ener ce ee ae Ties RO — oa a ee ee ee 98 THE EX AMINER. — ee 8 a A lela a ti a a not put fame, fortune, or fine looks in the balance—and | she had squandered on military proparationa, she would hayo would most likely say asa character said in one of the articl of our favourite Putuam:—I[f Saak-peare loved me, and did vot love him, how could I marry him “T shall hate her if she Coes nut accept you,” was the very womanly response as the young man closed the door, But dear little Mes. Carlisle had mo cause to put her threat | inte execution, for Anne kad long appreciated that noble | hearted young gensloman to many blushes, for her own peace of mind, A few days after Mdward Carlisle had been an aceepted lover, Anne was re- turving from dinner to her wok, in her much worn, anc rather rusty black dress, common shawl, and last year’s bonnet. She usutlly chose the lea-t frequented street, beeause it was | the nearest, but tempted by the warm spring sanshine and the bright blue sky, she turned into the fashionable thorough- ture. - Edward Carlisle was standing on she steps of the —— House, én company with several young men, when one of them fuking bis cigar from b's mouth, said, with a good deal of So i } i avin itionai— « By Jove, Carlisle, there's a girl fit to be a princess by ” her stately step,” and ffnging his cigar away, he sprung down the steps, saying, * Ll see her face, or my Bame Is not ‘ . ‘ ; ’ hariie Howel!. She works for Mrs. Bowen. leave, Charlie-—that girl is my affianeed wile,” said Edward Carlisle, with sharpnesg, gs he left the « Not without my ’ , . , ent 1 ie MriVlbisar i : ' Alter our heroine bad served her time ont with Mrs. Bowen, which she persisted iu dving, they were married in ey uroh. Mrs. Harper was deeply mortified as she remembered the stand she had taken, but she only tosged-her head as she suid that “such peovle as the Carlislea could afford to marry any be . About this time the elder Mrs. Carlisle was summoned (o | her drawing room to receive a certain Mrs. Lofton with her | daughter and Charlie Howell. “ I kaow what she’s come gor,” she said, a little indignant, to her busband. “What 7” f *Q, to quiz me on account of this mesalliance, as she calls it, Soe‘ll fiad ste’s caught a tartar.” As she anticipated, Mrs. Lofton, after a few commonplaces, | said in her smooth tones : “[ was sorry when I heard of your brother’s marriage. “Sorry ! what for! we are delighted." “ O, of course it is well to muke the best of such things, but her position was so low.” : “I don't kaow what you call position, Mrs. Lofton, when you speak of a woman like my sister-in-law, highly educated | und accomplished, being beneath us; if you alluded to her ovcupation, | must say it is a very poor taste for us Americaus to scoff at trade. Why my husband's father wasa carpenter, nod I believe your mother learue kt make coats and pants of my grandmother.” This was a home thryst little expecte}, and little relished, | but it wouldn't do to seem cff-nded ; for besides being a’ Ste } 2 } oup and hastily jowed Anne. . ‘ re ~~ Vs wutual disclosure, Mrs. Carlisle was tvo isuportant a person | to get offended with. ” By Jove, she’s a sensible woman!” exclaimed Charlie | Howell, as they walked home ; * she might teach us all com. | mon sense—ut there are few dress-makers like Mrs. Edward Carlisle.” -_~- — ——- ---<« we 0-6 —___ —_——_———_-—— i THE RESULTS OF THE CAMPAIGN. ! (From the Edinburgh Review for Ocieber, 1855.) The War from the landing at Gallipoli to the Death of Lord ? r > , . we Raglan. By W.il. Russert. Correepondent of the Times. Loudoa : 1350. (Continusd fronPour last.) It-h2s been frequently said, however, that the war was con- | ucted in an old-fashioned way; that our generals were the} heroes of i812 and I815; that our artillery might have been! used at the siece of Namur or feured on Uncle Toby's bowline green; and that military sci nee had not k pt pace with eivil engineering. No doubt these allegations wer partly true, be- cause there had been an immense demand of late vears for the application of the intellect in this cor atry to civil rather than to militiry purposes. Our generals were elderly men, becaus¢ they have lived through a long peace; but so, with few ex- cepiions, are these of our a: tagonist and of our allie and our means of action were not af first adapted to the magnitude of our object. But if this were our starting point, we confi- } dlently affirm that within six months from the commencement of these operations, we had advanced with enormous and in-| credible rapidity beyond it, and that the entire history of war- fare docs not afford any instance of such important changes and such extraordinary novelties in the art of war. The truth . is. that far from carrying on thes: operations in an old fash- ioned