ond * 4 : j te & Pet hl ee ae ee he me we —<— * — tos away [ keep Gillin; e with spon il his sabnel, Mr. Bonner will give $10,000 for; ~— ° d I think I have the ae ental Pa the pleasure of seeing the feat performed, § h ¢ (f° vrhietihey > ta ery lemp, *’ | Ep eee i e G e Dr i 3 | BISMARCK § , Qo oe — GRAND STROKE, i It, a . ~ ‘ . ‘ "a0 r ‘I< he ' an anc her ) 871 ipie : i SHE TREATY RETWEEX nUSsiA axwp Paessis.) Chitown, Septen:ber 18, 1871, a elect 2) stus Sunnmary. — | | es A ee + . & ? a” Lowpex, Sept. 12,—Bbe following ate the; — To = ae 7 ee . ee —+— = | principal conditions of the treaty made between , PROBABILITIES. A . BTORMY OUTLOOK. | Russia and Prussia, at Varsailles, early this) yr Bowers in informing Mr. Rowe "ro ei ' hs, tee Mowe Wat | SO i how he should discuss the education ques re a a ar e wm the new 26 “The treaty epeeified thet Russia shoujd | tion sayss-* Re might take into consider- ! on tre Labor Reform Party sad supply & large, well-disciplined army to take | #tion also the probability of a majority of ‘ eweeping Hevolationary programme!’ | tho field under general orders. These two | the people making yo use of the present, «make the following extracts ; |powers, supposing their combined strength s*The sew Labor Reform or Nationa) #bould place thew belore the world as victors ’ * } ) ; in abor party has been holding a general Yet? © ae bd = tie following . ; rm3,— d should re oe ve “yngrese at St. Louis, and, consi lering the terms yat Austria shoud renounce jorever : Saad ae : f thie” favor of Germany the whol» of the Bohe- . onset -0 Omineps egtiation OF 1h) pian territory, all of Moravia, the province bor question on this side as well os on . of Silesia, and the Duchy of Salzburg, and her aide of thé Atlantic, the preelamat on that, since the conquest of the former conntry, the principles and purposes of this row) Biemarck s policy has been bat too clearly ty may well challenge the attention of/ seen by the Czar, who now finds himself in 2 statesmen and politicians of ail other the seme position that Napoleon lil, was i . nT after the battle of Ssdowa. The first stipala- rties ia the country These labor reform. ~ oe. : tion of the treaty was, that should a erigis »s their political platform for the ciim-) vriive, and war be Geciared, involy ng the in? g Presicential campaigo, Bay thet * be tervention of Austria, or if Austria should ad, water, air aud all natural clements, become a direct agent in proposing any. mea- 1 @ common gilts,’ and that * governments; sures which might produce a rupture in e ooly trustees to guard against their Europe, Russia, it was to be distinetly under- | © ae isapplication;’ that all clage legislation *0°d, would participate in my her arn y et wre y > nik: "hie! aie! Sek’ diletatiy thin’ : acting in conjanction i @ armies of | UVe Instit ms. but » Ie tear : sporting these cere elements from the | Germany for she ciulioh In atin po seven eights of the electors wou'd pro vny to the few is wrong and subversive of the treaty Biemarck made a grand coup l elat pounce ngainst disturbing the present sys- od government; that ail abie-bodied, by pretending to Prince Gortschako® that it| tem. and if this is so, why disturb it. It is teiligent persoas shouid contribute to ‘be was absolutely nece sary that Russia should/ well enough to amend and improve our ex- mimon stock, by iruitfal industry, a eum furnish a number of ships of war, which was isting law, bat it would be uw ise to des quantity equal to their own support, and | Spee Ged, armed, equipped and provisioned, | troy it until we had Popes that di noe at Yeyistation shoald tend, as far as yas) f0F Ibe Eatpose of providing Prosia with the) tional education yickded better fru an otter : . means of re ag an enemy atsea, and for! countri an it does : ajority me, tq te oe distribution of va Sedan of their wabpattn The Russian | the peop e* made up their minds io minke | ’ is to follow in that case. In discussing the merits of our present education system, neither Mr. Rowe bor any one else has anything at all to do with i€ ation, -~ ore > ifit can be shown that sectarian schools ae beter than secular svhools in nixed communities, and that a * majority” of the peopie are dissatisfied with the present ar- rangement and would prefer separate in stitutions of learning, by ali means let us have them. When a clear majority of the Bay they would preier separate schools, we shall lay down ons arms at once, and yield to their request. Majori ile in countries with representa- ee" jy» ope ; be -“ . are : ; I rpius proaucts They say, furthermore, Primier consented to supply theshipsof war,|*"no use of our, present government , { at © peuperiem and erime are the prevail-| which were to be under the direction of the/ Schools” surely the same =‘ majority’ Z questions of al! modern statesmansh p. Councils at Berlinand St, Petersburg, Austri: | could elect men to overturn them end sup d@ it is with these we have to deal ;’ and/ wee also to renounce in favor of Russia the | ply their place with sectarian ones But) at, althoagh ‘chattel slavery has been! entiie provinces of Galicia and Da!matia shonid is large port nol the people re solye | liked he vights and seltins of in'or| wn te ortunea o nar bad deidedn eis) to “maken use of nr eset gore ; . r ai r z ents named? 1€ treaty, ment se s 3 ouid ac 8 - vad ~~ where they did before Caen ‘i ameanel, oe ee ghould| deed, and there would be no remedy for| m im respect to the division of the pio-' 4, an accomplished fact. The further stipu- them. We do not fear such a result, how | wte of the laboring masses of the conntry.” | jgtions of the document provide that Russia | ever, and consequently do nat see the ne- “ This ‘s substantially the bill of grov- should then cedo to Germany five of her pru -' cessity of taking sueh a proposition ixto} sce of the International aod of the Parig| cipal seaport towne in the Baltic, togother! consideration. — Argus, Sept. 12. 