~onwaom-mew ea ere eg te aert Ieee. genjus, who insists on learning everything tor itself, ond will take netbing on trust, Til copyinced by experiment, jt will not) — man-atturney—the very incarnation of their! peor of the 2th inst., says itis thought that the |‘he losses on either side are not serious. own frailties. There is his photograph—) 1, look at it. idians have been induced to commit these out- Vould ever norme/ intelligence} rages by Indians from Missouri and secession |Gen. Pope holds the railroad bridge, as well |as two commanding positions on the opposite you hear the news? the Award is lost! the Duke of Neweastle has rejected it!—what will the Go- We congratulate the good people of this favoured ly been blessed with an expansion of his benevo- country on havirg a public officer who has sudden- | a - eure samen eee terete has = : a a = ~ : ° for the oecasion—all parties implicated in com- | solution of these dificulties, which 2 i : ai rted in Fredericton } ved. mas 1@%, Which, 96 long » ; Gleanings from late Papers should levy war on one another, Formerly | the place. He reports that the Sioux —— - fa tol eee or Pier Majesty's forces in t Nae. passing the destruction of the dear lamented nee ist Continue to obstruet the'p mech. ~— . nies ~ | the Cavaliers were the tyrants of the old | united nese z oan thet be will boent ted British America has issued an order, directing Award. The learned Counsel must shew that) This conclision which ] have adonted re 10 n NOY country struggling to put down the Paritaps | desperate se ‘that th op ot wful upper bands of'| that in future all deserters cought in the act, shall ee the Duke of Neweastle, and the Proprietors, and | tbete Acts, renders it unnecossnre that Tahoe ta AMGRICAN CURRENCY. —to-day it js the new World Koundheads | '@PPy te-tind that the pow se instead of being transported to g penal ber 8th, 1862 more than acknowledge your Dispete, weed do . wie rt their despotism, and the Caval Yanktons and other tribes have not ynited. be shot, instead of being po Charlottetowa, Septem r ’ *\the Crown Law Officers, are all a pack of} the 95th of Jone, enclosing g meme a 46, of (From the Times: } { ; ar ‘ 4 tee Mr. Frenjer writes to Gov. Ramsey ou tha 21at acteny. -— Se ~ men! humbugs and tricksters—that they don't know Haythorne against the Act (Cap. xii P frou Mr. me of the South who strike for their independ- iust., saying that be Jeft Port Ridgeley ut 2 o'¢jock : ——byer hates that in the four| © = & P the operation of the Award ) W facilitate 4 The United States have lately made creraljence. Here was a people who would never| mn that mening, “There were thea over ‘AW0Q| A parliamentary I tewure to the anoupt off PHE BUBBLE BURST —THE AWARD] law or anything else; and that the Award must Shave, the Oe t discoveries, some of which will hence-| think or reflect when there was anything te! [ndians at that Fort, aud all the wooden buildingaxyears, 1857-60, S edits British India, from “OUT OF THE WAY.” be resuscitated jn spite of them. “ Won't we,” Liett. @ (Signed) NEWCASTLE ferth form tt of the Latonal stock of! do. Here was the time and place for leaders, | there had been set gn fire and were burning. Mr. "a and egy POPES . gu says Mr. Secretary Pope, “bring the British steal. Governor Dundus, &e. &¢. ' = eet — mn ps aa wor wise einiaces, for greatstatemmen. What} Fresier thinks ef at jonni a cavaiennaiinnh —= POLITICIANS in town and country have been vd r nt to their se at Won't we teach | (£ztract from Minutes of Executy F i ’ , : om Si 4 y vw ~seutavery f idable | === ies sai anak aematuaali ' : id : overnme o PRES | . ive ( . wt ison cantante tcteens policy and Woes = aot Onsaaenen ee array. ee ee ee Th 3 Civil War in the States very qyamh “ameenen ony ay vont hens such a leason as to make them understand Covscin CHameen 22d jae . A P ec ‘ i ‘ » § : f { e te - , i llige phic i F . : ; . . ’ ° » ae otis — oa a ‘i wegemnete!, oe place of a seaator—a pon- th . See ae Sr caoiien — ; ane | of the — — Z "se a ne Sense the folly of slighting the Parliament of this - la a eer: a ® great war yoes ehormous Gebt ang taxr} coring father of the Republin—a wise and |e "yury ae ee aia) ad » 08 a , ‘ » | circulated after the meeting o ae try and disrespecting the Ministers of Govy-| , B &xceHency the Lieutenant Govern od ation ; that chege produce paper money ; that) pm an sc patriot to awe ¢hem with ven- tie be oe ee FF - ante oe FROM POPE S ee ooo Council on Tuesday, regarding the rejection of |°™” ; > aa _ Phe Hon ~ Palmer, The Hoa. Mr. ae ‘a this in time becomes ineonvertible-—tor the} eration into silence—to govero their pride Seite part of Sibley, and other counties and the DERATES OBTAIN regan . 1s | the “so-called Arard of the Land Commissioners,” or ene : cjicitestion oh the sitet M: a r. Pope, present, at least; that, therefore, the pre-| and passion by the persuasiyeness of measur- adjoining country, 4 i the available horses are Puitaperrmia, 25.—The Bulletin bas in- Duke of Neweastle describes it. The sup- We are in eestacies of admiration at the gr My Movilens Mr. Simpson cious metals rise #7 & high premiuu, then | od thought—to soothe their tarbulent souls i gathered together, and all sorts of weapons |formation from a gentleman who left the | as the . eo . . i sone nese spirit displayed by our Provincial Secretary in The Board having tak ; : disap All this is ABC to us, but A by the voice of virtue and reason—they call! will be used by williag hands tor immediate sutn- Rappahannock yesterdey morning, that our| porters of the Clovprnanen were be are ? contemplation of the “ vai” which he theestens inmemnh itil intitetod ~ ite consideration a. Bb C is hard learning wo those who have not to the helm the cork and bubble of their wary Veugeance upon those blood-thirsty Indians. | troops had frequent skirmishes with the re- | ment, running wildly hither and thither—grabbing to make upon the Government of Great Britain. | ences between Landlord and Tenant ant differ. learnt it. America is the child of original electioneering intrigaes—a Mississippi boat- Cmicaco, Ang. 23,—The St. Paul (Mino.) Pio- | bels while falling back from the Rapidan. | |... onother by the button-hole, exclaiming: “ Did : p Tenputs on certain Townships to py enable ; : u version of their tarms,”” sabmit reliase the re- Cngard, on bebalf of himself, and a“ ped Saree | prietors of Lands in thie Island aad lags , kod transmitted to ; 7 : . 5 i 1 dis Excellency the Lieutenam G : Weliewe that the Gre buras, that edge tocls —healthy mindedpess—the capacity to look | traitors of that State, and Yat when Major Gal- | side, which the rebels have assailed seyeral | vernment do? it was their oly hope, you know Tieie ilies regarding Tenant Rights and Wrongs; | patch from His Grace the Dekoot em ina des. ure us, that too many Jollipops IN-| ot the world and at facts as they really are, | braith lett the agency on } riday, everything was times. Our troops are distributed along the | of course, the Proprietors and Liberals were in a we tan Gedk WES bees he Gee. ing date the fifth day of April, iséz, aoe ? duce sickvegs, or that it ig better & keep out in their natural signification — come from | (ict. The Indians had received their goods and an £ ’ har bear |river, and have received all assaults. ‘They league to destroy it! The Duke of Newcastle that they cannot consistently His Ex. , r, -. - ‘ - eure « ~~ 8: 3 BS sa . » - - z oak “va ° : > 2 2 7 tl t -elleney to } old out an * Ps . on vy } ‘ =; ; inlay an) bY Pie. | buch & face as that 7 Plenty ar enemy 68°) eal “ eon Se ae Sale a = | will be able to maintain their pone one and the British Government must suffer for it! stance to the fact of Mr. Pope aan saan oF Semel Connea, and Sle sturteae’t by which Sir sent stage of Americsa information is repre-) citoment, hut what of rightly-strung nerves 2}! a ‘ — wae Gee sels eatieniinn. junction with the other army corps enubles And the Proprietors must enffer! And the tenan-| the agency of a valuable estate in this Islan ‘| His Grave the Duke of New ie torts OF sented in the fyct of the largest, and at the| vivig enough indeed, but what is there vital othe first anakeal the Indians was made on the |them to resume the offensive. The rebels| And the Prop ; Some lingering respect for proprietary claims in- | to believe that the Legislature of this induced eome time the smallest, jaconvertible paper ou in the world. The Union is flooded with paper. 