o A WEE VOU. XVI. 1 LITERATURE, WASTED TIME. Alone in the dark and silent With the heavy thought of a vanished year, ight, When evil deeds come back to sight, And wood deeds rise with a welcome cheer ; Alove with tne spectres of the past, Phat come with the old year’s dying chime, There glooms one shadow dark and vast, The shadow of Wasted Time. The chances of happiness cast away, The opportunities never sought, ‘The good resolves that every day Have died iv the impatience of thought. The slow advance and the backward step la the rugged path we have striven to climb, How they furrow the brow aid pale the lip, When we talk with Wasted Time. What are we now? what had we been, Had we hearded time as the miser’s gold, Niriving Our weed to win, Through the summer's heat aud the winter's cold Sirinking from naught that the werld could do; Fearing asught bat the touc!: of crime ; Labouring, straggling, all seasons through, Aud knowing no Wasted Time ? Who shall reeall the vanished years ; Whe shall hold back this elbbing tide That leaves us remorse, and shame. and tears, And washes away all things beside ’ Whe shall give us the strenut! een now, To leave forever this holiday rhyme, To shake off this sloth from beat and brow, And battle with Wasted Time? The years that pass come ot again, The things that die no life renew ; But e'en from the rust of his cankering chain KLY JOU ( HHARLOTTETOWN, PRIN R ~ truc Liberty, when jou, ina whisper. Then, finding the pail | minutes longer, and then a baker’s man ap- empty (it was nearly full at half-past nine, ee a Le when I entered), ' had playfully thrown to the further end of ithe shed. the pail stood close to my head; so that I peared with a great wooden tray piled up he considerately went and with just such slices of bread as we had re- | refilled it, and even took much trouble, too, | in searching fur the tin pot which served as} to an able-bodied casual, who took his place | ceived over night. The tray was consigned |a drinking cup, and which the last comer with the taskmaster at the shed door; and |then, in single file, we re-entered the shed, | ought to bave mentioned that|each man and boy receiving a slice as he passed in. Pitying, as I suppose, my unac- had peculiar opportunities of study as one |customed look, Mr. ‘Taskmaster gave me a after another of my comrades came to the }fonntain to drink, just as the brates do in The pail re- filled. Daddy returned, and was seen no more | those books of African travel. | till morning. lt stili wanted four hours and a balf to|and **skilley! skilley seven o’clock—the hour of rising—and never | before in my life did time appear to creep /80 slowly. } parish chureh, and of the Parliament Houses, as well as those of a wretched tinkling Duteh | clock somewhere on the premises. The parish church was the first to announce the hour (an act of kindness | feel bound to ac- | knowledge), Westminster came next, the jlazy Dutchman declining his consent to the | He never uttered a word in reply, or showed | _| time o’ day till fully sixty seconds alter- wards. ence of sixty seconds an injury—il the officers |} of the house took their time from Datebman It may seem atrifle, but a minute is some-| one of which fluated a small tin saucepan, | buck ?”” some listenerasked. * | Slice and a lurge piece over. The bread devoured, a clamour for ‘* skil- ley’? began. ‘The rumour had got abroad Mreebor that this morning, and on all future morn- | ee ee ee ee kw a ee ee ae eiges- © RK i lei | eit as : - PEIN ieee lll Bt my old woman as lived in the borough. Well, one day, a woman agwas in the house ses to we, ses she, * Don’t you go past the | Deaf and Dumb School as you goes home !° So T ses, * Yes.’ So ses she, * Would you mind callin’ there and takin’ a message to my little gal as is in there daf and dumb?’ So 1 ses, * No.’ me in, and [ tells the mess:ge, and they sbows me the kid what it wa for. Pooty | little gal? So they tell ber the nessage, and | then she begins making orts and crosses like | j on her hands. * What’s shea doin’ that for!’ ses. ‘She's a talkin’ to you,’ ses they. m Men, having to advise the Public, may speatl« Well, I goes and they lets | [AL OF POLITICS, LITERATURE AN Pm own GR EWS, SSS tree — = : a a a ; 2 a <7 on 7 CK EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, MARCH. 19,, 1560. ‘or hewa pine, $250 cents per theasand. feet, | board measure ; dressed pine, 25 per cent; other | woods, round, hewn or sawed, 20 per cent, and Paes 25. percent, like these could. not. be entertained for an instant by the people of the Provinces. The Canadian press, without an exception, are | unanimous in expressing satisfaction at the rejec- tion of the unfair terms proposed by the Com- | jmittee of Ways and Means. The Montrea! | ministerial organ and a journal thoreughly devot- {Repo Euripides. . tariff. Ten per cent. duties may be substituted | determined beforehand for twenty and twenty-five, and balf, our tax ation thrust upon our neighbors by their purchases | in a cheaper market thap they can find at home. Of course propositions | Wealthy Amencans by thousands will make a! | trip through Canada conducive te their healt! and advantageous to their wardrobes; and the | belles of Newport and Saratoga will find the | { NO. 19 eens to shackle the trade of the and they have succeeded. Upon them, and them ouly, rests the blame! ' But, now, behold themagnavimity of our neigh- ' bors! Ly avrogating the Treaty they have lost | the use of the Prosiacial.in-chore# ishevies—" the ~ two countries, | attractions of our shops as necessary to the en- finest in the hemisphere,” as the N. Y. ‘Times de- hancement of their charins as the five breezes’ of) seribes them. American manufactures feel- | | the St. Lawrenee. , ling the weight.of taxation will transfer thei | | whole world beside. But they seem to have decided already that their fiechermen shall not leave the skill and carry .t to Canada, for while they only fishing grounds. Their newspapers boldly tell us, Gazette, whieh may be held at the sawe time a pertially lose thereby the trade of the United | that the-fishermen will hardly be induced to xa States, they gain in exchange that of nearly the! 8 The tide of emigration will | the poor Previncialists’ rights inthe valuable pro- lings, there would be skilley at breakfast; |‘ Oh! 1 ses, ‘what's she talsin’ about?’ ed to the commercial interests of the country | flow from over taxed America, torn by internal | perty; on the contrary ; the men who served with which centre in Montreal, gives the following ac- | dissensions, toa country where freedom exists in | Farragut in Federal war-ships will probably '*? resounded through jthe shed. No one had hinted that it was jnot fortheoming, bat skilley seems to be L could hear the chimes of aj thought an extraordinary concession, and after waiting only a few minutes for it, they ittacked the taskmaster in the fiercest man- liner. They called him thief, sneak, and |**crawler.’’ Liitle boys. blackguarded him jin gutter language, and looking him in the | face, consigned him tu bell without flinching. & sign of impatience ; and whenever he was And Lt deelare L thought that differ- | obliged to speak it was quite without temper, There was a loud ** hooray !°’ when the| longed-for skilley appeared in two pails, in ‘She says you're a good boy forcomin’ and tellin’ her about her mother, and she loves you.’ Blessed if I could help laughin’! So L ses, ‘ ‘here ain't noeall for her to say that.’ Pooty little kid she was! L stayed there a count-of the feeling evinced in the commere metropolis on the reception of the news:— tion, and the maximum of political and social ia} | the largest measure with the maximum of taxa- | 4 shoot on the spot” any one. who attemps te jorder.” There opeus up for these Provinces a interfere with their piraciest We shall hare ne Men snet in little groups to discuss the question | grand future if our rulers are. only wise enough | Inter- Colonial Railway ""—no ‘* Inter-Calenial 'goodish bit, and walked about the garden| in the Exchange, and the expression of satisfae- | to see where the stream is bearing us, and to cast = a 4 with her, and what d’ye think! Presently she takes a fancy for some of my jacket but- tous—brass ans they was, with the name of the * house’ on ’em—and | euts four on ’em off and gives her. Well, when | gave her i them, biow me if she didn’t want one of the ‘brass buckles off my shoes. Well, you mightn’t think it, but I gave her that too.’’ | Rather! Got | thing when a man is lying on a cold flag- | with a stick thrust into its handle, by way | ep without dinner and walloped as well, 28 | Stone, and the wind of a winter nightisbiow- of a ladle. Yellow pint besins were provided | I wouldn't tell what Id done with ‘em. iingin your hair. Three o'clock, tour o’olock | struck, and still there was nothing to be- | guile the time but observation, under the! We obeyed with the utmost alacrity ; and | the master one Haring gaslight, of the little heaps o! outcast humanity strewn about the floor ; and after a while, I find, one may even become j accustomed to the sight of one’s fellow-crea- | tures tying around you like covered corpses lina railway shed. For most of the company were not bundled under the rugs in the ghast- jly way I have already deseribed—thoug! for our use, and large iron spoons. round the walls!" “Range | the tauskmaster shouted. | then what I should judge to be about three- fourths of a pint of gruel was handed to each | if us as we stood. [ was glad to get mine, | because the basin that contained it was warn, | ind my hands were numb with cold. 1 tasted | a spoonful, asin duty bound, and wondered more than ever at the eateem in which it was held by my confreres It was a weak decoc- Chen they was goin’ to wallop me again, 80 I thought I’d cheek it out; so l up and told all about it’? ‘* And got it wuss?’ * No, I. didn’t. The master gave me new buttons and a buckle without saying another word, and my dinner alung with my supper as well.”’ Lhe moral of all this 1 leave to you. seems necessary to Say something about it, for the report which Mr. Farnall made, alter | ) visiting Lambeth Workhouse on Saturdry, I! ; here and there a cropped bead appeared. | tion of oatmeal and water, hitter, and with- | scons ineant to suggest an idea that what | surmounted by a billy-cock like my own, or | out even a pooch of salt to flavour it —that ] | hus been described here is merely an irrega- by a greasy cloth cap. Five o clock, six o*-| could diseuver. But it was hot, and on that | larity. So it may be; but an irregularity A golden truth is glimmering through ; ‘That to him whe learns from errors past, And turus away with strenyth sablime, ; | weleome—of the world without, an he bie ifieult ersut , jden on the night when somebody happened And waketh each year outdo the last, | weleome—< orld aCe d of the! LU had no difficulty in persuading one of the | 4¢ g y happ }elock chimed, and then [ had news—mousi | account, perhaps, was so highly relished that which consigned some forty men to such a | There is no Wasted Time. —_—- GOING UP AND COMING DOWN. This is a simple song, ‘tis true And songs like these are never nice ; through Aud yet we'll try and seutte real beginning of day. Half a dozen factory bells announced that it was time for working men to go to labour; but my ¢COMpanions were nut working men, and sv snored on Out through the gap in the canyas the stars | were still to be seen shinning on the black sky. but that did not alter the facet that it | was six o'clock inthe morning. | snapped decent men to accept my share. It was now past eight o'clock, and as I knew that a certain quantity of labor bad to be performed by each man before he was al- lowed to go his way, I was anxious to begin. | |The labour was to be ** crank’? Jaber, The | ** cranks ’’ are a series of iron bars extending vcross the width of the shed, penetrating to be there to see, is probably a frequent me; and it certainly is infamous, | And then as to the other workbouses. Mr. ar- nall was in ignorance of what was done at Lambeth in this way, and I seleeted it for a visit quite at random. Doves be know what gees on in other workhouses? If he is in- clined to inquire, 1] may, perbaps,‘be able to | tion at the turn things have taken was fat more | themselves fearlessly upon it, | general than we could have expected. A dozen | Providence has given us marvellous strength for the oecaeion; , feeling” —no “Inter-Colouial Union” —and, finally, j no Fisheries!! The Yankees will eventually claim callers at our office of en Whose cpivion en pub- | never before were the’ Provinces sevich in ineans ; | to regulate everything for us, and even prescribe | lic affairs we greatly respect, expressed, in decided | terius, the sawe view. We have: not, on the! | other hand, heard oue single expression ef regret ; | juor yet of anybody who has. ‘There has also been, as we remarked the other day. a singular | that it weuld be folly to say too much for Reci-| | procity, and that we can do without it. There is | | a feehng in the city and throughout the couniry | that it will be an advantage for us, as a people to} touch bottem, to know where we stand, and to | | feel our own resources. Some men jeven go By | | far as to express annoyance that these provinces | should have gone to Washington at all ro the po- sition of suppliants, Bat those go tov far. There is no bamilation in what has been done; and it is of advantage that we should know the exact measure of our commercial reletions with our re- publican neighbors, The Toronto Globe and Leader—the two most influential and largely circulated papers in Ca-| jnada—for once agree. The former journal {says °— But serious as the coming change in onr foreign / commerce from the abrogation of the treaty ur-| | doubtedly is, we heartily congratulate the country | on the escape it has made from an uaspeakably | | greater evil. The imposition of dnties on our | | products