way, the novelty and multi; licity of the means placed at the disp sal of the generals was so great, that the minds of those who were engaged in directing these great works could I le bans on wrath: +1 ssi sueae a hike af ; ce fh Jar iy Keep pac With tacw ona wocn Ww hav bbided is Has not been from any want of such material resources as the in- genuity or resolution of the country could supply, but from the deticiency of a high standard of iateliectual capacity and of professional education in the army. The intimate union of the naval and military services was new, fer it was the first | time that two vast armies, operating on a coast. bad within sight, and under their command, a large steam fleet to supply all their wants, and to await their orders. A great part of the seience of balistics as exemplified by this extraordinary siez? was new to the engineers, for never before was guns of such calibro, or projectiles of such elaborate construction, used in war; and we attempted to demonstrate ; i last number, that the expedients resorted to both by the de- fenes and by the attack, were practical discoveries in tie art of fortitications. We have it on high authority that the French arsenals alone have sent about a million shot and shell to the East since the opening of the war, and Marshal Pelissier states that 1,600,000 rounds of amununition have been expr nd- ed in the siege ; whereas the largest amount of ordnance stores ¢ever consumed before amounted at the siege of Antwerp to ubout 65.000 rounds, Phe. weight of the siege trains was equatiy novel and astonishing. The old 24-pounders were silenced and discarded as popguns, and the success of the siege was mainly due to the introduction of a weight of metal never seen before. ‘To work guns of such dimensions in lines of such surprising extent, mechanical ingenuity was again applied ; | for nothing less than a flect of transports and a railroad could ave enahied the artillery tn heine . ois have enabied the artillery to bring up the siege trains and the t length in our tons of inctal to be hurled against the works of Sebastopol. | Lastly, to organize the application and the supply of these ex- | traordinary means of action, an instantaneous communication | was established between the camp and the seat of Government 3,000 miles off. Of course these devices were not all prepared beforehand, and the torpor of official routine and professional | ! } traditions was overtaken by the vivid inventive genius and the enthusiastic interest of the nation. But these expedients arose | one after another pro re nata; and when it is considered that | barely six months had elapsed from the sailing of the expedi- | tion to the momert when our full resources were in eperation, and that another six months exhausted the eecmaulated resis- tance of the Russians and compelled them to retreat, we ven- ture to affirm that hereafter men wi.l wonder, not at the protracted duration of the siege, but at the rapidity with Wahich it was brought to a glorious termination. These have proved to be the true elements of victory to the | Western Powers. They had not at their command the innu- merable legions of the Russian armies, for their military forces were on a peace establisiiment. They had not accumulated stores of war at their disposal, which it appears to have been the constant object of Alexander and of Nicholas to collect during a period of forty years, for the eventual subjegation of the East. But the Western Powers brought into action the superior energy and civilization of Europe; and there can hardly be a more vivid picture of the contrast between these antagonists than the railway train hissing from Balaklava to the camp, with the mighty stores of the besiegers, and the owe the evacuation of Sebastopol to the exhaustion of the Russian armies rather than to the destruction of its worke. The system of internal defence was unsubdued to the last, and the fall of the place has not lessened the respect with which we regard the authors of the remarkable system of fortification | Island : eaee- eine thrown ap around it. Atthe moment at which we write itis Patrick Mooney and others,” and wére found wanting ; the o much, so she thought, with | only of the fall of Sebastopol that we can speak as an accom | recording of whieh does not by any means render them valid. | plished fact, bat we entertain the strongest hopes that before, ayt the alteration or amendment these documents recvived ‘the termination of the campaign the same strategical causes since examined at the above suit is a few very imperfect in- which have mainly brought about this important result, will be followed by the evacuation or loss of the Crimea by the Russians, The military results of the siege of Sebastopol, however great they may be, are of