/~..1 A Weekly Hournal of Politics, Literature, and Alews, Vol. XL. Poetry. HALLOWED BE THY NAME, List to the dreamy tone that dwells In ripling wave or sighing tree ; 76, hearken to the old chureh bells, The whistling bird, the whirring bee : Interpret right, and ye will find "Tis **power and glory"’ they proclaim— The chimes, the creatures, waters, wind, All publish, ** Hallowed be Thy name !"* The pilgrim journeys till he bleeds, To gain the altar of his sires ; The hermit pores above his beads With zeal that never wanes nor tires; But holiest rite or longest prayer That soul ean yield or wisdom frame, Witee Wetter taport own it bear Than ‘*Father! hallowed be Thy name ?"’ The savage kneeling to the sun, To give his thanks or ask a boon ; The raptures of the idiot one Whe laughs to see the clear round moon ; The saint, well taught in Christian lore : The Moslem, prostrate at bis dame— All worship, wonder, and adore ; All end in ** Hallowed be Thy name !"’ Whate’er may be man’s faith or creed, Those precious words comprise it still ; We trace them on the bloomy mead, We hear them in the flowing rill ; One choras hails the Great Supreme ; Each varied breathing tells the same— The strains may differ, but the theme Is, ‘Father! hallowed be Thy name !"’ OUR SECRET DRAWER. There is a secret drawer in every heart, Wherein we lay our treasures one by one ; “This is true Liberty, when Freeborn Men, having to advise the Publie, may speak free.’---Enripides. = — ithe volunteers of this country. You ought to take a lessod from that, and remember, unless you persevere in drill, uniess your officers practise themselves, and endeavour to attain the ) same perfection as officers of the regular army, a disaster of the | same kind, a sudden pame, might happen to the volunteers of \ thie country as well as in America. Having touched upon this subject, | will only say one word in reference to ut, viz, that 1 | know that every man in this town has only too good reason, ‘epartafrom the affection which he teers to his countrymen 'nerose the Atlonric—for still we must call them—t say he has too good reason, indesendently of this consideration, to regret the civil war; and f am certain you will join with mein the aldry are all of silver or framed-in by silver. earnest hope that further shedding of blood may be spared, and ‘that, before the lapse of any ‘ong tune, that calamious war may be brought to a close. (Cheers ) - ~> 20+ eo — TURKEY. THE NEW SULTAN AND HIS HOUSEHOLD OF LADIES. | The new Sultan appears efter ell.to be cong de way of al! ‘Swans. [t was believed that he had, on his accession, struck (a heavy blow at polygamy by declaring bis intention to reform hie harem bills by keeping only one wife. But his Majesty has jalready increased his conjugal stud to four kadins, several | tkpals, and a tolerably strong contingent of guzdes, winch, being | interpreted, mean “ the lofty in rank,’’ ‘those who have found | favour,’’ and ** those who please the eye.’ The first of these ‘categories may be increased to seven, and includes the fortu ithat of * wivee ;” for it ie a western fallacy that the Sultan ever \**marries.’’ The firat seven of bis ladies have, in the order of | their accession, wifely rank ; but marriage ceremony, such as | loosely binds other true believers, there is in his august case none. Next to these in the haremic hierarchy come the ikpals, | fortunate fair ones, from whom the supreme seven are generally recruited in case of death or penal bestowment ona Pacha. | Whilst each of the kadins has a sure of about 40 attendants, \these second class houris have severally an attendance of 25 or 30. They are themselves either eingied out by the Imperial | taste from amongst the retinue of the kadias, or are special purchases and presents to his Majesty by one of those latter. |The guzdes, like the ikpals, are limited to no number, and differ | | from the latter rather i the degree of their hold on the Imperial “eye” than in original inferiority of rank in the household. | But when they have gratified the sublime optic, be it only for once, they cease to belong to the rank and file of the great 'femele brigade, end attvin a substantive status and at'endants Charlottetown, Prince Edward Esland, Monday, November 25, 1861. the first hero of ali the festivines aod pageantries on account of his entertainments, which commenced on the 2ih in tis hotel, | | which is metamorphosed into an Aladdin's palace. His proces- | sion to the **d. filing gala-courv’ was eff cted in three splendid | | Carriages and six ond an open chaise. The duke and marshal | | hunself, rode in his new unequailed carriage. Lis body is blue, | ‘nared framework ; but so lavishly stivered over that body and | frame are quite overshadowed by it, The seat of the driver! (the largest ever seen) is all silver, end also the the moukey- board bebind and the steps Dn ether side. The whiee!-boxes, | lamp-boxes, &., are al! of si'ver, and the decorations end her-| The seats inside | are upholstered voluptuously, covered with silvery moire anti-| que, and surrounded by unblemished spiate glass. ‘I'he doors | jare splendidly painted with the heraldic emblem in ermine of | jthe owner—three red lions on a ground of Silver, with staffs of | | arshal-ship crossing each other, and cantons, The rims of | the carnage roof repeat these ornaments, and are trimmed with | Loorp dwardrequing of solid silver. Pie Carriage was drawn by | sx brown horses loaded with red and *ilver, their heads pro- | fusely decorated wish thick cordons of the same colours, each | Jed by a melodramatiz, pantominic lackey in white and silver, | three attendants behind in gorgeous allire, two fore-riders, two | behind, decked and tricked out m white and red with herald- ing embroidery. The whole was quite a treat for ibe cheering | mob. seein acters Tue Ixcaease of Caime.