Gy \ + Barer cry re nese toeeting hereby pledges itself at the approaching | measures already taken will put an end to the heart ep- culerprise which was Lopelese trom tbe first, and pesition to the Quebe: Scheme of Uniet Gr ta whore ebief result will be, as egeryone but its any ether measure cal-vlated te subvert the Gen- | gietims foresaw, to drag a considerable gumber stitution ef thie Colon) of te curtail its liberty or | of misguided men fram ther homes and peacable election te support these geatlewen in privileges. Votes of thanks were severally awarded | —ftetns Post unanimously to the Members for the Dis trict, to Mr. Haythorne, to the Chairman o’ ; which have from the first exaggerated Fevian io- the meeting, and to the representatives of the Charlottetown Press present—Mr. E. Reilly aed Mr. R. B. leving; and the same wer acknowledged by brief and suitable replies. On motion of the Hon. Mr. Coles, thre cheers were then given for the Queen; o1 totion of Mr. Haythorne three cheers fo the Honbles. G. Colee and Francie Kelly therr tive . and on motion of Mr — ee eas a a THE EUROPEAN CONFERENCE. as the above heading says :-— : «Phe position of the chief actors in the’ sanguinary drama which is Boon to be enact- ed on the plains of Central Europe has) slightly changed during the last week or two. The Emperor of the French now finds that he must fiucsse 4 little. His people bave pu wish for war, do not desire to be forced into | s; it, and think that France is great und po- tent enongh without any mew accession ol territory. All tne eats and ee class who have anything to dose are dead | re against it. This oon must be cajoled, and | accordingly the eemi-vfficial Constitutionnel has set about the work. It shows that the industries, and make them violators of the law The following extracts are taken from journals fluence, and indrrectly given encouragement te all heic movements. The President undoubtedly was placed in an infertunate position with regard to the Fenian nevement. Ov one hand it was his duty to see hat the laws be eoferced and that the boner of he United States be preserved; on the other and he could not ignore that public sentiment viuch run agaumet England without endangering iy he fastons.nnd 1 wall, atiny pleadure, use them, $0) — Ye to exhibit idhits hit the ter ofa Wilmer and Smith's European Tin ebler mafidiain eed 5 4 . ue THE ANTLCONFEDE! - - m, * oe péiqel perhaps, both for young followed more closely ——— Mmauifeg’a stronger disposition “to \thésesiu authority, and to order lowly aud reverently to all their EXTERS I ’ | hone: MEETING D the a } To tue Eviror or rue Exaaixer, _ re | Mr. Eprror; Apthe adjourhed nti-Gonfederate meeting Sir -—~At a Debate held ia the Mid sell School Jd on Tuesday last’ a resolution was passed House, of Monday, the 25th ult., on the subject flecting on the conduct of his Worship the | of Confederation, the following Resolution was asor. It seems sie plied a resola-| proposed by D."MePhee, Es jr., seconded by THE A CITIZEN. ——_-- | te & alike, ¢)pions teachingsof early life, and endeavour. | ie of the senseless petulance | Mr. Andrew TAWis, and carried “by a majority | of tion characteristt o a —— _" points will not be regarded asyipe and wvdificatou. The Nova . oo P; ; , reason ty suppose that ile delegates wall be bam- pered by any specific instructivhs conceived in 3 narrow illberal spirit. Lo Bruuswick the | confederates ae erg afe wot likely to fi Vee Obliged to @ powerlul | hori y by tnsisting upvo awendweuts mide iw twe Quebee cuulierence reso | a f this state vf mat proceeding tu give ‘ cal goveruments of the two Canadas. It is like be- is populanty We are net called upou, however, to protect the Cauadians ; let them pro- ivet themselves. We should merely be neutral Whatever the opision of the government at Washington may be with regard te the character or imprudence of the Fenwn movement on Canada, i it is to be hoped that the Seeretary of State will (From the Nec York Timez.; wot be aaa te sacrifice feelings of humanity The leading Fenian adventurers who have | or do vielence to public opinion in yielding too beee repu from Canada, and held to uch to British demands and vergeance. Mr. acéwer to our own “lovernment fur the gross | Seward is tee apt te tuady te foreign governments ie | and te sacrifice Awerica pride and interests to and indecent violation of our weutrality | seis wishes. Let hun iwitate in the present laws, evidently mad: some calculation on the lease the smvariable conduct of Great Britain, i ion of the American people at te) Jhich throws the protection of its flag over its of the Britwh G vernment daring | subjects every here, right or wrong Let not the late wat. Ther ate ready now to charge | our geverawent be too severe itself on those who upoo the Admins rition at Washington a | have erred, and let it net fail te give all the pro- want of pluck in mt availing by the Penian | tection possible to its citizens whe may have tall- demonstration to retaliate upon Cunada.| «e inte the bands of the british —N. V_ Heraid. and want of pluck in refusing their sym-| Their campaign (no matter by whose fault) has jes where a blow was intended against | been badly managed. ‘The Fort Erie demonstra- what these blundering leaders sapposed we | Hen was tow much in advance of the ain meve- would recogn ze as {he Common enemy. ment ou the St. Lawreace, ta allow them any It. was Surprising into what serious mis- | chance-otsuceess. The British have had so much takes these Fenian leaders. and others of | “™* tor defensive preparations, that au invasiou . : : wow Would lead only to an enormous sacrifice of mach higher intelligence and experience fall | ~ y ’ life te ne purpose. The lives of our Irish citizens regard t the real temper and eelf-re- , . aa 7 ana . | are too valuable to be thus thrown away in 3 spect, and devotion wo law treaty obli- bepeless undertaking. avd, in their interests, the gations of the American character. 5 We do government does well te interpose and save them not claim for our people an’ peculiar seD- | trem the fate on which, with uncaiculating bra- sitiveness to mere personal Paes but we | very, they are ready te rush. We trust they will have a right to say that. in all that concerns the true honor of our Government, its just recognition of international comity and duty. and the exercise as well of moderation and magnanimity as of are firmness, they Alegzander Robertsoa three chars for Mr Maythorec. THE LATE RAIDS, AND OUR NEU. | TRALITY LAWS. ment will treat them all, aders as well as fol- lowers, with lenity ; and that, in consideration of its vigour, the Canadian authorities will net deal too harshly with the ustertumate Fenians now m thei: bands.