SS ore eat peotoees ge rannene es th . a ae Scicepivuhsoesicseiileincensliptapiniintpinne> Walesa qaaaaee writing a letter which Mabel was to take| es back to Danville, where she aroused Mr | him and the jurymen, in the adjoining box. In 5 4 Le .amates are not in the habis ing for individual ; urposes. ily Morving News, Oct. 5.) On the following morning Mr. Wolfe ar-| 'with the real Mabel Smith; and he ced very much ‘ike a ghost when he enter- : his house; but when he found his wife his little ones alive and well, he recover- imself, Le hed been sadly frightened ;, 1 the substance of his story wae this; the employ ci Mr Gurney, pnd vainly! zg for Mabel’e love, had beci a fellow) d Mike Ammidown; and be had been! d away fer bad conduct, only three before the arrival of Mr. Wolfe; but e had been hanging about the premises, g to get a suiile from Mabel. By some s he discovered that Wolfe was going 1d back home for money; and he fur pore disoqvered that said gentleman was) THE ST. JOHN TRAGEDY. a ne (From the St. John Du _—_—_ | : The St John “Telograph” of Friday! The Storm in New Brunswick. says = | —— The interest manifested by the public in the! ApontS o’clock yesterday afternoon a strong discovery of the perpetrators of the double’ easterly wind arose which raised clouds of dust | murder oa the Black River road has, at times, {in the streets to the great annoyance of pedes been very great since the remains of the wo- tyjans, and caused parties having property in man and child were found, and their identifi-| shape of vessels at the wharves, to look to their | cation and that of séveral articles of their! fastenings. Gradually the wind rose till near-| wearing appearl commenced; but it reached) |y 7 o'clock, when rain fell, not as usual in a climax yesterday while Mrs. Crear was drops, but in drenching sheets, which com-| giving his testimony. Her arrival in this city p Hed all outside to seék some cover from its and her known intimate relations with the | pitiless pelting. The rain did not last long, | missing sister, the letter that she had received | but every now and then during the evening purporting to come from her, and the evidence} came on in brief but pelting storms, the wind which it was believed she would be able to| continuing to rise till 9 o'clock, ' SLingles, give, naturally excited great interest and! loose slates, cliimnies,fences and smal) braneb- caused the Court to be densely packed before! es from trees, were flying about in ajl direc- 10 0 clock, a.m, and still more deusely at 2} tions, endangering the heads of passers by, | p. m., when the Court resumed vroceedings | whose business compelled them to be out} But it was the impression produced on the| doors. It was in the harbor, however, where | mind of Mrs. Crear by the dierent articles| the results of the storm were most apparent. that were submitted to her for identification, | By 9 o'clock the water had risen to the height parts of diesses which she swears she had) of ordinary spring tides, although it then purchased or made up for her sister, Serah M.| wanted an hour and a half to high tide, and Vail, or her child—her sister’s fine hair, of} the sea ran up the harbor like a mill race, the e,ate in the sporle, he seized the girl;| which she was so proud, her teeth, with whicl | waves following each other in rapid succession, | id and gagged her; took away the letter; | witness was go familiar, the ribbons and trim-| and of such a height as to endanger everything | also teok her trunk; leaving ber in aj mings of her dress,—it was in referring to| with which they came in contact. The night | ep vault, where the light of day never| these that she became gradually excited to an| wae dark as Erebus and the full foree of the | me, and where she might lie ull she stary-| enormous pitch, her emotion finding vent in|}scene could not be realized, but the faint} .—only ho promized that he would come| bursts of weeping and in frequent lamentations | glimmer of lamps here and there along the| rk and set her froe when he had made the| over her sister and expressions of aversion to-| wharves and slips sufficiently indicated that a} t.” From Mabel s trunk the wretch got} wards her destroyer. | dreadful woik of destruction was going on e dress, and the wig he feund easily enough | It was at noon that the first scene occurred. | The lateness of the hour, the darkness of the Dat Mabel was nota girl to lie idle while} The bench where Judges usually sit was occu-| night and fearfa! force of the storm prevented | could mcve; and by persistent efforts she | pied by clergymen, magistrates and other gen-| our reporters from gleaning as much reliable | eeded in freeing lerself; though it was|tlemen. In the Clerks desk, just beneath, sat | information as they wou!d have been enabled | into the pight when she had accomplish | the Coroner; around the table in front of|to do under more favorable circumstances ; | tho work. And then, lke a girl of sense,| him were the Reporters atid Barristers. To still they were enabled to pick up enough to} sib was, she mace the best of her way) the le{t of the Coroner sat Mrs. Crear, between| warrant us in saying that such a tide has not} | visited St. John within the memory of man volfe, and told her story. Horace Wolle!a chair in front of Mrs. Crea, faciug her, and | Taking the lower part of the City, the waves sd a distinct remembrarce of etarting from| only a short distance from her sat Mr. John| came Gasing in upon the Breakwater Wharf anville with Mabel, but he could remem-| A Mauroe, arrested under suspicion of being| entirely submerging it, and breaking with r little else unti) he held his wife end chil-| the murderer of Miss Vail and ber child, and| violence upon the Charlotte street extension, 1 to bis bosom; fur when he had heard | outside of all was the surging mass of absorbed | and the slips in Lower Cove, where a great the fell mission of Mike Ammidown, he| spectators, pressing forward, catching every| deal of damage was done by the lifting of the ow not what power was to save bis wife.) word of the witness, and dividing their atten-| wharf tops and the scattering of timbers in all \i8 money he never thought until all else| tions chiefly between ner and the prisoner.| directions. The fish-house of Mr. Hancock 2d come out right. | The appearance of the Court yesterday can | was destroyed and its contents to a large ex- Mrs. Wolfe bad « long spell of sickness as; never be forgotten by any one who were pres-| tent wasted away. Every wharf received more result of that terrible ordeal; but shejent. It was when viewing portions of what| or less injury, the extent of which, however ed a kind and tender nurse in Mabel Smith; | she identificd as her sister’s drawers, the pat-| it was almost impossible at the time to tell. , when, at length, she was able to be at) tern of which was drawn by her sister, ¥ rs.