circumsiances, with the Bible in purely promiscuous secular istitu- | tious of learning ike our own conmimon schools, remains yet to be proved. ' | schools, or pure secular courts v! education, are which encountered the mountaineers inforee, sand-bank, a dangerous shoal neat “the by which they were driven back in contusion entrance of the Zuyder Zee, where sh on the main body ; a general engagement speedily began to break up, and of fous then eusued, in which the mountaineers were bundred lives on board vbly forty-lour are onee more victorious, “These repeated checks reported to have been saved, appear tobe making the Russians perfectly +e. —— furious, thus render:ng a further advantage) Tae New Batrisa Caxsins.—The British. to their adversactes. ln the meantime the Goverument bave recently adupted & nhew Russians are understood to be making pre- breech loading rifled ce rbine, which has the! The lastreally trustworthy accountsof Gen-! the Bible at all, is likewise a point Which has parations for a grand e nip. but where and tollowing peculiarities: tbe barrel is tweuty- | eral Longstreet's position is, that on Thars- j never yet been clearly establisl oe “ e a when this is to take place remains as yet & four imeones in length— tull lunge b thirty- day last he was making his way into North | that the faunly circle we tie aa Ses aie, seeret. ‘The unfortunate Circassians are suf- cayen and a hall mehes—and weighs aite | Carolina by Bull's Gap. The Cincinnati aud “ory a . - ws a coliedtibe ‘ering severely for the want of provisions, gether a tmfle under six pounds. iv hay an! papers of Monday, however, manufactured a a, van ee Ww. to ee thi it ull numbers of families being reduced to liv Irg effeetive rauge of over w thuusaud yards, is) Story that Longstreet bad been overtaken by Seen es the hied- at ( pristianity are }on the commonest roots they ean find, sighted for twelve bundred yaras, and will @ division of Foster's (late Burnside’s) army ;— cceuiaulh the appropriate places for the collective and the Russian Consul at Tretigond is using carry @ ball or rifle sheil very nearly one bis forces surrounded and the Confederate study of the same Book ; and we kuuw Sabbath every effurt to prevent aid reacting them.”’ | wale, or about sixteen bundred yards. ‘The General himself killed. All this story savors schvols and all such protessedly religious institues —=ee- i bore of this weapon is the sate as the Enfield of moonshine. It bad no effect on the gold }in any known christian comunnity are equally A Suppen Derarrurs.—Considerable ex- rifle, and fires a similar baliet, conical, and | Market here, except to cause ap advance of eligible to the befitting study of the same common citement was created in town yesterday by weighing about an ounce, The contrivance | 1 per cent, lor loading aud then closing the breech is one lchristian Bible. But we do net know that any chnstian wian is morally, i any seuse, bound to thas sends a steel plug inte the lower ead of the barrel about the third of an inch. Tie earry that Bible te the woods, to the mill, to the ball protrudes naked from one end of the market, or te any other ordinary secular place of naturally secular business to which he way babi- i i tually find himself physically required fo resort, cartridge, and when fired entirely fills the We are not sure indeed that we would feel greatly | bore and eTOOVES, thus preventing windage. constrained to regard him as being either a Jess lt is impossible for it to leak fire. By a) enthusiastic, or hypocritical, or in any wise a ne- simple and ingenicus contrivance in the Cart- ridge, the gun lubricates and cieans itself, and does nut become the jeast toul, even after firing thousands of times. At the Jower or base end of the cartridge is a wad, eut out of heavy woclien felting, at least a quarter of an meh thick. ‘bis is satarated with grease, lard or tallew. The powder is between this wad and the bullet, and ateer the discharge the wad remains in the gun Of course the wad goes out betore the next ballet, and as the gun grows warm by firing, the grease welts, and the gun is lubricated and cleansed at every discharge.—Army and Navy Journal (U. 8.) . ae SS - Intsa Exicration.—Tolitical and religious | News from North Carolina is to the effect | that the blockade-running at Wilmington still continues, it being estimated that half a million dollars worth of goods arrive there every twenty-four hours. Since the State has been nearly abandoned by the Confede- rate troops the banks huve decided to dispose of their specie, and have been paying it out to citizens at the rate of one dollar im gold for four dollars in North Carolina money. Gen. Butler is raising ao army of colored troops in the department, and the three black regiments of cavalry, recently started, are filling up rapidly. the disappearance of a person named Wilson, who has been a resident of this city, at inter- vals, during the past year. ile represented bimselt to be a Southerner,and to he possessed of considerable means, and he bad the appear- ance ofa geatieman. Ee made some acquain tances in the city, and among othersa young Englishman, well connected in Toronto whom Se imvited to visit Kauglund at his ex- The journey was undertaken, and the Southerner was entertained in London at the young geatleman’s house ; aud so agree- ble did he make himself, that was cepted vs a suitor by a daughter of the house. The marriage took place in due cuurse, and Mr. Wilson and his bride retarned to Toronto to take up his permanent reswtence among the lady's relatives here. A tew days ago he placed m the hands ef an uncle of his wife, a member of one ef the oldest and wealthiest firms in the eity, certificates of bank deposits, with drafts on New York, to the amount of 44.000. which he declared } he iatended to invest for her benefit. On the credit which he acquired by the deposit of his neighbours, even supposing he habitually did. On the selfsame obvieus gtounds, then, aud tor the self same iitrissically very good rea- | sous, Wwe donut yet clearly knew that such aman’s jehild is by any means any otherwise morally bound te earry that same ible, during the appro- | priate hours of its purely secular employmeut, to cht setciteencni / a commen local school house, the ordiuary scene A CLOSELY INVESTED CORNFIELD. — There | Of & great part OF Its) pret heal secular duties, lo was a cornfield on the Rapidau from whieh the |X te up in any degree with its most ebviously soldiers of both armies used to pluck choice reast- designedly secular enpley ments and secular men- ing ears. It was dangerous business, tue field tal Sxerciars. We do not know, we fearlessly be ing exposed to the tive at the pickets on both | repeat, whether the Bible CAR, ta strigs ae sides, but still the boys would encounter the risks | weer have anything specifically more to do with | for they wanted the corn. The rows at last be- he learning ot grammar than with the chopping gan to decrease between the hosile gleaners, ot wood, or with the