f We have before spoken of the trade of Ja- a aa . so, it is due to their own indolence, ——— Pe ‘eee improvie ‘a much larger income from his private practice, | from his office of Attorney General, and es- Ez THE DUPES OF FENIANISM. na aol | The Cork Examiner thus forcibly remon- | see |“ NEWS BY TELEGRAPH wat by the light of present events ever before our these prices are much in excess of those whieh «| dence and vice, acted upon by the absence of | New York, Nov. 30. P Ves, te she : P . ; ne he States mi aica, ¢ shall simply note here the quanti- dence a ’ “eon, a : a oe i ‘ on ie : 9 : es of i tag y wor, 30, P. M.—New Ves, te show we (he way in which our movemecuts ruled five Years Aro. Prices in the States may maica, und sha PY} I ood example and of eivilizing influences in pecially from his shipbuilding operations—pru- | strates with the duy of the Fenian delu | Venezuels says us a party, headed = from should te directed. We must never, never forget the development of character which those people not remain as high as the y are for any great length of time, but the taxation and the inei- ties of a few leading wlicles of its importations on ; in the year L857:- many districts, aud by the evil teaching and | evil agencies to which I have already reterred | dently declined the vacant place. Some of his sion — Miranda, in Kuoxills, was entirely dia in a battle. The General was left dead ona have just manifested, and we must shape out datad. Tasocdeiel i at al ee he é . 4 ' 82.687 : - irers give him credit for patriotism| One might be curious to know with what ! eae sil oy ge elma thei 8 foratels a 7 eae ooo S on ce, ? a ~— Ms 17 901 in all. J i aa of | great admirers hi : > on I : ; a! feelings three-fourths, nay four-filths, of the| field... . The €x-emperor Solowque, of Hayy ; ' . ' the shoulders of the Americ: weople, . §0 rrnmeal, IS. “It is a remarkable 4 »0, tha 'y i ix i ce y G rather give him)... : arriv Santina; ~~ 7 on Se Sones many y a preyent a return to the prices which Bread and Biscuits 3,723 | | ane alt or i ae outbreak have ee ; Fenian prisoners have trad, or will read, the had arrived at Santiago De Cuba *n route fot . ot wai —.% 4 the principal rebels in the 2 t s “The story ofour * Cawnpore”—the lapping of prevailed before the rebellion. Our neighbours Corn, bushe!s been persons well off and well to do m the credit for entertaining a due regard fer his yrand orations and triamphant doings of the St. Thomas, having heen expelled § maica.....Cape Haytien had been biethe fe the Bareu’s bleed, as Gower after finger wae re- ; : , cides : moved trom the hand warm with lite—the cutiing | MUSt, therefore, expect to s e their old foreign Wheat, do. 4, ua6 | Ww orld—possessing lands, cottages, furniture, pocket. Brotherhood mee eer, ~ ae by two Enzlish war vessels, and redn tt et pret Vietor Hersechel’s tow de, while Me | CUstomers going elsewhere for manufictured Beet, bbls vast horses or mules, or other property, and with an The Hon. J. W. Cudlip, Te ge ee for St. cell, or. m sad fcka opens te in ce , st "i . ashes Geffrard’s troops. em r. pos ced to eart atill panted with life—the t ‘img } goods. Much of the trade which they lose un- Danke he 7s m nb a : : ; the majority of the prisoners must receive in E s troops ssession heart ott | ant iwith | “pe dices owe | — ; fuch of th ; id re, ies Pork, do. . nna | education above the average of the peasantry. John, has been appointed an Executive Coun- bitte ed a siaosk heated tidings of freedom rhe ruins. Many of the rebels seria of of poor Price by women, amid such deep and bit-| donbtediy goes, as is said, to Kurope.* Bu | Butter, firkins ~~) | Jt is necessary to bring these facts before |. : : itterness ol st . : the rest fled. The insurrectix , and ter groans as, we are told, * would have pierced | there is no reason why a good deal of it may Lard do Roe} ; bute aviies 4 hodk with ly spread eillor, in the place, we presume, of the Hon. walfted across the ocean, and curse in their! the res ea . Und ; ; "t in Hayti has ie ee ia We as , Lhe ee ce |; you m order to cony > VE eiys " ‘ ; i .-, terminated.....ULnder orders fre Snaj the heart of a stone’ —these things are sufficient! not he hbrouzht to these Provinces We have Pickle s harre!s 698 |}- . e oe “we xe , , hearts the mocking phantom of an Irish Re 7 Spain ; tie Z é se i ickled Salmon, barre! : tgp Sage / a Hayes W. Anglin. rears » zt < ee ail to “barrew up bis immest sobl,” and will, we) ihe advantage in point of distance, and, in al Smoked Herrings, boxes 5,744 | and ee : ' ply a apn r. Ang public, with its crownless harp and its) negroes landed from slavers are to be returned st ine wr . j leep © ; e’ : o Be his; y daring ( ‘termine p ention i — : ricd trust, tmpress upon hint the importance and ¢ “P| vood many articles, we can have the advantage Mackerel, barrels #5380 - cenit ang Ane -ayeare the mtenti glorious sunburst. And evenif they should | to Africa. fesse that free penple should be left elon le 249,975 do. has been, and still is, to make Jamaica a second “The HEvaminer of Monday, we observe, not have as yet awakened from delusions, New York, Dee. Ist p. m.—The Ney 7‘ ; in poitit prices. In proof of this, we may say Herrings ; ; Cael settle their own affeirs; and that it ie a danger. | PON] ; a? Q « Havti, and how imperative it is upon you, gen- . . ter of the : 7 that our. Canadis ; ‘turer, ¢ 5 ’ = : : ‘ y* ‘ : akes ac e Reporter of the House . eee . i : ous — a perilous Laing to trifle with edged toole,| Ut our. Canadian manufacturer, at least, has | Codfish, quintals rae tlemen, to take sack measures C under God's we ent - —_ : "1 » publication of and should still rejoice at the jrogrese Of) Herald's Toronto despatch says the Koad of in the shape of the feelings of au iguoraut and | 4!ready ascertained that his wares can be sold! Cheese, ewt é‘ 9 se blessing, may avert such a calamity ’ “4 ae a te tl ‘lv , If the. editor | the cause," exersplified by bunds, and c09-| "prade last night resolved to hold a great Juter. exe table peasantry like ours c. a go “l profit in the markets of ¢ uba. Ws j Candles, (various kinds . boxes 12,048 “ The: me ane nets tine ‘ prowu.te up = é me - mates of a Pn GW OE y. ' the Hl itor tributions, enthusia: m much eloquence, and national Council and Banquet at an early day = : a ha®e no doubt that the enquiries of the com-| — Sog Oxes 37,555 f at a te ee 4) of that paper, who is an hon. member, will ex- : : nd invading hests.