7 Pare ant she reinedics suggested en ee = ; morgen’ snr = os a The above reminds us of one of the char- -s aki . hy oa ence. She was also tu cede to Germany part! : : “yee : ' ones ye ee ot the province of Courtland, ? eA in| 2 ters in the satire of Ginx s Baby. His : : eP pe : | making theese overtures ta Reasia, tas violated pameis Mr. Shortt and “he had been sble j* veeping poiltical revolution in the history! tn. ‘Treaty ot Paris, which itthereby regarded mankiaod. }as null and void, by pledging an armed parti- “Qu the remnants of the old issnes 2nd/cipation in she conquests in the East, and uvenirs of wary aod on half-way Gnanvia! agreeing to supply a force and the sinews of probabi In fact, pedients aad theories of reform on loth Wr equal to Russia, and the subsequent | heart and sou) to prophetic legislation; he «des; the Republican and Demoer nt Sem haven ediethons Se oo we } ' : »t aited untii e wa ween | ) ' ee = = France and Germany had ended, fiuds fiom | mouth.” a : : 5 8| the manner in which affuirs haye beenmanaz-| Our friend of the Argus is like Mr. residential campagne through the sheer) ed recently between ihe Courts of Berlin and | ree of party discipline and party loys'ty. Vienna, that Rnssia has been as completely ut as the old temporizing Whig purty | fooled by the machinations of Bismarck in ; Sat to pieees after the election of 1532, ‘wd as the old pro-slayery Democratic party : Sut to pieces after the election of 1860. so, 5 dare say, the Republic and Democratic ‘arty, as now organized, will both begin to! from aiding Austria on the Sebies« ig-Holstein! makes provision for the ‘probabilities’ » to pieces aftez the election of 1872, and) question.’ ' * om these disiptegations of both s des it i <n site possib'e that the party superseding| Goto W. A, Weeks & Co. for Cheap Goods | : | e@ Republican party in 1876 will be the , of course can not be ignored, 1 arty representing the combined agyreesive| A LIVING HEAD ON A DEAD BODY, | this we base our argument that the present jemeots of the labeuring classes of the! ; ‘,untry ageigst moneyed monopolies and | ‘ whinations. The working-mea have the oe ee ae me a score of times to demonstrate to the Liouse lities. he was, opposed would live, legislatively, from hand to , along as best it can from hand to mouth. lar recent treaty with Prussia, Bismare | agreed to give Luxemburg and other territory | | that may arise. The “ broad principle of right or wrong”’ —_——-— « wem - — ——— —- — ——-—-- + pee ---——__ -~—- -———— (From the New York Sun). -stes, and they need only discipli ' In Iowa resides James Auderson, aged 96, | Ple- ; s , 7 ey A Anta | Three years agohg died from his neck down. | oftentimes hard to determine. It appears , aes late isend’ hdaade a en ward. His head, however, is alive, and more | to us to be only right to aid schools that do si > /Urp ‘Ves CO get vivo h 2 i “as ‘ iia hi Ui sestasion in the election of 1976. it nar c ‘aa laedumens one oer | good amount of secular teac a 50 to _ re. not ouly of the Natioaal Governg ent, | eral times by an angry cow. speak, and that they should not be depri- |.» of every State Government of the! Shortly afterward, while he was eating | ved of assistance from the public funds be | pion. | bread and milk, a rattlesnake joined him, and * * Thst the elemeote of. o great revolu- when the two had finished, his enakeship | + ch @re fermenting in thie country vo imap ‘7 vo successfully dispute; that the revoly il come from a political straggle between - webupations of capital end a general com- # oatiog of labor is broadly foresuad. wed made his bow and retired. At 6 years old a| horse ran away with him, and made for a sta- and his mother seized him just in time to save} his life. Hegrew up a good gymnast, at the | time of ihe uceident was a haudsome young it carries conviction. When that ‘*majo rity’ for which the Argus . : ° “rr ; r respec 2 . rth of « } > i this lator reform movement, and is ap- man, : |comiIng respect agree with us, of ¢ USE | arent om every hand. The fearful de- One afternoon, at Glenwood, Iowa, he wes | the School Question wil! be fairly settled. coaliedl d . f both our *eciiDB OF ® pole. He had on gaiters tip-! ps thonch a maiorit oe ee ; a . : ULL ¢ ajorit g nid, at prceseni crait@ations aod corruptions o 8 OUr ed with patent leather. He swung down)!” IZ ’ vr y shouk ae peceegs, reat political portions the greedy, gras) ing trom the pole by his feet; the leather shppea Consider the school law all sufficient, that a ad (Btorliouate doings and demands of and he fell. He struck bis neck just where) is no reason why they should be right a combinations, of ee aud 1 joms the je wey re ed “ut Besides we doubt very much “that seven | ‘’ od speculating riogs, a *, Na}, Cerscious, iS DoGy Teit @s8 if crushed to a . . at pom g rings Bad of commer vial, jelly. Heexperienced a horrible tincling.| Cights of the electors would pronounce |. ackstering and manufacturing monop:les. J°Y- | per Peas ee. ulm wt See’ vise rit } { , , an ep the doctor came he told him not to| 2gainst disturbing the present system. jad the general tendency cf things io a ; ‘ Te oe ore re t rar ey 7 wet : SS i. - . : . F - iouch bim, a8 Dia body was broken €ces.'| How can that be ascertained otner than by *. ipant . % n . * i 4 : d £i0% < tain OLneCr ti ’ ;tgautic wicneyed sristocracy op the one) [ysamation set in, and all thought that bis th or vote. The Argus knows yeu hay and, and a multiplication of paupers, right well that on election day a dozen ‘- agraots end eriwinals on the other |aad, pave created a state of feeling amony the. ‘bouring classes, at home as well av al road, ,¢ bieb is full of danger ana mischie! to * the owers tbat be’ every where. * Lo the closely coutested election in New , lampshive last Mareb, this Labor R-form arty wiclded the balance of pcwer ; i the ! oming Massachusetis election, should Gen, _ datler be the labor candidate, be may iuro | be State topsy turvy. in this eveat even --.2¢ Presidental ciection of this year may ‘j,ecome a doubtful problem; but in any eud was come. ‘To the surprise of all, in a few days he bezan to mend. Time hung heavily on his hands, and he resoived to Jearn ty write with his mouth. He accomplished this, and, as he says in a | letter to Mr. J. K, Nutting, he soon wrote a! |tolerably good mouth. He is now trying to paint, and hopes by this means to earn some- | thing for his support, He has been, and stil) | er the School Question is let go by the board. As to whether the secular or sectarian his step-father, who, though a poor man, has| shown him every kindness, * ; | His worst enemies are the flies which buzz| View. Ifthe Argus wou'd reproduce it about his face. He hoids a leafy twig in his| his readers would see what is thought of : mouth however, and manages te twirl it about | religious education in England. t yeat, after November, 1872, we shal. have ip a wonderful way, and drives off his tormen- = : % ae beginniog of & new political agi(ation tors. The case ie without s parallel, except} ‘Ve pass on to the next question, which ;2 ‘this eoyntry, which will hardiy stop| that of Jon Carter, of England, who