tie ee ee 7 + eke ee 5 he omen a eehgg = Pe $4) THR BHRABINER. rT Pane. Bs Nea Re a moras. ~ oe -—~ —- = = - - - . pcneeanets m r : : [ ‘ .. q . — ' vs ” _ ——ate a, Ti a > 3 5 \ i iN rr Ri iSt. John’s was decided on that day, aged Upper Canada, for ae" pores aes to i occasion. In Mr. | j ha : | } : . . * | Kee ers arhiament.| Weuster s ‘ene - : SB SAS Be oy warm contedt, infavour of P,P, Keeping Lawyers out of Parhinqeni.| Webster's remarks, he said that, the *~ wih AA | ‘The following 1s the concluding pera-| Ambissador had come to see the United .- ~~ ome Saturday, Nevember 30, 1550. — es a I — News of the Week. Tus Steamer Rose, which should have arrived here on Sunday last, did not make her appearance until Wednesday last— her delay having been occasioned by the boisterous weather which prevailed for two or three days previous. The Rose made another trip to Pictou early on Thursday morning, and has since return- ed, but brought no English Mail. We learn from the Novascotian of Wednes- Gav Jast that the English Steamer was then hourly expected. The most serious injury has been done to the Shipping and Commercial interests af this Island by the late gale,—and we presume that the same interests have suf fered elsewhere to as great, if not greater extent. Nearly the whole eastern shore of Nova Scotia is reported to be covered with wrecks, many of them being of ves- gels destined for this Island, laden with Fall supplies 6f Merchandise. Amongs! the latter are, the Itob Roy, Turnbull, from Halifax, with goods—askore about 15 miles from Pictou—vessel and cargo only slightly damaged; Brigt. George, Le Blanc, with.a valuable eargo of Merchan- dise from Halifax for Charlottetown, is a total wreck about 30 miles from Pictou, cargo completely destroyed ; the Spec. Griffiths, is wrecked about the same place --one hand lost, the remainder of the crew saved with difficulty; brig Sham- rock, lately built and owned by Messrs. Reddin & Son—a total wreck, with loss of masts, chains and anchors; besides several other vessels, the names of which we have been unable. to ascertain. We are giad to learn that nearly al! the pro- perty thus destroyed was insured; the delay, however, which our merchants and trades people must put up with, before they can get their supplies renewed, cannot fail to be a great disadvantage and loss to them and the whole community. Several of those gentlemen took passage ia the Steamer for Pictou on Thursday morning. The wire of the Electric Telegraph between Pictou and Halifax was thrown by the late storm. EUROPEAN NEWS. A Telegraph despatch from N. York to Halifax announced the arrival at the former place of the Steamship Niagara from Liverpool in JQ days and 16 hours. There is no political or continentia! news of importance, The English markets are without ma- ierial change. France is quiet.—General] Changarnier has forbid the Trogps from uttering cries {of Vive L’Emperor, §c.,) when under arms. ‘fhe Spanish Cortes was opened by the Queen in person onthe 31st October. There has been no further hostile movements in Schleswig; but the Hol- stein Civic Guard has been disarmed by the Austrian troops, A grand Miltary Council is to be held at Vienna. A Turkish ship of the line has been blown up, kiiling 1000 men. TRIUMPH OF LIBERAL PRINCI- PLES. By the*Mail of yesterday we have ad- vices from Newfoundland to the 20th instant. The election for the District of Little, Isq., our date respected fellow of tie poll at its close : Little, 1873 Douglas, 1402 Majority, — 11 ple of St. John’s in favour of Responsible: Government—Mr. Little having canvass-| ed the electors, not on personai merits, buat on the strength of the principles in- volved in that system; while liis opponent adopted the very opposite course, affect- ing to deride and disparage them. An- other is thus added to the many proofs, that the people of all the Colonies, in- steud of being adverse to the introduction of the British Constitution, are eager to enjoy it. NewrounpLanp.—We see by the Newfoundland papers that the Govern- ment there are about issuing Treasury) Notes, similar in appearance to those of the Bank of British North America, It is thought this wil] be a great help to the Mercantile Community, and will be a step towards establishing a Colony Bank there, directed by men in whom the country shall have confidence, whose in- terests shall be interwoven with the pro- cress and advancement of its institutions, their tenure of office depending on the well understood approval of the public, The issue of these notes, says tha .Vorn- ing Courier, wil] tend in asmall way to counteract the monopoly heretofore en- joyed by the Bank of British North Ame- rica.