subjocts I of wealth as a ‘means , o _ mpislature of Victoria for public works, .4. ilASZARD'l ‘ JULY 30. ITATI AND PUICU OP AUITIALIA. We have ust received _ancther of those astc uments which have taught us to view plain, saber, practical truth as more and more extravagant than tlge wildest ' lotion. 'I‘he nome of t e ins who showered n his avourite the miles of depd’: caverns and seclndadmuuntains gave him ncthin but the power of gratifying his passions, his lux- ury, and his magnificence. it never enter- ed into the head of Eastern mbulists to con- ceive the simultaneous enrichment of a we community, and to trace the effect of change on the daninies cfnstions and the commerce -of world. The tale usually represents the Sultan as richer and his Court as mere id, but leaves his as it found them, f re u conquest and external ssion. Plutue dealt more favourably with the Australian colonies; his favours have been lavished on communities _instead of indivi- duals, and are felt almost as strongly on one side of the world as on the other. It is impossible within the limits allotted to us to give an adequate idea of the revelations contained in the report of the Melbourne Chamber of Commerce, a document ably drawn u , and containing a statement of facts s as never before have been sub- mitted’ to the perusal of mankind. Progress and advancement are but faint and inade- quate terms to e reu what has been hap- pening in Port Philip: the thing, as witnes- sed there, has no name, for the world has seen ' in the least resembling it. All we can do is to call in figures to our aid, and leave our readers to estimate as well as they may, the facts of which those figures are the symbols. . Eighteen years ago the province of Vic- toria was a sav e a unknown wilder- ness, inhabited by a few barbarous tribes, and contributin no more to the wealth and pro rose 0 the world than it would have done if its shores had been submerge beneath the waves of the Southern Pacific. From that time to 185! its p as w wonderfully rapid—ita population had risen e souls—its shipping inwards to 669 vessels, with a tonnage of l29,000 tons, and its revenue to £3&l,000, an increase, we believe, never exceeded by any commu- nity. Now mark the difference of a single year. In 1852 the population had bccome_ 200,000, the shipping inwards I657 vessel with a tonnage of 48,000 tons, and the revenue £l,578,000, of which £342,000 was raise from Customs. During the year 185! the value of imports amounted to £1,056,000; in I852 it increased to £4, 044,000; the exports in 1851 were £1, 424,000, in 1852 they had reached £7, 459,000; but, taking into consideration the large amount of gold which has lell. the colony, without being recorded, the total amount of exports is not, probably, less than £l5,(lJ0,000 rannum—thst is, every man, woman, an child 'in'Victosie, ces an export to the amount of 5 per head. But even this statement does not do fnlljustice to this astoundin influx ofpros- purity. The production 0 gold is taken from its commencement, when most of the labourers were inexperienced, andthe ma- chinery they employed rude and imper- feet. The colony was unprepared for so vast an accession to its population, and bad roads, and irriperfect supplies, and every other physical dificulty have impeded the industry of the miners. ' tom of alling all‘ or exhaustion in the old- field; the suppl is practically boun less, and seems toithnit an increase in propor- tion to the number of hands employed, and the greater fhcilities of transport, supply, and machinery. Seven hundred and twen- t thousand pounds have been voted by the besides this, three railroads have been sanctioned, one to connect Melbourne with the port, another to connect Melbourne and Gee ong, and another to unite Melbourne and the gcldfields of the interior, each at a guarantee of five per cent, on the capital advanced for a period of '2l years. a may remark, in passing, that the town of Melbourhe, which in 1851 contained 23,000 inhabitant, ‘had increased by the end of 1862 to a population of &),lI)0, an amount 5 much kept dow_n by the impossibi- ity of findi house accommodation, and that the popixtion of Geelo had increased the same period them to M, . he prospects of railways seine estimate may be formed from the fact, that the