1¢ descends like snow, in flakes | worth @ halfpenny a-piece. Cartloads of paper gepts issue daily from the Treasury, and are #qwn bruadcast over the Federal States. The t denominations, trans- Jated iato vulgar Knglish, are ha!fpennies, three-halfpenmies, twopence-halfpenny, five- pence, sixpence, a shilling, fifteenpence, three-ayd-ninepevee, whence you ascend to, | sunken and sallow leather cheeks ; those eyes | there? LIpyidity rather than life. | buried below the peathouse brows ; that fish |, woutli, that scraggy neck surmounted by a head that seems too heavy for its pedestal ; el Those house of Mr. Baker, on Sunday last, near the town | are endeavoring to turn our right and get in . " . : . 7 of Acton, and thirty miles from Forest City, in| our rear by way of Warrenton. hich three white men and one woman were killed. On Monday morning an attack was made | was continual skirmishing between advance » Redwood, and at the time the messenger lett that cadaverous and dyspeptic hue; what) there was a number of perons killed. would come of that t@ command,. to soothe, | Aiter the Messenger had crossed the river he to contro} passion, or compel reverence to the | SW the Indians firing into the traders’ stores and , A councils of moderation and reason ? vo much selected for any qualities of states- manship? Was he not, by the incoherent i dr | st , ther buildings. \W us he Ocuuer kt i igs He estimated the number of ndians engaged iu this firing at 150. He also ates that wessengers had arrived at Pert Ridgely ; With money to pay off the Indiaus the sums due ‘fimes’ correspondent states that there guard of our army on ‘lhursday, and a force of Rebel cavalry and infantry which crossed at | noon. Our batteries compelled the infantry to retreat, and a rebel cavalry charge on the Indiana troops was repulsed with the loss of a rebel Captain taken prisoner and several privates. A brisk artillery duel was kept try must be advised to resist the payment of rents ! And Tenant Leagues must be got up at once! And”—the Lord knows what else was going to be done by indignant Toryism. The least we ex- pected to hear before the end of the week was, that Mr. Gidley’s apartments out of town were inconveniently crowded—that there was a sudden and alarming accession to the patient list in the hauds of our medical practitioners—and that, in the domestic economy of some houses, strong sti- duces him yet tv bear the burthen of one or two other agencies; but when he shall be relieved from these—as it is believed he will be shortly-- we may reasonably expect to notice a forther ex- pansion of his benevolence, as he will have leisure for the cultivation of generous sentiments; and by the study of the dark lines which have been cast in the unpleasant places of the tenantry on the Westmoreland, Fanning and Cumberland Es- sanction any measure respecting ——e reported upon by the Land Commicsione j might differ essentially from th principles oxo) in their report. coeh eee The House of Assembly at its Session, deem ing the faith of Her Majeny's a to this Colony to maintain and carry out the A o aoe uniuissioners in its true Meaning and = vave, by an overwhelmi major; passed : for its coufirmation. Thee 18 az at aman me, passed a Bill to facilitate the execution of the Award in that part whieh provides for coat by the medium of an arbitration, the fee of et in causes where the Proprietor and : ‘ ® bigher brangh of the new currency—dol- | operation of the coostitution, but theaceident than ‘Pie St. Paul Press of the 2ist says that up several hours. The rebels have batteries lants and objects of an exciting nature were | ‘tes, he will learn to execrate proprietary op-| mutually atree between themsclyes: ay ' lar notes, ang ao on. Everything may now) of ay accident—a bladder on the tide of po- | several loads of panic stricken people from Currier |on the river extending fifteen miles, bat our ERE ORE OS f sight. We| Pression to a degree never yet experienced by the nh matare appearing indispensable te give ! be done with bank-notes: you pay several i palar froth chosen avowedly as g compromise, | and Sibley counties arrived in town Jast night, | batteries suenced them at every puint. strictly ordered to be kept out of sight. t effect to the methed of valuation, in the # crossing-swee per ; still more toa shoeblack ; | a whole handful to @ porter, anda pile of notes for yoar dinner of beefsteak and porter. The notes are distinguished chiefly by the | heads and colours. Benjamin Franklia, with | # blue face, guarantees the worth of the balf-penny pieces; a pink Washington au- | thenticates the three ha'pennies. Jefferson, in chocolate, d on the twopence-half- enny note. Washington, again, in green. | biue. and lilae, marks the three next grada- tions of value; Frauklia, ufter doing daty among the halfpence, is rewarded with bis, face on the fiftesn-pennies; and the great hero of Americgn independence finishes the new series with @ blue iyce on the three-and- pinepennies. This must be the enghth plague of Egypt. With notes you are to pay for an estgte, & maurof-war, a house, a gluss of beer, oraroliof bread. The fruit stalls must do their business in Not only gold and siiger, Lut even the greasy little nickel cent- pieces haye disappeured, and it is paper, or father cardboard, everywhere. In some otf our charity sebouls the children have tickets of merit for each day's attendance, which on presentation at the end of the half-year count up intoa prize. They are nearly as valuable sé Ameyican currency. In our museums are any curiosities of coinage — kimmerage or coul money, leather money. cowries, the salt money of the Desert, as old as Herodotus; but a]} these must yield to the many-culoured # mediocrity, just because he had neither, p rincipally women and children, ‘They were great- force of character nor commanding talents | ly excited, and gave exaggerated accounts of the enoygh to excite the jealousy of tuvse who had? Every body whom the people place ia position in America is ** a remarkable wan, sir!’’ MeClellan is the Young lapoleva and Farragut is Nelson already. | we | : IS Fremont is th Indians, who were marekiug on Shaska county. They also say that the towns of St. Peter, Mender- m and Gleueoe have been burned. A private letter received in this city to-day from t. Paul, dated the 20th, says that it seems to be i general opinion amoug the best informed of the Bayard of his age; and 80 beeause | our citizens that these Indian troubles originated Lincoln chances to be President, it is diseo-er- | y ed that he is Washington and Cromweli all in one ; thet he could Jead the army and out-| + general Wellington. But what tis he dune? de has followed and obeyed when he should restrain and control; he has been the mere tool and blind instrument of dewucracy ; not the leader of men, but the involuntary ring- leader of g mob. The most giguntic plunder and peculation ever recorded in history have gene not only uprebuked but adopted on his responsibility. rected and weilded the instruments of ruin- wing the vastest State, and destroying the |! Gleucoe on Saturday night. come news that 62 persons who were suppesed to be killed are safe. women and children. ith the cursed Secessionists of Missouri. Major Galbraith was told by one of the Indians that ere are vow in arms 10,000 of the Sioux tribes, besides other tribes from Northern Missouri. LATER. Sr. Pau, Aug. 25,—Mr. Goodall arrived from He brings the wel- Among the party were 42 As regards the fate of the missionaries, Mr. In sixteen months be has di- | Goodall thinks about 40 families, including those between Lacque Parle and the Ageney, are killed. Ie ways the friendly Indiana gathered at Mr. most elaborate constitution on the face of | Rigg’s house te defend him, and that they must the earth. te a Mississippi boatman aud a" country attorney. Pray what more or betterishenow? The electrical excitement of Z « mad high pressure people has placed ut bis | them to hold out. disposal, unquestioned, obsequivusly, slave- ishly money and men, enthusiasm and energy without limit. What has he done with them ?