none menace” sounder, anneonunneiei. anvnnriesse. Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Saturday, July 23, "1853. ,1 New ‘lilo. Esiiilillslitd 1823. r .,.-.-~. 1- . o’... so-is .r-IL u'as‘Ias-A“rassI|dsml:IJ5'- I 0' ADVIITIIIIIL V , the r r , ..l£i:"§‘:‘:.‘%"l'....u..,...'Jlf!..i..":'°:.?_.‘..:L'.'.. s.. as-s.4.._.so llssi. an ad--is ' I-— usnggua-usu Is.—-and sum_uit saiiitaaui Diaciiut for cash iav..u.a."'.'l‘d°.in°t" utensil-iti'ia'tii'§s°.°3ill§ eoiitiniied c.‘osnt'1s's"Ann\'r. Chsstat IAIN! t t as the Commlsasriar . ‘ f|allfsI,.vvill ivan in exchange for Irltlh , or losiaau rs, at r. _ . ,|Aflfl|-D, |.l)l:I)Y, D. A. C. G. ceinlisssriat. P. 11. Island. In July. I353- unrner email. of Malls. III IAIIJ for the asigltbouriug Froviooss will . bsmsdsapust vf ' Notleesvery'l‘UE- DAY’hdTHUK8DAY NIGHT. at Nine o'clock, sad fvwlrdad via Pierce. and the NAILS for Ba- glsadwlll badassd span the fstlswingdsys at the gas r. '.|laasdsy.Msy I0. Tuesday. August .0 " lay I4, " Asgsstll. " Jana . “ Augsstlll. " Jnsall, “ Sept‘ 18. " July 5, " I7. " July “ October I I. I9. to be registered. and Nswsplpsfs. must be mulled half an hour before the time ofel THOMAS OWEN, Postmaster Gesarsl. General Post Oflae, April 80. 1353 Gsorgeto Malls. . [[3 uAl[.3 hr as own soil! fbrtbsr Notice, will be made up a forwarded avsry Monday and Friday ‘ow at nine o'clock. ‘ ' T - OWN, Pastussiar Gsusrsl. any a. tsss. Hall Issamar “ Fslry Queen." W. R. BULYEJI. Oemssosdsv. WILL lsavs (till fsflrthcr notioo)_ for Bpdolgp: flfiufl gv Cub evsui , I ' vs’ ‘rat '7 o'cLolr, morning: ‘ ‘ will leave Ihsdiscatl p. m., aqua at Oc'elaoh, in In . Mar? s U ‘. ,g C. , P 301-. 30591‘.- C' CI’ 0“ ‘ins can to filled o4:,.snd as usual to Place. c~;|¢uggoug_, flay I0. ID53- Eq, 9. TANIQ soylstxiv Gannnay Guns §uvsst,o ts Hr. J. 11.. Watt s: w It _ are taken by the most improved N only light that can produce a ' W‘! t of l..eskpts,Prhs‘in:a. and plain 'ii cssaalrs teessissiyos ti. .w more a. In. to 4 p. in. lion H most preferable for I“ II l..s ‘.- Isy I . 3&- ' t 2:. ngsgsq ‘HM do ‘entered. ism - O0-Pull .N 3331? as EIIAL sad ' willmihufstura ‘.3. magic v 5. 34.: N and aim of L WORTH G. i 7 E8‘; ‘sit 'cis LONGWOBTH. Aug '1' it. runs. c~.f'hmi”"'i:t E’ "d, ‘an ' on baalapaa will at all times ..,’lg..g._i,i4t«'.iiiasi- ":El'..‘.'.1‘i.'t... .... OOOIIITAIT. ' Pssttss srussuusous A -a-.r-mom ' whh .'.a 4;;-tch.s II-r-I--' Partnership stbsv . ad Aecossta, ta. srrssgsd and bslssod at to «harsh- iss Direelorsof tbeshove ls slu Tsissonsoa Ball. this jseolstloa. was assslmssaly ",t‘::2=~*"-*- "thstwshwvsthls yvivehi .0 vdd.s“i r s . . =1“ - 5* . .,. m ioorqqwssiesiwsu date" W-. W. you by as to Jsllsfifi. euidl‘ sy,'Isva- Uivcns -roii's CABIN. can. run. Results-George and Elisa at Bouie—'l‘he Psa- tor's Pro mmc disarrsnged-—Chsngc in Cass —-Emmeline's good For-tune—George’s Plans—Misaion of t e Anglo Saxon Race- ’ 'ermont. Tun rest of our story is soon told. George Shelby, Interested, as any other oung man might be, by the romance of the incident,no less than by feelings of humanity, was at the pains to send to Cassy the bill of sale of Elise, whose te_anil name all cores nded with her own knowledge of facts, and le no doubt upon her mind as to the identity of her child. It remained now only forlier to trace out the path of the fugutives. me do Thoux and she, tlius drawn to- gether by the singular coincidence of their for- tunes, proceeded iiuuwdiittely to Canada, and is tour of inquiry among the stations, where the numerous f ugutivcs from slavery are located. At Ainliersthcrg the found the mis- sionary with whom George an Elisa had taken shelter on their first arrival in Canada, and throiigh him were enabled to trace the family to Montreal. “cor and Elisa had now been five years free. George had found constant occupation in the shop of a worthy machinist. where he had been earnin a competent support for his family, which, In the mean-time. had been increased by the addition of another daughter. Little Harry, is fine bright boy. had