studying of nat hematies, until ouly a tew were left ungathered. One geography or Latin than wiih grinding of Jour, | merning two rebel soldiers were cautiously pick- | selliug ol goods or sowing of corn It is true that ing from the few remaining rews, when they ob- we find the Mention of a great many places such . as “ Joppa,’ “ Asia Minor” and the like in the pense, he uc- causes have very little to do with the emigra- - these securities, = vbtained from eertain gion, Saxon oppression’? counts for ne- oo re — me in the fs eggs, sible, which may be very easily connected in the okere in the @iy the sun t $3.000 _ : adniatits wie st on the other side. All were alarmec mn moni". “es : : rok iy va of §45.000, and thing. There is no repelling force in any | mind of a child with the leeal geography of the | demanded a surrender, aud each gave a defiant , ‘ cs learth; but it is no less true that we read alse of answer A desperate row aud tuwoale fight then | CPs 9 ab Wwe read &@ ' Tate. “two women grinding at a moll,” of “ the market cots > altel : on commeneed, whieh continued until the arrival of | i . os Pere aed geries, but Wilson received no mont ¥Y upon Continent. The exodus is nut a revolt; it a third Contederate, when the Yankees were cap- place,” of the * buildiag of tents,” of the “selling them, and the only suff: rers are the brokess| jas no leader, no organization. No mission- ‘tured, aud triumphantly carried across the river, ol werchandize,” and at “the ships of far and who diseonnted his drafts. Much sympathy juries have preached any doctrine making : i c piteh,” and of myriads of other things which may 1s expressed for tbe highly rspectable family , emigration a duty. Die: didie hes than | just as easily be connected in the minds of grown a member of which has unfortanately become | gtirred the popular mind comes from those. up men and wewen with thousaids of the equatly connected with thisswindl tr. [ts tortunate | the step has made prosperous, The success current secular pursuits in Which they must often, that bis vietum has friends able and willing of one emigrant determincs hundreds to follow ot absolute necessity, at peeuhar stated periods, to care for her.— Tvronto Globe. he q | The cuse scribed | } busy thetinelver, } : ; the eximpie ve Cause described by the Tiere is barely a possible abstract question, * Country Clergyman’’ is oneof many. A therefore, still involving itself in the essence ot | farmer's only son goes ont to America, comes i back within a year. well clad, and with bis pockets tull of money,”’ gives a glowing ac- count of bis circuistanees, that he shall soon be able to buy a farm and live as well as with thatamount has leit for parts unknown. | jnstitutions in the kingdom that throws off The certificates of deposit turn out to be for-| ghese masses of population to the Western 22 — The Sonathern correspondent of the London Tities says itis safer to go inte action thas to take | a long journey by rail in the Confederacy. ‘The | trains run “wild,” that is, af the couvenience of the conductors, aud there being buat single lines of | track there is notbiag te prevent collisions; the | rails are worn down to the thickness of a lady’s little finger, and the numerous trestle bridges : : lereak and tremble as a train passes in such a | Cular education itself, as thus udnauitered iu }fushion as would, in Eugland, elicit one hundred | COM wen mixed schools or colleges like our own, jletters per diem to the Times from agonized | W¥ether the Roman Catholic element of our ge- —_—- - An examination of the students of St Francis Xavier's College, Antigonish, took place last week, in presence of the Ke. Rev Dr. McKinnon. The institution appears to be in a flourishing condition. The Casket suys.— ** The students and day-scholars were ex- amined in all the branches constituting a | high collegiate education — Mental Piiloso- phy and Theology excezted. The classes of Mathematies, comprising Geometry, Algebra, |Surveying, Navigation; and in Natural | Philosophy—Meebanics, taught by Roderick | sicDonald, Esq., reflected great credit both ;Gpon themselves and their Proiessor for the /aceuracy and facility with which the young | passengers. The Times correspondent was two | Foe eee "90 ‘i ** big landlord or his reverence,’’ aod hurries | days and two nighis iu getting from Chickamau. | CO" ae a ae own religious terets across the Atlantic again, *‘ as if every day | ga to Atlauta, a Cistance of only 130 miles, j— may not legitimately pussess just ns good | Erne ponding sae ee es é {right as teetatellers —to quote in their own be- opens im - ay ets Soren — > oe oO } . i? . . | half—the oft retterated passage: ** li meat make lost We can well imagine the effeet pro- n the 6th inst., the Confederates made an | my brother te oflend. I will eat po meat while . 7 . ‘ eg “a “ duced in a country district by the appearance «attack on Natehez, but were repulsed by the tye world staideti iest 1 make my brother tu jul such a representative man. lle is the Federal garrison veccupying the place. ' offend.” No Protestant will, we presume, be most effeetive of emissaries, though he hasno | = see willy to deny that a ivwoan Cathohe neighbour express mission. Tie same encouragement oie aioe coil Gisele ip tna eheare ot GORRESPORDERCE, jinay at least have just as teuder a conscici.ce as jeither a Son of Touperance, reclaimed from former emigrants to their friends at home. | FOR THE PUBLIC | vicious habits, ora priuitive christian reclaimed These communications must bave an immense | . . jfrom the practice of teathenishly sacrificing to jmen sulved the different problems proposed effect. They describe the advantages oi the | (No. 5.) | dumb idols. Bat the only real doubt on the sub- jfor solution. In the Classiwal Departwent, new home, ana dispel t) e fears and misgivings | “Justum ae tenacenm proponti viram, aoe mar a apg ale cpg lg enl ) the Greek and Latin students acquitted them- with wheat the vuyage and life in a distant! ao eivitun ardor prayva jubentinm, or? kiana a wonly, 9 tile necy mates Selves must satisfactorily.’’ | Poe ~ ee a rd Non villus instants tyraunii at present before us, any suing atall ke an equally ’ country were once regarded. The Atlantic! Mente quatit solida.”—Hoxar. tender conscieuce as that which Paul recommends iy Tee ee i has ceased to be a dreadful barrier. The Mr. Eptror: | towards their own modern Roman Catholie bre- While President Lineoin was confined te! National Schools of Iveland have not been * as te the “ Bishop's Letter,” then, we frankly | thren. This is a gravely serious problem which bis house with the varivloid, some friends teaching the people in vain. ; f : : ‘ called to sympathize with him, especially on ne They read and | gdiit that the ianatical outcry about a“ godiess We candidly teel ourselvesin duty bound to assure the character of his disease. **Yes,’’ he said. jappears. Prosperity seen beckoning on the | time gave rise, is a circumstance which will pot | We biassed consideration. For thas viewing the reo - _ write and consult maps till distance dis- udueation,” to which that simple epistle at the | them may net be altogether undeserving of their t» ehramicle the crimes as well as the virtuce| ““!