|;. ¢.. . : : ; y, THE CONSPIRATORS’ PLAN 1 Soap, boxes 24.703 |few words. Create a strong Government, and plain why he withheld from the Reporter's notes promises of privateers and & in favour of Reciprocity and the Georgian . Among the treasenable documenta rece tly | captered by the authorities, im their search since | the oathreak in St Thomaa in the East, ie a ot Kingsten, said to bave been prepared under the direction of Genera! Lauwothe, the Haytien| refugee The plan presents the point at which the city | wis ty be fired, the poms to which it was ex-| peeted the authorities would repair, the points at missioners will show that the same can be said ot other markets and of other articles of our production. **We have already noted the large trade which exists, or recently existed, between the United States and the tropical countries of America. The trade with Cuba especially is a | large one. Nearly all the exports from the | United States to those countries, consist mainlv | }two to four millions annually. Coal tons Oak Staves and Headinzs, No Pitch-Pine Lumber, feet 650,653 White do 2,605,556 The Island of Hayti also does a trade of several millions annually. The United States stands first in the list of countries trading with Hayti; their exports to that amount to from ) These exports 672,585 do then, under a firm hand, to much may be accomplished. ‘(In order to obta.n a strong Government, there is but one course open to you—that of abolishing the existing form of Constitution, (compensating the oflicers whose offices are abolished), and establishing one better adapted to the state and requirements of the Colonv— one jn Which union, co-operation, consisteney guide and direct, of his speech on Confederation, which, if we re collect rightly, were sent to him for revision in May, then we will explain why it was that the Reporter only lately * saw fit to give the balance of the debate to the public.’ ”’ We take the above paragraph from the Patriot of Saturday. Thestatement about Mr. Whelan we can easily imagine how their legal ad visers and advocates estimate the enurmous injury which these speeches and other pub- lished proceedings in Philadelphia have in- flicted on their unbappy clients. We may likewise imagine how the majority of tue mothers, wives and sisters of those in goal read or hear of the fine speeches uf Head Uen- tres and other great leaders—~ in witich their Canal. Annexation Clubs ave springing up q over Lower Canada... .Two members the Canadian Parliament, Messrs. Galt and arrived in Washington yesterday, to he p at the opening of Congress... ..A Washington despatch says, postive information is to the ef. fect that the iin of our Government with France and England are entirely satisfactory There is no possibility of serious disturbance, at which the uassacre was te commence from,| of articles which can be furnished from these | ; > - i me ; . . 1» » Ags . : 2 : ‘ : and the points at which pests were to be sta-| p wi ' F d ‘ t ener wie ] si {consists. of flour, pork, beef, fish, household aud promptness of action may, us far as prac- wiehncnemy Crom Wy Reporter of the Assembly ingarcerated relatives are coolly relerred tu Napoleon s speculation is very unpopular with at >< sate ‘J i 0 uces. i the mulrpose Of snowimneg oO . . ‘ > 22 —_ " =? ' - ® . > ? . * . : 24) 4 tinted. Ge Gor BN out Ul the Bickt 44 thuse whol. ; . = zs e On a aaa ’ y 7 {furnitue, cotton goods and manufa = 8 ot oaks. ha mead the «notes of his speech ou Coufederation,” 15 | ag* a few of the advanced skirmishers’? whe} th. French and he will withdraw his foreag od : 4 | Many of the wants o 10se tropical Countries; ...; erintions The ce ‘cial recula- z i ° ° - : r P, 3c 2 2 she cz . of « een ped to the roads leading owt of the city he | | Various desc riptions. The commercial reg “| invite you, then, gentlemen, to make a] NOT TRUE. It is quite true that the *‘ notes have fallen into the hands of the enemy, | from Mexico as soon as he can do sO without ecunspirators wee TO Wwait the arrival of troops at the seede of conflagration. and then, ona given could be supplied from British North America, an exemination of the trade returns of the a tions of Hayti do not discriminate against the States as do those ef Cuba and Porto Rico, and great and a generous sacrifice for the sake of were sent to him (Mr. W.) in the early part and are as covlly left to their fate’; that fate being rendered moze peri!ous by the Gold 14s, compromising his dignity. , , eR 3 basin Whe ohn ; your country, and in immolating on the altar} . - : Yew York 2nd.— The North Caroli Sianl + to seize the-eawp, the barracks, the|'80d of Jamaica will be in place. The chief c s } . beral arrangements |)? pune) g | : ‘ aati te ois Has satiate , ; New York, Dee. 2nd.— The North Caro} signal, were to seize the -eauy ‘ eks, the | we have no doubt that libera f of patriotism the two branches of the Legisla- of Summer — perhaps May for revision, blustering nonsense of men whose limbs are ma arsenal avi the batteries; there was to have fol- | lewed a general massacre im every street from! beth evds, every house beirg entered and searcti- | ed Whata veleane we have been sleeping upon! | Che Gxraminer. | ~ SO er Charlottetown, December il, 1865. ' | THE WITH TRADE FREE TROPICS. | Ir is very much ty be regretted that there is | ly, Jamaica actually imports a large quantity exports of that Island are sugar, rum, molasses, singer, coffee, pimeito, arrowreot, and co-| coanuts—all of them articles we import and | pay eash for. Jamaica, on the other hand, | imports articles which are nearly ell produc dj’ in these Provinces, and produced cheaply too. Chere is a basis of exchange at once. Flour, cornmeal, wheat, corn, beef, pork, butter, lard, and fish of various kinds, are imported in con- | iderable quantities by Jamaica. Oak and pine | lumber, shingles and wooden hoops are also | among the imports of the Island. Very little | manufactui ing is done there. Though export ing thirty thousand hogsheads of sugar annual- | can easily be made on hehalf of these Provinces. | What we have shown to be true of the chief West Indian Islands, is true of the smaller ones swell. They all import largely of articles which our people ean sell them on advan. | terms. Had we time we could go tareous through the statistics of the trade of Brazil Laat Mexico, and show that the same is the case with the importations of those ccuitries. But, without that, we have given facts enough to sow the importance of the negeciations and enquiries which a commission is about being sent to make in the West Indies and other tro- pical American countries. ture, of which you yourselves are the consti- tuent parts, to hand down to posterity a noble free, und who speak and act without respon extension, and the incorporation of many ' sibility, because without fear of personal extracts which Mr. Whelan read in the exwaple of self-denial and heroism.” | 7 > - | MEXICAN AFFAIRS. Tue news from this long-listracted country That the Unite@ States Government are anxious to is heyinning to assume unusual interest. provoke a war with the new Empire, and thus find employment for their large army, can now hardly admit of a doubt; and a war with Mexico /extracts were not at hand, without which the risk. ‘There may be a few among the rela- tives of the men now in the grasp of the law who are insanely blind to the real nature— that is, the utter hopelessness and absurdity —of the Fenian movement, and with them reasoning 18 altogether thrownaway. They, and those who hold their opinions, or share ion their delusions, regard remonstrance as the language of cowardice or slavery, and they pronounce every man a traitor to bis country who will not believe with them—be- lieve against his judgment, bis reason, the evidence of his senses—that the Brethren course of his speech; but he had no time then to prepare those **notes’’ for the press, and the speech would be incomplete. Mr. Whelan offered to Mr. Laird, when the latter applied to him in the “dog-days”’ for the Speech, to de- liver up the Manuscript notes which he had received from his associate Reporter — saying that he, Mr. Laird, might do what he pleased Legislature has ratified the constitutional amend. ment abolishing slavery. There were on] six dissenting voices... ..Feur thousand bales of Government cotton were burned at Colum. bus, Miss., on the 25th ult., loss $1,000,000, Fire was caused by an incendiary... . It is eg. timated that 200,000 persons, both whate and black, in Alabama, will have to be furnished with food until they can raise it for themselves, _...The Freedman’s Bureau are taking to relieve those people... ..A letter from nada estimates the number of Fenians in the Canadas at 82,000, half of whom are already armed, Bostox, Dec, 4.