was in- | 2/ter all is the one nearest to the hearts of ‘short of the greatest and most radical and juted iu @ similar way, ana who became a Englishmen generally, and inquire, How * weeping revulution in the history of the '™0v# painter. | ‘vorid, and we shall be fortanste if we es-. » Ape another geveral civil war in passing _brougi this spproaching revolution. Such _Te the signs of times, aud we live in an | | ge of revolutions.” é Yesterday the Archbiehop publicly return- ed thanks to the various Catholic conzrega- tions for their exertions in making the Bazzar in aid of the building fund, so striking and |ecomplete a success. Hie Grace especially | aeknowledged the kindnesa of the Dominion Ree ee ge _, | tion, it implies, in the first place, the start- Government in having placed at bis dieponal, jing from # certain basis, by treating the the Drill Shed for so long a time, To the! °49 ee os in | millitary authorities also, bis Grace returned | | thanks for the liberal manner in which they | : mn ‘ ys wks : : F | of a state, but us a child of God that is. a furnished the various bands during the week, being created by God to have communion and algo to the baudmasters and their men with files. und to do His will Then - : ‘ ; So n¢} P din i ’ © S . . (.nce of the famous trotter Goldsmith Maid at [0° their care and taste in the selection of mu. | 41, process of education. it adds to the facts Jilwaukee, un Wednesday last. Acc nding | Sic and their penctual attendance. To the! pe : i f nature and of humanity, which all edu : D members of the different Cathelic associations, |? » a oS © the telegraphic uews received here, that es oerePS, | cation must endeavor to teach. the facts of ,' elebrated anima! has trotied a mile in iwo and to the Eugine Co., &c., the warmest ack : : 'a relation to God whichin a Christian srs- ie esa nowledgments were made; as al th . ; ra a. ts ea a yf wy. seconds, which,if true, ee of. other deneminehees _— hed tem involve the facts of the work and na- eats Dexter, long the champioa of ti turf, | a kindness quite admirable attended the Biz. t¢ of Christ, and the office of the Hol ne quarter of @ second, It is batt ath to! : honcee| Spirit. Lastly. in the object which it pro- ay that there are many pergons in the city, | aar, subseribed to it, avd stripped their houses ' tvell pested in the annals of the turf in this of some of their choicest a: ticles of ornament a | for the Museum. Altogether the Bazaar rea- ; _auetry for menuy yeors past, who re! use to - mer Oe | own development and happiness, with ' “veliewe that the. Maid bas made any such lized about $11,000, reckoning what W98 | remnine hind todd bie dotr in: this life 4 if j Le: ; : «ft; aad we feel bound to say that the dis |>. oe GUY Ih Shis fe <0 ‘ime, Amagng these, doubtless, te Mr, Robert) *"*3 SN. rae rr See, ae ae farmily, to his country. and to mankind | Benner, the owner of Dexter, Mr. Bonner play on the oceasion not only did credit to the | ° é thon =? lead hi a sy wa Milets te ad eed todhe oe community to which the ladies who worked | 2" /#"Ze ~it proposes to iead him to AaAVe aN i eq | fav it be : b le al | object, to ‘doall to the glory of God’ . Yorse. Indeed, if he were not such he would |" #t belong; but tended to raise the whole | O'J* =? . ta ’ Sas , » We cies fin thd anthinntian of shecanem a Hali fase | which from the nature of the case looks 106 have m his stables at the pregent time eo Express tpl J beyond all visible relations. and refuses to many €yv:ne aoimals which,in order te secure "eal | confine its operations within the limits of ania annals he. va obsized te pay out | this life. sundreds o : ee : dollore. The forth. | $0, it is the greatest truth; it may be false + 2omiog number of the New York Ledyer will and if so, it is the deadliest falsehood. Sema On ; | UBER REASON FoR ASKING PupLic Assts-|* : a atl aes paragraph OF extract : are To Emigaate.—At e ebiak cee | in nu case can it be treated as a secondary ; ome of the Goily fs have reported | the City Council ot Dublin a singular memorial | 2 ter, over which men may agree to differ. that Goldsmith Maid hee trotted a mile in) roma pereon named Aepel was read by the 2 ¢ old words ‘religious and - irreligious ' 2.97. SBverybody knows that she never saw | Town Clerk before the close of the meeting. Jt| imply a certain fundimental antagonism , the day she could do that without runuing, | prayed the Council te supply the apylicant with the newly-coined phrase * non-religious’ __ wut even if she had done it, it would leave her | the means of emigrating, upon the grounds that attempts an impossible neutrality. If reli 'Phehind Dexter, for hg trotted, in the | resence | he was constantly in the habit of getting drunk | gion be excluded, it is more than ignored; + of 10,060 people, in 2.16, although beaten ip) aud committing assaults when drunk, and be the effect on teacher and on pupil must be that race by a runpiog horse, who ma |e 2.15, Lome ee been in prison 67 tunes — It! equivalent to a denial. There can be no is aod thecelore got the record, : cedaulicaneeatned spare haont ery aoa wonder, therefore, that the attempt to send : {it into banishment, however honorable. : : ‘ in prison or @ lunatic asylum. ‘The Council were)... “oh : : ‘i From the Spirit opelve Fags. visitly impressed by the frankness of the eonfvas |Stitred all English society to its very b She will never be Dexter’s equal, in our ples by insisting on the paramount impor sibility of shelving it. Religious education does not cousist merely in giving a certain amount of theological or religious instrue- PORTING NEWS.