| His Cabinet—his own selection—have been called drunkards and peculators, tuo bad even for him, and gloomy tanatics. ave been overpowered. A messenger bon Henderson says the half-breed scout Freoier would return to Fort Ridgley and ive the inmates such assurances as would induce There can be no surrender without annihilation, and the Indians know this. Col. Sibley’s force was at St. Peter's at four ‘clock Saturday morning, 50 miles trom Fort Ridgeley, but could not reach there before Satur- | day evening. One of them | Posed to strike across the couutry, aud may get Col. Cullen, with 700 cavalry, pro- ‘The Rappahannock correspondent of a Phi- ‘ladelphia paper says that on the morning of the 2lst the rebels opened a battery on our centre and continued vigorously to throw shot and shell for several hours. A little higher up it was discovered that the enemy had during the night erected a bridge over the river at this point. The most brilliant and successful affair of the day is reported to have occurred in the vicinity of this bridge. ‘The rebels opened a brisk fire on one of Gen Sigel’s batteries, which for a time replied with spirit; ina little while our fire slack- ened and then ceased. ‘Ihe battery having been apparently silenced or withdrawn, three rebel regiments then rushed forward across the bridge and Gen. Sigel offered no opposi- tion. Everything seemed tuvoradle to the rebels, but alas the scene s00n changed. No sooner had they crossed than Gen. Sigel opened his battery on the bridge. The fourth shot completely demolished it. At the same time our troops opened a deadly fire of mus- ketry on the rebels in front. Their retreat being cut off and being assailed by our artil- lery and muskets, they soon surrendered. Not a man escaped. Nearly 2000 are said to have been captured, and about 400 killed and wounded. ~ The enemy having failed in this,now push- ed forward their forces with impetuosity and strived to cutflank Gen. Sigel by crossing at French’s Ford, but Gen. Pope ordered u P | to the Government—but because we have always were not surprised to hear that there was unseemly scolding in the Executive Council when the Duke's despatch, rejecting the Award, was first read, and that a threat was made by the members to resign en masse, and thereby bring the Duke and the whole world to their senses; but the threat was happily recalled, in a lucid moment, which shortly after supervened. Aw regards our own feelings in the matter, we most rampant escheator. As to asking the Colonial Minister and Proprie- tors to reconsider their opposition to the Award, the proposal is simply absurd. The Duke of New- castle is not the sort of man to recede from a po- sition he has once taken; and Sir Samuel Cunard is too jealous of his influence to offer even the ap- pearance of being shaken in his will by pressure from any quarter, The thing is put “out of the are quite surprised that anybody should be sur- prised about the rejection of “ the so-called Award.” Nearly seven months ago we predicted the fate of the thing, and nearly once in every seven days since we have declared it as utterly absurd to expect a confirmation of “ the so-called Award.” We plainly saw by the despatch of the 7th February, that the Duke had thrown the thing “out of the way.” But if we had any lin- gering doubts on the matter, the Cunard Bill was eminently calculated to remove them. That gave us an exposition of the views of the Proprietors, and the despatch which accompanied it shewed us that the Proprietors and the Colonial Office were ONE. We won't disguise the fact that we are very much pleased at the rejection of the Award—not because its rejection is, and will be embarrassing way” for ever; and all the petulance of Mr. Pope, and that of other writers for the Government, can bave no other effect than that of making them- selves and the Colony ridieulous. Our valiant statesmen, though they might put all their military toggery upon their backs, must not think of get- ting Up a quarrel with the statesmen in Downing Street, even thoagh it could be shown that the righteousness of the quarrel was with the former. Our Executive authorities have been snubbed— their pretensions to influence treated with scorn ; and the only noticeable measure which will serve to mark their four years’ possession of power thrown aside as so much waste paper with scant courtesy and respect at the hands of the degtrayer. It is said and believed that the Government will take the disallowance of the Award Bills as an excuse for holding on to office a few weeks longer, and violating the spirit of the law by holding i wmmeted vibe Canmissioners. 7 ey u the Lill proposed by Sir Sam above referred to, it is coin that the cad Come ‘exceeded the authority intended to be viven them by the Assembly and the said Proprietors.” assumption ou the part of the Proprictors to be founded upon rules of construction licable to instruments of a certain and Well-detined egal character, but which rales would appear to be totally inapplicable to a Report or adjudication ceeding from a Commission acting under the oie, ordinary powers conferred upon the Land sioners. These powers were never intended to be restrained or limited by any formal or arbits le- gal rules. By reference to the words of the mission aes | appear that the Coumissi were empowered to enquire into the existi differences between Landowners and Tenante, sed to “the sume on fair and equitable pri -” From the language here employed, the powers conferred upon the Commissioners ‘were of an unlimited des- cription; and, in the opinion of the Board, amply suilicient to enuble them to define any mode of set- tlement, even one of a purely equi character. The Board know of no more equitable inciple om that of an impartial valuation of each Teumnt’s arn, ’ ‘or the Commissioners to have attem: their own personal labours, would ave be work of almost endless duration, and incaleulable expense. Having, then, estublished clearly the — of valuation, they found that the object could be accomplished in shorter time, and at much less expense, by the intervention of Valuators, in whose Ju ent, alse, more confidence would likely be re , from the circumstance of their being judges chosen by the jes themselves. In order that this, the principal element in the Award, might not in avy instance be i ive by the obstinacy of either party im the issue, ref te nominate bis Arbitrator, the Legislature prot a coip of the United States. “There are , : | there ahead of Col. Sibley. It is believed the Gens. Banks and Reno to aid Gen. Sigel.and , : h ion. We shall not be surprised to} Mcaus as simple and just as be devundiuy many colours now, but what will they be eth ay cy gh hag webu all Indians will get information of the advancing force | 1). rebels were again repulsed, The rebels | "garded it as an instrument that would do ma- another session © shan ne P whieh the intonsl & a a > ed Z afters several years of hourly passage from the Senator to the Niger and back ogein? It is already perceived that the wear and tear of such gurveney will be a yast source of national wealth. Half of it wil} be lost, burnt, or turned into pulp long before the Mr. Chase the day is ready %9 giye mets] for it. ishmen somstivies carry their eards in| Sheir waisteost pockets, and they find that a. xide in the sun, 4 smart shower of rain, or ten minytes 1p a crow, will render the names illegible. Ig America such a misfortune will cost IgHy cents, not to say dollars. The coiners, they say, wil! soon be at work at the higher denominations. The blug Washing- tons will pay for the labour, not the pinks or greens. As for the smail bits, they are mere spawn, beneath the notice even of a ‘‘emasher.”’ If you havea soyereign in your pocket, good regder, take it out, lok at it, and be proud of your pountry. Across the Atlantic it is nted by $00 representa- tives of Renjomin Prankiia in blue. That's the sopt of change you are to expees for the first piece of poid your necessities coment you to part witha: New York. But the value pf each cent-piece jg itself a caleylation trom day today. Every time you reguire small change ty will ep to learn first the ex- c e Of the day. Sy the premium on j | beyond any possible results. denounced for dishonesty —others remaia to | Bay at counters with public money still. | the worse the news becomes. is Generals! Why, to call them by that a name is enough to provoke laughter like the | neighing of all Tattersali’s. the Republic. has dune. Why, the officers haven't eve brute courage; but, from ensign up to brig- |“ adier-general, go into action beastly drunk ; and the men are 60 demoralised by the bad) appointments of the Government, that whole | people have been wassacred. | and hastily leave the Fort. Col. Cullen writes tuat the further he advanced All the inhabitants re flocking in the towns. Hon. J. R. Cleveland writes en the 21st. from We were told | Maukats that he staid at New Ulm the night be- | that the war would find out the genius of| fore, and saw the most horrible sight—in one '0- | orisis of this war occurred between Thursday It is more than the President | Stace eight bodies of stalwart men with thei ; . } throats cut from ear to ear, their skulls battered od Jimbs mutilated. He knew some of them © | well, and says they were good citizeus of Brown + | couuty. Our opinion is that not less than 100 ef our Large portions of divisions have to be broken up and drafted | Glue-earth and Brown counties are depopulated, into other less debauched brigades, while! with the wheat left unstacked, in the fields, the Bleaker's army has supplied a new name to) ¢ the American dictionary equivalent te high-| waymay and garotter. If « powerful nation | becomes invane, and is eager to fool itself to! [; the top of its bent, regardless of its own fate, | uttterly regardiess of posterity, any fool or idiot can be the tool or instrument of drain- ing its resources, and straining its energics| ti ' —to restrain the spasms of the lunatic — to | husband resourees—to overrule extravagance, and check peculation—to spare blood and treasure—and not to make sacrifices totally What is the wWhers escaping to the eastward. Perit or a Canavian Sreawzr. — The pper Canada steamer Empress, according 'to the Toronto Glode, in guig down the La- ly or yin as strong as Lee and Jackson, and jehine Rapids, near Montreal, oo Saturday | Gen. M t whic! vnight, about half-past nine, struck a rock whether self-woven or not, beld him in its ; uamediately after passing under the Victoria | meshes on the Peninsula. Some stir was they crack. The business of a leader a Bridge, and a large hole was made im ber |¢aused in camp, abd a thousand times more real king of men, is to moderate the madness! hows The stream here runs very rapidly. |'9 Washington. . | Fortunately, the steamer sailed on, bat the ituation of the passengers was a most peri- o aie : 20 supply trains were destroyed and lous one. ‘The steamer was rapidly filling night, ppy ' y with water, the fires were put out, and every their contents injared by the rebels. 100 moment the crowd of passengers (over one | prisoners and mauy horses were taken: all worth of a Union made bankrupt by attempt- then moved highher up the river. How the next oe of the enemy succeeded I have not learned. New York, 26th.—The Tribune's Rappa- hannock correspondent states that the greatest ‘morning and Saturday night. It is passed and we are safe. Washington is safe. Our army is sale. The nation is safe. Gen. terial dainage to the general interests of the Is- land, and not serve to abolish the leasehold tenure. It set out by confirming all the claims of the land- lords — giving them up fishery reserves, loyalist lands, arrears of quit rents, and by confirming all the original titles, which are well known to be extremely doubtful, in some cases at least The only concessions made to the tenantry were Pope's artillery is now guarding the line of the Rappahannock, and Fitz John Porter with a very heayy force joined Gen. Pope on | Friday evening. A host of regiments have | joined, and are joining him now by way of | | Alexandria, and you may now look for t!e! (grand movement of the war within thirty | days. General Burnside has massed a large | torceat Fredericksburg.and Gen Pope is near- | cClellan is freed from the net which, Innd by a sudden raid of 250 guerillas upon Cattello’s Station: under cover of the —that they might buy their farms at a sum equal to twenty years rent, and pay the money in instal- ments of not less than teu pounds each; or if they did not like to give that price, they might demand a local arbitration to determine the value ot the property. It was true that arrears of reut due prior to 1858, were to be remitted to intending purchasers, but we peinted out that if such ar- rears existed, it could only be in exceptional cases; and that tenants against whom such old arrears stood must be of the very poorest class, and not likely to have the means of buying their farms at any price. Besides, there were only three or four estates ou whieh the Award could go into operation at all. And as regards the Ar- bitration part of the Award, that we considered the most unsatisfactory part of the whole arrange- ment. The proposal was not ouly open to “ in- hear of any monstrocity perpetrated by them in their present frame of mind. They have come to that point in their downward career at which the victims of misfortune or folly become indifferent to the opinions of the world, and at which the very sense of danger becomes swallowed up in despair. If they were to do such a sensible act as to appeal at once to the ceuntry, aud ask for a justification of their policy from those to whom they are responsible, the fact might be taken as evidence that they themselves do not look upon their case as irredeemable, — it would shew that they were not ashamed to face the people—that they had some hope of escaping a ec and overwhelming defeat. But though they know election day inust come very soon, their only re- solve seems to be to shut their eyes to it as firtly as they can, and let time aud the tide of public opiuion carry them off whitherseever fate may drive them. We give below the Despatch which records the fate of the Award, and alsothe very feeble Minute ofour Executive Council, which was manufactured more for use in this Island than anywhere else— to make gullible people here think that the Go- be carried out These enactments on the part of the local Legis. lature, it will be observed, do not, in any