car- ’ plies to ' Mount 0 "5 I C ‘U and r last’ year was stthe rate cf£l per‘ ten per mile, an that it is estimated that ' e of supplies during liter, from Melbourne to cost of e ‘earn the lad Australian GPO II IIOIylIlP- ' eat and most decayed city of Spain orGcr~ man . Roads they have none, and the tree a which lead to the spots where nature Iquauders lier ‘treasure with so lavish a band are difilcult in summer, and‘ barely psmable in winter. ' masons and carpenters to build them houses, and “navvies ’ to make them decks and rail-roads. Till these wants are an lied it is vain for on men of talent w- ledge to see their fortunes in a land want- ing nothing w ‘ they have to give, and appreciating far more highl the coarsest manual, than the finest inte eetusl labour. This is the tendency of every new country. Physical material wants must an ‘ plied, and only when men have gained lei- sure from the struggle will they turn their minds to the cultivation of the intellect or the taste. What cruelty can be renter, what misconception more lamentab e, what betrayal of atrust more re rehensible, than to send a bqp or astudent lkom college, with a few poun s in his pocket, to seek his for- tune in a land which wants nothing that he can contribute, and will contribute, nothing that he wants? To send such a person to Austrailia is, in fact. to sentence him to work on the roads at ten shillings a-day,- good y, certainly, but a miserable avoca- tion or one brought /up with the feelings and aspirations of a gent emun. Even with the goods which other coun- tries can contribute Victoria has, as ap- pears from the scale of prices, been but scantily supplied; but there is a marked distinction between those thin s which she can procure from abroad an those which she must, ii-om necessity, produce for her- self. Till this inequality is reduced every- body's mind will be absorbed in more ma- terial progress. The owner of thousands who cannot get a house, until he is released -from the necessity of livi in a tent or a bark but, will scarcely think of a tutor for his sons or a governess for his daughters. We feel it right to couple the account of this unprece ented prosperit with this warnin , because we are wel aware that every s ip carries out to Australia its con- tribution of young men and women destined to verty and wretchedness from a neglect of this very obvious consideration. one or SAM si.icir's YAIN3. (From Sam Slick’s Wise-S—a-we and Modern Instances.) Although women are not endowed by nature with the same strength as men the aim deficient in real courage, when there is it fit. wo- man that would scream and faint ifs mouse was to run over the keys of her piano, could face fire, shipwreck or death in any shape, with calmness an coolness that nothin' but faith in Providence can give. I recollect a curious circumstance that occurred down to Keuuebse, durin the revolu- tionar war. had it from one o the family. Old aptain Eldridge and his son had to leave home one da to attend a meetin’ of the King's friends and t era was nobody left in the house but his daughter Mary and a hired gall, both ou’em about eighteen years of ago. Well, things went tty much till sundown, when there was an awful npresr in the yard. Such a yelllii,' and sersamin,’ and squeelln,’ and runtin,’ and scamperin, uTer as heard. " hat in natur is all that. In ly 1" said Miss Eldridge. “ Lord only knows, miss" said she, “ unless it’s the reb- els aseeaiu of the captain's swine for the fort. The cowardly villisns know that the men folks are all away and I shouldn't wonder if it’s them taking the chance to plunder." “ Well if the men are gone the Sins aint,” said miss; " and l‘ll treat em to a ct at any rate. IfIdon’t hit ’em ‘em, for cowards ou’t like the n to Let me door. lord a’ mercy on ns,” said she. “ it's a monstrous t big black bear, a ' ’ ofi the old sow in his kitchen fire and ran after the besr,wavin’ it round and round to keep the More bright, and screamln’ and shoutin’ at the tip of her voice, for wild varmints are awfiill sored of fire. But the bear warii’t so as y dsrnted; he stopt, and showed an awful row of harrow teeth, enough to fri ten an one. But on she went, came up to h , and etched him a blow of the hot, sparkling, harddwood ' coals, right across e the business for him. Bruin dropped lg, that seampered cl’ to the aty roariu’ asif o w- in’ warn’t inst quitess as ticklin‘.) spill then he made f0l"bllO ence,which wals built 0 on rsn ' stu ,nottrees nor es, twixt find bestiwnfen like such as the ragrs Well, the bear rs hind t, and set s-fiyiu in a 1 directions, was a caution . " fill " aais she, " coins t on the d o so fat. blsoyeslaahadlrs enough to light u the fioa-moufindbsfalrly roared agin wi braced a mL.:e’.