— N.Y. World. ors eminently distiv.-u for practical good re bre sense and prom of action BUNCOMBE IN CONGRESS. The Fensan leaders failed to discover this quality im season, as some of our cousins scrote the Atlantic failed to appreciate it in the early years of the Jate rebellion. Bat it (From the Terontea Globe, June ¥5_) We published on Friday a resolution moved new abandon their cuterprise ; that the gevern- | Second Emyire means peace. To ignore the of ang war in the Urimea and the war in lialy was ations of intelligent s2ea, and far more cou- tageerinle ; apt spe ee a be aeeee: demnatory of themselves than of the object en i junction wit Ngan ope ; ’ Ls | am foal welled 80 Sardpe. dod te of its censure, should have been passed with, latter was entered upon to tree a great and out a dissenting yoice at a meeting where ensiaved people. Lt France, which rules there must have been a certain namber (small Europe, can bring together tools that are about to disturb the peace of the Continent, they may be induced to listen to reasun; if they will not so listen, France has done her jvnoramus that the actual duty of the Mayor in om ke this a < orlinglusifienwos = calling a public mace lay ends with the publish- notes of the oracle are pitched. It 1s clear, from Mr. Gladstone's speech in the House of '™s : Commons on the 24th, that there 1 not the | necessary to the organization of the mectiag, slightest hope of peace; and though Mr. Giadstone was too polite te Say it, tov skilled |. ; at Bie ‘ei Aid) shaethite in diplomatic Soot 8; to utter w word that | mstance it was particularly so, a: ue worshig could give offence, he really meant that our was known to be opposed to the object of the Government had no faith im the sincerity ot | meeting. To expect him to remain and take its powerful neighbour. _ Austria has ne part in the proceedings was simply prepos. taste for war; Prustis hesitaies, ss well she’ sah may, with a disevntented people und an unpo- lterous. Indeed, had he altogether declined to pular Prime Minister. The only Power that comply with the requisition, he would have ws really 1n earest is Ltaly, and Vietor Een aa- been perfectly justified, as the meeting was not nuel is the creature of France. Louis Napo- ' : leon pulls the strings, aod the puppets dance | called to discuss a matter of general interest, to bis order. The Congress, of course, will but to further the purposes of a political meet, and England, Franee, Kussia, and the ction. three embryo belligerents will euter it; but 6, 1: ty esteemed Maror has been elected nut for two or three weeks yet, by which ett aia - : time France will be ready to unsheath the the Civic chair for several without “fl sword, the real ubj-ct uf the meeting beimg t position. His occupation of it has been altke SSS ae of “ eae ” iit creditable to the City and to himself. - For the | Bere. Bus 6, & word trom the Smperye OSPF | last two or three years his Worship has only | French would dissipate the fears of war in , : ; an instant. If he wereto say, in sincerity. consented to take the office at the earnestly \** the Puwer that strikes first makes we bis expressed wish of his fellow ct'zens, who would ‘enemy,’’ a willion and « half of men now arm- Uabte GicGeeus- jing for the fatal shock would be rendered ‘ as harmless as doves. With regard to the perhaps) of men of sense and rizht feeling. It is well known to every one but a perfect of the re juisitioa, —his attendance is not and at any time is a matter of courtesy. In this not hear of his resigning. cry schoolbeys tha of the grave deliber- ‘of the electors preseut :-— lin a fascinating style, and if ever 1 pe a ; aca inning ty build without k whether the towu- ‘+ Resoleed, That Cx yntederation on pruciples erase not prove te bw wp buundary line just to the Isiaud would be beneficial. | which has yet to be run, of even on the wrong side Owing to the shortness of notice, a smaller of it. If the conference uf deiegates to be held : — ohda dust iu London should remove the live separaing number were present than was desirable during the koeat and federal powers in the Quevec the discussion of so important a subject, but 4 gcheme, any local gevernments which mght be sufliciency to show that the subject of Confeder- Lettts in Airerea tapers oon ot cee aa ation is regarded favourably in this quarter. stitutious will net receive the finishing a the first of the two parte into which the seesion will uaturally divide itself. The Legislature aust - know bow the whole scheme of union stands after it comes frow the hands of the Conterence pro- 7 <r? 7 posed to be beid in Loudon, before it can deal TO THE GOVERNMENT OF P. ET. definitely and finally with the local constitutions Messrs :—I ain seasible of uy inability te dictate for Upper and Lower Canada. mscased = As cach Province wust practically determine _ ceremouious artiainess, it po longer characterizes the shape of Its own local constitution there is, we, tor of this unimportant, A net superfluous, and cau be, wo guarantee that they will all be quality aed of many other siuilar oves, 1 have shaped after one pattern, nor is it necessary that been bereft, by the uurelenting band of age (they should Each Province will have errtsin Bearing this in mind, then, you will surely be so subjects of legislation ou which to treat ; the na- _courtevus as to porden the abseuce of eluquetice ture of the machinery by which that work = | and sublimity, while 1 tender to you a twig Wwad- done by any one Province will be a matter of | ‘ed with figs (fects) which, | have ne doubt, Will comparative indifference te all the others. The be most execrable to your delicious tastes; but United States thought it necessary to iasist that whieh have been, as will subsequently appear, each State should have a republican form of gos- well seasoned. As already hinted, | cannat, ce-| erument ; but still there was vothing like uni- _remoniously, approach (be vature of my grievance; formity in the details of the several original State | but, with all due deference to epicureans, | would constitutions, If the different’ Provinces incist | call your most qualified attention to the Grand upon it, the same latitude will hase to be allowed | | River Bridge, now in course of