manver vary or trench npon the principles of the Award; and they have been passed, not only for the of carrying out the provisions of the Award in fuller detail, but as being essentially necessary, in view of the Despatch of His Grace the Duke of New- custle to His Excellency the Lientepant Governor, of the date of the Zist March, 1860. ‘By a pane contained in the despatch of the uke of Neweasthe to Mis Excellevey the Licuten- amt°Gdéveruor, dutéd the 7th Febraury, 1862, His | Grace appears to apprehend that the arbitration | system prescribed by whe Conimissioners, would ne- cessitate amaltiplicity of separate local arbitration, which, in the estimation of His Grace. would eon - stitute insuperable objections against this wode of adjustment. The Board, however, see no reason to apprehend that in the practi workihg of the measure, many of these arbithators would be called fo. On the contrary, they are ‘of ‘opinion that should arbitrators be resorted tg, two or three cases on & Township would bave the effect ef establish- ing & price or prices that would become the respec- tive standards of value on that Township. The Board feel impeHed to eX press Thele hope, that His Grace, the Duke of Neweasti¢, in consi- dering the Bills which have been passell by the Le- sisluture of this Colony, ter the prrpose of ivi | aon to the Award of Commisstonert, 0 os | in mind, that the differences whieh the Cominission- lers were wppointed finally to ine, have, | for upwards of a half century, exe a t | baneful influence upon this Colony, and thit ‘the people generally hailed with much satisfactiog thé | prospect of having these differences adjusted by a niode to be pointed out by the very talented Cot.’ re | a silver is 144, and the charge npom you isa : the private papers and letters of Gen. Pope , hundred and eighty in number, mostly Ame- P P pe, So ean Ee ee ee aan ing to preserve it—plunged in fathomless and) pieans and nt oh who had oli irom copies of despatches and reports, memoranda vernment were quite anxious for the Award to| missioners to whom they were erred,—andthat, dollar and sents estimeted in metallic cur- reney; the sum will be ag follows:—100- 2146 of 200 ; 229:: 135: the Gguye required, yia.y 154 115-1000. The result will be, that os getting a headache by the sum, and ying @ paper dollgr and 54 paper cents, there will remain g 'raction to settle between ou andthe a. The jerks and shop- who have to do this gzithmetia every morsent of tie day will soon begin to think thes even trench work in the swamps of the Ceickshominy, under the gemerylship of an able engineer officer, may beJevs disagrezable, and eveo less fatal, if mysterly retreats gre still the order of the day. But bow will the jadics do allthis? They wil! have to patthe kb out of the question, and take the werd of the shopman, paying him as much as he chooses todemagd. But can any- 7 venture to suy what will be the end of | jeall? It ie now only g few yeure since the | United States, having eyer thing else they could possibly want, suddenly diseoyered that ‘ad inexhaustible treagdzo of geld. We may all remember how they ex-{ ulted in this new confirmation of the flattering | sheory that the world was made for the United States, and that they were to go on prospering, growing, moat eksincrvasing. udding, and annexing, till they com prised she wijling world: Even in gold, the first aod oldest idea of weulth,-and the fiercest object of the Old World coterprise and am- dition, they now took the lead.; Yet in this short time all the gold has made itself wings —for such, indeed, are the myriads of dittie paper promises never to be fulfiljed. Every ship vor away gold apd silver, neyer to return till thy States are either once more united or amicably separated. Even then, endless debt—depraved to a military despot- ism and # reign of terror—with a Constitution broken and trampled upon by the mere fiat of the first magistrate himself—the guardian of the laws—with the connivance of a faction | of slaves? The financial jugglery of the); Minister 18 hastening insolvency—the vast , } more men—to do what? To leave industry | ¢ and eapital without hands or protection—to_ destroy the very States and citizens the returo ; of whom te the Union is the sole ostensible ob- extemporised inu month to meet the seasoned What wall, what can they be, but mere food | for powder? And this—the statesmanship | tutions! We have put the question to! American citizens :—How did you suffer one t much as calling ‘Parliament together—why |! de you submit to éetires de cachet — secret grrests without reason or trial—the censor- ship of your press—spies and passports—the seizure of yous anes oo thevery bench —the| incarceration of —the destruction of freedom of election by aeing the pooling booths under the provost arshul and the imprisonment of shop- keepers because they caynut give change fur a five dollar State nute? Your very life and lon Sunday morning, the 24th inst. | Montreal to the Falls) expected to be swal- | relating to the campaign and to the army ; ‘lowed up in the rapid stream: but she, amidst the most breathless anxiety, provi- dentially reached the whari, and the passen- ; ers | gers had just time to get on land and w save ie of the corps and divisions ; all maps and ‘| topographical charts, containing information heir luggage. When she reached the whart , he had five feet of water in her? Had she | % army of 700,000 men has melted away by! been but five minutes later in reaching the | history and plan of the campaign, the number sickness, fatigue, desertion, and the bullet, | wharf, the vessel would have sunk in the deep | and disposition of the troops, all are reveuled until the General-in-Chief howls fur 306,000 | and rapid water, and to add to the terrors of | to the enemy by this disaster. 1}3 serwas- The | he scene the night was very dark. assengers speak highly of the conduct of be ladies on Loard when the crash occurred: only one lost control of her feelings. All ject of destroying both. Can 300,000 men be | maintained the deepest silence, and expected | (every moment that they would find & watery heroes of Beauregard and Stonewall Jackeon ? | grave. ————— <r --- ™ SHIPWRECK AND Loss or Lire.—The sub of Abrabam Lincoln and his Seeretary—-this | joined letter from Nathaniel Smith, dated Burn- ‘is what Americans eall an able Minister and } coat Light House, 27th August, Js62, has been @ remarkable man. This is the administrative | received by Hugh Monroe, Esq, Chairman of the genius that is developed by Repuvlican Insti-| Board of Works, Halisax :— Sir,—It it is my painful duty to communicate v your Honble. Board the upsetting and beaching man to make @ great civil war against his) o! a small schooner, of about 30 tons burden, and fellow citizens for three months without so | the drowning of the crew, on the North Shore of his Bay—aoear the mouth of little Bass River— The said | schooner was discovered laying on her beam ends, | sails unfurled—uear low water. On exaimivation i 1 there was found, near by, the bodies of two men. imposition of test oaths at discretivn — the | The schooner appeared to be light, with the ex- eption of a few bushels of apples. ‘There was State Legislatures wholsule | found some papers in the sehoouer, by which it was discovered her name is “ Samuel Lune,” and that the Captain's name was Green, of Spencer's fsland, N. 8. It is supposed that the very sudden and violent gale on Saturday night, the 23rd, was the occasion of her misfortune. copies of telegrams gent; a!) despatches re- ‘ceived from the President, Halleck, and the War department; orders issued to the Gene- of the greatest value’; in a word, the whole ness can hardly be estimated. It is taking , the rebel General into the confidence of Ge- | noral