secondary interest to its political | consequences, The maritime preponderance of Russia in the’ slack Seags for a long period destroyed: the fortress from | which an embassy or an expedition perpetually threatened the | shores of the Bospherus is dismantled; but above all, England and France have shown the world that gigantic as) this enterprise undoubtedly was, they had aot overrated their own strength in engaging in it. To haye failed in such an | undertaking was impossible, for i¢ would have dimmed the glory of the lmperial Eagles of France, and lowered the renown and influence of Britain. There was, no doubt, a moment when the disappointment of the premature hopes raised after the battle of the Alma, and the excessive hardships endured by | the allied armies, induced the neutral states ef the Continent to form an erroneous estimate of our strength and of our de- termination. The winter campaign, the impassioned appeals of the press to the sympathy of the public, the partial disso- lution of the British Cabinet, the angry and dissatisfied atti- tude which the House of Commons retained during the session, | were all construed on the Continent as proofs of the decline of | our real power and the hopeless confusion of our political in-! stitutions. The world had forgotten that under a free go-. vernment it is easier to heal wounds than to hide them; and that though a melancholy list of disasters was daily thrust, a he ee scenes nie ein OS A AO ~ ‘prepared to lease or sell any part of said property, as his ont been infinitely more formidable w Europe and far better able ¢ tles are now duly reco: ded. (to resist the present invasion of her territuries. As it is, we However plausible that notice may appear, I beg to in- form the tenants and settlers on the above mentioned lor that ‘Mr. Bourke’s tithes ure the very identieal documents, the legality of whieh were tested in the Supreme Curt of this lust May, at the suit of «“Johu R. Bourke vs. pose of leading the public into the belief that these constitute a title for Lot 37. But, Mr. Editor, the day is past for Mr. Bourke to practice on the credulity of the public, and no doubt the tenantry and settlers on Lot 37 will keep a sharp look-out fur their right=, and will not be entangled by hits fascinations, without, taking legal advice, touching the pre- tended titles alluded to, which it appears consist of a lease purperting to have been given by a Mrs. Molesworth and her husband, both of the City of Dublin, in Jreland, on the one part, and Mr. Bourke of the other part, for the term of 99 years, at 102. per aynum rent, and dated 18:h December, 1854, which lease seems to be superceded by a subsequent conveyance of the same property by the same parties te the said J. R. Bourke, dared J9th December, 1854, * for and during the natural life” of the said Mrs. Molesworth, for LU00d. sterling. It appears, therefore, quite evident that Mr. Bourke’s title, if valid, would entirely depend upon the lengevity of ap old Jady in Dublin. How, then, can he sell or lease ber propurty according to his * notice to tenants r That gen- tlemau also requests all arrears of rent to be paid to him by the tenantry on the above property; but where is his autho- rity to collect the rents? his power of attorney, (if he has Council, in making appointments, or in any other Teepect, ‘the most effectual way to bring him to his senses, is fop the Council to resign, and turn the parliamentary majority againgt ‘him. Ifhe shpuld resort to a dissolution, and his conduet bg | | really indefensible, there is not much likelihood that the peg. ple would return a majority of his creatures. That Lord ‘Metcalfe acted in a manner becoming the representative of | Majesty, was the opinion entertained by the people of Cangs ‘da, as shortly afterwards expressed at the polls, and by that opinion was Mr. Daly justified in the course he pursued, But \ -terlineations, which appear to have been made for the pur- cain taille Mis lordship differed with his council on the OCR. ‘sion referred to, and from that time hence, Responsible Government did not, and has not ceased to be administered jp all its integrity. From the whole tenor of the article in the Islander, which ‘we have just noticed, one might suppose it impossible for the writer ever to speak or think well of Lis Excellency Goyernoy Daly. But there is an old saying whieh reminds us how ne. “cessary it is for a certain class of people to lave good men. | ries, and we shall add one or two to the many thousand proof, ‘that have been given to enforce the adage. We take the fol. lowing extract from an editorial in the Islander of June 16, 1854, published, as will be remembered, shortly previous to the general clection of that year, in which the hope is confidently expressed, that the people