erection. there. Aad in fact the lerm of Constitution best | | This Bridge, as you are well aware, should adapted for Upper Canada might be very unsuit-— | have been finished, accurding te promise or agree- | able tor most or all of the Maritime Provinces. } went, iw i “remains @ Babel of confusion. Was net the con- | se well worked oul in nove of the other colonics Yours truly, ANDREW LEWIS. St. Peter's Bay, June 27, 1266, The licensing proje ride e, AS we suspected it w would be better to let the Ameri the free ra of the fisheries at once pom t a restriction which “ onfémpt. The weakness of the Ci n their present condition, is painfully mags est to our greedy neighbours over the’ line @g. gaged in the fisheries, who, in the absence of war vessels, have'very little: respect for intep. national treaties. The iis of the nited States have acted Certainly in a uyost ignoble and ungenerous spirit in this “ ra there je some danger They first closed their markets against soa a> ae etna cee as ae Sa e Fn By a i fishermen, and then they coolly counfen the robbery by their Gtigensof one of our most valued interests, knowing we are to weak te avenze the Wrong. This must be very he miliating to the Provincial people. OT AOR tore WAR IN EUROPE. Tur long threatened war between Prosi and Anstria seems to have commenced. Steamship Jura arrived at New York on the 28th, (Thursday last,) bringing the news of the entrance of the Prussian troops into Saxony— of the entrance also of the Austrian forces into the same country, and of the formal declara- tion of war by Prussia against Austria. It is said that the first battle of the campaign was fought near Leipsic, but no detail is given ; not even is the result of the battle stated in the telegram. The next English Mail direct to Halifax will be looked for with some anxiety, as likely to afford full information coucernang this momentous event. -_- ' We find the following very important infor mation in the Toronto Leader of the 21st ult. :-— October last; but, sadly to relate, it yet | The truth is, respunsible government has bere | CONFEDERATION. The Lezislature of New Brunswick is ex- | tractor “ bound dows to the letter of law” to| ae in Canada, Lucal modifications have Wa? | pected os lopt the projett of O | fulfil kis agreement? and why, I ask, when he! adopted almost everywhere. While Governor iu the matter and compel the pledged protectors | sumed to do almest anything be tewk inte Mouday ; aud unless something occurs in his the meautime to prevent it, |‘ failed to du co, did you net take legal proceedings | Bannerman remaiued in Newfoundland, he as- | 0¢Xt Canada, New Bronswick, ree: | of the would-be contractor te pay for the “whistle!” | head, witheut much reference to bis sworn ad- | By that Bridge, the public, frow whom the * tin” visers or anvbudy else. Asa general thing, the stances I think Mr. Hayiland caa well afford | wust come, lave bees pat to sad intenveniences.| smaller the culouy the less perteet has been the | 30th inst. If this can be ie pever too late to learn. We doubt not these Fenian * belligerents ** will be slow t repeat the mad ex We are equally sure that if ever this nation should bave w chastise another rebellivo emong our own pe. neither the British ‘Guveroment in Lon nor the Pruvineia! authorities in Canada will be so ph as in the war, t recognize ** igerent pag fe less to sympathise wit and entertain border robbers and ete conspirators agains: the United Go- vernment. The mistake of the Fenian leaders was, in ing that we desired tu have theese un- neighborly and unkind acts on the part o! sume of the Canadian people redre-sed by euch a raiding rabtie as ‘icy propose to pre- eipitate upon the Provinces trom our peutral territory ; in ing that after the tri- umpbact end af our war against domestic treason and rebelli.a, we could not afford to treat with dignity and moderation, if not with entire u)ness, the done by our neighbours, or that we could affurd to torego our ows self-respect in openly tolerat- iment of using our) neutral frontier for another raid on Canada. | j am Sonam Ap. te. Ane. of Poasigwonity | iange of 0 Congress, no one attaches any im- to smile at a resolution which was obtained by the private malice of a, brace of wasps taking demanding the repeal of the neutrality law of the portance to st. There will be plenty of talk United States, for the reason that the Fenian about a re-distribution of territory ; but this | cut-throate had found that law inconverient. | #8 8 question only success om the field can) Phe American papers bore a fuller report of the | enttle. proceedings relative to the disposal of that re-| pound a green table ip her own capital ; but solution. Mr. Hale moved to iay it on the table when the time for action comes she will be | —in other words, to burke it. Several members | less modest. A Paris correspondent, whe is, sought to offer suggestions te Mr. Ancona, but having mored the previous question, he was un-) walling to modify bis position, but he finally con- sented to alter his resolution a little. Originally | Metternich, to the effect that the Kaiser | sation which purported to have taken between the Emp. ror uf the French and Prince ala /are sinking rapidiy, while others bave an ~ up- France cannot avow her designs two few citizens—the silly threat Toe Herald in| ectting ” tendency, and Will eve hong, 1 feor, be the statesmen and diplomatists who will sit allusion to the civic Elections in August next | floating down the river, with bottoms upward | he may well treat with contempt. | Even if it were passable presently, it is macers- oo i} : 4 _ sible from Lhe nerth side, owing te a morass which While on the subject of this great meeting 1) extends about one hundred yards from the wm r- | well versed in the secrets of the Foreign may remark that, the Confederate members | thern end of the said bridge. This bit of precious | office there, two or three days ago @ conver. | jaye still reason to’ be sutisfied that they have | morass has, in reund numbers, cost the Island ; , £100, and nething short of a similar sam will rge share of the iutellizent members of the | ever render it passable; so that when you are ve of its | Titwed in the reflective mirror of economy you cmmmunity with t 2 i =a | present nothing ensieus; and sure I am, that it had “ instructed ” the Committee on Foreign | would never give up Venetia to Ltaly ; he | composition by those selected to prepare the | when you are weighed in the scale