| At Reed's Point Whart at about ten o'clock r table, she found that Mabel was as good | William Olive, the hat and trimmings which the scene was sublime, the waves dashing over ok and housekeeper as she was nurse | Miss Jane Campbell had colored — the crape all the sections and covering the lower patieny ebort, she really loved the faithful girl;| tiowers which were divided between the two| to the depth of some feet All the top work, od as for the chiidven, Mabel never had to| sisters and some of which Mes, Crear still re-| too, outside of the Anchor line Wharf was| vs them fora kivs. In fact, they came to| tains, and above all when she was shown the | lifted bodiiy and broken up into fragments | y ber favora with kisses. ‘ir. Michael Aiwwmidown made no more) 2 to bis aforetime inamorato, as the State| him quarters in an instituticn whence! of wander- ber. Froma’l this he drew his own} jusions, and resolved to make a bold| se. He wasangry with Mabel—hating| r almost with a deadly hatred; so he cared | how much she suffered. Knowing that} intended to take the first train, so as to) dan hour, or sv, with her mother in} onox, be hurried on in advance; and, with | nasistance of a stout companion, who was| Crear completely broke down, sobbing out | disorder and destruction ; wildly, “It is the ribbon which I bought at|it was doubtful whether the warehouse could James Masen’s{’ “ Oh! my poor murdered | withstand the attacks made upon it by wind | sister! How could he do it!” ‘Take away|and water. To the leit,a schooner, the S V.| | that dress cut of my sight; I made it for my-| Coonan, got into a dangerous position, being} |self!’? The Coroner, the jurymen, the spec-| lifted up and dashed on the wharf at every | | tators, all wept, visibly, many audibly, the | wave, so that the crew had to be brought on | whole scene utterly baffling description. What| shore by meaus of ropes, taking cat also their | was most remarkable wae the fact that Mr.|dunage lest she should go ty pieces, and thus AN ACCIDENT AT NIAGARA. NiaGara Farus. Sept, 23 —A most melan- ly aceident vceurred on the Canada shore the Niagara Rivr, in the vicinity of the «ls, about nocn yesterday. A party con- uog of one gentleman and four ladies, ell | nging in Providence, R. I., stopped over | e awhile on the: r way bome from Buffalo, | ; |, after viewing the sights on this side. | Jury, una! order to recover their composure. Similar! {cet above the level of the pierheads Direct- scenes, though perhaps not quite so over-| ly above this the waves dashed over the little | poweringly painful to all concerned, oecurred | Wharf jutting out at the commencement of the | several time curing the afternoon, | Water Street Extension, flinging the spray a hundred feet along the roadway and washing | esed over on the Cunuda side. cir carriage was passing the curve opposite While! . : ' Mrs, Crear testified that her sister, Sarab | Margaret Vail, has been missing for a year. | She was unmarried and had a child. The) up large quantities of seaweed and debris | Just above this two vessels broke from their} ‘take ber off, was washed from her blocks and carried ashore in Lower Cove Slip,.but with the assistance of two tug boats she was got off safe- She also lay by till up the river. The Bay, but, Capt. works were blown away. morning, and then proceeded Empress left Digby to cross the . , ra s ing the storm arising, very wisely ran iy yesterday mornivg Without receiving any seri. | Steen, seeing aes rning. She ous damage. The schoaner 3 V. Coonan, at back, aud lay there til! yesterday — metas Maxwell's Wharf, is up to her decks in the water, nothing but ber deck load keeping her | from sinking. The @etion of Reed's Point Wharf, on the south side of the Anchor Line | Warehouse, 18 all eeperated from the main wharl; the planking, is all off, and the logs wrenched apart. The Anchor Liny Warehouse, was work- | ing fearfully yesterday morning, and it was ex-| pected to fall when the tde receded ‘The rest ot the wharf is gonsiderably racked and strewed all over with empty casks, boats, &e. Braces were put along the face of the wharf to keep it from going away with the morning tide. The Empress Wharf, presents a fearful as- pect, the whole top, haying been wrenched from ite position, breaking up the timbers, and rack- ing the warehouse upon it so, that it parted in the middle, and fell over upon its side, logs, time-| ber, and debris of every kind washing right into j Jhe end of the wharf, where the ceal for the use of the steamer was etered, is all broken up, and anything that might have been upon it, Washed away, This wharf will have to be en- tirely rebuilt. Close by, and between this place, and the Cus- tom House wharf, is Mr. Lewon’s shipsmith | shop, the northeastern end of which has sunk with the wharf, suficient te crack one of his| chimnies, and the fuors have been lifted from | their position. Fortunately, Mr. Lemon, had just got out of coal, and bad not got in his fall | supply. | The Custom House Wharf has a great deal | of the plauking terown up, and the foundations | of Mr. McLeod's warehouse, appear to have been considerably shaken, : Lawton’s Wharf is much in the same condi-| tion, and some of the ships have their sides ond | sterns chaffed pretty badly. The deals, which were in the scows, iying in the slip, between these wharves, being strewed bil over it, and filled up with floating debris. The Marsh Bridge suffered pretty badly from the effects of wind and wave. At this point, the surging waters swept up in @ manner fearful to behold, flooding the entire lowlands in the locality, from a foot to a foot and a balf oo a level, A portion of the eastern side of this bridge has been swept away, and will require immediate attention, it being a dangereus spet, with eo much travel night and day over it. The shipyards were wasbed clean of everything, in the shape of timber, spars, &e. The north side of the flood-gates was jammed with timber, acd debris of every description. Nearly all day yesterday, a number of men, women, and boys, were busily engaged dragging out the wet wood, and carrying it off to convert into firewood. | An old woeden building, alongside the bridge, | shifted its position a little, and does not appear | over-safe, as it etands at present. The timbers, | swept from the wharves, around Courtenay | houses, and everything not secured and in a! perfect condition, were prostrated by the wind The wharves, along Courtenay Bay, suffered | severely, Holt & Nugent’s fine wharf, at the} foot of Union street, was wasked almost entirely damaged state The wharf at Sullis’s Shipyard, | was lifted on the top of a mighty wave, and | eral wreck, Mr. Wilson’s loss is very severe, | besides his whole seasen’s fish, the waves bore | off a large quantity of fishing gear valued at} something sear $2,000. Smith's Foundry, Cour- | tenay Bay, was partially blown down, The Feiry Slip did not reeeive much injury, | more than losing a few piles, but had the tide! risen much higher, serieus damage would have | arrived about noon, and iies at wharf, : : ‘The Railway track was damaged in places by the wash of the storm, and the bridge across Jones’s Creek, near Muncton, was blown away. Trains did not reach St. John, yesterday, from beyond Sussex, and that is the only place this city bas telegraphic communication, YESTERDAY'S TIDES. The wind having gone down in the night, there was less sea, as the tide rose yesterday morning, and thousands visited the various wharves to view the wreck, which had been made by the previous night’s high tide. It was believed that further damage would result from the incoming tide, even