. «333°m~m V 09° '°l~.I!9l‘,_fllV.5l cullrltge to and facilities HASZARD'S GAZETTE, OCTOBER 4. .IIboIu'_ to the kifling market; and and we fought Napoleon, the loom of fats, with-our vvcavei-rm route ' The diggers of nuggets, and the fellers of - tical trades, and ancillary caterers for their , being’ becomes a furor of flight, and sug- TIIE WORKING MAN. “ When we entered upon our great Europpan war, our population was less thau half what it is now. wish so was the sqander uggftreasnre, the expenditure of bl was g In the Army and NW]. not less than 500,0tl)yof our most ablebodied producers were drawn from the I Withal, our productiiie powers incrcasediesci _I'IpIdly (almost in the ratio of the decrease in-the supply of our workers) that waste was more than supplied by the increase; great weaver L cotton and_- in l. “M f I d whenever moneywas‘ any nu 0“ lw nted fiir the pur- G"EiII’s‘o ciiinmerce. W now more than double the capital we then possessed, and s groatdcal more than double the 'p.bpnlation—yet we are greatly more sensitive to the perils of war--our funds and our trade are in a far more ner- vous state. We seem as if we could bear- the drain of hostilities less easily-' the bus. den of ‘taxation less lightly._.u,,, drag}, upon 0lIl' population less conveniently. Emigration grows by what it feeds on. °f “°'."‘-‘-°‘.l°"' “.d.1.°§_ it .J_!m Dg.¥9£::§ILIQ. chose the right 0 IVC for another. h_e_hollIe heart goes across the broad Atlantic. or doubles the Cape with the sons, mothers or sisters that have wandered thither; the home affection rises ran the ashes of the hearth of mere national- ity. Then trade and commerce gradually follow the stream of moving human life. the great forests draw around them parasi- wants and appctites—the preponderance first, the equilibrium afterwards, of affection and population to the old country is over- come; and we see that in Ireland cheap land and high _wages fail to arrest the mi- gratory instincts, or the new convictions of .the people. At last they even prefer poorer fare in the new region of their fancy, to improved conditions in the country of their birth. Perhaps the facts we see around us . now account for the mystei-_ious decay of great nations. A hankering after ‘untried gestions of self interest utterly fail to arrest the desire for change. It cannot be'that labour should go, and that capital, enter- prise and ability, or skill, should remain behind. The brain worker must have his toolso Thclnerchant must follow his cus- tomers. The seller must go where buyers have money. Where the carcasc is there will the eagles be gathered. We are, in this old world and this old country, in a state just now of most critical transition. ,_ Following on free trade, emigration and the Pactolus streams which have flowed in upon nrope from the West and South, have arisen a serious of strikes of the most exten- sive description, and ominously protracted duration. These do not betray any symp- toms of subsidence or exhaustion. In fact, we must expect them to grow and strength- en. s most universally abundant harvest ever known to the furthest reach of univer- sal history has not only been grown but garnered; and with bread cheap, and capi- talset at liberty for commercial purposes, lit is quite obvious that the working man can at once live upon less and exact more; the great conditions of scarcity in the supply of labour and consequent increase of it price. ‘It will require a steady hand and awise head to bear this overflowing cup steadily to the lips. Nothing but the sagacity of the labourer can save him from the great injury of all other classes, and the ruin of his own. The significant fact is before us, that one of the best remunerated and lar est bodies of workers in this king- dom re nse to toil for more than a sixth part of the day—_-that as yet they have contrived to rule their employers, and enormously tax the public—and that in -reference to a great necessary of life for which the pre- sent consumption is Materially contracted by the season, they manage to increase the — price. What it will be in winter, is an an- - xioirs consideration to the-community. It is not to be concealed that the poor are chiefly interested in moderating an excess in the w es of labor. For every shilling more pal to the worker the consumer has to pay at least cighteenpence. An advance in wages in one direction is e ualised ulti- mately by an increase in anot or. If the collier charges