“ up u ‘the fence witlrlhi: macs email has Us made a £sp.esats pu'llmhaek- t. The more liclplled, 5.’: .“Letgo. ' and ran for _t; and he ulled out his head, and after her quick stick. ut it was no go. After sjiiuipor two he fell, ll he rose, ' and the and tell again, and then he t up, and a red about with his head fiugi ' and lhll vythnd bled to tli. lle qua the largest bear ever seen on the Keunebec r ver. - - Well, aouie of the neighbours skinned it for her; and what do you think she did with the far i" “ Made a mufiof it," said Uollingwood. “ No." “ Trimmed a sleigh!" “ No." " Made a counterpane l" ‘* No. ’ “ A mat for the bed-side l’ “ No." " h“ what on airth did she do wifi it then!" “ hy, she had the skin shaved close, and took the fiir and spun it into yarn, and .vowed if she married an ofioer in the Kin ’s service, she would knit a battle- shirt for h , that he might be reminded of the courage of his wife ; and if she married a civi- lian, and ever had sons, the first shirt they should ever ut on should be one made of the hair of that r, that they might be brave and victorious!" “ Well, di she ever marry ?" said the caphin. ‘- Yes. she did, one of the mildest and meekest of men, a cler an of the Church of England, that was settl afterwards in Nova Scntia, as and as peaceable a mis- ' as the society ever em loyod. Now, that's uman natur agin.” “ ell, it aint my idea or what's nateral,” said Collin ood. “for like seeks like, the brave like brave : birds ofn feather flock together. You know who peop areby their associates." “ Excuse me,” ss_is I, “ you’vc got it wrong. The natur of matrimo- ny is one thin . and the natur of friendship is another. A ta man likes a short wife ; a great talker likes a silent woman, for both can't talk at once. A y man likes a domestic gall, for he can leave or to home to rinse children and make pap, while he is enjoyin’ of himself to rties. A man that haute any music in him, It chimes -.. O 'kes it in his spouse, and so on. beautiful, for they aint in each other‘s way. Now, friendship is the other way, you must like the same thin to like each other and be friends. A sini lsrity of tastes, studies, pur- “Dear E‘?! suits, and recreations, (what they call conge- nial souls ;) a toper for a toper, a smoker for ii. smoker, s horse-racer for s horse-racer. a prize- fi hter for a prise-fighter, and so on. Matrimony ’ contrasts; fr-ieiidsliip seeks its own counter- parts. Well, the lady had three sons, and as soon as they were born they had the bears shirt put on; and one thin is mrtin, they were all three men of nndou coura . One was killed in battle in Canada, a Captain in the Bri- tish army. e other two were civilians, men that nobod would think of takin’ a libert with. The hair a irt is in existence still. I see it my- self, ,and have a small bit of the yarn to home now. ' VTIMPEELNCE. UNITED KINGDOM ALLIANCE 51. Princess Street, Manchester, June 91, 1863. To NATHAN S. DIIIL, Esq., . ., St. John, New Brunswick. Dear Sir,—We mke the liberty of forwarding to your care the enclosed Address of the Exe- cutive Committsa of the United Kingdom Alli- ance, to the friends of Temperance and social reform in New Brunswick. We doubt not the deep interest you hke in the Temperance move- ment, and in the, social elevation of the people of your interesting Province, will induce you, in concert with others like minded, to ma this friendly communication as widely known as his ; and we shall be glad it‘ the frater- na sentiments it expresses are generally and ful‘ly reci ted throughout your Colony. _ e enc osea copy of an Address the Commit- too are now issuing-“ To th Britain and Iraland"—-also list of General Council to lat June, with copy of Constitution, te., of the Alliance. We are, dear Sir, Your‘s in the common cause, Wimsn Gswriiosrs Teens 3. Banana. II’ o poun. 