though unaccompanied bya bigh wind, The tide d.d not, however come up as nigh us before, and with the excep- tion of lifting the loosened planking, everywhere, along the wharves, we did not bear of any fure ther damage. At 5, p. m., it was dead low water, and 80 low was it that boys could walk outside the South wharf, all of thirty-five feet below the point the water reached ou Mondav night at 190 clock. The oldest inhabitant was again in request and sald he bad vever seen anything like it. Great precautions#were taken against a further rise last night, and many loose and shaky places on the wharves have beea during the day secured. At full tide, however, nothing unasual ogeurred, much to the satisfaction of everybody. FREDERICTON, In Fredericton the storm was quite preceptibly felt on Monday night, thongh the damage to pro- perty was not as great as in other Jocalities. One house, that of a Mr. Aikens, was blown down, but the inmates fortunately escaped unhurt, a couple of the large trees on the Square in front of the Officers Quarters were uprooted and branches broken clean off all of the others, and chimuey tops, fences and trees in all directions more or less demvlished. The roof was also biown off one end of the Car Shed at the Railway Station, ST. STEPHEN. At St. Stephen the violence of the storm, from all accounts, was severely felt The steeple of the Episcopal Church was destroyed, the rvof of the Wesleyon Methodist Church flattened, the top of a photograph Saloon opposite the principal Hotel swept away, barps unroofed, trees blown down, chimney tops toppled over, and in fact things in general outdoors pretty well disturbed. Nerepis Settlement. Here the storm raged violently, very much injuring, if not completely destroying, the substantial chapel which the Ro man Catholic worshipers in tbe locality have for sume lime exerted themselves to put in creditable condition. Cork Settlement, Here sacred things seeraed to find no better escape from the terrific tornado than other localities, The Catholic Chapel stood | waist ribbon worn by her sister, that Mrs | which the receding tide will leave in a state of| Bay, were driven a long distance inland. A| in its way, and it was moved down as easily as indeed at one time) pertion of the roof of Seovill’s Fousdry, at the} stretch of grass by a scythe in the bands of the | three wile house, were blown off. Fences, out-!| pasbandman. Along the line of Western Extension. Al! along the line of rvad the storw made itself severely felf, In one localty, about midway up the line, whole acres of trees were either torn up from the reets and toppled over or snapped | away, and Wright's Shipyard, isin a I:ttle less | squarely of some four or five feel from the ground and levelled. At Traey’s the root of one section of his extosive mille we Munroe seemed ec inparatively unmoved. The | they might lose thely little all. The water | dashed bodily against Mr. John Wilson's wharf, | ji{ted clear aud clean from its resting place, and le to proceed with business, had to| rose #!. over eed’s Point Whar f, and the | and fishhouse, tearing them from their founda- | various parts of otber sections more or less ask an hour's adjournment of the Court in| Steamboat floats stood op some two or three | tions, and sweeping them offyto addte the gen-| damaged, At Hart's Mills the railway wood shied was cowpletely destroyed, and several barns were relieved of their roofs. Between Westfield station and what is termed the o!d Government House no fewer than twevty-five baras are reck oned in the wreck ; but though the storm special- ly favored this section ef country, it did not for- get other sections, for alwost everywhere along the whole line were to be seen riddled, , wehg form beaye 1 with the indignation his | irs. Tillinghast ana Mrs Fisher were badly @ precipice in front of the Clifton House, moorings and were carried some distance | | further up before they were again secured. A| | number of scows laden with laths, patlings, and | boards, were bruken up and their contents flung | in all directions, ‘The “* Empress” wharf was moved bodily, and | the warehouse parted in the middle, the eastern | halt drepping over to the south, and for a time perwitting sticks of timber to batter in its walls, | and float through. Loose planks and broken buards in every direction made known the fear- ful havoc at all the wharves, The vessels had| been doubly moored and the precautionery | measures taken prevented any great disasters to | |the shipping, but every wharf visited showed signs of being more or less injured, | On the lower side of Water Street the wash of! waves under the bouses caused sume of the oc- | cupants to leave their dwellings, and seek for themselves and families a bigher and more se-| cure resting place, A oumber of families thus | went off in coaches, h b . bl 4 -?| father of the child was John A. Munroe, the © Dorece Cecame anmanagadic, 2nd, a8 16 architect. This Mrs. Crear knew from her ss evident they would go cver the bank, | sister, as well as from her own knowledge of wo Criver and My Lillingisast,the Providence} Musroe visiting her. The child was born on -atleman, jumped cf the seas and escaped the 4th of February, 1868, and was nemed b slight injury. The horses and carriage, | jen Mary Munroe. Witness confirmed the | ether with the four ladisa, went down the previqus witnesses as to the child being rup- uk, however, a distance of eome fi ty feet. | tured, and said she made the truss for it. She 8. Mahala Smith, one of the party, Was) swore positively that the truss found with the | cribly mangl:d and instantly killed, and | pemaing was the one she made for the child. is@ Mary Acn Ballou was so dengerously! She also identified the dress found as one ured that she cannot possth!y recover.) worn by her sister. While on a visit to St. | John, in Jane last, witness received from the Postmaster at Carleton, a letter bearing the Boston postmark. The following is the fet- ter: ruised, but thcir wounds are not dangerous + body of Mrs. Smith will be forwarded to -hode Island to-day and the injnred parties | be cared for at the Spencer House, on ee American side. Zhe «ccident happened)». a), oston may 19 bile an inquest was being held on the body | ““'® "' & man who committed euicide at ihe same i ewore i would never let you know how i| .ce a day or two previous, Ths sad event got - pe am qome te cicago in a few days| 3 east @ gloom of sorrow over all the |‘) °“ perky ee ha se we 18M) the floate bubbing up aud down, aud the ferry 1yiste At the Falls. ‘There are rife eke ha ae Coa tog iret of the | beat responsively doing the same, as she was se- | nors about the carelessness of the driver, saa gettin on Dully when | get over it} curely fastened just below. The shipping moor- | ;i may com on in the spring. i told him I was a| . i there is, of courzve, correspond:ng indiz-| yi¢ a EI a Be ‘ote | Ca at the wharves above and below kept up a| ’ ’ P g 3~| widder. he is teaching me to write i have wrote) eonstant and dismal creaking, while the roar of| iion. A i res i 3 ,) - ; nae, tam j . aa a , . ° n iq st will be held here tc | to john, before we are all well may is well, wind, the dash of the waves and the rattle of | ye Mrs: Maggie crandal, cordage, filled the more timid with dear and ++ Mrs, Rebert Crear dread. Tioraipte !