—BONNER STANDS ON DEXTER, From the N. Y. World. The borsemen of this city have been much | xereieed in mind over the reported pe: furm- Go to W. A. Weeks & Oo. for Cheap Goods. , : : ion, and resolved to aid the penitent in turning de ths. . ‘ opinion, until she can,in @ race with » trotter| over a new leaf in Aweriea At the recommen-| _Nor is it necessary to show that if reli- and rauping mate superior to her in speed, | dation of the Board of Superintendanee his fel | gious influence is to touch the great mass trot a mile m 2 16 oa the Fashion covurse,and low-priseuers were made instrumental in prome | of the children who will c:owd our new | repeat in 3.172. » | Hing bis reformation, the expenses of his journey schools must be brought to bear on them '. If Goldsmith maid has really beaten Dexter's, betwg deirayed out of the profits realized by the! in the school itself ‘Those who talk of re- } time. ler owner is a fortupate man, fr if she | sale of thew work. eee et ees fe ' gulating it to the influence of Aome, must +; yas done it once, the presumption is she can! Fellows Compoand Syrup of Hypophosph ‘tes is } either be ignorant of what the homes (so ide it again, Some time since it was 'epored| the only preparution known whieh gives prompt | Called) of the children are or else must be : that Mr. Bonner stood ready to give $50,009 | and anergy relief in diseases of the Lungs and speaking in a mocking and cruel irony. jpfor any nore shat would beat Dexter s time rire ier atin es idamaien sit ute | 186 proposal to trust to the distinetly reli jn a fair, stynate trot of 4 mile. The writet is} nnenous membrane.wnd is the most certam remedy | S'0US teaching of variovs bodes, through if authorized in saying that Mr, Bonner upkes a Pebilitatirg Maladies Full directions accompany | their ministers or their’ luity, in churches “much more. ee eens i mn hs each bouls. rim chapels ey nen meals } ‘lows: Dexter, vib a road wagon an river, bilentiad . a ee 7 .. | lectures is more plausible and more really NGweighing together Hy pa behind him, pea en and at Toho won thet ieoties hopeful; but it igvores two very serious | made s mile in 2.217 about @ sear ag. The’ upyly of “Johnson's Anodyne Liniment’’? [tig difficulties the impossibility “wasoy was a road wagon, and the d; iver was} the most es ble oe ime for 4li purposes there | hold of the children in a large majority of _ Mr. Bogner himself, The owner of the Dex- there in the wor: | cases, and the great difficulty of finding fy ter aways he will give $100,000 for a: en Conta Jigs disseac*, aneh we Lore ail, albeidin| places for them and sufficient teaching ma- a —_-——---. @&> _————B 000 - that will fairly beat that gime, and ande be prevent @ by tho use of “Sheard chinery to hear upon chem if they dotome me emanaal lf the owner of f f ry Condi.ion bs wders.’* Peiine traveling Those pleas havé been pretty well * threash- Nice that beata that time ix not wilhitg to IN} with horses should ui Be mote of ibis.” >’ ea out,” atid the small quantity of wheat in % ne i then effectually separated trom the large | | quantity of chaff, } | government schools, and Jet us know what/ ' c oe ‘in the educational strife anticipated the | taking such a ‘' prdbbability’ into consider The question should be discussed | on the broad principle of right or wrong. | —_ om i. Pa It is agreed. with tole-) rable unanimity, that the propesyl to ex-| clade religion from the sehools is virtually | “Wo read an article sume tims sines which a proposal to exelnde it in very great mea- aol vecbeolnad Y tk sure from the theory and process of educa- | English High Commis tion. siuners as a set oft The great question. therefore, has had) fairly to be faced. We alwaysthought that its decision woulda not be doubtful. AS! cane—and it was in the Prim declared that there could not be @ | editorial columns of the Republic in Spain without Repub icans so, | Akrus.” — Lxaminer with more ynquestionable truth, we belie | 4th Sept. ved that there could not be a secular sys:| We beg pardon of our tem in Englaud without secularists. But centemporgry. We have ; ? : : ‘ recolleet f usin we are inclined to think that neither party soy aaah lasdies, we : ; ; might possibly have decisiveness and vigour with which the | guoted fuses words aa answer of public opinion bas been given on this point. ignoramuses, wha were outwitted by the Ameri velng used by some of those whose views were The reviewer further says:— in Opposition to the ™. 6 L oe f public | 24 but we never The first remarkable indieation of pubic lused them to express opinion was shown in the petitions presen-|oy- own opinions of ted to the House of Commors. ![n June, ] ¢ither the treaty or its 1870, when the discussions in Par jament |} framers... From the very were almost approaching a conclusion, the | first—that is when we Union published an abstract of the petiti | came to understaud the ons. drawn from the official Report of the | previsions of the treaty Committe on Public Petitions, and there |e expressed oursel fore of no doubtful authenticity, by which|%¢* #8 faverable to ite it appeared that the number of pe titioners | *4ePtion, und we can Ce ee fi es the | See no reason for chang~ in favour of the general prov isions cf the ing our Vina,’ We fe Bill was about twelve times the number Of | say, and. we ang 60 elill those opposed to it, and the number peti justment bargain ? HE THAT RUNS CAN READ. While we do not be- lieve in the doctrine of coercion, we think oure eelyes entitled to jue- tice, the present Treaty,«m our opinion, tlearly in dicate, thar the British Commissioners were ontwitled by the shrewd Americans, or compromiced our rights in their eagerness to re- establish tions with the United States, It is notorious that on all commissions and arbitrations te- specting these provin- ces, whether in the get- tlement of commercial ifficulties, or the ad- of national boundaries, the shrewd Yankees invariably manage to get the bet ter of the bargain. How can we account for the Are the Americans better skill- edin diplomacy? On the contrary, we be- lieve that ov the pre- sent Commission — es- pecially, greater talent was ranged on the Bri ithe extracts which we gave from The provisions of either | riendly rela- We rant the Progress to understand that | named Smith who enlistedin the Revolutionary war, and baving lost an arm in the service of tne other par Crown had yranted this lock of land. Soon fter ne was drowned ot sea and his wife und c : e ; a pers, concerning him, were not intended as WN" ii vent to Chatham, where the old lady an insult by us. to show that some of our contemporaries, us, said hard things of himself. We agree with him in despising personalities. and we. give him credit for respecting the imper- sonality of the press; but why does he not: go still further, and discuss questions with-| out sneering at the sincerity of those who ean not see all qnestions in the same light ashe does. Then he finds fuult because ‘we do not rebut his charges. It is impos- ‘sible to find time to attend to all the fudge’ one sees in newspapers, and we scarcely) ever read any personal squibs, whether | directed against ourselves or others. As- ‘to our friend’s sneers about “saints,” it | We cited them reluctantly | died. States and married she re dpe ayain, sho af aled jadgment against wealitry, one mere" =e 1g * lwmatter through. | | quieuly working the case up since last winter, We understand that Charles Duff, Esy., of St. Jobn, is ibe