5¢c’s. snnama or ran xxncurivs coiisri-rs: or ran uiiirso xutnnoii ausssa, Formed June lat,-1853 to procure the Legislative su pression of the trellis in Intoxicating ors. u Totlisfriaids i_ifTaiiperaice iiiflie Proviiicrof New Brunsiaicl, British America. Friends-—With no ‘ordinary feeling of interest and solidtude, we send you an A rose of congratulation and frets greeting, ‘his being the day on which your no lo anti- elect, we doubt not it will f a new litical history. Since, ent sustained with a earnestness, we cannot but ex- is. t on the evils con- nected with and resulting from the Liquor Trale. You have seen its iniqnities, and can understand better than we can describe, its vile and horrible atocities. With you as with us. that Tralc is new race by its fruits M I Iooisl sudsseral U Tree heddi blight cm iii. forest sci? of eséafain civil: this should ever ‘”.hssekfo‘tllsd.. l fd ht- . C III‘ OI on - = r'.:H°:.:....... at 3 F 5? ti ? till 1?: Here , T New York—will the and disoitsc. they would pause-ere they united so great ll llllotl of social turbulence and public dcuiiiriilimti-iii. Lnuk to it friends. we beseec you. in iiun-, lent the good results ofyour past efiirts be t‘t)\llliA$l'lllIlllll08tl by equal i not pre- pondcratiug evils. The accompanying paper will intiniah to on that not only has your example attracted our attention, but that we have commenced to follow _\‘ul|l' ate it. ()n the Nth February last the Provisions Committee of the ‘- Lnited Kingdom Alliitm-o" resolved to send out an Address privately, to some of the leading friends 0 Temperance and social reform, pro- posing that an orgiiliization should he formed, raving for its distinct and declared object the to- tal Legiialative suppression ofthc entire tritflc in all intoxicating liquors. The Ooiniuittee ' not calculate on lmlllg able to secure more than fifty names before the scheme was announced to the public. But having earnestly consider- ed the matter, the firmly resolved that if but fifty good men an true would join their stan- dard, they would raise the or of entire sup- pression. Feeling, however, t e vast and ino- mcntuous character of the work they were un- dertaking, the Committee deemed it wise when filly names were obtained, to proceed with their canvass until they secured one hundred. Hav- ing one hundred ndhcsious they were encour- aged to think it more than ssible that one hundred and fifty, if not two iundred could be 5'‘ n. 5. got for the first list of General Council. In order, toaccomplish this. and in other res ts to con- solidate their plans and augment mir means and appliances for future action and agitation, the Committee determined to defer the convo- cation of General Council until the coming Autumn, at which time the Alliance is to be publicly insu urated. The first 0 June has been selected as the sppro riste day for this ollicinl initiation of the [nite Kingdom Alliance, in respect to its be- ing as already intimated, the day on which yo r New Brunswick Act to prevent the trallic #11 intoxicating Liquors comes into legal efiect. lied our organisation been suliiciontly ripe and ready, and had it been practical on other grounds, we should have gladly made this the ay of public inauguration. that, however, could not be accomplished without undul pre- cipitating our plans, we could not risk t e in- terest of the movement to gratify private wishes and feolin a. You wil please to ncce t this Address, one of the first acts of the first ecutivc Council, as though it came to you emanating froiu the entire body of the General Council, every niombcr of which, we doubt not, will full and cordially concur in every expression 0 I inpathy and good ' it contains towards t ie friends of ompcrnnce in New Brunswick: Signed on behalf of the Execiitive Committee. ii. lliitvxv. (‘liai'rman. Nsrii. CARD, Trmiurer. §‘ArlUla Porx, Hon'y. Secretary. ii. AWTBO i-ii . . Tnos. ll. Baaiiaa: A"‘""m'u S“ 3'" Committee Room, 52, Princess-street, Manchester, June 1st, 1853. GLEANINGS FROM LATE PAPERS. Sumuiiuvi: Truossrn us-rwitxx [simian AND Aiiaiiics.