— Al the quarter sessions at Bir-| ferred to the heavy calendar paced before hin. He was aware that Birmingham did not siand alone in that particular, but that there had been an increase in the commirments over a large ‘portion of the country. ‘Though there was a large increase in| ithe caleadar, still that did pot change his views as to the treat-| | ment of criminal offenders. He believed that the increase of | crime at the present we was commen to the whole country. | }and would not last more then for a short period, as it arose from a depression im the prosperity of the pation under peculiar cir-, cumstances, which entailed severe trials upon a large portion | of the community. They should recollect that owing to the | | force of circumstances crime wou!d at times increase in spite of their best endeavours ; but still their efforts were not all in| vain. The learned gentleman then proceeded to direct the at-. tention of the grand jury to the parsimony which refuses to | eidents. allow witnesses the remuneration which should protect them from actual loss ia rendering their testimony against prisoners /made the sun tutal 73. | returned to his house. _doorof a house, which he found closed ; and crossing, sat for a j of the British conquest of her present Amencan roof, hummed an air, and then clambered to a neighbor’s win-| 2 he Pang of the Baie de Chaleurs and it was far froin his wish that the remuneration should be made | dow, who, accustomed to his nocturnal habirs, opened it tohim. 2 °°8 the colonization roads on the South a SS ee New Series.---No. 46, village, named Goa, Dr. Barth made sequaintance with its | tewber 18th, he lett the city, chief, one Dood, whom, to get rid of the exigent swarm of his | and valuables of both women sable attendants, be invited to call upon him next morning, at-| wife at’ Marrietta, Ohio, tended only by bs sons. Before sunrise Dood appeared with Institute for the Blind 40 grown-up men or strong striplings, saying he did not like 10 succeeded wm dupiug, and there made their acquaintance a few bring the little ones for fear of trespassing on his visitor’s gene-, yeers since. The ladies are representedas ot uni achabie rosity. Being asked how mony he had, he began to count them | character, and are deeply sympathized with in oe by breaking a reed into small pieces (none of these negroes can _————~ oe PEA, count beyond ten), and calling over ten names as he placed a A Bisnor eronounces AGAINST Low Neckep Dresses — piece before him onthe deck, and omitting the babies, he Bi-hep limon, of Wesiern New York, has issued a letter ad= | dreesed “to the honored and pious Christian women of the dio- ———— / Cese, upon a subject which he has long refrained ‘to touch The number of children in Pranee able to attend school is 5, "2 "gh pressed apparently by Divine impulse, lowsnecked 200,000. of whom 4,017,000 receive primary instruction, at ee loans He discoursed. at much length on the weotony.af dress, quoting largely from the Scriptnres on the score of mo= hands of 68,500 teachers ; ef thi se 1.800,000 are taught in free Nearly one-fourth of the instructors are members of |T#! '¥. and from the wrtngs of Cath tine Beecher, Dr. Eilia schools. religious fraternities and sisterhoode, there being 16,000 of [ard uihers, as respects health. The Bishop trusts that Obrise ice in the spirit in which inig them. tan ladies wil receive his ady astors under his charge touch upon — ——————— taking with bim all the clothing ,and afterwards marned a thud at Columbus. as are all ladies whom he _ a ern and directs that the p Remarxasre Cask or SoMNAMBULISM.—A remarkable case | the subject in their d:scoursie. of sousmambulism laely occurred at Grenoble between the hours —— of 11 o'clock and midnight, observed by more than a hundred; A man in La Crosse, Wis.,a few days persons. A young man, 20 years of age, living on the Place fiver swearing that he wou! Wi Grenette, was seen to leave his room at 1] o'ciock in his shirt, | ¥aded into the depth of his waist, his wife, who ued & he bed bare-headed, and in slippers. He went round the Place and | him, seized him by the hair, and then, as a local editor soon a place where the d dtown himself, The spectators, supposing it to be an | bes it, she tied him back tl! they reached act of madness, followed him for fear he should do himself Water was about two feet deep, where sh some mischief. his head up 8gain, © —leay ; out the attic window and sat upon the edge of the roof. The | >rats! (anther plunge) ~—get drunk? (anothieg snetf eH : a a anxiety of the spectators may be imagined. Afier a moment, for the river! anovher dip and shake uf his head!) he came in and went down again to the square and proceed |'0 leave me a widow, and all the me ' some distance tothe city gardens, of which the gate was closed. |2!1ng him to her heart’s content By a violent effort he pushed it open, and entering, then a better man, and eseorted hi directed tis steps to the other gates, which were locked, show- | door.” ing bis impatience at this by a sort of inarticulate cry at each. He now retraced his way, and coming into the street. tried the —In no atthe war!’ Af ob tee. » she led him out a wetter if net ™m into the house and closed the Tae Faexcn Acapians.—There is one page in the history © ies wh | most Britons have at one time or another blushed to read moment on the opposite pavement. He soon rose and began | which they h to walk rapidly homeward, but when very near the house he te Wl ra desired to see blotted ont, We allude to the | made a cirenit, and took a roundabout course to it, followed by A dain O+ the poor Acadians. It was a very harsh set in. a great crowd, including policemen, and accompanied by a few ie iis ee a in the manner of ite execution. persons who went before to warn passengers and to prevent ac- adler a . 