of public relations tu report a bill repealing the neutrality Weeld Bght both Prussia and Italy, and beat) act of 1818; as altered, it simply instructed the pcs Moe dreayey Me a. wren Bang | Committee to enquire into the propriety of re-| 19 do what he liked with it; but Austria porting such a Bill. The House then refused to | would be no party to treating with Italy for lay the resolution on the table by a vote of 4 | the parchase of Venetia. It is more than) yeas to 113 nays. Gen. Sebenck, of Ohio, then probable that this conversation was pot im-. ‘ . inary, and we believe, thatitvery accurate- offered a substitute in the fullowing terms :— = ok a the feeling by which Austria “ Resolred—That the President of the United | fas been animated from the first. States, in the opinion of the House, should re-| 1, fight, if attacked ; but time only can show consider the pelicy which has been adopted by coves Lo him a8 between the British Government and that | whether her ea will te om on Bor a their way, are certainly not noted for iutellec-| inte She means Vig. Korror,— termination. There are rumurs in Paris of | Supreme Court, and finding time hanging beavy ddress, who, though ‘perfectly respectable in ‘epinion you will be found wanting. Your grad : ceeds when compared with your misdeeds sink utter iusiguifieance, and, above them the tual attainments. | latter rise perepicuously to view, so that it would Yours. &e.. ‘be in vain you would cttempt te conceal them CIT ‘from a discriminating pubhe, tor they are written \. . |in charactere »» plain that he who rume can iene eae Bt | read thew without halting. THE CITY MEETING. | The bridge reminds me of the poison tree on 7 2 | the ieland of Mauzanilla. The ences would | be fatal te the man whe would take bis stand by Being detained in the City te attend the ‘at tree, and, almost ¢imilarly, se will they be | te the encumbered stranger who will persist in turcing his way over the bridge ; but, fortunately, _—_ — during the past two yrars, and, te all appearsnes, | working of respousible government. Prince Ed- | [yy erial Parliament is expected to take up ithe same shall be characteristic of the present wagd Island adopted meditications of the Ame- summer, yea, of suauuers yet te Come, it some. rican system, and weither of the other Provinces advantage of the temporary irritation of a | thing 1s net speedily done. Some of the abutments ever thoroughly learned or practically applied the lessow that for all executive acts, the Ministry, and the Ministry alone is to be held respousible. | The tendency in the small colonies bas beer to- wards a feverish desire for change; and this drove swe of them inte a partial imitation of the bad American nabit of cha: ging subordinate Government employes with each change of admin- istration. It is the opinion of sume of the pub- he men in the Maritime Provinces that the local adoption wf the principle of responsible govern- went weuld deprive these small goverumenis ot every elemeut of stability and make a rapidly re- curring suceresion of changes the pormal con- ditwwu of things. This consideration, or this fear will probably cause them: to aim at giving a ecer- hecrasity of a like precaution is not telt, tainly net to the same extent, in Canada. Here ible government bas worked well: and whatever difficulties have armen have been trace- zble te circumstances which will cease to exist when Upper aud Lower Canada bave each a Legislature of its own. Why change that which has been foaud to work well? It there be advo cates of a radical change, it reste with them te show the grounds on which it is te be defended. encroach te place beture them extracts therefrom, not only ing the violation of treaties, by way of show- ang & malignant or spiteful epirit of retali- ation. Even if we | «d occasion to treasure up ortien of the Irish people whe, im the name of “enians, are struggling fer their independence, and that be be requested to adopt as nearly as practicabe that exact course of proceeding which was pursued by the Goveroment of Great Britain im the civil war in this country, between the United States and the rebels in revelt, recug- nizing both as lawtul beiligerents, and ubserving between them a strict veutrality.” Mr. Harding. of Minvis, then proposed another substitute tor beth propositions, “ declaring that : the course of the Government in repressing the ; : ; Fenian iwvasion is ignowinious and disgraceful.” judge for theueelves of their tope on this subject, . Sen upon eur editorial epaee in order | Mr Shenck deciined to consent to the offering of ' | that substitute. Gen. Banks, of Massachusetts, os aren ee | persuaded the Obio General to cousent to a mo- eent emergency. ; ? tien referring both the resolution and the sub- the note at i | ce te the Committee vn Foreign Affairs, ineffensive sen shed by the reckless j 22 : the C itt oan cas tiade aul ing | Promising that if that were done the Committee majerity ot reat acknowledge the crime, and pointedly motion to lay on the table, and this time got Where it in part belonge—Ner wight votes against 113. Subsequently be en- san | devoured to offer a compromise amendment. but was prevented by the refusal of Mr. Ancona. The motion of Gen. Banks then prevailed by a vote of 91 to 34, and the question gues to the Forvign Relations Committee, with the chair- man’s promise that a report shall be made. Mr. Hale atterwards sent to the clerk to be read the eeutioners of our vengeance than the 0 Neills and U'Sweenye of the last week"s sorry farce. An open dec/aration of reprisal would surely be preferable to tis b a. eo THE N. Y. PRESS ON THE LATE RAID. é Heil i) i i fet ‘ | 2 i : ; offering. It proved to be a manly and bhonour- able declaration—“ That the honear and good faith of the United States imperatively demand a just aed vigorous enforcement of the neutrality law, and that this House will entertain no pro- pesition looking te their repeal, revisien, or sivlation.” fF rl i: é & = i z i =F 6! f t ; t Fs ii Hl | rpese on the part of its prerogative fur the ewent it had nuraed inte activity. interposed wheu a. Mikes collected bis followers in public) We would like te see a direct vote upen Mr. eee 4 culrTpr so eouet wcorasaril —_ have) Hale's amendment, as we have a little curivsity grow, inte a a — ner ever a to know bow many men there are in Congress. alarmed the householders of Canada by an incur- | courageous enough te do right regardless of what is termed “the Irish vote.” There surely are more than the eight who voted for Mr. Hale's second mution to lay on the table. It would be | : £ F 7 Es : it pe: gf: ff af ; all sides to flatter the Irish for the sake of their .