sent to the United States is but a tem-| porary loss which by energy and enterprise may | be ttiumphantly overcome, and better outlets for | our traffic opened up in room of those we have lost. But to have submitted to the humiliating conditions—whether offered by our negotiators, or attempted to be exacted by the Americans— never before so united in sentiment; never before Was the delermination of independence so general, and never the material tmeaus te conquer it so plentiiul, What we want isthe statesmanship te guide, aud the mercantile euergy te seeure the ‘unanimity among the newspapers throughout the | fruition of wise legislation. Let us hope that | |** Didn't yer get into a row when you got Province on this subject—a general expression | these will be forthcoming — 1), Mareh 3. | --— ~<a — AMERICAN INSOLENCE. We ought to feel thankful that we have got Great Britain at our back in these troublesome Linwes, Otherwise, the tender mercies of our American neighbours would be extremely cruel. Indeed, it as been a difficult matter, of late, to read, calinly, the remarks of the American Press on Colonia! questions, so abusive and insulting is A case in point is found in the Bos- ton Journal, which, when forced to admit the value of a Reciprocity Treaty to American com- werce, advocates a new basis cf trade, chiefly be- cause it beheves that extended trade with the States would perpetuate Colonial disunion! Hear this moderate journal ou the failure of recent ne- gociationa:— their tone. “It will be dangcrous to give encouragement, eve tenipdratily, to the Intercolonial feeling which certain influential men, both m Britain and in Ca- nada, ave \doing all iu thei power to eulticate. The suspension of reciprocal trade wall be a cogent argument with the. Canadians-in favor of the building of ‘the Intercolaniad » railway, WHICH EVERY INHABITANT O& NEW, ENGLAND SHOULD our diet, dress and religious ordinances. Verily, the Americaus are a great natien, and we Provin- cialisis are aniserabie communities, only fit te minister to the wants of our powerful neighbors 4 Well, perhaps we are weak and defenceless, but, God oe praised, the arm of Old England is around us—or we would fare badly at the hands of the adjacent natien of fillibusters.—St. Juhu Telegraph. tee FENIANISM IN IRELAND. Subjoined is an extract froma letter received | by a gentleman in this eity, whieh came to hand iby the last mail steamer from England. Ths writer, who dates bis Jetter at Lismore Castle, 18 au official in the service of a nobleman in Lre- land, and he is also the brother of a Renen-Ca- The information contained in the paragraph will not only be found instrue- tive but also perfectly reliable. It is te be deeply regretted that any such delusive movemeet was ever made. Fenianism cannot possibly be pre- ductive of any good, and will probably result in wueh harm to those eulisting in its ranks. It 4 unfortunate in such cases tnat the innocent euffer equally with the guiliy:— “On Menday next we will have 100 acldiere quartered bere in the Castle to menace the Fenian corapiracy. The authorities are uneasy about tholie Bishop there. h or two of sound ad vice ingers : he Dute! t auxty assis he investio t j int; mv) , : : , : A pinch or two of sound ad vice my fingers at the Dutchman, with his sixty through the wall, and working a our mili |® ist the investigation by this hiat ; my ‘as the price and penalty of a renewal.of the| seek ro PREVENT BY ALL PROPER aeans, | !¢ Sympathy for the movement, but the delusion Then listen, pompons friends. and learn | seconds slow, forin another hour [ fondly) on the other side. Turning the ‘crank "| COMPaeions hada diacuasion during the might) 7.0 1y of 1354, would have been, to draw down and whieh, With the coutinuauce-ef reciprocity, | 8 Yery prevalent among the working classes that Never ta boast of mach renown: hoped to be relieved from duty. A little! i. Like turning a windlass The task ia notal the rrege chive merits of the yarione upor, ourselves lasting injury and distrace. To | and the prosecution of the Lntereoluuial aie. wiil, armed assistance will come from America te Wins Decbidinhe tied oenthcialg while, and doors wera heard to I en ee ane (bushels workhouses ; and the general verdict was that make modifications in the terms of the Treaty, to | ia our opinion, never be built, Clesely allied te fight England and take Ireland. They appear te Aad some go ap and seme come down. Ve know a vast amount of stocks A vust amount of pride inanres Bat Fate has picked so many locks, We wouldn't like to warrant yours, Remember then and never spurn shut; yeta little while, and the voice of ther early bird ; and then j distinetly caught the word ** bundles—tor my pleasing brown coat, for the warm if unsightly *+ jersey’ which | adopted as a judicious substitute for + waistcuat—for my curduroys, and liberty *Clang!"" went the Workhouse clock. Daddy was audible in conversation with an-| they were called—but that is doubtful) have to be ground every morning by the hig it's butch of casuals. 1 up to the cealing hangs a belli connected with the machinery ; and as each measure is ground the bell rings, so that the grinders may kaow how they are going on, But the grinders are as lazy as We se to work those of ‘Tottenham and Poplar were the worst in London. stated, that at one of these workhonses the casual sleezs on bare boards, without a bed of any sort ! One word in ‘conelasion. I have some horrors fur Mr. Farnall’s private ear (should he like to learn about them), infinitely more It is true, as 1 heard it} amend iis details, to extend the scope of its operations—to meet, in short, the views of our | neighbors ia any reasonable manner that could be suggested—so long as the principle of Reciprocity { was adhered to, our. conneetion with Great Bri- ltain respected, and our own self-respect as a people maintained—every one in Canada, we are persuaded, was heartily prepared ter. But to this is the political Coufederation of the Previpees, which cau Hever be brought to pass usless an un- friendly policy on the part of the United States shall Jforce them, for their mutual protection and prosperity, ito a closer compact and alliance than now exisis.” Here we have it broadly stated that American interests are opposed to a better understanding be more inclined to spend the money collected in New York and abuse one cuother. Most of the aristocracy are leaving the country, and going te Dublin and England to live till this excitement is over, Of course the unfortunate people will suffer for employment. Lt necessary 200,008 men, With parks of Artillery, would be here in a few bours from England te crush this most formid- able outbreak. The poor people would be The one whose hand is hard aud brown \ ’ as te »DACE UC . Were no svguer sel Sh a oe ee coke a ts permit the Awericans to remodel our whole fiscal 7 . er i ' . ; : ke ; ores dy ‘ : revoutiny bhi any thx ai Uppe : ; ; . : m : aw Gev, hsb i 4, eeld Oo leo we Sow