a ee RASS ww? pee) Re A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF POLITICS, LITERATURE AND NEWS 1 FX 3s “Pers se ,ie | Roa oe | Py aes belay bas OY > Gl fog a ae fhe eed ¢ te _ rae ee “~ be . a Tes a - to iy i ow és pests St al] aus - gDWARD WHELAN] ae, ee eee wee Cis is trae Ciberty, when fre-born filen, having oe ES VES St Ee: aa ee ————— to advise the Public, man speak free——runipies. (EDITOR. anv PUBLISHER a IV. ele ar fy wan er eee Victoria Hous2, Georgstown. 17 VA —_ iar areas bane we tae and cheap Store. in the premises lately occumed by 7 Mr. Chariesa McLaren, corner et Kent and Grafion Streets, | Georgetown, an extensive and we'l selecied stock of British and American Goods, West India Produce, &e FREDERICK P. NORTON has pleasure in the public, that be has c extensive mercantile estab oshments im Enylacd, Scotland end Ireland (!o ship by way of Iiaiifex) the very bo <t deseription of announcing to opleted arrangements with th Goods. and on the lowest possib’e terms that they can be obtained rn Great Brituin—te bas als pened a corres pa@gpence wilh e best howsee af ine Unned s ites, Aed is now ID a jon Wich wil havie Nim LO seai fo: is ar other prom payiue ai, €ve y Gescrip: ? at f > tiwer avuUIIKD RIAD rads “anc at tie very lowest price they Cu VG PUrcauased for in this of. 8 dsland. —-BIS STOCK COMPAISES IN PART— CHARLOTT most | - E a Ue SS 2S NEW Goons. PUST arrived fom Halifax and Boston, and for gale at the subseriber’s store, Pownal-street, A large assoriment of Goods, ' suitable for the seac n, consisting of the following, viz:— 12 dozen pairs BOOTS, men’s and boy’s, 6 do do. women’s and children’s. 12 do Fur Caps, assorted sizes. | Satinetts, Tweeds, D Fiannel, superior fise Cluth, Ticking, Sheeting, white, grey and striped Cotton, 000 rolls, Cyutton Wadding. 3 boxes superior cast steel AXES 50 do TOBAUCCU 10 dozen BUCKETS 4 do BHADSTRADS 5 do LOUKING GLASSES. j ee —ATSO— 2000 gations HIGH WINES, and a large variety of Cooking, Franklin } aud other STOVES. } 20 boxes No. 1 SOAP 100 bags TABLE SALT 10 dozen CORN BROOMS 1U cane and wood bottom CHAIRS PATRICK CAWDEN. Pilct, Whitney, Petersham, Mobair and superfine West of ,—Charlottetown, January 15, 1854. England ond Yorkshire Broad Cloths, Orleans, plaid and faney Doerkine, Casrsinets, Satineta, Scotch Kerseya, Beavers and wither Cloths of all prices and colours. READY MADE CLOTHING. Over and Shooting Corts in faney. and b! ek, Trowsers Vests, striped nud fancy Shirts, Shirt tollsrs of al! shapes, Paris, Sitk, Felt and Glazed Hats. Cloth, Por and Pinsh Cape; men’s and boy's bine and scarlet Serve Shirts; Merino and Lambewool Veste, Guernsey Frocks. Drawers, &ce. VOMEN'S DRESSES. Bayadere, Alpaca, ech and fancy Dresees in erent variety; plain, plaid avd foney Drese Clotha, Rarin stripe Puete 3. plain and embossed French Mercnos in Ai for: nt colours; Cobourgs, QOrieans and Delatmnes, fienred rnd plein in every colours black sad coloured silk and cotion Velvets end Plushes in every shade, MILLINERY. Plain. olaid and fanev Cloakings. Paisley. Cashmereand woo!l- len long Shawls, won'len plaid Shawls. great variety. long Shaw !s | i all coleure; Enalish and French Ribbans, bonnet. and cep Flowers, Braids, Gimps, silk and cotton velvet ‘Mriramings, Habit Shirts, Sleeves and Collara, Laces, Edgings, Collurettes, silk Neckties, Handkerchiefs. &c. : CARPETS AND FLANNELS. Kidderminster and Victoria Carpets. Wparthruge, Druggets and other floor Clotns, hall and door Mats, Tapsstry, worsted linen embossed and oi) table Covers, atair Diapers, Prnegete and Carpets. Blankets in great variety; red, white and blue Serges; white, blue and red Welsh, Englisch and American Fianne!s, &c. BOOTS, SHOES AND SLIPPERS, Men's Frglish snd American Boots and Shoes, in every wariety, Slippers, Rubbers; women’s French Slippers, Boots and Shoes, and Cashmere, enloched, lasting and leather Boots; misses’ end children’s Boots end Shoes in great vMiety. MISCELLANEOUS. Knitting Cotton, black Crane, diaper tab'e Covera and Towels, black and fancy Anrong, plain and fancy net Muslins, hair