*8 | votes is palpable enough in the whele business. . a ee mneeEEeY | There is great pleasure, too, to a genuine Ame- quae inte:the Fealen said | rican Anglophobist in saying offensive things te them an unaccountable va i i it H 5 douse @ with t E they have auy protection weant. There is net the slightest danger that a : te or politi. | Congress wil vndertake to disgrace the United. d give them the protection | States by repealing its neutrality law in order to il they bave such sucerss they | permut band:ttis to plunder a neighbouring Pro- , and their acts are to be | vince. Ditter as prejudice against Britain may lating to persons in Canada| i Fj is ag? Hl a : Ly Fe | inns and aational expeditions legislature of a great and enlightened nation ier in Canada is therefore sub- | should stoop to discuss, even tor bancombe pur- jret to the same clas: of laws whieh govern the | poses. & prepesal to dishoneur iteelfi. We can- : 3 var most jufluental contem-| Would make a report. Mr. Hale made another | w eyes open. They cannot }abeut England. But beyond that nothing is | be in the States, it will not lead our neighbours | 4, without reference te the to thatextreme. The pity is that the national | the retirement of M. Drouyn de Lhuys—sig- jon my hands, I was informed on Tuesday, that, nificant, if true. jin the evening would be held in the Court reom REDUCTION OF THE CANADIAN Tanter.—A |e o the largest meetings ever couvened in the movement looking to a general reduction of the | City agamet a coufederation of the british North tariff is spoken of in Montreal. of an asseciation, with this object in view, is gard | : “pe to be conteenglated; and t'icadded that'a public | "72 8% 88 Se infomation I passibly coal on meeting will probably be the first stage. The ‘hesubjeet. What was my surprise on entering degree of reduction contend is from 2U, 25, and the reom te find, with the exeeption of about 30 per cent. te 124 and 15. The nnoperting mer- : s feben leadi ‘Char- chants naturally dislike te be made the medium | —o — oo " threugh which se large a portion of the revenue | luttetown were absent. The mechanies were is collected ; the system cramps their operations peorly represented—net a man of that class and requires them te have a umch larger capital | ),5,; word medica! fecelty we than would otherwise be necessary to do their | — bpanyp the aus business. They readily seize upon the ea. [ tavewe out by the Finanee Mimster, at the the City were f-w and far between: and the | Cornwall dinner, that in the present condition of peeches which emanat : | affairs it is desirable to give this country the at- le —— - a ent nea tractions which cheap living must present we ress the meeting, were delivered at random and certain classes elaewhere.— Toronto Leader. contained broad assertions net founded on facts. | cc CORRESPONDENCE, aa “was there, with tee atber PERAP Googrintees of eee Newspapers, viz—the Herald and Ross’ Weekly [FOR THE EXAMINER.) oa [his best style, and when he had finished you Meet oe: er could not tell what he bad been making all the | The Attorney General is reliably reported to | yuise about. The Pulpit orators onthe anti-con- haye said, in a public room, that the signers of \tederate ticket did not appear. After passing an |the Address to the seven gentlemen of the As- | Address to the Hon. J, C. Pope aud others, and |sembly were actuated in that demonstration by | the Hon. Edward Palmer and others, the Editor resolution whieh be had been presented from | 4 ish hope to obtain office Gf pecuniary bene- | of the Herald moved that the Address be referr-| fit under Confederation, or language to that ed back for the purpose of amendment. He had effect. Mr. Palmer's derisively-made allega- te encounter mach oppasition, but finally carried tion has provoked a rejoinder; and if, in its ad- | bis point, stating thaben ts present condition oue ministration, he is severely handled and damay- half of the people weuld net sign it. jing facts thrast home upon him, then the bon. The business for which the meeting was called, iventleman must blame himself only for the | having been bungled througb—two only of the . ‘ ‘champions of freedom being henored by having | application of merited reproof, and learn that eer : 2 ld c ithe “time has arrived” for him to understand a ee ae rae. ithe pot -y and lic f the o aw lating . ¢ potency and policy of the old saw relating | ing on the duct of his Worship the Mayor, for : Tait sis | au alleged insult offered to the citizens on the day Suppose Mr. Palmer were right in his allega- | previous, and gave as his reason why the resolu. tion, I ask, why and with what propriety can | tion should be carried that when he, the aid E | he sneerat those gentlemen? Has he not him-| J. jJodgson, requested his worship to remain in to a man living in a glass house. { useless public life ? and does he not at this mo- | whom I bad ne aequamtance. Both the mover and ment hug with death-like tenacity the office of seconder appeared to entertain deep rooted per- |from the Executive? And, moreover, did he | ' the Hon. Daniel Brenan, who acted as Chair- |not make a desperate effurt during the late ses- | #00, and who would. net put the Resolution until sion of the Legislature to create for himself a ren ant ee ae etn &; and judgeship, but which object he signally and de- | — manga ass pore eral iservedly failed to accomplish? And in his tent. dacensieed th Yad Uehesll Ghd deeerenene defeat, the Colony was saved some £500 addi- | proceeding. tional expenditure per annum: and it also was | I had nearly forgatten to.state that not more : | than twe hundred attended the mectis fortanately rescued from the then impending | and aan ee i were dniuers. ; _ stigma whieh must have rested upon it by| My impression ix, Mr. Editor, that the Union of Canads. 