—Courver. — NOVA SCOTIA. —_- ‘graph of an address which this novel! Slates, townsman. The following was the state Leasue has isaued. —* They would ear /U mon. inestly urge upon all electors the plain) p; duty to themselves and to the ceuntry 10\ that circumstance whatever, to vete for a Lawyer at the approaching general elec- This election cannot but be regarded 45 tion, as it would not be wise in us, or at a very distinct declaration from the peo- all to our credit, to trust those learned ; Jriends avy more, after practising their continued imposition on a liberal people.” Mr. Goveun,during his stay in Teronto, vot 1400 signatures to the Temperance Pledge. Ofthe number, 157 belonged to the military, and 156 were juveniles. Mr. Gough has since leaving T'oronte, been lecturing in Hamilton, he has given great satisfaction. A Sorpier vo se Haneep.—William Shutts, a private in tne 20th regiment, was tried on Wednesday and Thursday last forthe murder of James Cubiss a private in the same regiment, on the 17th June last. A plea of insanity was put in but was over-ruled by the Judge (Aylwin). He was sentenced to be hanged on the 13th December next.—.Vonireal T'rans- cript. Sepuctiox.—At the Kingston Assizes Mr. Potts, of Quebec, recovered, from a person named Pomeroy, a medical stu- his daughter, Hliza Jane Potts. Gvey has served the proprietors of the not a broken and dissevered iiadelphia papers contain a remour ta declaration of war between Buenas come to the full determinotion, under no) Ayrea and Brazil is soon to take steal it was not possible to trace tie news ® any authentic source, though the relations of the two countries are such as to render hostilities probable. A frightful accident oceurred on Thure Philadelphia to Baltimore, and about twenty persons were killed and many wounded. ’ A woman with six children, four of them barefooted, and all thinly clad! why said she was from St. John, N. B, re, was on her way to Philadelphia, where she has friends, was the object of much ‘sympathy and eommisseration in Stete |street, yesterday, forenoon. The feeling |was so strong that several of our “ first ‘men” ingwired anxiously if the poor wo- jae had ler late pastor’s certificate prove that she was in truth an object of charity. Not having the “ document” these benevolent gentlemen turned away, and made room for several hard-fisted mechanics, who at once made up a purse” ‘of $25 and presented itto her. She was. dent, £200 damage for the seduction of taken into Morse’s telegraph office, where . . before a comfortable fire, her children were measured for shoes, and otherwigp ‘armed against the pinching of frosty po- day last, in Delaware, a propeller having — burst her boiler, on her passage from” Montreal Gazette with a “ dectaration,” verty, The Times states that Capt. John which makes three coluuins in small type, J], ‘Richmond, agent of the Stonington alleging that they have inserted libels ir route to New York, has given the whole that journal, “ hurting the feelings of the family afree passage to that city, au set in plaintiff, and making his life unhappy, to perfect consonance with that. centleman’s the damage of £5000 currency. proverbial generosity.— Boston Bee. Lise. Case,—An action for Libel was brought against the Long Point Advocate,|A new bark, called the Funny, now fit- at the Assizes held at Simcoe. Dama-'ting at St. Stephens, N. B., and partly ges jaid at £2,500 by the plaintiff—ver-| owned in Boston, has on board, as # por- diet one shilling. ‘tion of her cargo, an entire steamboat, iwith all her usual fixtures attached, OUR TRADE WITH P. £. ISLAND Some idea of the extent of our trade| with Prince Edward's Is!and may be formed from the subjo:ned Itst of imports, entered at the Custom House in this city, from the Ist tothe 18th November. A branch of commerce so valuable should) be fostered by all the ligitimate influence, within ourreach. We are vlad to veas-) sured that the fertile island in questien has, during the past year and the present produce, abundantly, and consequently every demand has been promptly met. The export trade to P. E. Island, from this province, is quite equa! to ihe import. list kindly furnished by Mr. Keefler, 20,582 bushels Potatoes; 50,904 bush- els Oats; 11,147 bushels Barley: 8.571, bushels Turnips; 160 bushels Carrots ;' 318 bushels 26 bris, Oysters; 1360, qtls., Drvfish; 46 bris, Cranberries; 10 bris. Oatmeal; il bria, Mackarel; 16 cases. 6 bags Hay Seed; 6 bxs. Eggs; 19 fir-| kins and 800 lbs. Butter; 1462 feet Deals ;' 6 logs Cedar; 5 bales Wool.— Aalifaz, Morning Chronicle. Dears or nis Lorpsere tue Bisnor. or Nova Scoria.—We understand that. a ‘elegraphic Despatch received on Thursday evening, from New York, an- nounces, the death of his Lordship Bishop. £15,000. NEW BRUNSWICK. Tar Great Fire.