counsel in the cause, the whole of the saw will property and “ym formerly owned by Messrs Holderness and Mac- The daughter then went to the United Hey first Lusband having died The present husband is very end. it ie suid is determined to carry tho It appears that they have been The claim embraces Leod aud a large amount of valuable private pro- perty. We do not sink it likely that the validity of the claim can be establishedSr. Croix Covu- RL ER The Tea Party of the Presbyterian Sun- day School children came off on Wednes- day, on Government House Grounds. Above 409 little ones were present, and — enjoyed themselves pleasantly. There were several visitors pregent, but not, so many as there would have been, only for would be as well to leave that alone There! the disagreettble dust, which made tt a}-* is not much chance of any saiat ever being | canonised in this Island so long as we have} so many “ devil's advocates.” i ———~o <> o- We have received a list ofa ‘*New Go- most impossible to go through the streets, The interesting sketch on the first page is from Pure Geld. The Board of Arbitration under the ae vernment ’ which the writer thinks is bet-| Treaty of Washington, stands at present as i , not.” of Commons how silly it was to consider | Shortt, } s satisfied to let the School Question get | relation to this treaty and ite couditicns, the | Nevertheless, legislators must take proba-| same as France, when in 1566, under a simi- | pi)jties into account. Indeed what is known | as the highest statesmonship is that insight | to Napoleon on conditiou that he abstained | into the future which not only sees but | spirit in the bitter, scurrilous way he refers | 'to the allusion to himself in the personal of | i the and it is on | school question should be amended or} altered so as to meet the wants of the peo-| What is right and what is wrong is. not raindful as to who enjoys the good | cause religious instruction is given in them, | |} especially so long as the people are taxed | : | for education. This seems so reasonable | 00\ ble, across the entrance of which was a bar, | that—to our mind—the mere statement of, has so much be-| questions came up, and that with the efforts | of politicians to get or keep place and pow- | is, tenderly cared for by his sister, herself a| System is best, we command the perusal of |a swindle, he has no ngkt to attribute im ‘cripple, andspeaks io ihe highest terms of | the following passage from an article in the | proper motives to us current no. of the London Quarterly Re-} : Sa | Herald$ late Catholic | will Religion fare under the new systern?| We do not think it necessary here to lay | jelaborately the foundation of first princi.| them before a jury of their fellow-colonists. | . | We say, moreover, that we will be slow to | tance of the question, and the utter impos | | who have hitherto borne unblennshed lives 1 " ° e ; . mh |are parties to a ‘criminal’ swindle. The| |law under which we live, thank God, gives | ‘child, not merely as an individual being, | not merely as the member of a family and! heard before being pronounced guilty, and | the day has gone by in Prince Edward Is-| |land when any other less charitable or less | | fair praciice can prevail. _|the Contract, he has been misrepresented | ;a ae ° i . - . ‘ i ae poses to the child asthe reward of educa- | representation has been indulged in thought- Pollard was promoted Corporal of Police lion, it is not content with aiming at: bis! | those who blame him will be the foremost Qn motion of Mr. J. H. Fletcher, the | jto do him justice. Now this may be true, and, if} } Bat) of getting ter than ours. He suggests Mr. Howat for Leader and Mr Laird for Postmaster oom era). We must adhere to our own arrange: | ° ° e | mentas we think it was a correct one,as time | that the treaty does not tioning for re ligious education, in some give vs all we had a right form, Was no less than 3sl 214, as against to expect for the sur. 23 642 petitioning on the other side. Al-| ri udering of our value lowing forall the macuracies and fa lacies | able fisheries, yet, we of statisties of this kind, the resu t was un-| Would preter to see it go tish side In no way can we account for the apparant superiority of the Americans over tie British an Treaty mak sinkeable, and, we believe, astonishing | "to atlect, rather than ing, rg than that the wi} tell,—that is. if some of the “ slips be | hex gar Eee We ee . “9 things remain British have not made M > > é 'to both sides in the strugg e. joco things remain Gs] Brus twixt the cup and the lip —with which themselves sufficiently acquainted with the re- scources of these Provin- ces lo appreciate their importance. Had the fisting grounds been located aoug the Eng- ish coast, we suspect that the American press would not to-day be in a position to be su much enamored wilh the liberality and democra- tie proclivities of the British Commissioners It is true that a mixed Comu!ssion and umpire is to value the respec- tive fishing grounds and should ours be found jwnere valuable, we are | ‘ to receive a Compensa- ‘A enable him to pronounce that the majority | jtion in money, Srould | | we receive a fair equiva ; jthey have been in the In a future number we will show more} past. It we ean obtain fuliy the feeling that exists in England in regard to religious education, and reply human aifairs are fraught should not oceur | The Patriot even is not satisfied with the} handsome place we assigned him. He) thinks he can forma ‘* New Government "| |without our assistance Perhaps so, but we question if he can form a better one. If so let himi—to use a Common phrase,— *- trot them out.” Well back our * New Governmeet’’? against any thing he can| form. Will the Patriot also please give the pub ie his policy. He certainly has achanvce at last of * knocking the Railway on the |head-’’ but nevertheless we still hope the “ world will move on.” - —_—-- oe HAT a sweet, dear creature Elder Laird of the Patriot must be, to be the re- }a money Compensation ‘ lor if we can get our v0 jagricaltural produge in- the second article of our Queen Square | to the American market : | {ree of duty in exchange > smporary. which seems to us to con- : : contemporary ™ i fur our fisheries, welb ‘ie } For instance | aad good, but if neither lof these can be obtain. ed, then, by all means, lottetown who swear than those who do} jar us pave the treaty as We know our Argus has watchfal)i! stands, We should » ‘ “ | be sorry to Bee the op- ves * 2a he hers ‘ : , Ws aye > eee” ; eyes and since he became a