been put to a good school, and was making rapid profi- ciency iignowlodge. The worthy tor of the station in Amherst- bergi‘ whore eorge had first landed, was so muc interested in the statements of Madame de Thoux and Cass , that he yielded to the solicitations of tho ormer to accompany them to Montreal in their soarcb—ahe hearing all the expense of the ex ition. The scene new changes to a small, cost tene- mant, in the outskirts of Montreal ; the time eve- nliig. A cheerful lire blazes on the hearth; s tea-table, covered with s snowy cloth, stands prepared for the evening meal. it one corner of t a room was a table covered wilt‘h a green cloth, is as an open writing-dea . us, a r; and over it a shelf of well-selected bfiiilis. P P. is was George's study. The same seal for salf-imqrovemcnt which led him to steal the much- covet arts of reading and writing, am’ all the tolls and discouragments of his early life, still led him to iievoie all his leisure time to self- cultivation. At this present time he is seated at the table‘ makisg notes from volumes of the family library he has been reading. “ ” ssys Elisa, " you've been gone all day. Do put down that book, and let's talk, while I’m getting tea-do." And little Elisa seconds the effort by toddling up to her father, and trying to pull the book out 0 his hand, and install herself on his knee as a substitute. “ Oh, you little witch!” says George, yielding an, in such circumstances, man always must. " That's right," says Eliza, as she begins to out a loaf of bread. A little older she looks ; bar form a little fuller; her hair more mstronly than of yore; but ei idently contented and happy as woman need be. " Harry, my boy, how did you come on in that sum to-day!" says George,” he laid his hand on his aon’a head. Harry has lost his long curls; but he can never lose those eyes and eyelashes, and that line, bold brow, that ushcs with triumph, as he answers, '5 I did it, every bit of it, my/soy‘, father, and nobody helped me.” " 'l‘hat’s right," as a his father: “ depend on yourself, my son. have a better chance than over your poor fstlier had." Atth moment there is a rap at rho door and Eliza goes and o in it. The delighted, " lvVl'iy -—thls you I" csl a up her husband, and the good pastor of Ambersibcrgh is welcomed. There are two women with him, and Eliza sakes them to sit down. Now, if the truth must be told, the honest pastor had arranged it little rogramme, according to which this sllhir was to IOVOIO itself ; and, on the way up, all had very cautiously and prudenlly sllioriad each other not to let things out, except according to previous arrangement. What was the good man's consternation. thera- lad to be i 3 fore, 'nat as he had motioned to the tea sea , and was taking out his pocltet-hsudliarchisf to wipe his mouth, so as to proceed to his intro- ductory speech in good order, when Madame ds Thou: it t the whole plan by throwing her arms area as neck. and settling all out at ones, by saying, ‘ 0 George; don’t you know me! I atuyour alstsr mil !" Cass had sastsd herself more composedly, and would ave carried on her part very well, had not little Elisa suddenly appeared before her in exact shape and from, every outline and curl. ‘eat as her daughter was when she saw her last. he little thing peered up in her face, and Cassy caught has up is her arms, bar to her bo- som, sayi .. what at the moment she really balls " lhig. I'm your Isoibasl” lu fast. it was ‘a trait ' exactly is ropar order; but the good. pastor st last a ad in getting every body uiet, and dslivsriug the speech with which he b intended to span the exercises. sod is which at last, he s sow , that his whole audience were sobbing about him in a manner that ought to satisfy say orator, ancient or modern. They adlttsgsthsr, and the good mas prayed s —M his 3 some feelings so a listfi ad tullll . {they can llod rastooy bybsiu thdfbhotl of Alml hty - iova-so 1.":'t'.."""..... ',-':','l.l,"$l1'. u'i".l'.’.'..'.:. ll-on such peril is!