7 those poor sundered families? have lingered Having again ascended to his room, he took the road | iain dan oie "ale Gulf of St. Lawrence, . Some are resident through the window once more, seated himself again on the! rince Edward Island. These have desired to remove — the new settlemenis | side of the Galf of He is a graduate of the Ohio State . ago, rushed, to. she: - ‘ e i : He went up the five stories at the height of | backwards, soused him under, and pulled Peed aft ener nate Indies whose rank is as nearly as possible equivalent to) mingham, on Monday, Mr. M.D. tdill, Q.C., the Recorder, re- which his room was situated, entered his chamber, clambered “ Drown yourseif— (down he went) Each dear remembrance of the buried past ; Each cherish’d relic of the time that’s gone ; of their own, gal stock, his Majesty 1a already well provided. having four of the first and a fair number of both the second and the third. So /much for the highly-respectable story of one wife. It was said weeks ago, and locally believed by all Pera, that the whole of the late Sultan’s harem had been shipped over to the old sera- | glio, and there installed on the meagrest of board wages. But The old delights of childhood long ago ; The things we loved because we knew them best ; The first diseovered primrose in our path ; The cuckvo's earliest note ; the robin’s nest ; The merry hay making around our home; Our rambles in the summer woods and Janes; The story told beside the winter fire, W hile the wind moaned across the window panes; “eight hundred”’ has yet left Dalma-baktche. Apartments are, | ndeed, being prepared for them at the old serai, but as yet jthey remain at the new Palace—swelling the total of woman- [kind now within is precincts to “ nearly thirteen hundred.”’ | The Valide Sultana has a auite of 60 female atrendants, besides a strong contingent of eunuchs ; each of the kadins has 40, with | — neutrals”’ to mateh ; and the inferior favouriies their double ; suites in proportion. Add to these an ‘* establishment’’ for jeach of the six sons of the late Sultan, and for even the 5 year ‘old son of the present, for whom a little Cireassian girl play- | fellow was bought the other day at a cost of 30 000)., and you have, with the aggregate of Abdul Medj:d’s women, the mon The golden dreams we dreamt in after years ; Those magic visions of our young romance ; The sunny nooks, the fountains, and the Qowers, Gilding the fairy landscape of our trance ; The link that bound us later still to one Who fills a corner iu our life to-day, Without whose love we dare not dream how dark The rest would seem if it were gone away ; —_ So te em With all three of these categories of pro-conju- | | Frorence a source of profit, but it was nota proper state of things for a man on being called upon as a prosecutor to say, ‘I have suf- fered one loss, and now Lam called upon to suffer again in’ order to protect that community which does not protect me.”’ It was quite clear that that was contrary 10 true policy. But the case of prosecutors was not the strongest. There was one class of witnesses whose prof ssior, he might say, was to give we are now eesured that not one of Abdu! Medjid’s whole |evicence—the men and officers of the police—the great body | of whom are of necessity but scamtily remunerated for their services. te NiGuTINGALE on CKiINOLING.— at all. A man 1s now a more handy and fair less objectionable being in a sick room than a woman. Competled by her dress, every woman now either shuffles or waddles ; only a man can cross the floor of a sick room without shaking it. What is be- come of woman's light step—the firm, light, quick step we have been asking for? A nurse who rustles (I am speaking of nurses professional and unprofessional) is the horror of a patient, | Saitiiied inital seein atte though perhaps he does not know why. } of crivoline, the rattlit g of keys, the creaking of stays and of INDIA. j shoes, will doa pat.cnt moe harm than al! the medicines in The song that thrill'd our very souls with joy ; _-"hegentle word that unexpected came ; yt We prized because the thought wae kind ; Tle thousand, thousand things that have no name. GREAT FLOODS. SUPPLY OF COTTON--FEARS OF THE NATIVE PRODUCERS. Lord Canning will not leave Todia ti!l March. Cholera ia disappearing in the Punjcub. The county has been flooded from Benares to Agra. ‘Ihe greater part of Rampore Beauleah, lower down the Gauges, has been washed away. ‘The invalids and pensioners of Chunar have been driven out of their houses by the tmundation, Tee Calcutra payers treat fully of the question of the cotton ‘supply. Reports from all parts of the couctry Continue to pre- | dict favourably of the expecied cotton crop; wdeed we gatuer from all sides that an atea considerably in excess of previous years is already under cotton cultivation ; great efforts are being /made in the cot.on growing disirrets of the Madras und Bombay ’ All these in some far hidden corner lie, Within the mystery of that secret drawer, Whose magie springs, though stranger hands may touch, Yet none may gaze upon its guarded store. “Gleanings from late Papers. BRITISH AND FOREIGN NEWS. the world will do him good. “The noiseless step of woman, the noiseless drapery of woman, are were figures of speech in this day. Ller skirts (and wellif thegedo net thraw down some piece of furniture) will at least brash against every article in ihe room a8 she moves, Fortunate itis if ter skirta do not catch fire, and if the nurse does not give herself up a sacrifice. together with her patient, to be buratin her own petticoats, | wish the Regisirar-General would tell us the exact number of j deaths by burning occasioned by this absurd and hideous cus- tom. I wish, too, that people who wear crinoline could see the indecency of their own dress as gther people see it. A respect- able eiderly woman, stooping forward, invested in crinoline, ex- poses guile as much of her own person to the patient lying in the room as any opera dancer does on the stave. But no one will ever tell ler this unpleasant truth — Notes on Nursing. The fidget of silk and | He at once entered, but only replied by unintelligible words to bis friend’s questions, At this moment the spectators though- it best to awake him. But when they teok his arm for the purt | pose, he defended himself, erying—* Let me alone, { must go. to work.’ All this while his eves were closed, excepting during | the time he was held, when they would open, and on his release j immediately re-close. He row returned by the road to his own room, and ten minutes afier went to bed, taking care to extin-| gush the hybt, and tuke in the key which he had left outside. | Some momeots after, by knocking at his door, he was awakened ) in the natural manner ; and by questions arranged for the pur- The dress of | pose, it was found that he had no remembrance of bis adventures women ts daily more and nmre unfiting thew for any usefulness | | During all the while he walked with the most steady step among | trees, streets and passengers.—[ Paris Correspondence of Sat | Eve. Express. | GLEANINGS FROM AMERICAN AND COLONIAL PAPERS, A Bartiiant Coaree.—Missouri papers give an account of a brilliant charge of Major Zagonyi, a Iiungarian officer, with | about 150 cavalry, principally, Kentuckians, Germans, and Irishmen. The papers report them as a fierce locking set, armed with long knives, besides the usual accoutrements. Ma- jor Zagonyi had been ordered to dislodge the rebels from Springfield, where it was said they were 300 strong. After’ marching 56 miles for that purpose, he found that the enemy was about 1800 strong, instead of 300, but he determined not to return without at least making an attempt. The charge he made was so fierce that the rebels fled, and Zagonyi took pos- session of the city. He lost 51 of bis men in killed, wounded, and missing. Major Zagonyi subsequently withdrew, but Fe- deral remfercements sul! hold the town. — —2> 00 eo One or THE Caapiains.—One of the soldiers inthe 9th. Ohito regiment sends the following report to the editor of the ,setiled by a hardy and industrious | people, to that end deserves encouragement ee fei ‘ay qecdtaaa? (Story of His Exceilency Manners Sutton, lat Brunswick. It seems that a “pa i |eerzed the gubernatorial hand and remarke | your Excellency, but you're a brick 1" The Prince of Wales ie gradually preparing himself for the | discharge of those public duties wineh fall to him in his ca- pacity of heir apparent, and the intimacy which exists between the Crown and the people was brought into ful! play by the proceedings on Thursday in the Temple, where His Roya! Hiighness was made a barrister anda bencher, received a fre in bis new cepacity, opened the New Library in that abode of | legal ‘earning, was sumptuously entertamed ata banquet by his confreres,:he barristers, and appears to have acquitted him- self m every phase of the proceedings with a modest bearing becoming hie youth and high station. For this display, which erowsed the actwny of the legal world of London, the prepara- | tions were ample and gorgeous, and the event msy be regarded as the Prince of Wales’s first entrance into public life. The Queen i¢ about to visit the Duke of Newevstle at his late in nearly every cotton-growing district of india have gene- oe schoolfellow, who was going out to shoot pugs, and he asked | princely seat. Clumber Park, Nottingham,—an honor which the | rally tended to prove that, provided the seed be obtained by the | Me to come wih hin. highest among the English nobility regard ag a strong proof of grower early in the yesr, or ae shortly as prssible afier it has 7 went out, sbouta mile anda half from camp, toa place , been taken from the parent plant, there is no variety which wil| Which was notorious fur pgs. It was a deep ravine, with a very ‘not thrve and yield # plentitu! crop. It must not, however, be high mountain onone side, and alow one on the other, and the Royal! favour. The preparationa for the expedition against Mexico continue, tnd the treaty as been signed,or i# on the point of being sigued 0 London by the repre s-utetives of the three Powers— Engiand, Prance and Spain, There bas been some desay in signing the instrument, but rt has not retarded the preparations, inasmuch asthe French contimgent ie wot yet quite ready. The delay, in all probability, has arisen from the desire of France and England to secure either the moral or the physical co-operation | Presidencies particularly, to enable them to meet any call that may be made upon them for their staple. Tinnevelly has per- haps done more in this respect than any other district with the exception of Dharwar. The cotten growing districte bordering on the Godavery River are also reported to have considerably increased the area ususlly devoted to the cultivation, and the facilities offered by the river for transporting it to the coast, will render any increase from this quart. r h ghly destrable, not only as offering a prospect of larger returns for money tnvesied, fromthe cheapness of water carriage to the coast, but from the early date at which it will be available for the same reason, In | Tinvevelly great and succca-ful efforts have been made not only to umprove the staple derived from indigenous seed (to « hich ,much attention has been paid ia recent years) but to introduce foreign varveties. The