—The Fredericton Head Quarters says— We were incorrect in making the num- ber of seperate tenements destroyed 156, the rea! number is ascertained to be 122, occupied by 177 families and the estimat- ed Joss is £30,830. ‘The property eover- ed by insurances is £19,000, and the number of families requiring immediate aid eighty-nine, and there can hardly be a doubt that the Government of the coun- try will interfere to protect those. who have no means of protecting themselves. CANADA. -__—— Proscrieine LawyersS—We see that an anti-Lawyer League has beer formed Five hundred and fifty-six prizes were except the smoke funnel, which has been awarded at the recent exhibition in Mon-|.4en down. She is 120 feet in length, treal, amounting to £1,233 Ids. A sum 29 foe: wide from ontside to ouside of nearly equalling this amount will re-| 1s of ; ‘paddle-boxes. ‘The Funny is a vessel of main in the hands of the committee after about 800 tons, built expressly for this all the expenses are paid to purchase ar abject by Henry Eastman, Esq. of St ticles and to forward them to the London stephens, assisted by Mr. liymes, both of Exhibiiow. whom design to be present to superintend the delivery in the harbor of San Pran- West Inpirs.—Acoounts from Ja- cisco. maiea to the 29th ultimo, report a num-| Surrerine on THE Piains.—A ger- ber of deaths, from Cholera, as many as tleman from New York, who arrived at 30 per diem, in Kingston and Port Royal. | Stockton. California, on the 30th Septem- The disease was also verv fatal in St. ber, says that the graves of emigrants are Catherine’s and other plaees. The au- already thick at every camping place thorities in each were doing their utmost near the Platie river, anc that the cholera to arrest its progress, ‘he weather was | prevailed there toa horrible extent, hum extremely oppressive during the day; but dreds dying daily. The. following ex- at night rather bleak. A correspondent! tract from his sad story we copy from the writing on the 3lst, says that the disease Philadelphia North American, and i, will was still raging throughout the Island, be read with paifal interest :— and that the deaths were numerous, / “The sand was knee deep, the sun ibroiling hat; not a tree was to be seen; ‘there was no water, and their provisions: UNITED STATES. iwere all gone. Fortunately, after paa- ; 3 ‘sing over abont 300 miles of this hedious Great Fire in Boston.—The Boston gosert, they came across a man who bad Telegreph of the 5th states that a great gone 40 miles further, found a good fire took place on Monday evening, 1 spring, and returned. with two. basrele.. i which the large depot, used for storing) water. This water he first sold for $1 freight by the Boston and Maine Railroad | ho, gallon, then $1 per quart, taen $10 3 7° it . . Company, was destroyed. ‘There was in jo, pint, and as the emigrants.came along, A Noven Careo ror CALironwia.—. ‘nearly thirty cars, all loaded with flour and other produce. Messrs. [larrod and Fernald, dealers in mahogany, used the train of cars was entirely consumed, and there was no insurance onthem. The building was anew one, bnilt of brick, was five hundred feet long, and valued at $40,000. total Joss by the conflagration is estimat- ed at nearly $125,000. “The origin of the fire is at present unknown. Dinyen TO Amin Bry.—The mer- chants of Boston gave a splendid dinner o Amin Bev, at the Revere House, on Monday evening, which passed off very pleasantly. Among the puests were Secretary Webster, Hon. Edward Ever- ett, Wm. Appleton and Robert C. Win- upper part. ‘Their loss is between $40,-. 000 and $50.000, about one-fourth of) It is mostly insured. Tie! Inglis, at London, on the 27th ult. It ig the building at the time.the 5.o'clock each choked almost to death and com- said his Lordship’s life was insured for freight train bound out, consisting of pletely exhausted, his prices raised, and no sum he could name within the power ,of the poor emigrant was refused tobe paid. When the water was nearly all gone, aman came along who for three i= ’ ‘whole days and nights -had drank bute which is covered by insurance. The half pint of fluid. He was almost dead and. begged for some water. The answer was, “I have not enongh to last myself and animals beck to the spring.” $50. $100, $500, $700, was offered in succes- sion for one little cup full of water, and the deaier refused it. The wreiched em grant threw down £700, all he had in the, world, and by main force grasped the cup and quenched his thirst.” Down with vax Yan«rrs.—In € speech at New Orleans on the 16th inst. Senator Soule said: “Gentlemen, I care very little for the opimon of this city. New Orieans is under Yankee influence. —an influence which we must ged sit, of,” throp, most of whom delivered speeshes|