* is @ bad disease, but it has its advantages | other side of the ocean diminishes it to a mere | soon he forgotten by many a rustic native of this | question in fs widest aspects, we tind that the end triumphs of frail humanity. It would} For the firet time since { have been in itive} brook, crossed almost with as little difficulry. | Colony. tave been disgraceful to oar police system if the perpetrator of this double crime had re- | mained undiscovered; if the pvisoner had | been as unknown as the murderers of the little child at Frome, or the wretched woman at St. iles’s. But, indeed, that was searcely possible. ‘Tne murderer almost in- vited detection. He could searcely hope that his aeighbours, who knew the murdered persons so well, would fail to note their ab- wence, identify the bodies or the clothes, and communicate their suspicions. He de- removing himself from its sphere. Let the eurtain drop, and hide at least this one sad @eene of the strange drama of London life. There is no sjecial safety in crowds. In the midst of active life comes sudden and ter-| sible death; in the heart of stern, cold | reality, the fearful chapter of a romance takes form. and the fiendish callousness of the murderer, and the sinking to death of his victims, are as real ag the busy huin of Sa- tarday-night traffic and the glare of the gas- lights. The man who saw the murderer is taken throughout the town to identify his body if he can, for it is supposed be may have committed suicide. There is no lack of dead men. Every day, it would seem, has rte burden of despair and death ; every day is sume dreadful deed enacted here among us, on the very #pot where the pulses of life beat strongest.—Lomdon Weekly Despatch. | _ ee i Merper or a Frexcuwan 1s Japan —The| Japan Herald of Oct. l4th says :—** Searcely one year lias elapsed since we recorded the | barbarvus murder of Mr.C. L. Richardson, | one of the foulest crimes which ever had stained the annals of any country. The! inevitable consequences of this crime have | not had time to be fulfilled, when we are) called upon to record another of a similar, | of, if possible, yet more foul and dastardly | eharacter. This afternoon about 4 o'clock information bas been received by all the | various consuls, that the body of a foreigner | had beenjdiscovered at a villag+ named Idon- | gayah, about three miles and a hail from tse settioment. Mr. Von Brandt, the Prus- | swan Consul, with Lieutenant Applin and the | Military Train excort immediately proceeded | to the apot indjeated, whieh ts on the Tukaido, | and the French escort was sent to follow Mr. | You Brands. Mr. Bieckmen, of the French | Legation proceeded with two Chassears by | the country road, and overtook Colonel Fieher, Unsited States Consul, and Dr, Jenkins, with sume Japanese officers on horse- back. They went on towards the same place, | Modongyah, when coming on tie turning to | Kansawa, about one and a half miles trom | the settlement, and about 20 yards ar the bridge over the euna!, they saw lying | across the narrow pathway the horribly | mutilated body of M. Camus, a sub-lieuven- | ant of the 3d battalion of the Ciassears | @ Afrique. It is difficult to deseribe the} condition of the body of the deceased, some | 24 wounds had been inflicted, any one or | which had been sufficient to produce death The arm (the bridie arm) was completely | # vered from the trunk, with a part of the reins yet in the hand, was found nearly ten) paces from the body. The villagers profess the most profoand ignorance on the subject, but we have heard tiiat they have said that they observed three strangers (two-sworded | meu) in tie neighbourhved, and that one of | them, an ol! woman declares that, hearing | cries, she looked out from her house, and) saw two men passing quickly by, ome of them | with his garments covered with blood. The | officials, of course, profess to have 20 clue to | the dastardly marder. M. Camus hau gone | outio the afternoun, as was his usual pract:<®, | for @ ride. He was totally unarmed, not, having with him even the small pocket pistol which be sumetiwes carried.’ oe Dereat or rus Russians xy tue Crrcas- sians.—A letter [rom Soukum-Kale gives the following account of an encvanter between the Russian troops and the brave mountaine- | ers of Circassia :-—** The Russian forces, ca. | valry and infaatry, bave advanced in three columns on the Sapsubs. Tue latter, who were in expeetatioa of the aggressive move- } | } into the mountains, the wen rewaiming in « position, prepared to encounter the anewy, euder the command of Hadjt Thazi- guess, who bad already ea ned the ds n- guished repatation which he hus well sustained og this occasion, the Russians having been dri- including # large proportion of the staf A evlawy of Russians, who Were marching on tha Abasseh wish a view to capture Toaps, p-shed furward a Stung udvaace guard, fied earthiy justice; for he beld the means of | ment, had sent all their families and property | af boek atall pomts with seriouslossink ll @ But vow, atter that veleanie burst of | Catholic has absiractly just as good a right to bis have something now to give to everySody that | |; ig weakness to fear the inevitab e result of | precipitate popular phrenzy las, in a goodly mea- | OW" religion as the Protesiaut has to bis; he calls.” sure, died away, aud people lave onde more sub- | POy*: perhaps, just as much tor the general pur- lsided dewn to that more nermal state of cool | PO%t® of common public education ; the Bible in The atrocities atrributed ta the Russians Say : deliberation which enablea them te take a calm | Me peblig school is contrary to huis cousewence—il in Poland surpass all poesible imagination of Captain Maflic, of the privateer Florida, 0d tuiypassioned view of any subject in particular | ane tere oe conscience boman eruelty in an age like the present.) boasts that he has destroyed no less than 4 of all things in general, we find that, like Li it ell a rap ar ae wuthing r . a _ . venauell ae fi a 2 “re a eseehce The corporal punishment of women of all |9 790.000 dollars worth of American pro- | M0st etier bubbles when fly exploded, every | : es aa bernie ae gel rans under circumstances of special i dignity | i 1 ied 13 F a 7 i tte intelligent man is frankly reaay to acknowledge | Se schoolhouse rather than im the eounting- : cre vecial in } 413 Feder vessels of war 8 rr ee 3 ' $ * | perty, and eludes ederal vess vu , 5 clei ial te ie M4 the mill, or the factery; and these. being ' ‘a ' i : ; : im that the Bishop’s ouly meaning was io itself not | POUN, he er . x is incredible oeners but the Moseow Journa’ | especially sent to search for him Phe Army ouly so self-evident — ‘that be that saw might the clear) substatitiable conditieus of te case, states that the Russian suldiers in Poland | and Navy Journal, United States, counts up | yaad” but likewise that all thes I leave it to those candidly qualified to decide bave been furnished with @ new description | som¢ 200 vessels that bave fallen vietims tw ' ' Whether, after all, there inay not be more than of dagger, of peculiar formation, with jagged sides, pierced with sma!! needle-holes filled with strychvine, amalgamated in some way with gain. To make the effeets of the poison more fatal, the dagger is, by order, turned in the wound! the Moseow Journal pub- lishes a wooceut of the instrument. »>oo | education, nuw it is beginning to make itsel’ | visible. —_—_- extremely dis- torted interpretations which were suus quently = in tias self sume religious dispute abeut “ the jpremature, uuwarrantable and uopraiseworths . |} : va) 4 re ae Bible in the conmnon schools, “The general and relative consecuiive | : San Francisco, Dec. 17.