more for heating the baker’s "oven, or for the fuel of the flour-mill steam- engine, the baker must have more for his bread. If the farmer gets high prices for his cattle, or the grazier for his wool, he has to pay more for the leather of his shoes , and harness, and an advance to the‘tailcr and hoeier on his clothes. At first sight, indeed, this seems to result merely in a the- o of compensation. But under a system free trade‘ its and must bd the ruin of trade. Our chief, indeed our sole depend- ence for progress, for existence as a nation, is on'our foreign trade. Let it be clearly , gun, therefore, by our readers of the ..",,,’-king classes that-—IY,i"_sl, No single ‘ti-;pde cqii lo_n enjoy a.rate o wagssglee .. in .sneess o‘ftliose efether classes. Eva the oelliers willattraut persons from lesrllbe- rslly rewarded employmeuts; their employ- are will invest coati-ivsiioes M overcoming the resistance olfthelrtyranfs m‘d__ e in‘ of tlie‘,srtie|e wil obeckthe sad, if ' If all trades have their wages P ......-'-*- :.°-.: 7"’...'z°"'.:'.. -— -I--.: . .. ve ngv t increase seeeived luau. as one band will be » osgaod‘ by the en anced rice of comato- ' 4]‘, poll! witlitliebother. P Third--VVhile " n 0 I’ Limp?-tomcat. in the absolute ,, will flew from a the cost of , f on.» ' willshsrsb besersisedabove go schobl 0 BN0! filamentary principles of political economy.."’—- sskly Dispatch} -e own, unless we return to that protective policy which to us would do the end .of thnigs—-our exclusion from the circle of the It agnem and onr ultimate certain fU|l|- Not even in ‘the time of the Corn 145*‘ '7. .there so much need of sending ter abroad to teach the people INTOIIICT or Cunans--The camels with v I traversed this part of the desert were very dfieieut in their ways and habits from those which you get on a frequented , . by were 'neverl'edI. There was not the slighted si' n of a track in this part of the desert, at the camels never line. ...Bytlie direct- ions taken at first . starttug th_oy knew, I suppose,‘ thcpcint ‘(sonic encampment) for whichthey were to make. There is always a leadi . camel (generally I believe the eldest w marches forsmost and determines the path for the whole party. If it happens that not one ofthe camels as been accus- tomed to lead the others, there is a very great difiiculty to make a start, If you force your beast forward for a moment, he will contrive to wheel and draw back, at the same time looking at one of the other camels with an expression and gesture ex- actly equivalent to " after you.'’ a re- sponsibility oi finding the way is evidently assumed very unwillingly. Atler some time, however, it becomes understood that one of the beasts has reluctantly consented to take the‘lead, and accordingly advances for that purpose. For a minute or two e Foes on with much indecision, taking one inc and the other, but soon, by the aid of some mysterious sense, he discovers the true direction, and follow it steadily from morning to night. When once the leader- ship is established you cannot by any pur- suasion, and can scarcely by force, induce a junior camel to walk one single step in aavance of the chosen guidc.—-Traces of Travels. Maciiinics cs. S-wuss-rs.—“ I was ac- quiaint during the latter years in which I wrought as a mason, with a good many uni- versity lads; andl some times could not avoid comparing them in my mind with working men, of, as nearly as I could guess, the some original calibre. I did not always find that general superiority on the side of the scholar, which the scholar himself usu- ally took for granted. What be specially studied he knew, save in rare and except- ionalcnses, better than the working man; but while the student had been mastering his Greek and Latin, ‘and expatinting in N atural Philosolphy and Mathematics, the working man, i_ 0 an enquiring mind, had been doing something else; and it is at least a fact, that all the great readers of my ac- quaintance at this time, the men most exten- sively acquainted with English literature, were not the men who had received a clas- sical education. On the other hand, in framing an argument, the advantage lay with the scholars. In that common sense, which reasons but does not argue‘, and which en- ables men to pick their stepping prudently through the journey oflife, I found that the classical education gave no superiority whatever .