would not return a majority prepared to carry out Responsible Government as then and now undege stood. Ilis Excellency was then quite a stranger amongst us, and the editor of the Islander was weak enough to think that fulsome flattery like the following would seduce him from the plain path of daty :— Neither should it be forgotten that we have now a Governor who i lubours to repair them. Other armies have suffered quite as therefore he has no right whatever to receive one shil.ing of -coneentration of her troops in Gallicia, where not a shot was) \that the hardships of the winter campaigu had fallen with » were mistaken. The spring and summer found the British | © — iseas. ‘The greater was then the doubt, the greater is now the | plished. ‘essential that new institutions shoald be established in the | the appearance of such articles. We trust they are sincere in } befure the nation, the nation never desisted from its heroic any), is not “duly regorded” with his parchment titles ; . knows his duty, and will doubtlessly execute it, to the honor of the ; . an 2 ; ‘ name which he serves, and the interests of the people whom he gover mach or more in proportion than our own. the losses of the rent until he can produce legal power from the riglitful ee ele senasennel oulk ancenhiin sina emia lot belle Russians were enormous; and even Austria found that the owner or owners of the land. that every respectable man—if there be oue-—connected with the inipose I beg to remain, ture called the “" beral Reform Association,’ which holds secret meet ° » ings, and has neither propounded nor promoted a single reform of any Your humble servant, }eort that we ever heard of, howsoever ut bas conspired against the re. A NATIVE. tional liberties of its {fellow subjects, will be ashamed of Lis connexion, H. C., December 15, 1855. | In another No. of the same paper (July 2Ist, 1854) we find —_ w= an editorial article, headed, ‘a word in season,’’ written after ee “tie See ai P s i ri % ¥ “i p | the section, woe it sa prrnen that the aay ry had Se SHE SF S Gba been signally defeated. The Government was not then changed, ; oe ; : . ‘Messrs. Palmer, Holl & Co. still held office, although they frem misplaced zeal, ard partly from less honorable motives, | CHARLOTTETOWN, DECEMBER 31, 1855. anata procure a quorum to make an Executive Coase to misrepresent the policy of the Government and to underrate | i. / s thd resources it bad trotight into. the feld, we can foe) n0:eur- | Se The Islander appeared to be silly enough to think, that, by fired, cost her as many men and herses as a bloody campaign. But these sufferinge were concealed, and it might be supposed tenfold severity on ourselves. If such were the expectations of the enemy, or of our more timid allies the Austrians, they re divisions of the allied army fully equal to every duty that) eould be required of them. But when such constant efforts had been made in this country, partly from ignoranee, partly } . . . ‘ . . . Se . i { ie . , . prise that foreign States, forming their opinion of our power, We alluded in last Monday’s paper to two articles which raising a cry about persons leaving the Colony, in the event of from this imperiect information, should have exaggerated our | ; : oe : . . . aes ; . y: appeared ji s Islande » previous Friday ; the Liberals coming into power, the Governor might be indu inefficiency, and rushed to the conclusion that the military | I peared in the Islander of the previous Friday, unjustly and) z } ’ oF ced power of England had set for ever. It is very clear that the | coarsely attacking His Excelleney the Lieut. Governor, and | to disregard the large majority of Liberals, and still attempt motives which actuated the Cabinet of Vienna on the 2d of we intimated that we would probably notice them somewhat to govern with the broken and utterly routed party of the To. | December, when a treaty was signed binding it to concert ; c : in detail in this week’s iss "e are fully i hat it ries. ence the ‘* word in season,’’ which fell so far s ulterior measures if the Russians did not accept the four bases in detail in this week's issue. We are fully convinced that it ries. Henee the was M b Soil so far chee before the end of that menth, had materially changed when is not at all necessary to oceupy much space in reviewing the its aim, and from which the following is an extract :— Dn aed y ands eR ee Ie ta eae hte) sone cwe he hae : ~ . os t 1e period of action arriy ed; an d ths most rational explanation Islander’s animadversions. Those whose opinions we care for We bave now a Governor who knows bis duty—and Provineial polie of this change is the distrust of the success of the allies. felt : ; ' di ties, better than any man, or party of men, in the Island, can instruct by the time-serving