experiments which have been tried of Loverlooked thatin the north-west provinces there are many | filled up with dense jungle. zemindars, planters, and_ryo's yet Jiying who remember the days when a flourishing trade im cotton was carned on with 7 ms England; and the ruin which the introduction of American | forty beaters or coolies, who began at the Ope Pity 20d beat slave grown cotton entailed on all concerned in its cultivation and production. It is not unnatural, therefore, that men who have once suffered so severely, and whose tales of losses they of the United States, at least what rewaius of them, for Mr. | have met with have beea listened to by those about them,should Linco!n and ins countrymen have wrongs to be redreseed in) Mexico quite as strong as the European parties who have de-, termined to seek a remedy with astrong hand. ‘The United | States are hardly likely, seeing how they are engaged at howe, trade in cotton no inconsiderable outlay is requisite. to do much in the way of restoring Mexico to justice and de- ceney. The Spanish portion of the ermament is now being | fitted oat with all imegnable speed, and when completed wil! | sail for Brest, there to jow the French eqasdron, This intel- ligence way possibly have the effect of showing Amer.ca that there Was no desire on the part of England and France to act | not only hesitate themselves but cause others to do so, in re- | entering on the cultivation of a staple for the permanent demand for which they have no guarantee. ‘To successfully carry on a acrew houses must be established, and large advances made. This i8 a question more for Manchester thaa for India to decide. If she is willing to invest a portion of the millions she says she | 'ushed on as wei! as he could into a small part of the jangle) 13 prepared to spend on Indian cotton in the establishmeut of screw houses and agencies for the purchase of the staple, and will show herself thoroughly in earnest, she wil! obtain as much towards her in @ supercilious spirit in this hour of her adversity. COt-OH 8 she can require. The remains of a great man were consigned to the earth on | Wednesday, in the villace of Netherby, Cumberland, in the | Moet quiet and unos'entatious manner. Sir James Graham was | ‘Mlerred in an ordinary grave, amongst his own tenantry and the | poorest of his nenghdours. There was no show, no pomp,— | Rothing in the eolewn affair tu indicaie the great part which he played in his time on the stage of Eng ish politics. It is) omewhat remarkable that none of even his political friends mete present, the funera! cortege being exclusively cumposed te owa household and blood-relations. The trial of Curran, the Dublin cabman, charged with a innocent. ——--——_ 4 O0@- —---—- Jupiciat Tortwre iy Hungany.—The Gazette des Tribu- naux relaies an almost incredible act of judicial torture in Han- gery :—** Two soldiers, brothers, of the name of Varga, on fur- lough im the town of Koertsglye, Comitat of Sapatuinare, hav- ing been aecused of having committed a burglary in a public- house, were takep before a police-m»gistrate, Erdelyi by name. fle questioned them, bat they firmly protested that they were he sent for two pandours from the nearest puard-house, and by Gins and | barrelled rifle. Cleveland Lvangelist, an organ of the German Keformed | Sree. Perricoars.— In my capacity of surgeon, | was.’ | Chareh : : fet 7 Writes @ cCorrespousent, summoned to atiend a pretty child | “We have now a chaplain, but we would be better off with- ‘three-and-a-ha'f years old, who was severely scalded from the ,OUtone. He comes from St. Louis, and is said te have kept a shoulder to the finger-ends of one upper extremity, and from the | © ffee-house there. After he was introduced to us by the lieu- | bend of the fore-arm to the nails of the other. The respectable | tenant colonel, Sondershoff, with a sneer at religion, the chap. | family were happily assembied for tea, the child sat in the lap lain addressed us in the following words: * Comrades, 1 have | of an elder sister, when the servant entered with ‘the tea-urn been honored to be introduced to you as your future spiritual | hissing end steaining at the top! but uolockily ehe caught her | adviser, 1 wee it for granted that [ have men before me who ee the stee! wee hoop of a young lady sitting near, avd | mo = ' eee the cane teh oe a = a tumbling forward, poured the greater part of the boilng con- | *8§ on ever ‘epprosch you wi e bible, the tents of the urn over the arms of the ar litle fellow.” hymn-book, and superstitious prayers. My Lord God is liberty ; jeiiaaiclieila i Net | salvation ts good eating and drinking. When the drum beats : ; : | to battle you will not find me behind a rotten stump, o A Tiger Srony.—The following is from the pen ¢ on) inp, on my ‘ , # om the pen of an en knees, to pray like the Pharisee. sign in the 72d Regt., jus Shand: 766 ' ; ig ve 72d Regt., just arrived at Khandalla : I met an nil neue tp en te called word of God. You shall never hear me say anything to you is fully developed ; ] am fully enlightened!* ”’ ” My companion placed himself) about the imiddle of the ravine, and | took up my position near. ‘To the emt, where the ramnerarnt®@ede— Wy & had below about ——o oe The following is givenas a very nearly correct statement of |up towards me. They had passed Heyland without anythii sections of the country ; New England 200; New York, 12.000 ; j ‘ being seen, but as they neared the spot where [ was stationed, New-Fersez, 2000; Penneylvania, 10,000 ‘ Missouri, 13.000; [ heard a rushing and breaking among the bushes, and natur- Minnesota, 500; Wisconsin, 2Q00¢. Michigan, 1000; Towa, MONA . : ally exoected to see some pigs come out, so! cocked my rifle | 1000; Kanses, 500; California and Oregon, zug. Western amazement, out bounded a tiger; | then did what I have since | Kentucky, 500; Delaware, 100—total, 61,300. | | been told wag a very foolish thing. I fired at him with a single- ry eer Luckily, the shot struck him through both bis| The Southern papers say that they have at Charleston more. | fore-legs ; had [ hit hin arywhere ela» he wou'd have charged, | Federal prisoners than they know what to do with. _and [ should have no chance of escape ; as it wae, however, he | = A Query.