—The New York Sun's Ha-| Painter. h Ward eee eee and | : : : p the Seuth Market Wharf was floating about as | 1m correspondent eays that wheo the | Carleton, St john, N. B. | though independent of the swlid foundations on | aniards found on the moraing of the battle . : ' iid | i T bat thi : b d h | Mrs. Crear said she never believed that this | which it was placed. Here the stores and build | ae ee : + they Must avandon the | eter was from her sister,who could not write, | "8 Were wore or less imundated, the water} tle, they barred the ponderous gates from She always believed that the letter was written | Cowine up through the floors and pouring in at| 2 outside and fired the buildings. Tcere| by Munres to docsive her; Med. Cicdg- owas t dvors. Some of the werchauts had prepared | re one hundred and thirty prisoners, who : ly oh : Sal al : tor the rise of the Gide by moving a good deal of “ : : ‘ positively that a piece of embroidery ot a drese cea art 7 : ished in the flames, not one escaping to oud sien, shah. genbaanh once Gorn beth their stuff up stairs and raising such as might re- the hedious tale. Some of them were | *" wasn produced were worn by her! ceive injury, but others less credulous of the liere, but the greater number were wealthy | "tC" + #!80 identified the hair and teeth of the| story told by Saxby, bad let things stand as they eaten 'ithe dinatd a Vek of eames santos | girl and the child’s sontag. Miss Vail did not| were, and found them fl ating off ou their own tetteih: an ‘ert: te teced Fire ie at first know that Munroe was married. Mun-| account, One of our staff went into the store of | a full oe thane ahés ” thie Coban | ree contributed to the support of the child. Mesers Barbour Bros, at the corner of Ward, n hed the Spaniards back, from the | Rebecca Ann Olive, another sister of Miss | Street, shortly after 9, and found about 12 inches — Cre £ et dre. Th ry if as rs Vail, testified that she knew of Blunroe’s con-| of Water upon the floors, whilst the proprietors *hborboo = ¢ a e nt ea . nection with ker sister, and she was not on| Were busily engaged in overbauling and placing °B dan tants, or or am wate, Wate good terms with her on that account. Wit- 2 safe ee the lighter and more likely to be | . : . eet ctine of sh, | ness identified part of the clothing produced °*™*8ee articles, Mig sonlis prong: cage alia! date, contains the first intimation of the | on, bak clelnatg 5 representatives as be stepped into the store of ‘rible crime. The jvurnals claim that the | Geo ‘he Bu a - ‘ded at H 7 Mr. Whiting found bimecil in about 20 inches ot soners were slain in battle, and the bodies|, “Ta ae By yin Resided Wt Mtorace Dun=| water, and the tide surging about in the most un- : min | et 8. Loch Lomond, where the coachman,! ceremonious manner, but upon getting outside ned to prevent coniagicn and epidewig.| yy 3 cd po 8 8 **| Worden stopped, proved the two visits of| again the wharf seemed even less safe, aa it Was tho United States mal) closed ov the day | Munroe in the evach, and that he, (witness) | lifting and falling as though it would come to ove the steamer sailed the mails were par |). ¥g Munroe say, on the last occasion, the{ pieces beneath his feet. ‘Ibe vessels in the slip uy searched | the authorities, but the| 2 “J : ; girl and child were at Mr. Collins’, who would] looked lively enough, and g sehooner lying at the corre — not = ae open all the bring them in. Munroe was much excited at| 2d with her bow down stream looked every now ‘ere and @ Burider oO gs Were not ex-) +), time, and in paying his bill at the hotel and then as though she wight go down bead first, ein hardly b dited gave a £2 bill for $1. 5 et oon it two ss enaed oot “ aw e above can bar e credited. ‘ ; closely and appeared to be do.ng their best, aide . 7 , twill be seem by our telegrams that the by the preaion gpmee and tide > float over the Coroner's jury has returned a verdict ot wilful rves, y : wharvea, murder agaiust John A. Munroe, At the end of the North Wharf the vessels —- \ very melodramatic story comes from : * es ae fared badly, being driven with great force against oa, by way of / ae acd London. = a . ee se : the top pieces, threatening every now and then to man — an American, born of Engtith| [MPERIAL POLICY RESPECTING THE bilge them. At one time a report was circulated ents—was accused of having been engaged COLONIES, Ihat the ** Wave,” the St. Martins packet, with a filibusteripg expedition, tried, and sen sted to death. Mr. Ramsden, the Englieh “ul, and the American Consul interceded u-# behalf, alleging his innocence ; but in When he wus led to the execution attended and read a protest, but they re told that it was too late :— ‘With this the order was given to the ng party to ‘ present.’ It was the work of io tant, and Mr. Coneul Rameden and the 2erican Consal, rushing with the fags of) ir respective nations before the levelled es of the Spanish troups,and in front of the ortunate man, shouted ‘Ilold!’ And, owicg the English Gag around himee!f and | - prisoner, and addressing the officer in| stge of the firing party, Mr Rameden eaid, | ertemen as a Consul of Her Britanic jesty, Leannot stand silently by and see’ afoul murder o! aninnocent men It is, duty to protec: his life, andif you take} 1, yOu must take it through these !'—plac-| + himoelf immed ately in front of the con | oned seaman, his eyes sparkling while his) 120 barrels of fluur on board, bad gone down, but such was not the case. The extreme end of the wharf was battered to pieces by the fore of the waves, the woodwork torn up and strewn in every direction. ae A schooner lying near York Point Slip got away from ber moorings and fouled with ayurher vessel, but was subsequently got into the slip A man was miesed from ou board, but whether he had managed to get upon the other vessel or was drowned could not be ascertained. In Carleten the damage must have been severe and it was reported that the “ Acadian” schooner lying in Rodney Slip, loaded with coais had sunk. At Sand Point many people during the afternoon had moved their families and part of their effects to a more secure place. About 11 o’elock there was a rumor that the Suspersion Bridge had gone, but itis to be hoped tbat such is put the case, The telegraph wires in every direction were prostrated, aud we are therefore without des- patches from abroad. The tide began to recede about 10:30, and as it fell the wind also Julled. It had biowa trom the east. sweeping round to the south and weet, | and back to south again by widnight, when the | fog came in adding a melancholy gloom to the scene around the wharves, as though to hide the destruction, caused within the previous few hours, with a pall. We heard that the “ Empress” had left Digby, but we trust that such was not the case, as it seems impossible that she could live in such a fearful geie, subjected as she wonld be to the force of a terrible cross sea. Tne “* Acadia,” of the Anchor Line, came into the harbor about half-past tea and safely cast ancbor in the stream, near Long Wharf, which must have been @ source of relief to everybody interested in ber. What this worning’s tide will be like it is