; he THE EXAMINER. V4 oe nen ee oo Se. nd ; :. oe SUPFEKINGS OF HAVELOCK’S SOLDIRAS—HORKORS OF TH? TenntBLE—tr Troe.— The Wakulla (Florida) Times of the time, and not to any advantage | might wish to take of Mr. | c Ke Fram i 1 cr WAR. Mth ins’, says that a gentlemen residing at Auapulga?, Ga., © _as Lowe him, personally, no ill-will. a4 ‘ Tenfallettidas poriciilase from the cawp ol @enerit Havelock recently received a large sum ol money. lle was or afier- The Doctor labours hard to make it appear that the print. | r = e v ees é' es ame nre taken f oan | rivate letters, dated ug. 9, 1857, at which ‘wards obliged to leave home on business, and on the , ied oe ing of “Thoughts,” &e., was an insult to the people of} aint CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I., NOVEMBER 16, 1859 dve, General Haveloc! *s camp vas at Marrngurwar, a villog his departure, two negroes caine to the house and deinande d a Peter’s Bay. Re-read that article, Doctor, and you will not ~_ mini nnn, eight miles from Cewnpore, and on the left bank of the his wife to be shown where the money © ‘8, under penalty . me wos ie it, from beginning to end, against the people | THE PISCATORLAL PARSON'S LAST CA Cianges :—")'The ehemy are SoMumesous that they surrevad death, She complied, and they then demanded some supper, of St. Peter’s Bay. Many of the people of St. Peter’s Bay | sibel i ST. us, and we have to fight front, rear, and flank. In the en- pagement ef the morning of the Suh inst., Capt. Galwey, of the | Fusiliers, commanded the rear guard, consisting of about 50 | Europeans, and this gallant little band of heroes kept at bay at} least 1.000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry of the enemy for about | two hours, when two guns came up to their assistance from the | front. two messengers for the euas, but when they came and opened | upon the enemy the letter fled in every direetion—netwith-| standimg thar they heid their ground agaist such odds for two} full hours, only four men were wounded out of this small party, | und. fortunately, none killed. By their brave and determined resiarance, they eaved the baggage from falling into the hands | wf the enemy, and by this act of service they have contributed | to the preservation of the lives of the whole force, for bad as is wur condition, it would Aave been infiaintely worse had we been | deprived of the few necessaries of which the baggage was com~ | posed. Thot same afternoon we marched ali the way back to) Morrugurwar, and it is now decided that we are to recross the | river Ganges, and to remain at Cawnpore uotil we can get} together a respectable ferce capable of coping with the Oudites. | ht was awful passing through tie viilege on our return after the tight, to see the dard bodies of the enewy, dreadfaijy mutilated and lging about in every direction. Some cut ia two with their bowels all scattered about—some without heads, arms, or legs, and legs and heads s cattered about ina promiscuous heap. They lay on the read as they tell, no one removed them, and | Consequently the wheels of caris and waggons went over them | und smashed them. We never bury the dead of the enemy— | we leave them for the prey of the vulture and the jackal, &c. | This ia horrible, but we are so accustomed to these sights that we do not mad them. We hang rebels and mutineers and | blow them from guns ; we leave the fragments where they fall, and think nothing about it.” THE HAND TO HAND FIGHT AT HATTRASS. At Agra all was quiet tp to the 27th of Angast. On. the Mist°a force, ednsistiig of about 150 of the 3d Europeans, under Capt. Strover, three guns, under Lieut. Griffin, and 36 mounted militia—the whole under the command of Major G. J Montgomery, brigadier major, left the fort, with the view of making a demonstration against the insurgents in the neigh-| bourhood of Hattrass, The force entered that place without opposition, but intelligence having been received that a large party of the iasurgeots from Aliyghur was moving down to attack him, Major Montgomery promptly resolved to anticipate them, and aceurdingly marched out to meet the rebels, who retired into a garden, where they were protected by a wall, and sheltered among the trees, An ineffectual fire was opened on them, to which they smartly rephed, when the fanatics had the audacity to rush from under cover right upon the 3d