—The following des- | import ” is the ouls fair law. bs Wineh any man’s soe forts eetuee, tala a ae co miuel. Let i pateh was reevived from Los Angelos te Weaning any particular passage ol bis connected | 2° one, I ere fore, =e lip at the Question Mb thts “(Charles Watkins was indicted tor murder by a | written production, whatever it usahy hoes, ean, open ae view, piace hinseit ier au thooent apecial Grand Jury yesterday. ‘Tins morning under any circumstances, be jystly determined ; Ie , ame Hasbop: Mel naid ow © 'y other houest be was brought inte cot rt for tri il, and plead and this unive really admitted law, when applied | nnn t atlwhie’s stead, and opuddly ask hiusol! guilty. He was muwediately seized by the Vigi- | & the Bisiop’s “ godless eduéation,” transunts i ie te eG eee ith ef " veoee oe neatly lanes Committee, who entered the court reom m Lis ree rate foe nothing eer ae less a aeons, Sia sak tov oF wee: aia large nunibers, took the prisoner from the Sherifi than just subetanitally : secular education,” ba : - o ad : 4 “deuara a ye a oe? I Z pete at ‘and hanged bim.— Watkins was an English Mor. the ouly ordinary acceptation of that term, This, | CAU0t, 2S Stel, Thee Ce ee ee mou. He is known to have killed three men iu | Meretore, is all he stipulated for in a mixed or wees “ate ea = ere tbe oe Utah, and he confeseed that he has committed | Pfemiseuous eounnunily like our own. Any other grounds ai ee prey the same obvious rea | aix ether murders. He was also engaged in the | “XPestien of the phrase godless education,” in | BBs Sor a wy th ra ss se ~ ne - Stiaieabeeen Meulens muninnen: * (the express comuection in wineh it stands ia the lerierly, io so far as te natural right to contorn | | production referred to, woud simply render the | his own rebyion is concerned, stand on pre- | | whole of the rest of his epistle the most perfect jcisely the same footing as the Protestant? Dues | tissue of downright nonsenge which it would be | Bet the Mabometan or Jew do the siauve 2 It very easy tor any sae man to concoét. Aud | UOt. Who ts to be the eartlily Judge between them ! surely no one will say that Bishop McDonald j Surely the modern Protestant is not so void of | really desired to exhibit himself as a fool. Let | 2! oatural reason as to claim, “a priore,” the ex-| any person now carefully read bis letter as writ- | Clusive privilege of acting uinpire tor the whole! ‘ten by himself when first published, and then «We are vot saying tat he is not right or eve | hanestiy deay that these remarks are explicitly auch nearer the treath in his religious principles | correct, if they can. Some inen, however, are so themselves than any of the uthers. But still thi: } perversely predisposed to do their fellow man an dues not aller the present question of el Injustice, especially when they corerive that by | baliral right te asstiiie hizher claims in the so doing they may possibiy obtain any pecumary | Sightest. All others believe themselves right as | jadvantage themselves, that they will unserapu- | Well as le, and Giod alone is absolute judge of the | Hously make both their own hermenentics aud | wenconseieuce. The Bible does not teach him everything else involve the most arrautly ridicy- | forestall his neighbour in any respect on reli- | lous absurdities to obtain at least, in so far as this | #!0US avy Miore than on auy other grounds; and | goes, their own heartlessly uuprincipled and posi-,! while he is at sere libevcy, or even duty bound, tively “ godless” ends. Such wen would not even, | to use every lawful ineans to perstade his neigh- jaccurding tou the old adage, agree to “ give the bour, whom be deers ey error, to tura to me devil his due,” if they thought that by withhoid- | clearer truth or taith which he himself conscien- ing it they could manage to turn barely one more | tiously upholds, still that very bigber trath which | ot which we are 18 estimated at $15,000,000. ene FCoOpe 7 A shocking railway accident occurred on the Northern Railway at Canaan, N. Hamp- shire, a few daysago. I[t is supposed that some evil minded person had drawn from the rail the spike that held it, leaving the rail unconfined, as the bar was missing from the tool house near by. The engine and sleeping car had passed over the loose rail before moving it. ihe next two ears containing about one hundred persons, owing tu the dis- placement of the rail, were thrown duwn an embankment of some forty or fifty feet, turn- ing the cars complerely over twice. ft was thought at least thirty persons were more or less injured. The cars were literally sunashed in olin Ficenan’s DEFEAT. IN New York ano Wasu- ineton.—The New York Herald vi Thursday says:—* The issae of the Lleral/ cxtra yes- terday morning far in advance of our cuntem- | poraries, containing the result of the great ‘international fignt between King and Heenan, created the wost intense excitement through- to pieces, and one of them took fire before out the city. So unexpected was the result the passengers could be removed. Tue ruins that at first few persons could credit the truth the next day presented « terrific spectacle | 0! the report, believing it a matter of impos- +o {sibility for Heenan to be defeated in the short Sreet. Suirs —Two large ships built of | time announeed in the telegraphic summary stee! plates were launched in the Mersey on of the fight received by the Jura from Port- Wednesday. Though some small vessels land —The Herald office was besciged by have been built of the same material, this is excited crowds anxious to parchase and to the first instance in which steel has been read for themselves the brief details euntained used for ocean ships. The stecl now mana- | in the Extra. A blank feeling of disappoint- tactured for ship-tuilding purposes, is seid ment and dismay pervaded the majority of to have an advantage over iron in being the crowd, alchough in many instances the 4 Fetish 4 “ ve : amet more ductile and malleable, as well as | loudly expressed exultation of excited indivi- |“ “alfpenny token ” into their own insatiable | ae iuioustietahaiteaks be Bgher roth | stronger and hght. In the Formby, one of duals showed that King waa not withoat his | Pockets than they might utherwise possess, even | ® all-—obligates him a saine time, it it neces. | 7 6 . i -y at {he samme moment clearly feresaw | 84tily improves on him any one thing rather than | the newly launched vessels, of 1276 tons backers and partisans among them. With Sane ast of tuinetty ta haloes Comat ‘another, to ae. corcive iufluences whatever burthen, the weight ot steel used is 50U tons, jall our facilities for printing a large edition | shat poor vid wight Meelfin hoe ote noni jin his endeavouring to bring it legitimately to | whereas if she bad been constracted of iron, our presses could scarcely keep pace with the \ greater iisery than his present forlorn prospect | °at on that neighbour's own proper human cons sO. tons weight of that metal would have | immense demand made upon them. In the! pay really foreshadow. - He, however, who cay | 8ience Such influences, in any possible degree, | been required. That the launch of the two | minds of Heenan’s friends and backers a faint | thus wilfully distort a fellow-iman’s plain meaning | C@2 never, trom the word of God itself, be either | steel vessels was considered of importance by | hope still lingered that the news might prove | not only is virtuatly stealing his neighbor's char. | Shown to be lawful or expedient; and while such | the Government is attested by the fact that | erroneous, which was hardly dispelled when acter, in one sense, but is actually doing it in se | strong natural ground oa this is plainly the birth-| Mr. Reed, Constractor ot the Navy, made a) the report brought by the Jara, via Portland, mean a way that, as a general rule, we would be | — — ( athohic vu the land, we do not, special journey trom London w attend the was confirmed by the arrival of the Asia at Yery serry to leave our purse, if it contained pee eget eg rT ay ee ee launch and examine the ships. | Halitax | anythmg worth while, in any place whatever in |D}@me can really justly attach to Bishop Me- — ° <nkementielapnatene which it might be in danger of coming in contact | — for stipulating for what we have already Axotuen Wrpce 1x tHe INTERIOR or!. FsepERAL AND CONFEDERATE Crvlsers — | with it. From vue wen, theretore, we igo for | eae peta cease rane. hy monr Caiva —Captain Alexander Bowers, of the. The agents at Madras of one of our leading acts ane nenrny ‘he .. amare aaaeme the (any of those whieh may seendvediess se bats Royal Naval Keserve, has perturmed an ex- local firms have received a letter enclosing a a Caer mr ar apt tem er ou the uheubdcdvel aliens af aur balan ae ploit as importent, if not as interesting, 4s cheque for 16.000 rupees, for the dishurse- present We shall pals rather ovibunt endediela /meut authocities in this Island, or any of their the diseuvery of the source vi the Nile. He ™ent of the Contederate steamer Alabama, | wits reasoning with those wlio may find them- | 2U™erous supporters, We admit that this point has taken @ thousand-ton ship into the heart which should shortly touch at Madras. ; This iselves possessed of a sufficient amount of “clear | 58 hitherto been clearly touched upon by Rev. of China, ascending the Yang-tse tv Hankow, ¥® have on good authority. The last infor- | eouscence” to render them really wiling to do | Mr. Allan in tis late brief altercation with some tie great tea en/repot, fourteen hundred miles tion received of her was when leaving | simple justice to their fellow tian as such, what. | Of the wholvaale Supporters of our present Go , by map measure, trom Shanghai. He tound >!mon’s Bay (September 22), since which ever they may find him. Aud with those we | Vernment in relation to this same current topic. , aS ls f t Pq’ , , . . , waneoni the ‘sent in-| His advocacy of the voluntary system, as essen- a greaccity and flourishing trade, with about TU™mors of ber being off Ceylon were reported | trust our process of reasoning, in the present in- | 74'S oe tee 7%) ; as ¢ z 5 z , : : mn “eh oe cther seamen ta kok laborate, | tially and naturally arising out of these primary thirty British bongs, burit upon land grantetl by last mail. The U 3S. steamer Vanderbilt Sonee. maces SSairee on we eek nee ate 7 j considerations which we have now delineat d by fhe Chinese Government, more hongs | under the coxamand of Capt. C. H. Baldwin, | - ¢ presume aL simple a ae the ak s |was not unique. In all the ponitians an os : ' itiue < je & Cruise .p | true meaning in the case In dispute, as well as | . ah roe P building, and every sign of great commercial | lelt Mauritius on Cet. 10th, oe es after (the multifudinous misrepresentations which were | assumed he was more than probably correct, and prosperity. A club-house and echurel are | the Alabama. % A vessel w hich arrived short- subsequeutly attached to it, bave now become so te, entire severance of “Church and State,” batiding, aud, of course, the third sign of | ly yon the Vanderbilt ae reported seeing thoroughly understood in every even moderately | whieh, after all, lies at the very foundation of the eivilization—a gallows—cannot be lung de-| the Alabama off Ceylon, and as this was com. | intelligent circle in the community, that the whole | Whole dispute — in the sense in which the advo- layed. ‘The anchorage vp posite the town is | municated to Capt. — Baldwin, who would | affair has long since passed inte a mere joke, will | Cates of Voluntaryism deem desirable — may yet tairly safe, the risk of the voyage is not ex- ' doubtless go in that direction, a collision be- in iteelt be amply sufficient to set the point forever | be found to be in itself, from the relative as well | cessive, and there seems little doubt that ‘Wee? them is very probable. The Florida | at rest in the minds of al such traly eonseientious 4% ote , ae oe ween’ a consum- a aiieeie ; : ; ; i inquire , af diiesaiemenan, (a tly practicable as well as. Hankow will henceforward be in direct eom- | #94 Georgia are both being rapidly fitted oat inquirers. And what turther fagts of consequence |" ee ee le us well as | munication with Londun. big is reully a | ®t the ports of Brest and Cherburg. The re- | does this not indisputably prove? Why, it proves most devoutly consistent wee all the trie require- : : . oy Bi. f the F d 2 finished la} ;agreat deal. It proves, in the;first place, that a | ments of either the civil ov the religious well-being eat resuls from the capture of Pekin, the Pers o the Florida are finished, wud a letter | very “great fire ie ¢ Rios hind! a b very (Of the universal christian world. The letters of | valiey of the Yang-tse beimy as productive ag | from Bre-t says that she was expected to put littio aoe rma sc > aaiees al y satan Mr. Allan, at least, distinctly showed the ultra- | that of the Gunges.