1) he steals, it i« felony ; if he | 80% Conceive of the possibility of the Commons , , c it is murder. Suininateinharedta eed we of Great Britam degrading itself in such a | elevating to the Berch a man so unworthy | element largely predouinates in the City. Seine gees ee borer |e at the prion. Andis it net 0 no tet responsibilities which they aesumed. Cartainx Sexues —Capt. Semmes, who isa torious truth that the Hon. Mr. Palmer, | 4 FARMER. : siit-ciap nett eae A More criminal raid wis never heard of in the , member of the legal profession, was a short history of modern nation. “The idea of asserting time ago elected by an unanimous vote Judge by & wourderous onslaught | of the Probate court of Mobile county, Ala. residents of a remote British province / Since then Gen. Wood, the Federal com- oe pte a have ne concern ;mander of the district, has issued an order, the de in Ireland, wr what the | in securdance with imstructions from Presi- Beitish Gorernment sure with that Idand. The | dent Johnson, forbidding Capt Se destruction of life in Canada, theretore, is a crime : : ae morc al has wo excuse, and the whole expedition | T°" the function of judge, ** or any other be don precisely as we should look on | °¥!l oF political office of trust while he remains band of men guing secretly into Canada and unpardoned by the President.” and property —Journal of Com- merce. < : 4 » . Wuffins whe irivaded Canada had with them a flag The President has issued a i aa na fla, . GS comer _given them by the “ladies” of Maldon with this araiag sil persons sasinet taking part inthe ®-| C14" Pagan matte upon it— Ve Vietis” —vr aed aoe : both |” death to the conquered.” Ip the same spirit - mee d commanding b [esate tell that “Sonar Spear exhorted his evil co 2 | eer-cal ops on entering Canzda te spare the 1h the premises, aqvedt aS Reagan? in Os | ramen and children, adding that ye the . | enemies of their country in their bands—which | We suppose means that the women were to be : . S spared as widows and the children as orphans! errs, subjects them, woder the laws of the United | Pra theee things can be reported in ‘aiden Tue Gextee Sex —It ie stated that the raga- ganization subject themecives to one thousand | deliare fine and turee years im ; Moreover, Sweeney, Ruberte acd all the other Works on Monday night were called out by an leaders aud originators of this Fenian enterprise alarm from one of the sentinels in Dalhousie are subject to 2 fine of three thousand dollars and street, who said that he had sey Bary and three years’ far that offence. ‘had heard the bullet whisk past his There is no that the courte will enforce | : pean andch, cotenea ; 7 next sentry, and a Fire Company also declared ‘ heard the report; bat uotwithstanding an every ' search, no one could be disco e to our wevehbors, he is now enlightened by | had committed the outrage. ipabemndien the proclamation of he President. We have the sentinel at thir post had been pelted WU stapes P quae taneie paar ea Sees ties way yet fis | that this shall be done, at all hasan; aud the | cepeat their unsconduct. a ila | some eight years since, walked inte the Assem- | | bly upon the pledged principle that no member jof the Assembly should nor could hold office hannen but too frequently he ; p ! re, that occu (of emolument under the Government? How me we , 4 _ where else, some surprise might be excited tha ro t . rprise mig excned that did Mr. Palme r, after his return under that the vote of censure upon our highly respected | pledge, sustain his public integrity and keep} yayor should have passed at decent es his pledze to the electors? I answer by the | federate meetis fact that a gentleman was gazetted Attorney | peice.” But party prejudice leads men to General, and under that cover, Mr. Palmer, sub overlook the just merits of a question, aad to rosa, received the pay. Thus his pledge was | g.cide ithout. refeetio violated, and his public honor was buried in | That, but) hogtied enahshdishanedl ‘ i ; To 4% '. > ‘ m | the debris of aeennnon. At this juncture | Chief Magistriite shoul have been so wantonly jthe “necessities of this gentleman — (ay, | insulted in the Sale ahieies of ibis /“necessities " is the word now in vozue)}— | jawful guthority. is & malteriof general resret % Ys = 3 were generally known to be pressing, and there! put unmerited persedifans, he’ must be well was so much corsideration for his family, | qwesn,: eae ant unfrequent in this little com- that the party attached to the Attorney | smnity y | General, one and all, connired at his recsiving | The mover of the resolution (which by the jthe salary of the office while the duties were | way is very awkwardly worded) is a young, To Tue Evvror or tHe Examrver. Sin:—If we were not aware that things ng “without one dissenting Sextixes. Finev ox.—The men of the Gas | performed in the name of another. This is the | and by no means influential individual, anxious, | #!terations. “mode in which he illustrated in his own person | no doubt, to obtain notoriety in some way or _his much vaunted theory about members of the | other, although in this instance he has made | Legislature being iudependent of office and its | a somewhat unfortunate selection, since men allurements. And now, forsooth, with this of very opposite opinions readily concur in j load of political odiam ‘upoa him, the Hon. | diseountenancing the presumptuous forward- Mr. Palmer has the indelieacy to charge ness of those who searcely comprehend the upon others a seeking for office, bettas of civilized society, and reprobate | Thave not yet done with Mr Palmer. The their freedom of remark upon the conduct of | materials at my command are ample to his con-' their seniors and superiors. The termation | American Colonies. I was resolved to attend | state of the bridge, which, at the same time, if placed in the same situation; the Merchants of | The Bar waa very poorly represented. Mr. Laird | | David reiterated the old story, in, ax he supposed, | Iledgsen brought forward a Resolution reficet- | It there be any whe advucate one House insicad ot two, and a fixed insiead of a ible ad ministration, it is forthem te show why they pre- pose to throw down the old landwarks. [i will be sufficient for those whe think there should be a8 little change as possible that Upper and Low- er Canada should each have a form of local gov- }the uowary will ubstinately pursue an ouward | <rament Ssmrarty as possible resembling that course, despite all entreaties, he will get literally | which they have unitediy exjuyed emer IS40— to stuce in the mouiter beacon, where he will be | take their stand on the ground that this system | detained until a sufficient crew arrive te perform fies worked well. On this greund the question | modus operandi wecessary to his extrication. aay fairly be left to be fought out. There it is, a befitting monument to the memory —=— of the ingenious and political architects, an rye- “IP CITY warn esc: jsere