Europeans, then ia skirmishing order, and endeavoured to cut them down with their swords. A series of hand-to-hand combats then took place, which ended in the enemy being driven away, leaving | 300 dead behind. ‘The remainder fled, pursued by the militia ‘jects. He said he had learned the Lord’s prayer; but when cavalry, and mowed down by the artillery. In this affair, which occurred on the 24th of August, Mr. J. O'Brian Tandy, late manager of the North-Western Bank in Calcutta, and Ensign Marsh, of the 16h Grenadiers, who accompamred the force as volunteers, were killed, and Lieut. Longueville Clarke, late of the Gwalior contingent, was severely wounded. The total loss on our side was 5 killed and 25 wounded. Alter the action Major Montgomery, althoug pressed to follow up his successes, | fell back upon Llattrass. TREASON AND ALARM AT NEEMUCH. Affairs have begun to assume a most serious aspect at Weemuch, and the men of the 2d Light Cavalry can hardly be gelsed upon; for, independently of private bushed-up ramours, which ascribe to them the daikest treason, the numerous desertions that have taken place, combined with the overt mutiny of one squadron of this corps, justify the presumption that they will, en masse, uvail themselves of the first favourable | opportunity to Join the rebels. “Phis opportunity may uot be | far distant, for large parties of men, under a person sad to be a gon of the King of Detht, who has lately j ined and concentrated them, have established themselves in the neighbourhvod of Neemuch, TERRIBLE SUFFERING OF A LADY. Mrs. Leeson, the wife of Mr. Leeson, deputy collector, mide her escape from Delhi, on the morning of the 19h. Poor greature, she was almost reduced to a skeleton, ss she was kept in a sort of dungeon while tn Delhi. Two Chupprasses, who, it appears, have all along been faithfal to her, aided her in making her attempt to eseape. ‘They passed through the Ajmere-gate, bat not wholly unobserved by the motineer’s sentries, as one of che Chupptasses was shot by one of thei. It being dark at the time, she laid hidden among the long web gras- notil the dawn of day, when she sent the Chupprassee to recon- noitre, and as luck would have it, he came across the Maropean picket stationed at Subzie Mundie. S» soon as he could discover who they were, he went and browght the lady into the picket- house amongst the soldiers, who did all they could to procure her wafetw. As soon as sbe arrived inside the square she fell down tipen her kuees, and offered up a prayer to heaven for her safe deliverance. All she had round her body was a dirty piece of cloth, and another piece folded round her head. She was | in a terrible condition, but- I feel assured that there was nota single European but what felt greatly concerned 1 her behalf, and some even shed tears of pity when they heard the tale of woe that she related. After being interrogated by the officers for a stort time, Captain Barley provided a doolee for her, and sent her an ter escort eafe to cainp, where she has been provided with a staff-tent, and everything that she requires, General Havelock, whose name is now on every Englishman's tongue, is a member of the Baptist body, and 1s known tq be very firmly attached to his denomjnational principles. He is married to the daughter of the late Rev, Dr. Marshman, the eminent Serampore Baptist missionary. — 4 eH 6-—--—————--——- UNITED STATES. The gallant leader of tins handful of men Bad to send | market is rather dull, the announcement of the Persia having ' which the lady furnished them, putting, however, a quantity of | strychnine mto theircoffee. Ina few minutes they were both) dead, when it was ascertained that they were white imen, and | near neighbours, in disguise, who had been aware of her hus- band having received the money as before stated. Financray Arrams at New Yorx—Ocr. 28 — The money put a stop to operations. The stock market at opening was rather active butirregular. Foreign exchanges have improved ; in domestic there is no alteration of moment. Specie continues | dull of sale, the rates ranging from 410 1 per cent. The ex- changes at the Clearing House were inside of $9,000,000, and the specie balances paid upward of $735,000. A summary of the failures and suspensions in the United States, since the first of August is given in the Philadelphia Bulletin as follows :—Whole number 952, of which 448 were in New York, 85 in Pennsylvania, 120 in Massachusetts, 40 in Ohio, 7 in Kentucky, 3 in Indiana, 6 in Maryland, 21 in| Lowa, 23 in New Jersey, 5 in Rhode [sland, 24 in Wisconsin, | and 58 in other States\—with total liabilities estimated at ninety millions of dollars. 