—Semi-official News from ; f refined sugar—ior the simple reason, we | 0 +- <> -+ + — would unquestionably involve a war with France. | With them; or, if he preferred it, that he might : f a disposition xmongst some of our people here | suppose, that suge “refining is not done in a| THE JAMAICA INSURRECTION. Whether “a United de er pass by the Speech altogether, and proceed with abroad are to wrest Ireland from the power the City of Mexico, Nov. 1ith, has been re. © treat, if not with disdain, at least with indif-| country where sugar is one of its staples. But | oe | I co oe Lee a ti Mr. Laird sly will not deny of England, and cstablioh an independent | ceived in this city at the Mexican legation.. . . . ference, the project of opening up free trade all those tropical countries are destitute ot | Tue diabolical and unprovoked rebellion of wndertahe such a gigantic work remains to be “i : oe 7 ate e st 7 a republic whe onde a — ee Langlais, inert Taney whom Napelegs claticds #ih the Beltich “Weet India lel manufactures, o7 nearly 50 ; and not only im | Be! teladlinn hin tai sy Mesilla eciitaad| 9008: The following items of news may be in- | tls. e have no fauit to find with the -| most powerlu monare es of huro; e. sent to Maximilian m order to arrange t e fi- reretioms WHA the Hritiek West Lndia lelends, | port dry goods of all kinds trom the great Dt ee ee PPE teresting to our readers :-— porters—they do their work as well as the cir-| 4re people who despise reasoning, and Wh0/ pances of the Empire, has declared that it is with the Spanish Possessions, and with Brazil} factories of the world, but household furniture out. On the part of the rebels it was charac)" '"5 rca . ‘umstances a 1 requirements of the Colony only see and bear and belvove seourding ne imposdible to shored in thet euterprise, as Sy aud Mexico. We are told that we have nothing |#"4 articles of wooden manufacture and hard- | terised by the must cruel and brutal ferocity. l Te re! yer from Gen. Sheridan _ eae _ — 2 : " " ' 8 ze = 0 Pi their delusion prompts. But we still venture | juduet amounts to foity millions and ‘the re. to send to the countries which shall he visited} bap e-n well. Phese Prorinces have only the That the rebellion would and could be put | a8 2 an sas aa et ” ay a age | Seenety: beck. oe Spas : ee Serre ee ae ema joeisy of the nae fellows om ceipts do not quite reach fifteen millions... . In dhe ‘ae ; | manufactures which can Hourish in uew coun: | : —r ‘ Mf = haat aoe i eoerry. Ser | hee Jrandp. the head Reporter — who is uncommonly well | goal and their relatives are now of the opinion | |yte advices from Mexico it is represented that be the Colonial Commissioners, and nothin + to | tries, and could not compete in all articles for | @owa in a very short space of time, no intelli- The general Impression in the lt uited States stdin daiae biesmeitiiniiabiliin oh etal that the whole thing is a sham, and a bitter! ¢he Liberals are daily gaining ground, and the get from them. There is no use in holdin» an| the trade of the West Indies and neighbouring | gent person could or did doubt. The ring-}§ that Gen. Grant will extend his southern trip | | gry 7 ae and terrible sham, although the Head Centre) yyjaber of their forces continually increasing, argumaeut with persons who will be so unrea- sonable as to make such an assertion. E | ery intelligent man knows that we, as British A me- | countries. But in the coarser fabries. in fur- | | niture and wooden ware, and in some descriy - tions of iron manufactures, we could most | assuredly compete. Just now, some of our| leaders of the rebellion — for whose fate the to New Orleans to meet Gen. Sheridan for consultation on Mexican affairs. world will not shed one sympathetic tear — | have been brought to a terrible and shriftless | The New York Terald’s correspondent, | writing from Richmond under date Nov. 28th, ber for not writing out his speech as well as! jig the grand officials at the other side of the Atlancie talk so hopefully of their prospects, rely so confidently on their resources and deal contemptuously with the power to which they are opposed. The Coniederates making it—when the member does not care a straw whether it appears in print or not, most especially nine or ten months after it has been Gen Diaz defeated an Imperial force in the State of Puebla, and afterwards went to see General Alvarez to combine in a decisive moye- ment against the French. ———ae steps Co ricans —- taking the whole of the Colonies into | people are p:xying the very hizh duties charged | account. May all such black fiends—or fiends | Says that Gen. Grant has arrived in that city, leli I ce , . ve ; by » United States Gover . eo: . oi ; ‘ ‘ “as artily wele . . st. 0. | delivered. si - * “88 croE. N.C lov. 9 Fr , coijiddibiatica—Save very much.to give to, anal " the United tates Gove rnment, aud com-| of any other colour—be thus dealt with, when and was heartily welceme d by the military had 4 ets, armies, generals, resources, en ; I ORTRESS Mowrror, N. C., Nov. 2%th.—The : . iene peting with the American manufactures in their | te : q ht dns inten authorities. Coutrary to the General's usual <> thusiasm, unity. and had likewise the sympa | Envlish Schooner M. S. K. Thorne, from: * ne e > : » rpbery “ountries } ill ‘ . or, ne ydbery are eir objects, | isi oe , ° mn . ? ° . - . much te get from the tropical countries. But jown markets. If that can be done even tem-| @U°@er Tapme and rr ‘dhe . err | course, he is reported to have ** expressed him- Tue Epixsercn Review, for October, has|thies of Europe; but they were defeated, | Greytown for New York, is ashore near Cape ven Supposing we had only little to give or zet, porarily, there must be a very large margin tor | without the slishtest cause for the excitement} self freely, especially in regard to the affairs crushed, and to a certain extent with the aid! Henry. every believer in free trade principles ought to} rejoice at the prospect of opening up recipro- | under-selling our nizhbours in foreign markets, | where both must pay the same customs duties. ‘+ We presume that there will be little delay of their horrible passions. We have given in other columns some details of Mexico. He said emphatically that the ad- | vent of Maximillian to the pretended throne of | Mexico was a part of the late rebellion, and | ius C » é , ane resents a verv i ac- . just come to hand, and presents a very attrac | of the very men who are now endeavouring tive table of contents. So far, we have been tu excite an unarmed people—a people much able to read only the first article: ‘‘ The Jone.) donee too— tw wage a war of life and Wuixetox, N.C... Nov. 29th — The ship