toe the interested pu, a disgrace ar THE CITY MEETING. wnisance to the surrounding country. : Se ae | Perhaps to ali this you reply, “ ~ you not a| We have received, too late for publication ferry = we Grand River!” fees bee — in this edition, a report of the adjourned City even the ferry is wot what it shew , just i : . . cian the eee, is net property beak ew andl Meeting called for the purpose of thanking iu Consequence of this inadvertency, he is, to us | those members of the Leyislatare who voted an ordinary phrase,“ swinging on his own ao | last Session against Confederation. The meet- : and as a sequence he is his own master. . . . ferryman’s shertemmings are not few nor far be. 82 Was, according to report, a flat affair. The tween; but I de not feel disposed to criticise bis | audience did not, at any time during the eee os _ = ital coal ee | evening, number more than 150, or thereabouts, and anticipated remuneration. Periculam in| and of these a large proportion were boys. mora. There was scarcely a score of influential per- sons in the whole meeting. Of course, they carried their resolutions, including one con- | demnatory of the Mayor for refusing to preside at the first Meeting. In our second edition we |may give a fuller account of the affair. In the | meanwhile we give the following short account of the meeting from the last Islander -— ANTI-CONFEDERATE MEETING. On Saturday last, the 23rd inst., a requisition numerously sizued by parties in this City, o% e opposed to Confederation, was presented to the here, who are opposed to Union with the other Saves of this City, the Hon. T. H. Haviland, | Colonies “on any terms” frequently remind | requesting him to call a public meeting of the us of the manifold imperfections of the Quebec | Citzeus of Charlottetown, to enable them to Scheme, which, they assert, cannot be altered | Leeda their thanks to Se aan oe the — . om _. | Legislatare for having opposed Confederation | or modified in any was. This is not the opinion | during the late sitting of the Legislature. Hix | of public writers in all the other Colonies—it is| Worship called the meeting for the following | Monday, at the hour of two o'clock. At the however, by your precautionary wisdom, it has | been built in a place where Nature has planted a | beacon ef warning, viz, the beggy morass to | whicts Ihave already alluded. ‘This, nv doubt, | wil enable the piquant traveller to desery the Iam, respectfully, SENEX HOMO. Lot 14, June 2ist, 1366. The Graminer. | Charlottetown, July 2, 1866. | adie a & — : | [We are indebted to the Toronto Leader for ithe following justructive article. Geutlemen i not the opinion entertained by the Governments | appointed hour his Worship took the chair, and in all the Provinces—Canada included—else then requested the City Clerk to read the requi- The Quebec Scheme may |! !™z declined to preside at the meeting, the ~ Hon, D. Brenan was chosen chairman. A ( committee, consisting of the following gentle men, were then appointed to prepare an address jhe made the rewzh basis of union, but we | have no doubt that it will be considerably al- | The Leader, in several places, shows that ‘eee ee = Dead, Ralph | modification of the Quebee Scheie is practi- Richard aes Hod Oat a * a . Jeon, ani | cable and desirable; and the utterances of so Stumbles, Esquires, after which the meeting | prominent a journal as the Leader are entitled “% adjourned until the following even }to great respect. The opponents of union ° | here should, we think, desist from referring to ed meeting was much more numerous than that the Quebec Scheme, since they declare they will of the previous day. The Committee appointed not favor Confederation, no matter what plan, Se prepare oa aan ore the | same. an de ie | Several centlemen ress the mecting at or scheme, or terms may be devised.] considerable lencth, Mr. D. Laird moved, i é = : ; and Charles Palmer. Esquire, seconded the [oe eee LOCAL LE- adoption of the address. At the close of the pe ¢ —_ |meeting the following reselution was moved No other question of equal weight with the for-|hy E. J. Hodson, Esq. and seco : \ i nde by — of - — constitutions forthe Provinces fenry Hazard. a 7 chon Go tadehiaerdater ee libely vee oom | Resolced, That it is the opinion of thie meeting, This ie thing altogether out en <n aden that His Worship the Mayer of the City, having | line of legislation, and is a matter of much ah complrd with the srquisiion prtetuted 06 Bite ep er gravity, than. the aan at on ee Saturday, to convene this meeting, should, at the sol. lew... The quien basa =f ined are @PpOitted time, have offered a full opportunity how, and by what authority, the functions and due facility for organizing the meeting, aud [of legulation are to be prriormed, and by | tepaiur with due deliberation uf the a ve | what bedy and in what manner the executive , Se Sa autharity is to be exercised. The area with- without recording its opinion, that the eon- in which the local authority is to revolve has SuCt of His Worship the Mayer v0 the above oe- already been prescribed; the division of powers Casio, in hastily and abruptly retiring after between the federal and the local goveruments ‘#&ing the ehair, and in refusing to ide until was inarked out by the Quebee Conference and # Ch#irwan was appointed, evi net only a | these boundaries were accepted by our Legisla- “#%t of dignity for the office which he holds, but | ture. It is true that the allied: Provinces "Ch 38 absence of all courtesy and respect tor “are anxious te effect modifications of the the citizens present, as was womerited aud wu- | scheme, and there is no point to which they are Called tor by any circumstances whatever. | more hkely to address themselves than on the di-| The Resslution was put and carried. vision of pewers between the federal and local 1 | govermmente. Not one of the four Maritime ie pes oT phen, Sota Provinces unreservedly adopts the plan of union | Haag te the Hun. Daniel Brenan, for his impart al agreed te by our Legislature. Of the three | i ; whieh admit the desirability of union—the eantt aud upright conduet in the chair, when the meet- does not admit se much—not one is willing to | PT weap: _ accept the Quebec plan of Confederat , ' td earn a al gg, ag mak alge coy 5-4. ad FISHERY LICENCES, ations that will be asked by the different Pro _. _ vinoes bes hot yet beew indicated with any de- ! We have learned, on good authority, that up - eons iets or ar parang ye more to the