cabinets of Central Europe. This opinion Fe ever influenced by anything they may chance to read in jiu, ; aud until they see His Excellency execute hisduty vicariously, was of course fustered by the indefatigable agents of the Rus-| that paper,—and as fer the gentleman who is the subject of nvbedy should speak of emigrating, on politicnl grounds. wis : “2 > = ; > eo > wat tt : F . ‘ a ss | eo a ime + y . > « a 9 ian Government, an it extended to every part of the globe. | tno intemperate abuse referred to, he has seen enough of pub- | In the leading article of the same paper, (Dec. 21), we are + eere a reouls ay? ¢ ay? , ative } YM F ye ‘ he ~ ° . It was circulated among the native princes of India, and might told that the Governor committed an act of ** high treason” be traced by our diplomatic agents in the United States, in| lic life not to disregard most thoroughly the attacks of a paper South America, and even to the barbarous islands of distant | so recklessly conducted as the Islander is, by an individual who in enrvlling the volunteers, now disbanded, when the Rent Roll Act had not become law—that his doing so was a ‘‘levying” of “war”? on the inhabitants of the Colony—and that his offence in this respect was not more complete than that * which led the first Charles to the block.” This is not merely balder- dash and bluster of the most contemptible kind, bet itt balderdash and bluster without a particle of truth. The volunteers were not enrolled because the Rent Roll Act passed our Legislature—it is true their continuance as an armed force would depend upon the Act receiving the royal allowance ; but they were enrolled because the Legislature deemed ah armed force of some kind necessary, and made provision for the main- on a ee : ee ee has mo other motive than to earn his wages in some way or triumph ; our victory is measured by the obstacles it has over- | : y : : ni come and the sacrifices itJdias cost ; and although it is possible | other-—who has been disay pointed in all his ambitious schemes sbastopol might have fallen imto the hands of the allied |—and who now, in his doating old age, finds he has no cha- armies by a sudden attack after the battle of the Alma, it is clear that the success ef such a surprise would not have had one-tenth part of the same effect on the prestige of the Russian Empire, or on the opinion of the world, as the laborious and There is an individual, long since banished from the arena of Sangulnary trium} h the allied geberais have at last aceol | public life for his political tergiversations, by a betrayed and ts weliel “asl ‘racter to win or lose. Tow degrading it is to any press toem- | ploy such assistance as that on which the Islander subsists! : : indien: . i ey—forced to bury himself in the bush As far as this country and France are concerned, the capture | indignant constituency—for 7 aa, of Sebastopol and the destruction of the Russian Black Sea! from economical and prudential considerations—without an fleet accomplish the mest prominent and immediate objects of | atom of influence in any section of the Colony, and remarkable the war. Of the four principles laid down in the last negoti- ations as the indispensable conditions of peace, some are partially and some effectually attained. The Principalities i y are freed from the protectorat> of Russia ; the treaties imposed | er, fur no other reason than because he and the wretched fac- true the words ‘ constabulary force ’’ are used in the Appre by the Cabinet of St. Petersburg on the Porte are annulled; | tion who support him do not happen to be in power themselves ! ‘priation Act; but it would have been impossible for the i } for nothing so much as unparalleled mendacity, vulgarity and ; . e e . . ‘ . P | : ae > oe ; _impertinence—setting himself up as the censor of men in pow- tenance of such force in the autumn of last year. It isalso the invasion of the Principalities has been punished; and it | —— : 7 ce only remains for the Allied Powers to cause a form of govern- | We are far from thinking that the respectable portion of the ment to be established in those fertile countries which mily Tory party actively encourage the attacks now so frequently and 82 eficient for tne Service, as the New foundland pensioners, inaueurate a happier wra than that passed under the seoarge : 3 . ; Suara nil” neil . 