—Would it not be Gecent to stop denouncing Eng- beyond me, and we got him to show himself by making the | land as if she were an ally of the South, beeanse of the ofien | beaters roll down large stones at hin; but he always disap- | just sarcastic comments of her unofficial press on the action of | peared again before we had time to fire At last 1 watched the | our bunglers in high places, until, at least, we recall Burlin- ;exact spot where he went after one of these short appearances,| game and Cassius M. Clay, our accredited Representatives, ,and, making a lucky shot, senta ball right through his stomich. | who insulted and publicly threatened the British Government Upon this he got up, and with a frightful roar that made my | at the Banquet at Paris? Had any English ambassador bees flesh creep, he rushed back to his old haunt, receiving two or guilty of such uncalled for and insolent action, what a how! three balls in bis body as he bounded through the open space our tresses would have raised about it—judging from the howls between the two jungies. It appeared, however, that he was over the sneers of the London Times, which is not, and never ia ne burry to give up the ghost, for he got back all right to his | was the official organ of the English Government! ‘There sre | original lair. We now found,upon calling for more ammunition, beams enough both in John and Jonathan's eyes to build quite that the natives who were carrying it had, through excess of |a thriving village, if they were cut up into lumber; and the As he could not succeed in waking them confess, | fear, thrown away every bullet we had. We had now no al-/ least either of them says abou'fthe supply of building m»terial |ternative but to ride home for fresh supplies, which we did,| stored away ineach others’ eyes, the beter it will be for all, his orders they tied cords tightly round the thumbs of each man, | afier giving tae culprits a well-deserved thrashing ; and we | varties. Jonathan isa bully towards all defenceless peoples. and pulled them until blood flowed; then they placed each took advantage of the opportunity o° making a late breakfast; Indians, Negroes, Mexicans, and the like ; but he came honest- tal assault on Miss Jolly, has terminated, and the sentence man’s args in suck @ way that the hands were behind hshead, | D*¥'"g done which, we again started for the scene of action— | ly by thie vicious trait, as a search into those parts of his family Pasred upon him is two years imprisonment—a sentence alto- and they bound the wriste fast together; next they passed a Rether nent to an atrocity of this Kind, supposing Curran | cord from the wrists beneath his legs, pulied it as ight as pos- ‘0 be the real culprit. wae scarcely evidence enough to convict Curran. Some of the English papers think there | sible, and tied it round his neck. Though suffering dreadfully, | the two men were again interrogated, but they persisted 1@ at- A correspondent of the London Daily News encourages the ‘firming their innocence, and the magistrate declared that if td that the Poles are now in fate way of throwing off the | Ussian yoke. Uaheard of barbariy and sacrilege are perpetrated by the Kus. fan hordes on the barmiees inhabitants of Warsaw. gieh genilemen who have received persona! injuries and | grossly in-ulted by the Russian police at Warsaw, have | p Weir determination to seek redresa before the British | arliament. nine Gen, Sir John Inglis, whose defence of Lucknow is Wi fresh in our recolleetions, has beeu appointed to succeed Sit Edwaed Buller in the command of the troops tn the Lonisn | slande. Sip Jona and his youthful family will embark for Corfu lt Mn January next, A Ye t the cong) Duke of N ution of a late rifle contest at bie Grace said: Our Cousins - tee ae Other side of the Atlantic. taken place in that country. ny ey have Ne ondomemnay | atinued, but do n : tre one whit lees oo one moment believe that that people | from the same stock bot it because they have not experience, that they have not that drill, and that the ites sas those practical officers, that fommented upon. Now, | say that ought to be an example to i ( ? Bat thie correspondent also says that acts of |'!! the next day, glary, and their bonds were removed, they would not confess he would leave them in that state un- At length one of them, overcome, fainted, and one of the pandours threw weter in his face until he par- Some | Ually recovered consciousness, anc then the man pushed him this ime each carrying two riflesand a large hunting knife. | record, headed, ** History of the British in India,"’ and ** The “Screwing up our pluck we entered the thick of the jungle on| English in China,’’ ard ‘ the Life of Robert Emmett” will foot, and tracked hin by his bood. At last a native pomted! prove. Heis an hereditary sinner.-- Boston Pine and Palm. him out to Neyland, who fired at and wounded him; the tiger) (came after us with a terrific roar, and considering discretion the) Specimen or Patriotic Prayer.