‘ sad by such uuhaewu swpys, bad r E’ be . I hfitoar among the Ca- aadlau fu liivss contains not stranger than uzheashlt be rwlsa, when a. sysasm pssvsi w w . ' sasttsrs t r Isibdrl, nthaw£l~whfl ms lssvss sfdslflal These shotaa sf‘: ‘ ”"'lihspias ‘ g” I s .. 'issrsusro"il.".;'.ii'-no ' each other as lost. And sllhotiog beyond expres- sion is the esrnaatnvas with which every new arrival among them is met, if perchance it may bring tidings of mother; sister child, or wlfe, still lost to view in the shadows of alsvi-ry. aoflieroism are wrought here more than those of romance, when, defying torture and braving death iiseli, the fugitive voluntarily threads his way bsclr to the terrors and perils of that dark land, that he may bring out his sister, or mother, or wife. One young man. of whom a missionary hss told ‘I. s_:.... a I A Ar r r I - for his heroisni, had escaped again? and in a letler which we heard iesd, tells his friends that he is going back a third time, Iliat he may, st liist, bring away his sister. My good sir, is this man s|hero or criminal! Would not'you do as much for your sister! And can you blame him! But to return to our friends. whom we left wiping their eyes and recovering themselves from too great and sudden I joy. They are now seated around the soei board, and are getting decidedly oompanionsble: only that (Essay, who keeps little Elisa on her lsp,‘occs<ionu|ly squeezes the little thingin a msnrier that rather astonishes her, and ohsiinstely refuses to have her mouth stuffed with calm to the extent the little one de- sires, alleging, what the child rather wonders at that she has got something better than cake, and doesn't want It. And, indeed, in two orthree days such I change has passed over Cassy that our readers would scarcely know her. The despairing, haggard expression ofhsr face had given away to one of gentle trust. She seemed‘ to sink at once into the of the fsmily,snd take the little one into her heart. as something for which it long had waited. Indeed, her love seemed to flow more naturally to the little Elisa than to her own daughter, for she was the exact image and body of the child wh-mi she had ‘lost. The little one was s flowery bond between mother and daughter, through whom grew up sequmntanceship and sfioclion. Elis.s’s steady, consistent piety. regu- lated by theconstantreading of the Sacred Word, made her a proper guide for the shattered and wsaried mind of her mother. Cassy yielded at once, and with her whole soul, to every good iiiIuence,aiid became ii devout and tenderChristisn. After a day or two, Madame de Thoux told her brother more particularl of her aflnirs. The death of her husband had left her an ample fortune, which she nerously ollbred to share with the family. en shes‘-lrml (io‘I'll'gP wliitt way who could best it ply it for him, |iciiiis\i'cr- ed, “ Give me an otiitcation, Emily; that has always been my heart's desire. 'l‘hen I can do all the rest." On mature deliberation, it was decided that the whole family should g), for some 'ears, France, whither they sailed, carrying umeliue with them. The d looks of the latter won the affection of the rst mate of the vessel, and shortly after entering the port, she became his wife. eorge remained four years at a French uni- versit , and applying himself with an uninter- ' zeal, obtained a very thorough education. Political troubles in France at last led the family again to seek an asylum in this country. George’: feelings and views, as an educated man, may be best expressed in a letter to one of his friends :— “ I feel somewhat at it loss as to my future course. True. as you have said to me, I might mingle in the circles of the whites in this coun- try, my shade of colour is so slight. rind that of my wife and family scarce crcc itiblc. Well, perhaps on sulferance, I niig II-. ut to tell you the truth, I have no wish to." “ My sympathies are not for my father's race, but for my mother's. To him I was no more than it fine dog or horse; to lll poor heartbroken mother I was a child .