2. sae ee a : aot ee ee J , * Det, >, | made upon the Lieutenant Governor; indeed several of them who were allowed each only two shillings a day, and were of Russian protection. The Septannial Mospodariate of Prince | ee ; roll deilied deal ee he felendee cles GANT Stirbey terminates in May 1850, and before that time it is | have been heard to express their dissatisfaction and regret at W® en ee ee = 7 “~ “™ a asserts that those pensioners were sent for—*‘ imported here by our Government. The men arrived here defore they were Government, to have procured constables at so cheap a rate, Principalities on the principies already agreed to at Vienna. |,,. : 5 SOROLes eee : eo. 7 ee aS. | thie exnres omnes ' we fhis object is the more pressing from the extreme unpopularity | this expression of regret; but we wust say that we think if of the Austrian occupation, and the inordinate corruption and | they had a hearty will in the matter, they would find a way. ae ot ° ° g - 2 2 a = . profligacy of the wretched government now existing in Bucha- | o¢ abating the nuisance, of our local Executive, and of course had a right to Barrack ‘accommodation. It was only after they had received their rest and Sassoy. Nor can we discover any reason that the | discharge, that the Government here organized a force of discharged from Her Majesty's service, but not at the direction Porte and its allies should not at once take measures to place | fhe reason, it appears, why the Islander is so very indignant S°> twenty-five men, taking half that number from the body of the government of these dependencies of the Ottoman Empire | with the Governor is, that he will persist in governing the Co- on & permanent foundation—an object to which the assent of) | Newfoundland pensioners and the other half from pensioners previously in the Colony. Russia is indeed a matter of secondary consideration. Iler re- cognition of the established Moldo-Wallachian government would then become one of the conditions of peaee. : / Who does not remember the hue and ery made by the Tories, in which the Islander joined more lustily than any, about the time Her Majesty's Government had decided on withdrawing the regulars frum the colony? ‘It was all the fault of Re sponsible Government,” said they ; ‘if we lose the troops, the Snatchers must be held accountable for the loss, for ther will be no protection for life and property.” This was the cry raised by the discontented and unprincipled set, and yelled _lony on constitutional principles—that he wail co-operate with his Executive Council in carrying out, with a fidelity unsur- | passed, the new principles of Colonial polity introduced by his | j The navigation of the Danube was the point on which the | immediate predecessor. If Governor Daly would obligingly Conference at Yienna in April last was most suceessful; but, us was suggested by Lord John Russell, the complete restora- tion of the right bank of the stream to Turkey, as it was before | the treaty of Advianople, should be an essential condition for lony henceforth just as | may think proper, regardless of your the maintenance of this arrangement. : and graciously strangle Responsible Government—if he would ‘say to his advisers: ** Gentlemen, I purpose to govern this Co- \opinions, and of the wishes of those who placed you in a par- The erents of » & anc nw i wait Swe as ; . The events " the Sth and 9th September may he said to ter- | |iamentary majority ; and I shall select persons to fill the pub- minate for a lengthened period the prey ‘rance of the Rus- iq... : . ao ; : : for atengthened riod the preponderance of the Rus- '4:. situations without reference to political affinity, selecting sian maritime power in the Black Sea; but they also give us_ ; : i. the right to require, in a more peremptory form, conditions even your opponents whenever it may please me so to do”’— “+ : ec caleulated to ensure and preserve the permanent and complete if His Excellency would adopt this course there is no doubt he with the utmost discord and ferocity by the Islander. Wheat i Yeu nea , so ré a Tha ‘y} as 4} - j | ° ° ° » tharale ; ~ ; > 2 independent e of those waters. The Crimea being once in) would agord great satisfaction to the editor of the Islander— the Liberals did organize a small force, in obedience to the eX possession of the Allies, becomes a material guarantee for these conditions. Enormous expenses and s.crifices have been | incurred to conquer it; but having destroyed the Russian fleet more than onee*pointed out to Her Majesty's Representative. property, should any sudden emergency require their intervell- end driven out her armies, the principal positions in the [ti ‘ if . . : ” oF Bil- j : : t is needless to say that the day is never likel , tion, they are again honored with the maledictions and Peninsula can be held with very little cost or danger by the y y kely to arrive when | ow 5 it is the very course, indeed, which that unscrupulous man has’ pressed desire of the Legislature, for the protection of life and ‘maritime States. Sebastopol would be secure in the hands of His Excelleney would even entertain the thought of such a|lingsgate of the Islander. But why? because it was the a French garrison of 2 