* nor did it appear to form so tit- ting an introduction to the realities of busi- ness as that course of dealing with things tangible and actual in which the working man has to exercise his faculties, and from which he derives his experience. One cause of the over-law estimate which the clasical scholar so often forms of that class of peopl to which our skilled mechanics be- long, arises very much from the forwardness- of a set ofblockheads, who are always sure to obtrude themselves upon his notice, and who come to _be rgarded by him as an average spccelnin of his order. I never knew an intelligent mechanic obstructive.- Hugh .U'tIl¢r. Miniiiau soussr ins Wii.i..—Sir Wsllor Scott used to relate the following anecdote:— " My cousin Watty. " said he, “ was a mid- shipman some forty years ago at Portsmouth ; he pnd two other companions had gone on shore and overstaid their leave, spent all their mono and run up an immense bill at a tavern on the oint. The shi made a signal for sailing, but the land- lady as d:— " No, gentlemen you cannot escape without sying your reckoning,” and she accom snied her words b appropriate actions, and place them under the keeping of e suficiciit number of balitfs. _ They felt they. were in a scraps, and begged to be released. " No, no,” said Mrs. Qaiellly. " I must be sa- tisfied some way or other; you must be aware. gentlemen, that you must be totally ruined if you \lcn’t get on in ‘ms. ” I They all made long faces and confessed that it was true. -"Well," said she. " I'll give you a chance. I am so ciroumstancsd bore thatl cannot carry on business as a single woman, and I must contrive somehow to have a husband, or at all events, I must be able to produce a marrls e certitloate, and therefore the only terms on w lob you shall have leave to go on board to marrow is, that one of yoaconeeut to marry me ; I don't care a me which it is, but b a I that's good, one of you willlisve or,else l three go to jail, and let your ships sail without you.” The Virago-suns net to be pssltlsd, and the poor youths, left to themselves, s; s also-to-dnw~|oI-. and mhrrmd cousin. Notime was to be ost, and so oltlisy matched to the church, and my poor relative was forthwith spliced. The bride, on returning, ave them a good dinner, and several bottles of w as a piece, and havln tumbled them all In ‘a wtieny, any they. oil’. ‘The ship‘ sailed, an the young men religiously adhered to IIIO.filI|I of secrecy they had made previous to drawing lots. The bride I should have said, wm» the drst to propose an eternal eepetstisa. . 1 sea’ as r "3: ,5. ..lI.'if,f'.;.'l.'». .b'i.|1Ii, ' . W:it';.:.ti: was observed to N g carelessly reading as sceoua.t‘ef;.r;.‘ of sunny; cried {Irv- the I‘, . -- 1 ii ‘ ' v M’ ' at at.‘ .0"l'tssatevieIl'll0|0'It0“" a to fall on my; . VA!-"All-I DIIOOVIIV--1‘ dlnovery, which is likely to be of great sdvaatace teagricaliaie, has {not been reported to the Agricultural Society of ‘IGIIIIOIIK (Ola-) A aavdeusr, wliuee frames and hot house aired painting, decided on making than black. as likely to attract the best better, and from a principle of economy lie made use gas-tar instead ol black paint. The work was performed, during the winter. dad on the a proaoh of spring the gardener was surprised to ad that all the spiders and insects which usually infested his bot-house hail disappeared, and also that a vine which for the last two years had so f Ion ed‘ iliat be intended to replace it by another, d sc- quircd fresh force and vigour, and gave every sign of floduciiig a large crop of grapes. I-lo sflerwat used the substance to the t and trellis-work which supported the trees in the open air. and met with ihssame result, all the eater- pillsrs and other insects completely disappearing. t is said that similar rinieats have in some of the vineyards of the Giionde with similar results.—Goli'gaeiit'. GEIIBAI. I!_TBI.I.IGBIOE. WEST INDIBS. The colony of Jamaica was in a state of ex- citement on the nth instant in consequence of a general election, under circumstances such as have never hitherto attended any similar event. The packet which left England on the 17th of August, brought us the long ex ted order in council, confirming the act for the reform of our local constitution. ' ouncil was there- upon summoned by his Excellency the Governor, and yesterday a proclamation was issued, dis- wards the construction of the new state of things. Her Majesty's steamer Argus arrived on the 7th instant from Halifax, with despalches from the Commodore announcing that an American squadron had been despatchsd by the United States government in Gieyton, for what purpose it is not exactly known. '1' 0 B A G 0. 