- and, t rough I never saw her after the cruel sale that separated us till she died, yet I lmow she always loved me dearly. I know it by my own heart. When I think of all she suffered, of my own early sufferings, of the distresscs and stru les of my heroic wife, of my sister, sold in the . ew Orleans slavc-mur- ket--though I hope to have no unchristian sen- timents, yetl me be excused for saying, I have no wish to pass or an American, or to identify myself with them." “ It is with the oppressed, enslaved African race that I cast in my lot ; un ' wis any- thing, I would wish myself two shades darker, rather than one lighter." “ The desire and yearning of my soul is for an African nationality. Iwonta people that shall have a tangible, separate existence of its own ; and where am I to look for it! Not in Ilsyti ; for in Hayti they lied nothing to start with. A stream cannot rise above its fountain. The race that formed the character of the Hay- tiens was s worn-out, efieminnto one, and, of course, the subject race will be centuries in risin to anything. “ Where, then, shall I look.’ On the shores of Africa I see a republic—a republic formed of icked men, who, by energy and self-cducntin force, lmve, in many cases. individually. rais themselves abovsaeon ' on of slavery. llaving throu s preparatory stage of eohleness, iliis has at last a an acknow- ledged nation on the face of the earth—sclrnow- lodged b both France and England. There it lg in to go, and find inyaslfs poop e. “ am aware now, thatl shall have you all at me; but, before you strike, hear me. tiring my shy la France, I have followed ll , with lstuisa interest, the history of m poop in America. I have noted the skuggle tween Abollticnlst and Colonlsationist, and have re- oslved some impressions, as a distant spectator, which could never have occurred to -e as a participator. - _ — . “ I % this Llberi; mbs. haw; suelfissri sad‘; 3 . urposes, y ugpsy o In the i'1'.a- o r --s-in-¢ I9- Dou ,tha aclism sad. in up , hands‘ means pf ratardin orp- emsnglpg . tit a question b- me is a man mtifadssovs Ill ma‘. schemes! my no not have overruled all their dsslpa, founded for us a nation by them‘ "Islhau.hys.ans .ls-barn is a day. Croatian ahrts-new with allthe grnt problems sqsfltsssllfs and alvlllntlsu-vrscugbtsvat F0 0 to its hand ; it has not to discover, but on! to sp ly. Let-us then, all bkc hold raged: wit all our night, and see what we can wi new on rise, and the whole splen- did oontinent of A ice opens _ fore us a our children. r notion shall roll the tide of civilisation and Christianity along its shores, and plant there mi hty republics, that, grow- ing with the rspl ity of tropical vegetation, shall be for all couiin ages. *- Do you as that ‘ am desertin my ensla- ved bretlircnl I think not. If I orget them one hour, one moment of my lilb, so may forget me! But what. can I do for them here! Can I break their chains! No, not as an indi- vidual; but let me and form part of a na- tion, which shall have a. voice in the councils ofnations, and then we can apes . Anation has a right to argue romonstrate, implore, and resent the cause o its race, which an indivi- ual has not. " It'Euro ever becomes a grand council of free nations-—ss I trust in God it wi1l—if there serfdom, and all unjust and oppressive social inequalities, are done away; and if the , as France and En nd have done, sekuow edge our position—t en, in the great congress of nations, we will make our appeal, and present the cause of our enslaved an sufiarin recs ; and it cannot be that nice, enligteued erics. will not then desire to wipe from her sacuteheon that bar sinister which dlsgrscea her among nations, and is as truly a curse to her as to the enslaved. " But, you will tell no our race have rights to mingle in the American republic as the Irishman, the German, the Swede. Grant- ed, they have. We ought to be free to meet and mingle-—to rise by our individual worth, Without any consideration of caste or colour; and they who den us this right are false to their own profsa principles of human equa- lity. We ought, in