im- possible to surmise,but uo effort should be spared this morning to make everything fast and strengihen those places of iinpugtance which were weakened last night. [From the Duily Moruing News, Oct. 6,] The effects ot the storm, as seen yesterday morbing, presented an appearance of sad havoc The sbore all alcog, from below the Barracks, up to the Ballast Wharf, is strewed with logs, | deals, broken timber, and eeaweed. The Bal-| The Right Honorable Edward Cardwell, Secretary of State for War, delivered a speech to his constituents at Oxford, on Wed- nesday evening last, on the subject of the policy of the Government towards Canada. He suid the general policy of the governing colonies from home was a total failure. Thee bad consequently been substituted for it @ policy to encourage them to develope their own power and resources, and stimu- late them to a epirit of self reliance. He showed how successful this policy had been in the ease of Canada, and briefly re- viewed the progress recently made by that Colony. She asiready had an army of her own, and such a merchant navy, that, if her people choose to adopt an act passed for the purpose, she might become one of the first Wuritime powers of the world. IMPORTANT TO LUMBERMEN., sefore leaving for the woods be sure you have supplied yourself with an ample stock of the Pain-Killer. If Languid or Depressed from exposure to the | Cold, nothing is as good as the Pain-Killer to re- vive you, the Lumbermen of: Canada consume annually hundreds of dozens which is the best argumect in its faver. It cures CRAMP AND PAIN IN THE STOMACH, Cuts, Bruises, Burns and Scalds, Sprains, Swell- ing of the Joints, Toothache, Pain in the Face, Neuralgia and Rheumatism, Sore Throat, Sud den Colds, Coughs, &c. Fer sale by ail Drug iste and Councry Storekeepers. Price: 25 and 50 centa per bottle. PERRY DAVIS & SON, Proprietors, é Montreal, P. Q, W R. Watson, Agent, Ch'town. iv IT En loLLoway's Piits,—Purve Blood.—As this DEATH TO WORMS. tal fluid when i: a healthy state sustains and | Among the many preparations to be found on sovates every part of the hving aystem, (but! ofe shelves of Drug-stores for relieving children nit becomes it: poverished or uopure, ex-| those troublesome and irritating companiens— # & precisely cont rury efleet,) it is abundantly | Worms, we are eure none will be found 3o| last Wharf,das sustained great damage, the LL! ‘fest that dny w dicine which dees not reach | effective ae =“ Watson's Scholedion”—a new | section, ix cerpletely breken up mig all along | circulation, can uever exterminate diseave;| temedy, advertis.d in oor columus this evening, the front, is more or less started the planking, | any preparation capable of exercising a sane) and ove that way Le relied on. Mothers ! try | lying in all directions, Messrs ’ Fishers's ore! Jificence ever ie hiped, must with it be! it, Itis about the nest wholesome Candy you | ship, on the blocks, at their yard on Charlotte | vied to er" g fibre «ot the frame. The! can give your little ones, om ; | stress extensiun, escaped an injury, but, at one! ‘ ae MG scaler A receive | | time, it was thought, the keel would be forced | ch had so heroically expressed. The verican Consul, wrupped in the * stare and | ipes’ of the Union, stood abreast, and for s¢ moments the Spaniards stood aghast, conduct of the two Coneuls being mora n they could comprehend, he emotion | he prisoner was extreme; he was support- right and left by the Consuls, and the * fellow shed a profusion of teare from ‘ness and excitement. A consultatian ecain held, end the prisoner marched | © 40 jyil und: r an eecort of troops, the sule supporting the unhappy man ail the , eloug. The furore was beyond dee- ‘ition. After ark the prisoper was re- ved, and finally shipped from the country ae Oe indofatigible exertions of the ssuls. _———$ oO > o— ~ Hutlo-| Tar fue RS A | tr j ; ° . OE .#% i : ; ' oF MEDICINE . Mover’e Inpia| fron its position, The Lower Cove Wharves, | v's Purifying Pith operaie direet'v and powere| Root Pitre a ER Cone Dr. : ; - . ! j ; , eye ' iflering with disense | avd Lumber Yards, are in a state of great oy tpon tie whee waes of blood, whether get this medicine. nee eens lh Snewss wreath Egy nt mag coos or arterials (ey strengthen the stouiael,| erudicute the late the liver au: kidiieye, expel ciwase, and ng existence, Gradually bat surely it wizj| fusion; deals, lumber, of all descriptions, shingles | je seeds of diseuses, aud by removin | and logs. being all mixed up together, and the) ) tie cause render sick tess impossible, wharves almest totally destroyed. The Brigt. Get the “Resone of Tulu Almanae.”’ Rolling Wave, which was waiting for a tide to i L Ves Moons been dene. | unroofed orsdemolished barns of greater or lesser Walker’s New Wharf, stood the storm brave- ly, aud shows, that it has been well and securely built, A few of the top planks, were, however, loosened, aud some of the debris of other wrecks was strewn upon it, The eld wharf was seme what etrained, and had seme of the planks lifted, All the alleyways, ruuoing off Ward street, were more or less damaged, | The South Wharl, was greatly racked, and, had it not beeu fur the new end, which was Luilt on this Spring, it is the general opinion that it, | with the buildings thereon, would have been | swept away. a foot from the buildings. Several of the stores | had several inches of water on the floors, but as | wost df the perizbable stuck bad been moved out | of the reach of the water uet much loss was sug tained. The end of the North Wharf was broken up, as the waves had fuil play upon iw The} schovner Bickford lying there on Monday night, had ber quurter breken badly. The schoubter stuncheons torn away, and her side bad'y ci ‘ed, | Robertson's What did not receive any in-| jery mere than baving seme of the planks torn up Union Street Wharf was left ina bad condi | tion, the inside being mustly washed out of rt, | and the end having settled 3 or 4 feet. ‘The slip | was strewn with logs and wreck, Hares Wharf was all afloat, and is covered! with seaweed and broken logs, ‘The top of Fairweather’s Wharf was aflvat, | and the planks were laying in wll directions, no | logs were carried away. The water rose about | 3 inches in Messrs. J. & T, Robertson’s ware-} house, which had a large quantity of salt im it, | and wili be considerably Bastia. The Long Whart is ina very bad state, some | of the tiu:bers being washed away together with | the planking, and the whartis covered wilh logs, seaweed and wreck, ‘The other wharves beyond are now more or less damaged, Sand Point, Carleton, shows more havoc than any place around the harbor, as the wind and | the tide beat upon it with al! its fury. The heuses near the Breakwater are a complete wreck, the water waking a clean sweep through them, driving the inhabitants out without giv- ing them time to save anything, and filling them full of debris, one house Sone litted bodily and moved Bix feet. There is nut a house on Pro- tection street aa far as the Engine House but bas been injured. The vames of those who suffered utost severely are, J. McCaffrey, Tom- othy Sullivan, Patrick Brenan, Jobu’ MeGrath, and Thomes and William Clark. Messrs. Glas- gow & Black, had a lot of their stock damaged, | and