then! wake ‘em op!’’ cried Da GY | than the tuskmaster let us to our own sweet tH : he mm ee eon inne systemm—to permit them to dictate the removal of | among Colonists themselves—opposed to the con- aa ; pee shot = cats, 1 aay mare officers or he is like ogo up, as already up—sittin: es : these papers. ee a ‘ cs ty: si j or 2 . ad citaeds ms ae | | was already up—: ituing up, that | haing | will, with nothing to reatrain ite exercise but | ©” paper certain custom duties, the imposition of certain | struction ef a railway betmeen the Coleniee—cp- and sol iers from Amé rica going about he re, whe Aud you are likely fo come down. fangious to Witness the resurrection of the in occasional visit from the miller, a weakly - custome and excise duties, and the chvsing Be oF d d litical i | hich Coleniat : mits“ hunted Som lawn io: tome by d avmmn § hostia ‘Gouses te. he ail Bt 7 : é ur Free Ports, simpty to suit their convenience | POSe to apolitical union by which Colonists may | ost of them returped with whole skina, I think A wathnes ti ee Weill ghastigy figures roiled in their rags. rut expostulating man Onee or twice he came! ar FRHIUAS ie arr a os our ret orts, simply to sult ih con ( : : a tee hing oO i apre Fe ‘ ' ’ ? . x " fa 4 : ? : : r i. m 7. . ey » , . ot waar e moe nabody but myself rose at the summons : aaikat ULEASIRUS F tS ‘i if TE PAPERS —perurit them ta go aver our ivapert list of manu-| mutually protect each other! We are left to un- | they will not be very easily seduced again. 1am Tis toutt a f } ‘Quay mye re: 8 weve , in and said mildly, ** Now then, my men,) Wbebesstenii het 4 me etwa : “4s : inclined to think ‘thet Irish : mn ere Say Se Se wer: oeeernrs Chey knew what it meant well enough, and oe es a | factured goods, and select from it just such ar-| gerstand that Americans will prevent any and all | clined to think that Irishmen whe are nearly Hey I The i ane i wri, ana why don t you stick to it? and su went One ee nnn . stand < i “opt J ‘ That Is but a ecaly thing at best *Codfish Aristecracy And though the fishes, large and strong, May seek the little ones to woewn, Vet fishes all, both great and «amall, im & EPpy Voices Curse d the bell, apd wished it in several Greadiui places; but they did not move until there came in at the hole in the canvas two of the pauper inhabitants of the house, bearing bundles. +* Thirty-two,’ ut aguin. Ti e resnit of would have disgusted me at any tune, and then. At ldewss one- laxity of overseeing this was intensely disgusting lhalf the gang kept their hands, frem the THE: RECIPROCITY TREATY, Our Giles of late Canadian papers, received at the end of last week, give us a large amount of interesting information respechinrg the negotiations Are going ap and coming down. ** twenty-eight.’’ they bawled, but not my | orank whenever the rmiilier was absent, and jy l'for the renewal of the Reeiprocity Treaty, and ticles to be included in the free list as pleased | them, without or selecting any—toe permit them | lto fashion our Customs Tariils in just sach a | manner as suited their interest, while to the Go- vernment of Great Britain we grant no such pri- | Vilege—to permit them to levy any rate they i choose on our natural products, in the shape at of these projects—they will promote strife among Colonists—they will thwart the construction of | an Inter-Colonial Railway, and make New Bruns- wick and Nova Scotia dependent on them in win- ter for conneetion with Catiada! ‘hese are the all very comfortable at that side of the Atlantie ought to try to keep and improve their happy posi- tion rather than venture 3000 miles from thei¢e howes to fight one of the greatest powers in the world. It is much easier for them to gather money and send over agents here among the @ver working classes to bil their hearts with oan promises, but they take care not to come te Ire- number, which was thirty-four. Neither }s.; k tl ' 3 : | [an internal revenue tax, while we levy none on | base purposes of eur Yankee enemies. They ; ‘took themselves to their private amuse. | nee 4 oo el : * | land igh ha wretched i : ue ’ ie ae : 7 aukenk tin alte , aatiaiie ‘anada view ite | thaimmsuere aad he . ‘ ee i and to fight with a wretched set of people without Oar lives are fall af chance wid change, thirty-two nor twenty-erght, however, m= | nents and pursuits. Some sprawled upon the spirit in which the people in Canada : i i se -L port have 7 . ee ee have encouraged the cut-throat Fenians to invade | 4 gug a a pound in ‘thew pusbethe Sos tien an: vou kno new sure: ie ‘ae o “uece hits - fortune Leis } - “ie “eDe “e are taformed that it is to the influ- | bands of a fereign powe e €v POL © ire es : i : eee ’ . | , . And chance, you know, is never sure ; - . tue a s a pe — : od : oe ein * MZ) the beds and smoked; some engaged them.) 'P' il. We are taformed that it ss - ia Sine aan te et ee British Provinces to the | US from without, and, in addition, threaten to pro-| this: every man of standing, except the workmen, ‘ ore wm «lk rine new : at “re ir cubed. i ere Culied upon three »lwee as miner Loner m tastes . ne »| ence—ane » have ail i suspec _ Mr. hea " . . a d aan anltiontn - : aie . Aud ‘twere « doctrine new m1 rtp rr J ’ pom Ske! selves and their (riends in tailoring, and one | en iid we have ail along suspected it—ot Mr. | position of a contemptible dependency of the Re-| mote internal discord! This is the Yankee pro- | @re enure ly opposed to this conspiracy, Thera Thaset places high are met + iyeveral times before they would answer ; and turned hair cutter for the benefit cure ; of a gentle- | Morrill, Chairman of the Committee of Ways aud | yybhic. To make the. ¢ t hutniliatic okt : is po doubt that the poor people were aud are in & i : in. é (ag Morrill, ) \public. To make the, eup of our humiliation run) 564 ne—it is well we kuew it. “ Forewarned : an rare Soe nomen gee eee ORIEN, an pa por , — Ha aft puck Wi ian who, unlike Kay, bad nof just come Means, ‘the financial head of the radical party | over, it wanted but that the advantages for which \8 a deplorable state, but L beheve the aew Parliament ore . ‘ 4 welore shaek * . ree ” . SATII, ‘ ‘ar ’ ’ 2 me oy wt . ia . ow aa ; . Aad vield the eeeptre and tlhe erow n, | here, Gans oo ‘ " } _— e yo — re out of I rison. j here were three tailors ’ w in the asce lant,” that the re ult of the ne- | all these powers were surrendered to the Ameri- porenrens é: or dete rinined to do all they can a the way of Tivestniind Mie den jover your sairt and ticket,’’ the bundle- coe ot thom om. tha bade mending. thani neti to ae Pe Feet! wee" cans, should be seenred to us as‘a Treaty termin- The New York Times—(which is the organ of nw 2 ae we gp Be ts gross de- " Our; ’ $ee e; 15 aa. neneien tes ereon ‘4 a at okaat? i ° bia tiatem x ee . Sacstend | | ta : a ; oe iis i J ur ‘ . a , Then B qvee ap and-te-eumeedown. holder answered, whereon twenty eight” | gjats, and the other operating on a re- | gotiations at Washington must be attributed. | able