0ar_ advices from Tobago are dated to the 22d of Augesl. e ouse of Assembly met August 8, when the rum bill was read a third time, and assed. In consequence of the late period of the session, and the opposition of certain members to vote supplies without being requested to do so by the Executive, the notice relative to a supply bill was withdrawn. An honorable member gave no-- tice that he would take the sense of the House on the propriety of passing what we understand a vote o want of confidence in His Excel- the Lieutenant Governor. NEIV BRUNSWICK. From the Church Witness. Americans are making great preparations to take advantage of the right of fishing in Colonial waters, conceded to them by the Imperial authorities under the Reciprocity Treaty. and "considerable dissatisfaction is exhibited both in this Province and Nova Sootia. that the tariff‘ laws of the United States had not, at the same time, n suspended by the American tive. t seems however that the legislation of the Un' ed States has been made dependent entirely upon the action of the Colonial Legislatures. and that therefore the gcvernmenbie powerless until such action is taken. Canada has accepted the treaty, and passed the necessary laws, and New runs- wick no doubt will follow her example. ' r in a mercantile him in New York, the following letter from the Score- tary of the Treasury to the Collector of Customs at that port, on the subject referred to, which explains the matter at length. It was written in consequence vessels having arrived in Now i lency the Provinces, and claimed their admission duty free, under the terms of the treaty and the procla- mation of the President of the United States. Treasury Department, Seplqnbcr 19, I854. sIR—TilO filth article of the reciprocit treaty with Great Britain provides that “ the present treaty shall take eflect as soon as the laws required to carry it into a ration shall have been passed by the imperial rliament of Great Britain and by the Provincial Parliaments of those of the British orth meriosn colonies which are affected by this treaty on the one hand, and the United States on the other ;" and the sixth article provides the treaty shall not embrace Newfound- land, until the Provincial Parliament of the colony of Newfoundland and the Congress of the United States shall pass laws to that effect. It is understood that the Inn rial Parliament and the Congress of the United tates have paced the necessary laws to carry the treaty into effect, including Newfoundland ; but that the parliaments of none of the British North American colonies have as yet acted upon the sub" t, and some of them will not be in session for several months. The navigation of the St. Lawrence and the hshcries, being considered lm rial rights, have been conceded to the Unite States by Great Britain in advance of the proper legislation by the colonies; but that has no elfcct upon the tariff‘ of the colonies, which can only be taken awn their legislation, and the legislation of the oiled States has lltede do t upon .tbeir ae- ' The tarifl’ laws wil , therefore, be in force, as though the treaty had not been made. until the British colonies sbsll legislate upon the subject, in accordance with the provisions of the treaty. Their legislation will of nouns, be communicated to the government of the United States, and when eocummunicated will be made publie, and the proper notice given auto cessation of duties. I am, respectfully. Janna Gnrusis, eoreisry of the Treasury. II. J. Rsdheld, Esq., Collector, &Tc., New York. We regret to announce the death of the Provisional Bishop of New York, Dr. Wainwright, after a very short illness. In the discharge of the duties of his responsible ofice, be had uircd the esteem of men o ll parties--of di srsnt shades of opinion, and his loss will be severely felt. U‘ W - Qu—o. Sept. 23. The 71st Regiment has been withdrawn from , and embarked to-day for l.'a'ive3ool. It will not be replaced by other troops. thcr troops will soon follow. ‘ Bo assent wss lsolprocity Bill. Ir. Syd terzgivate Secretary to President lecoe.wsson door oftlie house when the vote was taken. The Grand Jury of New York have found two bills of liidiobnt H ‘yer of that . ' I“. i di ted 0 Incl” I'll ’ "rd for nting a license to a female who was not a o tlssu. In the other case, be was Jointly in- Oenhellmsa ofdie seventh ward, The Gal Vindicator sbtes tbstasisgulss l m’ btlagoliolers l as I’“'3.