—'l‘he following important announce- ment-has appeared in the Morning Advertiser :- “ Arrangements are for advanced towards- oompletion, for laying down a submarine tele- graph between the United Kingdom snd Amo- rica. It is intended to connect the two countries, or rather, the Old and New Worlds, by means of Galway and Iialifax—these being the two nearest points of communication. The dtstance is about 1,600 miles. The perfect priicticabilit of the thin has been guaranteed under the hen of netirly u l the eminent engineers of the day. and various parties have sent in estimates for the execution of the work. These estimates vary from £800,000 down to £300,000, and it is a remarkable fact, that some of the most respect- able firms in the country. When this extraor- dinary project has been carried out, we shall be able in alf an hour to send messages from Lon- don to New York, and receive messages from the United States in about half an hour. And not, we on ht to add, from New York alone, but from t c interior of America, the electric tele- graph being laid down for upwards of 2,000 miles up the country. Admiral de la Susse has been superseded by Vice Admiral llamelin in the command of the French squadron in the eastern water . The latter is a youn r man than the British Admi- ral Dundns, an the chin is an act of courte- which will allow the British Admiral to hke ills precedence in the movements of the fleets. It is understood (says the Daily News), that in consequence of the cut pressure of public business. Parliament will not be prorogued until after the 20th of August. UNITED STATES. Orrmxo or run Iimvsrsisi. Exiiisrrioit sr Nrw Yosit.—0n Thursday last, the industrial Exhibition was o ned in e presence of about 000 persons. The President of the United tates, who assisted at the openin ceremonies, landed at Castle Garden at ten" o’c w warm y ' . At half-past 11 the proces- sion took the line of march up Brcadwa , and arrived at the Palace at half-past2 o‘cloc , hav- ing been delaycd by a shower that fell about 12. e scene inside was very gorgeous. Amon the distinguished persons resent were Lor Ellesmere and suite. Pr ident Pierce‘s ad- dress was very brief. He thanked the Mayor for the kind and patriotic expressions with which he had recived him, and said :—“ For the first time Iaddross, within their own bor- ders, the citisens of the Empire Gig, now, be- ond all controvers , the commercial metropo- lie of our {in The rapidity‘ air, with which New York has arisen to so com- position as one of the most im r- tant cities upon the globe, has no paral in r . Already the enterprise of our iner- chante, genius of your sh? but , the daring splrlt of‘your vast trad ng marine, are begin to in c you llrst in the markets of my oountrymen—-hero is ledger of eoiaaieree the accounts of the nations of the earth." The display, so far as the Americans are con- cerned, is not at all creditable to them. most every article they have failed to anything to be com with the productions of other counties. In hot had it not been hr the foreign contributions, the exhibition would ve been a complete lkilure. Speaking of the °":.“'..*:"'°:.;. ...,,....°' .3. °°".'.."' '* mar s t" ion a u in exhibition is a forei;.cae. K '0'"- have {'£® Id 7‘ the war . 5' predominate. Whilzhofiirel El: tfinselves out for s pu M’ cans have been comparatively l Aaaivsi. or A Osntmahir srlutlasircisco. -—-The ship Hamilton, which aklvsd es the . inst. bolt lioug long, altlloufl not built al- I10 exhibit China, is, we believe, the first visual owned by Cliinainen, which has ever entered this under their fis . She is owned lJ%Ton at and command . a under- shiid a_ large par rocelvedbyw Iolnely Q r . Chinese in the hi ' es the.|.r country and ours is rminlyan interesting and curious event, and may in time lead to import- ant resiilts.—AlIe Cover-iiis 'Jiiiis'8. \ Aztoi-iisa _8raaiiaos-r (ti-rssrsens-—0n Da- turdsy morning about 2 o'clock steamer "'4 |_'l°°P came in collision on the river about live miles from Poughkeepsie; one of the boilers was knocked overboard, and the boat took fie". it was a terrible scene ; solos of the passengers. it is supposed, leaped overheard, and were _ The bar tender. two females and a boy were kill- rd. Seseral dead bodies were taken he; an river.—[Bostoii Post. Vie-riiis or riir Mosrassi. Iliers—Tliomas O’Neal and James Lewis died in Montreal, from wounds received in the late Gavusi riot. fli- Lhswp was an enterprising and esteemed mer- c an . lloitrsaan,-July ll. Ci.oss or run lsouas-r oii -res Vicriiss os- rss Moitrsaai. Gsvsasi .