particular, to be allowed here. We have more than the rights of com- mon men-—we have the claim of an injured race for reparation. But, then, I do not want i't;Iwanta coun ,anationofmy own. I think that the African race has uliarities yet to be unfolded in the light 0’ civilisation and Christianity, which, if not the same with those of the An on, may prove to be, morally, of even a higher type. .1 “ To the lo-Ssxunrsoe have been entrust- ed the destinies of the world, dut-in its ' near period of struggle and conflict. '10 that mis- siou its stern, inflexible, ener tic elements were well adapted; but, as is C ristian, I look for another era to arise. On its borders I trust we stand; and the throes that new con the nations are, to my hope, but the birth ii of an hour of universal peace and brother 00 . “ I trust that the development of Africa is to be essentially a Ohrisnan one. If not a. dominant and commanding race, they are, at flu o2 least an afictionate, msgnanimous, and for» giving one. Having it called in the furnace of injustice and opp:-osslon, they have need to bind closer to their carts that sublime doctrine of love and forgiveness, through which alone they are to conquer, which it is to be their mis- sion to spread over the continent of ‘ca. “ In myself, I confess I am feeble for this — nll halt‘ the blood in my veins isthe hot and busty Saxon; but I have an eloquent preacher oi‘ the Gospel ever by in side, in the person of my besutilul wife. W on I wander, her gyn- tler spirit ever restores me, and kee rs my eyes the Christian calling and mission of or race. As a Christian patriot, as a teacher of Christianity, I go to m counti-y—-my chosen, my glorious Afiica !—an to her, in my heart, I sometimes apply those splendid words of prophesy, ‘ Whereas thou hast no on and hated, so that no man went through thee ; 1 will make thee an eternal excellence, a joy of man generations!" “ on will call me an enthusiast: you will tell me that I have not well considered what I am undertaking. But I have oonside ,and counted the coat. I to Liberia, not as to an Elysium of romance, ut as to s field ofioorlr. I expect to work with both hands-—to work hard; to work apinst all sorts of dillicultiss and disoourafements; and to work till I die. This is what for, and this I an quits sure I shall not be ppointad. “ Whatever you may think of my determina- tion, do not divorce me from your confidence; and thisikolyhat, in whatever lldo, I act with a heart w ‘van to m e. y 9 y Busts." George, wifli his wife, children, sister, and mother, embarked for Africa. some few weeks fter. If we are not mistaken, the world will yet hear from him there. _ Of our other characters we have nothing vary rticuler to write. except a word relating to ‘as Ophelia and Topsy, and a farewell chapter, which we shall dedicate to George Miss Ophelia took Topsy home to ermcnt with her, much to the an rise of that grave deliberative body wlinni s ew Englander re- isos under the term "Our ol£s.’_' "Our ," at first, then ht it an dsud unneces- sary addition to well-trained domestic establishment; but, so Cllrolallly oloient was Misa0 lieliaiu her couacien on rear to do her my by lies shin, that the child rapidly grewingraos Bvourwlththatmilysnd neighbourhood. At the I30 of Volllllhood Ills O fo was by her own request, baptised. sud hacs-a a member of the Christian ueh is the place : and showed so mud: in as,vsotlvi ,sud ssshsuddsslretcdogasd thewos ,tbaI she was at and pps-ovsd as a missionary to one of dis .ahtlon:ui.Afrlcs; _audvraliavs heard that the asniasetlvltyaud Ilass ins.» de Wlolllllltl ‘ll 2.. anploysd,.l:a fir and wholesome: lhan ’ nor, in teaching the abildssu of bar. awn asun- "ii. 3.4: j that also some do ‘firs Mutts Law is sags. plea oftlio Ms,‘lpp‘Imw sre 'not,naw',‘ it!” saoldssthstnesofC ‘ _n', this leader of s thsllfonable wor d thus do- nouuced the Run c in t e dass of Lords. We co " ' rem lithe denouucera of the Maine ‘Law, Ibm. hit its logic, and for proof that the tlfifla legal prohibiting of rumselllng 'bs‘q’e confipyzzl to “fai:t‘i‘cs." ’ . . . 