Aleyone, Leavitt, of St. John, N. B., from eal trade transactions with any country. We} in the departure of the commsiesinners upon of the atrocities committed in Jamaica by the his immediate expulsion should be a part of its | nal and Correspondence of Miss Berry ;”’ and| death with a country of four times the popu- | Liverpool for Baltimore, with a cargo of salt, shall know what each other wants. in course of | their errand. If no unforseen ditfficu'ties arise, rebellious Blacks. We now proceed to give | history. France did not ask the consent of : . HP sil ‘lation of the country which is so divided, ) went ashore on Bondey Esland, about 60 miles | time—the want and the demand will be felt to gether; and the supply will inevitably follow. | the whole business mav be completed, the in- formation which is gathered by the commis- stoners laid before the country, and the neces- some extracts from the very able speech of the Governor of Jamaica, at the opening of the | Americans to establish a throne in Mexico, and | Americans should not consult that power in re- j establishing the Republic. He said France had no one who reads it can fail to see what a and ‘uf @ Bundled timde’ the resodrecs, in money and materials, of the country which charming picture it presents of social and liter- is comparatively without either! ‘They (the ary life in England, in the higher circles, for north of Cape Fear, on Tuesday morning, The ship is a total Toss. The captain and crew were all taken off by the steamer Wash- The It is not likely that the admirable scheme of| sary treaties in force in good time for next! Parliament of that Colony, at Kingston, on the} no rizht to interfere in the question, but if she : ae ; > g;.| Amer can Fenian leaders) —we speak o! their | ington, which arrived at this port to-day, free trade with the Tropics would be thought summer’ s business. That the fullest succe:s/ 8th ult. On that oceasion His Excellency | would involve herself in a war with us on this |“ least -_ ele ihe tenes se military leaders—bave helped to crash a/ Washington made every effort to pull the ship of 46 he United: Santen Goviresneet ted srt attend the conunissioners must he the Re | point, now is the time to have it, while our | Horace Walpole and Pope down to our own | Secession to which eight millions of a brave off, but it was of no avail, as there was a heavy i Mavis | prayer of every patriotic British American. |army and uavy are vet organized. days. If we had time and space we should be| race, animated by the most extraordinary | sea at the time... ..Gold 1477. signified their determination to abrogate the In the Globe of the 24th ult., there is another ‘In appearing before you to-day to open our) The Empress had started for Yueatan, un-! d sli rhted to give some further account of the|enthusmem, were pledged; they saw it . iteeiprecity Treaty. Their spite and chw he site ‘ he’ same bi i ‘ ; aa . a | ordinary Legislative Session, I copes but feel | accompaiied by Maximilian, who follows. The ; ri ble I a : O wad Madevts Chlied }erushed—nay, they still bear the elamour SPREE neds.ci EW vetahld ta Teave tomevelill det. | ™ the same subject, whien deserihes | that the sad and soiemn eveuts of the past few | reception of the Empress along the route was| admirable Review of Miss Berry’s Corr SP" for the blood of the captive confederate Pre- (FOR THE EXAMINER.) ' ings with the Colonies on any thing like liberal | terms ~~have very hanpilv aroused the spirit of ; ppHy i the Colonists, and induced them to look for other countries. It would he a} markets in yreat relief to be ind pendent of Yankeedom | which it contains will be interesting and perhaps more roinutely the actual dollar value of the | trade of the British and Foreiz® West India Islands. We extract it without abridgment, | we feel satistied that the information | because weeks impait to our meeting a deeper interest than ordinary, and they certainly make me more than usually anxious to seek your advice and co-operation, ** The present is indeed a most critical period in the history of Jamaica, and the Session now j being inaugurated will, in all probability, be | quite tame, except at Vera Cruz. | Fourteen hundred reinforcements had ar- rived at Vera Cruz, and more were looked for. |The Libsrals were actively collecting at all points. : e | Passengers who are four days from Matamo- | ras state that the Liberals, about 2,500 strong, dence; but we can only recommend the reader | sident, and yet they call on the unarmed peo- to get the Edinburgh Review, or the very plea-| ple to rise in rebellion against a power ; : | yreater than that which bas trampled upon | the very ashes of Southern Secession. Were | not the consequences of the delusion serious /and even calamitous, one could laugh at the Bea We observe that Mr. McDonald, the | misrepresentation by which innocent people sant book to which it has devoted so many pases. ili ee WOMAN. A priceless gift to bless and cheer A lonely life, was woman dear; This hoon did you bestow. Attractive, innocent, and fair— i its blust 1 tl loubt that morvinonie: to aff, partion arr f the most important and t fleeced of t! dtl aud its Bluieter; ane rere is no douht that} ;one o ne most important and momentous | ‘ . a~di . Te i Ae ‘aster e of their money. and the promises —- ** Few persons in this lati r| ever held in this colony were encam»ed ten miles above that city, the |@diter and proprietor of the Pictou Eastern | are Hleeced of | a P \ sweet companion—nade to share when our angry American cousins find that ew persons in this latitude are aware of| ever held in this colony. | denial P ahs me Y =| hronicle, is al ire fr } bli of aid and Sasistanee by which the propia of : o 7 ithe extent of the trade carried on between the| ‘The occurrence of a most wicked and un.| £4ttison of which consisted of about 1,700 re-| Chronicle, is about to retire from the publica- this country are excited to idle hopes and mis Man's happiness and woe heir Lad temper has oceasioned a heayy loss | United States and the West Indies, Mexico, | provoked rebellion in the eastern division of| gulars, pwn volunte er and a detach- |tion of that journal. The Chronicle has been chievousorganizations. Bat the whole thing >| ment froma French man-of war. Two or three | to their pockets by the closing of trade rela-| tions with the British Colonies, they will be | disposed to sue for a treaty that will give us better terms than the one that is now about ex-| piring. Free Trade between these Colonies | and the tropical countries —in which Canada| will participate most extensively — will, ho | doubt, hasten the plan of Confederation; and | we are afraid that free trade principles with Mexico, Brazil, Cuba, British and Foreign | West Indies, will not receive much favour at and South America. The West Indian trade | f our neizhbors, however, is alone worth about as much as all their trade with British North | America, avd more than thet with any Euro-| pean country, Britain and France alone ex-| cepted. The following table shows the exports from the United States to the West Indies for the vears 1860 and 1863 :— 1860. $12,382,269 L781, 750 3,368,479 2,673,682 } 1863. $14,811,289 2,217,723 | 7,558,321 3,988,731 Cuha, Porto Rico, British West Indies, . Hayti, the Island has brought sorrow