City Father | position of one Mitkas looks faithfully after the morals of the ri-} land stand in the way of jtu amicable adjustment F : : ee: jot great natioval diffi- give hini credit for such intimate acquain: | py ities, — frgus, Sept y | 12, 1871. tain some strange assertions. he says that “ there are more boys in Char sing city generation, but we can scarcely tance with the ‘*‘ daily walks and conver . . t sation” of the Charlottetown boys, as to| | lof Switzerlanc f the are swearers , they ir he | i of them are swearers. If they were, the} | lent for the privileges we : cipient of such favors as the following, | argument tells strongly against secular | | concede we would not be which we find chronicled in the last issue follows; Charles Francis. Adams, arbitra- tor on the part of the United States; Chief Justice Cockburn, arbitrator on the part of Eng'and; Genera! Menabrea, abitrator ap- pointed by the King of Italy Jacques Staempfei “Pr inted by the Government . The Emperor of Brazil bas also to name the arbitrator to complete the number required by ‘the treaty. : It is reported that the River St. Laws” rence is drying up. Rey. Mr. Rand avell known in this Is« land has been appointed Superintendent of Education in New Brauswick. The new gun mentioned recently by the Argus, and invented by Mr. Thomas Huestis, has been generally noticed by oute" ‘. side papers. The gun, we have reason to believe is all that it has been represented By aid of a lever, it is leadéd and un- loaded, and, with twenty barrels, i can discharge 12 000 balls im a minute. With a few of these guns, and our gallant yolun- teers, Prince Edward Island might. stand - education jin a position to com : 1 a | | plain; ont this need not of that ‘*somniferous”’ sheet the Patriot by! against “ a wor!din arms.” It is well known that the religious | ibe expected, Our fist ery tesources are omy beginning to be devei- oped, and, consequently © schools haye not been in existence two, ’ an aged lady. 3s. 8d.; a'so from a young years yet, and hence “the boys’ have | lag ady, 3s. 3d.; J Zz lady, 12s. 6d., per Rey. R. Laird.” Is this scarcely had time to break off the “‘ swear | it is very difficult to : : j in huceiwg | : i : . ic ‘ ete € ing’ habits which they certainly never estimate their value. the price of his apostacy in again hugging | re: ' . : British and American Commissioners are the ieaat likely to award us ; Oa : sufficient compensation | Joun ARBUCKLE Es@:, well Besides the Americans, Teacher aud a School visitor, died suddenly at | do not admit that ovr A\berton on Saturday last He was on a visil sevogtrgetclie crated onphad to his sister, and seemed to be in good bealth thle than theirs. and be | fore the Commisstoners | When he left the city a few days ago. Mr, Ar- to be appointed lo esti mate ther respective value,can come to set tlement . there will lilely be another compromise —_ —e in rehgious or sectarian schools. -_—————_ + eee 0 -- known as a would have acquired hed they been trained i THE Herald does not show a very friendly } ’ ‘* New Government.’ Our only objec t| give an interesting paragraph, and| we believe he is the only one who took it illnaturedly. Should he get the Queen's Printing, we shall not envy bim his posi- tion, and would just as soon he should have is as any one else—ourselves, of course, | excepted. We know we will have a long | time to wait our chance for the tarn of the | We might stup here, but in justice to the Argus) As we go to press, we have received the Roya! ° we give the concluding words of the above article | Gazette, which contains the ** Correspondence lot May 2d- was to He reach ed more than the “ three score years and tea’ of our rights for the). = ‘ } ae benefit of the “Mother | being 74 when he died. He will be — to, Country —Argus, May,| “orrow at 3 o'clock, The Funeral wili leave 23, 1871. | his Sou’s Residence, near the Ferry Wharf. There-is no need of comment on the above, + ete gretted by a large number of friends, political wheel of fortune, and hence ar | between the Governnunt of P. E Island and ; ; : Ae age ler | “Provincial and American Commissioners bring | Messrs. T. & C. Walker, W. D. O'Brien, H, D things. We certainly think it is a poor , et . de santsauy Gaitialed eudleialiaiiee. anetien | about an equitable settlement of Provincial Ques-| MeLeod & Co, J. H. Fraser & Ca. Wm ) , e -religious contempor- |". : : ; : ‘ iL tah i : | tions, aud should be allowed to arbitrate all such | Rannie & Co., and Collingwood Skreiber, on ary to call low names, taken second hi: : J : ae % oe mwne'| matters. Although the treaty is not a!l that we} the subject of the acceptance of their tenders to out of the mouth of the Patriot, which has| grown ashamed, and left off the disgusting reject it. It is not as favourable to us as it wight We shall review the whole affair in our next, and practice. His justification of himself will | be, yet it wili be much more advantageous to us | give the Correspondence. not do, that we made an improper us of} than the way our fisheries were managed in the = any conversation had with him. We never| past.” | ’ used a word in ast week’s paper nor at any | —---- “ . i formerly of South | Shore, whilst out boating in compamy with harborjy about three Matthew Whelan, The Argus condemned the Treaty, but alwaya it was better than to let things remain as! another in Boston lhe reference to the caucus we had learned | they are. We think that by holding fast to what }we have, we may get time, derived from any information of lus. | thought weeks ago from several persons on Saturday, and that Reciprocal Free Trade setting. His body was jound three days could not be kept private when a printed “an 4 United States, Though, we shouid not afier, He leavesa wife and three child. ‘eed, there is a glory in manfally battling for!» rcular was sent to more than a dozen of |*¥6<*rts there isa glory in maofully battling ren. te Lhe -] our rights up to the very moment of utter defeat ae, , . 1e@ ! cpect oO nature 1e | pe opr. 16 ** unsuspecting” nature - t 1€ | sich A BA ot Re TO CORRESPONDENTS: proprietor of the /eraid. we hope, will re- | COMPLIMENTARY ceive due sympathy, and that his misfor once J. M. J chuatone.—-Received, will appear in 4 nie | mn . . ie | our bext. at being a “ victini of misplaced con-| THe Examiner, published at Charlotte j q , . . If we | town, P. E. L. is, as many of readers know, jnow conducted by our former townsman, | &|P. R. Bowers, Esq.. and we are pleased to/| tune, ' = M. Rowe.—Letter reeeived put in t fidence * will not be lost on him. a 7 M. B.