4) ee —e NEW BRUNSWICK. Rumours of highway robveries, arsons, murders, &c., are) now quite rife. On Sunday uw was currently reported that a | Doctor had been robbed of his watch and a yold piece near the Suspension Bridge on Saturday night ; and that near the Valley Church a Bank Presidert prevented an attack by pretending to draw a pistol, Tur Beavek Lake Traceny.—lt is said that the trunk of one of the children of McKenze bas been found under a frank- lin, supposed to have fallen on it at the time of the fire. To make the siory still more shocking, it is now said that the two younger children were thrown into the fire alive. ‘The prisener, Breen, is quite satisfied that he must die, and wishes to show where a great part of the property is bid. His description has not enabled the police to find it. Apolication will be made, it is said, to the proper authority, to permit his removal in custody, for the purpose of showing It. A quantity of his clothing, and a shirt of McKevzie’s, were found at a house which Breen was im the habit of frequenting. A pair of drawers found on Breen is supposed to have be- longed toMcKenzie. On old Slavin was a trousers of the saine cloth as the coat and waisteoat found at Heagerty’s, and as the piece sworn to as resembling that purchased by McKenzie. The prisoners have been thoroughly washed and cleansed, and supplied with clean clothing. They seem to have to feeling or sense or idea whatever of religion. Old Siavin when asked if he did not wish to see a clergyman, said he did not know of what use they could be. The boy when questioned, said he had been to school for some time, but could learn fittle. He knew little of religious sub- asked to repeat it, mumbled something almost wholly unintelli- gible, and it was painfully evident that of praver in ite proper sense he hes not the slightest conception. — Weekly Freeman, Nov. 5. Yesterday morning on the assembling of the Court at 10 o'clock, the prisoners on the McKenzie case were brought up to plead to the eharges against them, Breen, on being asked what he had to say to the indictment, replied resolutely “ guilty,” and on being warned by the Judge that if he) persisted in this it would be recorded against him, and his | sentence of punishment be the same as if tried and convicted ; he still kept to the same plea. The elder Slavin on being asked, * guilty or not guilty,” replied, « ‘deed [ cannot clear myself of it,” and persisting in this form of speech, the Judge in accordance with the law, ordered the plea of not guilty to | be recorded. The rule under which his Honor acted in this is the eighth section, chapter 159, Revised Statutes, which says that, “ [f any person arraigned on any indictment shall stand mute of malice, or shall not answer directly, the Court shall direet the proper officer to enter the plea of * not guilty’ on his behalf.” The younger Slavin pled distinctly “ not guilty.” On the Judge usking if they were ready for their trials. the elder Slavin replied * [ guess so,” and on bis further asking if they were provided with professional advice, or if they wished the Court to assiga them such, the elder Slavin declined any legal aid, and the younger replied affirmatively.— Sz. John Courier, Nov. 7. + ea > have told me, that had the Kpiscopalian written out their own thoughts on the sub’ect, he could not have given a truer transcript of them than what that article contained. This does not look as if they were insulted, But a person with half an eye can see through the Doctor’s drift, ia bis impo- tent attempt to bring censure on the Printer for publishing the heretical communication. Sir, -* there’s a good time coming.” ‘There is to be an Election next summer, and the Doctor is coming forward as a candidate, and, therefore, catches at every straw with a view to influence the people of this District against Mr. Whelan. But he will not succeed. The people know the Doctor too well to trust him again. He has no more chance of going into the House of Assembly again than he has of going into the moon. What? Does he think the people