few thousand men and a squadron to thing, and hence we may be sure, that so long as Maclean is intention of the Liberal Government to make the Islanders wateh the Bay of Odessa; whilst a detachment of our own |. a = seg bo Pek sil ii + troops might hold Kerteh and Yenikale and command the paid to-do it, there will be a hash and a rehash of such abuse mB = Pena eOes,. Seerery ee eee: 7 Sea of Azoff until the termination of the war. The whole of a8 the last Islander contained, regarding which, we feel con- maigtaining the force. this service might be efficient] y performed by the steam firigetes yineed, no one in the Colony will be half so indifferent as the | Aud who does not remember the time, while we had 4% and corvettes of the feet, the enemy having lost his whole tent Goneinein Adena gular foree in the Colony, when the Holl & Palmer Gover maritime force. By these means, if the war be prolonged, the | ~ ’ ; ; . A . : Allied Powers may at a very small expense extinguish the) The ** sketch of the public career of Lieut. Governor Daly ,”? ™ent caused @ legion of special constables to be sworn im, PE trade and eee of Southern Russia, and ultimately | (in Friday week's Islander) is too absurdly false and contem pt- vided with staves, and the military in the Barracks to be served : icr (! STty avigatine 2 ack S heir | - . . acide re ee: : i j i eat 1e mn of navigating the Black Sea on their lible for serious notice. One whois intimately acquainted with | with ball cartridges, and be ready on the following morning (Te:te eontinned’) the history of His Excelleacy’s career in Canada, assures us th fixed bayonets, to st) or shoot down any refractory Libe qqneremstentmimmmemimenemien sinenistsonemeiny > ,that the ‘*sketch’’is fictitious from beginning toend, The | als who might interfere with Palmer’s and Longworth’s Corres po dence ci about Lord Metealfe’s quarrel with his Executive Coun. “l¢ction? Did any Act of Parliament authorise chem tore , | cil is grossly misstated. His Lordship’s advisers did not raise to such high-handed measures? No, servile and eringi ~ SD PPPPP PPP PPP LOL LL AL lel el lll el el fell eel AP eee : | , i . . $6 ‘th t : the Assembly of the day was, it dared not sanction 58 TO THE EDITOR OF THE EXAMINER. : ae oe ee , eee en eee despotie as d 3 I adds blic opinion revolted # 3 e . exten respor 1 ay - me id . J eecading, an 1 opinion Dean Sin, — Permit me, in your next impression, to call | — - ut a et a ee ee ee the eal ti d n afte af fri _ despots theif | the attention of the Church Wardens of St. Pawl’s Church |“ not ** that the governor-general should make such appoint= | ers ee eer ie oe ‘in this City, to the most unseeull y and very irreverent custom | ™euts as his Council might recommend ;’’ but the question (short-lived authority. The shameless organ of that party dit of drying clothes on the railings enclosing the saered edifice was this—that he should give the Council a written pledge’ plays a wretched taste and total want of judgment in thas? committed to their trust,—and to subscribe myself, that he would make no appointments without their concur- | minding us of facts and eccurrences which must ever oor Yours, truly, , N . | wi iseri i i i | Charlottetown, Cndieens Al ae ee rence. Lord Metealfe very properly rejected the proposal— | With disgrace the recollection of their short bat arbitreH | - (and where is the Governor that would not, should not, do the | career, f . ‘same?) Mr. Daly sustained his lordship, and his conduct in TALE-BEARING AND SPYING. so doing was afterwards highly approved by all parties in| We were of opinion that the editor of the Islander had los * iw “ep ‘ Ls . oat Tenants,” sgned “John R. Bouke,” which has appeared Canada. To give a written pledge that the Governor-General sins exhausted all his ammunition and means of at! in the last few numbers of your paper, in which that gentle- should do nothing without consent of his Council, would be against the Government, and that he would betake bi TO THE EDITOR OF TNE EXAMINER, Sir,—Permit me to direct your attention to a “ Notice to aa oe of — toiling painfally over the steppes of the | M4 requests all persons indebted to him for rent: or arrears virtually to abolish the gubernatorial office. The demand was from week to week, to re-asserting his old falschoods and e relief of the besieged. Had Russia expended on} Of rent on what he terms Ais part of half of Lot 37, to pay not only a highly improper, but-an offensive one. If a peating his customary Billingsgate slang. To be sure va asters tnd. : ued i 4 : 7? and internal improvements onc-half of the millions the sawe forthwith; 20d ulso notifes the public that ho is’ governor chooses to act arbitrarily against the views of his | the latter, without a week’s intermission, and we are 2?