on six. months’ notice, or by ‘ Legislative | the Federal Governmeat, as the Boston Journal | @*% and & mockery for the ers of the Thia world for you and me, my friend, Hath something more than pounds and pence ; Then fet me hawbly recommend A little use of common sense. Thus lay all pride of place asite. And have a cure on whom you frown, For fear you will see him going up, When you are only coming down. 7 _—_- — A NIGHTIN A LONDON WORKHOUSE (Concluded. Whether there is a rule, says the writer, which closes the casual wards alter a certain sat up. and divested himseli of his borrowed | eunsbent friend in the rearward part of his | Che Committee seemed to be so constituted that | shurt, ung it with his wooden ticket; and tis bundle was flung back in return, clothing. Where the needles came from Il do not know; but for thread they used a > 1 f s ; s y 94 ; i It was some time betore bundle No. 34) strand of oakum (evidently easy to deal with) turned up, so that | had a fair opportunity to lobserve my neighbours. The deeent men them, but the blackguards were in no hupry. | Some indulged in a morning pipe te prepare | themselves for the fatigue of dressing, while | others, loosing their bundles as they squatted ; naked, commenced an inystigation for cer- *| tain little animals which shail he nameless. | At last my torn came; and * Chucking | cranks went round at a very slow rate, and | the views of Mr. Potter set forth at Detroit. which the boys were picking in the corners Other loungers strolied about wiith their ot the day, and playing practical jokes on the industrious few; a favourite joke being to take a bit. of rag, anoint it with greace from the crank axles, and clap it unexpected- ly over somebody's eye The consequence of all this was that the over’’ my shurt and ticket, I quietly attired pow and then stopped altogether. Then the myself in clothes which, rigged as they were. | willar came in: the loungers rose from their The beau ideal of his policy is to completely isolate he really had the control ef it in his hands. the ecoummeree of the United States—to make the country a-second Japan. He starts with the slipped into their rags as soon as they got | hands im their pockets, discussing the topics principle that the producer pays the faxes im- posed at the Custom House; and of course there is nothing to be done with a man who cannot get any other idea through his brains. | to barriers of this nature, the Colonial Ministers | found a strong leaven in Washington society of It is doubtful if Mr. W. H. Seward is not the main- In. addition: | Reciprocity,’ terminable any day in the week! There was but one possible end ef such an ar- | rangement as that. It meant taay fer.a few brief | years the people of British America should be | | kept dependent on American legislation for the | |surety of their industrial operations—looking to | | Washington in daily expectation of hostile changes | —uniil sick of insecurity and fear of change, they | should forget their loathing of annexation, and | submit to be * absorbed’? in the American Re- | | public. i | i | The comntiercial editor of the Montreal Gazette observes that many tnforseen results and new \ ontlets te Canadian commerce will spring up to | compensate the country fur the discontinuance of | i i | reciprocal trade with the States. He points out | is the trueexponent of American popular desires, ) is devoting considerable attention to the Provin- cial Fisheries, eo coveted by our avaricious neighbours, aud makes use of threats as cowardly as they are auealled for. The Tees gives a very partial sketch of the position of the Visheries be- fore the Reciprocity Treaty was agreed upon, adding :— ‘“* From this position, irritating and pexilous, we were relieved by the Reciprocity Treaty. Our fishermen were allowed, of right, to evter the tinest fisheries of the hemisphere, and most ener- gelically bave they profited by the opportunity. An important interest bas been fustered. A large and lucrative industry bas been cultivated Femans to be deluding the poor suffering people by false promises, but they will have the money by all meaus.”—Halifar Reporter, March 3. Laelia Ti CuoLera Conceess.—The suggestion fur a Congress, for the purpose of arresting the north-westward progress of the Cholera, has at length been carried into practice. The latest vews from Constantinople states the nomination of the members has been completed, and that its construction will be entirely diplomatic, and that the Congréss is expected to meet shortly, Tue Cuorera Conrerence in tTuB East — The following appears in the Levant Herald spring of this policy. Just now the protectionist | ,couches, the tailorg ceased stitching, the | il oe ‘that it is not too much to expect the establish- * But the treaty in virtue of which these privi- smokers dronred their pipes. and every fel- | Party 18 in the ascendancy at Washington. It has | i i Halifax | le Lee. Ke saved diawe fo a close, Or | smokers drop; Cir pipes, an ay | fa weg ios, Hot te eae ae ad ment of depots for Canadian produets at Halifax | leges have been enjoyed draw “° close. ’ 7 s : or: ‘ ajority J oress, ¢ as -arne i ‘ , . “te es . “ee ‘itw * 2 low was at his post. The cranks spun round im wity in Covg , and ; ’ : *.1 and St. John, N.B., almost immediately. Pro- the 17th of March ri carer’ ae pom + of a fariously again, the muller’s expostulations | how to use that majority for its own ptrpose. | end; ard with ite termination willcome a reviva | were cleaner than they looked. In Jess than of Constantinople :— +The nominations to the fortheomiag Che- lera Conference are now nearly completed, hour, 1 do not know ; bat b — “tas o clock ltwo minutes 1 was ont of the shed, and in our number was made ap, the last comer), yard, where a few of the more decent rignalising his appearance with a groterque | ¢ 114 ye were crowding round a pale of water. i j j a - ‘ : . a ae seul. Hie rug over b . shoulders, he and scrambling after something that might | jaing drowned amid a shout of * Slap bang, | » : : Medes sei is fy wil | duce canbe stored at these points in the fall of of Provincial exclusiveness in the matter of the and the Conference will, ~ learn, hold ite walteed into the ehed, waving his hands, and a oe as : ; s | ap bane. | Bat there are sigas that this supremacy will not | perl oS ey ; ; oe te : ia .. | first sitting early in the coming month. The ; ; be called a ‘** wash’’—finding theirown soap | pere -e are again!’ or thia extewporised , * | the year as conveniently as in Montreal or at To-)| fisheries, and the eutorced denial te our fisher: | i W.s Her Mai oe of singing, im an affected voice, as he sidled as far as I could observe, and drying their | wor. -— - last forever. It is evident from the tone of the | coatie coll bm aieee peaitahia feat Meelch ox men. ot liberty to labour in the Jocalities most eer: | Hon. W.. Stuart, Her Majesty's Secretary J to, ¢ ’ ; : : " In the language of the Re-| Embassy, with a medical associate nut yet West India markets, besides haviag the advantage | port of the Chamber ef Commerce, they will be | naméd, wifl be the British representatives ; of a home trade from.the Lower Provinces. i driven out of the Bay of Cnaleurs and other Count Lallemand, as already stated, will ba We are glad to see this brave spirit exhibited in | teeming inlets, w hich are within the formerly pre- | the Frenet member ; and the Italian, Belgian at } scribed himit of three miles. All the old misun- and Sweedish Ministers will respectlully @e- : * | derstandiugs will recur. There will be regressions present their several Governments. Persia these Previnces are not frightened at the pros-| and reprisals. Que citizens, aceustomed tor the | All Wide be adaittted t0 tis hy fienlé eossert, | pect before them. The people of British North | last ten nae to po 2 cm ‘moat spevdhautive' aed: will eontribate the wiedses ded ademas : | waters submil but sul/enly, if at all,to the ex-\ *— 7, : _* | America know now what they have to expect. | wate re aie - x se . sme «lof Teheran, through the Melkem Khan and c |take place, and the free trade leagues will assist | 7. i we : : | ercise of Provincial authority adversely to their in- ‘nimi v8 Th t! iaglead. So the game con-|.. . : hat’ d In ‘tl ti ‘i al? he depression ‘arising from uncertainty is re- |p yests, and even to their nghts, as they under- | Dr. Sawas ey. The other powers, incla aste at ay. 2 ‘antiine "BE | . "Ny . . Fe ; ; " ‘ ; in haat ning t at day n the meantime the | woved, and it only retains for the peaple te pre-| stand them. This is @ poiut to be cou-idered, ing the United States, have also appointed i ** Now four boys!’’ and instantly four poor Provinces will know how to take care, of them- | pare termi. | cur Chatnber of Commerce has said, * as bearing their delegates, but the names have get yat clown. The oslasabiae was less sertonste 'Y | little wretches, some with their rugs trailing | go eat to look for more profitable labour, | | nation af Reciprocity . in -teade.invelves.. There directiy on tue subject’ of the expiration wt Reei | been re a gb. pram it —. his opinion. ‘She's weriy dickey !—ain ad about their shoulders, and some quite hare. ‘and the paupers by profession taking matters) We have reliable statements of ithe.eharacter |. -s . Dea . : gc Peay pease Sees a eee eee we get what Leall + move’ about her.” llow- | : : Sa a vite easy. L am eonvineed that, had the! + | is a vast amount ef latent energy in our people, “That the provinces are preparing promptly | rather diplomatic than medical. and that the | came shivering over the stones and across the | 4 > ei . i re ve "of the negotiations that took place between our : : . ee | ‘and energetically to visit upon our fishermen the} esult will perforce pata degree of voreasu ever, the wretched young woman was re#-) 4...) yard, and were admitted to the bath-| work been properly superintended, the four ' ; all’ duit ncn 285 jand now, ifever, is the time for its development, and en i aeiietiaenihal nesiieinain tine ett a in Perrorce fF ee i ‘pressure pited trom the scourge of bis eriticism, for. outta & drteun:'''*4 Rew tour were boys,”’ cried | measures of corn etelehidedden todad ia Delegates and the Washington authorities. n | —Hft. Reporter, Feby. 2%. | penalties of commercial non-interceurse, bia} ‘on the Porte which Ali Pasha hardly fore- 2 . 4 J) +e 7 rr - - 2 : ; sail : leading journals of the Union that the theory of | | tain to yield profit. We ll bang np the miller on a sonr apple tree, f : os We'll hang up, the miller on a cour apple tree, the proteetionists does not find acceptance with | a * . tra tie along | faces onany bit of rag they might happen to “| like tahea ewell.a roaming down Pall Mall, | jaye about them, or upon the canvas curtain | Gr a lL dou't much care, so | can be a | of the shed. } > e ti ¢up the miiler on a sour “appre tree, tr On Hatlelnjuh, &e., &e. i the intelligedt partof the population ; aud the or- | | ganization of free trade leagues throughout the | go grindi: Glory, vlory, By this time it was about half-past seven, | and the majority of the casuals were up and | : astip aes dressed. IL observed, however, that none of | By such ditties the ruffians enlivened their | country shows that the intellect of the nation is | the younger hoys were yet up.and it presently ;shors spell of work. : Short indeed ! The rebelling against the false and injurious theories appeared that there existed) some rule | miller departed, und within a minute after- | of the Morrill school. A reaction will assuredly indging, he could only muster means fur a | against their dressing in the shed; for Dad- | wards the beds were reoceupied, pipes lit, seatin the gallery of the ‘Vie,’ where he) ay came out of the bath-room, where the and teiloring resumed. was well entertained, judging from the flat-| piundies were deposited, and eailed out tinued: the honest fellows sweating at the | tering manner in which he spoke of the| eranks, and anxious to get the work doneand A couplet which had an intensely comical | effect. This gentleman had just come from | % pantomime (where he had learned his, song, probably). Too poor to pay for a} Canada, for it will prove fo the Americans th at ence for the changes which the selves, ’ : Gti See ee SE ee : i bos ‘infer:ed from the action already announced by the |. ‘ ae’ : tf the critic and his listeners were soon fast Daddy, and so on. | the space of an hour and a half. As it was, |! part of the Provinces the concessions offered | THE CANA DIAN PRESB ON TH ) REPEAL Government of Canada. A telegrapkte despatch caw when. be.sp eae: Aaa eae he asleep; and yet I doubt whether any one of) Wien all were up and dressed, the boys; when the hettle bell had tinkled for’ the | French proposal.”’ were large and iimportant:—The fisheries, free navigation ef the St. Lewrence and Canadian Canals, the subjection of Provineial agrieultural and other products in the reciprocal. list to the OF THE RECIPROCITY LREATY, | published yesterday iuiorms us of the issue of a | United States excise duties; the improvement of ling to agree to reciprocal free trade in} the company slept very soundly. Every) carried the bed rugs into Daddy’s room, and | tourth time, and the yard gate was opened | ‘oclamation setting forth that after the 17th ee : ‘ i . ’ . J = prod aimation setling 1 Lis : aaa li . = snoment some one shifted wneasily; and as) 5), pauper inmates made a heap of the | and we were free to depart, the clock had | We perasive-be -papetarresclued fram Badeton| proxime “Hv ‘vedeul owned and manned in he| Sounp Jupce—Sreriv Law.