have forgotten his treachery when he last represented them ? Does he expect Catholics to vote for him at the coming Election, after his betraying them and his other friends for the paltry sum of thirty pounds? No! he has no more chance to a seat in the Assembly than that “ black boy” he sa:s he sawin England. By-the-by, Doctor, was it in England you saw that young “colored gem'man ?” Perbaps ‘twas in ** Sc-o-tland,” as you call it. Well, Doc- tor, L can tell you that all the putrescent lotions of your laboratory, aye, and all the waters of the Morell to boot, will not be sufficient to wipe from the minds of your late con- stituents the remembrance of your dastardly, treacherous and turn-coat act when you were last in the House of Assembly. But I must have done. I feel “sick,” Doctor, trying to follow you through your rigmarole of a letter. You tell us in conclusion that the “ writer and the printer deserve to be kicked.” Try it, Doctor; meet them with your own weapons ; administer to them some of your usual medicinal prescrip- tions, and they’ll soon kick the bucket! In conclusion, let me tell you that the quieter you keep in future the better. I know a little of your conduct in Church matters in the Rev. Mr. Douglas’s time. I know a few other things which, pe: haps, had better not “ be wafted on the wings of the press.” * * * © © % @ & lam, &e., JOHN PARKER, Head Saint Peter’s Bay, Ovtober 24, 1857. P. S.—Doctor, when you next write, date your letter from your rea) place of residence, aud not from Saint Peter's Bay, with a view to divert readers from placing suspicion on your- self'as the writer. ‘To write a communication at one place, and then to date it as if written at another, implies a false- hood. You did the same when you wrote respecting Mr. J. MacEwen’s land affair. Thus have you heapedinsu!lt upon insult, J. ¥s —_____—_ + 20 > Exrata.—lIn Mr. Josiah McJ.cod’s letter published in the last Examiner, for * Their adeptness at slander and falsehood are such,” read “ Their adeptness, &c., is such ;” and for “ Catholics entertains a different belief,” &e , read “ Catholic entertains,” &e. Nov. 10, 1857. Original Poctry. LOLOL LLL LOLOL (vOR THE EXAMINER.) TO MY COMPANION. Dear J , companion of bright days departed— Bright days that shed lustre on life's sluggish stream— When no shade of darkness or gloom ever thwarted ‘The sunny effulgence of life’s morning dream ,— Alone, from a far toreign land and in sadness 1 send you a fervently heartfelt adieu,— Oft shall the springtime return in its gladness Ere I shall visit my country and you. Bright were the days that we squandered together, With sunbeams of bliss and sweet flow’rets of joy ; Thy affection, | know, was the love of a brother, And mine—neither distance nor time can destroy. Quickly our friendship did spread forth its blossoms— The mutual love-knot of kindred souls— Its bloom shall not fade, and its sweets in our bosoms Shall live and shall gladden while life’s torrent rolls. How oft *’mong the rocks that reply to the billow Fines. —Toronto, Oct. 31. A destructive fire occurred at Whitby, C. W., to-day, but as the telegraph office was destroyed, we have been unable to learn the particulars. Reed’s Rectifying establishment at Belleville was burned | this morning. Loss $4000. ———<———— = = Seana Correspondence. LIKE DOCTOR LIKE PATIENTS. To vue Eptror or THE EXAMINER. Sirn,—Under the head of “ Like Writer like Printer,” the Monitor, cf the-Sth inst., publishes a letter from St. Peter’s | Bay, containing strictures on an article which appeared in the Examiner, of the 14th September, headed, “ Taoughts in spare minutes,” and signed “ An Episcopalian.” As I am put down as being that Episcopalian, and have met with no smal! amount of abuse on that account, I shall, whether wise or otherwise, endeavor to reply to the offended corres- pondent of the Monitor. I should have done so ere this, had I seen the paper sooner; but I did not see it until yesterday, and only then afier having sent nearly five miles for it— Awrut Deata By Ramway Acctoent.