and suffering upon the whole. community. The valuable lives of many noble and gallant men, who were ornaments to the land, have heen sacrificed «whilst peaceably meeting in the discharge of their duties to the State) by a most savage and cruel butchery, only to be paralleled by the at- rocities of the Indian mutiny. A large amount of property has been destroyed; an immense jexpense has been entailed upon the country, }and one of the richest and most productive dis- | tricts of the Colony has been left without resi- dent proprietor or manaser to reap the abun) dant crops now ready for the harvest. French vessels were reported at the mouth of | the river, to co-operate with the Imperialists. No other reinforcements had arrived by sea. he Government forces were supposed to be ample to defend the city, but insuflicient to keep away the beseivers, | Bravo, of the Liberal army in Mexico, hearer of despatches from Juarez to the United States | Government, arrived at Kansas City on Friday mornin, and left immediately for Washington. He states that the Mexicans have 25,000 troops under arms, and 75,000 more can be put in the field as soon as the means are raised, which is too gad, tou sulemn, too terrible, for muck - ery; and reasoning must be addressed t» | those who are su liable to receive as truth that which is spoken in the nawe of the men, Messrs. Alley and McConnel, favourably | country of their strong aff ctions We have known im this Isiand, will, we understand, as-| done our part hitherto, and, with God's belp, will still continue to do it, in the attempt to | counteract the appeals and promises of those who, we charitably suppose, ure utterly ‘ignorant of the state of things in Ireland, vod who rely implicitly on the communica- tions of people at home, who must be either enthusiasts or knaves, egregious dupes or deliberate traitors. for many years a very well conducted weekly newspaper; and we are glad to know it is not intended to allow it to die out. Two young sume the management of the Chronicle early in January next. We wish them a suecessfu! career, - WHERE THE MONEY GOES. It will be some consolation perhaps to the poor Dear gentle helpmate, chaste and true, Who could refuse the homage due To tenderness like thine. To wrong thee were a cruel shame— To breathe dishonour on thy name, A foul, degrading crime, Of weaker frame, yet doom'd to bear Of grief a more than equal share, And sorrows all her own, The pangs that mothers only know— ihe hands of persons who seem to think that an- coe om aoe I cietes i ‘Through the hearty co-operation of the Civil, | “ hn! meee s : G ; dupes who have contributed money to the Fenian eo samy ase, v'er the couch of woe, nexution to the Uuited States is a very desirable | Prone) . S aeaae oven! Military and Naval authorities, and through | resident Johuson has appointed MOTT ccunent to know that. if theie hard caraiae| THE BEMIAN MOY EMENT IN THE Unheeded, and alone. ; ; vee ien ' 044, 2 M01, 244 | the promptness and untiring zeal and energy of, Logan, a bitter opponent to the Franco-Mexi. | '??%°™*! 7 nae, 7 EROHE NOTE, Carninge WP eee eat tee ier a te ¢ thing. Annexation, we sincerely hope, wil, | Duteh du $05,431 $52,598 | al); but, above all, through God's blessins can arrangement, as minister to the defunct | have not “ liberated Ireland,” they have at least UNITED STATES. The household cares, the anxious fears uever come to pass — Heaven forbid it should.| Swedish — do W7,218 7,575 | apon the meas used, this most diabolieal con-| republic of Mexico; but it is extremely doubt-| provided palatial quarters in New York for| The publication of the constitution of the) ppat cloud the brow, and finch the tears tu P.iace E:iward Island no class of politicians| have power to bring abuut such » seheme :—it | may be talked of, in or out of our small Par-| liament, but those who indulge in any belief’! that Auwexation is practicable, so far as we can.control kK, will be most assuvediy lau, hed ut for their folly. As we are desirous to give all the information that can be obtained with regard to free trade with the Tropics, we shall make use of such | fucts as we can glean from time to time, and | whieh may be likely to shed light upon that At present we have yreat pleasure in giving the fullowing extracts from « very able article in the Torontu Globe of the Lith alt., which will show that the Provinces | have very much to vain by free trade with the important subject. $24,584,384 $31,529,443 ‘Tn the total for 1360, a trifle over one mil-| lion, and in that for 1863, o trifle over two} millions, must be allowed for bullion seut from the States to those countries. ** Cuba is the largest and most populous of'| the West India islands. It contains a popula. | tion of about a million and a half, and, as we | have shown, dves a large trade with the United | States. The importations from that eountry | iatu Cuba, though amounting to a good many | millions, are much less than half of the total of | Cuban imports. Differential duties in fayor of Spanish bottoms and of Spanish productions | keep out many articles which the United States | could supply if permitted. Cuba imports meat | to the value of more than one million doliars | annually, but it nearly all comes from Buenos | Ayres, for the reasou that there was a diseri-| mination in favor of meats in Spanish bottoms. spiracy to murder the white and colored inha- bitants of this Colony has been effectually sub- dued, and the principal actors in, aud chief instigators of it, have been brought under the punishment of death, so justly due to their) visable to send this number of men with his| precured, and now use as their “ headquarters,” most henious offences.” The Governor then particularises the services | rendered in the great emergency by the Naval | and Military officers on the West India Station, and eulovises also the Civil Officers connected with the local Government for the important services rendered by them. His Execllency then gives an account of the rebellion, as follows :— ‘* Within three days from the first intelligence of the rebellion reaching Kingston, it was headed, checked and hemmed in; within a week it was fairly crushed, and arrangements made for scouring the entire district, to capture and | ful whether the offer will be accepted. Gene- | ral Logan wishes to have 20,000 United States “Fenian Brotherhood,” and the issue of the “Colonel” John O'Mahoney and the “ senators” : Tope ein wa ‘aa tal bonds of the * Irish Republic,” induces the and other officers of the Brotherhood. The New | soldiers to go with him as an escort. It is doubtful whether Mr. Seward will see it ad- | just ¢ rege delegate just at present. | Mexico anp tue Unrrep States. Judging by the reports which so frequently appear in the New York papers concerning the relations | between Mexico and the United States, we would infer — being guided by the old saying | of, where there is smoke there must be fire— | that matters are fast approximating to a ‘hostile issue. An occasional correspondent at Wash- ington communicates to the New York Tribune the following important, if true, statement. He says that parties who left the city of Mexico on the 8th instant, state that most of the pub- lie men and politicians in that city looked upon a war with the United States as