Nets, rolled and twilled Linings, Jean, Irish Linen, furniture Cotron, polka Jackets, scarlet and shaded Cravats, black and brown fur Muffs, Victorines and Coffs; fancy regatta and white Shirts bine and red Serge ditto; reefing Jacketa and India Rubher | and Delames, Auetritia Crane | Mens’ Ready-made Clothing. FE are desirous of informing the public, that we have on hand, and are constantly making up, the largest and best stock of ready-tnade Clothing in Charlottetown—cut by ourselves, and made up by workuien in our employ. Persons desirous of furnishing theutselves } with fashionable well inade Garments, at reasonable prices, can be suited , better at our establishment than any other in Charlottetown. C. & J. BELL, Tailors, Queen Square, Charlottetown, opposite the Market | N, B.—Bcing practical working ‘Tailors, and confining ourselves | eaclasively to the Tailoring and Clothing business, we are confident that | We can give custmers belter satisfaction in every Garment whicb they ‘require, than those parties can who import slup clothing, and have no | knowledge of the business. January 15. C. & J. B. Eastern Stage. Pps Wastern Stage, carrying the mails, will leave Char ioitetuwn for Sours and intermediate places on Tuesday and Friday mornings, at 6 o'clock; and from Souris for Char lotletowu on Wednesday and Saturday mornings, at 8 o'clock. pee: freight or passage, please apply to Mr. John Holman. Vorchesier Street, Charlottetown; and Mr. James Moimegh Souris WILLIAM HOOPER, Postman. Morel), January 15, 1854. To bo Let, And possession given on the first day of May next. PEVGk PU WELLING HOUSE and Premises near Government House, at present occupied by Captain Beazeley, con- sisting of a Dwelling House which contains a spacious Dining jroom aud Drawing-room, Breakfast-room, 7 Bed-rooms, large | Kirehen, Servant’s Hall. 3 Servant’s Bed rooms, Pantry, Larder. Mront-porch, large Entrance Hail, large t{nuer Hall, Back porch, 2 Back entrances, Back and front stuir-case, Scullery, Pump and Wash-house, Lumber-room and a splendid 6 roomed cellar A iarge and comnodious Coach-house, 3 stalled Stable, Har ness-rooin, Cow House, large Hay-loft aud Grain-room, Manure- vard, large Kuchen-garden with Pruit-trees, &c., Flower-yar- den, elegant front entrance and carriage drive, a large Lawn running down to the Harbour with convenience for keepin roats, &e., exiensive plantation of young trees of all kinds. large Koot-house, weod and chopping lLiouse, and a spacious and commodious yard, There are irontand back gates facing on different streets, aud a never fatling well of water on the premises. CTOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MO . oe } Thiss “4 i $s} d s Coats and Leggings Oil Cloth Suite, Southwesters and Hats, | ] his sple oe ee wows oi 8 pena ge 9 s the — . . rt ‘ s , ‘ vt w < ? Unbrellae, weavers’ Reeds, india mbber, worsted and cotton | Vie of any house jn Charlottetown, an oe , ' . a. Ww , | Government House and other advantages the Subscribér confi Beaces, tailors’ trimmings. blue, red and white Cotton Warp. a lently offers it the most elegant, coinfortable and desirab! 7 ' | oe y ¢ ti E . ‘ large assortment of grey Cattons very cheap; navy blue Prints enuv otfers it as ) gan oimior e an esirabie and Denimsa, printed Cottone. checked Ginuloms, Redtickes white and striped Shirtings, Sheetings, Bagaing and Boas, black Indiana Shawls and Handkerchiefs, plain and plaid Handker chiefa and Searfa, silk neck ard pocket Handkerchiefs, Indies? and gents’ black and fancy silk and antin Neckties: cambrie poeker Handkerch- fe, Cashmere Mufflera, honnet Silke, binek, hlve and white si'k lace Vejle, creen. blue and brown Rareve, cam Ribbons, black and white lace Blond and Edging, goff-red and moursiog Blond. silk and worsted Braids. cotton and Iamba- woo! Hose, ladies’ and verte’ Glaves, honnet Shanes. bonnet and cap Wire, children’s worsted Hoods and Boots, white and coloured Jean Stays, Moleskine, and a number of unentakrited articles. HARDWARE. CUTLERY. CARPENTERS’ TOOLS. &c. Mill, cross-cut, hand and pit Saws, with Files to