—As the 10 30 ee train on the Chicago, Fond-du Lac and Saint Paul | ailway was about to leave the station in Chicago,a man named Shuettle, an emigrant ticket agent, was standing on (he station platform, when the train started rather suddenly, and in attempt- his silly effusion thas: “It is well known that the writer’s | ing to jump upoa the train he fellon the track, The wheels of theee carriages passed over him ; his legs were cut off, one near the body and the other just below the knee. He wasalive when taken up, but no hopes were entertained of his recovery. Dr. Hawley gives a detailed account of the ease of the boy at Ithaca, N.Y, named Northrop, upon whose diseased limb a fower is growing! The lad is from 13 to 14 years old, and has been subject to tenderness and disease of the hip-join', which, at two years of age, resulted in extensive tamefaction ; three years liter anabscess was formed, and finally the disease caused the dislocation of the bip-jomt For four months the patient has been unable to move an inch in bed ; abscesses have formed in the abdomen, through which the fecal contents of his intestines were discharged ; and his nervous sensitiveness has been such that he would allow no one to touch bim or make an investigation, and careless walking across the floor has caused him to ery out with pain, The prolongation of bis life was re- garded as a miracle. On the 4:h inst,, there was projected from the right limb, which for a long ume had been greatly swollen, a stem, on the inner side, at the edge of the gastro- nemious mescle, rising at right angles with it, more thay seven inches in beight, a flower squarely set upon it, resembling the Passion Flower, or the China Aster. On Wednesday the boy felt an oozing from what had been expected to be au abscess, and expressed great relief. He did not permit an examination votil Satarday afieraoon, when a stem was seen arising at right angles with the limb, at about the height of three inches, I should have had considerable of writing on my hands! crowned with pure white buds, resembling the white buds of Voy also state that “ one of the clergy was attacked behind the orange! On being exposed to the light, the flowers ex- panded, and assumed the colour of a beautiful greyish purple. — Rochester Democrat. ‘ An, American paper says that a lady and her husband, and their thirty-two children, stopped at the Madison House, Cov- ington, Ky.. recently ;—and that the lady, aboué sixty years of | age, appeared young and hearty. “The cir¢ums{agce was cer- tainly worthy of note. there being but two copies of the Monitor coming this way, | ‘that [ am aware of. | The aforesaid despotic and intolerant scribbler of the | Monitor—-whom T shall address as.“ Tae Doctor’—begins | mother” (meaning Parker's, of course) * is a Roman Catholic, ‘and his father, what he calls bimself—that he has attended ‘both Chuareh and Chapel,” &. You are correct, Doctor. |The writer’s mother was a Roman Catholie while she lived, ‘and do you dare to insinuate that that is any disgrace to her ‘son? You forgot to state, Doctor, that I have the additional ‘honor of having been baptized by a Roman Catholie Bishop '—the late Bishop MacKachern. You are equally eorreet in ,saying that my father is what [ style myself—an Episcopa- | lian. He is also a man who has too much integrity and | ‘honor in him to haye betrayed a constituency for thirty pounds, as you did; he would die first. But you are not | quite right in saying that I attend both Chureh and Chapel. ' All who know me know that “both” of yours to smack of (deliberate falsehood. That’s like the untruths you wrote ‘about the letter Mr, John MacEwen received, in mistake, from Mr. Aldous, relative to the land affair. * * * * | You suggest that I should have sent a letter to the clerical | gentlemey privately, if I ** wished to do them good.” Con- iseience and the Crimea! Do you meaw that i should have | written a Jetter to every preacher in the Island who comes ‘within the sphere of the strictures of an * Kpiscopalian ?” |What? To write a sermon for every one of them? Truly jhis back, and when he could not defead himself—he being ‘absent from the Island,” &e. We all know whom you meau, ‘and I defy you to point out where he is attacked. The ar- ‘ticle, “Thoughts in spare minutes,” would have been written ‘if Mr. C had been home a thousand times over. — Lts hiving been written while he happened to be in Nova Scotia, We wandered alone, through the long summer day ; How oft has the green grassy holm been our pillow While eve’s dying glories fled faintly away. While night and her darkness stole slowly aronnd us, And star followed star through the deep fields of heaven ; How oft have we lain, as some spell there had bound us, Grieving the hour when the chain should be riven. For dearer to us were the breeze’ many yoices, The whispers of men, the sounds of the sea, The glory of night which so deeply rejoices The soul that, O Nature! can commune with thee, Than all the forced joys of the circles of pleasare, Which play—but which pall—in the dwellings of pride,— O dearer together to squander our leisure With Nature, than mingle with Fashion’s cold tide. But now we are parted—I hope not forever,— Though years on Time’s pinions of fleetness shall flee, And Ocean's wild wastes shall continue to sever My faithful and fondest associate and me ; And I shall still wander—but I cannot wither— I feel a wild freedom inspiring my breast, An influence restless impelling me hither— - My spirit finds all things enjoyment—but rest. Dear comrade farewell ;—when among the sweet flowers Of Beauty that cheered our hearts, wayward and young, You stray as of old—in those bright sunny bowers Where Love and where Friendship spontaneously sprung— You will not forget, then, the kindred spirit That was wont to be there in the days that are gone,— Long may you that sunshine of beauty inherit Though I, in the distance, must wander alone. Upper Freetown, 10th Noyv., 1857. SYLVANUS. . (vOR THE EXAMINER.) THE HAPPY PAST. When joy shone bright on all around, And all we look’d on smiled, And sorrow seein’d for ever flown, And love the hours beguiled ; Oh say doth memory ever cast A lingering wish behind, To view again that happy past— That bright and happy time. But fate hath will’d that we must part, And bid those scenes farewell, And feel that anguish of the heart Which words would fail to tell, And though we breathe our hopes anew In dark and sadder clime, Yet memory sighs again to view That bygone happy time, But though fond memory often strays To those dear scenes of youth, When joy shed forth her sunny rays Of innocence and truth, Yet all those joys we loved and prized, We loved alas in vain ; For like earth’s summer flowers they die, And know no second spring. | Was owing to the accident of my hearing Mr. Barker at that October 20, 1857. Joun Barrer. A very stupid ‘‘ Constant Reader” of the Protector, nop having the fear of violated grammar and outraged common sense before his eyes—has constituted himself the Merry Ap. drew to the Punch of the Protector; and, a8 a specimen of literary composition and sound reasoning, his effusion in thy diately following it, from the pen of the piscatorial parson, Sutherland. The stupidity of the first of these worthies woulq justify his assumption of his nom de plume, for we wil] any one who is a ‘‘ constant reader’’ of the Protector motto imbibe some tinge of the stupidity and folly characteristic of that eminently Christian sheet, which has to resort for a pro- traction of its existence to slandering and vilifying its cotem. poraries, and shrinks not from bearing false witness againgt its neighbours. We pass by the cur whose bark we but notice, that we may show how thoroughly we despise it; and leay ing him to ‘* bay the moon,’’ come to our friend the Reverend George, who stands confessed ‘ the big dog in the tan-yard” of the Protector’s editorial corps. , As we happem to know that the only chance of recruiting the inadequate resources which remained to the Protector wag the excitement of asectarian row, which might add a little spice to the soup maigre of its editorials, we do not intend te gratify the reverend editors by entering into matters which we consider unfit for our columns, and too sacred to be made the weapons wherewith to gratify the feelings of animosity with which a set of political parsons may seck to obtain the realization of their uims, and insult the feelings af their opponents. ’ The Reverend George appears to be much annoyed at what he designates as ‘‘ personal abuse’’ from the Examiner, which he admits has raised the laugh against him in the community, We defy the Sanctified editor, or any of his reverend coad- jators, to point to a single sentence in this paper, in which he ean discover the ‘* abuse’’ complained of ; whereas, if we turn to the pages of the Protector, we shall find almost every column teeming with calumnies the most foul, and abuse the most unprovoked, of a religious body in this Island who num- ber nearly one half its