Halleck, and’ may render it necessary to change the whole campaign. | ‘The Washington correspondent of the Tri- bune says, relative to the important capture of Pope's despatches and baggage, that the whole might have been saved and the attack repulsed if there had been pickets or even sentries about the camp, but there has not been a guard mounting at headquarters since Gen. Pope took the field —a piece of care- lessness for which he has paid a heavy pen- alty. The same correspondent says this news would be telegraphed it it were ible, but the orders of Gen. Halleck exclude from the telegraph everything relating to the army of Virginia. The people of the North it seems are to be treated like children or cowarde who must not hear or dare not hear the truth. The Warrenton Junction correepondent of the Herald writes as follows :— Military cri- tics profess to believe t’ at our forced advance to the Rapidan were prematurely made. Jackeon disturbed our figures somewhat at Cedar Mountain and possibly deranged our calculations, as a consequence he and his coadjutors assail us now within 30 miles of Mannaseas, and with the largest army the superable objections,” as stated by the Duke of Neweastle, from the fact that it would give rise to a multiplicity of local suits, but it would cer- tainly engender deep-rooted animosity between landlord and tenant—would eause immense delay before a case could be settled, and would entail heavy expense, which, as a general thing, would be likely to fall upon the man least able to bear it—the tenant. In fact, it was nearly certain that a disputed point in an arbitration case would be settled against the tenant, and all the expenses would, therefore, be thrown upon him, because by the Act of our Legislature, the choice of an umpire was confined to freebolders; and that class, with their high votions of the value of pro- perty, would have the ascendancy in a dispute be- tween laydlord and tenant. It is net for the reasons we have stated that the Colonial Minister objected to the Arbitration part of the Award, and therefore to the whole Award itself;"but he has put it “ out of the way,” to use his own words, because the proprietors considered the whole plan of the Commission as broken up, when the Commissioners delegated to others a duty which they were appointed to per- form themselves. We ourselves have more than once expressed the same view in this paper and in the House of Assembly.” The Royal Com- missioners were appointed to seTTLE the Land Question—they were the real Arbitrators—that is | the name by which they were often recognised,— how could ‘they or their advocates pretend that the Land Question was settled so long as they go into operation, when, from the well known views of the Duke of Neweastle, they could ex- pect nothing of the kind :— No. 120, Prince Edward Island. 4 Dowsine Street, 9th Aug. 1862. SIR,—I have received your Despatch No. 45, of the 2orh June, enclosing two Bille, passed with suspending clauses, by the Legislature of Prince Edward Island, intituled Cap. 1V, An Act to give etlect to the Report of the Commissioners on the Land Question, and Cap. XII, An Act to facilitate the operation in ceftain particulars of the Award or Report made by certain Commissioners to settle aud adjust ditlerences respecting some of the Town- ship Lands in this Colony. In forwarding these Acts you informed me, that you would shoruly communicate to me a minute of your responsible advisers, explaining the reason for framing these measures; and this you have since done in your Despatch No. 52, of the 23rd of July ; I ain therefore now in a position to communicate ‘to you the conclusion to which I have been led. It appears from the minute of your Ministers, that they consider the socalled Award of the Land Com- missioners to be binding on the Proprietors, and the Legislature, and on this ground they state that they are unable to entertain Sir Samuel! Cunard’s propo- sal for enabling the Tenants in Prince Edward Is- land to acquire freehold interest in their holdings, which was transmitted to you in my Despatch of the Sth of April last, No. 103. I very much regret that it is not in my power to concur in the views by which your Government have been led to prepare those Bills; or to advise Her Majesty to bring them into operation by giving her assent to them. Your advisers appear to consider that H. M. Go- vernmeut had proposed to the Proprietors of land, and that those Proprietors had consented to place themselves and their interests absolutely in the hands of the Commissioners. This, however, wus fur from being the case. The Proprietors consented that Commissioners shouid be appointed “ to enter into all the enquiries that might be necessary, and to decide upon the dif- ferent questions which might be brought before 1 should anything occur to prevent}such adjusigert; | und the contirmution of their unanimous, able, ard on Report, to which the Legislature, by these Bills, seeks to give effect, the consequences will be of a very serious nature, und result in causing much anxiety to Her Majesty's Ministers, and also to those to whom may be intrusted the Government ot the Colony. A true Extract, which I certify, Cuarces DesBrisar, C.E.C. onal atu Listas THE NEW COMMANDER OF “THE BRIGADE.” WE find the following advertisement in the last ‘Royal Gazette,’ which we transfer to our columns without any charge against the Adjutant's General's Office :— ** Militia General Order, “Heap Quarters, Ist September, 1862, ** His Excellency the Commander-in-Chief, undér the provisions of the General Order of the 5th April, 1862, is pleased to promote the Honorable I Jieutenant Colonel Joux Hamitton Gray, of the 2d ueen s County Regiment, to the rank of Colonel in the Mi- litia of this Island, and te the command of the Prince Edward Island Volunteer Brigade. “By command, “P. D. Stewart, Adjt. Gen.” We all remember the Telegram which appeared in the newspapers the other day, drawn up in Napoleonic style, and signed “ Haviland, Com- manding the Brigade ;” and from that we natu- rally inferred that he was the gentleman who had a right to play First Fiddle to the Volunteer Movement. We have a heap of questions to put to somebody — perhaps “P. D. Stewart, Adj. Gen.” will answer them: Why was the First Fiddle taken from the hand of our “ Young Na- : litical existence are free speech and free + <p ogee ———_~ rebels have ever rallied east or west. We al)! left to the decision of others the most essential | them, giving, of course, to the ies interested, an | poleon?” H i i unless the deek be cleared by one gigantic| P° : ; : . : . denis , p yan Oe » bo the part » an | poleon? é had no Bull Run disaster to tarnish : : press. u are not 4 State at all without . i look hopefully for the coming of Gen. Me- yr opportunity of being heard. : ; ashel , 6 io heed to. cco howshe You ar we ull without) Ata mecting of the Colonial Commissioners to Cielien Gen, ‘feenaee & ae ee point in the whole question—the rates at which ihe ak qunation s thus to be decided upon were : | his fame. What has “the Honorable Lieutenant : : : these. If you were anything like unanimous | the International Exhibition, held in London, eee sities = tenn cen sper be Se o in your loyalty'to the cause of the Govern-| July 1%, Sir Daniel Cooper in the chair, resolu- | 4 ¢ ; os tende., 0 liferni inaitauh a ment, wherefore these precautions ‘for the | tivos were passed highly approving of the proposal | time. Gen. Pope ia still held to be equal to : F : Lo, ee ey he oe “ Pa, : ora e digg. | *appression of the gushing loyaity and swell-| to form a Colonial Museum in which the products | any emergency. The crippled but indomi-|°f arbitrators handing over their work to be} mitted by the Landlords. commend for future