quite probable, and were making preparations in consequence. | the “ Moffatt Honse,”” Uaion Sqnare, in that city. Chicago Tribune, the leading aud most influen- tial organ of the Republicans in the Western States, to call upon the American Government to take judicial notice of the movement which thus makes known its purpose to the world. Our contemporary pomts out that the object of the organization cannot be accomplished without a violation of the neutrality laws of the United States ; that, in fact, those laws have already been violated. The languaze of the neutrality act is as follows :— Yur k Herald, of Saturday, says that they have the large and costly private mansion, known as It gives a long description of this building, which, it says, has been noted as one of the most splen- did family establishments in the United States It is a five storey, brown sione edifice, fifty by one hundred and sixty feet in dimensions, Auished and ornamented in the most gorgeous manner. The outer doors, we are told, ave made of rosewood, and there is a great glass folding-door in the “ re- ception room,” which cost $2,000. Stained glass windows, paintings, frescoes, statuary, marble floors, &¢., give to the whole establish- ment a Juxurious appearance, surpassed by none “Tf any person shall, within the territery or jurisdiction of the United States, begin or set on foot, or provide or prepare the means for any wilitary expedition or euterprise, to be carried on from thence agaist the territory or dominions of any foreign Prince or State, or any Colony, district or people with whom tie United States are at peace; every person, so oifending, shall be deemed guilty of a high misdemeanor, and shall be fined net exceeding three thousand dollars and From eves unused to weep ; And vet, through all her bosom burns With love that merits rich returns— Unseltish, strong, aud deep, The grateful smile, the word of praise, Her large self-sacrifice repays, O’er all a veil is thrown— Some kind exeuse is fondly framed For slights of which she ne’er complained, Prhaps, thought the fault her own. Who, then, can thus dear woman view, Patient, unchanging, kind, and true, And yet withhold his love? "Tis all she asks, oh grant her all, Let Nature's voice respond her call, An echo from above. ‘ y | Cuba imports flour to the value of three mil- : , .4 : : : : a : r : oo : . ce countries that are shortly to be visited by the} jj, a ae h tit coal all come hon th z punish the guilty who have not yet met their just! The violation of pean by. ® fow Federal) ® wri Drea ek, She teien koprisoned net more than three years.” a > 2 of Ty c ry gh diate a's ve ope >] : , 3 jers i re ras © sidere ns i 7 . - 2 . “ . . Colonial Commissioners. The Globe says :— | for the reason that Spanish flour ouly nays a| doom. ‘ ‘ soldic rs on the Rio rrande was considered as | should be prostituted fe suc . base purposes as The Tribune contends that it is no arcument Charlottetown, December, 1865 ' luty of $2 50, while flour from the United| ‘So wide-spread a rebellion, so rapidly and the forerunner of an invasion an a large scale, | those to which the Fenians will andoubtedly put to say that “no milit “ “seat i. l ; , es < oo. i ‘ 2 50, p » . . te dl ; ‘i . 2“ “Oe ° < SB: “6 ary expe as 2@ “The commission must act with the appro- . a - leffectually put down, is not, I believe, to be) and the despatch of Gen. Weitzel to Gen. Steele it, and we faney that when (he proprietor gets it ) itary expedition — has been nseiipeliapinebbuitugil val and co-operation of the [Imperial authorities, and the gentlemen who compose it wil! be | aceredited by the British Government to the | Governments of the countries which they may | may require to visit. Their duties will be two-| fuid. — They will be expected to collect onal compile information bearing upon the su! ject | of trade between British Nucth Americe and the countries named; and they will be en) ow- ered_tu negotiute commercial treaties, sul, ject, | of quurie, to the approval of the Govern: ent | frum whieh they will derive their authority. | . . .- . *. . . ¢ “There is already a direct trade het ween | these Provinces and the countries Which our} coummesivners will visit, but that trade is a very States pays no less than $10 81! famine time, American flour can have little | chanee in that market. There are plenty of | Except in | jother restrictions which hamper al fireizn | trade, and give as great advantages as possible | to Spain; but, in spite of them, the United | States, as we have seen, manage to sell the | Cubans twelve millions’ worth in a year. The | following were the amounts of some of the chief imports of Cuba in 1854, from all! cc untries :— | Liquids, Fig $2, [eats, Cereals, flour, pulse, cacao, aid and butter, Cheese, 2,736,874 | 2,215,029 | 1, 38H, 846 | 1,197,643 | 153,135 “p met with in history, and speaks volumes tor the zeal and energy of those engaged in sup- pressing it. «To this prompt and decisive action I firmly helieve we owe, under God's Providence, that we are able to meet here this day. One mo- ment’s hesitation, one single reverse, mizht have lit the torch which would have blazed iv rebellion from one end of the Isiand to the other, and who can say how many of us would have lived to see it extinguished ! “It is my duty to point out to you that, satisfactory us it is to know that the Rebellion in the Eastern Districts has been crushed out, the entire Colony has long been, and is still, on the brink of a voleano which may at any mo- as indieating clearly that the intention of the Federal authorities was to provoke war with Mexico, Several Cabinet meetings had been held, in which the question of a war with the United States was agitated. The decision of the Cabinet was that serious apprehensions were entertained on that subject, and that it. was not too soon to take measures of precau- tion required for the defence of the country against forein aggression. The resolution of the Cabinet had, however, heen anticipated by Marshal Pazine, who for the last six months, had looked upon a war with this country as un- avoidable, and who has in consequence pre- pared himself for suc’) an emergency. By his orders several points have been fortified; others ‘carried on from the United States: that the Supreme Court has held that it was not neces- sary that a vessel should be armed or in a con- dition to commit hostilities on leaving the United States ; but that if persons were hired or re- tained to go abroad with the intent of enlisting in war against a power with which they were at peace, the act violated the above sec- tion of the neutrality laws. ———__—__~~- «= o_— The Cattle Plague still makes its ravagee in back again—for it is only rented by the Brother- hood—it will be, as Rome was after an irruption of the Vandals, shorn of many of its beauties. The first floor is used by the financial department of the “ Trish Republic,” aud has been fitted up with counters, de 4.3, &e., for the civil service clerks, who, it is expected, will be kept busy all the time in paying out “Irish bonds” to the eager throngs who will rush forward te subscribe ii for them. A substantial safe has been provided, Great Betiate. Many epidemic diseases have Where the money in future will be kept secure, afflicted cattle in England before, but none of them at any rate from recovery by the fools who in an Te *° virulent and mischievous as that which is excited woment tay new be deluded into con- Scientific | now sweeping off thousands of head. _ Extract or a Letrer rrow Toroxto.