— London Weekly, | . oral oe ce a days. T ara "any people or -human beings are sometimes at *“Pperters of oar present Tory rule inthis Island, Nov. 23. | S60 tm satwactory state, her re Deine jeast uot very wise in their particular geveration | tat in so far as their advocacy of the present ee _ almost completed, and a few weeks, it 18 ex- | tor allowing such exceedingly transitory affairs to ‘religious educational controversy is concerned WRECK OF AN EMIGRANT Suir and Loss or pected, will see the whole three again at throw them into such untimely states of preter. | they bave not the support of many of their own | tearecard oe Lives Se Telegrams oe arge. jnatural cousternaiion, Lt proves in the thirg oe a “ net of other subjects. yesterday afternoon in tae City trom Lloyd's a la MnO py. nap ees . place What is perhaps much more pertinent to the « refer of course to Protestant authorities, | apent at Nien Diep, on the Du.ch coast, Be megs Ext Smee ee ee ease in hand, that Bishop McDonald merely as- Such as many Scottish clergymen of nearly all commeanicate the brief particulars of one ol’ Government ave already commence the wor ‘suned pretty much the eame grounds at most _ denominations in that country, as well’ as many the moss dreadiul shipwrecks during the late - —— 4 Proms _— vie St. ee | theoretically, at all eveuts, unless he wished him- others of the ue standing in the grade of modern : ‘ | to the mouth of the Amoor, & ditsance of about) oor ty bere arded as asimpleton, have advocated | reputation; aud here again it may not be alto- ee ree ee of | twelve thousand miles, aud this, it is anticipated, | pretty ply Sen atin te ee which may of the | gether impudent in us to remind i once more euast Sor waey; P Ua K b a will be completed about the middie ot wext yeor. | wisest heads in Scotland and other much larger | Of the same fact. Perhaps they might feel better was the Wihelws org. Capt. Kross, wilt in fhis 1s the line we are to join to communicate | Qountries than ourown have for years back been | pleased in some respects with themselves if they 1862. avd upwards 0: 1200 tons burden. She! with Europe, and by a little journey of About | coujaiutly stipulating tor, vizt secular education | had. _ But we can bluntly assure tnem, notwithi- | left Hamburg in the early part of last week twenty thousand miles reach London. This Me aluest purely as sueb in any promiscuous or Standing, that they have not, and eur assurance | for Australia, and is reported to have had thod of Poe ee Europe ee Ss we ) mixed commuuity like our own, 10 so far as Civil 38 Che Which we can at any moment most easily nearly 400 ewigrants on board—men, women, Sugsested by Mr. Perty Collins, an American) @ocorament may have an thing to do with it. 44d abandantiy establish. One, and only one. citizen, while he was acting in au official capacity | ; ) as ‘ 3 : and chiidren—Germans. She had also a CMiZen, while te —— en PAY He neither asked sor showed the smallest incli- “ere certain fact, which by the way we may cargo of general merchandisy. Jt would i the Amoor country: 0 | uation to desire any fundamental change what- further notice in relation to Mr. Allan's late let- seem that she bad searcely cleared the Elbe) Courrestes or THe New Zearanp War.— ever in the existing character or “ modus oper- a Bie this oe the one truth, that , i | orp role > ies sob @ Maths andi” of our present public educational iustitutioas, | WS@°%ever may have been their merits in other | before the dreadful gale of Thursday was en- “The courtesies of war have (anys a Me thourne car ay pin omaha! suarantee should be given | Tespects, they were, at any rate, indisputably the preg ei age P Aigpery blowing direct > papas) Snes very haem pean an eee . ‘th if t that th Pf) ould be thus in wivotdas only written productions yet issued on the general the coast, the ship evidently was unable tg | te Maori leader, William Thomsen, and General |} tis elect that they sho ] ‘ et i ] . ed 0 7 . t fin or of the L, li f Jow | Cameron. We have already related the present | good faith supported by all classes alike, as free SUbyect In + prov ince, possessing in themselves = oe a ow f mileh goats, fat fowls and turkeys, sent by | Schools, at the same time free from any and every | anything really like the necessary properties of shoals which abound on thst part of the, Th _— a Leh ciee Gee iain learn, 'eligious sectarian bias whieh wight practically | Clear logical induction, or close consecutive ra- coast. The ship was brought up at her, cenit ra y Pine yo Rens nl age render them, in any degree, undeserving of the Sonal argument. Every one who read them, at anchor, but the furious gale and the heavy tobncee, fdiuwed era a Bae side by a fullest confidence by any. This is surely nothing least, felt fully conscious of their indinite sape- waves waich kept tumbling in frow the quantity of wild duck and other game. Ere long | more than’ every strictly honest man in the | rierity to any of the others in this special regard. oe Sea, no ae quite Saiatmeeae the these courtesies will be exchanged for sterner | eetn's nannies ain * tw do by where ily W. KEIR, | vessel, aad she wasdriven on the Lerschelling greetings.” lhe would have them do by Lim," must be aaturally | Malpeque, Jan. 6, 1864, de to either Bishop MeDonald | Whether even those | really in themselves any proper depositaries tor) Jong after the Gulf is impassable to the westward eessarily more genuinely religious tan than any | j this very Bible controversy, in relation to ail se-! jneral population—admitting, of course, that they | *y to . o ‘ ! , aer , ' 7 | the Contederate cruisers, the value of which and soe ungenerousiy attached te it were equally |* mply eve questiva plainly seriously involved | odious traftic, and British capitalists had inyested | | Wilberforce, Clarkson, Brougham, and other which attached to’ them, 38 a nation, tor having | acts of their legitimate or constitutional prede- | ee liament of today for adjustment or we cannot for one moment alloy think that, by their deferminatigg wt would shew themselves to be actuated magnaninous and generous seuse of that by which their predecessors of governed, when they so nubly decreed Last Thoreday, the 24th instant. I left Halifax in cipation of slaves throughout the Colonial —_ company of a number Lound to the Island, and pre- | of Britain. “tying proper and just that the Res: To tHe Evrton of THE Examiner. | Sim:—Having ol served a notice in your x had the 28th instant, iat the English and Colonia: | Mails have been delayed several days at the Cape, in consequence of the bad state of the Gulf with | lolly, it appears very strange that those entrosted | | with the forwarding of the Mails to and from the Island have overiooked the facility with which | Muils and passengers can cross at Wood Islands = = vailed upon some who were going by the Cape to | oe | try the Picton und Wood feland route. Tbe wind) If it was right, | being HN. E. Christos day, we were unable to Parliament of 18232 should be hela o ’ | Jeuy ore W vessel d we would have | Father euve, as there wis no vessel, and we would ltotake a boat. Saturday morning we left with D. | they shoukl hold themselves, — | Stewart’s boat (eleven of