—When the old lady had better pirt of valour, we bastily mounted a tree ; this operation fallen into the well, and was rescued from Growning © ith some was reveated three times, and at last we found him lying on difficulty, she declared that ‘* had it not been for Providence his side, apparenily dead. We went up within five yards of and another man’’ she would never have got out alive. The bun to have a look at fim, Heyland firing both barrels at him,! theory of the old woman’s assertion seems to have Operated in. brutally against a wall, saying, ‘As you area soldier, you ‘about fifteen yards off, previously, to m»ke certain of hun; but one of the churches in Logansport, Ohio, where, on the na- - ’ ought to know how to endure suffering.’ After bearing the dreadful torture for about 20 minutes, the two young soldiers, | moved. in Order to obtain relief, said that they had committed the bur- Erdelyi then told them that as they were at liberty they must renew the confession they had made, but they declared that they had only admiited uilt to escape from torture, and that in reality they hac nothing o do with the burglary. On that Erdelyi struck them in the | face, and ordered that they should again be subjected to tor- Pee or Newcastie on THe American War.— ‘ture, but from terror the two young men again admitted they review of the Robin Hood Rifles, the, were guilty. eweasile presented the prizes to the winners in the | writing, and they were sent to prison to await trial; bat a few Notungham, In the course of his remarks | hours after they fel: so ill that they had to be removed to the Remember the example you have seen among ho=pital. The superior Tanne of pe cee You have heard of what had taken place, and he at once had Erdelyi lodged in : jo at the most important battle which has hither- | prison on the double charge of toriuring the setian cain and of | ¥89 running alongside of me,and mauled bin most frightfully 5 like @ racevon. i deeply regret that the civil | usurping the funetions of the military tribunal by treating them I deeply regret that it is being a6 if they were civilians, instead of anding them over to the, A note of their admission was taken down in military. The two brothers were afterwards tried by the mili- than yourselves. They have sprung |'ary tribunal for the alleged charge of burglary, but they were + they would fight as well as Englishmen; ecquiuted. As to Erdelys, he remains in prison,” Granpeor or THe Frexca AmBassavor.—The topics of | Rua, which has been so much | the day are the excesses of the mob, and the exceedingly dazz- ling equipage of the Dyke of Magenta, who bids fair to become | of Central Africa, the following incident a testimony ;—Ata TL suppose in his excitement he missed him, as the tiger never tional Fast dav, in the presence of a Jarge congregation, a gen- Mey 65 a — =~ yards — tk weet? ee _ ae creditable attainments, both literary and_ to give him a shot and make doubly sure; but Heylend said,! moral, thus prayed : | '* No, no} you will spoil the skin,’ and laid hold of my rifle.) ‘ O, Lord, had the East done as well as the Hoosier State | oie ], ikea ver let go, Sees ~ —. must be and : | in —— men hoe — see rebellion, we would not be ut as we were taking another step forward be rose with an| under the necessity of calling on Thee!” }awfyl roar, snd sprang afierme. teyland ran down-hill, and | 'got off all right; but Tran up hillas herd as I could, ard the | A Poinrep PrRaver.—The prayer of a pious Methodist for (uger after me. I had just got up to some covlies who had fol- | the ungodly of Pittsfield, at a Berkshire camp-meeting, many | lowed us in our advance, and were now running away 4s fast years ago, is furnished for the public as a model for the special as they could, and | heard the beast breathing at my back.) prayers proposed in some quarters in bebwIf of the errors of the | | What an awful moment waa that? [ never expected to get secessionists: “ O Lord, we®pray thee that thou wouldst con- io of the scrape alive, so I eee kaife and fe round | vert ail that thou canst in the middle of this town; and all that [aoopennres to make a useless effort to save myself, when the | thou canst not convert, O God, be pleased to take them by the. tiger, changing his mind, leaped upon the back of a native who. nape cf their necks, and shake them over hell till they squeal | Amen.”’ | but it was his dying effort, and the goolie got off with a mauling: ‘that would have killed any European, but did not kill bim.”’ A RemarkaBte Breamist.—A blind man, named Thomas. : - ee ae ai a | Bishop, is uuder bonds in Cleveland, Ohio, to stand his trial on | t is said the photographic art in Paris, inciuding all classes |» charge of marrying three wo:nwen, all blind, within the space of photographic workmen, employs no less than 10,060 persons. | of eight days. ‘The Leader says toat on the 10th of September The portrait card is the most profitable branch. he was married at the American House, in Cleveland, to a lady. | of theron county, at which time he assumed the name of Wil-_ liam Gibeau. Seven days later, assuming the name of Gibeaut, | be married a young lady of Cleveland. Oa the next day, Sep-| | rn ee A Fine Famity.—As to the proinic capacity of the natives | Mammoth size, measuring 4 I brought a gun with me, | Comrades, if any of you need comfort | Anparati, are retailing at 10s @ 13s ial sa in : - to-day br , He leo! me a single-barrelled rifle, and come to me—I will try to comfort you, but not out of that so 1'y brought from 10s t0 133. Che about the Lord God, but I shall instruct you by the voice of 'ot@ little tart, sold at auction at past history. Tama man upon whom you cin rely. My mind | | Turkies, 744 ¥ Ib: Chickens, Is @ 1. 