suit, Rasps, | American narrow Axes, Adzes, Ha'tchets, ehingling and lathing Hammers, Drowing Knives, Sookeshaves, Rules, Framing Squares, Chissels, Compasses, Chalk Lines. door. cheat, trunk, drawer and nad Locke; butt. etran chest door and T Hinges. &c., rim Locks. sprirg Latches and Screws of all sizes; Spoons, Knives and Forks, Ciimbiets, Seuffera and Vrava. tea Trays, | Scissors. shoe and carnenter’s Pincers, Awla Russia Haire, Rosin; Shoethread, lasting, pump and carpet Tacks, ent and wrought Nails and Brads. all sizes, Planes and Plane Irons; Iron and Steel, cooking and close Stoves, GROCERIES, &c. Rum, Brandy Gin and Wine; Tea, Sugar. Molasses, Sonn, Candles, Sierch, Bine, Rice. Raising, Currants, Nutmegs, Ginger, Pepper, Snices, Confectionary, Mustard. haking and washing Soda, all kinds Dyes'uffa; honeydew and fir Tobacco; erushed Sugar, and « great variety of other useful articles. Sole and Upper Leather, Reffalo Robes: Cloeks. Chairs Broome and Rucketa; Glees, China and Earthenware, &c. Georgetown, Janusrv 15, 1855. (. & J. Bell, Merchant Tailors, And manufacturers of ready made Clothing, QUEEN SQUARE, OPPOSITE THE MARKET, CHARLOTTETOWN. Importers of— Cloths, Whitneys, Doeskins, Tweeds, Vestings and Tailors’ Trimmings, and keep in their employment the largest number of the Journeymen Tailors on the Islond. All orders attended to with punctuality and despatch. January 15. NOTICE. HE undersigned gives notice, that by Deed bearing date Eighteenth day of December, 1854, from Arthur Napin Molsworth, 4 and Harriet Molesworth, his wife, all that part of Towhship No. Esrty-seven, in this island, formerly owned by them, was duly conveyed thi m. “All Tenants or others indebted for rent, arrears of rent, or stampage, are hereby called upon to pay the same to hin; no other per- son having any authority to reeeive the same. Mill View, Township, No. 49, Jan. 8, 1855. Any person found trespassing on the above estute will be prosecuted according to law. : BENJAMIN CHAPPELL — JOHN R. BOURKE. ee HAS the following, among other things, for sale, which he will dispose of on reasonable terms — Rabber Boots and Shoes ; Leather Boots, Shocs and Brogans ; Oil Cloth Suits, Glazed Hats, Sou’ Westers, Striped and Unbleached Cotton ; Cot- po. Warp, Time Pieces, Brooms, Buckets, Indigo and otier dye stats ; ers, TRA, Sugar, Motasses, Soap. Canile:. a a men ‘ » Table Sal ovels, Hz Manure Lurks. MO Busheis LIV BKPOOL Saute” cs ; Shingles, 15,600 feet Pine Boards, reesdence for a gentieman’s fami'y in or near town. Por further particulars epply to DAVID WILSON, Richmond Street. September 11, 1854. Barquo Sir Alexander. FAN above Barque having sailed for Liverpool on the 28th ult.. the Owner takes this opportunity ; to express his thanks to the Merchants and others for the | liberal support he has received from them since he put the “ Sir Alexander” on the line between this port and Liverpool, and | as he belicves that general satistaction has been given, trusts to receive 4 continuance of their support for the outward voyage in the Spring of | 1855, at which time a clipper-built Ship of 590 tons will be in readiness | to take the place of the “Sir Alexander.” W. W. LORD. } Charlottetown, Dee. 4, 1854. Grain, Grain, Grain. Ty highest price giyen for BARLEY and OATS at Coles’s Browery and Distillery. | Constantly on hand at prices cheaper than can be pur- chasecin the Market, the best of Rum, Brandy, Gin, Whis- key, and a superior article of old Malt Whiskey. Also :— X, XX, and XXX Ale. Charlottetown, 19th Nov. 1853. Notice to Debtors. VENUE Subseriber hereby notifies all persons indebted to him, either by Note or Book Account, that uuless they make immediate | payment, their Accounts will be handed to an Attorney for collection. January 8. CHARLES SAUNDERS. | FALL GOODS. Per Park “Sir Alexander” and Schooner “ Elizabeth.” | "Pak Subseriber Legs to inform the public that he has | received by the above vesscls his usual stock of BRITISH GOODS | Suitable for the seascn. —ALSO— | An extensive selection of GLASS, CHINA and EARTHENWARE, and a superior article of MOLASSE3 and SUGAR by wholesale and retail /at a very small advance. | Intending to make an alteration in his business, all goods not sold | before the fifteenth of June, 1855, will then be disposed of at Auction. All persuns indebted are requested to make aearly settlement of their acgpunts. On sale, {00 barrela No. 1 HERRINGS ; quantity CODFISN. W. W. LORD. ! | Chariottetown, January 8, 1855. 