ne) and landed at Little | the | Sands at 15 minutes past noon. At present, a small | vesse! could ply between here and Picton without , against a certain portion of the any difficulty, as there is no ice or lolly in the! wrongs and evils perpetrated jn Brith Oy: Nowa fan, aiter those wronge and evils had ex; | Stvaits; and the month of the Wood Island Pond is : pag ' alee gheut, where a sinall craft could get in and out ; the sanction of British rule, for Upward rd as long as the Straits continue clear. ‘years; and that they should actualj my ’ “ee respectfully pecuniary sacrifice, put ® step to the oo PONALD TAYLOR. \r these wrongs aud evile; Gand that it wae Wood Island, Dee. 81, 1863. ight, | = | proper and just for the British Parlignept ~% act, Do British freeman will now, we belieys deny ;) and, if the parallel between the state oft, | slaves at that time in British Colonies and condition of the tenantry of Prinee MA warg lh. ‘land, at the present time, and for nearly 190 yan back, that is ever since British subjects first be. | came tenants or serts in this Island—if the lel, we say, be true, or only pearly 8, 6 by the Tue position assumed by us, in slightly toue® jyajority of our community it is certainly held 1 ing upon the Land Question, in our last week’s | be, we cannot, we think, arrive at 4Ly other issue—a position the perfect justice and propricty | clusion touching the question than that With ey. of which, we feel confident, every right-thinking | pect to the tenantry of Prioee Edward man in our coumpunity must admit —is that the | responsibility on the part of the present power vested in the Crown, or rather the Go- | Parliament and Government exists Similar to that vernment of Great Britain, to dispose of the cou- | acknowledged by their predecessors of 1833 with quered territory of Prinee Edward Island, was respect to the existerce of Negro Slavery in By. merely that of trustees, having the control and tish Colonies, | management, for specified and well understood | Then, now that both the Land Comission ana purposes, of property not their own, for the be-| the recent Delegation have — as we clearly fore- hoot and benefit of ot! er persons. saw aud distinctly and confidently prophesied That the trusteeship, as respects this Island, | they would — proved utterly futile and ine flies which, in 1763, on its being renounced by France, | civus, and are now seen to have been the veriest and ceded by it to Great Britain, devolved upon | shans and humbugs, having established nothing the Government of the latter eountry, bas been save @ general conviction of the insincerity and ‘grossly abused, no one, we presume, will new incapacity of the wen te whom, in gp evil day for deny. Not only has the abuse of that trusteeship | theinselyes, the people, at the hustings, entrusted been again and again loudly complained of Ly the | the protection aud promotion of their common in. | people of this Colony, and set forth by them interests, is it not time te consider whether the repeated complaints and petitions to the Crown,., best course now toe be pursued with a view ty but it has been acknowledged and insieted upon ‘the procuring of a full, effective and womediags (as a grievance demanding immediate redress by | redress of the grievances of the people, would yoy jevery British statesman who has ever publicly | be a direct appeal sm their behalt tu the linperial | expressed his sentiments concerning it. | Parhament. Such an appeal, if made, should, The wrong, then, being fully adwitted, no one we need scarcely say, be well digested, moderate ‘surely will be bold enough te deny that it ought, and reasonable ix. its demands, yet fully compre: if possible, to be redressed; although, we doubt hensive of ell causes arising from the Land not, there are sume ready enough to maintain Tenuresand Absentee Proprietorship, which bars ‘that, like some of the physical ills to which flesh eombined to impede the advancement of the Pro. is heir, the grievance has existed tov long to admit | vince, te repress us cuergies, and to prevent its lof its being ever effectually cured. That, with arriving at that state of prosperity te which, ; respect te many pational wrongs, perpetrated | under more favorable circumstances, it night, centuries age — as, for instance, those inflicted, | and, no doubt, would, have attained. Au appeal | nearly SU0 years since, upon the English by that | of this nature, however, will never be made under /gigantie rubber and murderer, the, Norman bas- the auspices, or from the ineeption, of our pro tard, whom historians have vainly attempted te | prietary Government. Even were they te unde diguify by bestowing upon him the appellation of take it, it would never, in their hands, be pras. “the Conqueror,” such an assertion may be only cuted to a happy issue: it would, in tact, prove | tow truly advanced—is what we need not and do | nothing but *a delusion, a mockery, and a snag.” | hot deny. In such cases, after a lapse of cen- If engaged in at all, to be proseewted aright it | turies, the conquered aud the conquerors become must be by men of unquestionably greater bie sv blended and united as to torm but one people; | jative eapacit y, of vastly superior inistrative | their interests, thenceforth, are inseparable ; ne tulent, a Tas all, = — cup a / all causes of jealousy and cowplaint completely | sincerity of purpose than they who are now in disappear, With respect, however, to the wrong the ascendant in our political horoscope, and who inflicted upon the people of this Colony, the | have so signally failed in the management of the | case is widely different. ‘rue, nearly 100 years jaflairs and interests of the province during the | have expired since the evil deed was done; but whole course of their administration. We have, that Japse of time, instead of having removed the | jt is trae, amongst us several public men, on the sense of the injustice, has served ouly to aggra- | wisdom and probity of whose counsels and pro | ceedings the people might safely rely—as has al- it will be long, long, indeed, before the reparation | ready beeu satisfactorily provec—in ali emvergen- shall arrive. | eres. The position of these men, however, at | It is the beast of our Law and Constitution | present, is such that, notwithstanding their stater j that no wreng can arise for which they do not) wan-like qualifications, their integrity, and ‘affor? a remedy. Theoretically, indeed, this is patriotism, they are powerless to efivct any posir ) true; but practically it has wet been found se. | tive public good. Since, through the malignant Tu etnies, however, as whatever ought to be most j and persevering efforts of hypocrisy, bigeiry and | assuredly might he; so, as respects the grievance | intolerance, they were driven from power, ail aminer. Che Ex January llth, 1864. | Charlottetown, THE LAND QUESTION, aa j vate the evil. Ut time ouly is co afford che rewedy, | —the monster griecance — of Prince Edward Is-! matters and questions affecting