34, the | fresh, lld @ Is # ib. ‘the number of Germans in the F+deral army fram the different | a an | Correspondence, and brought it up tomy shoulder ready, when, to my utier| Virgina, 1000; Maryland, and districi of Columbia, 500; a newspaper article, pays the a Lawrence, in order to rejoin the people of their own rac ant language. The Governinent has not been indispose d - Sarction and encourage this movement, though they hay oa thonght it right to devote any considerable gum to aie ieake io Private subscriptions are being taken up in Qreder's id this immigration, and we believe a simi'ar subscription oil be metre one - thas the wrong done to their efailere Je harshness of British rulers or. nerals, and negieet the French Government of that oo - rn will repaired by-the Canadiane of te" Bosent ‘ tit ie a great moment that the strip of Canadian lend lyi > ing b Lower St. Lawrence and New Brunswick Tedtecetal = timental feeling ab out off | Montreal Gazette. cung separation to she Acadians.— “You are acy Bracxs !’—The St. John News tells a good a e Governor of New rty of youn ent . John, rather fast in their tendencies, iron” preterien’ ish winter, and afer viewing the. lions, d them to pay His Extellency a visit, _ wean Governor waa treated to some highly complimentar ; ks by the spokesman of the party. aT Scibpy to see ey polite rejoinder of His Excellency, «] hope joa ast well, cf that your friends will not be long deprived of your com y home. After a few more inierchange of camaheateiins Excellency invited his guests to “« teke @ glass of wine,” wh 4 they did, except the Temperance ones. Short! afterwar, they rose to dejart,and bade his Fxeellency +6 aot by’’ in the most fervent manner, and the compliment was as cordian re- ciprocated. On passiag out of the front door one of the bey d—* By George, “SS > . . Excellency —** you're all bricks.” So are you,”? said his A Larcre Appie.—aA day or two »go we gaw an apple of Huis girth 14 inche i the orchard of John Johnston, Esqr., oe Wellies tr variety od which UIs & specimen, is called the © Monster Pippin. The lady, who showed us the upple, said she saw a barrel of the same, most of which appeared as. ‘large as the one in her possession. They ought to b ona n . e sent to Exhibition. — Bridgetown Register. ror P. E. Istayo axp Counray PR —Th i supplied with all descriptions. Peer eee tating at Is. 6d. ¥ bustel. Kidneys, N.S., 2s. 6d. tes — at auction to-day, part of cargo brought 2. 24. ® bushel. fe- tailing at 2s Gd. Barley—received no offer, 4s ¥ bus. is arked bul probably will be suid by the quantity at 3s 10d. Apples, 9d ¥ bbi., lots at suction ese i by the drum, sold for 5d ¥ lb., retail ite oh mene 3@ 5s¥ bbl. Geese turkies and chickens, have been plenty. Geese, Is 64 @ Qs; ir; Butter, Fresh Beef, 244 @ 8d ” lb by the quarter. —_— } finn To Tug Epivor or tHE EXxamuver. Sin—A bot I forwarded you a commanieation in answer to ** Obseryer.’’ . ed for publication, and yet it never made its appearance in the- Examiner. When an individual takes the trouble of tage, and fory j Editor of a newspaper to which he bas itech veaties many pieces, the least it deserves is notice. You are in the custom of noticing other writers’ communications; but, eon- trary to habit, you seem to have treated mine with silent contempt. Lad you said that you had received my commu- nication, but deemed it inexpedient to publish it, or anythin of this nature, I should haye been satisfied. : would lead the public to believe that [ intended Saltbaia what I had previously stated, and that I was not to be cowed into silence by that New London s ant ‘* Observer.’’ What I said was eck! “einglbeoaeine London, as @ body, were not a respectable class of nien.”’ From this position | sball never flinch, If there. was an reason for withholding my letter from the public gaze, it oe that it stated the plaia, unvarnished, undeniabl truthe If one writer brings charges against another, surely the accused should have the privilege of defending his own position Wher. this is not the case, there cannot be that «* freedom of the -— ree _— glory and the distinetion of civiliza- tion. People now have every reason to beli belied the people of New et because ye seen anything from me corroborating my OWn statements | believe a liar to be the most detestable being in a community and I assure you I'do not wish to be added to that cate ry. In all my letters on * Rule and Misrule” I have eadehiOersd to present the truth regardless of style or any otherornament. This has even been acknowledged through your columns. The Editor of the Js/ander even did me the honour of replying to some of my remarks. And I can safely say that my state- ment in regard to the people of New London was as true as any rae a ; went , *+ Observer”’ first laid down several principles fo guidance, the most part of which I ainiteed ode letter to be weil founded. But in that letter] cballen -bim to prove that I had deviated from these principle = set down the principles, and before he w i jetter he violated them in the most pitiful nee bs ' W hen ‘* Observer’’ proves the people of New ndon to 08 sess ‘‘ spotless morality’? and ** unblemished Characters ‘ he shall then prove that I have violated his principles. This neither he nor any other scribbler can’ do. ore, his * principles” might as well have been kept in “his shallow pate from which they emanated. That there are respectable people in New London, I will not deny ; butthat they, as a body, are not respectable, I fearlessly maintain. In my un- published letter I gave reasous showing the cause of alf this, and in a manner in which no New Londoner could take offence. ‘* Observer’’ has also stated what is not trath, He says that L have ‘* sympathised with them in their nes."’ False. The only misfortune peculiar to New London is one which deserves no sympathy, unléss it be froma fell@Ww like its sycopbant ** Observer.”’ That I have * slept if their houses, rejoiced at their weddings,sorrowed at bariais,”’ 4 ‘* B.5 “ ry ee ee i FO ee oe el MEER TS ek ln | 3 - : * * » . ee a