population. And this kind of garbage is served out by the Protector under the hypocritical plea of glorifying God and promoting piety and good morals; but bigots, who cater for the Sanctified Press, of the intolerant and acrimonious feelings with which they regard their Cathos lic fellow-subjects, and who have the good sense to treat their calumniators to the most cool and aggravating indifference, As to the heinous offence of provoking laughter at the expense of the Reverend George, we beg to remind his Reverence that he is entitled to all the credit due to the promoter of the healthful exercise referred to, as there could be no laughter but for the singular pranks he cuts. Although we cannot compare him to Falstaff, who was “ not only witty in himself but the cause of wit in other men,’’ we can safely say that he is often pre-eminently ridiculous, and his Reverence knows that laughter and ridicule generally go together. We are accused of a desire to ** throw veil over the aly surdities of Popery.’’? We reply that we know of no other absurdities to veil than those which emanate from the unsetu- pulous pen Of Mr. Sutherland and those of his reckless coadjutors ; and their effusions are 80 very absurd ihat it would he an unpardonable waste of time to notice, much less to refute them. With respect to the error in our quotation from Seripture, to which his Reverenece has directed public attention, we readily acknowledge that we incautiously used ‘ whited sepulchre’’ ** instead of ‘* whited wall,’* and the detection of the error was, of course, more in the parson’s way than ours; but the ideas suggested by ‘‘ whited sepulchre ’’ being so’closely, connected in our mind with the views entertained by many of our clerical cotemporary, that the slight deviation from the sacred text may well be pardoned in one who does not pretend to be so well versed in Scripture as his antagonist. His Reverence lays great stress on the fact, that, in the passage from which we made the extract, St. Paul made an “ apology,” and intimates the wish that we should follow his example. We have no objection to do so, if his Reverence ean establish the faet, that he occupies the same position, political or religious, with reference to society, that the High Priest did to the Jews. But until we shall have been furnished with some proofs of his claims to the dignity of High Priest, we must decline to make the apology impliedly required of us. ~ We thankfully acknowledge Mr. Sutherland's admission, that learning, eloquence, and piefy, are to be found in the com- munion of the Catholic Church ; and congratulate the reverend editor on the discovery he has made, that piety can find 8 middle ground between superstition and infidelity. : Until the worthy parson shall have revived the falling fortunes of his paper, we shall not take serious notice of li compositions, but, merely ‘*‘ using him for our mirth whe he is waspish,’’ laugh at his absurdities ; and for the present we dismiss him with another quotation from our favorite which we hope will not excite so much of his bile 38 previous one :— * Listen, ye wolves, while George to Cynthia howl, Making night hideous; answer him, ye owls.” : THE TWO COOPERS. Tue editor of the Monitor, in the issue of that highly * fluential journal on Thursday last, has seen fit to indulge? sundry impertinences with reference to our reprobation of t sentiments of bis namesake of Sailor’s Hope, as conveyed # the communication of the latter which appeared in our colum™. on the 2d instant, and which we criticized on the 9tl- Out great offence is, that our strictures did not appear until lapse of seven days after the publication of their subject. “W have already given our reasons for allowing it to appey out allusion in the sheet in which we gave it to our , we cannot help it. We-have long since had ample — of the difficulty of pleasing them by any thing we 4” say do, as long as they are in the cold shades of opposition. ss if our conduct, in holding our peace for a week, ** = . to heaven,’’ how is it that the Monitor let eleven days ee pressive silence’? muse its censure? We are stated to ‘apologized’? for not haying noticed the letter sooner last No. of the Sanctified is a fitting prelude to the one imme. really with no other object than to relieve a few wretched ” and if those reasons do not satisfy the Political Alliance "5 §