— Nov. 20, 1865,—* As | have already intimated, there has been a great improvement in almost every branch of trade in Canada West: busi- ness is very brisk. We are visited by large numbers of our neighbours from the other side, not in the way of ‘‘raid,”’ but for the pur- pose of buying up everything they eam lay their hands on, even dry goods, clothing and. Jewelry, which they can purchase much more advantageously than at home, in consequence of their enormous taxes, and the high price of labour as a result of this. With, the exception of dry goods, everything here is dear. To give you anexample: Wood, 84a cord ; butter, We flour, $3; beef, 124¢ per Ub., and most other steel] one, and mainly an in port tr ad . iI : , ish ° 878.35 , . * , fers : > " . mv le * d } en t ve d * e Cc 5 a 1 a, tlali , eeere 45,9066 ai } “st t fi “y are actually receiving their contmvent in men,! trl uti g lh Pou ar at . j i ge ntlemen and ot lers ta evot ad tu th time to } ° . . . v4 fax, t i} . cially, i oo) situated that it oni ehet ; CO,. . | Is +P BD | ? 'T1 e : : ar ! : distri t or part h mm the guns and Laiuasthian, J he sseuaii 1AS3Cs ete 7 » | the stud; ot this dix . Th i ti d " - . ; pe G 4 t h 7 ' } . g ere is scarceiy @ Gb tc , I APIS 4 > i i Or other branehes of this pow rful and rad t 5 | a i ease. err inves igatious o farmers, who in : h t > ° 4 have a large trade with the West Indies, and| Cottons, 2,595,098 | Island where disloyalty, sedition and murder- j have been defended with earthworks, and in “Government of Treland, a splendid suite of | nat sicw t» Revwied ‘tn the adoption uf means to generally had good erops, even from Quebec a considerable tradk W vollens 124.673 | 2 : , : . : * . ade mitht | ’ -*:"* | ous intentions are not widely disseminated, and | every French encampment the bustle and tur- : . 2 . nen re ine » {9% . ’ pene : a os : - : | : ai. . : . | arrest the further ravages and deatr r pea ; : he dune under present circumstances, The | Lineus,. 2,425,195 ‘in many instances openly expressed. The | moil attending the preparation for a great war | Te™s being reserved for the exclusive use of ite! iz uetion of the You have doulless heard and read a good’ West Indies and these Provinces are most dis-| similar in their productions, and that is an ex-|! Other manufaetures :-— |misapprehensions and misrepresentations of) are to be seen.M—Quebee Gazette. ———_ <-> <> +e puissant head, Col. John O'Mahoney ‘Phe Herald | plague. Remedies without number have been says that already the © government” has com | proposed, tried. and found wanting in efficacy. deal about the Fenian movements here, and if’ half of what our American fi iends say of us is: : : ‘ ‘ | pseudo-philantropists, in England and in this | e rondition for 7 Skins and peltries, $REt, 225 | PSCUCOT a = : aes ah. evicmines Gal a : : vellent condition for natural and permanent peri pied country, the inflammatory harangues or sedi-| menced its functions in this classic capitol, and Che plague still spreads and conquers. ‘The imme. | Ur Ye Must be in a very terrible state indeed. — ‘ ns TUL PATS : | . . eominereial intercourse. Even if Halifas did Wood, oni ee ee cs a , ad THE ENGLISH MAIL. | Pa : : ; Some genius here, wl loes “" : ; Red alih et SS Agiods tings of political demagogues, of evil-| : . aii , ~ 2, Who does the correspondence obtain the lion's share of the trade wt] an] Metal, 167,172} ious writings of politica gues, we suppose that within a month er two Ambas | diate consequence resulting from this visitation for the New York ~- t-te anal minded men of higher position and of better | | is, loss of property to owners of cattle; but from r ies and ' . . | Glass 5 | $ Snelis ai rrived ¢ ifaw : . ; inv s P . West Lave 5 aud the othe: countries, it would | a oN 141,510 | education, aud of worthless persons without | ag en pus on ipe ” Halifax on | sadors will be rushing in from al! the ean tl. . ung some of the most extraordinary lies I ever simply ty the medium of conveying the pro-| 4 gai ; aaa leither character or property to lose ; the perso- | Friday morning last, per Steamship Asia. The | potentates, and powers in Europe, Asia, Africa, | this arises a scarcity of cattle, and of meats and | reud. According to his account, the inhabi- -@ ‘ » Pp aan es a . Svan, O29, 82 | “i i. dee - ° +8 - aie a ‘ 2 : ’ m . J w i . ‘ > om © . sas . _ io os Be a aes wae Medieines ' 42 960 ‘nal, scurrilous, vindictive aud disloyal writings | Mail for this Island was brought here at a late| America. and the Cannibal Istands ~ from the butter for the market. The whole world is thus | fants are mm constant fear, the streets patroled M img secured,. there would be neither | “oO ’ oe | of a licentious and unscrupulous Press; and the | hour on Saturday night by the Princess of) latter especially—to pay their devetions to the affected by the plague in Great Brivain. Beefand | °S°" night, all the avenues of approach to the tariff nor hostile commercial relations to keep | . -. Pe 3 trem making Halifax our port of shipment. | Sut when the season permitted, Quebec 1! M outreal, and, for that matter, our lake might ship directly. **A more favrouruhle Opportunity for the de! ve lopennent of sucha trade could hardly fall to our fot. Hitherto, the [ nited States has ane ] ints, i ex-| te oy i * hoon . . . i sa i > ported very larzely tu the countries named, and | of some articles, as we have seen, the discrimi-| men, but they are true, and this is no time to| to nearly the whole of South and Central A me- 5Ce. A few years azo, the imnorts. fron the | Uaited States. of Cuba and Porto Rieo alone, amounted to about $13,000,000, and our | neighhous algo sent their wares ty the Bazil. ! ia", Mexican ahd other markets in tro ical Am wien, to the value of millions annually. | Latety there has been a complaint that this! tra le has somewhat fallen of, aud one 0: the | reasens sugested for it was the depredat ions | eomajtted anon American commerce by Con-! fedurate privateers. But there is anothe: fluence to be taken into aceount. whieh will ig| the future, if it did not in the past, have a very | rrjudieigheTeet unon the exporttrade of the | Tocted States with these South and Centenl Am: dgan counties. The excessively hich pricey which now prevail in the United Si ates must tead to render the manufactures of that eviowey unasleab'e in forelz markets! Jt is nt dmoly that the vices are-hich when ex. rested in the Inteted currency of our neish- Css, tous thet) seduetet9 the guid: sipadacl in. | 164,984 115,338 .127,871 Furniture, Perfumery, ; Candles, sperm and lard, These figures must, in most cases, be very much under the mark now, for the trade of Cuba has larvely increased in ten vears. Nearly | ignorant, excitable and uneivilized population | every article in the list we give could be sp. plied from British North America. In respect nation of the tariff and other chanves recently. if not now in force, would be just about prohi- hitive. But it will be a part of the duty of our comunissiouers to eudeavour to nesotiate trea- ties which will be more equitable than the