—it is stated the night wore on, the silence was more and | .. beds,” stacking them against the wall, As struck eleven. by seer Europe that Mr Morrill, Chaccuran ot | Usited States of America can pursue the inshore | that, pt indlont denmiom, ao ane Sete em snore Wokatss by the ‘ceend ‘of cnaghing | before mentioned, the shed served the treble | I had seen the show—gladly T escaped into | | Committee ot Ways and Means, has reported to | fisheries’ within the territory of Cauada, * with- | pec Gace Gas'ke ear Oikos he ida be ‘Thve was one of the mast distressing things | purpose of bed chamber, work room and | the open streets. ‘Phe sun shone brightly on the House of Representatives, a bill relative to | out paras Cee tae to the rand en eainies ane her Y bot of by ose horrible, the tales that yen told more fairly at the cranks and set them going uotil ‘its squalor with Startling distinctness ; but ) the Western trade; assimilation of Canadian | vinces. It is substantially the same proposition een wom ~ ae Spntie 8 oe and provide over into Canada and drinks bitter British beer, horrible still, and worse than either (though the bedding was stowed away. | within all was rejoicing. A few yards, und | excise duties on spirits, beer and tebacco to those tuat the tO 0 a Se aianiaiie ened vor its attehdant difficulties, without delay. lor eats French truffles, both duty paying here, pot by any means the most infamous thing®| Breakfast before work, however ; bot it! then | was Ddlessed with the sight of that! oi). rnited States, to prevent’ smuggling ; ain} SON ge Saye serge te = much, as the, “ Weare justified in assuming that these diffi- | and does so tor the avowed purpose of a g fo be heard—I dare not even hint at them) | was weary while to some of us before itysame vehicle—waiting for me in the spot | hia tawie Thted’ ter parang Si ed o be j p ‘d upon her ebief ex. | culties are not remote, and former experience, drink and a good dinner cheaper than in the was that song, with its bestial chorus shout-! made its appearance. For my own part 1! where L had parted trom it fourteen weary jassituilation of the Ree ee tiunstin's Tega) pero ee Le: ‘eheardenins ane aa chee © a | points to the snpposition that in their nature they | United States, returning before digestion is com- ed from a dogen throats; but at any rate j44 Jittle uppetite ; bat about me were aj bours before. Did you observe, Mr, Erlitor, | showed the great anxiety that the Delegates felt | a ane in last Semeletia issue, au a | will be complicated and important, Tu lvs.report | pleted, suuet be etep up to the marshals efice they kept che blond warm with constant hot! dogen poor wretches who obviously bad a/ with what alacrity [jumped in? [have a | torenew, the treaty, even on terms, which NO+ meécation of these duties and it is therefore . un- to the Treasury Department, Mr. Derby, in view ond oats Sits ot tal’ Wes Ce gi flushes of anger; while, ae lor the coughing. very great one ; they had come in over night! vivid recolleetion ot you, sir,—sittrng there | goubt many persons in the Provinces will think | yeeessary to refer to them again in detail. The se Sar coutingency, suggests va fhe Soar nee aprangh d o Y diculd in aetinnaldaans tu hie on the flagstones in what was nothing | 45 ace tor bread, and perhaps may not have! with an easy patience, lounging. trough should not have been offered. ‘On the other hand | bill in question is to,come into effect on the 16th! should soapairee “,npeenran fe i oe on thee de a the pretended report Arbuthnot of the six white better than an open shed, and listen to that, } oben fast since the morning of the previous | your Tunes, and oh! so detestably clean to cata ry ~ | Mareh, the day when the. Treaty expires. It js | see that our gesscls are not molested, and that ous tg 6; the pleading for the blind ‘ beeen _ gee ; , ' ha they were met by a disposition te ask everything | : = | fisheries are not destroyed. If trey do not” be adie, | and black horses ; since the pleading for the blr hour after hour, chilled one® very heart | | ay. The decent ones suffered most. The look at! But, though L resepted your collar, |"? ¥ ah ne cs | not to be debated wext week, and no doubt wiii /s Wl crpect the fishermen who hace been | puppies in Les Plaideurs, there bas been nothing with pity. Every variety o! cough that ever | blackguard majority were quite cheerful— | { was grateful for the sight of ‘a familiar | and give nothing ia return; the United ptaten | pass, } ; noe Fartocu ta follow the advice of Gen. ‘x0 exquisitely ridiculous ag the wwoufectare of I heard, was to be beard there; the hollow |... 4kiag, swearing, and playing their pretty | face, and (or that draught of sherry whieh | negotiators demanded the fisheries, the free navi-| In a previous issue we placed before our. read- | Dir. i attempts to haul down the Ameri-| smuggling out of a purchase. Men who remam- _ 2 hort ugh; the hysterical rT Be ‘ a aga a Sevately brauchs f call saeeini : a ae . ia, ers the more notable utterances of the Canadian | 4¢*, yf any eae mrs ( . i ber that ten fl and pebple used to the cough; the short cough , eo. Ryser | horse play, the prime end of which was pain | you eonsiderately Drought lor me, & welcome | gation of the St. Lawrence and Canadian Canals, | Press on the subjeet of the reeent negotiations lean Flag.” We have no fear that our Govern. | ber that ten thousand peop pase Une cough; the bark that comes at regular in-| 5° digcomfiture to someb rly else. Onecasaal) réfreshment after so many weary, waking | vith tuits proportioned te the mileage ; aid aboli- | with the United antes on the subject of Recipro- { ment wil be found unprepared for the eeeasion, gates of Paris to drink sey unten d by Betrai, tervals, like the quarter-chime of a clock, as) there wae with only one leg. Whenhe came hours of fasting. ti f the Canadian free ports; in return they | city ‘Their most remarkable features are un, | oT, in any particular, Unequal to its reaponsibili- | every Sunday, mre srpnce ja ht ie th er if to mark off the progress o! deeay ; eough- in over night he ‘wore a black hat, which! And now L eome to the end, I can remem- ion of the Canaais I ; , Seka approbation id tha condect of tha Pro: ‘ties: but we should nevertheless be glad to see | “i oom aioe ant. oxo alehee aed iad ing from vast hollow chests ; coughing from added a certain look of respectability to a | ber many little incidents which escaped me | Were Wi : 7 ; vineial delegates, indignation at the absurd pro- {the danger averted, and the difficulties which pro | ma, se ror “ae é eyuonymous. little narrow ones—now one, now another, worn anit of black. Altogether his clothes! in writing the previous articles. Lought ty unwraught Burr millstones, rags, firewood, grind.) positions of the Federal Committee of Ways aud, duce it overcome. moth I. ee now two or three together, and then a mi- | had been delivered up to him by Daddy ; bat) bave told you of two quiet elderly gentlemen, | stones, aud unground plaster, aud gypsum; and | Means, satisfaction at the termination of wegotia- To {ally comprehend the meanness and ferocity , The Richmond Examiner has been “aquelehed” nute’s silence in which to think of it all, and now be was geen hopping d isconsvlately about who, amidst all the bluckguardism that went that is all. “They proposed, it is true, to abvlish Wate an . 