middle of last week only six licences had the Mdeal"a wie soon ain : Canada been taken out by American fishermen, the ashe hea ranchiny f the ater Po : he ha F (nt on Th sadn Peat ily aeninet | 2E2TEzaLe to scarcely 450 tons. We are in- such a consummation. It is inipeatiniass they formed by those who have seen them, that the way demand a different division yf powers from fleet of Ameri fishe i 5 saaheietelieg emcee ie. American fishermen pursuing the in- Canada is epne:rned, = teed upon. As there ia *#Ore fisheries round the shores of this Island ‘te be a new convention, it is difficult te say what is unusually larze—being from three to four ‘ ' ‘uesday) at seven o'clock, then to meet in the | vurt House. The attendance at the adjourn- | the other Provinces ; tonnaze of whose vessels amounted in the | Newfoundiand will leave for England << question of confederation in the second week vt Jaly, and that the Imperial Act will be passed befure the session closes, At this rate these provinces will be coufederated early in the mouth of August. The Government here could, no doubt, have given us this information without having to go so far as Toronto for it, for, we may rest assured, they have been inwited to stud Delegates to the Loudou Conference, which, of course, in their mizhty independence, they decline tu do. a precious figure the Island will cut in estimation of the other Provinces and in that of Great Britain! Will her blind and spiteful opposition to Colonial Union, in any shape, be rewarded by letting her have her own way? Not at all likely. Great Britain will, most pro bably, quietly legislate us into the union on such terms as may be accepted by the Delegates from the other Provinces. It would be far better to. send Delevates from the anti-Confe derate party of the most rabid stamp than to send none ai all, re —ieae ~9So— Hox. G. L. Havaeway.—The following picture is given of Mr. G. L. Hatheway in a late No. of the St. John Telegraph. Ttwiltbe remembered that Mr. Hatbeway made a speech at Summerside, a short time ago, against Cun- federation, whereat he managed tu evoke sume sympathy at the ignomjuious defeat of hs party in New Brunswick: — “Two correspondents of this paper have for- warded statements embodying the substance of Mr. Hatheway’s public remarks in that tows. If our readers should not find the reports as clear as they might be, they will Kindly lay the blame upon Mr. H's very sore throat, and not on the Re rs. Of one or two things there can be lithe dowkt: Mr. Hatheway did he could tu exalt himselfin the eves of the | ; ers, aud to slander the Lieutenant Goveraor of New Brunswick aud the peuple of New Bruas- wick. With to he everybody in this Province knows who and what George L. Hatheway is: and it is one of the ventleman’s fuilmys that before he is forty-eight hours in auy city or town oat of New bis character is as well known as if a emt of it had been posted on the town in inted letters a foot in length! As far as the Sand Governor is coucerned, Mr. Hathe- way s remarks about Mr. Gorpox having of fered t» provide for him in case he his opposition to Confederation, are false— thuromyhly Jalee—taise in every partieular. We make this statement on authorts, as ase have coms.tuicated with Fredericton since the | receipt of the letters from Sammerside chroaicl- jing Me. Hatheway's sayings and doinss, No taser falsehood has ever been uttered by even | George L. Hatheway—aud that is suying a great deal! 4 «We beg our readers* pardon for wastin | der aud shot on so dead a “duck” a jouly member of the lite Goverument who bad | wot the pluck to face his constituents, and who, atter this Island speech, will scarcely venture cs as were not slanderous appear tu havs been flaveured with the Essence of Trash. ! We can assure the Islanders that if they want 'Mr. Hatheway, not temporarily bu: Attorney General in the humiliation of ejection | sna! enmity to his Worship. Much eredit is duc | tered aml modified at the London Convention. to the majority of the Legislature who opposed imanently, they can have him, without eney and without price. New Brunswick be no further need of him, and will not shed a tear over his departure. We trust, if he intend: to leave us for an Island home, that he will “ not stand upon the order of his yoing but go at once.” en FLovrismixe stare or Casxapias Fux axces. —We commend to those editors and other, who are continually crying out against the so called impoverished condition of the Canadian ‘finances, the following extract from a Iate paper: - “It is exceedingly satisfactory to find that the state of the Canadian finances continues | most encouraging. It will be remembered that Lord Monck im opening the Legislature, stated that the ordinary revenue was sufficient to bear the extraordinary expense of the wa of ihe frontiers against marauders, nov learn that the value of the importations for the first ten months of 1645 was $44,000,000, and that the exportations reached the same amount; _while in the cor img period for the year previous, the impurts reached only $36,000,- 000, asd the exports $30,000,000. The total Commerce Of the country. in these ten wontht, amonted to the cnormous sna of = 100,008, 000! The customs duties, for the same period, amounted tu $6,300,000, arainst 4.900, 000in the correspunduig period of the previous year. | The mouthly statements of the Banks are also , most gratifying evidences of the ral jperity. The financial crisis in England has ,uot produced the least deraagemeut in commer- cial or financial matters in Canada. We hope that the Auti-Union journals will note these facts for the infurmation of their readers.” ' ———_.. oe TO CORRESPONDENTS. song > attach much importance to the Graces | self been an office-seeker and holder of office of | the ebair he took no notice of the request. ‘This | why should a new Convention be propesed to sition convening the meeting. His Worship | @ face them aguin!—Such of his Summerside . sion upon Mr. Ancona’s motion. The ansiety on | nay during a large part of his obstructive and | Resolution was seconded by a gentleman with | held in Loudon? — We have received two letters over the sign® ~ ture of «Senex Homo ”—the first a consider able time since, and this we have inserted; but the second we must decline to insert. The truth is, the composition in both is too defective for publication; and we have neither the time, nor, indeed, the will, to make numerous corre tions in the communications of correspondents.