‘.’l 'i.'2"t...i... out sales the "Elli CEIPi0Vl|’IItI“:Ia]IIl|I With. brnltplp oasvvstk. * disre have been no lives lost,_and no accident solving the late Assembly, as the that step to- ' York with cargoes ol',coal and other products of “ to-da given to the gag uey Wyebs witncx or run scnnw srnullt ctr! Pl1ll.ADll.PlllA. The Royal Mail Stdumer Merlin. from St. John's Newfoundland, arrived yeshrday fore- noon. The most important item of news is the straadin -of the new screw steamer Oily PIu'lnd¢ '. Capt. Iaitoh, of 21(1) tons, Chance Cove, in the nei arhood of Ca Race. According to the ‘ Ncwfoundlander' “ she was on her tlrst vo a ' from Liverpool (which port she left on t e 30Ih'ulto.) bound to Philadelphia with a cargo, the estimated value of which is £00,000, and -with about 540 passengers. The weather on Thursday night in he locality of the accident, we understand, was very fo e vessel was steaming at the rate of tween 9 and 10 miles an hour, whens little after eleven o’clock she struck on Cape Race, and then backed at full speed into Chance Cove, where she now lies ashore. Fortunately, 0' at of any kind, except to the slap. The passen- grs at once ot tour pitch , and quartered emselves as t they could, until. on fittin- d;y morning, the Telegraph Company's steamer ‘ ictoria ' coming from the westward have in them to St. John's and then left immediately for the remainder. Messrs. Brookin and Son, agents of Lloyd's, have had aecommo ation pro- vided for the passengers, and, we presume, ste s will be forthwith taken for the rescue of tlie slii and cargo, as far as this may be recti- cab e. A party of the military, with giant. Law, were dispatched yesterdy morning to Chance Cove for the protection 0 the property. —lIali_'/'a.r Sum, , Paicn or Ni:wsrai>aiis.—'l‘he proprietors of four of the Cincinnati dailies, namely, the In- ‘ 'me.r, Commerci , an oumbian, have changed the price of their respective papers, from ten to twelve cents per week. Reasons assigned, the increased expenses of labour, material, an the necessaries of life. I 3 Mormons Ita1'uiu~iisc.—'A Western paper says that a few days since,a train, composed of nine wagons and fifty persons, crossed the Missouri eattwardly in search of a new home. They had left Salt Lake City on account of the oppression and immortality of their Church. HA8ZARD’S GAZETTE. Wednesday, October 4, I864. THE SPBBCH . ‘ is our observations on this and all other public acts of the Government, we must be ful- I understood as not incul ting the Lieut. vernor, nor intending th: least personal disre ct. He follows and is, we admit, bound to folldw the advice given him by his Executive Council, and had his predecessor, Sir Alexan- der Bannerman persevered in the same consti- tutional course, we should have iven him the praise due to his consistency. he speech of the Lt. Governor we shall continue to consider as that of the Administration. second cause assigned for calling the Legislature at this particular time is to provide the mean “ by which the Government of this Island will be placed in ii position to maintain the supre- mac of the law, and to preserve internal tran- 'quiliity under all circumstances.” We can hardly venture an opinion as to what will be the method proposed to meet a contingency produced by the factions conduct of those members of the Legislature who, dead to all the feelings of honor, and res t to the constitu- tion, and actuated only by the desire to embar- ssan Administration, the crowning sin of which was, that no part of the public money was set apart for them individua l , threw out a bill, which if passed, would have had the efllect of keeping the detachment still here. There will now be no pretence, we should hope, of saddling the town of Charlottetown, with the whole or with indeed any part 0 the ex- pense. It was argued that if the soldiers were retained by reason of that bill, the benefit derived to the people of Charlottetown by their continuance was such as to make it but fair that they should bear the cost of the customs- tion of a lice force. Whateter plausibility there mig t have been in the argument then, is of no consequence now. The troops have been withdrawn, and not onl does' Charlotte- town feel the loss,but in Ii e manner those rts of the country which were in the habit of supplying the wants of the garrison. In fact the whole Island will