the fleor of the sture is algo begved up. All the wharves, back of these houses, are carried | away, not a stick being left. Mr. Joseph Coram lost beavily; three fish sheds, together with a quantity of fish, bis nets, some of his fishing boats, aud wharf, are alldestroyed. Mrs. McDougall, aod Messrs, Adams s, Cuorams, and Littlebale's wharves, are all more or less damaged, aid South Rodney wharf has a breach right throuch it, and is Very wuch disabled. Alil the slips are filled with the wreck, The Beacon suffered severely, it is compleie- ly gutted, and on standing at Sand Point oae cau see right through it. James Karle, toe keeper, had a very bard ime of it. He had to set up Lo the light to keep out of the water. MeLaugblis & Stackhouse’s Blacksmith sbop is all knocked to pieces, and Mr, Beattie’s barn, on Ludlow street, was lifted with the force of the wind, and earried quite a distance. SUMMARY OF DAMAGES TO SHIPPING, The Schooner g. V. Coonan, at Reed's Point, is in a sinkiug condition. Bark Rialto. at Walk- er’s wharf, is very much chafed, anc had to be taken to Lloyd’s Blocks to be repgired. Ship Beacon Light bad a portion of her forechannels earried away, The deck-load of the Armanedla, had to be thrown off, she labored so bard in the storm. Bark Ansel, lost her mizzen topmast, and some of her rigging. Brigt. L. L. Wads- worth, broke from her moorings, at Tilten’g wharf, and ran against the South wharf, damag- ing her siern. Brigt. Maud Potter, lying uf the Roduey Shp, broke loose, 2nd lost ber jibboom, and at low water was aground on the bar off the Ferry landing. Bark Twilight had her quarter considerably chafed. Mr. Fisner’s Yacht, the Mary Emme, lying at the Ballast Whart, is no more. The sehooners Effa and Bickford, at the North Wharf, received considerable damage; the former had six of her stancheons, and the latter, a portion of her stern carried away. The schooner Renown, of and from Parboro, N, S., for the United States, was lest, on Monday night, at Musquash, during the storis. The Captain and two men were drowned. It is al- so reported that a schooner from Beaver Har- bor, for this place, was wrecked down the Bay. MISCELLANEOUS, One of the chimnies of the Leingter street Baptist Church, was blown down, and those of many private houses lest mere or less of their 8. " noble balm of gilead tree on Wellington Row, in the garden of J, M. Walker, Esq., which for over half a century, has stood the shock of every storm was riven in pieces and its beauty destroyed. Many windows of private residences in the higher portion of the city, were blown ing and tke caps of fire escape holes in the reofs were carried away. The Temperance Hall in Fairville was blown down, and another building was blown over aguinst the Meeting House, causing consider able damage to that edifice. The steamer Fawn, on her down trip from Fredericton, had to moor to the shore near Gagetewn, where by the assistance of her an- chors she rode out the sturm, and got down! about 9 o'clock, yesterday morning. The Olive got up to the same place, but, whilst trying to obtain a sufe shelter, a portiou of her upper Ly j away. pretensions. Near Brundage’s Point, the dwelling of Joshua Brundage was levelled with | the ground, the inmates having narrowly eseaped | | with their lives, er | TEE STORM IN NOVA SCOTIA. Special Despatches to Chronicle } Truro, October Sth. Parties who came from Londonderry this morn- | When it settled it had separated | img bad to tiavel by back roads. Iu many places; the pust roads are tloeded aud impassable. Fences, telegraph poles, bridges and dykes are carried On Tugenishe Marsh can only get along in beats, In this direction the sterm was very severe. High wind and heavy rain. Amherst, Oct, 5, Line down hence to Sackville, N. B. Violent storm of Wind and rain. Very high tides in the Bay of Fundy have destroyed the dykes, Marshes The Ferry Slip was quite a point of attraction, | Effa, which lay ouiside of her, bad tour of her| are flooded, and travelling between Sackville and ithe ann Alumlerst impracticable at present t Wolfville, Oct, 5, Highest tide here last night ever known. Dykes | overtlowed in every direction, aud a large unmber of sheep and horses are destroyed, The \y indser aud Aunupolis Kailway suziained considerable damage in ihisueighborhvod. Wiud and rain very heavy, Londonderry, Oct, 5, A violent storm last nig!.t—tremenduous tide, The dykes, fences and bridges are goue; a mile pertially destroyed, A boat loaded with appl.s, trom Comwalils, was driven into a potato field. Cargo partly iasured, No lives loyt. Great deg- traction of dyke property. Extract of a letter from Amherst, Sth October, 1869 ;— “The whole country from Sackville to the upper marshes, on the Macean and Kiver Hebert, is all submerged—uall a sea—buried under water trom 3 to 8 feet deep. Eight hay barus, with their con tents, dritted of the common marsbes, lie stranded on the upland at the foot of Crawtord’s hill, and elsewhere. Forty to fitty stacks of hay, curried long distunees, lie ashors on the north side of the Big Lake, at the Common’s bead, and lower down on the upland. The price of fouder is likely to be materially effected. ‘The tide is supposed te, have been full four feet higher thaneyer oe efore. The new railway embankment ucross from Craw. ford’s hill to Napan’s, are swept away to consider. able extent—Whitehead’s contract. Napan bridge, vear Fullerton’s, gone. Miuudie marshes, all but part of new marshes, submerged, and hay-stacks in all directions floated off. It wili Le a week betore the water will have suflicieutly subsided to ccm- wence repairs. Nothing so disastrous of the kind has ever before etoarteal at the head of the Bay of Fujdv. it will take many bundreds of thousands. of dol.ars to cover the loss and damage. —— oe Destructive Fire in Antigonish, N.S, TWENTY-ONE BUILDINGS BURNED—HEAVY Luss, ANTIGONISH, OCT. 5. A heavy fire broke out at ten o’clock last night at the eastern end of the town,on Main Street- The flames spread rapidly, and the fire lasted until four o'clock this morning. Twenty-one buildings were consumed and fifteen families bave have been deprived of their homes and household property. Loss as at present estimated ia thirty thousand dollars The following are buildings destroyed: al] those owned by Hugh McDonald Esq. M P., all owned by Rodk. McDonald, Inspector of Schools, all the property of James Wilkie, Clerk of Peace. A house owned by heirs of the late P. Power, four barns with hay owned by John & Williasn Randall, a Louse and barn of Christopher Me- Donald; house and barn of W. J. Beck (not his dwelling.) ‘There was insurance on hia property oaly. Loss to the Insurance Companies not over $500. Fire originated in a barn, aud is supposed to be accidental, No lives lost. LATEST BY TELEGRAPH. FROM EUROPE, London, Sep. 29. The Prince and Princess of Wales arrived in Paris, to-day, and were received by the Emper- or. It has.been decided to present to the Spanish Cortes the name of the Duke of Genoa, for King. The steamer at Lisbon brings the announce- ment that President Lopez bas been utterly de- feated in his struggle against the Brazijiang and the allies driven trom every defensive situation, aud forced to seek safety by flight. The con- test he has maintained for years, has culminated in rout and ruin, : Consols 93, Liverpool markets steady. Corn, 292. 