0 mene Kn - ae of the menaces earployed by these Government : by tien Torey: Hoty Goths uduisine Stated wonder who would begin next. One of the 4), place on bis cruteb, fur the hat was mis on around, held a discussion upon the merits, the fishing bountids now paid to"Ameri¢un fisher- | level wil we ren wkane ey hemor wn | writers, we have only to recall the fact that the | aud freest Government the sun ever abone on” h } . : ‘ . . "ane : ‘ 160 8 P iand a cheerful determination to meet the aliered , ; ; 7 : reprobates above me coughed 60 grv-| .in4 [le wasa timid man with a mild voice, of the English language—one of the dis; ut- | : : eid ‘pute heare’ ty : . Nidiiieiienaal Mo 4 t ‘isheriee, ook no part. reconcile this with the clause in the Coustitutioa 3 ‘ir “a ‘ 6 eerste special admiration f he | wien, but in retarn they would put a heavy [aX ejrcumstanees of the Provinces with the courage | Colouists, Whe own hese Fisheries, OR a. eure tree & Land a tree terquely like the chopping of woo7, that and whenever he asked some roffien ** whe-| ants showing an especial admiration for t ee } itt eDiocberpaniencedty tir thelendedionta ‘Dien 3da- : : sity P Al ' which should secare tree spece press neawed him in my mind the Woodeutter. ior he had seen such a thingasa black hat,’’ | word “ kindle,” ** fine old Saxon’ word ‘a8! on Provincial fish, ,We shall not go over the os aioe a ie sabiateall cea aT abrogating the Reciprocity Treaty. , thoag ‘te the millions? The same thing is frequently Now and then [ found myself coughing too, .n4 got his answer, he invariably said ever was esined.’ Then there were some | jengthy list on which those generous geutlemen| Miniatfy ee had such au opportunity to ipau- | they ‘had vot preficedso largely by the Treaty ‘as dane ju France and there called despotism. whieh may have added to the poignant dis- | sehank you,” which was regarded as very | childish games of **first and last letters,” 19 | proposed to place duties, but shall merely refer! arate a new commercial poli¢y as that which the Awericans, they took ne steps to bring about Pl) septa ace 8 sities tresa these awfully constant and san ia ee At last one sidied up to him with | vary such entertainments as that of the) | the articles which we ebjefly export to the | now. wields the Goverument of Canada; it bas )its termination... The hostility to its continuance | Mas. W ar eeaeaaenanee sounds occasioned me. They were good in ‘a grin, and showing about tliree square inches Swearing Clab. 1 should ‘also have men-| Mcdoral’ dine ditiad dud 'asty obits par the whole peuple with it; and has only te show | duitiecld Peace Ahoatherieihd:, The. Aimee: Prescription 0 one oft ps agg gy ani i . | Stafes:—Mackerel, ong y per | ; oad , . 4 > eam y id purses in the Uni States, one way : they made me forget what wretches of some fluffy enbstance, suid — * Is this| toned that, on the disaolation of the Swear ( : itself equal to the occasion td Carry triumphantly" fi sect and 5 : ith failing enfoty and they were who, to all appacraneces, were so. anything Inke wot you've lost, euv'ner?’’ | ing Club, a game at * dumb motions *? was barrel; herring, pickled or salted, one dollar per | any measures it chooses te prepese. Here and Vean# have threatened its abrogation for several | ysed for thirty years wit ed rare Hom rapidly OS their way toe pauper's ys cripple incpoenel it. That's the rim started, which presently led to some talk bagrel; salmon, two dollars and fifty cents per there a doubtful protectionist ep ea little ery. years; Yankee protectionisls elaimored loudly he afm vie pain ‘coraag ta acidity a , ~ . ¥ : | * - » P . 3 } t " “ . . 2 i s ¢ Z | .e8 Bi : vg e graveyard. [ did not care about the more of j¢t'’ he said. ‘What a shame !’’ and ‘concerning deaf and dumb people, and their pareel: shad, two dollars per barrel; all other D eche majority 1e0eteee areRGUNEY teeta |for its repeal ; Yankee “ patriots” made no seeret | tee teninell, relieves wind colic, aad, by giving matured ruffians so much ; but though the | honbled off with tears in his eyes. _ | method of conversing with exch other by §sh, pickled, one dollar and fifty cents ver barrels | tection for Canadian manufactures is freedom of their Hhtention to punish the Provinces, in this) rest aud health to the child, aemforts the mo- sen” the pore Ene By. Sorina tae | Fall three oe of an _ of a seer ght — te sh a he oe sais provided, that any fish in packages ether than from taxation, and the cheap labour that flows way, fortheit sympathy with the South ; Yankee | ther, : = ise saee? A id * ‘ d shivering, and then came the taskmaster story that syanded strange oug ‘ : oe rom it. Absolute free trade, the -dreain of em 8 1. : > : Sain comrades — to hear what cold and hunger. toe ooidieis leaking man, over six {eet high, from the mouth of the most efficient member | barrels, shall pay in proportion to the rates anh Suniel Adela without a custom eels wej? — " ee ee Ye ey am i Men in Washingtea have no re ; and vice, had done for them at filteen, was wit} quick gray eyes, in which * no trifling” ‘of the club. A good memory for details ed upon similar fish in barvels, All other fishes). ioe reach, because in the present cireum- | nexation of the Provineess would be ower ‘and go to a ball or euil on the Ch +. agie- almost enough to make a man cry; and ;appeared as distinctly as a notice agaist ‘enables me to repeat this story almost, if not one half cent per pound. Coal, bituminous, Bfty | stanees of the country the necessary direct tax-! When the Provincial Delegates reached Wasbing- trate of the netice in a sackcoat as often as there were boys there even younger than | trespassing on a wayside board. Le came | quite, exactly. **Tbey are a rummy lot, . ot. and all other, twenty-five cents. per tun; ation is impossible; but the next best thing, mo-)to4 Jact month, aul offered terms of trade, too in a frock, and the oid ortbodox dress coat ie these. in none a and the gray eyes made outour | them deaf and dumb,”’ said the story teller. tesa ten conts per bushel; hides, ten per doen aunee pes oh amnswtes, - eg "a » Me } me by hal, they were geet by propositions thas pe ee Ae vers? wt cael At half-past two, every one being asleep, number ms moment., ** Out into the yard. Ir I was at the saat ap taney Seced cent “ad valorem.” Pine logs, $1.50 per thou- a titi our pray, with the probable result of a (the Yankees well knew would be-rejected. . a i rt ow and their despair, i ee ee en ehaaleie Sine re a fa ‘ ab a yoay hon Veacholiday ‘l nee to go-and see | sand. feet, boaxd measure, or 0 per cent; sawaplarger revenue than. we obtain from a higher | inteaded that they should berejected. They | ; ; emnnted ents baa, wets foun and os pul. vue _—" wasp? < aa “ve ms . 8 ta lhe ‘ i oF $1 tee geo 1 .ceutcetty ‘ a dria dsea : i? } : ~JsO@ae FY J lik , ay ¥ Qs ‘és bial ~avisdquad <-s ad of ¢ este a . ; ye alti é « ‘om a w = « 4 ¢ > Vere PYF eo yh Fue i +;