the public welfare | land—fandlordism, — which ought never to bave| dave been most shameluliy misuauaged; hayes existed, and which ought immediately to be | been either stationery or retrograde; aud sv will abolished, we can easily, we trust, show how they continue until the people, taught by their its extinction may effectually be accomplished, | bitter experience of Tory rule, shall again give a and in pertect accordance, too, with the principles majority in the Legislature to those men wheat of our Laws and Constitution. the late election, they so unwisely, not to say se | uugratefully, deprived of the power to protect and | promote their best interests, which, without a of the poor uegro slaves and their masters oF single deviation from tue path of public duty, owners in the British West Indies and other Bri- | tbey had zealously and successtully done tor the tish Colonies. | previous eight years. Their recall te power will, however, we are certaiu, ultimately take place ; ‘and perhaps it may be at a much earlier period than we caleulate upon. In the meanwhile, ignorant as we are of what may be the projected plan of manauering of our proprietary Govern- went in the approaching Legislative Session, gling tevautry of Prince Edward Island, without | although pretty certain that no positive or sub- any undue infraction of the rights—either the real | stantial good to the people will result frow it; we or the supposed—of “the proprictors,” so called. | shall, in our next number, proceed to shew what, That redress of the wrougs—slavery and all iis) we believe, will yet be found to be the most ad- concomitant evils—which were being endured by yisable course that the people can eoneur in the negroes in British Colonies, was due to them authorizing and instructing their parliamentary from the British Parliament, and that too with representatives to pursue for eflecually freeing out spoliation of their masters, was thus proved them at once and for ever from the proprietary to the entire satistaction of the British people. yoke. [t was shewn that successive English governments | had not ouly permitted but evcouraged the slave- trade and slavery; and that, by the sanction and Ir was our intention to notice the leading under the protection of these governments and of articles in the last Islander and Protestant on the parliament, British subjects had carried on the | present pulitionl eundition of P. E. Island, but want of space and time forbids us doing so, The Islander’ article abounds in sophisme and vatruths, ‘and views the question of the leasebold tenures— .Y , | which is the main topic of the article—through the nal , , nas : ; . zealous friends of humanity, the British pes vle| spectacle of the Land Proprieors. A hypoeri- 2 al fe | . , j were made to fool and echaswielige the guilt | cal cant is attempted tu be palmed off throughout To prove that the wrong or grievance is reme- diable, we need, indeed, only adduce the case The case of these slaves asd their masters is strikingly analagous to that of the ten- anutry and the proprietors of this Island; and as, in the one case, redress or relief was awarded to the sufferers (the slaves) without any injustice to the owners of the plantations, so may it, in the other, be procured for the oppressed and strag- pe peli is Net sins THE ISLANDER AND PROTESTANT. fortunes in slaves and slave-cultured estates. When, then, through the persevering labours of the article as sympathy for the tenants; but the a state of . . : . heal suit hits cin olteiei dal dritt of the whole thing is a caution to every body at. pereyeag Se} not to touch the influence, power or pockets ot continuance in any of their Colonies, redress of thd bevel The pew editor is trying =» the Negroes’ wrongs, as a matter of course, was ie p ae a bi rote sestidile enat ected afforded by the British Parliament, and by a vote. a . of 3220,000,000 sterling, emancipation was pro- toga Soper ional siawep em eet at ' ” , ane : ‘ : . | When he advocated a compulsory extinction of the cured for the slaves, aud compensation tor their — Se ee leasehold tenure on the same principle as that loss of ownership awarded to the planters. : nen , , Iti fig rear ie | which led to the emancipation of the West Indian Cis a principle of justice jn the governmerts | ‘ : the a . ts _ slaves. His views on that occasion startled of all fres and eulightened nations that existing | adininistvatious or legislatures must recognise the | Proprietors, and brought all manver of re strances to the Islander office. ‘The new editor | is now trying, we presume, to make things smooth | and pleasant for his irate patrons. The article in the Protestant is quite character- istic of that * Evangelicai W itaess,” which seldom bears anything but false testimony against every une opposed to it in religion or polities. It ia not clever enough tu deal in suphisms, but its duplicity can compass any amount of misrepresentatied, and its coarseness and vulgarity complaceotly 1" courage Falsehood in all ite twistings and turt- ings. It would take some time to expose not ouly the deliberately false assertions, but the direnge- nuous statewnent of facts aud suppressions of truth which ¢baracterise the article relerred tw; aud we promise Mr. Laird that if we have ne better ee ployment for our pen before next Mouday, be ell have the benefit of it. REV. GEORGE SUTHERLAND AND THE PROPRIETIES. brought millions of hunmn beings into the most galling beudage, cessors;—if right, to sustain them ; if wrong, to amend or rectily them ;—and, in accordance with this principle, the British Parliament of 1833 justly held themselves responsible for the. evils | which had arisen in British Colonies from the traffic in negroes and the existence of slavery therein—a trade and condition of humanity which first becaue practically known to Engtishinen in their own territories in the year 1816, that is 217 | years before. Our Imperial Parliament did net Luld themselves exonerated from the duty of re- dressing the wrongs of the begroes, either on the sxore of the great lapse of time—2J7 years—since they were tirst inflicted upon individuals of the negro race in our West India Colonies; or on account of the immense sacrifice of money, which, cousistenuy with justice both to the slaves and their owners, would be required te enable them to afford thatredress. Having been made clearly to perceive what justice required then ty do— | as if influenced solely by the wost uncompre- | mising precept, “ Fiat justitia, ruat calum’’—they nobly did it; and if any similar case—suppose it Were tu be that of the vroprietors aud the tenan- —paeer: try of Prince Edward Isiand — were now tobe Ture are certain observances amongst well- brought fully and fairly betore our Imperial Par- bred med, which are sometimes, for want of 3 ——p “Railing and prairing are bis usual themes, Aud both to sirew his jadgmeéut in extremes ; So over vielenut or over civil a That every man with bin: Was God or Devil.’ erery MONDAY, ae: ph... aati ~*