6d ; Pork 110s. London, Sep 30. The Empress Eugenie started on her Eastern tour to day. Mr. Lesseps, the Engineer, has passed through the Suez Canal in a steamer in fifteen hours, No action has yet been taken to convene the French Senate and Legislature. ' Gold bas decreased in Bank of England 5§3,- 000 pounds during the week, The London Times correspondent asserts that there is but little hopes of a compromise be- tween Spain and the Cubans, ‘The Spanish Government says: Lay down your arms, and send deputies to the Cortes, if you will be as Canada. We are willing if you desire indepen- dence. Do not say no; the matter will be ar- ranged, but disarm.” The Cuban motto is ** No. thing by cowpromise.” ; London, Oct. 1. Ship Themopylae, bringing the first consign- nient of the new tea crop, arrived at London frem China yesterday. She made the run from Aupier, Java, in sixty-four days, : - % _———— The reports from Madrid represent that the republican movement in Catalonia and Andalu- sia promises to deceive the hopes of ite instiga- tore, A commission of fifteen deputies to the Cortes has been charged with the daty of re porting on the various candidates for the Throne of Spain. : Political news unimportant, FROM THE STATES. New York, Sept, 30. George Peabody, eniled yesterday, in the steamer Scotia, for Liverpooi. New York, Oct. 1. Rowan Catholic Bishop Lyach, of Toronto, leaves for Kome next week. f Mexican papers are agitating the annexation of that country to the United States. New York, Oct 2. A boiler exploded yesterday afternoon on the Fair grounds at Indianapolia, while a great crowd were present. There Were nineteen per- sons instantly killed, and the mumber wounded is at least one hundred, The barometer at Havana yesterday indicated storray weather. Masters of veseels in the bar- bor were directed to make thei anchorage ee- cure. —_— FROM THE DOMINION. Toronto, Oct. 2 Prince Arthur and party reached Ryerson, Ontario, Friday morning. He bagged nearly 400, ducks, had a splendid time, and retarned in excellent health. On Friday afternoon the Prince went to Mo- hawk, where he was received by the Chiefs of the Six Nations in full paint. He was duly in- stalled one of the Chiefs, and afterwards vielted the Indian schools, Afterwards he went to Hamilton, where the programme of crowds, ad- dresses and a banquet was carried out. Ghe Examiner. i Charlottetown, Octob-:r 11, 1869. Mr. Hvrrox, Principal of the Deaf and Dumb Institution at Halifax, accompanied by several of his Pupils, has been on a visit to our Island, and has explained to public meetings, held in various localities, the pbilan- thropic object of his mission, and ‘as shown, by undeniable proots, the great good which his Institution can effect among a very forlorn class of our fellow creatures. Few, perhaps, of those who listened to Mr. Hutton, reflected on the number and magnitude of the difficul- ties which beset this particular undertaking of Christian charity, or how many centuries had to elapse before fruits such as Mr. Hutton showed could be produced. The education of the Deaf and Dumb has indeed beena plant of mest difficult culture ; it is, however, entirely indigenous to the soil of Christianity—Pagan- ism knew nothing of it. That there must have existed among the ancient Greeks and Romans deaf and dumb children, we may take for granted; but we find no mention made of any care bestowed up- on them, or any exertion directed towards the development of their natural faculties. Indeed, we would be almost inclined to believe that no measures of this kind were ever taken, from the wonder occasioned by a certain Quintus Pedius, a Roman, wko in his infancy had lost his speech, and yet did not remain wholly without culture. If we examine the constitution of Pagan society, we shall discover sufficiently good reasons for concluding, that the Deaf and Damb were amorg the ancients entirely neglected, and left in the most cruel manser to shift for themselves as they best could. Yhe two great elements of Pagan society then, were utility aud enjoyment. But no utility and no enjoyment could accrue from | the education of the Deaf and Dumb sufficient | to compe: sate for the trouble, the pains, and . oyance occasioned by such a task,— Jet them therefore use the limbs and the ; Strength given them by nature, to win their | bread, and not become a burden upon others. |—Pagan society was interested in nothing more regarding them. Jt was of no impor- tance that these unfortunates, were miserable members of a society which all but rejected them; that their intellectual faculties were left undeveloped, and in a state more re- sembling the lowliness of the brute, than the nobility of man, Pagan society was too selfish to heed. Change now the elements ef Society—let duty take the place of utility; and let the idea of imperishable happiness, supplant that of fleeting enjoyment—jhen will the misfortune of a human being become as something sacred in the eyes of his fellow-men,who will busy them- selves with the alleviation of his suffering, In a society so constituted, the Deaf and Dumb are not so many machines, destined to labor for the profit of those who own them ; nor yet animated beings whom it is pecessary to sup- port,merely because they cannot be destroyed ; they are, on the cohtrary, men endowed with reason more entitled to culture that the rest of mankind, because of their diminished means of acquiring it. Such was the hght which Christianity threw upon the Deaf and Dumb, It must be confessed, however, that with all this, their education proeeeded very slowly. In the first centuries, all that was attempted was to convey to them the bare necessary rue diments of religion. No one seems to have tried to plan a means by which they could communicate with their fellow men. You do find, here and there, in those far times, some instances of a déaf and dumb individual suo- ceeding in acquiring a slight acquaimtance with literature, but this is a marvel and a prodigy, and as such is chroni¢led with much solemnity in the annals of the period. These instances, however few, and however much isolated, set at rest one important ques- tion; it was eyidently possible to communicate with the deaf and dumb by other means than that of speech: Teachers were encouraged; methods were devised and canvassed. The in- vention of printing lent an opportune aid in spreading over a wider area, more just ideas of the mental capabilities of the deaf and dumb, and so the work progressed. It may be a subject of wonder how, in the lapse of so many years, so little advancement was made. But it should never be forgotten in what con- dition Christianity received the deaf and dumb from Paganism. They were little, if any- thing, removed from the brutes—they bore the appearance of men, they might be endowed with reason—but what that reason was capa- ble of, was a sealed mystery. Paganism, in- deed, held it as a fact that it was im possible to elevate them to the knowledge of anything that lay bevond the confines of the senses. Now, between the eradicating of this opinion from the minds of men, and the implanting of its opposite, that the deat and dumb are