6w. | Boots, Boots, Boots. UST received by the Subscriber at his Store, opposite Mr. Cvles’s Brewery, one bundred pair Men’s and Boys Pegged Boots, which will be sold cheap for Cash. ~ i‘ , JAMES LONG. | Kent Street, Charlottetown, August 7th 1834. | WOOL, WOOL, WOCL. OLES'’S STEAM MILL CARDING. MACHINE is now in superior order, being newly fitted up and in full operation | Charlottetown, July 8, 154, | Notice. i "FRue Subseriber having appointed Mr, Cuantes .Weisn his Attorney during his absence from the Island, requests all per- sons to whom he taay be indebted to furnish their accounts for settlement; aud a!l those who are indebted by book account, or otherwise are requested tu pay, the same, ey . "WILLIAM WELSH, Jharlottetown, November 20, 1854. ry a t LS ——— ——— MODERN CHIVALRY, As we read the sickening details of the holocust of the brave before grim Alina—as we devour the details of the! abortive valour of our terrible chivalry at Bala Clata—as we think of the kandful of noble hearts toiling in the trenches. in the night, without tents, clothing, shed, shelter, necessary | food, and roused as they snatch an hour of fitfal sleep to } esking, Peeneh Cloakings, white, red and yellow | encounter five times their number day after day, hurling the | |maddening enemy to hideous ruin, only again to return to_ the toiling mine, and to be awakened ‘all with weary task | foredone’. to a new victory indeed, but also to fresh grief as well as glory, as comrade after comrade offers up his stalwart | frase to the thunder clap of the remorseless artillery—as we {behold triumph upon triumph robbed of the relief'and security | )it should have earned, by the piling up of increasing hostile | | numbers, fresh and closing in upon their strained strength and thinned ranks—thinacd by their.own prowess and sacrificial intrepidity—we are staggered in our purpose, and question our very heart's core to see whether it can be possible that any end can justify such means. Kngland’s best-and boldest perishing of cold, of climate, or disease—our British ‘ beautiful and brave,’ the prop aud pride of many a princely house, stretched stark upon the bloody field, or, while yet breathing, murdered for their trappings by greedy Cossack or callous drunken Sclave—our peasant patriots, the hope of the sweet hamlet. the light of the village home, that stood by their colours in the lurid glare of deadly strife, or followed their captain to the charge with British cheers and lion hearts, to death or giory, hewing down the confounded Musecovites ‘like sheep,’ and, in the very tempest of the fight, serupling to deal more carnage among poor wretches beaten up to their work of murder, with the stick, or pricked into the advance by the sword points of their officers, when we think of this, realize it to the faney as a thing done, and yet doing —it is then that we feel the solemn signilicancy of the course we have advo- cated, and are driven again to interrogate our consciences to see whether all there be‘ clear in this great business.’ It seems as if the annihilation of a cloud of Cossacks were dearly purchased at the cost of one Life Guardsman or Hightander. To lose an Arnaud, a Catheart, a Strangways, in such a melee with Nortiern savage slaves, isas if we dashed a chronometer against a barren sea mark. Could we prevail upou ourselves to look upon human rightsas if they were bales of cotton, and the cause of civilizatien in the light of the tare and tret of sugar hogsheads, or the yards in a piece of domestics or fustian, capable of an arithmetical gauge, or of compression into a balance-sheet—then, indeed, we should, perhaps, be driven to revert to the Quaker position, We