partic pate in the loss for £l0.000 or £12,000 which was expend- ed by the military and those connected with it, was one of the most rotltablo additions to the exports that could ima 'ned. One made without risk, and consequent y free from the char s of Insurance, Freight. Brokerage, ., for t ongh the articles were used and consumed here, they were paid for from abroad,and was, so far as respects the island in It commercial ppint ofview, the same thin as if they had an exported to London an id for there. But what cared the Hon. 0 ce-hunters for this? Of what consequence were the interests of commerce to them! The had their own interests to look after, and 0 course gave those the preference. In what manner the loss of the regular troops is to be supplied, is as yet a myster , an dcsignedly, so we suspect. There are some thin that, like committing suicide, will not admit of reflection, and the less that it is than ht of then the better. When, however, the tixgure that it makes in the appropriation bill comes to be looked at by the unfortunate wi hts out of whose kets it tocoinc, and w on that is adds to the loss occasioned by the withdrawal of the troops, it will not be matter of rolleotion but of that there should be a body of men invested with the power of thus indirectly and uncon- stitutionall taxin them to solar an amount, and solely or the fiirthcrance of air own sel- tlshYparposes. We shall. however, wait, on she not fail to give the ublio a full and true account of the matter. are is no fear but that whatever the measure is, and however hard it may bear upon the poo le. it will be carried. any opposition to it w ll be labo in vain. Mooney s boast is elsetually silo the rest are too well b master's will. is s surpml eebblldimzdt of a orieel We shall take occasion to enter lar y this subject at an early day, but in t mean time, we would su at w y expend the means of the country in t e education of men to a profession by which, when acquired, they will not be able to live. Until the Iusnclal resou of the country are such as to aim! a remune- ration to a such as will enable him to live with comfort, support a wife and lhnilly, and lay by a sum to ensure his lib, or accumu- of to their assistance, brought more than 200 of or, any on d assure your Excellency that we ' loyalty “£5 for r..“.l..-‘ill! l rose of the advantages of ed mon laborer iti f ll I‘ tli ' description, ‘to think, of iiien :ii'ii:;i,?."‘;i.i; in _the equally fatiguing. though non iuin. s"h'd °°°“P“|°|\ 0 e School-master. We ‘Hall lrvoflape eppagb wea think, for the con- era on o t s ques on, as when 0 nsc_ of _ nsular ice comes b be ascertained, it will make,i we be not greatly ’sn mi _ en,suoh an iinroad Into the we insanathat it will be ‘considered pro at to d the eratiee of this im t question. And we would in conclusion, beg leave to suggest that now, when the necessaries of life have most of them advanced 50 per cent, and will in all likelihood, if the war continues, rise tp a h_igber figure, it would be more con- aistent with the dictates of common honesty. to raise the salaries of those we have, then to ondeavuor to encourage others. HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY. The House of Assembly have now been in session aiorqhtlisn a :hOOk,h:II«I|0lIb in ‘a to e s win 0 ammer. The liIitor of that pager was vs bard upon the majority of the late House, for their tardiness in doin business. We think he has a much more avorsble o portunit of showing up the present House should he £ to I I The following Message has been transmitted to the House by His Excellency the Lieutenant Governor. D. Daav, Liciit. Governor. The Lieutenant _ Governor transmits herewith '.I f L I II hxwfi r u L I ' Government on the subject of the Reciprocity 'l.rcaty, for the information of the House of Assembl , vin- No. I. l8th August, 1854, (signed by ‘Earl of Clarendon.) No. 5. slot August, 1854, from the Secretary of State fer the Colonies. . : On receipt of the filII_ mentioned Despateh, the Lieutenant Governor summoned the Legislature at this early period, and caused a Bill to be pre ved by the Attorneyrfieiisial for giving edbct to tilt‘; provi- sions of the reaty. in so far as they could affect this Island, at the ear iest possible period The subsequent receipt of the second Des tcli, however, the case of Asssiiibl will not ii to perceive, made it im ible for t a Lieutenant Go- vernor to permit the introduction of the meadilre that d