example the fine taste dis- ington un the ether. ndfuls of dust rs | ing devotedaes of the people; forthe restrain-| of the British Colonies could be exhibited; and| table Banks is still with his command, and| finished by another batch of arbitrators. Un. the firstund most important of these questions, | 11.64 in a pending the title of “ Honorable” to NT rane theie Raatints of Saas 5 iag of the patriotic enthusiasm of your writers | 2" appeal was made to the Commissioners for | Gen. McDowell has an opportunity to wipe| Of course we will be told that it is ve the Commissioners professed themselves unable to = P og side arl , California, a wightier engine at Washington in support of the war? There is a strong, | SUC portions of the goods in their possession as away @ bloody recollection within a cannon : Ty wrong Some to any conclusion, and instead of deciding it, | the new Commander in his military capacity, a# is. shomesing ee dayne: epee FA contteoed and cowed party against the could be left a4 a nuckus for the Museum. The |shoc of Ball Rom. Our retreat fron Cal. |9Pt 7 Saleh Sr us to make three yn adit ether Acthupees eee minut, | Lieut. Col, and not to him as “John Hamilton a the whyle people in one matted mass Government. “The Presiden er o his Min. Imperial Government would be asked to supply a pepper was a masterly thing, and it is not that the Commissioners were able and impartial ; . . pRyrasccae’ Ape ; d. This, however, is not what they were charged | Gray ") Is it supposed that the “Hon. John os building for temporary accommodation, and a small ; . RE je oe y coarge ys ppe ‘ sters are great State crimingls atecped ta ‘the | sum of money for poe superintendance. The | beti¢ved to ke marked by the loss of #0 much | Officers, and all that sort of thing—that their| to do; they were authorized by the Proprietors to | Framilton” is the most competent man to take the 4 eyes in sedition ‘and treason. They dgren’t | Colonial Governments will be appealed ay an old boot or a haversack. When shall | decision was ratified by a majority of the H make an Award themselves, but they were not au- ed , ppealed to for as- | 48 ; ‘ority © House | thorized to transfer the dut ; istinguished THE PRESIDENT OVER THE WATER. | make peace. they daren’t let the South 8°; sistance. It is proposed to mavage the Museum | We learn the masterly art of advancing so) of Assembly, &c., &c. The Duke of Newcastle! to otlfers. ‘The crateumbarats ats. Sdaneke raed a wren er navn in » Ta be ' : “43 the first lull, the first access, of redintegration lby Trustees, each contributing Colony to name well? hcauetain for a very liberal allowance ef . a personal one. The Proprietors relied on the imself in a brick- riot many ycars ago ' From the Sasurdey Meview. of the forces of the Constitution brings upon | ene. A Committee was appointed to wait upon aleend : _ ames skill, knowledge, and fairness of the three gentle-| Dublin, before bypochondriasis came to bother The history of the people ef United States them impeachinent State prosecutions, ten the Duke of Newcastle, soliciting his support and ready, and his Grace may be sure he will get a| men 2ppointed in 1860; but they could not, there-| him? Or—Does the Commander-in-Chief of this is meee spirited, adventurous -race.| +, ousand actions in the different local courts, | itflweuce in Parliament in favor ot the project. great deal more from indignant Toryiam in this |"; *¢ ctlled upon, in deference to these’ gentle- Jf new levies were ever needed it is at this tenants could convert their leaveholds into free-| First, at what rate Tenants ought to be allowed to | Colonel John Hamilton Gray” done to merit pro- : . acquire freehold interests in their propert ; and : ; bolds. We have never yet heard of one batch ment whet enctunt of amet er i cat chal id be we. |metion? (And here let us specially remark and —-—eo A DISGRACEFUL MILITARY RIOT. : : New York, Aug. 24.—Owing to some dis- cine men's opinion, to confide their i t -| great country seek to imitate the example of the conquering tt esi one _ a at the instance of the outraged citizens. To ~—————- affection among the troops of the Empire | /sland. It is said that he has tarnished the honour bitratore specially desiguated in the Avacd, wach Fisemnibie take at Washingten, who one Muture: .. fight prem-| cap the climax of their enormities, they have) During a revent discourse at the Cathedral | Brigade at East New York, considerable dis- less to persons whose very mode of appointinent is of the Crown by not keeping the promise he made ee wheres Aare oo wound up their session by an impotent Bill! Chureh in New York, Archbishop Hughes used | ta: bance occurred on Saturday afternoon. ueve. claimanta: terri , - : ee x my ‘Witind fo the sieeeeed ae : mi } jeSovereign.. Rach little community confiseating the whole property of the Con-| the. fullowig language: What is the prospect of | Barracks were torn down, a hvtel gutted, | threatened on bia Grace. And as for the Pro.| Proprietors, but it is not waived, and being insisted neral Halleck, and is ready to take the Lord ; : federates, and sentencing eight millions of! it (the Wer) coming to anend? I do not see any | several officers beaten, and many soldiers|_ “6 3. a: Upon, Dam obliged to admit that it is conclusive ; had iteown laws wo make out and its own their fellow citizens to capital puniehment ! prospect. There does not appear to be an issue, badly hurt. A military company and 100 prietors—it is difficult to comprehend the extent| and Tum bound further to say, that it is, in my | knows-who to-morrow if the Commander of th several Brigades does not distinguish himself be its behalf, and audetermiued by i. day exchanged General Scott for General Mo on its alf, and all sorts of vengeance are| ‘J his objection might, of course, be waived by the Clellan—exchanged McClellan next day for Ge 4 —— ae i noo The vast extent of | O¢ gi iberati aud it may be that Ged, for some design ot Hi : ed f the dire di pinion, an objection f a ; — ways of liberating the blacks, the very rey Aap trees rationg will enon sc | Marines were sent to aid the police in quelling |“! the dire disasters in store for them. The “ Man | Pinion, an objection founded not on any technical inland ferritery removes their atmos- : own, which future generations will appreciate, it. One of the members of the militia aie with the unclean hands” grumbles ominously in ple of pact nen eas nad indlepetsbie princi fore the enemy? Or is Col. Gray promoted, a8 * ocean—thoir climate is entirely dry, avd ~ ewe - in order to bring from these results a benefit to | P&ny fired into the crowd, killing the Sergeant | the columns of the last “Islander.” He does| who has voluntarily submitted his case to the deci- reward for his “de sid oie . in settling the their ir end themselves highly qharged with | THE [NDIAN MASSACRES IN MINNESOTA | the whole human race. These are circumstances | Major of one of the regiments. Police In-} not positively tell the tenantry to organise Tenant wihees Ele cea ann, Wnsttene, Bo competed, eee electricity. Their soil and social quality) —500 WHITES KILLED — HORRIBLE | the results of which no man ean fathom, they de-| Spector Folk, of Brooklyn, was very badly out a ‘amous Commis i ’ SCENES — 10,000 RED SKINS IN ARMS. | pend upon so many unconditional circumstances, is, ¢ i i i or | months from the time be got bis f S give to.them all the abundance of the most a a : But there is one qyestiqn that ought to be clear | officers were also injured. The troops gene- pockets—some landlords, we suspect, have often sal as iene, ieepeeetite bd nay otiee Re er ae ' , ee highest f-4| or EI GS Eee the estign t : Jesty to sanction ihe two Acts which you have | sion in operation? Or, is his appointment ove