1 " use I thugs’ ssltacb' hurtful in thrive: new sincere, and its body is- , ro as rsonisirab. None, my lords, ever heard in any nation of a tax upon tht-in or sdultry, because a llcoiise was grsittéd for the use of that which is taxed to all who shall be willinig to ay it. “The noble lor ," (he went on to re- mark,) “has been kindly eased to .iuf'orm us, that the trade of distil rig is very extan- sivc ; that it employs great numbers, and that they have arrived at ex ulaits ‘ill, and therefore-—the trade of tlisglli is not to be‘ discoui-s'ged.—I never hes that ;s law against theft was repealed or delayed because thieves were numerous. It sp- pesrs to me, my lords, that if so formidable a body are eonfederuted a inst the virtue or the lives of their fellow citizeris,it is time to put an end to the havoc, andlo intsi-pose, while it is yet in your power, to stop the di- struction. , "So little, in lcrds,srti I elected with the wonderful 'l which the distillate use said to have attained, that it is in my opinion no facility ofgrest use to msnkin , to pre- pare pslstsble poisons, nor shall I over coit- tribute my interest for the reprieve of a murderer, because he has by long" practifl obtained great dexterity in his trade. If their liquors are so dsllcioissthat the people are tempted to their own ruin, let sis st length, my lord, secure them from this fetal draught _ _ thl slats which too- tais them. Letuscru ,at oncsthasa arti- sans in human slaughter, who have racon- ciled their countrymen to sicknsfl-IIII to ruin, and to spread over the pitfslh ‘of do- bsuchsry such habits as-cannot be resisted. I am very far, my lords, front thinking, that there are this year any peculiar reasons for tolersting msrdsr-nor can I conceive why the msnufactory should be hcldsaorod now, if it is to be destroyed herealtar." A Wu-r.s.i.oo Ysn1¢.—The world as been listening for can to stories of a- terloo ; but it won soon that like a car- tsin other commodity, long since familiar to our renders, there an a few‘ more left of the same sect.’ An individual who owned is small tavern near the eventful field wds frequcntly questioned by visitors whether he did not posess some relics oftbo battle, and as invariably and as honestly answered in the negative. But he was very or, and one day while‘ lamenting to s- I said not only his poverty, but the sun ’ ’ cs’ travel- lers ave him, his fiieud cut him‘ with. ' ell’ make one help the other; make some relics ’ ‘But what can I-do P’ inquired the peas- one. ‘Tell them that Napoleon or Well on entoredyour shop during the‘ battlsingdnd sat on that chair.’ Not long after, an English tourist enter- ed and in uiring.for relics, heard the chub- story. T echsirwesstonosbcugbtatsn incredible price. The nest corner was in- formed that Wellington had taken sdrinfl, and the ‘ Wellington tumbler’ was accord- ingly sold. The third ' arrival‘ gaasd with breathleu wonder at the nail on wbidt Bonaparte had ‘hung up his hat.’ The fourth purchased the door pods between which he entered, and the Bills became the happy possessor of the floor on which he had trodden. At the last advices, the inn tunats tavern keeper had not a roofto cover his head, and was seen sitting on s of gold in the centre ofa daap pit fo by selling the dirt on which thovliosss had stood. Sorts pompous psrsous have’ a wsy"of saying the plsinest things’ in the ntoh swelling manner; a manner which is sit infallible srampliticstion of a weak mind. An American writer, of a rare humour‘. onoa setirized this apuecies of afsetloit, exposi- din s lbw pla , every-disy. V into big -sounding phrases. ' following are sxam lea: W :3o..b3i'ol'i>°y"i’.'.{:'. of - 3-’ -advsssa disposition ofhia-o cs (aqs_id&'ishsaad,0s scrutlults in dspls dhaatious tisn Sabbath." " set your are they cases to be svlfasm._" u L“ M M!’ " ssdbr a has y suflslsasy to ssnah in solitude." --‘nulosasstdtlusoosist _ ,." , .«'1'lie mialrmiofan _ R ' , w t . , . " ' aalllwindlxd "'I\d-galls-ls‘-thy- n?I"bsssihIIilI‘Ie*ls‘aq%Iy