been ropsred. without praviolll communication with the overnor Genera . ' The Lieutdant Governor as accordingly trans- mitted the draft Bill tolbd" overnor General for such observations or suggestions as he may wish to make regarding it. Government House, 80th September, IBM. ADDRESS or run issaishu IN Antwan ‘ro ‘run oovnnnon‘s srai-:cii. ' We, Her Majesty's faithful subjects,‘ the House of Assembly of rinoo Edward Island, res otfull offer our thanks for the speech wit whic your Excellency was pleased to o n the resent Session, and while admittin t e necess ty for assembling at this season 0 the year, we trust that no serious inconvenience will arise to ourselves or others in doing so. We are quite sensible of the importance to this Island of the Treaty which has been con- cluded botwocn Her Majesty's Government and that of the Unitsdistates, and we shall give our best consideration to whatever measure may he submitted to us by your Excellency in reference to this sub'ect. Althougi we have long since been made acquainte with the intention of Her Ma 's overnment in regsr e tlnal removal of the small military force stationed in this Colony, we cannot avoid regarding that occur- rence with sincere regret. It has been the opinion of former Houses of Assembly, as it is unquestionably the opinion of the present one, that this Colony possesses peculiar clsiiasto the fostering care and protection of the mother country; because, at the time of its first settle- ment, the government of England thought pro- per to bestow all the land in the Colony upon some few individuals, thereby lessening the means at the disposal of the local vcrnment, r supporting a military as we as a civil establishment. The other Colonies have exten- sive tracts of valuable lands, from which a lar e revenue is derived, but this Colony in sulfiring from the disposal of its soil, and yet ller Majesty's Government have not onl ro- vided for a considerable military force in each of those Colonies. but have allowed such force, to a certain extent, to remain shtioued there. From the position of this Island sat num- bers, often amounting to thousands, of the flab- ermen of the neighbouring Republic havlngre- course to our shores during the summer season: --a military force would seem to be required for the preservation of tranquillity more so than in any other of Her Me’ or ' 5‘ _)eety's Amssinis provinces. But from the well known loyal of the people of this country, we apprebe no interruption to the public tranqui it from the withdrawal of the room. Nevert eless, we shall make such revision as may in some measure supply their plans, safer as the means at our disposal will warrant its in doin trusting that when tlhe rcircumstanoes which required the remove o t militar have ceased tosxtst, this Island will lie placed on an equal footin , as regerdstliis matter, with the other Colon es.,_ The progress of the war in which our beloved Sovereign is pow oagigod, and which your Ea- oellency has been pleased to say some degree intluuiced the immediate mmova of the troops from ‘s alaud, is a source of deep sollcitadc to Her Ma’ ty's dutiful subjeoh in rincoliklwsrdlsle ,e\adthea-s sec on ogfler hthjss 's dcnsinloas where the motives w tli -which e If s ° tbl coa- test are more lllglily"a‘g.i'ii,rt3o'idfi.:l' iiiir ls.ller'e. ‘ w access to, ‘arI‘e_ , _ Q“ ' ' , ', 0 0 movie ,§'t?I“f°"tlist tlisirsriovt it Rsvcnq; at time J tee the progressive pi-ospe ty of the Colony; I9d'.m‘fI,»&t°_.l"0'iIlt: lingly make the necessary provision fdr the pub- is service. .; . . I‘; silo:-Ids as‘ an aunt, ' ' e, t’ n a ulltda - diirsioiihl through’ this ‘gland ' on witiiessetk evidences ,q_f the!ei‘i‘\:br tie: to no t a ti as w as o e 1‘ “drill eatilachmsgto‘ Ber IIqieety’s per. son a a meat’ dlstlnguls. ; are use l.-‘tbouaiodasiifi h d» i * ur on on pgo , s e an m- ‘reunion ugqn gut’ oaeifcy hi 1y fivorable to the poop committed to your c ergo. We are glad .to learn tlmt there cxlsh throughout e Island a growin appreciation um . IIIILIDO our constsnt_sim to strengthen such appreciation‘ by briugiu education within the reach of all ; and we ll,' th assure, give fie-hlhsk consideration to your « ecllenc s tioil wil regard to In osiabllzmeuter late a fund for sickness and old ‘pg, it is fully ‘tp.t.blnk&p€ sin “hthtemtlaw ‘a“‘upei-ate ‘Isl i e , II 0 , s I ‘as it suit is.’ Rowdy ws'p's!steia'-i up or col, or to any measure calculs ..‘*'..*.**.‘!.‘;“:: :.:‘..::-3.3..“ "* "'*.