might be asked asa mere question of profitand loss, whether the disease and misery, and hayoc of the march, the encamp- ment, siege and battle, caused to the Turks, the Russians, the Greeks, the French, and the British, by resistance to the dictation and aggression of the Czar, are not greater than any conceivable infliction of unresisted oppression ?. We might be (as indeed we have been) told that the hundred millions of money, and the hundred thousand able-bodied men lavished on this war, would buy peace, and be of greater value than if Turkey were actually reduced to our own possession, We may be reminded that all these devastations of the Crimea aud the Principalities, and Finland, are positive, ascertained, human calamities, to be scored up against a mere, problema- tical evil—a political hypothesis ; and that the taxation wrung from the poor to carry ou the hostilities is not only withdrawn from reproduction and applied to destruction, but, in. its abstraction inflicts on the masses of four nations the most grinding poverty—an amount of misery as greatas the sack- ing of towns, or the infliction of a military despotism upon the countries involved in the controversy, This subjection of political ethics to the formula of algebraic equation only re- quiries for its sueccss the trifling concession of the postulate to be proved, and then, indeed, the Peace Society would overbear all. resistance. When the Tory mewber, whose probosis had been tweaked by an Opposition Lrishman, asked Pitt what he should do, the Minister advised him to soap his nose—truly a much less troublesome process than either a duel or an action for assault. The more formidable that the Czar proves himself to be, the more necessary is it that he should be put down. Wesee not only the overgrown power of this barbarian dictator, but.the use to which he seeks to patit, Turkey his slave, Austria h’s vassal, Prussia his ally — where would Europe be in another generation had this Imperial tyrant his way? Talk of arbitration? Was not Austria his owu re‘eree-—and was not the award against him? Costly as is the price—great as is our loss of brave jand able men—dear as is the rate at which we pay in devasiation, disease, privation, penury, and mourning of the | heart, the object is worth it all—the terrible means. are | sanctified by the pure, high-principled, unselfish, holy end, | It is worth our last guinea and our last man, The solema | truth has gone forth: a war of aggression will no longer be tolerated in Europe. ‘Phe public burglar of States, the un-| , scrupulous buccanier who wantonly invades the territory of an junocgent neighbour, must be outlawel as a common public | eciminal, and quashed as a general nuisance. No Royal Ruffian can, in this century, be suffered to substitute violence for right, and to found a title upon mere unprovoked con- qifest. Let him once ‘bestride the narrow world lke a | Colossus,’ and soon he will make ‘ petty men’ of all of us, and scarcely suffer us to * Crawl Under his huge legs, and creep about To find ourselves dishonourab'e graves.’ We scarcely megnify the issue when we ask-—‘ Whether it | were better he should die that we may live all freemen—or | that he should live, that we may die ali slaves?’ Should he baffle us, ‘Turkey is gune—Greece is swallowed up—LEgypt appropriated— India approached—furewell to Hungary, Italy, Poland—the cause of constitutional government in Europe. ‘Justice ¢alls on us to say that it was no necessarily ‘ timid counsel’ which opposed the invasiowof the Crimea. Events| have proved that with the force then at our disposal it was a foolhardy expedition. The same reason entirely exoncrates | Lord Aberdeen for the delay im resolving upon the under taking, For it is clear, if the army had gone early, the road ‘were when they sailed “Ihe English press has done its very ‘best to urge both Sir Charles Napier and Admiral Dundas to! ‘and Sebastopol, leaving the Russiam fleets first to déstroy our , + 1 main « 7 nae a "4 f disabled ‘ships, and then, ‘cutting ‘ff the army from their’ of it with satisfaction,” the ‘ground "héhad eecupied NDAY, JANUARY 22, 1855. ee Vand the opinion e storm to Constantinople would have-been left open, as Austria had |‘tatisfy the amour propre of the Srmy, and pr not concluded her treaty with the Porte; and the numbers of | effect throughout E the allies woul@ have been still moré inadetyuate than they | ‘destroy their whole fleets upoo the stone walls of Cronstadt | No. 28. THE LESSONS OF THE WAR. The batile of Inkermann has its lessons, of which we trast profit will be made, Due vigilance was wanting in the weakest part of cur position, which, as most likely to be selects for attack, should have been most carefully guarded against surprise—-but surprised, as we have seen our troops were, and they had barely time to get into position to bar the way of the enemy swarming up the heights, under cover of the fire of their batteries, planted undiscovered during the night. All was well prepared on the one side, and unprepared on tho other—dogged, resolute bravery excepted, which retrieved a'l faults, The enemy was, as usual, great! y superior in artillery ; /not superior in practice, but superior in weight of metal and range, and it was not till two cighteen-pounders were gotu und brought to bear that we coped with them effectively with thet arm, Those two guns swept away the Russian columns like grass under the mower’s scythe, every shot traversin masses of flesh, and leaving a long train of kilied and Roane The question is why, in all our wars, we are go generally overmatched in artillery, not in skill, but in'guns, our pieccs being lighter than those opposed to them. In the campai of Wellington complaint was constantly ‘made of the disparity between the calibre of the French and English guns, and in India we were in this respect overmatched by the Sikhs. Yet no nation has such means of moving heavy pieces, as our horses are the most active and strong, or in default of horses, our men can handle the largest guns like toys, as our seamen prove wheneyer they are employed for the purpose ashore. The improvement of our muskets has just taken place in the very nick of time, and the Minie rifle has ren- dered inestimable service against the Russians, as they them- selved acknowledge; aud there is no reason why we should’ not havea superiority in artillery also, or at least an equality, instead of an admitted inferiority, as at present.’ Smartness has always been too much prized in our service, and probably for smart movements our guns have been kept below tho calibre which is now found to be requisite to put them on an equality with the corresponding arm of the enemy. Our field batteries are now, compared with those of the Russians, about what the old musket Brown Bess was, compared with the Minie rifle, that is to say, in point of range, . This is a defeet that should be promptly remedied. The marvel is that our troops have done what they have done with their means and numbers; and whatever may be the result of the siege of Sebastopol, it will be a matter of amazement and ad- miration hereafter that such a force as that cf the allied armies undertook such a work, and carried their operations successfully, so far as to hold on their defence nearly an equal force behind walls furnished with all the material of war? of an amply provided arsenal, while also keeping a large relieving army outside at bay, and victorious] y repelling their attacks. It is really, however, almost a urisnomer to call this a siege, As properly might the Russian attack of the Sth be called the siege of Inkermana, To borrow,a naatical phrase, we have brought an entrenched position alongside the» Russian entrenched position, and are fighting it like two ships, yardarm to yardarm, but with this unusual eiveumstance, that there is a third ship of nearly equai’ foree hovering about, to seize opportunity of attack. It has hitherto been considered as a rule of strategy, that a siege cannot be pro- seeuted with any prospect of suevess unless the besiegers are in such force as to be able to dispose of any army attempting the relief of the place. And when