~—You wust give us your name, can not go as far as the Herald in d ‘Head Quarters at Rassa ’—You must send |} nonueing his late confireres in the Govern-! see that under its new management asun-)| Us your name in confidence, li . . | ; i ment as ** criminals,” and parties guilty of | der the old w hen our esteemed fr rend, the | : J B.--The matter referred to, is }underway |late lamented Hon. Edward Whelan, con- and will be sent you this week. : ™ | trolled its destinies, it is in every respect : ‘ : : ¢ +SUINICS , 1 Jy Test 2 L A. M.—Attended to. We have no person- | credit to provincial journa ism. We wish! luck: al knowledge of any Railway Ring, and do; Mr. Bowers the fullest success, and from | not know the contractor in any way. We_| his talents, industry. and perseverance, we : }are sure he will win 1t.—Szt. Croix Courier, Glad of your good R. P MeP —Amount of subseription received, am |do know that one Member of the Govern- | Sept. 12, i871. ment was most anxious to give the contract to Mr. O’Brien and we now say that we cannot condemn him and some other of the Weare thankful for the good word of the | Pur rent Hews Items ' Courier. To one commencing business, it) ~ Suatrecte: WiBbi| 3 a — to ooare to make efforts 7 A Manitoba paper says that Mr. Archibald is . . | do right in one ‘ ~| to resi yer i at Provine having such evidence as would convict g me of the most honor able pro | to resign the Goveraership of that Province, and fessions. as we believe journalism to be. | to be made Governor of Nova Scotia, J We hope to make very marked improve-| : i , | There is a story of an English tourist w . ments in the EXAMINER, and rely upon our ienhe ce ae ; . tenho ves : ‘ ya few ser . subscribers to enable us to do so. The | oF y er hee , nil | was able to order a “dinner. He wished some | Sums due us, though not large for each one, | mushrooms—very delicious and large. Not know- " | ing the name, he demanded a sheet of paper and ; We trust, therefore, that all OUT | peneil and sketehed one. Tho waiter vudersiood subscribers and advertizing patrons will) pin ina second, disappeared for ten minutes kind!y pay us the respective amounts this and returned with a splendid—umbreila i }fall, and enable us to make the lmprove-| matin ments which we contemplate. The Steamer St. Lawrence was obliged to re- main at Summerside on Wednesday night, owing Crry Counce, Arrarms.—On the 11th|'? te heavy blow, She reachod Charlottetown on Thursday about 4 o'clock, inst. a full meeting of the City Council, ap pointed Mr. F. Johnson a policeman in | place of Mr. Toombs, resigned. believe that these gentlemen, and others | | nmount in the aggregate te several thousand } dollars. go g | to the meanest subject the mght of bein + oe + som + Because Mr. Howlan was not in town! during the negotiations for the letting of | Wednesday last, was one of the dustiest days ever seen in Charlottetown. Some means should | be taken tu sprinkle or macadamize the Streete, ; : cee se yood deal in the city Police un | € > Perhaps this mis ‘ . lag irre orce at increase of 5s. waves per m i er lessly, and, when the facts are known. ore wow Mr. Robert White has fitted out a go d teau and conveyance for bringiag spring wate . i or yl ls s - ig r to Censuring public men | gs without collars and name of OWNET | town, unheard, is not a safe proceeding, and eed thereae will have.a hard time of Th ; should be discountenanced by all lovers of | t after the first of Ootober. Any dogs | ates et Seer vere i ee Me“ Hotslan bis been in public | found on the streets after that date, uncol-| don and Montgomery do business, caught fire on life for above eleven years, and all that | ared, will be collared and knocked in the| a ve a i Cebit ae eee i TL: “ ‘i a : was speedily put out, time he has not made a cent out of polities. jhead. ‘This will lower the price of sau | eg | sages. |on Monday, probably fram sparks from one of ; Persons in arrears for City Taxes a chitunies ia the avighborhood, 1868, 1869 and 1870, are to be made pay| The Patriot of yesterday reiterates the old up. nice sioeneuee Speakership having been offered On the 14th on motion of Mr. W.E.|itin. M, nal aya a an a Dawson the sum of six pounds was voted ‘note to the Leader of the Government, wherein to Mr. R. Harris, for painting an oil por- t slice "theme, i9.n9, tyath la the asser, | trait of the Inte Hon. Robert Hutchinson. |? : That is a move that every one will approve) The town of St. Andrews, N. B., is to haye a of, and reflects credit on all concerned, _/| {*8t-elass hotgl, St. Angrews is very pleasantly It was ordered that an additional police- situated for a summer watering place, and will man be appointed to look afier cows, pigs| probably ealla great many visitors there when pull Whee ema anilke the line of Railway is completed from Bt. John it was also ordered, on motion of Mr. vn rere Dawson, that the Treasurer s books be laid before the Council for their inspection and | information. A petition of 500 citizens was, an the 11th inst.) presented to the Mayor and Council, protesting against opening another grave The Halifax Burton or Tangier Crew won| yard within the city limits; but as acite for the race and first prize $1,000, at Montreal, a suitable grave yard has been procured im by one hundred and fifty yards, or eleven | the Royalty, no fuither action was deemed boate lengths, defeating both the Renforih | necessary in regard to the matter. and Taylor-Winship Crew, Time.—33 mis-| We observe that the City Council are ates and 10 seconds—distance five miles. really in earnest making lmprovements, ; ———a- and we are pleased to find that the repre- Advices from Rieshes tee ax bs » Ke We call attention to advertizewent in another ; , : ‘ column, * Boarders Waasted;” this is a rare sentatives of Ward 2 takea prominent part that the whole of thar fair play. Living a distance from the city, 1t cost him time and money to attend the meetings of Executive Council. Whatever msy be the censure his opponents give him, (and it is impossible for any man 1n pyblic life to es- cape censure.) we believe that he has never been truthfully charged, hitherto, with not attending to any duties imposed upon him in the Legislature and Executive Council. During the meeting of the Executive that transacted the railway affans, he was en gaged on a contract to get off the large ship which had stranded near Alberton. Had’he left the work which he was domg, he would have failed to perform an agree- ment and thereby have lost at least 4500. Besides, we must presume that be had con fidence in his colleagues, and that he is in accord with their proceedings. aera ey A EID ly a The fact that this Island is to have a Railway is atirring up the Newfoundianders to go and do likewise, K ames ILLED.