regu- lutions which have hitherto restricted American ecommerce. With Cuba, with anything like fair play, these Provinces could sell goods to the amount of millions in Cuba every vear. If the co-operation of the Imperial Government can secure for as the necessary t caty re rula- tions, we are sure that co-operation will be readily given. Phe total im»orts of Porto Rieo—the other | misdirected efforts and misguided counsels of certain Ministers of Religion, sadly so mis-call- jed, if the Savior’s example and teaching is to | be the standard, have led to their natural, their | necessary, their inevitable result amongst an —Rehellion, Arson, Murder. | «These are hard and harsh words, gentle- indulve in selected sentences or polished phraseology. ' ‘+ A mishty danger threatens the land, and in order to concert measures to avert it, and pre- yent, so far as human wisdom ean, any future recurrence of a similar state of things, we must examine boldly, deeply and unflinchingly into the causes which have led to this danger. \1T know of no general grievance, or wrong un- 'der whieh the negroes of this Colony labour. Individual cases of hardship or injustice must arise in every community, but as a whole, the | peusantry of Jamaica have nothing to com-, plain of. They are less taxed, can live more Wales, gallantly surmounting the obstructions | illustrious chief who has restored liberty and hap- “oppressed and weeping Erin.” _— —" not received up to the time of going to press | Cost oF Living In THE STATES.—The th: se | Boston Courier says:—* From being one of the j which the fast-making ice had placed in her | Piness to | way after steaming up the harbor. We have | jthe whole of our Mail papers, but. in | whieh have come to hand we find no news in| Cheapest countries in the world to live in, taking | addition to that received by a late arrival at! the rate of wages inte consideration, the United New York and telegraphed to Halifax. States has becwme the dearest. Five vears ago, isedstdebintaidiiatinaies: | all articles of prime necessity were within the NEW reach of almost every family in the land: while 3RUNSWICK. 4 | BRUNSWICK taxes of every kind were so light that the bur- Tre lately vacant office of Chief Justice in then of them was scarcely felt. What a change | this Province has been filled by the appoint-| has taken place since then! Now every imagiu- | able thing is taxed. The food we consume, the j}ment of Mr. Justice Ritchie, and the Hon. J. for) that cuaka'i i . |W. Weidon—a lawver of no practice—has been | a is és as = oe ae a ae oe peat we w LONER Ww i | raised to Mr, Ritchie's place on the Bench. The! ; , gs pha ent: We are taxed on the raw ma. j we reeeive, - eek / jterial, aud taxed over aud over again on ite _ cussing the merits of the appointments; those) panufscture and sale. Thehentanes iwn de. the rival papers of the Province are intent on dis- Spanish West Ludia Istand—amounted, in 1853, | easily and chenply, and are less under an obli-; jy, opposition to the Government contend that receipt we give, the covenent we enter into, the to considerably over 85,000,000. The imnorts are similar to those of Cuba—consisting of meats, cereals, lard. butter, cheese, fsh, cot-| imnosition of taxes, the administration of Jus-| tice tons, woolleus, Hueus, wooden and other ma-_ tice and the ev'oyment of political rights, ap-; Mr. Justice Wilmot—who is senior to Mr. we drive, the match that nufactures. Differential duties and dues in favour of Spain exist in Porto Hico as in Cuba, hut hardly secure Spain so large # share of the trade as iz the latter Island. . | vation to work for subsistence than any peasan- try in the world. The same laws as to the nly te them and to the white and soloured in- habitants alike. t more comfortable and more independent than the Inbonrers of any other country. If it is not Sue every em +> - They ought to be better off—| both are bad, and that in the case of Mr. Jus-! car we ride in, the watch we eatery, the chair we titehie a grave slight hag been offered to. sit in, the window we look threngh, the nail that we light, even the very Ritchie on the Bench. The office of Chief stoneson the street and the bricks of the sidewalk, | Justice might have been readily taken by the are indirectly taxed. Everythiug, in eburt, is Silo, A. J. Gath: benches gentleman having taxed, except the air we breathe.” 3 . jaf fares and hotel mutton, in the pickled state, are exported from the ports of the United States, and from the porte in South America, and find ready sale in English markets at gcod prices. Butter and cheese are purchased in this Province and find. their way itt large quantities to the same markets, And onr cattle, too, purchased by Americans, are made inte pickled meats, and are sent to the same greedy markets. So long as the plague may lasts beet, Mutton, butter and cheese will fetch gvod prices. ie A Canadian paper saya that Stephens, the Ireland Presbyterian. Some years ago he was the minister of a congregation in Ballybay, County of Monaghan. Havg iwbihed Radical theories coupled with Unitarian and other semi-nfidel — a dewnward career inte Fenianiam and Socialisin is not surprising. 1? y from the Ministry in 1350. a rn ~— Po —_—___ A ConTRrast.—The Boston Traveller says: * Overeoats, such as cost $55 here, ¢ 2% chased in Montreal. of the most fashion for $29. A suit Consisting of ce: lof the finest English ence: 2. there for - | &100, articles “r@ much lower than here. \Sran who should yo to Winter's clothing. re, can he pur: shionalne tailors, Moeutreal te a alinost save th f » providing the t Without paying duty, as bundreds dy weekly.” leader of the Fenians in Ireland, is a North of city guarded, and the military almost e nstantly under arms ‘The true state of the case is, that little or noalarm exists, and, with the exception, perhaps, of a few nervous individuals, no one here has any fear of a Fenian insurreetion or muvasion. That the Fenians have the will tode us harm. few doubt, bat we think the fear of hw gallows, and the most speedy retribution, | will deter these evil-minded men from making any attempt ou our lives or property.” or et: DUNSTAN’S TemreraNce SocteTy.— Thomas Kelly, Exq., lectured, according te an- houncement, before this Society on M might last. The Hall was very well filled on the vecasion, by @ promiscuous audience, who listet ed with decorous attentwn to the lecture while being delivered. Mr, Kelly is a very anpressive «and pantaloonss c : Smere, can be bought 1 pr Oa heat tailors would ara’ Kitods, ladies’ gniter boots and other A man and buy their | e expense | which he appropriately reaponded. acros,) Amateur Band was in attendance, and play el speaker, and handled his subject well,—the minent points being brongh! Gut with much ill, | His first appearance before a Charlottetown | audience has been a decided succuss, tor althomgl: ; the subject of Temperance be considered dry aud hacknied, yet it was treated by him in se onigl- / val and able a manner, that he rivited the atten | tien of the audience for upwards of an hour. or Lopression which he left upon bis hearers | Was of the most favorable kind, and ind | many at the close of the preeeedings te themselves under the banner of Temperanee. vote of thanks was accorded to the a wseveral airs in good style. —Herald.