-The inquest into the Gavsui in y closed lad light. Nine Prcts_stant jiirers foo ,ameug other things, that the firing upon ihe citiseos on the occasion was bl the order of the Mayor, and that the said firings were unnecssar and usjustillsble.-Ten Catholic jurors return a verdict realng mainly wnli the other, but stating that order to tire was given by some person uskowii. ' The Sons of Tera rance, at llichibucto, is- tend holding a pa lic demonstration.- piirpose having a Pic-uic, on Thursda ‘us: , and intend to proceed to the West ficlnt of P. E. Island for that purpose in the Steamer Enterprise. EASZARJTS GAZETTE ' Saturday, July so. iota WHAT OUGHT THE A’l'l‘ORNlY GENERAL Men are sometimes placed, not from any fault of their own, but from circumstances over which they have no controul, in that awkward grad - cement, when it becomes a dlfioult and dc icats question whether they should advance, retreat, or stand a ' Mr. Iiensle it a youn man whom all parties respect in is private c rue- ter, ofa honorable and upright gentleman-his ppblic character is yet to make-—he can hardly - said to belon to the party of which he is nominally a memlier. His advent to the ofice which he fills was brou t about I) a contin- gency as unox ctcd as twee singlkr. I.¥old- ing t e ofiice 0 Law Clerk in the case c As- scmbly, he was induced to acce of that of So- Iicitor General, not frcin the prospect of emolu- ment certainly, but from a feeling of titude, combined wit that praiseworthy feel to rise in his profession, to be without which, in a lawyer, as pre stcrous as to be a soldier with- out courage. t resented also a good oppor- tunlt of servin an apprenticeship on the ori- mins side of t e court, which mi ht lead to better things, and at all events, co d ofno proyudice to him, as he was not considered pled to any particular line of conduct, for not ing in either branch of the Aasembl , no plcphge was requi us matters a us- I e Gave ent after having defended ti rnm Cha'rles Young against e accusations offlsrl. on the point where his conduct was most excep- tionnble, turned round upon him for hav' acted, as he thought, upri htly and conscient - ously, in a matter of no pu lie or political im- portance, and forced him to resign. of Attorney General begs! vacant andhir. Hens- ley having the undoub right to susceed,inde- pe_ndontly of there be no can titdon, we think his acceptance of I was re r a matter of course than otherwise, iall as the £100 per annum had been at m Solicitor- ship on his account alone. We Oink he was equally rmt in hking his seat at file Oolneil Board. House would soon dis a natural death if not dissolved, and he would be diets in lal_con(li£i°on to try wbebtgier he could not maak: is p permanent securing a seat in Assembly, the more as lly, as b so doing, he woul necesaaril form apart of tlie and from his ofiiefal situation an He made the attempt, and alters bir contest was defeated and now arises the ‘tiipp tbmert this article, Wfllll oaghthge to . . ensey ainanotaomuc can- dor. to attempt to say, that he does not know what were the public profound as of the party to which baked s _bIIOlf,snd Deal to btaln ma bl’ V“. dd’ h o a seat for Geqrgtplzuboviaz-“- nnc , It I make it manl- fest that heyioesessed of one of the twent - our constituencies,inm which the Island is ivided, which of them, it mattered not, the most populous or that with the hwsst voter s. The whole Island was before him.and he might have linked himself to Mooney and been returned in place of McGill, or with Lordaud tried to re ousted y. rgetowa was, however, t a safe,and ifhe had been returned, sstsid boroufli, at all events, we should lmve heard nothing of its rousiiiieu, though we are inclined to milk, that the Government ad was the most rottepn, N0 votes at furthest. . Hensley’s supporters, for he himself had to do with it, and they have filled to return hiis——lt does not refiect the least grace Id . Hensley-—-fie‘ now ttlqrbllllsldlbr is what he will do. And we . u ' ve stialeuey lea! " flasttoha owsdassatlsth“e“:sea(m0oeaeil' iieceuity which issaldto have swim, tread iasiiiais£::::stsi;bssIiIes,tkm'wastkls asential c‘e,be§wssahiscas@dI'I:g>.f .l!easlsy's. . on was I4: tare,aadhadlsst ham dilsveqsys Gevws