capa- ble of entertaining the loftiest conceptions— the distance is so long that only very many years coald furnish the time necessary for it8 | passage. It was effected, however, and then arose the question of how was this intellectual culture to be communicated? In the disquisi- tion that followed, Jerome Cardano in [taly, and Benedict Ponce de Leon in Spain, boxe prominent parts. At the close ef the last ceutury the illustrioas Abbe De l’Epee marked & new epoch in this curious history, the practical extension, namely, of certain and secure methods for the general education of the deaf and dumb. Before his time instruc. tion was restricted, confined to countties, and to certain privileged classes of society, He removed these barriers, and ex. tended the benefit to all who might need it, And now the end proposed is, to restore to society all those individuals who, throug their organic conformation, eppeared to be debarred from entering it, and to restore them as polished in intellect as those who from watere more advantages. Hence, not one, but many methcds have been devised net some, but hundreds of mute children ré. Geive «& liberal education; not a few, tug hundreds of institutions are spread over the world, To these noble efforts of Christien men te discard received opinions, and devise way¢ ang means of elevating the deaf and dumb to the platform designed for them in common with their fellow men, ® curious Commentary js furniehed by the writings of certain Christian philosophers. Bonald Montaigne and Condil. ~ lac, have not hesitated to adduce the deaf and the dumb in proof of some of their lenge tenable theories respecting human nator, Some writers assert that they have neither memory nor the power of reasoning ; others that titey are ineapable of forming abstrag, ideas, or of distinguishing between good and evil ; but we can afford to leave the complete refutation of such opinions to the young. pupils of Mr. Hotton. . eens LITERATURE. _——ee BLACKWOOD FOR SEPTEMBER. Tux first article in this number of Black wood will prove of great interest to the Philologist, and will open up, even to the casual reader,curious seams of thought and re- flection. How it ever could happen that any of the words of a living language shou!d go a- missing, appears at first sight an enigma, yet a perusal of this article upon “Lost Preterites,” will make clear the fact that such a thing does happen, and that frequently. The author insists that, “if we really wish to discover the true well of English, undefiled, where the stream runs clear and unmixed, we wust Jook to the author of Piers Plough an rather than to Chancer.” We shall tlere find a large vocabulary of strong words, such es are plain to all men’s comprehension at the present day, in the Bible as well ae in the common speech of the peasantry, and above all,in that ancient form of the English language which is known as the Scottish dialect. Literary men, and polite socicty, have, it would seem, to bear much of the blame consequent upon al- lowing these words to escape ; and it is neither in the words of the one, nor the circles of the other, that the philologist must look for his lost treasures, but among the uneducated people, where “still survives a large uymber of verbs as well as of inflections, that ought never to have been allowed to drop out cf literature, and which it only needs the efforts of a few great writers and orators, to resto @ to their original favor.” Here is indicatd the beginning of a work, which bas for many years been going on in Norway. Many years ago, the Society of Sciences in Throndheim cor~ ferred upon a young scholar of ready talent in this department, an aunual stipend to iravel about the country, and pick ap among the the peasantry the strong verbs and a: cient idioms which had fallen into disuse in polite The result of his researches he gave to the world in a Grammar and Dictiovary of the language of the “* Norse Folk.’ We are ignorant how fur the old forms of expression thus rescued, like brands from the burning, have come to be adopted by literary men, and were a like service performed for the many noble Anglo-Saxon words which have dropped ozt of use, we doubt much if they would serve for better than recreations to the philologist. The districts over which the search would need to be made would be widely apart, for some of the most valuable of the missing articles are to be found im familiar use in the United States. The second article is evidently from the pen of a writer excellentiy well informed upon the subject which he treats. The question of en- listment and army reseryee, is one of peculiar interest in Europe at the present time. The writer brings together in narrow compas. the advantages and disadvantages of the French, the Prussian, und Enghsh systems, and gives it as his view, that a combination of the two latter, would probably ensure the greatest amount of advantage, with the smallest aymber of drawbacks. Mr. Mill's “Essay on the Subjection of Women,” receives a somewhat severe treats ment at the bands of a reviewer. Mr. Miil's arrogant assumption that he alone, of all men, has discovered what woman is capable of, and has possessed perception and fairness epough to stand up as her advocate, receives a well- merited reprimand. Indeed, if we believe the reviewer, Mr. Mill's system of establishing his views, would infallibly sueceed, would man- kind only submit to it, in settling as truths the wildest dreams of the enthusiast. No honest or rational man, he 1s convinced, can differ from him — he ignores all opposition to his theories, and is even dissatisfied with, and ashamed of his countrywomen, for being con- tented with their position. £*He exactly corresponds to the lunatic,” gays the writer, “who proved logically that all the rest of the world was insane.’ The conviction which forces itself upon ps after perusing this article is, that it would be @ great misfortune for man- kind im geneval, and womankind in particular, did Mr. Mill succeed in reducing his theories to practice. “A Night with the Volunteers of Strath- kinahan,” will remind many readers of Black- wood, of the amusing contributions cf the late Professor Aytoun. “How I became a Yeo- man,” or * The Glenmutcbkin Railway,” bas clearly been the writer's model. The sketch, though overdrawn, is amusing. Old age has privileges ; it can be granulows and repeat its little jokes without incurring severe animadversion, but when it becomes dyspeptic, and casts bitterness on all men and all things, only those who have a prospective interest in it can be expected to bear it. Cornelius O’Dowd is more loquacious thas ever, and evidently suffering acutely from temper. Nothing is going right. The Irish Church Establishment should never have bees upset—the Emperor of the French is s man without a policy, a clever trickster who mases believe he is wise, while all the time he is only availing himsclf of contingencies. Small | benefactors have been annoying Mr. O'Dowd | by putting him m mind of the walking-cane, or pen-holder they gave him.—The Irish Catholic Priest has no right to have a rain} proof roof over his herd, or even a roof of bis own at all—a spare room in a farm house, oF a mud cabin with three apartments is too good circles.