this is the case the operation is an investment, and the place is so surrounded with works as to cut it off from all succour or support from without. Instead of th's, our means confine us to a partail attack on Sebastopol, leaving it open in the other quarters; so that the Russian troops come and go at pleasure, and shift their strength from the open field to the fortress, or from the fortress to the open field, as may. suit4heir operations or exigencies. It is the opinion of competent military judges, that for the reduction and subsequent occupation of Sebas-. topol, the allied forces should be raised to » number not shors of seventy or eighty thousam] men of ail arms. ns +o coe. Tuanks oF Partiamenr ro tue Paexcu Anwy.—The Moniteur says: “ All Hrance will he deeply moved by the thanks which England has just voted by acclamation to Gen. Canrobert and our army, and to Admiral Hamelin and our navy, for their gallant co-operation and cordial assistance in the Kastern war. ‘To this solemn manifestation, hitherté un- exampled, of the sentiments of a great people towards its faith- ful ally, France has already responded by the expression of her admiration for the distingnished valour of the Jipglish army and wavy. She las eagerly echoed the culogies which eur generals-in-chief, after the bottles of Alma, ala Clava, and Lukermann, have given to the intrepidity of Lord Raglan and his noble troops. The two peoples, as the two ares have rendered to each other the fairest, the most cordial - ustice, Whilst the soldiers and sailorsvie in courage and se! -denial, the two nations seem to contend in generosity cach to grant to the other the greater share in the glory acquired in come mon, Nothing can be more calculated to draw stil! closer the bonds of their alliance than the exchange of these noble feelings ; nothing can better, secure for ‘them the sym athies and assistance of all civilised peoples, and, hasten the final triumph of the holy cause which they are defending.” —_ > PREPARATIONS FOR STORMING Serastopot.—Private letiers from the French camp before Sebastopol speak of the assault of that piace as an event that may soon be expeeted. | From several points of observation everything that. is done: within the besieged city can be seen. The second line of fortifications is described as very strong. The Russians have availed themselves of every point. where resistance ean be offered, and what is calledithe Promenade, is not the: worst prepared to meet the allies. The difficuliy, however, is not so much to take Schastopol as to kw) it, for we shall be amquestiouably exposed to a severe fire from the heights avd fortresses on the right side. Sebastopal will probubly be a complete ruin before we can get in, at ruin as it may be, there j ‘No alternative, ‘s that it rast be stortived und captared to a moral . Phe Russians seem to have foreseen and provided for such’a cotitingeicy ; and they have made every preparation for retreat to the north side of the harbor, and ‘huve taken measures to place every impediment to: our advance. “I'he retreat ‘of Liprandi was’ occasioned by the inundation of the Tchernaya, and a letter from the — feet Re nee Deals, 6000 fect Studdiag, B0v0 fees Scantling, 50 Cords Firewood. f Land, being N % Cove to ‘ A CARD. ALso, | LO ae | [Fifty-five], situate on the Road leading | AUCTIONEER and COMMISSION MERCHANT, and hopes, by ‘© Mills, og Lot or To ) Number iS.4 Gumebes 9, 1958. riber offers his services to the Publie as/ our transports. ee ree ye ee re et nie. (at we a fittle ‘impression on the euémy, while th? chemy is about 10,000 more than was’ supposed. ona ge. rf . i ous hig v ' DO WO} z2i cst. | bat 29 navy, to ¢ome to Kngland, ravage our coasts, and destroy | covered with wood, which can be made available for fix | We have'tried the experiment 6? bombard- ‘other fecessaries: “45,000, it is now satdat! - War =— ‘ing Sebastopol from the sea ; and it has been distinetly proved is the amoutt of the ce tt péeted ey taben mene as from ouir best bigs, 8 Td NS fa 8 ee Sore les wren rma mmm cma aaa acca, etiam patina. s