nation inthe world. Flesh meat ison every | Minnesota iver reached here last wawht —They| mee ake ree -_ a a ‘ ifsuch a war- /rally stampeded to Brooklyn and New York | found more than oue kind of rent there—but he| forwarded, and Sak tee eet ne mnmmee to» Renton’, Companion 0 Brigade,” to b table at every meal, i by. eauces,| state that the scouts estimate the number of praia ieee, in apemaran cities, and at 9 o'clock in the evening only | writes in such a way as to shew that he would | der the Award ob:igatory on all who consented , "8 , 3 I must instruct you, therefore, however unwill- : ; ; pear 4 aw © ee ~' oe Oe have been arrested since and ret d by the). i 5 aieummlocheens rd only as | Summing a title which does not eae ooh Geieaiherd ae . ion js baned. op the number of bodies discover. ossenines taal cok d é with } ‘ t and returned by the} ; augurated and rent . . ingly, to treat the Commissioners’ Award only 8 ap : ‘thes diet to an incredible core. ed strewn along the road, and by traces of blood. | delay as possible. YM WHE HEC) policg, ‘Phe whole affair is said to have been th ‘Tn ial p th Anyone see: expression of opinion, which, however Valuable | conferred by the “Commanderin-Chief? Or Dr. Caldwell, their most eminent physician, It is belivved that all the missionaries have been naliciiestiali ilies. primarily gaused by the non-reception of | ‘¢ imperial authorities has a very pugnacious| as such, phere ftom the saline particles uf che distant wom is that of killing the whites. has permitted this clamity to scourge the country ple of justice. —the principle, namely, that a person : ' ; Land Question, as he promised to do, within eigh: in the bead with stones, and many police Leagues and keep their rents in their breeches | another. ’ ; oe garnished by : ol ; : ad about 100 of 2000 were in camp. Man be ‘sod . to the reference. considered as a gentle rebuke to the latter for a varieties of bread and narcoties. The | whites already killed by the Sioux at 500. This manity, to try to put an end to it. The people Pp. J | not Surprised or annoyed if Leagues were cannot be made loyally binding on the par- | it sidered quite in keepi have at the hea: ties concerned ; and which, th it con’ quite in ping to have Saas ied. The ci i i Ap te i i smack init. He nearly insi iti ; erefore, ought not to| + adage sogean American eats oe indigestible tna Seutheopinateralions Me Reloacaitiomese The Queen, under thé title of the Duchess of ee tientinn Government a" Pp ; fag Para ~ nie allowed to stund in the way of any other propo | of a Movement, which it seems arrant madness te > © don, thaw = Englishman in a year. who has spent moet of bis life among the Indians, | Lancaster, has contributed the munificent sum of aes pnd’ + Feprietors shall be made to| sal which promises an amicable settlement of the i ; : . ; intain at the public expense, a gentleman whe "to new farms in| y, * -. £2,000 for the reli f of the manufacturing di tricts | DEFEAT OF 800 UNION TROOP redeem their pledge with regard to “ th led questian. — ’ P Gluntecred to go alone, trusting to his knowledge | +*+¢ re manufacturing districts S BY MOR- piedg g © 8O-Ca, dell iwi . Ssatess .their business or pleasure | of them and hie di ise to ate dn eect He of England. GAN’S GUERILLAS—300 TAKEN PRI-| Award”—he stoutly questions the sagacity of the i eenaiee aes ‘Tiseenied aan om Gow - ‘ hapoelt declared that he is sometimes _ vel je of thousands of miles. The dressed himself in Indi e ‘ Y ste Aan ee cage atm SONERS, aie rs ’ ade by fic Res ; @ W you the proposal | in his jntelleet? And when may we expect. Sravel je thar 7 b Indian costume and started on Duke of Neweastle as shown in regarding the made by Sir Samuel Canard, in hopes that it might pre with mora!, mental, end ma- his a. He arrived at the Upper Agency at| Messrs. Hows, MeCully and Annand from Nova LoursviLLe, Ky., Aug. 23.—Major Generals ng ; t morning, i of E. Johnson, of Kentucky, with 800 eral sqidiers, comprising a part of the 2d In-| 5... . : : : : diwna stabiersan Wynkoop’ Pose yivania regiment, distinguished himself in our little law courts, is : : ‘ be found to furnish a basis of avre ment in lieu of | 8ee in the Colonial papers a Telegram couched terial wlante. Contingencies whieh would night. The place was literally the habitation of | Scotia, and Messrs. Tilley, Steeves aud Mitchell Nelson and Wright, and Brig. Generals Jackson mt move other people make them! death. 1, not,as I und i,t hey think r ? ‘ : ; se .,, | Sal, not,as | understand, because they think it in it arr as to the illegality of the thing—(the “ Man with | seif inadmissible, but bocanee they consider them-| “The undersigned desires to intimate to . instruction and | “Fe scattered in the yards and in the roads. He | question of Intercolonial Railway and Intercolo- brothers in arms in the sister Provinces that in experimental wisdom. The unconscious in-| “eto the house of Hon, J. R. Brown, and re- nial Free 'Prade, F Award as illegal—he positively refuses to take the ee recommendations of the Covimissioners. in the following terms :— 4 He visited a!l the houses and found their | are the delegates from New Brunswick, to confer and Munson and Craft, arrived in this sit is | (Pinions af the Crown Law Officers of England etde Tanbennon Cena Sinit . literally mad... £ y boast of their Ligh | former occupants all lying dead, come on the door-| With ~ members of the Caaadian Goverament | ung ie Tubdersgued decree to ital ‘i : ; ite ide their habitations: rs | at Quebee, on the 10th se lative ‘oman suggestions Sia rofess to ignore | **¢p# and some inside their habitations others | at Quebee, on the September, relative to the the unclean hands" who has more than once | selves as bound to give effect to the Commissioners’ presouse a ward. competition fer the honourable post of C a i ; binshal . This Award being now out of the way, I have to d f the Volunteer Brigade ot Prince Btincte of. _| Cognized every member of the family. They $< <a and the 5th Kentuchy cav "| cortainte 9 lnasine ity ; : dans pee alll ee ee er of the Volunteer Brigade Edw lieve the es & rece would lead them to re numbered 18 in all, and every one of them had| Major General Doyle bas been swora in a gart, steeds 700 pn conan — eS aetna Sr thats ceeouetaene "7 ioe oy oe Island, the guerdon was honourably won by j i : ; un | n ina Morgan, under their reconsideration. 7 eee e nee temper! been brutally murdered. At Beaver Creek he! Administrator of the Government of Neva Seotia | bear Gallatin, and were defeuted, with a — of —and he recommends that Messrs. Hensley and) rable that I should myself express any opinion upon in sotion. - political histor il be eel Y | found that 50 families had beeu killed outright. during the absence of Earl Mulgrave. He bas | 300 5 : Thomson—lately Counsel for the Tenant —be | its merits. I will only observe, thai it is in som to fight out other gations. If they did/ At eve : ae . ; gark _ He . Prisoners, including Gen. Johnson. The re- : ry ’ e : » Ui ry house he went into he recognized the | appointed Ww. Hickman, Esq., to be bis Private | mainder of the Federai ped despatched forth cnglan i + nos make war on others is was inévitable they \ dead bouies of nearly al! the former in dabitants of | Secretary. 4 ‘to Nashville, Col, MoCo ye oe in = ight eee oe ee “Grey, Commanding the Bri We dou’t expect all these questions to bes2- respects more favourable to the Tenants than th ie ; si wait a Conufiealonere’ Award; and that it will give ~~ swered at onee ; indeed, we are willing to w! before some new {ribugal that shall be iuprovised ' great pleusure to learn that it is likely to furgigh a reasonable time for an agsyer to <=> - AEN SH Noe men - one gg ons 7 Bh aid x OP RETR ect. sie o. a : ie =.