—A little boy,son of Mr. J, B Meese, tencher. Charlottetown, was killed this a ersean, Near Spring Park, on the Ma! peg ne Road, by fa ling from the front part of a truck the wheels of which passed over bis body brais’ ing him iv a terrible manner. He wag only seven years - age. The truck belonging to Mr. J. 8 od 1, aud was being driven ta the Spring by MB servant mun tor water, The acei lent occured while the man was aryang’ng the water casks which were about falling off the truck We syinpethize with Mr. McKenna ; as : ; . au their bereavément.—H eran. | # bis family in . Coyuty, ipf 2 vigh and shrieks a ll : : Xs p illaye chance, only a few ean be accommodated. in the refurms going on. | sFignding trom Beattie’s Bridge to Child’ ‘C : SEs ee et Coe oe ORS ba 5 is laid claim to by the daughver of un old soldan’ S. one so 2 oe Senter of ap old soldier, its « hypocritical ” editur: *‘ Received ord the editor of the Herald to his besom.— Com. | buckle was a sound sebular, a good teacher, and | National Division of the Sons of Tew per- | Ns f a kind hearted man; and his death will be re-| | ean desire, yet, we think, it would not be wise te | build a Railioad through Prince Edward Island.” | Hate Celegraphic Aetws.. was drowned by the boat up | The same roof was on fire. ‘subscribed The King’s County Fair and Exhibition | will be held in Georgetown, on the 5th and 6th of October The weather has become so eold during the past few days that stoves have to be. used. Messrs. John Jury. Henry Wadman, W.. C. Trowan, and Isaac W. Wadman, have, returned from the Annual Session of the ance. They speak of it as one of the moss successful and interestiug sessions hitherte held. - = Goto W. A. Weeks & Co, for Cheap Goods, On Thursday last Rev. Wk, Frame wae in. ducted into the pastoral charge of the congrega- tion of West St, Peters and Mount Stewart. Rev- Mr. McLeod preached on the ceeasion, Rev. J. Allan addressed the minister, and Rev. 1. Mure ray the people. Mr. 2d rame eaters upon a field for many years without a settled pastur, and wil? have many opportunities of bringing sheaves to his heavenly Master.—Pat. ’ vey ew European London, Sept. 11. Consols 93}. Other markets firm. Qveen Vicioria has completely recovered. . ‘the cases of cholera in North Germany are diminishing rapidly. ‘lhe Berlin “ Zeitung” to-day announces the re, : sult of negotiations at Salebarg as follows: Aus. : trian and Germany, repnadiating aggressive idexs, will auite closely to repel ageression. Germany i continues to wish Austria to be strony, and Ans. ¥ trian Emperor and statesmen desire yuion with e italy. oie Foreign. e & * Valparaiso, Sept. 11. The yield and exportation of coul this year from Chili has been extraordinary. United |_ States. New York, Sept. 12, About the third place in the fouroared race, a compromise waseffected by paying the Biglin and Taylor Winship crews each 730 am- onnt of third money In the Single Scull Race six contestants started, Sadler took the lead from the start and kept it, Witting the race by several boats’ iengths, in thirty minutes eight and balf sevonds; Hy se. cond, John Biglin third, Eilis Ward fearth und and Bagnall fifth, Bright giving up the contest be. fore completing the first mije Muine vote yesterday and gave a Republicau majority of over ten thousand, ‘ne Graud Trunk Railway station at Sarnia, Out-, was burned on Satartuy ; loss $20,000, New York, Sept. 11, _ At the Sagstorn Regatta to-day, the Wards caine in two lengths ahead ; the Tyne orew were secoud, leading the Bigtins aud Paytor:Winship erew by halfa dozen lenuths, The Taylar.Winshir crew claim a foul at stake boat. m The enthusiasm over the triumph of the Ward Brothers is tremendous. Tho judges have deelared a dead race between the Biytin und Taylor-Wingbip. crews, for third place in the regatta, aud the twe crews will row again to degide the point. Owing toi jonetion, the City Chamberlain did not pay orta dime yesterday, and warrants for money were given lo city creditors, Nix persons were killed io Newburyport, Maste to-day by an explosion, ofa boiler, Gold 13) to}. Exehange 9}. Boston, Sept. 12. New York papers, Just received, all agree that the four owred race at Saratoya yesterduy was the finest ever rowed in the world. ; ‘ihe water was perfectiy smooth, as it is almost always, and the Ward Brothers won by sheer row il. + They had been training and i ; six weeks, while the Enalish saene wees Otee training. The start was a tremendons pace, the crew yetting the worst of it; and ae the end of the race was between the Wards and the Bonguray crew, and the Taylor Wiusbip and iwiins. The Wards palled a stroke very like Renforth’ crew, and abont the same to the yamute, and the Tavlor Wiushipaud Biglins did about the same as o Bolen o doubt but that each did its best, for the Wards did their pretthodr: aud never aus safe from the Rentocth crew, . Tremendous cheering groeted them as the croesed the line in 24 winu es and 40 anon tek on the stake boat in LL. 40. : ‘Ver¥ One is anauimous in condempi duct of Bright as first class oarsman. “or _Taylor-Wiship crew never on hp. uy ngs pe turning; and would have only that the stopped mee @ aa - roweit, Sialas ‘he English papers think th victory is due to the stake lout arrangement, which was as fuir for oue as the oi her, for there were six stake : the grofessiona} gamblers bad backed the Tay lor- iustip crew, and lost very heavily. In the single seull race. Sadler had throughs out, except once when Kelly headed him atthe eud of the first mile, " « ; Ward, a Bagnall had as mech as h ld and was well bebiud Jobn Biglis. ee Time 30 35, —s He Rostorth crew gave the second prige to the They received great cheering ag they appeared on the Lake, Boston. Sept. th. The Bigtin crew crossed the line firet,the Taylor Winship crew haviug stopped rowing. No one having seen the foul, Morrisey decided they sho yow over, and at the time, Taylor prosest aguiusy such an arranwement as wntajr to t : xenerously pajd each $750, the full amgnpt of the third movey, leaving the question as, ided by the race itself. The judges pleased neithet srew,. ; N Se Gold i, Exchange a ae ae ve A national testimonial is proposed in bpamvet the Ward Brothers for their vietory over the Engs lish crews, Several New York politicians bavg 100 each, Ce Tibi. hm